Previous implementation for the glib format new types built a
`String` for the displayable value. This commit uses `fmt`
mechanisms so as to limit useless allocations.
Using `ClockTime::from_nseconds` it was possible to build a valid
`ClockTime` which would match `GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE` when passed to
the C API, leading to unexpected behaviour as `GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE`
is represented as an `Option::<ClockTime>::None` in Rust.
This commit panics when this function is called with
`GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE` (defined as `u64::MAX`). This is similar to
what happens when calling other `ClockTime` constructors (e.g.
`from_seconds`) with too large a value: the internal multiplication
overflows leading to a panic.
When the `format_args!` macro is used, formatted args are evaluated
in order to form the argument collection that ends up being formatted
when requested to do so.
For the log macro, this means that any argument that is an expression
was evaluated even if the log level was below current threshold. This
can be examplified by the following code:
```rust
gst::debug!(CAT, "{}", {
println!("fmt arg executed");
"A debug log"
});
```
This used to print "fmt arg executed" even when the log threshold for
`CAT` was filtering `debug` out.
Note that this could break existing code that would incorrectly rely
on the side effect.
When I introduced the 'ser_de' feature, I couldn't find a way to
name it 'serde' while also make it pull the optional 'serde'
crate together with the other related dependencies.
With rustc >= 1.60 we can use 'dep:serde' to refer to the 'serde'
dependency as part of the 'serde' feature.
warning: unused return value of `std::boxed::Box::<T>::from_raw` that must be used
--> gstreamer-rtsp-server/src/rtsp_session_pool.rs:23:5
|
23 | Box::<F>::from_raw(ptr as *mut _);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: `#[warn(unused_must_use)]` on by default
= note: call `drop(from_raw(ptr))` if you intend to drop the `Box`
Functions such as Segment::to_running_time_full replicate the C
signature for the return type: an integer indicates whether the
resulting value must be interpreted as positive or negative.
In Rust, alternatives are usually represented using an enum.
This commit implements an enum wrapper to represent the sign
and adds functions to FormattedValue to ease Signed handling.
The trait CompatibleFormattedValue can be used to check argument
compatibility to a certain Format. This is convenient to define
function which accept several FormattedValues which must hold
values of the same Format.
This trait enforces format compatibility at compilation time for
SpecificFormattedValues and at runtime when a GenericFormattedValue
is provided.
See https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer-rs/-/merge_requests/1059
The trait FormattedValue was only implemented on types which
could implement the full range of values for a Format. In order
to declare a function which could take both the intrinsic type
of any Format (e.g. `ClockTime`) as well the full range of values
(e.g. `Option<ClockTime>`), the argument was declared:
```rust
impl Into<GenericFormattedValue>,
```
This commit implements `FormattedValue` for any type representing
a format. E.g.: both `ClockTime` and `Option<ClockTime>` will now
implement `FormattedValue`. The trait `FormattedValueFullRange`
is implemented on types which can be built from any raw value.
These changes are intended to help for the implementation of a
means to enforce format conformity at compilation time for
functions with multiple formatted value arguments.
The following signatures were found to be incorrect and are fixed:
- `message::StepDone`: forced the type for `amount` and `duration`
to be of the same type, when `duration` is expected to be of the
`Time` format.
- `query::Convert::set`: the two arguments were forced to the same
type, so potentialy the same format, unless a
`GenericFormattedValue` was used.
See https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer-rs/-/merge_requests/1059