mpv/stream/stream_bluray.c

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/*
* Copyright (C) 2010 Benjamin Zores <ben@geexbox.org>
*
* This file is part of mpv.
*
* mpv is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* mpv is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with mpv. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
/*
* Blu-ray parser/reader using libbluray
* Use 'git clone git://git.videolan.org/libbluray' to get it.
*
* TODO:
* - Add descrambled keys database support (KEYDB.cfg)
*
*/
#include <string.h>
#include <strings.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <libbluray/bluray.h>
#include <libbluray/meta_data.h>
#include <libbluray/overlay.h>
#include <libbluray/keys.h>
#include <libbluray/bluray-version.h>
#include <libbluray/log_control.h>
#include <libavutil/common.h>
#include "config.h"
#include "mpv_talloc.h"
#include "common/common.h"
#include "common/msg.h"
#include "options/m_config.h"
#include "options/path.h"
#include "stream.h"
#include "osdep/timer.h"
#include "sub/osd.h"
#include "sub/img_convert.h"
#include "video/mp_image.h"
#define BLURAY_SECTOR_SIZE 6144
#define BLURAY_DEFAULT_ANGLE 0
#define BLURAY_DEFAULT_CHAPTER 0
#define BLURAY_PLAYLIST_TITLE -3
#define BLURAY_DEFAULT_TITLE -2
#define BLURAY_MENU_TITLE -1
// 90khz ticks
#define BD_TIMEBASE (90000)
#define BD_TIME_TO_MP(x) ((x) / (double)(BD_TIMEBASE))
#define BD_TIME_FROM_MP(x) ((uint64_t)(x * BD_TIMEBASE))
// copied from aacs.h in libaacs
#define AACS_ERROR_CORRUPTED_DISC -1 /* opening or reading of AACS files failed */
#define AACS_ERROR_NO_CONFIG -2 /* missing config file */
#define AACS_ERROR_NO_PK -3 /* no matching processing key */
#define AACS_ERROR_NO_CERT -4 /* no valid certificate */
#define AACS_ERROR_CERT_REVOKED -5 /* certificate has been revoked */
#define AACS_ERROR_MMC_OPEN -6 /* MMC open failed (no MMC drive ?) */
#define AACS_ERROR_MMC_FAILURE -7 /* MMC failed */
#define AACS_ERROR_NO_DK -8 /* no matching device key */
struct bluray_opts {
char *bluray_device;
};
#define OPT_BASE_STRUCT struct bluray_opts
const struct m_sub_options stream_bluray_conf = {
.opts = (const struct m_option[]) {
{"device", OPT_STRING(bluray_device), .flags = M_OPT_FILE},
{0},
},
.size = sizeof(struct bluray_opts),
};
struct bluray_priv_s {
BLURAY *bd;
BLURAY_TITLE_INFO *title_info;
int num_titles;
int current_angle;
int current_title;
int current_playlist;
int cfg_title;
int cfg_playlist;
char *cfg_device;
bool use_nav;
struct bluray_opts *opts;
struct m_config_cache *opts_cache;
};
static void destruct(struct bluray_priv_s *priv)
{
if (priv->title_info)
bd_free_title_info(priv->title_info);
bd_close(priv->bd);
}
inline static int play_playlist(struct bluray_priv_s *priv, int playlist)
{
return bd_select_playlist(priv->bd, playlist);
}
inline static int play_title(struct bluray_priv_s *priv, int title)
{
return bd_select_title(priv->bd, title);
}
static void bluray_stream_close(stream_t *s)
{
destruct(s->priv);
}
static void handle_event(stream_t *s, const BD_EVENT *ev)
{
struct bluray_priv_s *b = s->priv;
switch (ev->event) {
case BD_EVENT_MENU:
break;
case BD_EVENT_STILL:
break;
case BD_EVENT_STILL_TIME:
bd_read_skip_still(b->bd);
break;
case BD_EVENT_END_OF_TITLE:
break;
case BD_EVENT_PLAYLIST:
b->current_playlist = ev->param;
b->current_title = bd_get_current_title(b->bd);
if (b->title_info)
bd_free_title_info(b->title_info);
b->title_info = bd_get_playlist_info(b->bd, b->current_playlist,
b->current_angle);
break;
case BD_EVENT_TITLE:
if (ev->param == BLURAY_TITLE_FIRST_PLAY) {
b->current_title = bd_get_current_title(b->bd);
} else
b->current_title = ev->param;
if (b->title_info) {
bd_free_title_info(b->title_info);
b->title_info = NULL;
}
break;
case BD_EVENT_ANGLE:
b->current_angle = ev->param;
if (b->title_info) {
bd_free_title_info(b->title_info);
b->title_info = bd_get_playlist_info(b->bd, b->current_playlist,
b->current_angle);
}
break;
case BD_EVENT_POPUP:
break;
#if BLURAY_VERSION >= BLURAY_VERSION_CODE(0, 5, 0)
case BD_EVENT_DISCONTINUITY:
break;
#endif
default:
MP_TRACE(s, "Unhandled event: %d %d\n", ev->event, ev->param);
break;
}
}
static int bluray_stream_fill_buffer(stream_t *s, void *buf, int len)
{
struct bluray_priv_s *b = s->priv;
BD_EVENT event;
while (bd_get_event(b->bd, &event))
handle_event(s, &event);
return bd_read(b->bd, buf, len);
}
static int bluray_stream_control(stream_t *s, int cmd, void *arg)
{
struct bluray_priv_s *b = s->priv;
switch (cmd) {
demux: restore some of the DVD/BD/CDDA interaction layers This partially reverts commit a9d83eac40c94f44d19fab7b6955331f10efe301 ("Remove optical disc fancification layers"). Mostly due to the timestamp crap, this was never really going to work. The playback layer is sensitive to timestamps, and derives the playback time directly from the low level packet timestamps. DVD/BD works differently, and libdvdnav/libbluray do not make it easy at all to compensate for this. Which is why it never worked well, but not doing it at all is even more awful. demux_disc.c tried this and rewrote packet timestamps from low level TS to playback time. So restore demux_disc.c, which should bring behavior back to the old often non-working but slightly better state. I did not revert anything that affects components above the demuxer layer. For example, the properties for switching DVD angles or listing disc titles are still gone. (Disc titles could be reimplemented as editions. But not by me.) This commit modifies the reverted code a bit; this can't be avoided, because the internal API changed quite a bit. The old seek resync in demux_lavf.c (which was a hack) is replaced with a hack. SEEK_FORCE and demux_params.external_stream are new additions. Some of this could/should be further cleaned up. If you don't want "proper" DVD/BD support to disappear, you should probably volunteer. Now why am I wasting my time for this? Just because some idiot users are too lazy to rip their ever-wearing out shitty physical discs? Then why should I not be lazy and drop support completely? They won't even be thankful for me maintaining this horrible garbage for no compensation.
2019-10-02 22:22:18 +00:00
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_NUM_CHAPTERS: {
const BLURAY_TITLE_INFO *ti = b->title_info;
if (!ti)
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
*((unsigned int *) arg) = ti->chapter_count;
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_CHAPTER_TIME: {
const BLURAY_TITLE_INFO *ti = b->title_info;
if (!ti)
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
int chapter = *(double *)arg;
double time = MP_NOPTS_VALUE;
if (chapter >= 0 || chapter < ti->chapter_count)
time = BD_TIME_TO_MP(ti->chapters[chapter].start);
if (time == MP_NOPTS_VALUE)
return STREAM_ERROR;
*(double *)arg = time;
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_SET_CURRENT_TITLE: {
const uint32_t title = *((unsigned int*)arg);
if (title >= b->num_titles || !play_title(b, title))
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
b->current_title = title;
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_CURRENT_TITLE: {
*((unsigned int *) arg) = b->current_title;
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_NUM_TITLES: {
*((unsigned int *)arg) = b->num_titles;
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_TIME_LENGTH: {
const BLURAY_TITLE_INFO *ti = b->title_info;
if (!ti)
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
*((double *) arg) = BD_TIME_TO_MP(ti->duration);
return STREAM_OK;
}
demux: restore some of the DVD/BD/CDDA interaction layers This partially reverts commit a9d83eac40c94f44d19fab7b6955331f10efe301 ("Remove optical disc fancification layers"). Mostly due to the timestamp crap, this was never really going to work. The playback layer is sensitive to timestamps, and derives the playback time directly from the low level packet timestamps. DVD/BD works differently, and libdvdnav/libbluray do not make it easy at all to compensate for this. Which is why it never worked well, but not doing it at all is even more awful. demux_disc.c tried this and rewrote packet timestamps from low level TS to playback time. So restore demux_disc.c, which should bring behavior back to the old often non-working but slightly better state. I did not revert anything that affects components above the demuxer layer. For example, the properties for switching DVD angles or listing disc titles are still gone. (Disc titles could be reimplemented as editions. But not by me.) This commit modifies the reverted code a bit; this can't be avoided, because the internal API changed quite a bit. The old seek resync in demux_lavf.c (which was a hack) is replaced with a hack. SEEK_FORCE and demux_params.external_stream are new additions. Some of this could/should be further cleaned up. If you don't want "proper" DVD/BD support to disappear, you should probably volunteer. Now why am I wasting my time for this? Just because some idiot users are too lazy to rip their ever-wearing out shitty physical discs? Then why should I not be lazy and drop support completely? They won't even be thankful for me maintaining this horrible garbage for no compensation.
2019-10-02 22:22:18 +00:00
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_CURRENT_TIME: {
*((double *) arg) = BD_TIME_TO_MP(bd_tell_time(b->bd));
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_SEEK_TO_TIME: {
double pts = *((double *) arg);
bd_seek_time(b->bd, BD_TIME_FROM_MP(pts));
stream_drop_buffers(s);
demux: restore some of the DVD/BD/CDDA interaction layers This partially reverts commit a9d83eac40c94f44d19fab7b6955331f10efe301 ("Remove optical disc fancification layers"). Mostly due to the timestamp crap, this was never really going to work. The playback layer is sensitive to timestamps, and derives the playback time directly from the low level packet timestamps. DVD/BD works differently, and libdvdnav/libbluray do not make it easy at all to compensate for this. Which is why it never worked well, but not doing it at all is even more awful. demux_disc.c tried this and rewrote packet timestamps from low level TS to playback time. So restore demux_disc.c, which should bring behavior back to the old often non-working but slightly better state. I did not revert anything that affects components above the demuxer layer. For example, the properties for switching DVD angles or listing disc titles are still gone. (Disc titles could be reimplemented as editions. But not by me.) This commit modifies the reverted code a bit; this can't be avoided, because the internal API changed quite a bit. The old seek resync in demux_lavf.c (which was a hack) is replaced with a hack. SEEK_FORCE and demux_params.external_stream are new additions. Some of this could/should be further cleaned up. If you don't want "proper" DVD/BD support to disappear, you should probably volunteer. Now why am I wasting my time for this? Just because some idiot users are too lazy to rip their ever-wearing out shitty physical discs? Then why should I not be lazy and drop support completely? They won't even be thankful for me maintaining this horrible garbage for no compensation.
2019-10-02 22:22:18 +00:00
// API makes it hard to determine seeking success
return STREAM_OK;
}
demux: restore some of the DVD/BD/CDDA interaction layers This partially reverts commit a9d83eac40c94f44d19fab7b6955331f10efe301 ("Remove optical disc fancification layers"). Mostly due to the timestamp crap, this was never really going to work. The playback layer is sensitive to timestamps, and derives the playback time directly from the low level packet timestamps. DVD/BD works differently, and libdvdnav/libbluray do not make it easy at all to compensate for this. Which is why it never worked well, but not doing it at all is even more awful. demux_disc.c tried this and rewrote packet timestamps from low level TS to playback time. So restore demux_disc.c, which should bring behavior back to the old often non-working but slightly better state. I did not revert anything that affects components above the demuxer layer. For example, the properties for switching DVD angles or listing disc titles are still gone. (Disc titles could be reimplemented as editions. But not by me.) This commit modifies the reverted code a bit; this can't be avoided, because the internal API changed quite a bit. The old seek resync in demux_lavf.c (which was a hack) is replaced with a hack. SEEK_FORCE and demux_params.external_stream are new additions. Some of this could/should be further cleaned up. If you don't want "proper" DVD/BD support to disappear, you should probably volunteer. Now why am I wasting my time for this? Just because some idiot users are too lazy to rip their ever-wearing out shitty physical discs? Then why should I not be lazy and drop support completely? They won't even be thankful for me maintaining this horrible garbage for no compensation.
2019-10-02 22:22:18 +00:00
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_NUM_ANGLES: {
const BLURAY_TITLE_INFO *ti = b->title_info;
if (!ti)
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
*((int *) arg) = ti->angle_count;
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_ANGLE: {
*((int *) arg) = b->current_angle;
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_SET_ANGLE: {
const BLURAY_TITLE_INFO *ti = b->title_info;
if (!ti)
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
int angle = *((int *) arg);
if (angle < 0 || angle > ti->angle_count)
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
b->current_angle = angle;
bd_seamless_angle_change(b->bd, angle);
return STREAM_OK;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_LANG: {
const BLURAY_TITLE_INFO *ti = b->title_info;
if (ti && ti->clip_count) {
struct stream_lang_req *req = arg;
BLURAY_STREAM_INFO *si = NULL;
int count = 0;
switch (req->type) {
case STREAM_AUDIO:
count = ti->clips[0].audio_stream_count;
si = ti->clips[0].audio_streams;
break;
case STREAM_SUB:
count = ti->clips[0].pg_stream_count;
si = ti->clips[0].pg_streams;
break;
}
for (int n = 0; n < count; n++) {
BLURAY_STREAM_INFO *i = &si[n];
if (i->pid == req->id) {
snprintf(req->name, sizeof(req->name), "%.4s", i->lang);
return STREAM_OK;
}
}
}
return STREAM_ERROR;
}
case STREAM_CTRL_GET_DISC_NAME: {
const struct meta_dl *meta = bd_get_meta(b->bd);
if (!meta || !meta->di_name || !meta->di_name[0])
break;
*(char**)arg = talloc_strdup(NULL, meta->di_name);
return STREAM_OK;
}
default:
break;
}
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
}
static const char *aacs_strerr(int err)
{
switch (err) {
case AACS_ERROR_CORRUPTED_DISC: return "opening or reading of AACS files failed";
case AACS_ERROR_NO_CONFIG: return "missing config file";
case AACS_ERROR_NO_PK: return "no matching processing key";
case AACS_ERROR_NO_CERT: return "no valid certificate";
case AACS_ERROR_CERT_REVOKED: return "certificate has been revoked";
case AACS_ERROR_MMC_OPEN: return "MMC open failed (maybe no MMC drive?)";
case AACS_ERROR_MMC_FAILURE: return "MMC failed";
case AACS_ERROR_NO_DK: return "no matching device key";
default: return "unknown error";
}
}
static bool check_disc_info(stream_t *s)
{
struct bluray_priv_s *b = s->priv;
const BLURAY_DISC_INFO *info = bd_get_disc_info(b->bd);
// check Blu-ray
if (!info->bluray_detected) {
MP_ERR(s, "Given stream is not a Blu-ray.\n");
return false;
}
// check AACS
if (info->aacs_detected) {
if (!info->libaacs_detected) {
MP_ERR(s, "AACS encryption detected but cannot find libaacs.\n");
return false;
}
if (!info->aacs_handled) {
MP_ERR(s, "AACS error: %s\n", aacs_strerr(info->aacs_error_code));
return false;
}
}
// check BD+
if (info->bdplus_detected) {
if (!info->libbdplus_detected) {
MP_ERR(s, "BD+ encryption detected but cannot find libbdplus.\n");
return false;
}
if (!info->bdplus_handled) {
MP_ERR(s, "Cannot decrypt BD+ encryption.\n");
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
static void select_initial_title(stream_t *s, int title_guess) {
struct bluray_priv_s *b = s->priv;
if (b->cfg_title == BLURAY_PLAYLIST_TITLE) {
if (!play_playlist(b, b->cfg_playlist))
MP_WARN(s, "Couldn't start playlist '%05d'.\n", b->cfg_playlist);
b->current_title = bd_get_current_title(b->bd);
} else {
int title = -1;
if (b->cfg_title != BLURAY_DEFAULT_TITLE )
title = b->cfg_title;
else
title = title_guess;
if (title < 0)
return;
if (play_title(b, title))
b->current_title = title;
else {
MP_WARN(s, "Couldn't start title '%d'.\n", title);
b->current_title = bd_get_current_title(b->bd);
}
}
}
static int bluray_stream_open_internal(stream_t *s)
{
struct bluray_priv_s *b = s->priv;
char *device = NULL;
/* find the requested device */
if (b->cfg_device && b->cfg_device[0]) {
device = b->cfg_device;
} else {
device = b->opts->bluray_device;
}
if (!device || !device[0]) {
MP_ERR(s, "No Blu-ray device/location was specified ...\n");
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
}
if (!mp_msg_test(s->log, MSGL_DEBUG))
bd_set_debug_mask(0);
/* open device */
BLURAY *bd = bd_open(device, NULL);
if (!bd) {
MP_ERR(s, "Couldn't open Blu-ray device: %s\n", device);
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
}
b->bd = bd;
if (!check_disc_info(s)) {
destruct(b);
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
}
int title_guess = BLURAY_DEFAULT_TITLE;
if (b->use_nav) {
MP_FATAL(s, "BluRay menu support has been removed.\n");
return STREAM_ERROR;
} else {
/* check for available titles on disc */
b->num_titles = bd_get_titles(bd, TITLES_RELEVANT, 0);
if (!b->num_titles) {
MP_ERR(s, "Can't find any Blu-ray-compatible title here.\n");
destruct(b);
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
}
MP_INFO(s, "List of available titles:\n");
/* parse titles information */
uint64_t max_duration = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < b->num_titles; i++) {
BLURAY_TITLE_INFO *ti = bd_get_title_info(bd, i, 0);
if (!ti)
continue;
2016-09-08 18:59:24 +00:00
char *time = mp_format_time(ti->duration / 90000, false);
MP_INFO(s, "idx: %3d duration: %s (playlist: %05d.mpls)\n",
i, time, ti->playlist);
2016-09-08 18:59:24 +00:00
talloc_free(time);
/* try to guess which title may contain the main movie */
if (ti->duration > max_duration) {
max_duration = ti->duration;
title_guess = i;
}
bd_free_title_info(ti);
}
}
// these should be set before any callback
b->current_angle = -1;
b->current_title = -1;
// initialize libbluray event queue
bd_get_event(bd, NULL);
select_initial_title(s, title_guess);
s->fill_buffer = bluray_stream_fill_buffer;
s->close = bluray_stream_close;
s->control = bluray_stream_control;
s->priv = b;
demux: restore some of the DVD/BD/CDDA interaction layers This partially reverts commit a9d83eac40c94f44d19fab7b6955331f10efe301 ("Remove optical disc fancification layers"). Mostly due to the timestamp crap, this was never really going to work. The playback layer is sensitive to timestamps, and derives the playback time directly from the low level packet timestamps. DVD/BD works differently, and libdvdnav/libbluray do not make it easy at all to compensate for this. Which is why it never worked well, but not doing it at all is even more awful. demux_disc.c tried this and rewrote packet timestamps from low level TS to playback time. So restore demux_disc.c, which should bring behavior back to the old often non-working but slightly better state. I did not revert anything that affects components above the demuxer layer. For example, the properties for switching DVD angles or listing disc titles are still gone. (Disc titles could be reimplemented as editions. But not by me.) This commit modifies the reverted code a bit; this can't be avoided, because the internal API changed quite a bit. The old seek resync in demux_lavf.c (which was a hack) is replaced with a hack. SEEK_FORCE and demux_params.external_stream are new additions. Some of this could/should be further cleaned up. If you don't want "proper" DVD/BD support to disappear, you should probably volunteer. Now why am I wasting my time for this? Just because some idiot users are too lazy to rip their ever-wearing out shitty physical discs? Then why should I not be lazy and drop support completely? They won't even be thankful for me maintaining this horrible garbage for no compensation.
2019-10-02 22:22:18 +00:00
s->demuxer = "+disc";
MP_VERBOSE(s, "Blu-ray successfully opened.\n");
return STREAM_OK;
}
const stream_info_t stream_info_bdnav;
static int bluray_stream_open(stream_t *s)
{
struct bluray_priv_s *b = talloc_zero(s, struct bluray_priv_s);
s->priv = b;
struct m_config_cache *opts_cache =
m_config_cache_alloc(s, s->global, &stream_bluray_conf);
b->opts_cache = opts_cache;
b->opts = opts_cache->opts;
b->use_nav = s->info == &stream_info_bdnav;
bstr title, bdevice, rest = { .len = 0 };
bstr_split_tok(bstr0(s->path), "/", &title, &bdevice);
b->cfg_title = BLURAY_DEFAULT_TITLE;
if (bstr_equals0(title, "longest") || bstr_equals0(title, "first")) {
b->cfg_title = BLURAY_DEFAULT_TITLE;
} else if (bstr_equals0(title, "menu")) {
b->cfg_title = BLURAY_MENU_TITLE;
} else if (bstr_equals0(title, "mpls")) {
bstr_split_tok(bdevice, "/", &title, &bdevice);
long long pl = bstrtoll(title, &rest, 10);
if (rest.len) {
MP_ERR(s, "number expected: '%.*s'\n", BSTR_P(rest));
return STREAM_ERROR;
} else if (pl < 0 || 99999 < pl) {
MP_ERR(s, "invalid playlist: '%.*s', must be in the range 0-99999\n",
BSTR_P(title));
return STREAM_ERROR;
}
b->cfg_playlist = pl;
b->cfg_title = BLURAY_PLAYLIST_TITLE;
} else if (title.len) {
long long t = bstrtoll(title, &rest, 10);
if (rest.len) {
MP_ERR(s, "number expected: '%.*s'\n", BSTR_P(rest));
return STREAM_ERROR;
} else if (t < 0 || 99999 < t) {
MP_ERR(s, "invalid title: '%.*s', must be in the range 0-99999\n",
BSTR_P(title));
return STREAM_ERROR;
}
b->cfg_title = t;
}
b->cfg_device = bstrto0(b, bdevice);
return bluray_stream_open_internal(s);
}
const stream_info_t stream_info_bluray = {
.name = "bd",
.open = bluray_stream_open,
.protocols = (const char*const[]){ "bd", "br", "bluray", NULL },
stream, demux: redo origin policy thing mpv has a very weak and very annoying policy that determines whether a playlist should be used or not. For example, if you play a remote playlist, you usually don't want it to be able to read local filesystem entries. (Although for a media player the impact is small I guess.) It's weak and annoying as in that it does not prevent certain cases which could be interpreted as bad in some cases, such as allowing playlists on the local filesystem to reference remote URLs. It probably barely makes sense, but we just want to exclude some other "definitely not a good idea" things, all while playlists generally just work, so whatever. The policy is: - from the command line anything is played - local playlists can reference anything except "unsafe" streams ("unsafe" means special stream inputs like libavfilter graphs) - remote playlists can reference only remote URLs - things like "memory://" and archives are "transparent" to this This commit does... something. It replaces the weird stream flags with a slightly clearer "origin" value, which is now consequently passed down and used everywhere. It fixes some deviations from the described policy. I wanted to force archives to reference only content within them, but this would probably have been more complicated (or required different abstractions), and I'm too lazy to figure it out, so archives are now "transparent" (playlists within archives behave the same outside). There may be a lot of bugs in this. This is unfortunately a very noisy commit because: - every stream open call now needs to pass the origin - so does every demuxer open call (=> params param. gets mandatory) - most stream were changed to provide the "origin" value - the origin value needed to be passed along in a lot of places - I was too lazy to split the commit Fixes: #7274
2019-12-20 08:41:42 +00:00
.stream_origin = STREAM_ORIGIN_UNSAFE,
};
const stream_info_t stream_info_bdnav = {
.name = "bdnav",
.open = bluray_stream_open,
.protocols = (const char*const[]){ "bdnav", "brnav", "bluraynav", NULL },
stream, demux: redo origin policy thing mpv has a very weak and very annoying policy that determines whether a playlist should be used or not. For example, if you play a remote playlist, you usually don't want it to be able to read local filesystem entries. (Although for a media player the impact is small I guess.) It's weak and annoying as in that it does not prevent certain cases which could be interpreted as bad in some cases, such as allowing playlists on the local filesystem to reference remote URLs. It probably barely makes sense, but we just want to exclude some other "definitely not a good idea" things, all while playlists generally just work, so whatever. The policy is: - from the command line anything is played - local playlists can reference anything except "unsafe" streams ("unsafe" means special stream inputs like libavfilter graphs) - remote playlists can reference only remote URLs - things like "memory://" and archives are "transparent" to this This commit does... something. It replaces the weird stream flags with a slightly clearer "origin" value, which is now consequently passed down and used everywhere. It fixes some deviations from the described policy. I wanted to force archives to reference only content within them, but this would probably have been more complicated (or required different abstractions), and I'm too lazy to figure it out, so archives are now "transparent" (playlists within archives behave the same outside). There may be a lot of bugs in this. This is unfortunately a very noisy commit because: - every stream open call now needs to pass the origin - so does every demuxer open call (=> params param. gets mandatory) - most stream were changed to provide the "origin" value - the origin value needed to be passed along in a lot of places - I was too lazy to split the commit Fixes: #7274
2019-12-20 08:41:42 +00:00
.stream_origin = STREAM_ORIGIN_UNSAFE,
};
static bool check_bdmv(const char *path)
{
if (strcasecmp(mp_basename(path), "MovieObject.bdmv"))
return false;
FILE *temp = fopen(path, "rb");
if (!temp)
return false;
char data[50] = {0};
fread(data, 50, 1, temp);
fclose(temp);
bstr bdata = {data, 50};
return bstr_startswith0(bdata, "MOBJ0100") || // AVCHD
bstr_startswith0(bdata, "MOBJ0200") || // Blu-ray
bstr_startswith0(bdata, "MOBJ0300"); // UHD BD
}
// Destructively remove the current trailing path component.
static void remove_prefix(char *path)
{
size_t len = strlen(path);
#if HAVE_DOS_PATHS
const char *seps = "/\\";
#else
const char *seps = "/";
#endif
while (len > 0 && !strchr(seps, path[len - 1]))
len--;
while (len > 0 && strchr(seps, path[len - 1]))
len--;
path[len] = '\0';
}
static int bdmv_dir_stream_open(stream_t *stream)
{
struct bluray_priv_s *priv = talloc_ptrtype(stream, priv);
stream->priv = priv;
*priv = (struct bluray_priv_s){
.cfg_title = BLURAY_DEFAULT_TITLE,
};
if (!stream->access_references)
goto unsupported;
char *path = mp_file_get_path(priv, bstr0(stream->url));
if (!path)
goto unsupported;
// We allow the path to point to a directory containing BDMV/, a
// directory containing MovieObject.bdmv, or that file itself.
if (!check_bdmv(path)) {
// On UNIX, just assume the filename has always this case.
char *npath = mp_path_join(priv, path, "MovieObject.bdmv");
if (!check_bdmv(npath)) {
npath = mp_path_join(priv, path, "BDMV/MovieObject.bdmv");
if (!check_bdmv(npath))
goto unsupported;
}
path = npath;
}
// Go up by 2 levels.
remove_prefix(path);
remove_prefix(path);
priv->cfg_device = path;
if (strlen(priv->cfg_device) <= 1)
goto unsupported;
MP_INFO(stream, "BDMV detected. Redirecting to bluray://\n");
return bluray_stream_open_internal(stream);
unsupported:
talloc_free(priv);
stream->priv = NULL;
return STREAM_UNSUPPORTED;
}
const stream_info_t stream_info_bdmv_dir = {
.name = "bdmv/bluray",
.open = bdmv_dir_stream_open,
.protocols = (const char*const[]){ "file", "", NULL },
stream, demux: redo origin policy thing mpv has a very weak and very annoying policy that determines whether a playlist should be used or not. For example, if you play a remote playlist, you usually don't want it to be able to read local filesystem entries. (Although for a media player the impact is small I guess.) It's weak and annoying as in that it does not prevent certain cases which could be interpreted as bad in some cases, such as allowing playlists on the local filesystem to reference remote URLs. It probably barely makes sense, but we just want to exclude some other "definitely not a good idea" things, all while playlists generally just work, so whatever. The policy is: - from the command line anything is played - local playlists can reference anything except "unsafe" streams ("unsafe" means special stream inputs like libavfilter graphs) - remote playlists can reference only remote URLs - things like "memory://" and archives are "transparent" to this This commit does... something. It replaces the weird stream flags with a slightly clearer "origin" value, which is now consequently passed down and used everywhere. It fixes some deviations from the described policy. I wanted to force archives to reference only content within them, but this would probably have been more complicated (or required different abstractions), and I'm too lazy to figure it out, so archives are now "transparent" (playlists within archives behave the same outside). There may be a lot of bugs in this. This is unfortunately a very noisy commit because: - every stream open call now needs to pass the origin - so does every demuxer open call (=> params param. gets mandatory) - most stream were changed to provide the "origin" value - the origin value needed to be passed along in a lot of places - I was too lazy to split the commit Fixes: #7274
2019-12-20 08:41:42 +00:00
.stream_origin = STREAM_ORIGIN_UNSAFE,
};