Struct gstreamer_base::Adapter [−][src]
pub struct Adapter(_);
Expand description
This class is for elements that receive buffers in an undesired size. While for example raw video contains one image per buffer, the same is not true for a lot of other formats, especially those that come directly from a file. So if you have undefined buffer sizes and require a specific size, this object is for you.
An adapter is created with new()
. It can be freed again with
g_object_unref()
.
The theory of operation is like this: All buffers received are put
into the adapter using push()
and the data is then read back
in chunks of the desired size using gst_adapter_map()
/gst_adapter_unmap()
and/or gst_adapter_copy()
. After the data has been processed, it is freed
using gst_adapter_unmap()
.
Other methods such as gst_adapter_take()
and gst_adapter_take_buffer()
combine gst_adapter_map()
and gst_adapter_unmap()
in one method and are
potentially more convenient for some use cases.
For example, a sink pad’s chain function that needs to pass data to a library in 512-byte chunks could be implemented like this:
static GstFlowReturn
sink_pad_chain (GstPad *pad, GstObject *parent, GstBuffer *buffer)
{
MyElement *this;
GstAdapter *adapter;
GstFlowReturn ret = GST_FLOW_OK;
this = MY_ELEMENT (parent);
adapter = this->adapter;
// put buffer into adapter
gst_adapter_push (adapter, buffer);
// while we can read out 512 bytes, process them
while (gst_adapter_available (adapter) >= 512 && ret == GST_FLOW_OK) {
const guint8 *data = gst_adapter_map (adapter, 512);
// use flowreturn as an error value
ret = my_library_foo (data);
gst_adapter_unmap (adapter);
gst_adapter_flush (adapter, 512);
}
return ret;
}
For another example, a simple element inside GStreamer that uses Adapter
is the libvisual element.
An element using Adapter
in its sink pad chain function should ensure that
when the FLUSH_STOP event is received, that any queued data is cleared using
clear()
. Data should also be cleared or processed on EOS and
when changing state from gst::State::Paused
to gst::State::Ready
.
Also check the GST_BUFFER_FLAG_DISCONT flag on the buffer. Some elements might need to clear the adapter after a discontinuity.
The adapter will keep track of the timestamps of the buffers
that were pushed. The last seen timestamp before the current position
can be queried with prev_pts()
. This function can
optionally return the number of bytes between the start of the buffer that
carried the timestamp and the current adapter position. The distance is
useful when dealing with, for example, raw audio samples because it allows
you to calculate the timestamp of the current adapter position by using the
last seen timestamp and the amount of bytes since. Additionally, the
prev_pts_at_offset()
can be used to determine the last
seen timestamp at a particular offset in the adapter.
The adapter will also keep track of the offset of the buffers
(GST_BUFFER_OFFSET
) that were pushed. The last seen offset before the
current position can be queried with prev_offset()
. This function
can optionally return the number of bytes between the start of the buffer
that carried the offset and the current adapter position.
Additionally the adapter also keeps track of the PTS, DTS and buffer offset
at the last discontinuity, which can be retrieved with
pts_at_discont()
, dts_at_discont()
and
offset_at_discont()
. The number of bytes that were consumed
since then can be queried with distance_from_discont()
.
A last thing to note is that while Adapter
is pretty optimized,
merging buffers still might be an operation that requires a malloc()
and
memcpy()
operation, and these operations are not the fastest. Because of
this, some functions like available_fast()
are provided to help
speed up such cases should you want to. To avoid repeated memory allocations,
gst_adapter_copy()
can be used to copy data into a (statically allocated)
user provided buffer.
Adapter
is not MT safe. All operations on an adapter must be serialized by
the caller. This is not normally a problem, however, as the normal use case
of Adapter
is inside one pad’s chain function, in which case access is
serialized via the pad’s STREAM_LOCK.
Note that push()
takes ownership of the buffer passed. Use
gst_buffer_ref()
before pushing it into the adapter if you still want to
access the buffer later. The adapter will never modify the data in the
buffer pushed in it.
Implements
Implementations
Gets the maximum number of bytes that are immediately available without requiring any expensive operations (like copying the data into a temporary buffer).
Returns
number of bytes that are available in self
without expensive
operations
This is supported on crate feature v1_10
only.
v1_10
only.Get the distance in bytes since the last buffer with the
gst::BufferFlags::DISCONT
flag.
The distance will be reset to 0 for all buffers with
gst::BufferFlags::DISCONT
on them, and then calculated for all other
following buffers based on their size.
Returns
The offset. Can be GST_BUFFER_OFFSET_NONE
.
This is supported on crate feature v1_10
only.
v1_10
only.Get the DTS that was on the last buffer with the GST_BUFFER_FLAG_DISCONT flag, or GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE.
Returns
The DTS at the last discont or GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE.
This is supported on crate feature v1_10
only.
v1_10
only.Get the offset that was on the last buffer with the GST_BUFFER_FLAG_DISCONT flag, or GST_BUFFER_OFFSET_NONE.
Returns
The offset at the last discont or GST_BUFFER_OFFSET_NONE.
Get the dts that was before the current byte in the adapter. When
distance
is given, the amount of bytes between the dts and the current
position is returned.
The dts is reset to GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and the distance is set to 0 when the adapter is first created or when it is cleared. This also means that before the first byte with a dts is removed from the adapter, the dts and distance returned are GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and 0 respectively.
Returns
The previously seen dts.
distance
pointer to location for distance, or None
Get the dts that was before the byte at offset offset
in the adapter. When
distance
is given, the amount of bytes between the dts and the current
position is returned.
The dts is reset to GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and the distance is set to 0 when the adapter is first created or when it is cleared. This also means that before the first byte with a dts is removed from the adapter, the dts and distance returned are GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and 0 respectively.
offset
the offset in the adapter at which to get timestamp
Returns
The previously seen dts at given offset.
distance
pointer to location for distance, or None
This is supported on crate feature v1_10
only.
v1_10
only.Get the offset that was before the current byte in the adapter. When
distance
is given, the amount of bytes between the offset and the current
position is returned.
The offset is reset to GST_BUFFER_OFFSET_NONE and the distance is set to 0 when the adapter is first created or when it is cleared. This also means that before the first byte with an offset is removed from the adapter, the offset and distance returned are GST_BUFFER_OFFSET_NONE and 0 respectively.
Returns
The previous seen offset.
distance
pointer to a location for distance, or None
Get the pts that was before the current byte in the adapter. When
distance
is given, the amount of bytes between the pts and the current
position is returned.
The pts is reset to GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and the distance is set to 0 when the adapter is first created or when it is cleared. This also means that before the first byte with a pts is removed from the adapter, the pts and distance returned are GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and 0 respectively.
Returns
The previously seen pts.
distance
pointer to location for distance, or None
Get the pts that was before the byte at offset offset
in the adapter. When
distance
is given, the amount of bytes between the pts and the current
position is returned.
The pts is reset to GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and the distance is set to 0 when the adapter is first created or when it is cleared. This also means that before the first byte with a pts is removed from the adapter, the pts and distance returned are GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and 0 respectively.
offset
the offset in the adapter at which to get timestamp
Returns
The previously seen pts at given offset.
distance
pointer to location for distance, or None
This is supported on crate feature v1_10
only.
v1_10
only.Get the PTS that was on the last buffer with the GST_BUFFER_FLAG_DISCONT flag, or GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE.
Returns
The PTS at the last discont or GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE.
Copies size
bytes of data starting at offset
out of the buffers
contained in Adapter
into an array dest
provided by the caller.
The array dest
should be large enough to contain size
bytes.
The user should check that the adapter has (offset
+ size
) bytes
available before calling this function.
offset
the bytes offset in the adapter to start from
Returns
dest
the memory to copy into
Similar to gst_adapter_copy, but more suitable for language bindings. size
bytes of data starting at offset
will be copied out of the buffers contained
in self
and into a new glib::Bytes
structure which is returned. Depending on
the value of the size
argument an empty glib::Bytes
structure may be returned.
offset
the bytes offset in the adapter to start from
size
the number of bytes to copy
Returns
A new glib::Bytes
structure containing the copied data.
Flushes the first flush
bytes in the self
. The caller must ensure that
at least this many bytes are available.
See also: gst_adapter_map()
, gst_adapter_unmap()
flush
the number of bytes to flush
Scan for pattern pattern
with applied mask mask
in the adapter data,
starting from offset offset
.
The bytes in pattern
and mask
are interpreted left-to-right, regardless
of endianness. All four bytes of the pattern must be present in the
adapter for it to match, even if the first or last bytes are masked out.
It is an error to call this function without making sure that there is enough data (offset+size bytes) in the adapter.
This function calls gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32_peek()
passing None
for value.
mask
mask to apply to data before matching against pattern
pattern
pattern to match (after mask is applied)
offset
offset into the adapter data from which to start scanning, returns the last scanned position.
size
number of bytes to scan from offset
Returns
offset of the first match, or -1 if no match was found.
Example:
// Assume the adapter contains 0x00 0x01 0x02 ... 0xfe 0xff
gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32 (adapter, 0xffffffff, 0x00010203, 0, 256);
// -> returns 0
gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32 (adapter, 0xffffffff, 0x00010203, 1, 255);
// -> returns -1
gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32 (adapter, 0xffffffff, 0x01020304, 1, 255);
// -> returns 1
gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32 (adapter, 0xffff, 0x0001, 0, 256);
// -> returns -1
gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32 (adapter, 0xffff, 0x0203, 0, 256);
// -> returns 0
gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32 (adapter, 0xffff0000, 0x02030000, 0, 256);
// -> returns 2
gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32 (adapter, 0xffff0000, 0x02030000, 0, 4);
// -> returns -1
Scan for pattern pattern
with applied mask mask
in the adapter data,
starting from offset offset
. If a match is found, the value that matched
is returned through value
, otherwise value
is left untouched.
The bytes in pattern
and mask
are interpreted left-to-right, regardless
of endianness. All four bytes of the pattern must be present in the
adapter for it to match, even if the first or last bytes are masked out.
It is an error to call this function without making sure that there is enough data (offset+size bytes) in the adapter.
mask
mask to apply to data before matching against pattern
pattern
pattern to match (after mask is applied)
offset
offset into the adapter data from which to start scanning, returns the last scanned position.
size
number of bytes to scan from offset
Returns
offset of the first match, or -1 if no match was found.
value
pointer to uint32 to return matching data
Returns a gst::Buffer
containing the first nbytes
bytes of the
self
. The returned bytes will be flushed from the adapter.
This function is potentially more performant than
gst_adapter_take()
since it can reuse the memory in pushed buffers
by subbuffering or merging. This function will always return a
buffer with a single memory region.
Note that no assumptions should be made as to whether certain buffer flags such as the DISCONT flag are set on the returned buffer, or not. The caller needs to explicitly set or unset flags that should be set or unset.
Since 1.6 this will also copy over all GstMeta of the input buffers except
for meta with the GST_META_FLAG_POOLED
flag or with the “memory” tag.
Caller owns a reference to the returned buffer. gst_buffer_unref()
after
usage.
Free-function: gst_buffer_unref
nbytes
the number of bytes to take
Returns
a gst::Buffer
containing the first
nbytes
of the adapter, or None
if nbytes
bytes are not available.
gst_buffer_unref()
when no longer needed.
Returns a gst::Buffer
containing the first nbytes
of the self
.
The returned bytes will be flushed from the adapter. This function
is potentially more performant than gst_adapter_take_buffer()
since
it can reuse the memory in pushed buffers by subbuffering or
merging. Unlike gst_adapter_take_buffer()
, the returned buffer may
be composed of multiple non-contiguous gst::Memory
objects, no
copies are made.
Note that no assumptions should be made as to whether certain buffer flags such as the DISCONT flag are set on the returned buffer, or not. The caller needs to explicitly set or unset flags that should be set or unset.
This will also copy over all GstMeta of the input buffers except
for meta with the GST_META_FLAG_POOLED
flag or with the “memory” tag.
This function can return buffer up to the return value of
available()
without making copies if possible.
Caller owns a reference to the returned buffer. gst_buffer_unref()
after
usage.
Free-function: gst_buffer_unref
nbytes
the number of bytes to take
Returns
a gst::Buffer
containing the first
nbytes
of the adapter, or None
if nbytes
bytes are not available.
gst_buffer_unref()
when no longer needed.
Returns a gst::BufferList
of buffers containing the first nbytes
bytes of
the self
. The returned bytes will be flushed from the adapter.
When the caller can deal with individual buffers, this function is more
performant because no memory should be copied.
Caller owns the returned list. Call gst_buffer_list_unref()
to free
the list after usage.
nbytes
the number of bytes to take
Returns
a gst::BufferList
of buffers containing
the first nbytes
of the adapter, or None
if nbytes
bytes are not
available
Returns a GList
of buffers containing the first nbytes
bytes of the
self
. The returned bytes will be flushed from the adapter.
When the caller can deal with individual buffers, this function is more
performant because no memory should be copied.
Caller owns returned list and contained buffers. gst_buffer_unref()
each
buffer in the list before freeing the list after usage.
nbytes
the number of bytes to take
Returns
a GList
of
buffers containing the first nbytes
of the adapter, or None
if nbytes
bytes are not available
Adds the data from buf
to the data stored inside self
and takes
ownership of the buffer.
buf
a gst::Buffer
to add to queue in the adapter
Trait Implementations
This method returns an ordering between self
and other
values if one exists. Read more
This method tests less than (for self
and other
) and is used by the <
operator. Read more
This method tests less than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
This method tests greater than (for self
and other
) and is used by the >
operator. Read more
Pull some bytes from this source into the specified buffer, returning how many bytes were read. Read more
Like read
, except that it reads into a slice of buffers. Read more
can_vector
)Determines if this Read
er has an efficient read_vectored
implementation. Read more
read_initializer
)Determines if this Read
er can work with buffers of uninitialized
memory. Read more
Read all bytes until EOF in this source, placing them into buf
. Read more
Read all bytes until EOF in this source, appending them to buf
. Read more
Read the exact number of bytes required to fill buf
. Read more
Creates a “by reference” adaptor for this instance of Read
. Read more
Creates an adaptor which will chain this stream with another. Read more
Returns the type identifier of Self
.
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for Adapter
impl UnwindSafe for Adapter
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Upcasts an object to a superclass or interface T
. Read more
Upcasts an object to a reference of its superclass or interface T
. Read more
Tries to downcast to a subclass or interface implementor T
. Read more
Tries to downcast to a reference of its subclass or interface implementor T
. Read more
Tries to cast to an object of type T
. This handles upcasting, downcasting
and casting between interface and interface implementors. All checks are performed at
runtime, while downcast
and upcast
will do many checks at compile-time already. Read more
Tries to cast to reference to an object of type T
. This handles upcasting, downcasting
and casting between interface and interface implementors. All checks are performed at
runtime, while downcast
and upcast
will do many checks at compile-time already. Read more
Casts to T
unconditionally. Read more
Casts to &T
unconditionally. Read more
Returns true
if the object is an instance of (can be cast to) T
.
pub fn set_properties(
&self,
property_values: &[(&str, &dyn ToValue)]
) -> Result<(), BoolError>
[src]pub fn set_properties_from_value(
&self,
property_values: &[(&str, Value)]
) -> Result<(), BoolError>
[src]pub fn set_property<'a, N, V>(
&self,
property_name: N,
value: V
) -> Result<(), BoolError> where
V: ToValue,
N: Into<&'a str>,
[src]pub fn set_property_from_value<'a, N>(
&self,
property_name: N,
value: &Value
) -> Result<(), BoolError> where
N: Into<&'a str>,
[src]pub fn property<'a, N>(&self, property_name: N) -> Result<Value, BoolError> where
N: Into<&'a str>,
[src]Safety Read more
Safety Read more
Safety Read more
Safety Read more
pub fn connect_notify<F>(&self, name: Option<&str>, f: F) -> SignalHandlerId where
F: 'static + Fn(&T, &ParamSpec) + Send + Sync,
[src]pub fn connect_notify_local<F>(
&self,
name: Option<&str>,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId where
F: 'static + Fn(&T, &ParamSpec),
[src]pub unsafe fn connect_notify_unsafe<F>(
&self,
name: Option<&str>,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId where
F: Fn(&T, &ParamSpec),
[src]pub fn has_property<'a, N>(&self, property_name: N, type_: Option<Type>) -> bool where
N: Into<&'a str>,
[src]pub fn find_property<'a, N>(&self, property_name: N) -> Option<ParamSpec> where
N: Into<&'a str>,
[src]pub fn connect<'a, N, F>(
&self,
signal_name: N,
after: bool,
callback: F
) -> Result<SignalHandlerId, BoolError> where
F: Fn(&[Value]) -> Option<Value> + Send + Sync + 'static,
N: Into<&'a str>,
[src]Same as connect
but takes a SignalId
instead of a signal name.
pub fn connect_local<'a, N, F>(
&self,
signal_name: N,
after: bool,
callback: F
) -> Result<SignalHandlerId, BoolError> where
F: Fn(&[Value]) -> Option<Value> + 'static,
N: Into<&'a str>,
[src]Same as connect_local
but takes a SignalId
instead of a signal name.
pub unsafe fn connect_unsafe<'a, N, F>(
&self,
signal_name: N,
after: bool,
callback: F
) -> Result<SignalHandlerId, BoolError> where
F: Fn(&[Value]) -> Option<Value>,
N: Into<&'a str>,
[src]Same as connect_unsafe
but takes a SignalId
instead of a signal name.
Emit signal by signal id.
Emit signal with details by signal id.
Emit signal by it’s name.
pub fn bind_property<'a, O, N, M>(
&'a self,
source_property: N,
target: &'a O,
target_property: M
) -> BindingBuilder<'a> where
O: ObjectType,
N: Into<&'a str>,
M: Into<&'a str>,
[src]Same as emit
but takes Value
for the arguments.
Same as emit_by_name
but takes Value
for the arguments.
Returns a SendValue
clone of self
.
impl<'a, T, C> FromValueOptional<'a> for T where
C: ValueTypeChecker<Error = ValueTypeMismatchOrNoneError>,
T: FromValue<'a, Checker = C>,
[src]