yair 743bfb8323 Decouple display and recording in recv_raw_rolling.py
- Add --record-fps parameter for independent recording frame rate control
- Separate display and recording buffers (display_buffer_obj, record_buffer_obj)
- Enable recording without display and vice versa
- Independent throttling for display and recording operations
- Improve code organization and cleanup handling
2025-11-15 00:48:09 +02:00
2023-04-26 22:52:23 +03:00
2021-11-19 13:11:55 -05:00
udp
2025-11-14 17:00:20 +02:00
2025-11-14 17:11:18 +02:00

gst-plugins-vision

GStreamer plugins for IDS uEye cameras with frame analysis capabilities.

TODO

  • [] idsueyesrc doesnt respect auto exposure set in ini file. need to be set in filter exposure=0.5
  • []

Supported Elements

Image Acquisition

  • idsueyesrc: Video source for [IDS uEye cameras][1] (GigE Vision, USB 2/3, USB3 Vision)

Video Analysis

  • rollingsum: Drops frames based on rolling mean analysis of a single column. Analyzes pixel column deviation from rolling baseline to detect anomalies or changes in the scene.

Usage Examples

Basic capture from IDS uEye camera

gst-launch-1.0 idsueyesrc config-file=ini/whole-presacler64_autoexp-binningx2.ini exposure=0.5 ! queue ! autovideosink

WIP - Frame filtering based on column analysis

Drop frames when column mean deviates from rolling baseline by more than 0.5:

gst-launch-1.0 idsueyesrc config-file=ini/whole-presacler64_autoexp-binningx2.ini exposure=0.5 ! videoconvert ! video/x-raw,format=GRAY8 ! rollingsum window-size=1000 column-index=1 threshold=0.5 ! queue ! autovideosink

Note: The rollingsum element analyzes a single column of pixels and drops frames when the column mean deviates from the rolling mean baseline by more than the threshold. Use videoconvert to ensure proper format negotiation.

Additional rollingsum examples

Analyze column 320 with larger window:

gst-launch-1.0 idsueyesrc config-file=ini/whole-presacler64_autoexp-binningx2.ini exposure=0.5 ! videoconvert ! video/x-raw,format=GRAY8 ! rollingsum window-size=5000 column-index=320 threshold=0.3 ! queue ! autovideosink

Use stride for faster processing (sample every 2 rows):

gst-launch-1.0 idsueyesrc config-file=ini/whole-presacler64_autoexp-binningx2.ini exposure=0.5 ! videoconvert ! video/x-raw,format=GRAY8 ! rollingsum window-size=1000 column-index=1 stride=2 threshold=0.5 ! queue ! autovideosink

Lower threshold for more sensitive detection:

gst-launch-1.0 idsueyesrc config-file=ini/whole-presacler64_autoexp-binningx2.ini exposure=0.5 ! videoconvert ! video/x-raw,format=GRAY8 ! rollingsum threshold=0.2 ! queue ! autovideosink

Network Streaming

Quick Start - Single Line Transmission (2456x1)

Send Single Line via UDP

Extract and transmit one line from camera (daytime, 200fps):

gst-launch-1.0 idsueyesrc config-file=ini/200fps-2456x4pix-cw.ini exposure=5 framerate=200 `
    ! videocrop bottom=3 `
    ! queue `
    ! udpsink host=127.0.0.1 port=5000

Receive and Display

uv run .\scripts\recv_raw_rolling.py --display-fps 60

What's happening:

  • Camera captures 2456x4 pixels at row 500 of the sensor
  • videocrop bottom=3 extracts only the top line (2456x1)
  • 7368 bytes transmitted per frame (2456 × 1 × 3 BGR channels)
  • Receiver displays as a rolling vertical scan

See network_guide.md for detailed configuration options, nighttime settings, and recording.

Demo/Test Data Streaming

Sender (crop to first column, send raw over UDP)

gst-launch-1.0 -v `
    videotestsrc pattern=smpte ! `
    videocrop left=0 right=639 top=0 bottom=0 ! `
    video/x-raw,format=RGB,width=1,height=640,framerate=30/1 ! `
    udpsink host=127.0.0.1 port=5000

GStreamer Receiver (raw UDP → display)

gst-launch-1.0 -v `
    udpsrc port=5000 caps="video/x-raw,format=RGB,width=1,height=640,framerate=30/1" ! `
    videoconvert ! `
    autovideosink

Dependencies

  • GStreamer 1.2.x or newer
  • IDS uEye SDK (for camera support)

Building on Windows

Quick Start with PowerShell Script

The easiest way to build is using the provided PowerShell script:

# Set the plugin installation path
$env:GST_PLUGIN_PATH = "C:\path\to\your\plugins"

# Build all plugins (IDS uEye + rollingsum) and auto-copy to GST_PLUGIN_PATH
.\build.ps1

For more options, see:

Get-Help .\build.ps1 -Detailed

Manual Build Process

If you prefer to build manually:

  1. Install CMake
  2. Install GStreamer distribution (default path: C:\bin\gstreamer\1.0\msvc_x86_64)
  3. Install IDS uEye SDK (default path: C:\Program Files\IDS\uEye\Develop)
  4. Run:
git clone https://github.com/joshdoe/gst-plugins-vision.git
cd gst-plugins-vision
mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -A x64 -DGSTREAMER_ROOT="C:\bin\gstreamer\1.0\msvc_x86_64"
cmake --build . --config Release

Installation

The build.ps1 script automatically copies plugins to $env:GST_PLUGIN_PATH if set. Alternatively:

  1. Set GST_PLUGIN_PATH environment variable to point to your plugin directory
  2. Copy the built DLLs manually:
    • build\sys\idsueye\Release\libgstidsueye.dll
    • build\gst\rollingsum\Release\libgstrollingsum.dll

Verify Installation

gst-inspect-1.0 idsueyesrc
gst-inspect-1.0 rollingsum

Documentation

Debugging

add $env:GST_DEBUG_DUMP_DOT_DIR='.'

to get dotfile, and view using https://dreampuf.github.io/GraphvizOnline/, or

dot -Tsvg C:\dev\gst-plugins-vision\0.00.02.922833100-gst-launch.PAUSED_PLAYING.dot -o same.svg
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