Escape <portname>, <tensorname>, <paramname>, <port>, <rules> and
similar angle-bracket placeholders that doxygen interprets as HTML
tags. Also escape @filename (unknown doxygen command) and fix the
pw_stream::process() reference in thread-loop.h.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
- modules.dox: remove references to non-existent sendspin modules
- access.dox: remove reference to deprecated pipewire-media-session
- dma-buf.dox: fix \ref EnumFormat to \ref SPA_PARAM_EnumFormat,
fix \ref struct to struct \ref for spa_meta_sync_timeline
- pipewire.conf.5.md: add explicit {#synopsis} anchor for internal links
- pipewire-client.conf.5.md: fix audio_converter to audio_adapter ref
- pipewire-jack.conf.5.md: escape <id> HTML tags
- pipewire-props.7.md: fix monitor-prop__ to props__ for card profiles ref
- pipewire-pulse.1.md: fix pipewire-env ref to full anchor name
- pipewire.1.md: fix \ref CPU to \ref spa_cpu
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Prefix all pulse module source files with pulse- to give them unique
basenames, avoiding ambiguous \file suffix matching in doxygen when
identically-named files exist under src/modules/.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Handling pending RegisterProfile callbacks was wrong as it forgot that
there can be multiple profiles to be registered.
Fix the handling by allowing several concurrent register callbacks.
No params are implemented, so remove them from the emitted `spa_device_info`.
For v4l2, `n_params` was already set to 0 in 938e2b1451
("v4l2: profiles params are not implement yet"), effectively removing them.
No implementation has materialized in the last 5 years, so remove them
altogether, and do the same in the libcamera plugin as well.
When a single output port is linked to multiple input ports of the same
client and the client uses multiple threads to process the input ports,
get_buffer_output() is called from multiple threads concurrently and
causes a race.
Multiple threads will try to dequeue a buffer concurrently and set the
HAVE_DATA io status, which causes the port to run out of buffers quickly
and the io are to become corrupted.
Use CAS to make sure only one thread dequeues and sets the io status.
The other concurrent threads will spin until there is a buffer. The fast
path will be that the buffer is already dequeued and then it is simply
reused.
Fixes#5324
When inspecting the loaded modules, actually list the properties that
were used when loading the module instead of the informational generic
ones from the info.
Pulsaudio also does not list the Usage properties when listing modules.
Add some more fields like the type, default value and possible enum
values for the module_args.
Use this to generate the Usage in describe-module and the docs.
This should give more consistent and correct Usage output in all
modules.
Use spa_json_begin_array() instead of the relaxed variant when parsing
property values in pw_conf_find_match().
This prevents plain string values containing ':' (such as object.path)
from being incorrectly tokenized while preserving support for actual
JSON array properties.
`SPA_PARAM_BUFFERS_blocks` is a specific value, the plugin host should
not use any other number of data planes, so reject other values.
For example, the `buffers[i]->n_datas > planes.size()` situation was
not handled correctly, and this removes the need for handling that.
Expose the libcamera header and library versions in the device properties
similarly to `api.v4l2.cap.version` used by the v4l2 plugin.
The keys are not yet promoted into the public `keys.h` header file.
There was one file "libcamera.c" that was a C source file, which
prevents the addition of C++ functions, includes, etc. to "libcamera.h".
So compile that file as C++ as well.
This makes it possible to dynamically add / remove receivers, which is
necesary for sending to multiple receivers. Mixed multi- and unicast
receivers are possible. Example pw-cli calls (56 is the ID of the RTP
sink node):
pw-cli c 56 User '{ extra="{ \"command.id\" : \"add-receiver\" , \"destination.ip\" : \"10.42.0.1\", \"destination.port\" : 55001 }" }'
pw-cli c 56 User '{ extra="{ \"command.id\" : \"remove-receiver\", \"destination.ip\" : \"10.42.0.1\" }" }'
pw-cli c 56 User '{ extra="{ \"command.id\" : \"clear-receivers\" }" }'
Commands and their arguments:
* "add-receiver" : Adds a receiver to the sink's list. If the given
IP address <-> port combination was already added, the command is
logged, but otherwise ignored. Arguments:
- "destination.ip" : IP address to send data to. Can be a uni- or
multicast address, but must be a valid address.
- "destination.port" : Port to send data to. Must be valid.
- "local.ifname", "source.ip", "net.ttl", "net.dscp", "net.loop" :
These are all optional, and work just like in the RTP sink
module's properties.
* "remove-receiver" : Removes a receiver from the sink's list. The
receiver is identified by the given IP address. A port can optionally
be specified as well. If it isn't, then the first receiver with that IP
address is removed. If no matching receiver is in the sink's list,
this command does nothing. Arguments:
- "destination.ip" : IP address to send data to. Can be a uni- or
multicast address, but must be a valid address.
- "destination.port" : Port to send data to. This is optional. But, if
it is set, it must be a valid port number.
* "clear-receivers" : Removes all receivers from the sink's list. If the
list is empty, this does nothing. This command has no arguments.
If the RTP sink module is created with the "destination.ip" and
"destination.port" properties set, it behaves as if "add-receiver" were
called right after the module was initialized. This means that if none
of these commands are used, the module behaves just as it did prior to
this patch. Note that the "remove-receivers" command can remove this
initial receiver as well.
If no receivers are added, the module continues to work normally.
Adding and removing receivers mid-operation is supported.
NOTE: "destination.ip") handling in stream_props_changed() is removed,
since it never really did anything other than change the param value.
Always use the pffft aligned alloc function. The fftw alloc function
only aligns to 16 bytes and the AVX code uses stores that rely on an
alignment of 32 bytes. The pffft alloc alignes to 64 bytes.
Fixes#5320
rtp_stream_new() acquires a data loop with pw_context_acquire_loop() but
the out: error path never calls pw_context_release_loop(), leaking the loop
reference on every failure after acquisition.
Mirror rtp_stream_destroy() and other modules that pair acquire with release.
A 0 result from the iteration with a NULL filter means the end of the
iteration, if we get this for the first item, we assume there was no
item (same as unknown item)
A 0 result for the iteration with filter means nothing matches the
filter and so the filter should not be included in the result. A result
of -ENOENT means the param is unknown and the filter should be included
in the result.
Fixes#5313
When adding the freeze/thaw recalc graph calls, triggering the actual
recalc of the graph (when an active node with a driver was removed) was
removed.
The thaw only actually recalcs the graph when something set the
recalc_pending flag so we still need something to set this. Normally
this would be because of some of the ports or links that got destroyed
but if not, the original recalc trigger needs to remain as a fallback.
Some operations like deactivating nodes deactivates all links to the
node and this causes a graph recalc for each link.
It's actually a bit more problematic with suspend, which first
deactivates the links and then suspends the ports. The suspension of the
ports cause a recalc, which for the not yet suspended ports makes the
link active again, causing issues then when the port is suspended later.
Make recalc a counter and only recalc when the counter is 0. If the
counter is not 0, set the pending recalc, which will trigger when the
counter goes to 0.
With this, we can add a freeze/thaw operation on the recalc and delay
recalculation until all ports and links are handled.
We can also group some other operations with a freeze/thaw pair, such as
the destruction of ports, which destroys all links. Also the destruction
of nodes can freeze the recalc until all ports are destroyed.
When there is no input buffer because of an xrun or the io was removed,
ramp down the signal. Only remove the port from the mix list when the io
was removed, otherwise, ramp back up when there is a buffers on the
input again.
This avoids pops and click around xrun nodes.
Only ramp down when the IO was removed. We don't want to ramp down
because there was no buffer because of an xrun, because after the
ramp down, the port is removed from the mix ports and stays silent.
Add a new pulse.zeroramp.gap property that will enable gap detection and
fade-in/fade-out on gaps on playback streams.
Make a rule to enable this on chrome, which does not do a cork/pause
when a stream is paused but sends out silence. With the gap detection
enabled, this allows the audioconvert to perform fades to avoid pops and
clocks from sudden DC changes at the gaps.
Fixes#4745