/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 2; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*-*/ /* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this file, * You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */ #ifndef MOZILLA_MEDIASTREAMGRAPH_H_ #define MOZILLA_MEDIASTREAMGRAPH_H_ #include "mozilla/Mutex.h" #include "nsAudioStream.h" #include "nsTArray.h" #include "nsIRunnable.h" #include "nsISupportsImpl.h" #include "StreamBuffer.h" #include "TimeVarying.h" #include "VideoFrameContainer.h" #include "VideoSegment.h" #include "nsThreadUtils.h" class nsDOMMediaStream; namespace mozilla { #ifdef PR_LOGGING extern PRLogModuleInfo* gMediaStreamGraphLog; #endif /** * Microseconds relative to the start of the graph timeline. */ typedef int64_t GraphTime; const GraphTime GRAPH_TIME_MAX = MEDIA_TIME_MAX; /* * MediaStreamGraph is a framework for synchronized audio/video processing * and playback. It is designed to be used by other browser components such as * HTML media elements, media capture APIs, real-time media streaming APIs, * multitrack media APIs, and advanced audio APIs. * * The MediaStreamGraph uses a dedicated thread to process media --- the media * graph thread. This ensures that we can process media through the graph * without blocking on main-thread activity. The media graph is only modified * on the media graph thread, to ensure graph changes can be processed without * interfering with media processing. All interaction with the media graph * thread is done with message passing. * * APIs that modify the graph or its properties are described as "control APIs". * These APIs are asynchronous; they queue graph changes internally and * those changes are processed all-at-once by the MediaStreamGraph. The * MediaStreamGraph monitors the main thread event loop via nsIAppShell::RunInStableState * to ensure that graph changes from a single event loop task are always * processed all together. Control APIs should only be used on the main thread, * currently; we may be able to relax that later. * * To allow precise synchronization of times in the control API, the * MediaStreamGraph maintains a "media timeline". Control APIs that take or * return times use that timeline. Those times never advance during * an event loop task. This time is returned by MediaStreamGraph::GetCurrentTime(). * * Media decoding, audio processing and media playback use thread-safe APIs to * the media graph to ensure they can continue while the main thread is blocked. * * When the graph is changed, we may need to throw out buffered data and * reprocess it. This is triggered automatically by the MediaStreamGraph. */ class MediaStreamGraph; /** * This is a base class for media graph thread listener callbacks. * Override methods to be notified of audio or video data or changes in stream * state. * * This can be used by stream recorders or network connections that receive * stream input. It could also be used for debugging. * * All notification methods are called from the media graph thread. Overriders * of these methods are responsible for all synchronization. Beware! * These methods are called without the media graph monitor held, so * reentry into media graph methods is possible, although very much discouraged! * You should do something non-blocking and non-reentrant (e.g. dispatch an * event to some thread) and return. * The listener is not allowed to add/remove any listeners from the stream. * * When a listener is first attached, we guarantee to send a NotifyBlockingChanged * callback to notify of the initial blocking state. Also, if a listener is * attached to a stream that has already finished, we'll call NotifyFinished. */ class MediaStreamListener { public: virtual ~MediaStreamListener() {} NS_INLINE_DECL_THREADSAFE_REFCOUNTING(MediaStreamListener) enum Consumption { CONSUMED, NOT_CONSUMED }; /** * Notify that the stream is hooked up and we'd like to start or stop receiving * data on it. Only fires on SourceMediaStreams. * The initial state is assumed to be NOT_CONSUMED. */ virtual void NotifyConsumptionChanged(MediaStreamGraph* aGraph, Consumption aConsuming) {} /** * When a SourceMediaStream has pulling enabled, and the MediaStreamGraph * control loop is ready to pull, this gets called. A NotifyPull implementation * is allowed to call the SourceMediaStream methods that alter track * data. It is not allowed to make other MediaStream API calls, including * calls to add or remove MediaStreamListeners. It is not allowed to block * for any length of time. * aDesiredTime is the stream time we would like to get data up to. Data * beyond this point will not be played until NotifyPull runs again, so there's * not much point in providing it. Note that if the stream is blocked for * some reason, then data before aDesiredTime may not be played immediately. */ virtual void NotifyPull(MediaStreamGraph* aGraph, StreamTime aDesiredTime) {} enum Blocking { BLOCKED, UNBLOCKED }; /** * Notify that the blocking status of the stream changed. The initial state * is assumed to be BLOCKED. */ virtual void NotifyBlockingChanged(MediaStreamGraph* aGraph, Blocking aBlocked) {} /** * Notify that the stream has (or does not have) data in each track * for the stream's current time. */ virtual void NotifyHasCurrentData(MediaStreamGraph* aGraph, bool aHasCurrentData) {} /** * Notify that the stream output is advancing. */ virtual void NotifyOutput(MediaStreamGraph* aGraph) {} /** * Notify that the stream finished. */ virtual void NotifyFinished(MediaStreamGraph* aGraph) {} enum { TRACK_EVENT_CREATED = 0x01, TRACK_EVENT_ENDED = 0x02 }; /** * Notify that changes to one of the stream tracks have been queued. * aTrackEvents can be any combination of TRACK_EVENT_CREATED and * TRACK_EVENT_ENDED. aQueuedMedia is the data being added to the track * at aTrackOffset (relative to the start of the stream). * aQueuedMedia can be null if there is no output. */ virtual void NotifyQueuedTrackChanges(MediaStreamGraph* aGraph, TrackID aID, TrackRate aTrackRate, TrackTicks aTrackOffset, uint32_t aTrackEvents, const MediaSegment& aQueuedMedia) {} }; /** * This is a base class for main-thread listener callbacks. * This callback is invoked on the main thread when the main-thread-visible * state of a stream has changed. * * These methods are called without the media graph monitor held, so * reentry into media graph methods is possible, although very much discouraged! * You should do something non-blocking and non-reentrant (e.g. dispatch an * event) and return. * The listener is allowed to synchronously remove itself from the stream, but * not add or remove any other listeners. */ class MainThreadMediaStreamListener { public: virtual ~MainThreadMediaStreamListener() {} NS_INLINE_DECL_REFCOUNTING(MainThreadMediaStreamListener) virtual void NotifyMainThreadStateChanged() = 0; }; class MediaStreamGraphImpl; class SourceMediaStream; class ProcessedMediaStream; class MediaInputPort; /** * A stream of synchronized audio and video data. All (not blocked) streams * progress at the same rate --- "real time". Streams cannot seek. The only * operation readers can perform on a stream is to read the next data. * * Consumers of a stream can be reading from it at different offsets, but that * should only happen due to the order in which consumers are being run. * Those offsets must not diverge in the long term, otherwise we would require * unbounded buffering. * * Streams can be in a "blocked" state. While blocked, a stream does not * produce data. A stream can be explicitly blocked via the control API, * or implicitly blocked by whatever's generating it (e.g. an underrun in the * source resource), or implicitly blocked because something consuming it * blocks, or implicitly because it has finished. * * A stream can be in a "finished" state. "Finished" streams are permanently * blocked. * * Transitions into and out of the "blocked" and "finished" states are managed * by the MediaStreamGraph on the media graph thread. * * We buffer media data ahead of the consumers' reading offsets. It is possible * to have buffered data but still be blocked. * * Any stream can have its audio and video playing when requested. The media * stream graph plays audio by constructing audio output streams as necessary. * Video is played by setting video frames into an VideoFrameContainer at the right * time. To ensure video plays in sync with audio, make sure that the same * stream is playing both the audio and video. * * The data in a stream is managed by StreamBuffer. It consists of a set of * tracks of various types that can start and end over time. * * Streams are explicitly managed. The client creates them via * MediaStreamGraph::CreateInput/ProcessedMediaStream, and releases them by calling * Destroy() when no longer needed (actual destruction will be deferred). * The actual object is owned by the MediaStreamGraph. The basic idea is that * main thread objects will keep Streams alive as long as necessary (using the * cycle collector to clean up whenever needed). * * We make them refcounted only so that stream-related messages with MediaStream* * pointers can be sent to the main thread safely. * * The lifetimes of MediaStreams are controlled from the main thread. * For MediaStreams exposed to the DOM, the lifetime is controlled by the DOM * wrapper; the DOM wrappers own their associated MediaStreams. When a DOM * wrapper is destroyed, it sends a Destroy message for the associated * MediaStream and clears its reference (the last main-thread reference to * the object). When the Destroy message is processed on the graph * manager thread we immediately release the affected objects (disentangling them * from other objects as necessary). * * This could cause problems for media processing if a MediaStream is * destroyed while a downstream MediaStream is still using it. Therefore * the DOM wrappers must keep upstream MediaStreams alive as long as they * could be being used in the media graph. * * At any time, however, a set of MediaStream wrappers could be * collected via cycle collection. Destroy messages will be sent * for those objects in arbitrary order and the MediaStreamGraph has to be able * to handle this. */ class MediaStream { public: NS_INLINE_DECL_THREADSAFE_REFCOUNTING(MediaStream) MediaStream(nsDOMMediaStream* aWrapper) : mBufferStartTime(0) , mExplicitBlockerCount(0) , mBlocked(false) , mGraphUpdateIndices(0) , mFinished(false) , mNotifiedFinished(false) , mWrapper(aWrapper) , mMainThreadCurrentTime(0) , mMainThreadFinished(false) , mMainThreadDestroyed(false) { } virtual ~MediaStream() {} /** * Returns the graph that owns this stream. */ MediaStreamGraphImpl* GraphImpl(); MediaStreamGraph* Graph(); // Control API. // Since a stream can be played multiple ways, we need to combine independent // volume settings. The aKey parameter is used to keep volume settings // separate. Since the stream is always playing the same contents, only // a single audio output stream is used; the volumes are combined. // Currently only the first enabled audio track is played. // XXX change this so all enabled audio tracks are mixed and played. void AddAudioOutput(void* aKey); void SetAudioOutputVolume(void* aKey, float aVolume); void RemoveAudioOutput(void* aKey); // Since a stream can be played multiple ways, we need to be able to // play to multiple VideoFrameContainers. // Only the first enabled video track is played. void AddVideoOutput(VideoFrameContainer* aContainer); void RemoveVideoOutput(VideoFrameContainer* aContainer); // Explicitly block. Useful for example if a media element is pausing // and we need to stop its stream emitting its buffered data. void ChangeExplicitBlockerCount(int32_t aDelta); // Events will be dispatched by calling methods of aListener. void AddListener(MediaStreamListener* aListener); void RemoveListener(MediaStreamListener* aListener); void AddMainThreadListener(MainThreadMediaStreamListener* aListener) { NS_ASSERTION(NS_IsMainThread(), "Call only on main thread"); mMainThreadListeners.AppendElement(aListener); } void RemoveMainThreadListener(MainThreadMediaStreamListener* aListener) { NS_ASSERTION(NS_IsMainThread(), "Call only on main thread"); mMainThreadListeners.RemoveElement(aListener); } // Signal that the client is done with this MediaStream. It will be deleted later. void Destroy(); // Returns the main-thread's view of how much data has been processed by // this stream. StreamTime GetCurrentTime() { NS_ASSERTION(NS_IsMainThread(), "Call only on main thread"); return mMainThreadCurrentTime; } // Return the main thread's view of whether this stream has finished. bool IsFinished() { NS_ASSERTION(NS_IsMainThread(), "Call only on main thread"); return mMainThreadFinished; } bool IsDestroyed() { NS_ASSERTION(NS_IsMainThread(), "Call only on main thread"); return mMainThreadDestroyed; } friend class MediaStreamGraphImpl; friend class MediaInputPort; virtual SourceMediaStream* AsSourceStream() { return nullptr; } virtual ProcessedMediaStream* AsProcessedStream() { return nullptr; } // media graph thread only void Init(); // These Impl methods perform the core functionality of the control methods // above, on the media graph thread. /** * Stop all stream activity and disconnect it from all inputs and outputs. * This must be idempotent. */ virtual void DestroyImpl(); StreamTime GetBufferEnd() { return mBuffer.GetEnd(); } void SetAudioOutputVolumeImpl(void* aKey, float aVolume); void AddAudioOutputImpl(void* aKey) { mAudioOutputs.AppendElement(AudioOutput(aKey)); } void RemoveAudioOutputImpl(void* aKey); void AddVideoOutputImpl(already_AddRefed aContainer) { *mVideoOutputs.AppendElement() = aContainer; } void RemoveVideoOutputImpl(VideoFrameContainer* aContainer) { mVideoOutputs.RemoveElement(aContainer); } void ChangeExplicitBlockerCountImpl(StreamTime aTime, int32_t aDelta) { mExplicitBlockerCount.SetAtAndAfter(aTime, mExplicitBlockerCount.GetAt(aTime) + aDelta); } void AddListenerImpl(already_AddRefed aListener); void RemoveListenerImpl(MediaStreamListener* aListener) { mListeners.RemoveElement(aListener); } void AddConsumer(MediaInputPort* aPort) { mConsumers.AppendElement(aPort); } void RemoveConsumer(MediaInputPort* aPort) { mConsumers.RemoveElement(aPort); } const StreamBuffer& GetStreamBuffer() { return mBuffer; } GraphTime GetStreamBufferStartTime() { return mBufferStartTime; } StreamTime GraphTimeToStreamTime(GraphTime aTime); bool IsFinishedOnGraphThread() { return mFinished; } void FinishOnGraphThread(); protected: virtual void AdvanceTimeVaryingValuesToCurrentTime(GraphTime aCurrentTime, GraphTime aBlockedTime) { mBufferStartTime += aBlockedTime; mGraphUpdateIndices.InsertTimeAtStart(aBlockedTime); mGraphUpdateIndices.AdvanceCurrentTime(aCurrentTime); mExplicitBlockerCount.AdvanceCurrentTime(aCurrentTime); mBuffer.ForgetUpTo(aCurrentTime - mBufferStartTime); } // This state is all initialized on the main thread but // otherwise modified only on the media graph thread. // Buffered data. The start of the buffer corresponds to mBufferStartTime. // Conceptually the buffer contains everything this stream has ever played, // but we forget some prefix of the buffered data to bound the space usage. StreamBuffer mBuffer; // The time when the buffered data could be considered to have started playing. // This increases over time to account for time the stream was blocked before // mCurrentTime. GraphTime mBufferStartTime; // Client-set volume of this stream struct AudioOutput { AudioOutput(void* aKey) : mKey(aKey), mVolume(1.0f) {} void* mKey; float mVolume; }; nsTArray mAudioOutputs; nsTArray > mVideoOutputs; // We record the last played video frame to avoid redundant setting // of the current video frame. VideoFrame mLastPlayedVideoFrame; // The number of times this stream has been explicitly blocked by the control // API, minus the number of times it has been explicitly unblocked. TimeVarying mExplicitBlockerCount; nsTArray > mListeners; nsTArray > mMainThreadListeners; // Precomputed blocking status (over GraphTime). // This is only valid between the graph's mCurrentTime and // mStateComputedTime. The stream is considered to have // not been blocked before mCurrentTime (its mBufferStartTime is increased // as necessary to account for that time instead) --- this avoids us having to // record the entire history of the stream's blocking-ness in mBlocked. TimeVarying mBlocked; // Maps graph time to the graph update that affected this stream at that time TimeVarying mGraphUpdateIndices; // MediaInputPorts to which this is connected nsTArray mConsumers; // Where audio output is going. There is one AudioOutputStream per // audio track. struct AudioOutputStream { // When we started audio playback for this track. // Add mStream->GetPosition() to find the current audio playback position. GraphTime mAudioPlaybackStartTime; // Amount of time that we've wanted to play silence because of the stream // blocking. MediaTime mBlockedAudioTime; nsRefPtr mStream; TrackID mTrackID; }; nsTArray mAudioOutputStreams; /** * When true, this means the stream will be finished once all * buffered data has been consumed. */ bool mFinished; /** * When true, mFinished is true and we've played all the data in this stream * and fired NotifyFinished notifications. */ bool mNotifiedFinished; // Temporary data for ordering streams by dependency graph bool mHasBeenOrdered; bool mIsOnOrderingStack; // Temporary data to record if the stream is being consumed // (i.e. has track data being played, or is feeding into some stream // that is being consumed). bool mIsConsumed; // True if the above value is accurate. bool mKnowIsConsumed; // Temporary data for computing blocking status of streams // True if we've added this stream to the set of streams we're computing // blocking for. bool mInBlockingSet; // True if this stream should be blocked in this phase. bool mBlockInThisPhase; // This state is only used on the main thread. nsDOMMediaStream* mWrapper; // Main-thread views of state StreamTime mMainThreadCurrentTime; bool mMainThreadFinished; bool mMainThreadDestroyed; }; /** * This is a stream into which a decoder can write audio and video. * * Audio and video can be written on any thread, but you probably want to * always write from the same thread to avoid unexpected interleavings. */ class SourceMediaStream : public MediaStream { public: SourceMediaStream(nsDOMMediaStream* aWrapper) : MediaStream(aWrapper), mLastConsumptionState(MediaStreamListener::NOT_CONSUMED), mMutex("mozilla::media::SourceMediaStream"), mUpdateKnownTracksTime(0), mPullEnabled(false), mUpdateFinished(false), mDestroyed(false) {} virtual SourceMediaStream* AsSourceStream() { return this; } // Media graph thread only virtual void DestroyImpl(); // Call these on any thread. /** * Enable or disable pulling. When pulling is enabled, NotifyPull * gets called on MediaStreamListeners for this stream during the * MediaStreamGraph control loop. Pulling is initially disabled. * Due to unavoidable race conditions, after a call to SetPullEnabled(false) * it is still possible for a NotifyPull to occur. */ void SetPullEnabled(bool aEnabled); /** * Add a new track to the stream starting at the given base time (which * must be greater than or equal to the last time passed to * AdvanceKnownTracksTime). Takes ownership of aSegment. aSegment should * contain data starting after aStart. */ void AddTrack(TrackID aID, TrackRate aRate, TrackTicks aStart, MediaSegment* aSegment); /** * Append media data to a track. Ownership of aSegment remains with the caller, * but aSegment is emptied. */ void AppendToTrack(TrackID aID, MediaSegment* aSegment); /** * Returns true if the buffer currently has enough data. */ bool HaveEnoughBuffered(TrackID aID); /** * Ensures that aSignalRunnable will be dispatched to aSignalThread * when we don't have enough buffered data in the track (which could be * immediately). */ void DispatchWhenNotEnoughBuffered(TrackID aID, nsIThread* aSignalThread, nsIRunnable* aSignalRunnable); /** * Indicate that a track has ended. Do not do any more API calls * affecting this track. */ void EndTrack(TrackID aID); /** * Indicate that no tracks will be added starting before time aKnownTime. * aKnownTime must be >= its value at the last call to AdvanceKnownTracksTime. */ void AdvanceKnownTracksTime(StreamTime aKnownTime); /** * Indicate that this stream should enter the "finished" state. All tracks * must have been ended via EndTrack. The finish time of the stream is * when all tracks have ended and when latest time sent to * AdvanceKnownTracksTime() has been reached. */ void Finish(); // XXX need a Reset API friend class MediaStreamGraphImpl; struct ThreadAndRunnable { void Init(nsIThread* aThread, nsIRunnable* aRunnable) { mThread = aThread; mRunnable = aRunnable; } nsCOMPtr mThread; nsCOMPtr mRunnable; }; enum TrackCommands { TRACK_CREATE = MediaStreamListener::TRACK_EVENT_CREATED, TRACK_END = MediaStreamListener::TRACK_EVENT_ENDED }; /** * Data for each track that hasn't ended. */ struct TrackData { TrackID mID; TrackRate mRate; TrackTicks mStart; // Each time the track updates are flushed to the media graph thread, // this is cleared. uint32_t mCommands; // Each time the track updates are flushed to the media graph thread, // the segment buffer is emptied. nsAutoPtr mData; nsTArray mDispatchWhenNotEnough; bool mHaveEnough; }; protected: TrackData* FindDataForTrack(TrackID aID) { for (uint32_t i = 0; i < mUpdateTracks.Length(); ++i) { if (mUpdateTracks[i].mID == aID) { return &mUpdateTracks[i]; } } NS_ERROR("Bad track ID!"); return nullptr; } // Media stream graph thread only MediaStreamListener::Consumption mLastConsumptionState; // This must be acquired *before* MediaStreamGraphImpl's lock, if they are // held together. Mutex mMutex; // protected by mMutex StreamTime mUpdateKnownTracksTime; nsTArray mUpdateTracks; bool mPullEnabled; bool mUpdateFinished; bool mDestroyed; }; /** * Represents a connection between a ProcessedMediaStream and one of its * input streams. * We make these refcounted so that stream-related messages with MediaInputPort* * pointers can be sent to the main thread safely. * * When a port's source or destination stream dies, the stream's DestroyImpl * calls MediaInputPort::Disconnect to disconnect the port from * the source and destination streams. * * The lifetimes of MediaInputPort are controlled from the main thread. * The media graph adds a reference to the port. When a MediaInputPort is no * longer needed, main-thread code sends a Destroy message for the port and * clears its reference (the last main-thread reference to the object). When * the Destroy message is processed on the graph manager thread we disconnect * the port and drop the graph's reference, destroying the object. */ class MediaInputPort { public: NS_INLINE_DECL_THREADSAFE_REFCOUNTING(MediaInputPort) /** * The FLAG_BLOCK_INPUT and FLAG_BLOCK_OUTPUT flags can be used to control * exactly how the blocking statuses of the input and output streams affect * each other. */ enum { // When set, blocking on the input stream forces blocking on the output // stream. FLAG_BLOCK_INPUT = 0x01, // When set, blocking on the output stream forces blocking on the input // stream. FLAG_BLOCK_OUTPUT = 0x02 }; // Do not call this constructor directly. Instead call aDest->AllocateInputPort. MediaInputPort(MediaStream* aSource, ProcessedMediaStream* aDest, uint32_t aFlags) : mSource(aSource) , mDest(aDest) , mFlags(aFlags) { MOZ_COUNT_CTOR(MediaInputPort); } ~MediaInputPort() { MOZ_COUNT_DTOR(MediaInputPort); } // Called on graph manager thread // Do not call these from outside MediaStreamGraph.cpp! void Init(); // Called during message processing to trigger removal of this stream. void Disconnect(); // Control API /** * Disconnects and destroys the port. The caller must not reference this * object again. */ void Destroy(); // Any thread MediaStream* GetSource() { return mSource; } ProcessedMediaStream* GetDestination() { return mDest; } // Call on graph manager thread struct InputInterval { GraphTime mStart; GraphTime mEnd; bool mInputIsBlocked; }; // Find the next time interval starting at or after aTime during which // mDest is not blocked and mSource's blocking status does not change. InputInterval GetNextInputInterval(GraphTime aTime); /** * Returns the graph that owns this port. */ MediaStreamGraphImpl* GraphImpl(); MediaStreamGraph* Graph(); protected: friend class MediaStreamGraphImpl; friend class MediaStream; friend class ProcessedMediaStream; // Never modified after Init() MediaStream* mSource; ProcessedMediaStream* mDest; uint32_t mFlags; }; /** * This stream processes zero or more input streams in parallel to produce * its output. The details of how the output is produced are handled by * subclasses overriding the ProduceOutput method. */ class ProcessedMediaStream : public MediaStream { public: ProcessedMediaStream(nsDOMMediaStream* aWrapper) : MediaStream(aWrapper), mAutofinish(false), mInCycle(false) {} // Control API. /** * Allocates a new input port attached to source aStream. * This stream can be removed by calling MediaInputPort::Remove(). */ MediaInputPort* AllocateInputPort(MediaStream* aStream, uint32_t aFlags = 0); /** * Force this stream into the finished state. */ void Finish(); /** * Set the autofinish flag on this stream (defaults to false). When this flag * is set, and all input streams are in the finished state (including if there * are no input streams), this stream automatically enters the finished state. */ void SetAutofinish(bool aAutofinish); virtual ProcessedMediaStream* AsProcessedStream() { return this; } friend class MediaStreamGraphImpl; // Do not call these from outside MediaStreamGraph.cpp! virtual void AddInput(MediaInputPort* aPort) { mInputs.AppendElement(aPort); } virtual void RemoveInput(MediaInputPort* aPort) { mInputs.RemoveElement(aPort); } bool HasInputPort(MediaInputPort* aPort) { return mInputs.Contains(aPort); } virtual void DestroyImpl(); /** * This gets called after we've computed the blocking states for all * streams (mBlocked is up to date up to mStateComputedTime). * Also, we've produced output for all streams up to this one. If this stream * is not in a cycle, then all its source streams have produced data. * Generate output up to mStateComputedTime. * This is called only on streams that have not finished. */ virtual void ProduceOutput(GraphTime aFrom, GraphTime aTo) = 0; void SetAutofinishImpl(bool aAutofinish) { mAutofinish = aAutofinish; } protected: // This state is all accessed only on the media graph thread. // The list of all inputs that are currently enabled or waiting to be enabled. nsTArray mInputs; bool mAutofinish; // True if and only if this stream is in a cycle. // Updated by MediaStreamGraphImpl::UpdateStreamOrder. bool mInCycle; }; /** * Initially, at least, we will have a singleton MediaStreamGraph per * process. */ class MediaStreamGraph { public: // Main thread only static MediaStreamGraph* GetInstance(); // Control API. /** * Create a stream that a media decoder (or some other source of * media data, such as a camera) can write to. */ SourceMediaStream* CreateInputStream(nsDOMMediaStream* aWrapper); /** * Create a stream that will form the union of the tracks of its input * streams. * A TrackUnionStream contains all the tracks of all its input streams. * Adding a new input stream makes that stream's tracks immediately appear as new * tracks starting at the time the input stream was added. * Removing an input stream makes the output tracks corresponding to the * removed tracks immediately end. * For each added track, the track ID of the output track is the track ID * of the input track or one plus the maximum ID of all previously added * tracks, whichever is greater. * TODO at some point we will probably need to add API to select * particular tracks of each input stream. */ ProcessedMediaStream* CreateTrackUnionStream(nsDOMMediaStream* aWrapper); /** * Returns the number of graph updates sent. This can be used to track * whether a given update has been processed by the graph thread and reflected * in main-thread stream state. */ int64_t GetCurrentGraphUpdateIndex() { return mGraphUpdatesSent; } /** * Media graph thread only. * Dispatches a runnable that will run on the main thread after all * main-thread stream state has been next updated. * Should only be called during MediaStreamListener callbacks. */ void DispatchToMainThreadAfterStreamStateUpdate(nsIRunnable* aRunnable) { mPendingUpdateRunnables.AppendElement(aRunnable); } protected: MediaStreamGraph() : mGraphUpdatesSent(1) { MOZ_COUNT_CTOR(MediaStreamGraph); } ~MediaStreamGraph() { MOZ_COUNT_DTOR(MediaStreamGraph); } // Media graph thread only nsTArray > mPendingUpdateRunnables; // Main thread only // The number of updates we have sent to the media graph thread. We start // this at 1 just to ensure that 0 is usable as a special value. int64_t mGraphUpdatesSent; }; } #endif /* MOZILLA_MEDIASTREAMGRAPH_H_ */