gstreamer/docs/manual/buffers.xml
Thomas Vander Stichele e978887fca fix manual id's
Original commit message from CVS:
fix manual id's
2004-01-28 15:08:17 +00:00

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XML

<chapter id="chapter-buffers">
<title>Buffers</title>
<para>
Buffers contain the data that will flow through the pipeline you have
created. A source element will typically create a new buffer and pass
it through a pad to the next element in the chain. When using the
GStreamer infrastructure to create a media pipeline you will not have
to deal with buffers yourself; the elements will do that for you.
</para>
<para>
A buffer consists of:
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>
a pointer to a piece of memory.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
the size of the memory.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
a timestamp for the buffer.
</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>
A refcount that indicates how many elements are using this
buffer. This refcount will be used to destroy the buffer when no
element has a reference to it.
</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</para>
<para>
GStreamer provides functions to create custom buffer create/destroy algorithms, called
a <classname>GstBufferPool</classname>. This makes it possible to efficiently
allocate and destroy buffer memory. It also makes it possible to exchange memory between
elements by passing the <classname>GstBufferPool</classname>. A video element can,
for example, create a custom buffer allocation algorithm that creates buffers with XSHM
as the buffer memory. An element can use this algorithm to create and fill the buffer
with data.
</para>
<para>
The simple case is that a buffer is created, memory allocated, data put
in it, and passed to the next element. That element reads the data, does
something (like creating a new buffer and decoding into it), and
unreferences the buffer. This causes the data to be freed and the buffer
to be destroyed. A typical MPEG audio decoder works like this.
</para>
<para>
A more complex case is when the filter modifies the data in place. It
does so and simply passes on the buffer to the next element. This is just
as easy to deal with. An element that works in place has to be careful when
the buffer is used in more than one element; a copy on write has to made in this
situation.
</para>
</chapter>