This was matching e.g. both "foo/bar" and "foobar" against "foo", when
only the former should match. This could cause more property
notifications than necessary.
There's a short time during loading where external commands can add
external streams even before the main file is loaded (like during ytdl
hook execution). The track list is printed every time an external track
is added via commands. This was quite awkward when ytdl was adding
multiple streams, so don't print it in this stage. They are printed
anyway at the end of the loading process.
This command has been deprecated in the 0.8.x and 0.9.x releases - get
rid of it. Its only point ever was MPlayer compatibility, which broke
years ago anyway.
For certain reasons, we allow adding external tracks even before the
main file is loaded. This somewhat breaks in old assumption, which uses
mpctx->num_sources to determine whether a command can be applied in the
current state. Use the newer playback_initialized instead, which is a
much better choice for this purpose.
The previous commit removed this. Although mp_switch_track() can now be
called in all situations, we still don't want it to be called here.
Setting a track property while no file is loaded would simply deselect
the track instead of setting the underlying option to the requested
value.
Likewise, if the "cycle" command (M_PROPERTY_SWITCH) is used, don't just
deselect the track.
Adding an external audio track before loading the main file didn't work
right. For one, mp_switch_track() assumes it is called after the main
file is loaded. (The difference is that decoders are only initialized
once the main file is loaded, and we avoid doing this before that for
whatever reason.)
To avoid further messiness, just allow mp_switch_track() to be called at
any time. Also make it do what mp_mark_user_track_selection() did, since
the latter requires current_track to be set. (One could probably simply
allow current_track to be set at this point, but it'd interfere with
default track selection anyway and thus would be pointless.)
Fixes#1984.
Now it simply changes the options, i.e. what will be requested, instead
of returning M_PROPERTY_UNAVAILABLE.
This is another minor step towards unifying options and properties.
Still a bit weird: it will always return "no" if no file is loaded, and
disregards the option value.
Also replace their implementation with the recently introduced
properties. One significant difference is that audio-channels using OSD
formatting does not print the channel layout. The user can just use the
replacement property instead.
Now --volume takes an absolute volume, meaning it doesn't depend on
--softvol-max. 0 is still silence, and 100 now always means unchanged
volume. The OSD and the "volume" property are changed accordingly.
Also raise the minimum value of --softvol-max. A value below 100 makes
no sense and breaks the OSD.
The code checking for the type of seeking contained some if else
statements. To improve readability, I decided to refactor those
statements to a switch statement.
The OSD symbol for seeking to an absolute percentage was always OSD_FFW,
even when it should be OSD_REW. It uses the correct OSD symbols now, by
checking the current position ratio.
Note: The symbol is still incorrectly given when the absolute percentage
is very close to the current position ratio. Fortunately, that's a rare
use case.
Only absolute percentage seeking was permitted first. It is now also
possible to seek by relative percentage.
MPSEEK_FACTOR is used as seek_type.
Fixes#1950.
Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>
In the most simple case, this prevents the track ID from changing. One
disadvantage is that if the file fails loading, the track is gone for
good and would have to be re-added explicitly by the user.
Should help with debugging, and might be slightly more userfriendly.
Note that this is called manually in multiple entry-points, instead of
the functions doing the actual work (like mp_remove_track()). This is
done so that exiting the player or calling the sub_reload command won't
print redundant in-between states.
Approximate time of video buffered in the demuxer, in seconds. Same as
`demuxer-cache-duration` but returns the last timestamp of bufferred
data in demuxer.
Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>
Remove the old implementation for these properties. It was never very
good, often returned very innaccurate values or just 0, and was static
even if the source was variable bitrate. Replace it with the
implementation of "packet-video-bitrate". Mark the "packet-..."
properties as deprecated. (The effective difference is different
formatting, and returning the raw value in bits instead of kilobits.)
Also extend the documentation a little.
It appears at least some decoders (sipr?) need the
AVCodecContext.bit_rate field set, so this one is still passed through.
Remove the colorspace-related top-level options, add them to vf_format.
They are rather obscure and not needed often, so it's better to get them
out of the way. In particular, this gets rid of the semi-complicated
logic in command.c (most of which was needed for OSD display and the
direct feedback from the VO). It removes the duplicated color-related
name mappings.
This removes the ability to write the colormatrix and related
properties. Since filters can be changed at runtime, there's no loss of
functionality, except that you can't cycle automatically through the
color constants anymore (but who needs to do this).
This also changes the type of the mp_csp_names and related variables, so
they can directly be used with OPT_CHOICE. This probably ended up a bit
awkward, for the sake of not adding a new option type which would have
used the previous format.
There was a somewhat obscure optimization in the OSD and subtitle
rendering path: if only the position of the sub-images changed, and not
the actual image data, uploading of the image data could be skipped. In
theory, this could speed up things like scrolling subtitles.
But it turns out that even in the rare cases subtitles have such scrolls
or axis-aligned movement, modern libass rarely signals this kind of
change. Possibly this is because of sub-pixel handling and such, which
break this.
As such, it's a worthless optimization and just introduces additional
complexity and subtle bugs (especially in cases libass does the
opposite: incorrectly signaling a position change only, which happened
before). Remove this optimization, and rename bitmap_pos_id to
change_id.
This caused complaints because the fps was basically rounded on
microsecond boundaries in the vsync interval (it seemed convenient to
store only the vsync interval). So store the fps as float too, and let
the "display-fps" property return it directly.
Requested change in behavior.
Note that we set the assumed "infinite" display_fps to 1e6, which
conveniently lets vo_get_vsync_interval() return a dummy value of 1,
which can be easily checked against, and still avoids doing math with
float INFs.
Instead of refusing to set properties like "fullscreen" if no VO was
created, always allow it. So if no VO is created, setting the property
merely changes the options (and will be applied once the VO is created).
This is consistent with similar behavior changes to some other
properties.
Improves the behavior reported in #1676.
Also, we shouldn't check the config_ok variable - the VO should do this.
This gets rid of the need for a second (or more) parameters; instead it
can be all in one parameter. The (now) redundant parameter is still
parsed for compatibility, though.
The way the flags make each other conflict is a bit tricky: they have
overlapping bits, and the option parser disallows setting already set
bits.
Now --ass-use-margins doesn't apply to normal subtitles anymore. This is
probably the inverse from the mpv behavior users expected so far, and
thus a breaking change, so rename the option, that the user at least has
a chance to lookup the option and decide whether the new behavior is
wanted or not.
The basic idea here is:
- plain text subtitles should have a certain useful defalt behavior,
like actually using margins
- ASS subtitles should never be broken by default
- ASS subtitles should look and behave like plaintext subtitles if
the --ass-style-override=force option is used
This also subtly changes --sub-scale-with-window and adds the --ass-
scale-with-window option. Since this one isn't so important, don't
bother with compatibility.
The way the AO wakes up the playloop has nothing to do with events;
instead we must query the events on the AO once the playloop was woken
up. Querying the events in every playloop iteration is thus the correct
way to do this.
This commit adds notifications for hot plugging of devices. It also extends
the old behaviour of the `audio-out-detected-device` property which is now
backed by the hotplugging code. This allows clients to be notified when the
actual audio output device changes.
Maybe hotplugging should be supported for ao_coreaudio_exclusive too, but it's
device selection code is a bit fragile.
Not very important for the command line player; but GUI applications
will want to know about this.
This only adds the internal API; support for specific audio outputs
comes later.
This reuses the ao struct as context for the hotplug event listener,
similar to how the "old" device listing API did. This is probably a bit
unclean and confusing. One argument got reusing it is that otherwise
rewriting parts of ao_pulse would be required (because the PulseAudio
API requires so damn much boilerplate). Another is that --ao-defaults is
applied to the hotplug dummy ao struct, which automatically applies such
defaults even to the hotplug context.
Notification works through the property observation mechanism in the
client API. The notification chain is a bit complicated: the AO notifies
the player, which in turn notifies the clients, which in turn will
actually retrieve the device list. (It still has the advantage that it's
slightly cleaner, since the AO stuff doesn't need to know about client
API issues.)
The weird handling of atomic flags in ao.c is because we still don't
require real atomics from the compiler. Otherwise we'd just use atomic
bitwise operations.
These commands are counterparts of sub_add/sub_remove/sub_reload which
work for external audio file.
Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>
(minor simplification)
This is somewhat imperfect, because detection of hw decoding APIs is
mostly done on demand, and often avoided if not necessary. (For example,
we know very well that there are no hw decoders for certain codecs.)
This also requires every hwdec backend to identify itself (see hwdec.h
changes).
Opening the stream and opening the demuxer are both done asynchronously,
meaning the player reacts to client API requests. They also can
potentially take a while. Thus it's better to process outstanding
property changes, so that change events are sent for properties that
were changed during opening.
In particular, this would fix the sending the initial change event. It
was easily missed because MPV_EVENT_FILE_LOADED usually triggered it,
but the actual property could change only later, because audio
initialization really is kind of asynchronous to it.
This probably fixes#1544.
Now it shows one of:
- "Subtitles hidden" (sub-visibility=no)
- "Subtitles visible" (sub-visibility=yes, sub!=no)
- "Subtitles visible (but no subtitles selected)" (otherwise)
It should be a bit more self-explanatory than before. On the other hand,
I have no clue about UI issues.
This also gets close to what's reasonably possible with the OSD
expansion string syntax, which is why it looks so awful.
mpctx->audio_delay always has the same value as opts->audio_delay. (This
was not the case a long time ago, when the audio-delay property didn't
actually write to opts->audio_delay. I think.)
If a file is unseekable (consider e.g. a http server without resume
functionality), but the stream cache is active, the player will enable
seeking anyway. Until know, client API user couldn't know that this
happens, and it has implications on how well seeking will work. So add a
property which exports whether this situation applies.
Fixes#1522.
New command `mouse <x> <y> [<button> [single|double]]` is introduced.
This will update mouse position with given coordinate (`<x>`, `<y>`),
and additionally, send single-click or double-click event if `<button>`
is given.
Repurpose demuxer->filetype for this. It used to be used to print a
human readable format description; change it to a symbolic format name
and export it as property.
Unfortunately, libavformat has its own weird conventions, which are
reflected through the new property, e.g. the .mp4 case mentioned in the
manpage.
Fixes#1504.
`core-idle` depends on seeking state `mpctx->restart_complete`,
so make `core-idle` notified whenever `seeking` is notified, too.
`paused-for-cache` can be changed on MPV_EVENT_CACHE_UPDATE obviously.
Finally, `MPV_EVENT_PLAYBACK_RESTART` should be notified after
`mpctx->restart_complete` changed.
The "ontop" and "border" properties already used a common
mp_property_vo_flag() function, and the corresponding VOCTRLs used the
same conventions. "fullscreen" is pretty similar, but was handled
slightly similar. Change how VOCTRL_FULLSCREEN behaves, and use the same
helper function for "fullscreen" as the other flags.
Make their meaning more exact, and don't pretend that there's a
reasonable definition for "bits-per-pixel". Also make unset fields
unavailable.
average_depth still might be inconsistent: for example, 10 bit 4:2:0 is
identified as 24 bits, but RGB 4:4:4 as 12 bits. So YUV formats
seemingly drop the per-component padding, while RGB formats do not.
Internally it's consistent though: 10 bit YUV components are read as
16 bit, and the padding must be 0 (it's basically like an odd fixed-
point representation, rather than a bitfield).
bpp(bits-per-pixel) and depth(bit-depth for color component) can
be calculated from pixelformat technically but it requires massive
informations to be implemented in client side.
These subproperties are provided for convenience.
If there's only 1 chapter, the seeking by chapter (using the chapter
property) will either jump to the chapter point, or quit playback. This
is as designed, but seems like a useless and annoying behavior.
Do so by using mp_subprocess(). Although this uses completely different
code on Unix too, you shouldn't notice a difference. A less ncie thing
is that this reserves an entire thread while the command is running
(which wastes some memory for stack, at least). But this is probably
still the simplest way, and the fork() trick is apparently not
implementable with posix_subprocess().
If a filter exists, but has no metadata, just return success. This
allows the user to distinguish between no metadata available, and filter
not inserted.
See #1408.
Until now, these options took effect only at program start. This could
be confusing when e.g. doing "mpv list.m3u --shuffle". Make them always
take effect when a playlist is loaded either via a playlist file, or
with the "loadlist" command.
Essentially, don't make it the mmap() argument, and just add it to the
memory address. This hides tricky things like alignment reequirements
from the user.
Strictly speaking, this is not entirely backwards compatible: this adds
the regression that you can't access past 2 or 4 GB of a file on 32 bit
systems anymore. But I doubt anyone cared about this.
In theory, we could be clever, and just align the offset manually and
pass that to mmap(). This would also be transparent to the user, but
minimally more effort, so this is left as exercise to the reader.
Makes all of overlay_add work on windows/mingw.
Since we now don't explicitly check for mmap() anymore (it's always
present), this also requires us to make af_export.c compile, but I
haven't tested it.
Padding with spaces is very useless for OSD (because most fonts are
variable width), but it's good when using it on the terminal, e.g. for
reproducing the default terminal status line.
This was requested.
It seems libdvdread can't get the duration for titlesets other than the
currently opened title. The data structures contain dangling pointers
for these, and MPlayer works this around by opening every title
separately for the purpose of dumping the title list.
The result isn't quite what I imagined, because the A-point is never
marked as a seek point (so you can't jump between A and B), but it's
still slightly better than before.
There were complaints that a chapter seek past the last chapter was
quitting the player. Change the behavior to what is expected: the last
frame.
If no chapters are available, this still does nothing.
Running "sub_add file.srt auto" during hook execution automatically
selected the first added track. This happened because all tracks added
with sub_add are marked as "external", and external subtitles are always
selected by default.
Fix this by negating the "external" flag when autoselecting subtitles
during loading. The no_default flag exists for this purpose; it was
probably added for libquvi originally, where we had the same issue.
In all of these situations, NULL is logically not allowed, making the
checks redundant.
Coverity complained about accessing the pointers before checking them
for NULL later.
Does the same thing as the drop_buffers command. When implementing that
command, it turned out that resetting the higher level playback state
was more effective for achieving smooth recovery.
Untested; I don't even have any DVDs or DVD images with multiple angles.
This command was actually requested on IRC ages ago, but I forgot about
it.
The main purpose is that the decoding state can be reset without issuing
a seek, in particular in situations where you can't seek.
This restarts decoding from the middle of the packet stream; since it
discards the packet buffer intentionally, and the decoder will typically
not output "incomplete" frames until it has recovered, it can skip a
large amount of data.
It doesn't clear the byte stream cache - I'm not sure if it should.
Probably needs to be polished a bit more. Also, might require a key
binding that can set/clear the loop points in a more intuitive way.
For now, something like this can be put into input.conf to use it:
ctrl+y set ab-loop-a ${time-pos} # set A
ctrl+x set ab-loop-b ${time-pos} # set B
ctrl+c set ab-loop-a no # clear (mostly)
Fixes#1241.
Due to the current code structure, the "current" entry and the entry
which is playing can be different. This is probably silly, but still
try to mark the entries correctly.
Refs #1260.
This actually doesn't even write/return the new sub-property, because
I dislike the idea of dumping that field for every single playlist
entry, even though it's "needed" only for one.
Fixes#1260.
This might be interesting for GUIs and such.
It's probably still a little bit insufficient. For example, the filter
and audio/video output lists are not available through this.
This rewrites the audio decode loop to some degree. Audio filters don't
do refcounted frames yet, so af.c contains a hacky "emulation".
Remove some of the weird heuristic-heavy code in dec_audio.c. Instead of
estimating how much audio we need to filter, we always filter full
frames. Maybe this should be adjusted later: in case filtering increases
the volume of the audio data, we should try not to buffer too much
filter output by reducing the input that is fed at once.
For ad_spdif.c and ad_mpg123.c, we don't avoid extra copying yet - it
doesn't seem worth the trouble.
Causes the player to reload the demuxer and to relist the found
streams. Probably slightly dangerous/broken, because the demuxer
thread and possibly even the decoders will keep reading data from
the new title before the new demuxer takes over.
Fixes#1250.
This is what you would expect. Before this commit, each
ao_request_reload() call would just queue a reload command, and then
recreate the AO for the number of times the function was called.
Instead of sending a command, introduce some sort of event retrieval
mechanism. At least for the reload case, use atomics, because we're too
lazy to setup an extra mutex.
Call VOCTRL_GET_DISPLAY_NAMES it when the property is
requested. The vo should return the names of the displays that the mpv
window is covering. For example, with x11 vos, xrandr names LVDS1,
HDMI1, etc.
update_subtitle() already uees playback_pts to make subtitles work
better in no-audio mode. Using get_current_time() usually gets
playback_pts, but also has the advantage that it will use the seek
target time during seeks. This will result in multiple sub_seek commands
doing the right thing (at least as long as they're far enough apart so
that seeking is actually initiated when the second command is run).
Add a generic mechanism to the VO to relay "extra" events from VO to
player. Use it to notify the core of window resizes, which in turn will
be used to mark all affected properties ("window-scale" in this case) as
changed.
(I refrained from hacking this as internal command into input_ctx, or to
poll the state change, etc. - but in the end, maybe it would be best to
actually pass the client API context directly to the places where events
can happen.)
Instead of defining a separate data structure in the core.
For some odd reason, demux_chapter exported the chapter time in
nano-seconds. Change that to the usual timestamps (rename the field
to make any code relying on this to fail compilation), and also remove
the unused chapter end time.
Use the codepath that is normally used for DVD/BD title switching and
DVB channel switching. Removes some extra artifacts from the client API:
now MPV_EVENT_END_FILE will never be called on reloads (and neither is
MPV_EVENT_START_FILE).
No development activity (or even any sign of life) for almost a year.
A replacement based on youtube-dl will probably be provided before the
next mpv release. Ask on the IRC channel if you want to test.
Simplify the Lua check too: libquvi linking against a different Lua
version than mpv was a frequent issue, but with libquvi gone, no
direct dependency uses Lua, and such a clash is rather unlikely.
So a client API user can know when a window is created or destroyed.
Also might be useful for the OSC: it could disable itself if video is
disabled.
Before this commit, there were only indirect ways of detecting this.
The behavior of reverse cycling (with the "!reverse" magic value) was a
bit weird and acted with a "delay". This was because the command set the
value the _next_ command should use. Change this and make each command
invocation select and use the next command directly. This requires an
"uninitialized" special index in the counter, but that is no problem at
all.
Due to the way video-rotate currently works, the state will be
automatically updated once new video is decoded. So the filter chain
doesn't need to be reinitialized automatically, but there is a need to
trigger the video instant refresh code path instead.
Also move the support function closer to an annoying similar yet
different function. They probably can be unified next time major changes
are done to this code.
Allows properly changing/updating the cursor state. Useful for client
API window embedding, because the host application may not want the mpv
window to grab mouse input, and this has to manually handle the cursor.
Changing the cursor of foreign windows is usually not sane.
It might make sense to allow changing the cursor icon, but that would be
much more complicated, so I won't add it unless someone actually
requests it.
Apparently using the stream index is the best way to refer to the same
streams across multiple FFmpeg-using programs, even if the stream index
itself is rarely meaningful in any way.
For Matroska, there are some possible problems, depending how FFmpeg
actually adds streams. Normally they seem to match though.
A vague idea to get something similar what libquvi did.
Undocumented because it might change a lot, or even be removed. To give
an idea what it does, a Lua script could do the following:
-- type ID priority
mp.commandv("hook_add", "on_load", 0, 0)
mp.register_script_message("hook_run", function(param, param2)
-- param is "0", the user-chosen ID from the hook_add command
-- param2 is the magic value that has to be passed to finish
-- the hook
mp.resume_all()
-- do something, maybe set options that are reset on end:
mp.set_property("file-local-options/name", "value")
-- or change the URL that's being opened:
local url = mp.get_property("stream-open-filename")
mp.set_property("stream-open-filename", url .. ".png")
-- let the player (or the next script) continue
mp.commandv("hook_ack", param2)
end)
Showed "Volume: (unavailable)%". That was dumb.
The message string is now a bit convoluted; mostly because the property
expand syntax can't do "if-else", just "if".
CC: @mpv-player/stable
This does nothing good. This reverts a change made over a year ago - I
don't remember why this was originally done this way.
The main problem is that even if the volume option is set (something
like "--volume=75"), the volume property will always return "100" until
audio is initialized. If audio is uninitialized again, the volume
property will remain frozen at its last value.
Whether you consider the semantics weird or not depends on your use
case, but I suppose it's a bit confusing anyway. At this point, we keep
MPV_EVENT_PAUSE/UNPAUSE for compatibility only.
Make the "core-idle" property somewhat more useful in this context.
Each subsystem (or similar thing) had an INITIALIZED_ flag assigned. The
main use of this was that you could pass a bitmask of these flags to
uninit_player(). Except in some situations where you wanted to
uninitialize nearly everything, this wasn't really useful. Moreover, it
was quite annoying that subsystems had most of the code in a specific
file, but the uninit code in loadfile.c (because that's where
uninit_player() was implemented).
Simplify all this. Remove the flags; e.g. instead of testing for the
INITIALIZED_AO flag, test whether mpctx->ao is set. Move uninit code
to separate functions, e.g. uninit_audio_out().
For the sake of libmpv. Might make things much easier for the user,
especially on Windows. On the other hand, it's a bit sketchy that a
command exists that makes the player access arbitrary memory regions.
(But do note that input commands are not meant to be "secure" and never
were - for example, there's the "run" command, which obviously allows
running random shell commands.)
Somewhat more flexible: now there's a separate overlay struct, and you
don't need to coerce all state into struct sub_bitmap. Also, removing
the previous mapping (munmap call) is now all in one place, the
replace_overlay function.
Makes the next commit easier to implement.
This warning makes absolutely no sense. Passing an empty string to
printf-like functions is perfectly fine. In the OSD case, it just sets
an empty message, practically clearing the OSD.
Be less annoying, print the actual OSD level instead of something
meaningless, but still clear the OSD if OSD level 0 (no OSD) is set.
Remove the special handling for terminal OSD, that was just dumb.
This means that if a property not listed in property_osd_display[] is
changed, it will be shown on the OSD as "name: ${name}".
Properties that are listed in property_osd_display[] and have osd_name
not set stay invisible by default. This is used for "pause" and
"fullscreen", which (like before this commit) are not shown by default,
because it would be annoying.
The defaults still can be changed with command prefixes (osd-msg,
no-osd, others).
Probably not many user-visible changes. One notable change is that the
terminal OSD code for OSD bar fallback handling is removed with no
replacement. Instead, terminal OSD gets the same text message as normal
OSD. For volume, this is ok, because the text message is reasonable.
Other properties will look worse, but could be adjusted, and there are
in fact no other such properties that would be useful in audio-only
mode.
The fallback message for seeking falls away as well, but that message
was useless anyway - the terminal status line provides all information
anyway.
I believe the show_property_osd() code is now much easier to follow.
If no VO was open, these options couldn't be changed or even queried.
Although these properties are nearly useless if no VO exists, there's
actually no good reason to forbid querying or setting them. Also, even
if the VO is created, it doesn't mean the VO window was created.
Why bother?
Also, since now some properties could be mapped to non-existing options,
but mp_property_generic_option() is used, deal with this case and return
a not-found error code.
If there's a command that uses the OSD by default, then always print the
associated message (or a fallback made of name + value), even if the
command has an associated OSD bar.
This means volume, gamma, panscan, etc. all show both a message and a
OSD bar.
Also, add a '%' to the volume message. The extra_msg thing is not needed
anymore.
See issue #1103.
It's just confusing; users are encouraged to edit input.conf instead
(changing the argument to the "add" command).
Update input.conf to keep the old behavior.
We don't allow this by default, because it would be silly if random
external data (like filenames or file tags) could accidentally trigger
them.
Add a property that magically disables this ASS tag escaping.
Note that malicious input could still disable ASS tag escaping by
itself. This would be annoying but harmless.
Don't attempt to resync after speed changes. Note that most other cases
of audio reinit (like switching tracks etc.) still resync, but other
code paths take care of setting the audio_status accordingly.
This restores the old behavior of not trying to fix audio desync, which
was probably changed with commit 261506e3.
Note that the code as of now wasn't even entirely correct, since the A/V
sync values are slightly shifted. The dsync depends on the audio buffer
size, so a larger buffer size will show more extreme desync. Also see
mplayer2 commit 213a224e, which should fixed this - it was not merged
into mpv, because it disabled audio for too long, resulting in a worse
user experience. This is similar to the issue this commit attempts to
fix.
Fixes: #1042 (probably)
CC: @mpv-player-stable
This mostly uses the same idea as with vo_vdpau.c, but much simplified.
On X11, it tries to get the display framerate with XF86VM, and limits
the frequency of new video frames against it. Note that this is an old
extension, and is confirmed not to work correctly with multi-monitor
setups. But we're using it because it was already around (it is also
used by vo_vdpau).
This attempts to predict the next vsync event by using the time of the
last frame and the display FPS. Even if that goes completely wrong,
the results are still relatively good.
On other systems, or if the X11 code doesn't return a display FPS, a
framerate of 1000 is assumed. This is infinite for all practical
purposes, and means that only frames which are definitely too late are
dropped. This probably has worse results, but is still useful.
"--framedrop=yes" is basically replaced with "--framedrop=decoder". The
old framedropping mode is kept around, and should perhaps be improved.
Dropping on the decoder level is still useful if decoding itself is too
slow.
This code was sending a string to a different thread, and then
deallocated the string shortly after, which means most of the time
the other thread was accessing a dangling pointer.
It's possible that this is the cause for #1002.
Trying to jump chapters in a gile that has no chapters does nothing,
not even show a warning. This is confusing. The reason is that the
"add chapter" command will just bail out completely if the property
is unavailable.
This was because it exited when it couldn't get the property type.
Instead of exiting, just don't enter the code that needs the type.
(I'm not sure when this behavior changed. I consider it a regression.
It was probably caused by changes to the chapter code, which perhaps
started returning UNAVAILABLE instead of OK if there are no chapters.)
The client API exports this state via events already, but maybe it's
better to explicitly provide this property in order to facilitate use on
OSD and similar cases.
Internally, there are two mechanisms which can trigger property
notification as used with "observed" properties in the client API.
The first mechanism associates events with a group of properties that
are potentially changed by a certain event. mp_event_property_change[]
declares these associations, and maps each event to a set of strings.
When an event happens, the set of strings is matched against the list of
observed properties of each client. Make this more efficient by
comparing bitsets of events instead. This way, only a bit-wise "and" is
needed for each observed property. Even better, we can completely skip
clients which have no observed properties that match.
The second mechanism just updates individual properties explicitly by
name. Optimize this by using the property index instead. It would be
nice if we could reuse the first mechanism for the second one, but
there are too many properties to fit into a 64 bit mask.
(Though the limit on 64 events might get us into trouble later...)