GstAdapter

GstAdapter — adapts incoming data on a sink pad into chunks of N bytes

Synopsis

#include <gst/base/gstadapter.h>

struct              GstAdapter;
GstAdapter *             gst_adapter_new                (void);
void                gst_adapter_clear                   (GstAdapter *adapter);
void                gst_adapter_push                    (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         GstBuffer *buf);
const guint8 *           gst_adapter_peek               (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint size);
void                gst_adapter_copy                    (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint8 *dest,
                                                         guint offset,
                                                         guint size);
void                gst_adapter_flush                   (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint flush);
guint               gst_adapter_available               (GstAdapter *adapter);
guint               gst_adapter_available_fast          (GstAdapter *adapter);
guint8 *                  gst_adapter_take              (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint nbytes);
GstBuffer *               gst_adapter_take_buffer       (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint nbytes);
GList *                   gst_adapter_take_list         (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint nbytes);
GstClockTime        gst_adapter_prev_timestamp          (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint64 *distance);
guint               gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32      (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint32 mask,
                                                         guint32 pattern,
                                                         guint offset,
                                                         guint size);
guint               gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32_peek (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint32 mask,
                                                         guint32 pattern,
                                                         guint offset,
                                                         guint size,
                                                         guint32 *value);

Object Hierarchy

  GObject
   +----GstAdapter

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 gst_adapter_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 gst_adapter_push() and the data is then read back in chunks of the desired size using gst_adapter_peek(). After the data is processed, it is freed using gst_adapter_flush().

Other methods such as gst_adapter_take() and gst_adapter_take_buffer() combine gst_adapter_peek() and gst_adapter_flush() 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:

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static GstFlowReturn
sink_pad_chain (GstPad *pad, GstBuffer *buffer)
{
  MyElement *this;
  GstAdapter *adapter;
  GstFlowReturn ret = GST_FLOW_OK;

  // will give the element an extra ref; remember to drop it
  this = MY_ELEMENT (gst_pad_get_parent (pad));
  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) {
    // use flowreturn as an error value
    ret = my_library_foo (gst_adapter_peek (adapter, 512));
    gst_adapter_flush (adapter, 512);
  }

  gst_object_unref (this);
  return ret;
}

For another example, a simple element inside GStreamer that uses GstAdapter is the libvisual element.

An element using GstAdapter in its sink pad chain function should ensure that when the FLUSH_STOP event is received, that any queued data is cleared using gst_adapter_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.

Since 0.10.24, 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 gst_adapter_prev_timestamp(). This function can optionally return the amount 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.

A last thing to note is that while GstAdapter 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 gst_adapter_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.

GstAdapter 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 GstAdapter is inside one pad's chain function, in which case access is serialized via the pad's STREAM_LOCK.

Note that gst_adapter_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.

Last reviewed on 2009-05-13 (0.10.24).

Details

struct GstAdapter

struct GstAdapter;

The opaque GstAdapter data structure.


gst_adapter_new ()

GstAdapter *             gst_adapter_new                (void);

Creates a new GstAdapter. Free with g_object_unref().

Returns :

a new GstAdapter. [transfer full]

gst_adapter_clear ()

void                gst_adapter_clear                   (GstAdapter *adapter);

Removes all buffers from adapter.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

gst_adapter_push ()

void                gst_adapter_push                    (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         GstBuffer *buf);

Adds the data from buf to the data stored inside adapter and takes ownership of the buffer.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

buf :

a GstBuffer to add to queue in the adapter. [transfer full]

gst_adapter_peek ()

const guint8 *           gst_adapter_peek               (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint size);

Gets the first size bytes stored in the adapter. The returned pointer is valid until the next function is called on the adapter.

Note that setting the returned pointer as the data of a GstBuffer is incorrect for general-purpose plugins. The reason is that if a downstream element stores the buffer so that it has access to it outside of the bounds of its chain function, the buffer will have an invalid data pointer after your element flushes the bytes. In that case you should use gst_adapter_take(), which returns a freshly-allocated buffer that you can set as GstBuffer malloc_data or the potentially more performant gst_adapter_take_buffer().

Returns NULL if size bytes are not available.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

size :

the number of bytes to peek

Returns :

a pointer to the first size bytes of data, or NULL. [transfer none][array length=size]

gst_adapter_copy ()

void                gst_adapter_copy                    (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint8 *dest,
                                                         guint offset,
                                                         guint size);

Copies size bytes of data starting at offset out of the buffers contained in GstAdapter 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.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

dest :

the memory to copy into. [out caller-allocates][array length=size]

offset :

the bytes offset in the adapter to start from

size :

the number of bytes to copy

Since 0.10.12


gst_adapter_flush ()

void                gst_adapter_flush                   (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint flush);

Flushes the first flush bytes in the adapter. The caller must ensure that at least this many bytes are available.

See also: gst_adapter_peek().

adapter :

a GstAdapter

flush :

the number of bytes to flush

gst_adapter_available ()

guint               gst_adapter_available               (GstAdapter *adapter);

Gets the maximum amount of bytes available, that is it returns the maximum value that can be supplied to gst_adapter_peek() without that function returning NULL.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

Returns :

number of bytes available in adapter

gst_adapter_available_fast ()

guint               gst_adapter_available_fast          (GstAdapter *adapter);

Gets the maximum number of bytes that are immediately available without requiring any expensive operations (like copying the data into a temporary buffer).

adapter :

a GstAdapter

Returns :

number of bytes that are available in adapter without expensive operations

gst_adapter_take ()

guint8 *                  gst_adapter_take              (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint nbytes);

Returns a freshly allocated buffer containing the first nbytes bytes of the adapter. The returned bytes will be flushed from the adapter.

Caller owns returned value. g_free after usage.

Free-function: g_free

adapter :

a GstAdapter

nbytes :

the number of bytes to take

Returns :

oven-fresh hot data, or NULL if nbytes bytes are not available. [transfer full][array length=nbytes]

gst_adapter_take_buffer ()

GstBuffer *               gst_adapter_take_buffer       (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint nbytes);

Returns a GstBuffer containing the first nbytes bytes of the adapter. 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.

Caller owns returned value. gst_buffer_unref() after usage.

Free-function: gst_buffer_unref

adapter :

a GstAdapter

nbytes :

the number of bytes to take

Returns :

a GstBuffer containing the first nbytes of the adapter, or NULL if nbytes bytes are not available. [transfer full]

Since 0.10.6


gst_adapter_take_list ()

GList *                   gst_adapter_take_list         (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint nbytes);

Returns a GList of buffers containing the first nbytes bytes of the adapter. 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.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

nbytes :

the number of bytes to take

Returns :

a GList of buffers containing the first nbytes of the adapter, or NULL if nbytes bytes are not available. [element-type Gst.Buffer][transfer full]

Since 0.10.31


gst_adapter_prev_timestamp ()

GstClockTime        gst_adapter_prev_timestamp          (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint64 *distance);

Get the timestamp that was before the current byte in the adapter. When distance is given, the amount of bytes between the timestamp and the current position is returned.

The timestamp 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 timestamp is removed from the adapter, the timestamp and distance returned are GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE and 0 respectively.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

distance :

pointer to location for distance, or NULL. [out][allow-none]

Returns :

The previously seen timestamp.

Since 0.10.24


gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32 ()

guint               gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32      (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint32 mask,
                                                         guint32 pattern,
                                                         guint offset,
                                                         guint size);

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 NULL for value.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

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

Since 0.10.24


gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32_peek ()

guint               gst_adapter_masked_scan_uint32_peek (GstAdapter *adapter,
                                                         guint32 mask,
                                                         guint32 pattern,
                                                         guint offset,
                                                         guint size,
                                                         guint32 *value);

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.

adapter :

a GstAdapter

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

value :

pointer to uint32 to return matching data

Returns :

offset of the first match, or -1 if no match was found.

Since 0.10.30