The source output and sink inputs should be corked if the corresponding
sink/source is suspended, as handled during module initialization. This
also needs to be handled during stream move, because the suspend state
of the destination sink/source might be different to the previous one.
This fixes the issue with an infinite number of "Requesting rewind due
to end of underrun" traces after a stream move.
This patch removes all tabs hidden inside the source tree and replaces
them with 4 spaces.
Command used for this:
find . -type d \( -name bluetooth \) -prune -o
-regex '\(.*\.[hc]\|.*\.cc\)' -a -not -name 'reserve*.[ch]'
-a -not -name 'gnt*.h' -a -not -name 'adrian*'
-exec sed -i -e 's/\t/ /g' {} \;
The excluded files are mirrored files from external sources containing
tabs.
u->asyncmsg is accessed from two IO threads. teardown() shouldn't
flush the queue from the main thread while both IO threads are still
potentially using the queue. This patch fixes that error by flushing
the queue from the sink input thread when the sink input is being
unlinked.
Flushing the queue in teardown() caused this assertion in
pa_asyncmsgq_get() to crash sometimes: pa_assert(!a->current)
The sink input may_move_to() callbacks can be called while the source
output is not connected to any source (i.e. is currently moving too),
and vice versa.
Thanks to Frédéric Dalleau for reporting this bug.
Once the sink input has been routed in pa_sink_input_new(),
the sample spec and channel map have already become fixed.
The sink input and source output must use the same stream
format, because the data is copied as-is.
When module-loopback is loaded without arguments, the ss and
map variables are initialized with dummy values. This caused
a problem, because also pa_memblockq_new() was called with
the dummy values, making it work incorrectly. The base was
set to 1 instead of the real frame size, which in turn
caused alignment related crashes.
During initialization, the approach avoids having a needless short
period of corked state in case the sink is suspended, by always creating
the source-output corked and uncorking it immediately afterwards when
the sink is not suspended.
During initialization, the approach avoids having a needless short
period of corked state in case the source is suspended, by always
creating the sink-input corked and uncorking it immediately afterwards
when the source is not suspended.
At module-loopback load, if no sink is given, the default sink is used. If the
stream has a media.role property, the property cannot be used because a the
source or sink is forced to default. Both module-intended-roles and
module-device-manager are affected. The same apply to sources.
With this patch, if sink or source is missing, routing modules can be used.
Make sure we can't be called into by remaining references to
sink-inputs and source-outputs after we have unloaded, as
that will likely lead to segfaults.
Thanks to Tanu for providing valuable input on this patch.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
Calling adjust_rates after teardown results in segfault, and
judging from the Ubuntu bug report, this can happen.
Actively prevent this by destroying the time event, and by
setting adjust_time to 0, we also prevent this routine being
called on max request update.
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/946400
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
Flush the message queue before tearing down, and dest==NULL is valid in case moving failed.
With this my module-loopback finally no longer causes frequent crashes.
These are not used for anything at this point, but this
makes it easy to add ad-hoc debug prints that show the
memblockq name and to convert between bytes and usecs.
This is the beginning of work to support compressed formats natively in
PulseAudio. This adds a pa_stream_new_extended() that takes a format
structure, sends it to the server (=> protocol extension) and has the
server negotiate with the appropropriate sink to figure out what format
it should use.
This is work in progress, and works only with PCM streams. Actual
compressed format support in some sink needs to be implemented, and
extensive testing is required.
More details on how this is supposed to work is available at:
http://pulseaudio.org/wiki/PassthroughSupport
The same logic is applied to the sample rate adjustments in module-rtp-recv,
module-loopback and module-combine:
- Each time an adjustment is made, the new rate can differ at most 2‰ from the
old rate. Such a step is equal to 3.5 cents (a cent is 1/100th of a
semitone) and as 5 cents is generally considered the smallest observable
difference in pitch, this results in inaudible adjustments.
- The sample rate of the stream can only differ from the rate of the
corresponding sink by 25%. As these adjustments are meant to account for
very small clock drifts, any large deviation from the base rate suggests
something is seriously wrong.
- If the calculated rate is within 20Hz of the base rate, set it to the base
rate. This saves CPU because no resampling is necessary.
The arguments sink_dont_move and source_dont_move have been added to toggle
module automatic unloading when the sink or source were no longer
available, rather than just moving them to the next available
sink/source (via rescue streams).
Reviewed and tweaked by Colin Guthrie.
All seeks/flushes that depend on the playback buffer read pointer cannot
be accounted for properly in the client since it does not know the
actual read pointer. Due to that the clients do not account for it at
all. We need do the same on the server side. And we did, but a little
bit too extreme. While we properly have not applied the changes to the
"request" counter we still do have to apply it to the "missing" counter.
This patch fixes that.