Remove the SynchronousMediaCodecBufferEnqueuer interface
since we only keep the AsynchronousMediaCodecBufferEnqueuer
implementation.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 333701115
Retry AudioTrack init and write for 100ms before
giving up and aborting playback.
This was tested by throwing every 2 init/write and
making sure playback did not stopped.
#exo-offload
PiperOrigin-RevId: 333536841
This issue has been observed on a test app stress
testing setEndOfStream.
The issue has not been observed on ExoPlayer,
probably due to timing differences, but it is fixed
preventively.
#exo-offload
PiperOrigin-RevId: 333472136
This seems to be an exact copy of sample.adts. Update the test to use
the same sample but just output to a different dump file.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 333469714
We have a workaround for uneven sample stream durarions in playlists that
assumes a renderer allows playback if it's reading ahead or waiting for
the next stream.
652c2f9c18 changed this logic to no longer require to
wait until the next stream is prepared due to a change in how we advance
media periods in the queue. However, the code falsely still requires the
next stream to exist (even if it's not prepared). This can cause a stuck
buffering state when the difference in the duration of the streams is more
than what we buffer ahead because we never create the next stream in such
a case.
Note: DefaultMediaClock.shouldUseStandaloneClock has roughly the same logic
and also doesn't require the next stream to be present.
Also fix a test that seemed to rely on this stuck buffering case to test
stuck buffering detection. Changed the test to not read the end of stream
to ensure it runs into the desired stuck buffering case.
Issue:#7943
PiperOrigin-RevId: 333050285
This allows to use the same logic from multiple places without duplicating
it, encapsulates in its logical place, and allows to change the available
segments based on the new availabilityTimeOffset value.
The overall effect of this change is a no-op.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 333044186
Without this patch, playback would be frozen indefinitely
until the user manually pauses and unpauses it.
This has the side effect of disabling offload until
the next stop due to the workaround of
disabling offload when it encounters a failure.
As an audio server crash is considered very
infrequent, especially in stable conditions like
an audio only playback, it is unlikely that disabling
offload is an issue.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 332857094
I didn't copy-paste the whole of
https://github.com/google/guava/wiki/UsingProGuardWithGuava because
this line seems relevant based on our current usage.
Lots of that file seems to relate to classes that are strongly
discouraged on Android:
https://github.com/google/guava/wiki/Android#specifics
I've only added this to the `common` module, since everyone that uses
ExoPlayer must depend on that. This avoids duplicating this line into
every module that has a Guava dependency.
Also remove some other warning suppressions that are defined in both
`core` and `common`.
Issue: #7904
PiperOrigin-RevId: 332203086
This value is needed to figure out the last available segment for
low-latency live streaming. It may be present in each BaseURL tag
and each SegmentList or SegmentTemplate, with the latter one taking
precedence.
The value is saved as part of MultiSegmentBase where it will be used
to retrieve the last available segment index in future changes.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 331809871
This test is intended to check that DefaultLoadControl will cause
playback to fail as "stuck buffering" rather than OOM-ing, in the
case that its target buffer size is reached and playback still
hasn't started.
Unfortunately, the target buffer size is ~130MB, and when running
on some setups an OOM actually ends up happening before this much
memory is allocated.
This change makes the target buffer size much smaller to avoid the
problem.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 331748208
This may remove available memory from other tests running in the same
process. Instead, create the huge buffer when needed so it can be GCed
immediately.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 330960844