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PulseVideo

Allows multiplexing access to webcams such that more than one application can read video from a single piece of hardware at a time.

Features:

  • Multiplexes access to video devices - applications no longer need to fight over access to /dev/video0.

  • Robust

    • Each stream runs in its own process so a problem with one stream will not affect others.

    • Clients can automatically recover if the server crashes with minimal interruption.

  • Fast - single or possibly zero-copy full frame video using FD passing. No additional copies for each additional connected client.

  • Zero cost when not in used - relies on DBus activation so can be started on-demand.

  • Simple wire format - It should be easy to implement a client with no dependencies on GStreamer or GLib.

  • Secure to use between security domains[1] - designed for inter-container video transfer.

[1]: (with memfd, in theory)

Build & Run

Dependencies

pulsevideo is intended to be buildable and runnable on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and later. This means that it depends on GStreamer >1.2 and Vala >0.22. See .travis.yml for a list of apt-getable dependencies.

Build and install

make
make install

Run

Start pulsevideo server (defaults on using v4l2src device=/dev/video0 in 720p30):

pulsevideo

Start pulsevideo with a custom pipeline and custom caps:

pulsevideo --source-pipeline="videotestsrc is-live=true" --caps="video/x-raw, format=I420, width=320, height=240, framerate=25/1"

Show stream on screen:

gst-launch-1.0 pulsevideosrc ! queue ! videoconvert ! xvimagesink

Design

  • Server written in vala using GStreamer
  • GStreamer elements written in C
  • Uses DBus for discovery, activation and negotiation.
  • Uses temporary files, mmap and FD passing for zero-copy video transfer hidden behind GStreamer allocators, payloaders and depayloaders. See this GStreamer lightning talk for more information.

A client connects to a stream by calling com.stbtester.VideoSource.attach. This returns a unix domain socket over which the video stream will be sent. Multiple clients can connect and they will all be sent the same video stream.

We don't actually send the video data directly over the socket. Instead each video frame is written into a memfd[2] and the file description is sent over the unix domain socket using the SCM_RIGHTS mechanism. These video frames can then be mmaped by the clients. If the GStreamer video-source supports using downstream allocators this enables zero-copy video, otherwise a single-copy is still required, although no additional copies are required for each additional client.

A client will attempt to reconnect if the server shuts down the connection before sending EOS downstream. This offers an oppertunity to renegotiate and in combination with DBus activation makes clients robust to pulsevideo servers crashing or dieing for any other reason. This allows us to include a watchdog element in pulsevideo itself to kill the process if video stops flowing for any reason, safe in the knowledge that it will recover if possible.

A pulsevideo server exposes an object on the bus with a bus name like com.stbtester.VideoSource.XXXX. This service provides an object at /com/stbtester/VideoSource/XXXX that implements the com.stbtester.VideoSource interface.

It is expected that pulsevideo will be launched by DBus activation when required. This means that when not required pulsevideo doesn't need to be running, and if it crashes it will be automatically restarted when the client reconnects.

TODO: Document wire format

[2]: For systems that don't support memfd[3] an unlinked temporary file on tmpfs is used. This isn't secure however so should not be used between security domains.

[3]: memfd support is not actually implemented yet in pulsevideo, so actually we currently always "fall-back" to temporary files.

TODO

  • Rename VideoSource to pulsevideo everywhere.
  • Implement memfd support and add "insecure=false" property.
  • Protocol documentation - this should be independantly implementable without requiring that clients use GStreamer.
  • Push some of the elements upstream into GStreamer.
  • Don't require specifying caps server-side. Have clients ask for caps and choose a format that satisfies them all.

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Allows multiplexing access to webcams such that more than one application can read video from a single piece of hardware at a time.

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