Use the 3D rendering functions and shaders to render the video frame. This
is very similar to vo_gl. Most planar formats with varying chroma shifts
and bit depths are supported (including 10 bit), as well as some RGB
formats. The old code that used D3D's StretchRect function is still
available, but will by default be used with the least priority.
Also implement video equalizers and colorspace selection. These use the
same code as vo_gl and vo_vdpau, and are available only if shader YUV
conversion is active.
The rendering is extremely simple and naive, there are no filters etc.
Since compiling shaders seems to require the 500 MB DirectX SDK, all
shaders come in pre-compiled form, and there is no make rule to compile
them. mplayer should be compilable without 500 MB of garbage.
The main problem is that compiling shaders within an application seems to
require d3dx9_*.dll, which isn't installed by default.
Add an option ("disable-texture-align") that allows making the video
textures exactly the same size as the source video. The code used to align
the OSD texture size on 16 for unknown reasons, but since this was perhaps
a good reason, this behavior is kept for video textures as well. (There is
a chance that the alignment improves performance and stability with some
drivers.) Passing this option disables this behavior. It is useful for
reducing texture filtering artifacts at the bottom/right borders.
The code locked the texture once for each OSD object that was rendered.
But there doesn't seem to be any good reason to do that, so lock it only
once during OSD rendering.
The OSD code used a shadow texture on systems that don't report
D3DDEVCAPS_TEXTURESYSTEMMEMORY. Do that for EOSD as well. Refactor the
OSD texture management code to reduce code duplication.
I have not the slightest clue about Direct3D9 texture management, so it
seems like a good idea not to do something different for EOSD textures,
even though the OSD code does exactly the same as far as texture handling
goes.
It's also worth noting that D3DDEVCAPS_TEXTURESYSTEMMEMORY doesn't seem to
be supported by most real systems [1], and maintaining a shadow copy in
system memory in order to update textures is required. The previous EOSD
texture code may or may not have worked on some or all real systems, I
can't really tell by reading the MSDN documentation only.
[1] http://www.kludx.com/capability.php?capability=17
The D3D state (the IDirect3DDevice9 and all textures and buffers) were
released and recreated in the config() function. This is completely
unnecessary. Instead explicitly handle changes. The video surface is only
reallocated if the video format or the video size changes. The OSD texture
is only reallocated if the window size is increased. The EOSD texture is
not released. Since the resize code is reused to deal with reconfig
changes, some of these improvements (and possible bugs) apply to normal
window resizing as well.
The required feature for this, VOCTRL_REDRAW_OSD, was unimplemented for
unknown reasons. It is trivial to add.
There is still a weird issue when switching the fullscreen state while
paused. I have no idea why this happens. The contents of the video should
survive the window reconfiguration (at least we don't free it), and we
explicitly redraw the screen after fullscreen.
The code assumed the last format passed to query_format will be the one
that is used on playback. This is probably true and thus didn't cause any
bugs, but make query_format side effect free just like the other VOs.
Clipping it makes the video output look extremely crappy. There seems no
good reason to do this, and VirtualBox is fine with overlays larger than
the screen.
The code used WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGING to force an spect ratio. This didn't
behave well if the left/top window borders were used for resizing.
Resizing with these borders changed the screen position of the right/bottom
as well, which is unintuitive and annoying.
Use WM_SIZING instead. Unlike WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGING, WM_SIZING knows about
which border is being used for resizing and can act accordingly.
Note that the calculated window size doesn't necessarily match with the
size mplayer calculates, but this problem exists on x11 as well.
This commit fixes various issues with the way the window position and
size is setup. Most importantly, it fixes some bugs with restoring from
fullscreen state.
Rename create_rendering_context() to reinit_window_state(). This function
doesn't create anything, it just sets the window bounds and styles.
Do not use vo_dx/dy for the window position, as video_out.c overwrites it
with each vo_config() call. Use private variables window_x/y instead.
A big cause for issues was that reinit_window_state() accidentally cleared
the WS_VISIBLE style. I suspect that the API call to temporarily hide the
window was a hack to deal with this. Another bug was that the window style
was changed without calling SetWindowPos with SWP_FRAMECHANGED (as the
MSDN documentation says).
Properly initialize window position and size on vo_config following the
same rules as the x11 backend:
- Never change the window position. The window position should be kept, as
the user might move the window, and resetting the window position e.g.
during ordered chapter playback is not desired.
- Never change the window size, unless the size of the video changes.
These rules don't apply to fullscreen. When switching from fullscreen to
windowed mode, the backend should restore the previous windowed size and
position. When the VO was reconfigured during playback (vo_config() etc.),
the saved window position and size should be changed according to the
rules above, even if the window was in fullscreen mode during
reconfiguring.
Note that these rules might be perceived as awkward by some users: if you
play multiple files with different resolutions, the window won't be
centered when playing the files after the first. This is not a bug.
Restore hunk disabling overlay when the Window is minimized.
This was accidentally removed in r33657.
Fixes bug 1950.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33894 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Simplify code handling minimized state.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33895 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Apply uncrustify to vo_directx.c.
The vast majority of changes are whitespace changes, but in some cases
{} was merged with other lines or a ; was removed after a } from a
switch and similar minor and obviously correct changes.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33896 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Fix array layout uncrustify messed up.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33897 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Remove pointless () and {}.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33898 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Make NULL checks simpler/more consistent.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33899 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Use FFMIN/FFMAX.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33901 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Simplify struct initialization.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33902 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Split out read/write part from data struct and make read-only
struct const.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33903 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Store fixed-length string directly in struct, avoid pointer indirection.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33904 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Replace some inappropriate while() loops with for()
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33905 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Simplify some more struct initializations.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33906 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Avoid typedef.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33907 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Use struct initializer in one more case.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33908 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Simplify printing of error strings.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@33909 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Conflicts:
libvo/vo_directx.c
The name "MPlayer2" isn't used anywhere. It's either "MPlayer" or
"mplayer2". Make it more consistent by using "mplayer2" instead.
Note that the version string passed as network user-agent changes from
"MPlayer" to "mplayer2" as well.
The current code tried to print -1000 as unsigned integer if the
chapter time was unknown. Print -1 instead. This affects only the
-identify output used for slave mode, such as ID_CHAPTER_0_START.
Modify the YUV->RGB conversion matrix to take into account the
difference between the same color value being x/255 in a 8-bit texture
and x*256/65535 in a 16-bit texture (actually things are stored as
x*4/65535 for 10-bit color, but that can be ignored here). This 0.4 %
difference in the shader float value could make shades of gray in
10-bit (or generally more than 8 bit) YUV produce RGB values with
green slightly higher than red/blue.
Latest liblivemedia version disables APIs we need. The code still
exists in the library and the changelog says the old interface can be
enabled with "#define RTSPCLIENT_SYNCHRONOUS_INTERFACE". However, the
code on the library side is disabled by default too, and seems to be
disabled in distro packages, so defining that in the player does not
help (just delays the failure until link time). It's possible the
distro packages will be changed to enable this, but since dropping
live555 support is desirable anyway, change configure to disable
support by default at least for now.
The live555 code is the only part of the source that's in C++.
Including C headers in code compiled as C++ has caused issues at
times, so deleting this code would have a maintenance benefit.
Reportedly the rtsp support in Libav has improved, so there should
be less need for live555.
Remove the old EDL implementation that was activated with the --edl
option. It is mostly redundant and inferior compared to the newer
demux_edl support, though currently there's no support for using the
same EDL files with the new implementation and the mute functionality
of the old implementation is not supported. The main reason to remove
the old implementation at this point is that the mute functionality
would conflict with following audio volume handling changes, and
working on the old code would be a wasted effort in the long run as at
some point it would be removed anyway.
The --edlout functionality is kept for now, even though after this
commit there is no code that could directly read its output.
Changing the volume when softvol is enabled or if the audio output driver
doesn't support volume controls causes insertion of the "volume" filter.
This fails with AC3. Since the filter wasn't removed after that, and the
filter chain was in a bogus state, random crashes occured past this
point.
Fix it by reinitializing the filter chain completely on failure. Volume
controls simply won't work. (This can't be fixed, because AC3 is a
compressed format, and would require additional decoding/encoding passes
in order to support arbitrary volume changes.)
This also affects balance controls.
Windows uses a legacy codepage for char* / runtime functions accepting
char *. Using UTF-8 as the codepage with setlocale() is explicitly
forbidden.
Work this around by overriding the MSVCRT functions with wrapper
macros, that assume UTF-8 and use "proper" API calls like _wopen etc.
to deal with unicode filenames. All code that uses standard functions
that take or return filenames must now include osdep/io.h. stat()
can't be overridden, because MinGW-w64 itself defines "stat" as a
macro. Change code to use use mp_stat() instead.
This is not perfectly clean, but still somewhat sane, and much better
than littering the rest of the mplayer code with MinGW specific hacks.
It's also a bit fragile, but that's actually little different from the
previous situation. Also, MinGW is unlikely to ever include a nice way
of dealing with this.
mp_ass_configure() (first time setup for subtitle options) and
mp_ass_reload_options() (update options) duplicated the code for
setting some options. There is no reason why they shouldn't use the
same code.
Some of the code, especially the dshow and windows codec loader parts,
are extremely hacky and likely full of bugs. The goal is merely getting
rid of warnings that could obscure more important warnings and actual
bugs, instead of fixing actual problems. This reduces the number of
warnings from over 500 to almost the same as when compiling on Linux.
Note that many problems stem from using the ancient wine-derived
windows headers. There are some differences to the "proper" windows
header. Changing the code to compile with the proper headers would be
too much trouble, and it still has to work on Unix.
Some of the changes might actually break compilation on legacy MinGW,
but we don't support that anymore. Always use MinGW-w64, even when
compiling to 32 bit.
Fixes some warnings in the win32 loader code on Linux too.
MinGW maps the "printf" format string archetype to the non-standard
MSVCRT functions, even if __USE_MINGW_ANSI_STDIO is defined and set
to 1. We need to use "gnu_printf" to use the format strings as provided
by vsnprintf and similar functions to get correct warnings.
Since "gnu_printf" isn't necessarily available on other GCC compatible
compilers (such as clang), do this only on MinGW.
This makes MinGW redirect certain stdio functions (such as the sprintf
family) from the MSVCRT libc to a standard compliant MinGW
implementation.
This fixes a crash in talloc.c when compiling mplayer with MinGW-w64.
The problem is most likely with talloc_vasprintf(), which calls
vsnprintf with a small buffer and checks its return value to find out
how much space the formatted string requires. Without this commit,
vsnprintf would always return -1, and then the code calls abort().
(lachs0r figured out this one.)
The _UWIN define causes the mingw headers not to declare deprecated (on
Windows) function names such as open and mkdir. But the code uses these. I
have no idea why this used to work (if it even did), but the original
reason why it was defined seems to have vanished.
If --enable-cross-compile is specified, passing
--target=i686-w64-mingw32 for example will check if
i686-w64-mingw32-gcc can be used. This is only done if the compiler
isn't specified via --cc or the CC environment variable.
The same is done for some other build tools, such as pkg-config.
(Only the C compiler will try to use a fallback in this case.)
This didn't work very well when cross compiling from Linux to Windows:
it tries to execute an .exe file, which succeeds if wine is installed.
As consequence it detects "no" as result.
In general this won't work if emulation for the target architecture is
available. Remove it.
When the build wrapper repo scripts run configure they set a custom
PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable. Show the value of this in
config.log to make it easier to rerun configure with a tweaked version
of the same parameters. Also show CFLAGS if set, as it's likely to
break things.
This is a minor simplification. The original intend was to only open a
file if opening the image encoder went well, but this obscure special
case is not worth bothering the image writer functions with more error
handling.
This adds the --screenshot-template option, which specifies a template
for the filename used for a screenshot. The '%' character is parsed as
format specifier. These format specifiers insert metadata into the
filename. For example, '%f' is replaced with the filename of the
currently played file.
The following format specifiers are available:
%n Insert sequence number (padded with 4 zeros), e.g. "0002".
%0Nn Like %n, but pad to N zeros (N = 0 to 9).
%n behaves like %04n.
%#n Like %n, but reset the sequence counter on every screenshot.
(Useful if other parts in the template make the resulting
filename already mostly unique.)
%#0Nn Use %0Nn and %#n at the same time.
%f Insert filename of the currently played video.
%F Like %f, but with stripped file extension ("." and rest).
%p Insert current playback time, in HH:MM:SS format.
%P Like %p, but adds milliseconds: HH:MM:SS.mmmm
%tX Insert the current local date/time, using the date format X.
X is a single letter and is passed to strftime() as "%X".
E.g. "%td" inserts the number of the current day.
%{prop} Insert the value of the slave property 'prop'.
E.g. %{filename} is the same as %f. If the property doesn't
exist or is not available, nothing is inserted, unless a
fallback is specified as in %{prop:fallback text}.
%% Insert the character '%'.
The strings inserted by format specifiers will be checked for
characters not allowed in filenames (including '/' and '\'), and
replaced with the placeholder '_'. (This doesn't happen for text that
was passed with the --screenshot-template option, and allows specifying
a screenshot target directory by prefixing the template with a relative
or absolute path.)
If the screenshot_force video filter is inserted, taking screenshots will
always use the video filter, and skip the VO specific screenshot code.
This can be useful if the VO code causes problems, or if it's intended to
take screenshots from a specific location in the filter chain.
The 'screenshot' filter is intended as fallback, it's not used if possible.
Callign add_step_frame is not necessary, because mplayer always decodes
at least one frame when starting a new file. Calling pause_player is
sufficient, and unlike add_step_frame doesn't play any audio.
Instead of opening avctx in preinit() and setting paramters later,
(re)open it in config() where parameters can be set first. This fixes
a failure to open the codec with new libavcodec versions that check
pix_fmt during avcodec_open2().
Remove "Please check mtrr settings at /proc/mtrr" and "NOTE: Win32
codec DLLs are not supported on your CPU" messages printed at the end
of a configure run. mtrr should be irrelevant on today's machines, and
the DLLs are a lot less important nowadays. Also remove mtrr detection
logic that was only used to decide whether or not to print that
message. Bizarrely, there were --enable-mtrr and --disable-mtrr
options for this too (with no effect except for the message).
vo_xv crashed if existing frames had been lost due to a config() call
in the middle of a file and vo_redraw_frame() was called. Add checks
to reject vo_redraw_frame() unless at least one frame has been flipped
after the the last configuration change, so individual VOs do not have
to deal with this case.
libpostproc has been removed from Libav and the library now exists as
a separate project. Because it's not essential, separate it from the
Libav library check and allow compiling without it.
Add helper function pkg_config_add() that checks for the presence of a
package and also adds cflags/ldflags if it is found. Change existing
pkg-config-using feature tests to use that. Also change the freetype
test that used a separate libfreetype-config binary before; using
pkg-config instead helps cross-compiling. Drop other kinds of checks
(such as test compiles) from these tests. It's possible that this
could cause problems on some (broken) systems, but that can't be
verified without user testing.
The cue code will open the .bin file with demux_rawaudio if the file
can't be opened otherwise. In case the .bin file isn't in the exact
format demux_rawaudio uses (usually 44100 Hz, 2 ch, s16le PCM), noise
will be played.
This is done only if no other demuxer could open the file, and the
file extension is ".bin".