vo_dmabuf_wayland worked by allocating entries to a pool and then having
a lot of complex logic dealing with releasing buffers, pending entries,
etc. along with some other not so nice things. Instead, we can rewrite
this logic so that the wl_buffers created by the imported dmabuf is
instead stored in a linked list, wl_list. We can simply append our
buffers to the list when needed and destroy everything at the end. On
every frame, we can check the ids of our surfaces and reuse existing
buffers, so in practice there will only ever be a handful at a time.
Some other small changes were made in an attempt to organize the
vaapi/drmprime code a little better as well.
An important change is to always enforce at least a minimum number of
buffers. Certain formats would not make enough unique buffers, and this
results in flickering/artifacts occuring. The old way to attempt to deal
with this was to clear out all the existing buffers and remake them, but
this gets complicated and also didn't always work. An easy solution to
this is just create more buffers which appears to solve this problem.
The actual number needed is not really based on anything solid, but 8
is a reasonable number to create for the lifetime of a file and it seems
to do the trick.
Additionally, seeking/loading new files can result in flicker artificts
due to buffers being reused when they shouldn't. When that happens, we
flip a bool so all the buffers get destroyed in draw_frame to avoid any
visual glitches.
macOS really has completely different path conventions that mpv doesn't
take into account and it treats it just like any other old unix-like
system. This means mpv enforces certain conventions on it (like all the
XDG stuff) that doesn't really apply. Since we'd like to use more of
this but at the same time not distrupt mac users even more, let's just
copy and paste the current code to a new file, update the build and call
it a day. This way, the paths of these two platforms can more freely
diverge.
This finally allows us to put any user defined options into the
CONFIGURATION variable like what waf does. The arbitrary hardcoded
fallback is left in place for old meson versions. Also update the
documentation in regards to the mpv-configuration variable to be
relevant to meson.
Microsoft documented how to enable dark mode for title bar:
https://learn.microsoft.com/windows/apps/desktop/modernize/apply-windows-themeshttps://learn.microsoft.com/windows/win32/api/dwmapi/ne-dwmapi-dwmwindowattribute
Documentation says to set the DWMWA_USE_IMMERSIVE_DARK_MODE attribute to
TRUE to honor dark mode for the window, FALSE to always use light mode.
While in fact setting it to TRUE causes dark mode to be always enabled,
regardless of the settings. Since it is quite unlikely that it will be
fixed, just use UxTheme API to check if dark mode should be applied and
while at it enable it fully. Ideally this function should only call the
DwmSetWindowAttribute(), but it just doesn't work as documented.
Fixes: #6901
This better follows the actual required bits, and makes sure that
a file not part of standard EGL headers is available, as the
handle type is part of standard EGL extensions header.
This is the latest stable release, and what we should use for
libplacebo-next per haasn's recommendation.
The previous 202 version wasn't even a release.
This reworks all of mpv's unit tests so they are compiled as separate
executables (optional) and run via meson test. Because most of the tests
are dependant on mpv's internals, existing compiled objects are
leveraged to create static libs and used when necessary. As an aside, a
function was moved into video/out/gpu/utils for sanity's sake (otherwise
most of vo would have been needed). As a plus, meson multithreads
running tests automatically and also the output no longer pollutes the
source directory. There are tests that can break due to ffmpeg changes,
so they require a specific minimum libavutil version to be built.
Since meson has its own unit testing system, let's rework mpv's tests so
they integrate nicely with this. To prepare for this, start off by
dropping the unittest option. Of course, this means that tests will no
longer be supported in the waf build at all but it will be dropped
anyway. Note that the tests option is preserved for the meson build. We
will still make use of this in the future commits.
This returns the value of the target OS that mpv was built on as
reported by the build system. It is quite conceivable that script
writers and API users would need to make OS-dependent choices in some
cases. Such people end up writing boilerplate/hacks to guess what OS
they are on. Assuming you trust the build system (if you don't, we're in
really deep trouble), then mpv actually knows exactly what OS it was
built on. Simply take this information at configuration time, make it a
define, and let mp_property_platform return the value.
Note that mpv has two build systems (waf and meson), so the names of the
detected OSes may not be exactly the same. Since meson is the newer
build system, the value of this property follows meson's naming
conventions*. In the waf build, there is a small function to map known
naming deviations to match meson (i.e. changing "win32" to "windows").
waf's documentation is a nightmare to follow, but it seems to simply
take the output of sys.platform in python and strip away any trailing
numbers if they exist (exception being win32 and os2)*.
*: https://mesonbuild.com/Reference-tables.html#operating-system-names
*: https://waf.io/apidocs/Utils.html#waflib.Utils.unversioned_sys_platform
It turns out that there's a has_header check, and we should actually be
using that instead. We only care here if the header actually exists so
the pre-processor check is all that is needed. check_header depends on
what arguments the user passes among other things. That makes it more
complicated than necessary for our purposes.
When building both cplayer and libmpv in the same build previously all
sources were built twice.
By reusing the objects from libmpv in cplayer we can thus save 50%
percent of the build steps.
Core code should not use these features as it would mean that a libmpv
build could change an mpv executable and vice-versa.
Also changing one of them should not force a full recompile of the other
one through a change to config.h.
The libmpv feature should not have any impact on the built core code.
Otherwise a mpv executable compiled in a build together with libmpv has
different features than one from a build without.
The gl feature doesn't hurt, so always enable it.
I should have caught this during review but the feature was too cool and
I didn't really pay attention (sorry). For consistency with the rest of
the scripts here.
This allows us to rebuild the manpages and html documentation only when
necessary. It is not necessary to manually keep the list of dependencies
up to date.
Unfortunately rst2pdf does not yet support this feature, see
https://github.com/rst2pdf/rst2pdf/issues/1108
See https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/graphics-protocol/
This makes no attempt at querying terminal features or handling
terminal errors, as it would require mpv to pass the response codes
from the terminal to the vo instead of interpreting them as
keystrokes made by the user and acting very unpredictably.
Tested with kitty and konsole.
Fixes#9605
Now that 0.35 has been released, we can consider increasing our minimum
required ffmpeg version. Currently, we think 4.4 is the most recent
version we can move to (from the current requirement of 4.0).
This allows us to remove a few conditionals. There are more that we
won't be able to remove unless we move further up to 5.1.
BSDs use compiler-rt instead of libatomic for atomic types. In this
case, we can handle it similar to how dl is detected. Check for the
library (allowing for it to fail), and then check for a header symbol
while linking latomic. Fixes#10906.
Meson uses the sysconfdir option for setting the global config
directory. This conveniently defaults to /etc if the prefix is set to
/usr which is nice for linux distros. BSDs tend to use /usr/local which
causes this value to become 'etc' by default which is not an absolute
path so you would need to set something like -Dsysconfdir=/usr/local/etc
as well in the configuration step. It turns out we can have our cake and
eat it too by just joining the paths of prefix and sysconfdir together.
In the case where -Dprefix=/usr, this still results in /etc/mpv as the
path since the path joining logic just drops the leading '/usr/'. For
the /usr/local case, it ends up as /usr/local/etc/mpv as expected. This
fixes#10882.
Apparently, it is possible for touchbar.m to compile on non-macos
machines. Also, the disable switch didn't actually work either. Fix this
by using the require() function and making sure that Cocoa (should be
apple-only) is found in addition to the compile check passing which is
what waf does. Fixes#10847.
mpv has a CONFIGURATION define which is defined at configure time in
both build systems and printed out when you use verbose flags. In waf,
this is line is exactly what the user passes on cli at configure time.
In meson, there's currently no way to do that (someone did recently open
up a PR that would make this possible), so we just hardcode the prefix
and call it a day. This is a bit of a tangent, but the build also
copies waf and sets an optimize variable (true or false) that is also
printed out on verbose output. For waf, this makes some sense because
the build has a specific --optimize option (internally all it does is
pass -O2). In meson, optimizing is a built-in option and we just set
anything that's not -O0 as "optimize". Furthermore, there is a new
optimization option added in meson 0.64 called "plain" which passes no
flags at all* so this logic would need to be updated to account for
this.
In retrospect, this is all just stupid though. optimization is not a
boolean value and there's no real use for treating it like one just
because that's what waf does. Let's remove it from the features array.
Instead, we can expose this information in the CONFIGURATION variable
along with the prefix option so we know exactly what optimization was
used in the compiled executable. For good measure, let's also throw in
buildtype since it's related.
*: a590cfde0c
Meson's master branch helpfully prints out a warning here now saying
that "find_library('libdl') starting in "lib" only works by accident
and is not portable". We'll go ahead and trust them and instead change
this to dl which works with no issues.
The old "meson build" build command was actually deprecated a few months
ago*. It turns out that you're supposed to use "meson setup build"
instead which has been around for years. Go ahead and be a good citizen
and update this in the CI. Also replace any mention of "meson build"
with "meson setup build" in the documentation as well and change the one
random hardcoded string we have in meson.build to "meson configure
build" (might as well).
*: 3c7ab542c0
Wayland VO that can display images from either vaapi or drm hwdec
The PR adds the following changes:
1. a context_wldmabuf context with no gl dependencies
2. no-op ra_wldmabuf and dmabuf_interop_wldmabuf objects
no-op because there is no need to map/unmap the drmprime buffer,
and there is no need to manage any textures.
Tested on both x86_64 and rk3399 AArch64
We've had some annoying names for interops, which we can't simply
rename because that would break config files and command lines. So we
need to put a little more effort in and add a concept of legacy names
that allow us to continue loading them, but with a warning.
The two I'm renaming here are:
* vaapi-egl -> vaapi (vaapi works with Vulkan too)
* drmprime-drm -> drmprime-overlay (actually describes what it does)
* cuda-nvdec -> cuda (cuda interop is not nvdec specific)