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151 lines
5.5 KiB
Text
151 lines
5.5 KiB
Text
tsdemux/tsparse TODO
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--------------------
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* clock for live streams
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In order for playback to happen at the same rate as on the producer,
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we need to estimate the remote clock based on capture time and PCR
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values.
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For this estimation to be as accurate as possible, the capture time
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needs to happen on the sources.
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=> Ensure live sources actually timestamp their buffers
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Once we have accurate timestamps, we can use an algorithm to
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calculate the PCR/local-clock skew.
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=> Use the EPTLA algorithm as used in -good/rtp/rtpmanager/
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gstrtpjitterbuffer
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* Seeking
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=> Split out in a separate file/object. It is polluting tsdemux for
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code readability/clarity.
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* Perfomance : Creation/Destruction of buffers is slow
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* => This is due to g_type_instance_create using a dogslow rwlock
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which take up to 50% of gst_adapter_take_buffer()
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=> Bugzilla #585375 (performance and contention problems)
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* mpegtspacketizer
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* offset/timestamp of incoming buffers need to be carried on to the
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sub-buffers in order for several demuxer features to work correctly.
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* mpegtsparser
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* SERIOUS room for improvement performance-wise (see callgrind)
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Synchronization, Scheduling and Timestamping
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--------------------------------------------
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A mpeg-ts demuxer can be used in a variety of situations:
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* lives streaming over DVB, UDP, RTP,..
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* play-as-you-download like HTTP Live Streaming or UPNP/DLNA
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* random-access local playback, file, Bluray, ...
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Those use-cases can be categorized in 3 different categories:
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* Push-based scheduling with live sources [0]
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* Push-based scheduling with non-live sources
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* Pull-based scheduling with fast random-access
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Due to the nature of timing within the mpeg-ts format, we need to
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pay extra attention to the outgoing NEWSEGMENT event and buffer
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timestamps in order to guarantee proper playback and synchronization
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of the stream.
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1) Live push-based scheduling
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The NEWSEGMENT event will be in time format and is forwarded as is,
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and the values are cached locally.
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Since the clock is running when the upstream buffers are captured,
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the outgoing buffer timestamps need to correspond to the incoming
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buffer timestamp values.
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=> A delta, DTS_delta between incoming buffer timestamp and
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DTS/PTS needs to be computed.
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=> The outgoing buffers will be timestamped with their PTS values
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(overflow corrected) offseted by that initial DTS_delta.
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A latency is introduced between the time the buffer containing the
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first bit of a Access Unit is received in the demuxer and the moment
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the demuxer pushed out the buffer corresponding to that Access Unit.
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=> That latency needs to be reported. It corresponds to the
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biggest Access Unit spacing, in this case 1/video-framerate.
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According to the ISO/IEC 13818-1:2007 specifications, D.0.1 Timing
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mode, the "coded audio and video that represent sound and pictures
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that are to be presented simultaneously may be separated in time
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within the coded bit stream by ==>as much as one second<=="
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=> The demuxer will therefore report an added latency of 1s to
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handle this interleave.
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2) Non-live push-based scheduling
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If the upstream NEWSEGMENT is in time format, the NEWSEGMENT event
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is forwarded as is, and the values are cached locally.
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If upstream does provide a NEWSEGMENT in another format, we need to
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compute one by taking the default values:
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start : 0
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stop : GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE
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time : 0
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Since no prerolling is happening downstream and the incoming buffers
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do not have capture timestamps, we need to ensure the first buffer
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we push out corresponds to the base segment start runing time.
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=> A delta between the first DTS to output and the segment start
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position needs to be computed.
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=> The outgoing buffers will be timestamped with their PTS values
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(overflow corrected) offseted by that initial delta.
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Latency is reported just as with the live use-case.
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3) Random access pull-mode
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We do not get a NEWSEGMENT event from upstream, we therefore need to
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compute the outgoing values.
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The base stream/running time corresponds to the DTS of the first
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buffer we will output. The DTS_delta becomes that earliest DTS.
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=> FILLME
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X) General notes
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It is assumed that PTS/DTS rollovers are detected and corrected such
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as the outgoing timestamps never rollover. This can be easily
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handled by correcting the DTS_delta when such rollovers are
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detected. The maximum value of a GstClockTimeDiff is almost 3
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centuries, we therefore have enough margin to handle a decent number
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of rollovers.
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The generic equation for calculating outgoing buffer timestamps
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therefore becomes:
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D = DTS_delta, with rollover corrections
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PTS = PTS of the buffer we are going to push out
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TS = Timestamp of the outgoing buffer
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==> TS = PTS + D
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If seeking is handled upstream for push-based cases, whether live or
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not, no extra modification is required.
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If seeking is handled by the demuxer in the non-live push-based
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cases (converting from TIME to BYTES), the demuxer will need to
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set the segment start/time values to the requested seek position.
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The DTS_delta will also have to be recomputed to take into account
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the seek position.
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[0] When talking about live sources, we mean this in the GStreamer
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definition of live sources, which is to say sources where if we miss
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the capture, we will miss the data to be captured. Sources which do
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internal buffering (like TCP connections or file descriptors) are
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*NOT* live sources.
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