Currently, libplacebo always tries to reconfigure the d3d11 swapchain
to a 10-bit output format because disable_10bit_sdr isn't set to true,
even when an 8-bit format is explicitly requested via
--d3d11-output-format.
Fix this by passing the requested output format preference to libplacebo.
Document that this option may be ignored.
We will need the full ra_ctx to be able to look up all the state
required to initialise an ffmpeg vulkan hwcontext, so pass let's
pass the ra_ctx instead of just the ra.
Filtering globally D3D11_MESSAGE_ID_CREATETEXTURE2D_INVALIDDIMENSIONS is
suboptimal, because can also hide other invalid usages. In the same time
it is not enough, because not only this message is emitted, but also one
about E_INVALIDARG. Just flush queue before and clear messages after to
ignore this part of code.
As a side note, I don't believe this texture size lookup is in fact
useful, but since it is there and is relatively harmless, let's leave
it as is.
c784820454 introduced a bool option type
as a replacement for the flag type, but didn't actually transition and
remove the flag type because it would have been too much mundane work.
In debug mode the macro causes an assertion failure.
In release mode it works differently and tells the compiler that it can
assume the codepath will never execute. For this reason I was conversative
in replacing it, e.g. in mpv-internal code that exhausts all valid values
of an enum or when a condition is clear from directly preceding code.
It turns out that it's generally more useful to look up hwdecs by image
format, rather than device type. In the situations where we need to
find one, we generally know the image format we're dealing with. Doing
this avoids us having to create mappings from image format to device
type.
The most significant part of this change is filling in the image format
for the various hw interops. There is a hw_imgfmt field today today, but
only a couple of the interops fill it in, and that seems to be because
we've never actually used this piece of metadata before. Well, now we
have a good use for it.
A VRAM memory leak was present in d3d11 when `idle=yes` and playback
stops for an item. This patch re-enables some of the code which is
only used during diagnostic which fixes the issue.
This lets us remap various messages which might now be happening at
each frame onto the trace level, thus unaffecting the initial debug
log level.
Additionally - thanks to this ability - the previously globally denied
message queue abandonment messages can now be handled and mapped to
trace log level, as on that log level they may be of use.
Recommended by rossy and based on his libplacebo commit
6d72f6445566eddb0493447d0bda72d98a99d40c .
Instead of always having the reference outside of calling resize,
request a backbuffer at start and relieve the backbuffer at
submission for presentation.
Query the description of the swap chain, which should in all theory
contain the format of the backbuffer. Then utilize a newly added
ra_d3d11 function to map the format to an ra_format. After that,
utilize the depth of the first plane of the format, as previously.
We don't need to hold on to buffers longer than necessary. Doesn't
matter for vo_gpu but greatly matters for vo_gpu_next, since it persists
hwdec mapped textures for longer periods.
Unfortunately, only provides benefits for hwdecs which do explicit
copies in their decode path, which currently just means cuda and
d3d11va.
vo_gpu_next and libplacebo expect swapchain images to be able to be
blitted to, which for libplacebo on FL11_0 and up means they have to
have DXGI_USAGE_UNORDERED_ACCESS, since libplacebo uses a compute shader
to emulate certain kinds of blits. For libplacebo's benefit, set all
applicable usage flags on swapchain images.
We've been assuming that maximum number of compute group threads is
never less than the 1024 defined by the desktop GL spec. Given that we
haven't had working compute shaders for GLES and I guess the Vulkan
spec defines at least as high a value, we've gotten away with it so
far.
But we should really look the value up and respect it.
Today, validation is only possible for string type options. But there's
no particular reason why it needs to be restricted in this way, and
there are potential uses, to allow other options to be validated
without forcing the option to have to reimplement parsing from
scratch.
The first part, simply making the validation function an explicit
field instead of overloading priv is simple enough. But if we only do
that, then the validation function still needs to deal with the raw
pre-parsed string. Instead, we want to allow the value to be parsed
before it is validated. That in turn leads to us having validator
functions that should be type aware. Unfortunately, that means we need
to keep the explicit macro like OPT_STRING_VALIDATE() as a way to
enforce the correct typing of the function. Otherwise, we'd have to
have the validator take a void * and hope the implementation can cast
it correctly.
For help, we don't have this problem, as help doesn't look at the
value.
Then, we turn validators that are really help generators into explicit
help functions and where a validator is help + validation, we split
them into two parts.
I have, however, left functions that need to query information for both
help and validation as single functions to avoid code duplication.
In this change, I have not added an other OPT_FOO_VALIDATE() macros as
they are not needed, but I will add some in a separate change to
illustrate the pattern.
The current implementation of presentation feedback was designed to be
used with flip model presentation. With the bitblt model,
GetFrameStatistics returns totally different values and it's not clear
if we can use them at all. Previously, this wasn't a problem because
with the bitblt model, GetFrameStatistics only worked in exclusive
fullscreen. Now that mpv supports exclusive fullscreen, we should
explicitly check for a flip model swapchain before using presentation
feedback.
Change all OPT_* macros such that they don't define the entire m_option
initializer, and instead expand only to a part of it, which sets certain
fields. This requires changing almost every option declaration, because
they all use these macros. A declaration now always starts with
{"name", ...
followed by designated initializers only (possibly wrapped in macros).
The OPT_* macros now initialize the .offset and .type fields only,
sometimes also .priv and others.
I think this change makes the option macros less tricky. The old code
had to stuff everything into macro arguments (and attempted to allow
setting arbitrary fields by letting the user pass designated
initializers in the vararg parts). Some of this was made messy due to
C99 and C11 not allowing 0-sized varargs with ',' removal. It's also
possible that this change is pointless, other than cosmetic preferences.
Not too happy about some things. For example, the OPT_CHOICE()
indentation I applied looks a bit ugly.
Much of this change was done with regex search&replace, but some places
required manual editing. In particular, code in "obscure" areas (which I
didn't include in compilation) might be broken now.
In wayland_common.c the author of some option declarations confused the
flags parameter with the default value (though the default value was
also properly set below). I fixed this with this change.
By default utilizes the color space of the desktop on which the
swap chain is located. If a specific value is defined, it will be
instead be utilized.
Enables configuration of the PQ color space (BT.2020 primaries,
PQ transfer function) for HDR.
Additionally, signals the swap chain color space to the renderer,
so that the render looks correct without having to specify
target-trc or target-prim manually.
Due to all of the APIs being Win10+ only, will only work starting
with Windows 10.
If expected_sync_pc is greater than submit_count, the unsigned
subtraction will wraparound, which breaks playback. This bug was found
while experimenting with bit-blt model present, but it might be possible
to trigger it with the flip model as well, if there was a dropped frame.
Query information on the system output most linked to the swap chain,
and either utilize a user-configured format, or either 8bit
RGBA or 10bit RGB with 2bit alpha depending on the system output's
bit depth.
This affects hwdec_dxva2dxgi, which uses ra_d3d11_wrap_tex to wrap RGB
video frames that are shared with a D3D9 device. Without it, mpv uses
nearest instead of bilinear scaling with --scale=bilinear (the default)
and --hwdec=dxva2. It's kind of hard to believe this bug has gone
unnoticed for almost two years, but that seems to have been the case.
Fixes: #7042