Commit Graph

11 Commits (28947e96d727010a4ea49a3a20f12e7aa5d8e524)

Author SHA1 Message Date
jp9000 661d53067a util: Fix bug with darray_erase_range
Did not multiply the element size for the memory move operation.
2014-10-22 20:32:50 -07:00
fryshorts 3c5e8674b5 Use memmove instead of memcpy for potentially overlapping memory
This fixes an issue reported by valgrind where overlapping memory
was copied with memcpy.
This also removes a redundant assignment where the array size was
explicitly set to zero when it was already zero.
2014-05-17 15:47:59 +02:00
jp9000 8830c4102f obs-studio UI: Implement stream settings UI
- Updated the services API so that it links up with an output and
   the output gets data from that service rather than via settings.
   This allows the service context to have control over how an output is
   used, and makes it so that the URL/key/etc isn't necessarily some
   static setting.

   Also, if the service is attached to an output, it will stick around
   until the output is destroyed.

 - The settings interface has been updated so that it can allow the
   usage of service plugins.  What this means is that now you can create
   a service plugin that can control aspects of the stream, and it
   allows each service to create their own user interface if they create
   a service plugin module.

 - Testing out saving of current service information.  Saves/loads from
   JSON in to obs_data_t, seems to be working quite nicely, and the
   service object information is saved/preserved on exit, and loaded
   again on startup.

 - I agonized over the settings user interface for days, and eventually
   I just decided that the only way that users weren't going to be
   fumbling over options was to split up the settings in to simple/basic
   output, pre-configured, and then advanced for advanced use (such as
   multiple outputs or services, which I'll implement later).

   This was particularly painful to really design right, I wanted more
   features and wanted to include everything in one interface but
   ultimately just realized from experience that users are just not
   technically knowledgable about it and will end up fumbling with the
   settings rather than getting things done.

   Basically, what this means is that casual users only have to enter in
   about 3 things to configure their stream:  Stream key, audio bitrate,
   and video bitrate.  I am really happy with this interface for those
   types of users, but it definitely won't be sufficient for advanced
   usage or for custom outputs, so that stuff will have to be separated.

 - Improved the JSON usage for the 'common streaming services' context,
   I realized that JSON arrays are there to ensure sorting, while
   forgetting that general items are optimized for hashing.  So
   basically I'm just using arrays now to sort items in it.
2014-04-24 02:19:03 -07:00
jp9000 8225a0697a util/darray.h: Fix astoundingly silly assert 2014-04-19 20:35:03 -07:00
jp9000 02a07ea0a0 Add preliminary streaming code for testing
- Add some temporary streaming code using FFmpeg.  FFmpeg itself is not
   very ideal for streaming; lack of direct control of the sockets and
   no framedrop handling means that FFmpeg is definitely not something
   you want to use without wrapper code.  I'd prefer writing my own
   network framework in this particular case just because you give away
   so much control of the network interface.  Wasted an entire day
   trying to go through FFmpeg issues.

   There's just no way FFmpeg should be used for real streaming (at
   least without being patched or submitting some sort of patch, but I'm
   sort of feeling "meh" on that idea)

   I had to end up writing multiple threads just to handle both
   connecting and writing, because av_interleaved_write_frame blocks
   every call, stalling the main encoder thread, and thus also stalling
   draw signals.

 - Add some temporary user interface for streaming settings.  This is
   just temporary for the time being.  It's in the outputs section of
   the basic-mode settings

 - Make it so that dynamic arrays do not free all their data when the
   size just happens to be reduced to 0.  This prevents constant
   reallocation when an array keeps going from 1 item to 0 items.  Also,
   it was bad to become dependent upon that functionality.  You must now
   always explicitly call "free" on it to ensure the data is free, and
   that's how it should be.  Implicit functionality can lead to
   confusion and maintainability issues.
2014-03-10 13:10:35 -07:00
jp9000 e9ded173f1 add my signal/callback interface from another project, also update license of utility files to ISC 1.3 2013-12-25 22:40:33 -07:00
jp9000 70290b8c2b fixed locale code, added locale files, made wx use locale files, fixed some bugs, and added platform-specific files to the main program 2013-12-07 10:22:56 -07:00
jp9000 18834c6a45 some static analysis cleanup 2013-10-17 17:21:42 -07:00
Peter SZTANOJEV 0301b24ace modernize header guards to #pragma once 2013-10-14 13:21:15 +02:00
jp9000 b44ba06543 fixed the alignment issues for good 2013-10-01 07:24:59 -07:00
jp9000 f255ae1922 first commit 2013-09-30 19:37:13 -07:00