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GB28181: Remove unused RTSP protocol stack.
This commit is contained in:
parent
912cd6a59c
commit
b452144fb7
4 changed files with 6 additions and 1650 deletions
2
trunk/configure
vendored
2
trunk/configure
vendored
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@ -226,7 +226,7 @@ MODULE_DEPENDS=("CORE" "KERNEL")
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ModuleLibIncs=(${SRS_OBJS_DIR} ${LibSTRoot} ${LibSSLRoot})
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MODULE_FILES=("srs_protocol_amf0" "srs_protocol_io" "srs_protocol_conn" "srs_protocol_rtmp_handshake"
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"srs_protocol_rtmp_stack" "srs_protocol_utility" "srs_protocol_rtmp_msg_array" "srs_protocol_stream"
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"srs_protocol_raw_avc" "srs_protocol_rtsp_stack" "srs_protocol_http_stack" "srs_protocol_kbps" "srs_protocol_json"
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"srs_protocol_raw_avc" "srs_protocol_http_stack" "srs_protocol_kbps" "srs_protocol_json"
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"srs_protocol_format" "srs_protocol_log" "srs_protocol_st" "srs_protocol_http_client"
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"srs_protocol_http_conn" "srs_protocol_rtmp_conn" "srs_protocol_protobuf")
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if [[ $SRS_SRT == YES ]]; then
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@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ void srs_build_features(stringstream& ss)
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SRS_CHECK_FEATURE3(!string(source).empty(), "source", source, ss);
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int nn_vhosts = 0;
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bool rtsp = false, forward = false, ingest = false, edge = false, hls = false, dvr = false, flv = false;
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bool gb28181 = false, forward = false, ingest = false, edge = false, hls = false, dvr = false, flv = false;
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bool hooks = false, dash = false, hds = false, exec = false, transcode = false, security = false;
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bool flv2 = false, oc = false;
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@ -80,10 +80,10 @@ void srs_build_features(stringstream& ss)
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for (int i = 0; i < (int)root->directives.size() && i < 128; i++) {
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SrsConfDirective* conf = root->at(i);
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if (!rtsp && conf->is_stream_caster() && _srs_config->get_stream_caster_enabled(conf)) {
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if (!gb28181 && conf->is_stream_caster() && _srs_config->get_stream_caster_enabled(conf)) {
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string engine = _srs_config->get_stream_caster_engine(conf);
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if (engine == "rtsp") {
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rtsp = true;
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if (engine == "gb28181") {
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gb28181 = true;
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} else if (engine == "flv") {
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flv2 = true;
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}
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@ -144,7 +144,7 @@ void srs_build_features(stringstream& ss)
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}
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SRS_CHECK_FEATURE2(nn_vhosts, "vhosts", ss);
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SRS_CHECK_FEATURE(rtsp, ss);
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SRS_CHECK_FEATURE(gb28181, ss);
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SRS_CHECK_FEATURE(flv2, ss);
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SRS_CHECK_FEATURE(forward, ss);
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SRS_CHECK_FEATURE(ingest, ss);
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File diff suppressed because it is too large
Load diff
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@ -1,561 +0,0 @@
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//
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// Copyright (c) 2013-2022 The SRS Authors
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//
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT or MulanPSL-2.0
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//
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#ifndef SRS_PROTOCOL_RTSP_HPP
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#define SRS_PROTOCOL_RTSP_HPP
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#include <srs_core.hpp>
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#include <string>
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#include <sstream>
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#include <srs_kernel_consts.hpp>
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class SrsBuffer;
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class SrsSimpleStream;
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class SrsAudioFrame;
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class ISrsProtocolReadWriter;
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// From rtsp specification
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// CR = <US-ASCII CR, carriage return (13)>
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#define SRS_RTSP_CR SRS_CONSTS_CR // 0x0D
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// LF = <US-ASCII LF, linefeed (10)>
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#define SRS_RTSP_LF SRS_CONSTS_LF // 0x0A
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// SP = <US-ASCII SP, space (32)>
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#define SRS_RTSP_SP ' ' // 0x20
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// 4 RTSP Message, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 37
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// Lines are terminated by CRLF, but
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// receivers should be prepared to also interpret CR and LF by
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// themselves as line terminators.
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#define SRS_RTSP_CRLF "\r\n" // 0x0D0A
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#define SRS_RTSP_CRLFCRLF "\r\n\r\n" // 0x0D0A0D0A
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// RTSP token
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#define SRS_RTSP_TOKEN_CSEQ "CSeq"
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#define SRS_RTSP_TOKEN_PUBLIC "Public"
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#define SRS_RTSP_TOKEN_CONTENT_TYPE "Content-Type"
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#define SRS_RTSP_TOKEN_CONTENT_LENGTH "Content-Length"
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#define SRS_RTSP_TOKEN_TRANSPORT "Transport"
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#define SRS_RTSP_TOKEN_SESSION "Session"
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// RTSP methods
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#define SRS_METHOD_OPTIONS "OPTIONS"
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#define SRS_METHOD_DESCRIBE "DESCRIBE"
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#define SRS_METHOD_ANNOUNCE "ANNOUNCE"
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#define SRS_METHOD_SETUP "SETUP"
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#define SRS_METHOD_PLAY "PLAY"
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#define SRS_METHOD_PAUSE "PAUSE"
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#define SRS_METHOD_TEARDOWN "TEARDOWN"
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#define SRS_METHOD_GET_PARAMETER "GET_PARAMETER"
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#define SRS_METHOD_SET_PARAMETER "SET_PARAMETER"
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#define SRS_METHOD_REDIRECT "REDIRECT"
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#define SRS_METHOD_RECORD "RECORD"
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// Embedded (Interleaved) Binary Data
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// RTSP-Version
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#define SRS_RTSP_VERSION "RTSP/1.0"
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// The rtsp sdp parse state.
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enum SrsRtspSdpState
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{
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// Other sdp properties.
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SrsRtspSdpStateOthers,
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// Parse sdp audio state.
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SrsRtspSdpStateAudio,
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// Parse sdp video state.
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SrsRtspSdpStateVideo,
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};
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// 10 Method Definitions, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 57
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// The method token indicates the method to be performed on the resource
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// identified by the Request-URI. The method is case-sensitive. New
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// methods may be defined in the future. Method names may not start with
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// a $ character (decimal 24) and must be a token. Methods are
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// summarized in Table 2.
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// Notes on Table 2: PAUSE is recommended, but not required in that a
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// fully functional server can be built that does not support this
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// method, for example, for live feeds. If a server does not support a
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// particular method, it MUST return "501 Not Implemented" and a client
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// SHOULD not try this method again for this server.
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enum SrsRtspMethod
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{
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SrsRtspMethodDescribe = 0x0001,
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SrsRtspMethodAnnounce = 0x0002,
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SrsRtspMethodGetParameter = 0x0004,
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SrsRtspMethodOptions = 0x0008,
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SrsRtspMethodPause = 0x0010,
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SrsRtspMethodPlay = 0x0020,
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SrsRtspMethodRecord = 0x0040,
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SrsRtspMethodRedirect = 0x0080,
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SrsRtspMethodSetup = 0x0100,
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SrsRtspMethodSetParameter = 0x0200,
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SrsRtspMethodTeardown = 0x0400,
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};
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// The state of rtsp token.
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enum SrsRtspTokenState
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{
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// Parse token failed, default state.
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SrsRtspTokenStateError = 100,
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// When SP follow the token.
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SrsRtspTokenStateNormal = 101,
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// When CRLF follow the token.
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SrsRtspTokenStateEOF = 102,
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};
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// The rtp packet.
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// 5. RTP Data Transfer Protocol, @see rfc3550-2003-rtp.pdf, page 12
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class SrsRtspPacket
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{
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public:
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// The version (V): 2 bits
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// This field identifies the version of RTP. The version defined by this specification is two (2).
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// (The value 1 is used by the first draft version of RTP and the value 0 is used by the protocol
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// initially implemented in the \vat" audio tool.)
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int8_t version; //2bits
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// The padding (P): 1 bit
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// If the padding bit is set, the packet contains one or more additional padding octets at the
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// end which are not part of the payload. The last octet of the padding contains a count of
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// how many padding octets should be ignored, including itself. Padding may be needed by
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// some encryption algorithms with fixed block sizes or for carrying several RTP packets in a
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// lower-layer protocol data unit.
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int8_t padding; //1bit
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// The extension (X): 1 bit
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// If the extension bit is set, the fixed header must be followed by exactly one header extension,
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// with a format defined in Section 5.3.1.
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int8_t extension; //1bit
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// The CSRC count (CC): 4 bits
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// The CSRC count contains the number of CSRC identifiers that follow the fixed header.
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int8_t csrc_count; //4bits
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// The marker (M): 1 bit
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// The interpretation of the marker is defined by a profile. It is intended to allow significant
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// events such as frame boundaries to be marked in the packet stream. A profile may define
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// additional marker bits or specify that there is no marker bit by changing the number of bits
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// in the payload type field (see Section 5.3).
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int8_t marker; //1bit
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// The payload type (PT): 7 bits
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// This field identifies the format of the RTP payload and determines its interpretation by the
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// application. A profile may specify a default static mapping of payload type codes to payload
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// formats. Additional payload type codes may be defined dynamically through non-RTP means
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// (see Section 3). A set of default mappings for audio and video is specified in the companion
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// RFC 3551 [1]. An RTP source may change the payload type during a session, but this field
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// should not be used for multiplexing separate media streams (see Section 5.2).
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// A receiver must ignore packets with payload types that it does not understand.
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int8_t payload_type; //7bits
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// The sequence number: 16 bits
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// The sequence number increments by one for each RTP data packet sent, and may be used
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// by the receiver to detect packet loss and to restore packet sequence. The initial value of the
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// sequence number should be random (unpredictable) to make known-plaintext attacks on
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// encryption more dicult, even if the source itself does not encrypt according to the method
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// in Section 9.1, because the packets may flow through a translator that does. Techniques for
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// choosing unpredictable numbers are discussed in [17].
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uint16_t sequence_number; //16bits
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// The timestamp: 32 bits
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// The timestamp reflects the sampling instant of the first octet in the RTP data packet. The
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// sampling instant must be derived from a clock that increments monotonically and linearly
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// in time to allow synchronization and jitter calculations (see Section 6.4.1). The resolution
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// of the clock must be sucient for the desired synchronization accuracy and for measuring
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// packet arrival jitter (one tick per video frame is typically not sucient). The clock frequency
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// is dependent on the format of data carried as payload and is specified statically in the profile
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// or payload format specification that defines the format, or may be specified dynamically for
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// payload formats defined through non-RTP means. If RTP packets are generated periodically,
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// The nominal sampling instant as determined from the sampling clock is to be used, not a
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// reading of the system clock. As an example, for fixed-rate audio the timestamp clock would
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// likely increment by one for each sampling period. If an audio application reads blocks covering
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// 160 sampling periods from the input device, the timestamp would be increased by 160 for
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// each such block, regardless of whether the block is transmitted in a packet or dropped as
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// silent.
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//
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// The initial value of the timestamp should be random, as for the sequence number. Several
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// consecutive RTP packets will have equal timestamps if they are (logically) generated at once,
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// e.g., belong to the same video frame. Consecutive RTP packets may contain timestamps that
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// are not monotonic if the data is not transmitted in the order it was sampled, as in the case
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// of MPEG interpolated video frames. (The sequence numbers of the packets as transmitted
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// will still be monotonic.)
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//
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// RTP timestamps from different media streams may advance at different rates and usually
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// have independent, random offsets. Therefore, although these timestamps are sucient to
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// reconstruct the timing of a single stream, directly comparing RTP timestamps from different
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// media is not effective for synchronization. Instead, for each medium the RTP timestamp
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// is related to the sampling instant by pairing it with a timestamp from a reference clock
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// (wallclock) that represents the time when the data corresponding to the RTP timestamp was
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// sampled. The reference clock is shared by all media to be synchronized. The timestamp
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// pairs are not transmitted in every data packet, but at a lower rate in RTCP SR packets as
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// described in Section 6.4.
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//
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// The sampling instant is chosen as the point of reference for the RTP timestamp because it is
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// known to the transmitting endpoint and has a common definition for all media, independent
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// of encoding delays or other processing. The purpose is to allow synchronized presentation of
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// all media sampled at the same time.
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//
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// Applications transmitting stored data rather than data sampled in real time typically use a
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// virtual presentation timeline derived from wallclock time to determine when the next frame
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// or other unit of each medium in the stored data should be presented. In this case, the RTP
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// timestamp would reflect the presentation time for each unit. That is, the RTP timestamp for
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// each unit would be related to the wallclock time at which the unit becomes current on the
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// virtual presentation timeline. Actual presentation occurs some time later as determined by
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// The receiver.
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//
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// An example describing live audio narration of prerecorded video illustrates the significance
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// of choosing the sampling instant as the reference point. In this scenario, the video would
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// be presented locally for the narrator to view and would be simultaneously transmitted using
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// RTP. The sampling instant" of a video frame transmitted in RTP would be established by
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// referencing its timestamp to the wallclock time when that video frame was presented to the
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// narrator. The sampling instant for the audio RTP packets containing the narrator's speech
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// would be established by referencing the same wallclock time when the audio was sampled.
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// The audio and video may even be transmitted by different hosts if the reference clocks on
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// The two hosts are synchronized by some means such as NTP. A receiver can then synchronize
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// presentation of the audio and video packets by relating their RTP timestamps using the
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// timestamp pairs in RTCP SR packets.
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uint32_t timestamp; //32bits
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// The SSRC: 32 bits
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// The SSRC field identifies the synchronization source. This identifier should be chosen
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// randomly, with the intent that no two synchronization sources within the same RTP session
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// will have the same SSRC identifier. An example algorithm for generating a random identifier
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// is presented in Appendix A.6. Although the probability of multiple sources choosing the same
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// identifier is low, all RTP implementations must be prepared to detect and resolve collisions.
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// Section 8 describes the probability of collision along with a mechanism for resolving collisions
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// and detecting RTP-level forwarding loops based on the uniqueness of the SSRC identifier. If
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// a source changes its source transport address, it must also choose a new SSRC identifier to
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// avoid being interpreted as a looped source (see Section 8.2).
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uint32_t ssrc; //32bits
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// The payload.
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SrsSimpleStream* payload;
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// Whether transport in chunked payload.
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bool chunked;
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// Whether message is completed.
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// normal message always completed.
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// while chunked completed when the last chunk arriaved.
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bool completed;
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// The audio samples, one rtp packets may contains multiple audio samples.
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SrsAudioFrame* audio;
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public:
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SrsRtspPacket();
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virtual ~SrsRtspPacket();
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public:
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// copy the header from src.
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virtual void copy(SrsRtspPacket* src);
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// reap the src to this packet, reap the payload.
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virtual void reap(SrsRtspPacket* src);
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// decode rtp packet from stream.
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virtual srs_error_t decode(SrsBuffer* stream);
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private:
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virtual srs_error_t decode_97(SrsBuffer* stream);
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virtual srs_error_t decode_96(SrsBuffer* stream);
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};
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// The sdp in announce, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 159
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// Appendix C: Use of SDP for RTSP Session Descriptions
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// The Session Description Protocol (SDP, RFC 2327 [6]) may be used to
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// describe streams or presentations in RTSP.
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class SrsRtspSdp
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{
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private:
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SrsRtspSdpState state;
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public:
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// The version of sdp.
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std::string version;
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// The owner/creator of sdp.
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std::string owner_username;
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std::string owner_session_id;
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std::string owner_session_version;
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std::string owner_network_type;
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std::string owner_address_type;
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std::string owner_address;
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// The session name of sdp.
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std::string session_name;
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// The connection info of sdp.
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std::string connection_network_type;
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std::string connection_address_type;
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std::string connection_address;
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// The tool attribute of sdp.
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std::string tool;
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// The video attribute of sdp.
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std::string video_port;
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std::string video_protocol;
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std::string video_transport_format;
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std::string video_bandwidth_kbps;
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std::string video_codec;
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std::string video_sample_rate;
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std::string video_stream_id;
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// The fmtp
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std::string video_packetization_mode;
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std::string video_sps; // sequence header: sps.
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std::string video_pps; // sequence header: pps.
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// The audio attribute of sdp.
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std::string audio_port;
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std::string audio_protocol;
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std::string audio_transport_format;
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std::string audio_bandwidth_kbps;
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std::string audio_codec;
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std::string audio_sample_rate;
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std::string audio_channel;
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std::string audio_stream_id;
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// The fmtp
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std::string audio_profile_level_id;
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std::string audio_mode;
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std::string audio_size_length;
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std::string audio_index_length;
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std::string audio_index_delta_length;
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std::string audio_sh; // sequence header.
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public:
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SrsRtspSdp();
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virtual ~SrsRtspSdp();
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public:
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// Parse a line of token for sdp.
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virtual srs_error_t parse(std::string token);
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private:
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// generally, the fmtp is the sequence header for video or audio.
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virtual srs_error_t parse_fmtp_attribute(std::string attr);
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// generally, the control is the stream info for video or audio.
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virtual srs_error_t parse_control_attribute(std::string attr);
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// decode the string by base64.
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virtual std::string base64_decode(std::string value);
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};
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// The rtsp transport.
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// 12.39 Transport, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 115
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// This request header indicates which transport protocol is to be used
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// and configures its parameters such as destination address,
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// compression, multicast time-to-live and destination port for a single
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// stream. It sets those values not already determined by a presentation
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// description.
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class SrsRtspTransport
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{
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public:
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// The syntax for the transport specifier is
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// transport/profile/lower-transport
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std::string transport;
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std::string profile;
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std::string lower_transport;
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// unicast | multicast
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// mutually exclusive indication of whether unicast or multicast
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// delivery will be attempted. Default value is multicast.
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// Clients that are capable of handling both unicast and
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// multicast transmission MUST indicate such capability by
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// including two full transport-specs with separate parameters
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// For each.
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std::string cast_type;
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// The mode parameter indicates the methods to be supported for
|
||||
// this session. Valid values are PLAY and RECORD. If not
|
||||
// provided, the default is PLAY.
|
||||
std::string mode;
|
||||
// This parameter provides the unicast RTP/RTCP port pair on
|
||||
// which the client has chosen to receive media data and control
|
||||
// information. It is specified as a range, e.g.,
|
||||
// client_port=3456-3457.
|
||||
// where client will use port in:
|
||||
// [client_port_min, client_port_max)
|
||||
int client_port_min;
|
||||
int client_port_max;
|
||||
public:
|
||||
SrsRtspTransport();
|
||||
virtual ~SrsRtspTransport();
|
||||
public:
|
||||
// Parse a line of token for transport.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t parse(std::string attr);
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
// The rtsp request message.
|
||||
// 6 Request, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 39
|
||||
// A request message from a client to a server or vice versa includes,
|
||||
// within the first line of that message, the method to be applied to
|
||||
// The resource, the identifier of the resource, and the protocol
|
||||
// version in use.
|
||||
// Request = Request-Line ; Section 6.1
|
||||
// // ( general-header ; Section 5
|
||||
// | request-header ; Section 6.2
|
||||
// | entity-header ) ; Section 8.1
|
||||
// CRLF
|
||||
// [ message-body ] ; Section 4.3
|
||||
class SrsRtspRequest
|
||||
{
|
||||
public:
|
||||
// 6.1 Request Line
|
||||
// Request-Line = Method SP Request-URI SP RTSP-Version CRLF
|
||||
std::string method;
|
||||
std::string uri;
|
||||
std::string version;
|
||||
// 12.17 CSeq
|
||||
// The CSeq field specifies the sequence number for an RTSP requestresponse
|
||||
// pair. This field MUST be present in all requests and
|
||||
// responses. For every RTSP request containing the given sequence
|
||||
// number, there will be a corresponding response having the same
|
||||
// number. Any retransmitted request must contain the same sequence
|
||||
// number as the original (i.e. the sequence number is not incremented
|
||||
// For retransmissions of the same request).
|
||||
long seq;
|
||||
// 12.16 Content-Type, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 99
|
||||
// See [H14.18]. Note that the content types suitable for RTSP are
|
||||
// likely to be restricted in practice to presentation descriptions and
|
||||
// parameter-value types.
|
||||
std::string content_type;
|
||||
// 12.14 Content-Length, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 99
|
||||
// This field contains the length of the content of the method (i.e.
|
||||
// after the double CRLF following the last header). Unlike HTTP, it
|
||||
// MUST be included in all messages that carry content beyond the header
|
||||
// portion of the message. If it is missing, a default value of zero is
|
||||
// assumed. It is interpreted according to [H14.14].
|
||||
long content_length;
|
||||
// The session id.
|
||||
std::string session;
|
||||
|
||||
// The sdp in announce, NULL for no sdp.
|
||||
SrsRtspSdp* sdp;
|
||||
// The transport in setup, NULL for no transport.
|
||||
SrsRtspTransport* transport;
|
||||
// For setup message, parse the stream id from uri.
|
||||
int stream_id;
|
||||
public:
|
||||
SrsRtspRequest();
|
||||
virtual ~SrsRtspRequest();
|
||||
public:
|
||||
virtual bool is_options();
|
||||
virtual bool is_announce();
|
||||
virtual bool is_setup();
|
||||
virtual bool is_record();
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
// The rtsp response message.
|
||||
// 7 Response, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 43
|
||||
// [H6] applies except that HTTP-Version is replaced by RTSP-Version.
|
||||
// Also, RTSP defines additional status codes and does not define some
|
||||
// HTTP codes. The valid response codes and the methods they can be used
|
||||
// with are defined in Table 1.
|
||||
// After receiving and interpreting a request message, the recipient
|
||||
// responds with an RTSP response message.
|
||||
// Response = Status-Line ; Section 7.1
|
||||
// // ( general-header ; Section 5
|
||||
// | response-header ; Section 7.1.2
|
||||
// | entity-header ) ; Section 8.1
|
||||
// CRLF
|
||||
// [ message-body ] ; Section 4.3
|
||||
class SrsRtspResponse
|
||||
{
|
||||
public:
|
||||
// 7.1 Status-Line
|
||||
// The first line of a Response message is the Status-Line, consisting
|
||||
// of the protocol version followed by a numeric status code, and the
|
||||
// textual phrase associated with the status code, with each element
|
||||
// separated by SP characters. No CR or LF is allowed except in the
|
||||
// final CRLF sequence.
|
||||
// Status-Line = RTSP-Version SP Status-Code SP Reason-Phrase CRLF
|
||||
// @see about the version of rtsp, see SRS_RTSP_VERSION
|
||||
// @see about the status of rtsp, see SRS_CONSTS_RTSP_OK
|
||||
int status;
|
||||
// 12.17 CSeq, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 99
|
||||
// The CSeq field specifies the sequence number for an RTSP requestresponse
|
||||
// pair. This field MUST be present in all requests and
|
||||
// responses. For every RTSP request containing the given sequence
|
||||
// number, there will be a corresponding response having the same
|
||||
// number. Any retransmitted request must contain the same sequence
|
||||
// number as the original (i.e. the sequence number is not incremented
|
||||
// For retransmissions of the same request).
|
||||
long seq;
|
||||
// The session id.
|
||||
std::string session;
|
||||
public:
|
||||
SrsRtspResponse(int cseq);
|
||||
virtual ~SrsRtspResponse();
|
||||
public:
|
||||
// Encode message to string.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t encode(std::stringstream& ss);
|
||||
protected:
|
||||
// Sub classes override this to encode the headers.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t encode_header(std::stringstream& ss);
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
// 10.1 OPTIONS, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 59
|
||||
// The behavior is equivalent to that described in [H9.2]. An OPTIONS
|
||||
// request may be issued at any time, e.g., if the client is about to
|
||||
// try a nonstandard request. It does not influence server state.
|
||||
class SrsRtspOptionsResponse : public SrsRtspResponse
|
||||
{
|
||||
public:
|
||||
// Join of SrsRtspMethod
|
||||
SrsRtspMethod methods;
|
||||
public:
|
||||
SrsRtspOptionsResponse(int cseq);
|
||||
virtual ~SrsRtspOptionsResponse();
|
||||
protected:
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t encode_header(std::stringstream& ss);
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
// 10.4 SETUP, @see rfc2326-1998-rtsp.pdf, page 65
|
||||
// The SETUP request for a URI specifies the transport mechanism to be
|
||||
// used for the streamed media. A client can issue a SETUP request for a
|
||||
// stream that is already playing to change transport parameters, which
|
||||
// a server MAY allow. If it does not allow this, it MUST respond with
|
||||
// error "455 Method Not Valid In This State". For the benefit of any
|
||||
// intervening firewalls, a client must indicate the transport
|
||||
// parameters even if it has no influence over these parameters, for
|
||||
// example, where the server advertises a fixed multicast address.
|
||||
class SrsRtspSetupResponse : public SrsRtspResponse
|
||||
{
|
||||
public:
|
||||
// The client specified port.
|
||||
int client_port_min;
|
||||
int client_port_max;
|
||||
// The client will use the port in:
|
||||
// [local_port_min, local_port_max)
|
||||
int local_port_min;
|
||||
int local_port_max;
|
||||
// The session.
|
||||
std::string session;
|
||||
public:
|
||||
SrsRtspSetupResponse(int cseq);
|
||||
virtual ~SrsRtspSetupResponse();
|
||||
protected:
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t encode_header(std::stringstream& ss);
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
// The rtsp protocol stack to parse the rtsp packets.
|
||||
class SrsRtspStack
|
||||
{
|
||||
private:
|
||||
// The cached bytes buffer.
|
||||
SrsSimpleStream* buf;
|
||||
// The underlayer socket object, send/recv bytes.
|
||||
ISrsProtocolReadWriter* skt;
|
||||
public:
|
||||
SrsRtspStack(ISrsProtocolReadWriter* s);
|
||||
virtual ~SrsRtspStack();
|
||||
public:
|
||||
// Recv rtsp message from underlayer io.
|
||||
// @param preq the output rtsp request message, which user must free it.
|
||||
// @return an int error code.
|
||||
// ERROR_RTSP_REQUEST_HEADER_EOF indicates request header EOF.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t recv_message(SrsRtspRequest** preq);
|
||||
// Send rtsp message over underlayer io.
|
||||
// @param res the rtsp response message, which user should never free it.
|
||||
// @return an int error code.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t send_message(SrsRtspResponse* res);
|
||||
private:
|
||||
// Recv the rtsp message.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t do_recv_message(SrsRtspRequest* req);
|
||||
// Read a normal token from io, error when token state is not normal.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t recv_token_normal(std::string& token);
|
||||
// Read a normal token from io, error when token state is not eof.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t recv_token_eof(std::string& token);
|
||||
// Read the token util got eof, for example, to read the response status Reason-Phrase
|
||||
// @param pconsumed, output the token parsed length. NULL to ignore.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t recv_token_util_eof(std::string& token, int* pconsumed = NULL);
|
||||
// Read a token from io, split by SP, endswith CRLF:
|
||||
// token1 SP token2 SP ... tokenN CRLF
|
||||
// @param token, output the read token.
|
||||
// @param state, output the token parse state.
|
||||
// @param normal_ch, the char to indicates the normal token.
|
||||
// the SP use to indicates the normal token, @see SRS_RTSP_SP
|
||||
// the 0x00 use to ignore normal token flag. @see recv_token_util_eof
|
||||
// @param pconsumed, output the token parsed length. NULL to ignore.
|
||||
virtual srs_error_t recv_token(std::string& token, SrsRtspTokenState& state, char normal_ch = SRS_RTSP_SP, int* pconsumed = NULL);
|
||||
};
|
||||
|
||||
#endif
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue