mpv/video/vaapi.h

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/*
* This file is part of mpv.
*
* mpv is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 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 General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
* with mpv. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
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#ifndef MPV_VAAPI_H
#define MPV_VAAPI_H
video: add vaapi decode and output support This is based on the MPlayer VA API patches. To be exact it's based on a very stripped down version of commit f1ad459a263f8537f6c from git://gitorious.org/vaapi/mplayer.git. This doesn't contain useless things like benchmarking hacks and the demo code for GLX interop. Also, unlike in the original patch, decoding and video output are split into separate source files (the separation between decoding and display also makes pixel format hacks unnecessary). On the other hand, some features not present in the original patch were added, like screenshot support. VA API is rather bad for actual video output. Dealing with older libva versions or the completely broken vdpau backend doesn't help. OSD is low quality and should be rather slow. In some cases, only either OSD or subtitles can be shown at the same time (because OSD is drawn first, OSD is prefered). Also, libva can't decide whether it accepts straight or premultiplied alpha for OSD sub-pictures: the vdpau backend seems to assume premultiplied, while a native vaapi driver uses straight. So I picked straight alpha. It doesn't matter much, because the blending code for straight alpha I added to img_convert.c is probably buggy, and ASS subtitles might be blended incorrectly. Really good video output with VA API would probably use OpenGL and the GL interop features, but at this point you might just use vo_opengl. (Patches for making HW decoding with vo_opengl have a chance of being accepted.) Despite these issues, decoding seems to work ok. I still got tearing on the Intel system I tested (Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2350M). It was also tested with the vdpau vaapi wrapper on a nvidia system; however this was rather broken. (Fortunately, there is no reason to use mpv's VAAPI support over native VDPAU.)
2013-08-09 12:01:30 +00:00
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <pthread.h>
video: add vaapi decode and output support This is based on the MPlayer VA API patches. To be exact it's based on a very stripped down version of commit f1ad459a263f8537f6c from git://gitorious.org/vaapi/mplayer.git. This doesn't contain useless things like benchmarking hacks and the demo code for GLX interop. Also, unlike in the original patch, decoding and video output are split into separate source files (the separation between decoding and display also makes pixel format hacks unnecessary). On the other hand, some features not present in the original patch were added, like screenshot support. VA API is rather bad for actual video output. Dealing with older libva versions or the completely broken vdpau backend doesn't help. OSD is low quality and should be rather slow. In some cases, only either OSD or subtitles can be shown at the same time (because OSD is drawn first, OSD is prefered). Also, libva can't decide whether it accepts straight or premultiplied alpha for OSD sub-pictures: the vdpau backend seems to assume premultiplied, while a native vaapi driver uses straight. So I picked straight alpha. It doesn't matter much, because the blending code for straight alpha I added to img_convert.c is probably buggy, and ASS subtitles might be blended incorrectly. Really good video output with VA API would probably use OpenGL and the GL interop features, but at this point you might just use vo_opengl. (Patches for making HW decoding with vo_opengl have a chance of being accepted.) Despite these issues, decoding seems to work ok. I still got tearing on the Intel system I tested (Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2350M). It was also tested with the vdpau vaapi wrapper on a nvidia system; however this was rather broken. (Fortunately, there is no reason to use mpv's VAAPI support over native VDPAU.)
2013-08-09 12:01:30 +00:00
#include <va/va.h>
#include "mp_image.h"
#include "hwdec.h"
video: add vaapi decode and output support This is based on the MPlayer VA API patches. To be exact it's based on a very stripped down version of commit f1ad459a263f8537f6c from git://gitorious.org/vaapi/mplayer.git. This doesn't contain useless things like benchmarking hacks and the demo code for GLX interop. Also, unlike in the original patch, decoding and video output are split into separate source files (the separation between decoding and display also makes pixel format hacks unnecessary). On the other hand, some features not present in the original patch were added, like screenshot support. VA API is rather bad for actual video output. Dealing with older libva versions or the completely broken vdpau backend doesn't help. OSD is low quality and should be rather slow. In some cases, only either OSD or subtitles can be shown at the same time (because OSD is drawn first, OSD is prefered). Also, libva can't decide whether it accepts straight or premultiplied alpha for OSD sub-pictures: the vdpau backend seems to assume premultiplied, while a native vaapi driver uses straight. So I picked straight alpha. It doesn't matter much, because the blending code for straight alpha I added to img_convert.c is probably buggy, and ASS subtitles might be blended incorrectly. Really good video output with VA API would probably use OpenGL and the GL interop features, but at this point you might just use vo_opengl. (Patches for making HW decoding with vo_opengl have a chance of being accepted.) Despite these issues, decoding seems to work ok. I still got tearing on the Intel system I tested (Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2350M). It was also tested with the vdpau vaapi wrapper on a nvidia system; however this was rather broken. (Fortunately, there is no reason to use mpv's VAAPI support over native VDPAU.)
2013-08-09 12:01:30 +00:00
struct mp_image_pool;
struct mp_log;
video: add vaapi decode and output support This is based on the MPlayer VA API patches. To be exact it's based on a very stripped down version of commit f1ad459a263f8537f6c from git://gitorious.org/vaapi/mplayer.git. This doesn't contain useless things like benchmarking hacks and the demo code for GLX interop. Also, unlike in the original patch, decoding and video output are split into separate source files (the separation between decoding and display also makes pixel format hacks unnecessary). On the other hand, some features not present in the original patch were added, like screenshot support. VA API is rather bad for actual video output. Dealing with older libva versions or the completely broken vdpau backend doesn't help. OSD is low quality and should be rather slow. In some cases, only either OSD or subtitles can be shown at the same time (because OSD is drawn first, OSD is prefered). Also, libva can't decide whether it accepts straight or premultiplied alpha for OSD sub-pictures: the vdpau backend seems to assume premultiplied, while a native vaapi driver uses straight. So I picked straight alpha. It doesn't matter much, because the blending code for straight alpha I added to img_convert.c is probably buggy, and ASS subtitles might be blended incorrectly. Really good video output with VA API would probably use OpenGL and the GL interop features, but at this point you might just use vo_opengl. (Patches for making HW decoding with vo_opengl have a chance of being accepted.) Despite these issues, decoding seems to work ok. I still got tearing on the Intel system I tested (Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2350M). It was also tested with the vdpau vaapi wrapper on a nvidia system; however this was rather broken. (Fortunately, there is no reason to use mpv's VAAPI support over native VDPAU.)
2013-08-09 12:01:30 +00:00
struct mp_vaapi_ctx {
struct mp_hwdec_ctx hwctx;
struct mp_log *log;
video: add vaapi decode and output support This is based on the MPlayer VA API patches. To be exact it's based on a very stripped down version of commit f1ad459a263f8537f6c from git://gitorious.org/vaapi/mplayer.git. This doesn't contain useless things like benchmarking hacks and the demo code for GLX interop. Also, unlike in the original patch, decoding and video output are split into separate source files (the separation between decoding and display also makes pixel format hacks unnecessary). On the other hand, some features not present in the original patch were added, like screenshot support. VA API is rather bad for actual video output. Dealing with older libva versions or the completely broken vdpau backend doesn't help. OSD is low quality and should be rather slow. In some cases, only either OSD or subtitles can be shown at the same time (because OSD is drawn first, OSD is prefered). Also, libva can't decide whether it accepts straight or premultiplied alpha for OSD sub-pictures: the vdpau backend seems to assume premultiplied, while a native vaapi driver uses straight. So I picked straight alpha. It doesn't matter much, because the blending code for straight alpha I added to img_convert.c is probably buggy, and ASS subtitles might be blended incorrectly. Really good video output with VA API would probably use OpenGL and the GL interop features, but at this point you might just use vo_opengl. (Patches for making HW decoding with vo_opengl have a chance of being accepted.) Despite these issues, decoding seems to work ok. I still got tearing on the Intel system I tested (Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2350M). It was also tested with the vdpau vaapi wrapper on a nvidia system; however this was rather broken. (Fortunately, there is no reason to use mpv's VAAPI support over native VDPAU.)
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VADisplay display;
struct va_image_formats *image_formats;
bool gpu_memcpy_message;
pthread_mutex_t lock;
// Internal, for va_create_standalone()
void *native_ctx;
void (*destroy_native_ctx)(void *native_ctx);
video: add vaapi decode and output support This is based on the MPlayer VA API patches. To be exact it's based on a very stripped down version of commit f1ad459a263f8537f6c from git://gitorious.org/vaapi/mplayer.git. This doesn't contain useless things like benchmarking hacks and the demo code for GLX interop. Also, unlike in the original patch, decoding and video output are split into separate source files (the separation between decoding and display also makes pixel format hacks unnecessary). On the other hand, some features not present in the original patch were added, like screenshot support. VA API is rather bad for actual video output. Dealing with older libva versions or the completely broken vdpau backend doesn't help. OSD is low quality and should be rather slow. In some cases, only either OSD or subtitles can be shown at the same time (because OSD is drawn first, OSD is prefered). Also, libva can't decide whether it accepts straight or premultiplied alpha for OSD sub-pictures: the vdpau backend seems to assume premultiplied, while a native vaapi driver uses straight. So I picked straight alpha. It doesn't matter much, because the blending code for straight alpha I added to img_convert.c is probably buggy, and ASS subtitles might be blended incorrectly. Really good video output with VA API would probably use OpenGL and the GL interop features, but at this point you might just use vo_opengl. (Patches for making HW decoding with vo_opengl have a chance of being accepted.) Despite these issues, decoding seems to work ok. I still got tearing on the Intel system I tested (Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2350M). It was also tested with the vdpau vaapi wrapper on a nvidia system; however this was rather broken. (Fortunately, there is no reason to use mpv's VAAPI support over native VDPAU.)
2013-08-09 12:01:30 +00:00
};
bool check_va_status(struct mp_log *log, VAStatus status, const char *msg);
#define CHECK_VA_STATUS(ctx, msg) check_va_status((ctx)->log, status, msg)
#define va_lock(ctx) (void)(ctx)
#define va_unlock(ctx) (void)(ctx)
int va_get_colorspace_flag(enum mp_csp csp);
struct mp_vaapi_ctx * va_initialize(VADisplay *display, struct mp_log *plog, bool probing);
void va_destroy(struct mp_vaapi_ctx *ctx);
enum mp_imgfmt va_fourcc_to_imgfmt(uint32_t fourcc);
uint32_t va_fourcc_from_imgfmt(int imgfmt);
2015-01-21 21:12:30 +00:00
VAImageFormat * va_image_format_from_imgfmt(struct mp_vaapi_ctx *ctx, int imgfmt);
bool va_image_map(struct mp_vaapi_ctx *ctx, VAImage *image, struct mp_image *mpi);
bool va_image_unmap(struct mp_vaapi_ctx *ctx, VAImage *image);
void va_surface_get_uncropped_size(struct mp_image *mpi, int *out_w, int *out_h);
void va_pool_set_allocator(struct mp_image_pool *pool, struct mp_vaapi_ctx *ctx,
int rt_format);
VASurfaceID va_surface_id(struct mp_image *mpi);
int va_surface_rt_format(struct mp_image *mpi);
struct mp_image *va_surface_download(struct mp_image *src,
struct mp_image_pool *pool);
int va_surface_alloc_imgfmt(struct mp_image *img, int imgfmt);
int va_surface_upload(struct mp_image *va_dst, struct mp_image *sw_src);
vaapi: determine surface format in decoder, not in renderer Until now, we have made the assumption that a driver will use only 1 hardware surface format. the format is dictated by the driver (you don't create surfaces with a specific format - you just pass a rt_format and get a surface that will be in a specific driver-chosen format). In particular, the renderer created a dummy surface to probe the format, and hoped the decoder would produce the same format. Due to a driver bug this required a workaround to actually get the same format as the driver did. Change this so that the format is determined in the decoder. The format is then passed down as hw_subfmt, which allows the renderer to configure itself with the correct format. If the hardware surface changes its format midstream, the renderer can be reconfigured using the normal mechanisms. This calls va_surface_init_subformat() each time after the decoder returns a surface. Since libavcodec/AVFrame has no concept of sub- formats, this is unavoidable. It creates and destroys a derived VAImage, but this shouldn't have any bad performance effects (at least I didn't notice any measurable effects). Note that vaDeriveImage() failures are silently ignored as some drivers (the vdpau wrapper) support neither vaDeriveImage, nor EGL interop. In addition, we still probe whether we can map an image in the EGL interop code. This is important as it's the only way to determine whether EGL interop is supported at all. With respect to the driver bug mentioned above, it doesn't matter which format the test surface has. In vf_vavpp, also remove the rt_format guessing business. I think the existing logic was a bit meaningless anyway. It's not even a given that vavpp produces the same rt_format for output.
2016-04-11 18:46:05 +00:00
void va_surface_init_subformat(struct mp_image *mpi);
bool va_guess_if_emulated(struct mp_vaapi_ctx *ctx);
struct mp_vaapi_ctx *va_create_standalone(struct mp_log *plog, bool probing);
video: add vaapi decode and output support This is based on the MPlayer VA API patches. To be exact it's based on a very stripped down version of commit f1ad459a263f8537f6c from git://gitorious.org/vaapi/mplayer.git. This doesn't contain useless things like benchmarking hacks and the demo code for GLX interop. Also, unlike in the original patch, decoding and video output are split into separate source files (the separation between decoding and display also makes pixel format hacks unnecessary). On the other hand, some features not present in the original patch were added, like screenshot support. VA API is rather bad for actual video output. Dealing with older libva versions or the completely broken vdpau backend doesn't help. OSD is low quality and should be rather slow. In some cases, only either OSD or subtitles can be shown at the same time (because OSD is drawn first, OSD is prefered). Also, libva can't decide whether it accepts straight or premultiplied alpha for OSD sub-pictures: the vdpau backend seems to assume premultiplied, while a native vaapi driver uses straight. So I picked straight alpha. It doesn't matter much, because the blending code for straight alpha I added to img_convert.c is probably buggy, and ASS subtitles might be blended incorrectly. Really good video output with VA API would probably use OpenGL and the GL interop features, but at this point you might just use vo_opengl. (Patches for making HW decoding with vo_opengl have a chance of being accepted.) Despite these issues, decoding seems to work ok. I still got tearing on the Intel system I tested (Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2350M). It was also tested with the vdpau vaapi wrapper on a nvidia system; however this was rather broken. (Fortunately, there is no reason to use mpv's VAAPI support over native VDPAU.)
2013-08-09 12:01:30 +00:00
#endif