Previously OSD was always displayed on {ch,pl}_{next,prev} left-click,
and seekbar-hover-chapter was always enabled and with fixed format.
Now it can be controlled with:
- chapters_osd, playlist_osd: yes/no (only affects left-click).
- chapter_fmt: lua string.format template, or "no" to disable.
Fixes#4675
Commit 6abb7e3 updates the markers when the chapters change, but it
doesn't update their relative position at the bar when the duration
changes.
This means that adding chapters to a live stream would result in
corresponding chapter markers which were static while the duration
changed and thus their positions became incorrect over time until the
OSC was reinitialized.
This is fixed by observing the duration property if chapters are present
and reinitializing the OSC when the duration changes.
The live_markers user option, which determines whether the duration
property is observed when there are chapters, has been added in order to
allow disabling this behaviour as calling request_init() frequently
might have some impact on low-end systems.
The impact of request_init() on render() was measured to increase from
1-1.5 ms to 2-3 ms on a 2010 MacBook Air, while the impact was neglible
on a 2016 Surface Book (increasing only to an average of 1.4 ms from
1.3 ms for n=1500 render cycles).
The live_markers option is enabled by default.
The "seekbarkeyframes" option is now interpreted such if it's true, the
player default is used. Too lazy to make this a choice option or
whatever; the Lua option parser doesn't have support for that anyway.
Someone who cares can adjust this.
A minority of users have expressed a dislike of hats, calling them
"cancer [that] don't belong in software" describing the people who add
them as "shitty circlejerks" and "chucklefuck."
While I personally disagree with those opinions, it's probably easier
to let them have it their way. For that reason this adds the option
`greenandgrumpy` to the osc, which allows users to disable the hat.
To aid in discoverability, and to address the most common case
directly, I'm adding an 'auto' mode for the window controls. In
this case, we will show the controls if there is no window border
and hide them if there are borders. This also respects the option
being toggled at runtime.
To ensure that it works in the wayland case, I've also made sure
that the wayland code explicitly forces the option to false if
decoration support is missing.
Based on feedback, I've split the config in two, with one option
for whether controls are active, and one for alignment. These are
new enough that we can get away with ignoring compatibility.
It seems logical to account for the window controls if `boxvideo`
is in use (which has the effect of reducing the size of the video
so that the osc is not covering the video).
Today, if window decorations are not present, either because they were
disabled, or because the platform doesn't support them
(eg: gnome-shell on wayland), there are no window controls, meaning it
is not possible to minimize/maximize/close a window without knowing
keyboard shortcuts.
While you can imagine various ways of offering client side decorations,
it is attractive to consider using OSC because that is functionality
that we already have.
The main work here is defining a separate input area from the main
OSC box with its own buttons, etc.
While we could probably handle auto-detection based on whether
decorations are present or not, it's manually controlled for now.
The window control logic is mostly disconnected from the OSC itself,
except in the case of the `topbar` layout, where there has to be
coordination so that the controls don't get drawn on top of each other.
I had to do fine-positioning of the buttons based on the font on
my system, so don't be surprised if it looks wrong elsewhere.
You could also argue that window controls should be unscaled, even
if the main OSC box is scaled, but I've not tried to do this.
Normally I use the OSC like this: not at all, but have a key binding
that does "cycle osc" to show it. And in that case, I don't really want
it to overlap the damn video.
I could use the zoom/pan options to move the video out of the way, but
this is also sort of annoying. Likewise, you could write a script or so
which does this automatically if the OSC appears, but that's still
annoying, and computing values for these options such that the video is
moved correctly is tricky.
So I added a bunch of options that set explicit video borders (previous
commit), and a option for the OSC to use them (this commit).
Disabled by default, since I'm afraid this is too awkward and
unpolished, especially with OSC default settings.
I'm also using "osc-visibility=always". Effectively, making the OSC
appear will box the video, and making it disappear (by unloading
osc.lua) will restore the video back to normal.
This way people can still use the mouse to quickly check the elapsed time
without moving it all the way to the bottom while still having half the screen
to ignore mouse movement.
These can be used in input.conf for pretty formatting of lists as
with shift+clicking the OSC buttons.
Ex:
z script-message osc-playlist
Z script-message osc-chapterlist
x script-message osc-tracklist
Change a few other defaults accordingly:
- seekbarstyle=bar looks better with bottombar.
- Bigger scalewindowed and scalefullscreen make bottom/topbar more readable.
Adds always-on mode by internally utilizing hidetimeout as negative and
forbidding the user to set negative values.
This removes script-message to enable/disable the osc, and instead introduces a
combined 'visibility' control with the values never/auto/always.
It's available via script_opts and script_message as 'osc-visibility'.
As message, it also supports a 'cycle' value.
The del key is bound to cycling the visibility modes.
- --lua and --lua-opts change to --script and --script-opts
- 'lua' default script dirs change to 'scripts'
- DOCS updated
- 'lua-settings' dir was _not_ modified
The old lua-based names/dirs still work, but display a warning.
Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>