Florent Castelli 32ca95145c Only enable conference mode simulcast allocations with flag enabled
Non-conference mode simulcast screenshares were mistakenly using the
conference mode semantics in the simulcast rate allocator, which broke
spec compliant usage in some situation.

This behavior should only be used when explicitly using the SDP entry
"a=x-google-flag:conference" in both offer and answer.

Bug: webrtc:11310, chromium:1093819
Change-Id: Ibcba75c88a8405d60467546b33977a782e04e469
Reviewed-on: https://webrtc-review.googlesource.com/c/src/+/179081
Reviewed-by: Harald Alvestrand <hta@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Ilya Nikolaevskiy <ilnik@webrtc.org>
Commit-Queue: Florent Castelli <orphis@webrtc.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#31828}
2020-08-03 10:09:46 +00:00
..
2019-06-03 08:15:09 +00:00
2020-03-24 15:14:09 +00:00
2020-06-10 13:52:36 +00:00

How to write code in the api/ directory

Mostly, just follow the regular style guide, but:

  • Note that api/ code is not exempt from the “.h and .cc files come in pairs” rule, so if you declare something in api/path/to/foo.h, it should be defined in api/path/to/foo.cc.
  • Headers in api/ should, if possible, not #include headers outside api/. Its not always possible to avoid this, but be aware that it adds to a small mountain of technical debt that were trying to shrink.
  • .cc files in api/, on the other hand, are free to #include headers outside api/.

That is, the preferred way for api/ code to access non-api/ code is to call it from a .cc file, so that users of our API headers wont transitively #include non-public headers.

For headers in api/ that need to refer to non-public types, forward declarations are often a lesser evil than including non-public header files. The usual rules still apply, though.

.cc files in api/ should preferably be kept reasonably small. If a substantial implementation is needed, consider putting it with our non-public code, and just call it from the api/ .cc file.