| GStreamer Application Development Manual (0.10.24) | ||
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When writing a GStreamer application, you can simply include gst/gst.h to get access to the library functions. Besides that, you will also need to intialize the GStreamer library.
Before the GStreamer libraries can be used, gst_init has to be called from the main application. This call will perform the necessary initialization of the library as well as parse the GStreamer-specific command line options.
A typical program [1] would have code to initialize GStreamer that looks like this:
Example 1. Initializing GStreamer
#include <gst/gst.h>
int
main (int argc,
char *argv[])
{
const gchar *nano_str;
guint major, minor, micro, nano;
gst_init (&argc, &argv);
gst_version (&major, &minor, µ, &nano);
if (nano == 1)
nano_str = "(CVS)";
else if (nano == 2)
nano_str = "(Prerelease)";
else
nano_str = "";
printf ("This program is linked against GStreamer %d.%d.%d %s\n",
major, minor, micro, nano_str);
return 0;
}
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Use the GST_VERSION_MAJOR, GST_VERSION_MINOR and GST_VERSION_MICRO macros to get the GStreamer version you are building against, or use the function gst_version to get the version your application is linked against. GStreamer currently uses a scheme where versions with the same major and minor versions are API-/ and ABI-compatible.
It is also possible to call the gst_init function with two NULL arguments, in which case no command line options will be parsed by GStreamer.
| [1] | The code for this example is automatically extracted from the documentation and built under examples/manual in the GStreamer tarball. |
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