commit | 262d9cca089d8801122d9ffdade478a8dbd590f2 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Henrik Boström <hbos@webrtc.org> | Mon Nov 07 13:26:08 2022 |
committer | WebRTC LUCI CQ <webrtc-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> | Mon Nov 07 17:20:30 2022 |
tree | 129dc2db339d417edb7282585cc24eee3040426e | |
parent | 0e2cf6cc013f66ece390bce0c5bcd64e4fc5666d [diff] |
[Stats] Fix outbound-rtp.active bug in SVC. The code for determining outbound-rtp.active assumed, as the spec says, that we have one RtpEncodingParameters per RTP stream. Unfortunately SVC is currently implemented as one RtpEncodingParameters per SVC layer. This causes a discrepency where we do correctly only have one outbound-rtp stats object, but the lookup to check whether or not we are "active" needs to look at more than a single encoding. The bug is that if SVC layers are {inactive, active, active} then stats reports outbound-rtp.active: false. With this fix, active: true is reported if ANY of the SVC layers are active. For singlecast or simulcast this CL has no change in behavior. In these cases we have the same number of outbound-rtp and encodings and a simple ssrc lookup does work. The fix is exercised by unit tests and has also manually been confirmed: - Singlecast tested by https://jsfiddle.net/henbos/nvd6p4j1/. - Simulcast tested by https://crbug.com/webrtc/14628#c11. - SVC tested by Google Meet and chrome://webrtc-internals/. Bug: webrtc:14628 Change-Id: Ib89945caf29c8f4b85dd8a1120dcf8279296e4a3 Reviewed-on: https://webrtc-review.googlesource.com/c/src/+/282222 Reviewed-by: Harald Alvestrand <hta@webrtc.org> Commit-Queue: Henrik Boström <hbos@webrtc.org> Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/main@{#38569}
WebRTC is a free, open software project that provides browsers and mobile applications with Real-Time Communications (RTC) capabilities via simple APIs. The WebRTC components have been optimized to best serve this purpose.
Our mission: To enable rich, high-quality RTC applications to be developed for the browser, mobile platforms, and IoT devices, and allow them all to communicate via a common set of protocols.
The WebRTC initiative is a project supported by Google, Mozilla and Opera, amongst others.
See here for instructions on how to get started developing with the native code.
Authoritative list of directories that contain the native API header files.