* Split RTPStats into receiver and sender.
For receiver, short types are input and need to calculate extended type.
For sender (subscriber), it can operate only in extended type.
This makes the subscriber side a little simpler and should make it more
efficient as it can do simple comparisons in extended type space.
There was also an issue with subscriber using shorter type and
calculating extended type. When subscriber starts after the publisher
has already rolled over in sequence number OR timestamp, when
subsequent publisher side sender reports are used to adjust subscriber
time stamps, they were out of whack. Using extended type on subscriber
does not face that.
* fix test
* extended types from sequencer
* log
* Pacer interface to send packets
* notify outside lock
* use select
* use pass through pacer
* add error to OnSent
* Remove log which could get noisy
* Starting TWCC work (#1727)
* add packet time
* WIP commit
* WIP commit
* WIP commit
* minor comments
* Some measurements (#1736)
* WIP commit
* some notes
* WIP commit
* variable name change and do not post to closed channel
* unlock
* clean up
* comment
* Hooking up some more bits for TWCC (#1752)
* wake under lock
* Pacer in down stream path.
Splitting out only the pacer from a feature branch to
introduce the concept of pacer.
Currently, there should be no difference in functionality
as a pass through pacer is used.
Another implementation exists which is just put it in a queue and send
it from one goroutine.
A potential implementation to try would be data paced by bandwidth
estimate. That could include priority queues and such.
But, the main goal here is to introduce notion of pacer in the down
stream path and prepare for more congestion control possibilities down
the line.
* Don't need peak detector
* remove throttling of write IO errors