This PR introduces a major refactoring to replace `SrsSharedPtrMessage`
with `SrsMediaPacket` throughout the SRS codebase, providing a more
unified and cleaner approach to media packet handling.
---------
Co-authored-by: OSSRS-AI <winlinam@gmail.com>
This PR modernizes the memory management architecture in SRS by
refactoring RTMP message handling to use shared pointers
(SrsSharedPtr<SrsMemoryBlock>) instead of manual memory management. This
change improves memory safety, reduces the risk of memory leaks, and
provides a cleaner abstraction for message payload handling.
* Introduced `SrsMemoryBlock`: A dedicated class for managing memory
buffers with size information
* Replaced manual memory management: `SrsCommonMessage` and
`SrsSharedPtrMessage` now use `SrsSharedPtr<SrsMemoryBlock>` instead of
raw pointers
* Updated `SrsRtpPacket`: Now uses `SrsSharedPtr<SrsMemoryBlock>` for
shared buffer management
---------
Co-authored-by: OSSRS-AI <winlinam@gmail.com>
**Introduce**
This pull request builds upon the foundation laid in
https://github.com/ossrs/srs/pull/4289 . While the previous work solely
implemented unidirectional HEVC support from RTMP to RTC, this
submission further enhances it by introducing support for the RTC to
RTMP direction.
**Usage**
Launch SRS with `rtc2rtmp.conf`
```bash
./objs/srs -c conf/rtc2rtmp.conf
```
**Push with WebRTC**
Upgrade browser to Chrome(136+) or Safari(18+), then open [WHIP
encoder](http://localhost:8080/players/whip.html?schema=http&&codec=hevc),
push stream with URL that enables HEVC by query string `codec=hevc`:
```bash
http://localhost:1985/rtc/v1/whip/?app=live&stream=livestream&codec=hevc
```
This query string `codec=hevc` is used to select the video codec, and
generate lines in the answer SDP.
```
m=video 9 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 49 123
a=rtpmap:49 H265/90000
```
The encoder log also show the codec:
```
Audio: opus, 48000HZ, channels: 2, pt: 111
Video: H265, 90000HZ, pt: 49
```
**Play with RTMP**
Play HEVC stream via RTMP.
```bash
ffplay -i rtmp://localhost/live/livestream
```
You will see the codec in logs:
```
Stream #0:0: Audio: aac (LC), 48000 Hz, stereo, fltp
Stream #0:1: Video: hevc (Main), yuv420p(tv, bt709), 320x240, 30 fps, 30 tbr, 1k tbn
```
You can also use [WHEP
player](http://localhost:8080/players/whep.html?schema=http&&codec=hevc)
to play the stream.
Important refactor with AI:
* [AI: Refactor packet cache for RTC frame
builder.](b8ffa1630e)
* [AI: Refactor the packet copy and free for
SrsRtcFrameBuilder](f3487b45d7)
* [AI: Refactor the frame detector for
SrsRtcFrameBuilder](4ffc1526b9)
* [AI: Refactor the packet_video_rtmp for
SrsRtcFrameBuilder](81f6aef4ed)
* [AI: Add utests for
SrsCodecPayload.codec](61eb1c0bfc)
* [AI: Add utests for VideoPacketCache in
SrsRtcFrameBuilder.](fd25480dfa)
* [AI: Add utests for VideoFrameDetector in
SrsRtcFrameBuilder.](b4aa977bbd)
* [AI: Add regression test for RTC2RTMP with
HEVC.](5259a2aac3)
---------
Co-authored-by: Jacob Su <suzp1984@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: winlin <winlinvip@gmail.com>
1. When converting RTC to RTMP, it is necessary to synchronize the audio
and video timestamps. When the synchronization status changes, whether
it is unsynchronized or synchronized, print logs to facilitate
troubleshooting of such issues.
2. Chrome uses the STAP-A packet, which means a single RTP packet
contains SPS/PPS information. OBS WHIP, on the other hand, sends SPS and
PPS in separate RTP packets. Therefore, SPS and PPS are in two
independent RTP packets, and SRS needs to cache these two packets.
---------
Co-authored-by: john <hondaxiao@tencent.com>