This reverts commit 8e8b36a94a7a7a1fd0f8093979a406afa56e18c1.
Reason for revert: The CL has been improved with the following changes,
- Fixed negotiation of send/receive only clients.
- Handles the implicit assumption that any H264 decoder also can
decode H264 constraint baseline.
Original change's description:
> Distinguish between send and receive codecs
>
> Even though send and receive codecs may be the same, they might have
> different support in HW. Distinguish between send and receive codecs
> to be able to keep track of which codecs have HW support.
>
> Bug: chromium:1029737
> Change-Id: Id119560becadfe0aaf861c892a6485f1c2eb378d
> Reviewed-on: https://webrtc-review.googlesource.com/c/src/+/165763
> Commit-Queue: Johannes Kron <kron@webrtc.org>
> Reviewed-by: Steve Anton <steveanton@webrtc.org>
> Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#30284}
Change-Id: I834ed48ee78d04922c73e2836165e476925e1cc5
Bug: chromium:1029737
Reviewed-on: https://webrtc-review.googlesource.com/c/src/+/168605
Commit-Queue: Johannes Kron <kron@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Ilya Nikolaevskiy <ilnik@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Karl Wiberg <kwiberg@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Johannes Kron <kron@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Henrik Boström <hbos@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Sergey Silkin <ssilkin@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Steve Anton <steveanton@webrtc.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#30932}
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 “.hand.ccfiles come in pairs” rule, so if you declare something inapi/path/to/foo.h, it should be defined inapi/path/to/foo.cc. - Headers in
api/should, if possible, not#includeheaders outsideapi/. It’s not always possible to avoid this, but be aware that it adds to a small mountain of technical debt that we’re trying to shrink. .ccfiles inapi/, on the other hand, are free to#includeheaders outsideapi/.
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 won’t 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.