Microsoft DirectX 8.1 (C++) |
The following pseudocode shows how to implement the IPin::BeginFlush method:
HRESULT CMyInputPin::BeginFlush()
{
CAutoLock lock_it(m_pLock);
// First, make sure the Receive method will fail from now on.
HRESULT hr = CBaseInputPin::BeginFlush();
// Force downstream filters to release samples. If our Receive method
// is blocked in GetBuffer or Deliver, this will unblock it.
for (each output pin)
{
hr = pOutputPin->DeliverBeginFlush();
}
// Unblock our Receive method if it is waiting on an event.
SetEvent(m_hSomeEventThatReceiveNeedsToWaitOn);
// At this point, the Receive method can't be blocked. Make sure
// it finishes, by taking the streaming lock. (Not necessary if this
// is the last step.)
CAutoLock lock_2(&m_csReceive);
/* Now it’s safe to do anything that would crash or hang
if Receive were executing. */
return hr;
}
When flushing starts, the BeginFlush method takes the filter lock, which serializes the state change. It is not yet safe to take the streaming lock, because flushing happens on the application thread, and the streaming thread might be in the middle of a Receive call. The pin needs to guarantee that Receive is not blocked, and that any subsequent calls to Receive will fail. The CBaseInputPin::BeginFlush method sets an internal flag, CBaseInputPin::m_bFlushing. When the flag is TRUE, the Receive method fails.
By delivering the BeginFlush call downstream, the pin guarantees that all downstream filters release their samples and return from Receive calls. This in turn guarantees that the input pin is not blocked waiting for GetBuffer or Receive. If your pin’s Receive method ever waits on an event (for example, to get resources), the BeginFlush method should force the wait to terminate by setting the event. At this point, the Receive method is guaranteed to return, and the m_bFlushing flag prevents new Receive calls from doing any work.
For some filters, that is all BeginFlush needs to do. The EndFlush method will signal to the filter that it can start receiving samples again. Other filters may need to use variables or resources in BeginFlush that are also used in Receive. In that case, the filter should hold the streaming lock first. Be sure not to do this before any of the previous steps, because you might cause a deadlock.
The EndFlush method holds the filter lock and propagates the call downstream:
HRESULT CMyInputPin::EndFlush()
{
CAutoLock lock_it(m_pLock);
for (each output pin)
hr = pOutputPin->DeliverEndFlush();
return CBaseInputPin::EndFlush();
}
The CBaseInputPin::EndFlush method resets the m_bFlushing flag to FALSE, which allows the Receive method to start receiving samples again. This should be the last step in EndFlush, because the pin must not receive any samples until flushing is complete and all downstream filters are notified.