With selected_sfd being protected by in_lock, we pretty much have to
hold at least in_lock everywhere, and end up requiring both locks in
many places. The distinction has become pointless.
Change-Id: Ic0ad976c2d68d9639b9434da7f0e6e9c0d84c185
Protect selected_sfd with in_lock.
Protect RTCP sending with in_lock and out_lock as appropriate.
Has the odd side effect of RTCP reports expected in tests to be sent one
packet later than before.
Closes#1966
Probably fixes#1927
Change-Id: I225b43dff8e8fbb938d3be6aad50249997615d77
Remove the actual hash and just keep a linked list. Always move most
recently used entries to the front of the list, which also obsoletes
tracking the last used time stamp.
Change-Id: Id277499228b538dd013a4442e9b5c5a4d247ff15
Extend PT tracker to not just track the most used PT, but also which PT
has been used last. Use a simple circular array.
Use this new tracking to determine whether a DTX buffer should remain
active. The "most used PT" approach isn't reliable for this, as it leads
to a DTX buffer restarting only after the PT has become the "most used,"
so only after about 10 packets. Meanwhile a newly appearing SSRC would
have a new DTX buffer active immediately. Being strict about which PT
was used last resolves this inconsistency.
Change-Id: If912e4d10e6737a82f6adc0b19d502075aa18a93
The GLib slice allocator has been obsoleted. Having a mixture of two
allocators can lead to hidden issues on systems that use different
implementations. Take the leap and replace everything with g_new/g_free.
Change-Id: I025c8383ef47b2c2472573360407fd6a6ca339b3
Make the macro return the appropriate pointer type, and make sure the
free function takes an argument of the same type. This also eliminates
some boilerplate type-casting code.
Change-Id: I3094271fa2c53ec93b9ff9f837d461cf422e0f12
Add support for simplified G.107 formula, with math changed to
fixed-point. Retain legacy formula as an option for backwards
compatibility.
Change-Id: I999fc7de7be1407876c201c251538cea72b04008
In the file implementations follow the rules:
1. Firstly goes the correlated header file, then one empty row.
2. Secondly go system headers, so in angle-brackets, then one empty row.
3. Thirdly, go custom header files, so in double quotes,
then one empty row.
4. If there is "xt_RTPENGINE.h", it's mentioned next, but separately,
then one empty row.
5. If there are pre-processor definitions, they are added.
6. And eventually at least one empty row before the code.
In some situations it's allowed to step aside from the rules,
when inclusions are dependent on each other, so on the sequence,
and also possibly on some inline objects definitions, but if possible
to follow the rules, it's being done.
Change-Id: Ie512a970e230fe202398656d1942e8874bb14cd9
Start using the media subscriptions model
(based on newly introduced `media_subscription` objects)
in scope of `hunt_ssrc()`.
Change-Id: I08c7292e0d73a486e25004358de91a3414ce886a
Distinguish between two different types of "gauge" type metrics: Actual
gauges which (at least conceptually) have a single continuous value, and
metrics which are comprised of discretely sampled values, possibly from
multiple sources.
Real gauges with continuous values don't have mean/average/deviation
values directly associated with them, as calculating these requires
sampling or some other analysis.
Sampled metrics on the other hand do have these associated values.
Clarify which function does what and where each value comes from.
Change-Id: Iff5dd844b70ff70979b1b8c84dc7734d44b3da20
This fixes the payload counts not being tracked correctly when payload
types repeat after the tracker rolls over.
Change-Id: I16208ef73f3af3b051b96541a4c145b323cef7b2
Keep a running lifetime total of all "gauge" type metrics. Also track
the square of the sums of all "gauge" type metrics in order to determine
the standard deviation.
Change-Id: I23f60774a6421636f1a913674c7d1b54a1c5f702
Perform reverse SSRC mapping even if output media is not known, and use
the appropriate media side when looking up SSRCs for received RTCP
timestamps.
closes#1298
Change-Id: Ifa5a982163bf7b0510ffc2a92ae25995d1adb888
Complete overhaul of the codec handling code:
*) obsolete flags `asymmetric codecs`, `symmetric codecs`, `reorder
codecs`
*) support proper codec offer/answer
*) split codec manipulation (strip/offer/accept/etc) into separate
functions for clarity and better code maintenance
*) fully update codec handlers in both directions after an answer
*) explicit allocation and handling of codecs and payload types in a
codec_store object
*) improve codec matchup logic during answer
*) more explicit handling of supplemental codecs (CN/DTMF)
*) remove now obsolete hacks for handling certain use cases
Change-Id: I996705ba8fe339524c2f70e6bb0fd854f9a1f4fb
This solves problems when the same SSRC is looped through the same call
multiple times in different mono/dialogues, with different parameters.
Change-Id: I1d033cb1f012574d82b5bcbfffe11eb5f983cfd8