Commit Graph

362 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
sfan5 3e28c8e983 player: fix missed pause state update during reset in some cases
When playing a new file, if paused_for_cache was true before being reset
the AO would never be unpaused because that state was thrown away, leaving it stuck.
Fix this by updating the pause state before resetting that variable. Note that this
does not make the second update_internal_pause_state() call redundant.
This fixes the same bug fb5d976cb0 was supposed to.
2021-07-18 12:22:55 +02:00
Avi Halachmi (:avih) 799d3d4557 command: add internal INPUT_PROCESSED event
Fires after a non-empty input queue was processed.

Currently yet unused, but the next commit will use it.
2020-11-16 20:29:58 +02:00
wm4 9ba90b4f6f player: add pause state to playback start message
Now the player tells you that audio or video are playing while paused,
or something.
2020-09-21 19:36:25 +02:00
wm4 eed8b6d47b player: fix inconsistent AO pause state in certain situations
Pause can be changed during a file change, such as with for example
--reset-on-next-file=pause, or in hooks, or by being quick, and in this
case the AO's pause state was not updated correctly. mpctx->ao_chain is
only set if playback is fully initialized, while the AO itself in
mpctx->ao can be reused across files.

Fix this by always running set_pause_state() if the pause option is
changed. Could cause new bugs since running this used to be explicitly
avoided outside of the loaded state. The handling of time_frame is
potentially worrisome.

Regression due to recent audio refactor; before that, the AO didn't have
a separate/persistent pause state.

Fixes: #8079
2020-09-12 00:13:24 +02:00
wm4 98f9d50b30 player: some minor code golf 2020-09-10 23:47:59 +02:00
wm4 09d3a4d39d player: clamp relative seek base time to nominal duration
Since b74c09efbf, audio-only files let you seek to arbitrary points
beyond the end of the file (but still displayed the time clamped to the
nominal file duration). This was confusing and just not wanted. The
reason is probably that the commit removed setting the audio PTS for
data before the seek target, so if you seek past the end of the file,
the audio PTS is never set. This in turn means the logic to determine
the current playback time has no PTS at all, and thus falls back to the
seek PTS.

This happened in the past for other reasons (like efe43d768f). I have
enough of this, so I'm just changing the code to clamp the seek
timestamp to a "known" range. Do this when seeking ends, because in the
fallback case, the playback time shouldn't be stuck at e.g. "end +
seek_argument". Also do it when initiating a new seek (mp_seek), because
if the previous seek hasn't finished yet, it shouldn't add them up and
allow it to go "out of range" either. The latter is especially relevant
for hr-seeks.

Doing this clamping is problematic because the duration is a possibly
invalid value from the demuxer, or just missing. Especially with
timestamp resets, fun sometimes happens, and in these situations it
might be better not to clamp.

One could argue you should just use the last audio timestamp returned by
the decoder or demuxer (even if that directly conflicts with --end), but
that sounds even more hairy.

In summary: what a dumb waste of time, what the fuck.
2020-09-10 23:24:35 +02:00
Guido Cella 9b9ce74afa command: add read-only focused property
Add a property that returns whether the window is focused, currently
only for X11 and Wayland.

My use cause for this is having an equivalent of pause-when-minimize.lua
for tiling window managers: make mpv play only while it's in the current
workspace or is focused (I'm fine with either one but prefer focus).
On X I do this by observing display-names, which is empty when the
rectangles of the display and mpv don't intersect, but on Wayland its
value doesn't change when mpv leaves the current workspace (and the same
check doesn't work since the geometries still intersect).

This could later be made writable as requested in #6252.

Note that on Wayland se shouldn't consider an unactivated window with
keyboard input focused.

The wlroots compositors I tested set activated after changing the
keyboard focus, so if you set wl->focused only in
keyboard_handle_enter() and keyboard_handle_leave() to avoid adding the
"has_keyboard_input" member, focused isn't set to true when first
opening mpv until you focus another window and focus mpv again.

Conversely, if that order can't be assumed for all compositors, we
should toggle wl->focused when necessary in keyboard_handle_enter() and
keyboard_handle_leave() as well as in handle_toplevel_config().
2020-09-08 20:09:17 +02:00
wm4 b5c225382e encode: propagate errors to exit status properly
Don't just let mpv CLI return 0 (success) as exit status if encoding
failed somehow.
2020-09-03 15:44:35 +02:00
Leo Izen cdc5932859 player/playloop.c: reorder included headers per contribute.md
This commit sorts the included headers alphabetically and puts
them in sections, as described by DOCS/contribute.md.
2020-08-31 17:01:22 -04:00
wm4 b74c09efbf audio: refactor how data is passed to AO
This replaces the two buffers (ao_chain.ao_buffer in the core, and
buffer_state.buffers in the AO) with a single queue. Instead of having a
byte based buffer, the queue is simply a list of audio frames, as output
by the decoder. This should make dataflow simpler and reduce copying.

It also attempts to simplify fill_audio_out_buffers(), the function I
always hated most, because it's full of subtle and buggy logic.

Unfortunately, I got assaulted by corner cases, dumb features (attempt
at seamless looping, really?), and other crap, so it got pretty
complicated again. fill_audio_out_buffers() is still full of subtle and
buggy logic. Maybe it got worse. On the other hand, maybe there really
is some progress. Who knows.

Originally, the data flow parts was meant to be in f_output_chain, but
due to tricky interactions with the playloop code, it's now in the dummy
filter in audio.c.

At least this improves the way the audio PTS is passed to the encoder in
encoding mode. Now it attempts to pass frames directly, along with the
pts, which should minimize timestamp problems. But to be honest, encoder
mode is one big kludge that shouldn't exist in this way.

This commit should be considered pre-alpha code. There are lots of bugs
still hiding.
2020-08-29 13:12:32 +02:00
wm4 ab6dbf0a29 player: fix video paused condition on VO creation
Doesn't take paused_for_cache into account. For consistency; unlikely to
matter at all in practice.
2020-08-27 11:55:20 +02:00
wm4 2a23105c1b player: fix swapped debug output
Such failure.
2020-08-27 11:55:20 +02:00
wm4 c06577e291 player: do not loop if there's nothing to loop
This can happen if a file contains headers only, or if decoding of all
data failed, and such. Interestingly, it also happened when doing "mpv
--loop emptyfile.png", because demux_mf still detects file formats by
file extension.

In this situation, the player burned a lot of CPU by restarting playback
after doing nothing. Although such "degenerate" behavior can't be
avoided in all situations (what if you loop a file with 1 audio
sample?), detecting this seems to make sense.

For now, this actually decrements the loop count by 1, and then errors
out with a warning. Works for --loop and --ab-loop, while
--loop-playlist already avoids this situation with an existing
mechanism.
2020-08-22 20:43:15 +02:00
wm4 44ad00ba10 player: make unpausing directly after seek work with --keep-open (again)
Commit fcf0b80dc9 fixed this the first time. Commit 85576f31a9
"accidentally" removed this code again. The commit message justifying
the removal is correct, except it doesn't take other side-effects of the
state machine into account. I obviously didn't remember what exactly
this was about. So add a comment explaining it this time.

Just apply it again; the thing the latter commit fixed still works.

Fixes: #7819
2020-06-10 11:44:47 +02:00
Ricardo Garcia d061f28397 player: round position percentage to the nearest integer
This brings the displayed percentage closer to the exact number and
allows mpv to more frequently display 100% when it finishes playing a
typical video or audio file.
2020-05-01 20:48:16 +02:00
wm4 a2846faa32 player, stats: more silly debug stuff
In addition to stats.c being gross, I don't think master branch code
should be littered with debug code. But it's a helpful abomination.
2020-04-10 00:55:39 +02:00
wm4 b6655dd72c player: make a function static 2020-04-03 12:56:50 +02:00
wm4 26ac6ead91 player: fix subtle idle mode differences on early program start
If the user manages to run a "loadfile x append" command before the loop
in mp_play_files() is entered, then the player could start playing
these. This isn't expected, because appending files to the playlist in
idle mode does not normally start playback. It could happen because
there is a short time window where commands are processed before the
loop is entered (such as running the command when a script is loaded).

The idle mode semantics are pretty weird: if files were provided in
advance (on the command line), then these should be played immediately.
But if idle mode was already entered, and something is appended to the
playlist using "append", i.e. without explicitly triggering playback,
then it should remain in idle mode.

Try to follow this by redefining PT_STOP to strictly mean idle mode.
Remove the playlist->current check from idle_loop(), since only the
stop_play field counts now (cf. what mp_set_playlist_entry() does).

This actually introduces the possibility that playlist->current, and
with it playlist-pos, are set to something, even though playback is not
active or being started. Previously, this was only possible during state
transitions, such as when changing playlist entries.

Very annoyingly, this means the current way MPV_EVENT_IDLE was sent
doesn't work anymore. Logically, idle mode can be "active" even if
idle_loop() was not entered yet (between the time after mp_initialize()
and before the loop in mp_play_files()). Instead of worrying about this,
redo the "idle-active" property, and deprecate the event.

See: #7543
2020-03-21 19:32:50 +01:00
wm4 eb381cbd4b options: split m_config.c/h
Move the "old" mostly command line parsing and option management related
code to m_config_frontend.c/h. Move the the code that enables other part
of the player to access options to m_config_core.c/h. "frontend" is out
of lack of creativity for a better name.

Unfortunately, the separation isn't quite clean yet. m_config_frontend.c
still references some m_config_core.c implementation details, and
m_config_new() is even left in m_config_core.c for now. There some odd
functions that should be removed as well (marked as "Bad functions").
Fixing these things requires more changes and will be done separately.

struct m_config is left with the current name to reduce diff noise.
Also, since there are a _lot_ source files that include m_config.h, add
a replacement m_config.h that "redirects" to m_config_core.h.
2020-03-13 16:50:27 +01:00
wm4 3b4641a5a9 filter: minor cosmetic naming issue
Just putting some more lipstick on the pig, maybe it looks a bit nicer
now.
2020-03-08 19:38:10 +01:00
wm4 c032db6185 player: force update of cache properties even on inactive demuxer cache
When the demuxer cache read until the end of the stream, and was
finished and completely inactive, the cache properties were not updated
anymore via MP_EVENT_CACHE_UPDATE.

Unfortunately, many cache properties depend on the current playback
position, such as cache-duration or fw-bytes. This is especially visible
on the OSC. If everything was cached, seeking around didn't update the
displayed forward cache duration.

That means checking demuxer_reader_state.idle is not enough. You also
need to check whether the current playback position changed.

Fix this by explicitly using the current playback position, and update
the properties if it changed "enough". "Enough" is 1 second of media
time in this example, which may or may not be appropriate.

In general, this could probably be done better. There are many other
triggers that change the cache state and that are not covered. For now
I'm content with getting rid of the obvious problems.

I think the OSC problem in particular was caused by changing it from
polling to using property change notifications.
2020-03-05 22:23:43 +01:00
wm4 ae1aeab7aa options: make decoder options local to decoder wrapper
Instead of having f_decoder_wrapper create its own copy of the entire
mpv option tree, create a struct local to that file and move all used
options to there.

movie_aspect is used by the "video-aspect" deprecated property code. I
think it's probably better not to remove the property yet, but
fortunately it's easy to work around without needing special handling
for this option or so.

correct_pts is used to prevent use of hr-seek in playloop.c. Ignore
that, if you use --no-correct-pts you're asking for trouble anyway. This
is the only behavior change.
2020-03-01 00:28:09 +01:00
wm4 a3823ce0e0 player: add optional separate video decoding thread
See manpage additions. This has been a topic in MPlayer/mplayer2/mpv
since forever. But since libavcodec multi-threaded decoding was added,
I've always considered this pointless. libavcodec requires you to
"preload" it with packets, and then you can pretty much avoid blocking
on it, if decoding is fast enough.

But in some cases, a decoupled decoder thread _might_ help. Users have
for example come up with cases where decoding video in a separate
process and piping it as raw video to mpv helped. (Or my memory is
false, and it was about vapoursynth filtering, who knows.) So let's just
see whether this helps with anything.

Note that this would have been _much_ easier if libavcodec had an
asynchronous (or rather, non-blocking) API. It could probably have
easily gained that with a small change to its multi-threading code and a
small extension to its API, but I guess not.

Unfortunately, this uglifies f_decoder_wrapper quite a lot. Part of this
is due to annoying corner cases like legacy frame dropping and hardware
decoder state. These could probably be prettified later on.

There is also a change in playloop.c: this is because there is a need to
coordinate playback resets between demuxer thread, decoder thread, and
playback logic. I think this SEEK_BLOCK idea worked out reasonably well.

There are still a number of problems. For example, if the demuxer cache
is full, the decoder thread will simply block hard until the output
queue is full, which interferes with seeking. Could also be improved
later. Hardware decoding will probably die in a fire, because it will
run out of surfaces quickly. We could reduce the queue to size 1...
maybe later. We could update the queue options at runtime easily, but
currently I'm not going to bother.

I could only have put the lavc wrapper itself on a separate thread. But
there is some annoying interaction with EDL and backward playback shit,
and also you would have had to loop demuxer packets through the
playloop, so this sounded less annoying.

The food my mother made for us today was delicious.

Because audio uses the same code, also for audio (even if completely
pointless).

Fixes: #6926
2020-02-29 21:52:00 +01:00
wm4 b0b5de3063 f_decoder_wrapper: replace most public fields with setters/getters
I may (optionally) move decoding to a separate thread in a future
change. It's a bit attractive to move the entire decoder wrapper to
there, so if the demuxer has a new packet, it doesn't have to wake up
the main thread, and can directly wake up the decoder. (Although that's
bullshit, since there's a queue in between, and libavcodec's
multi-threaded decoding plays cross-threads ping pong with packets
anyway. On the other hand, the main thread would still have to shuffle
the packets around, so whatever, just seems like better design.)

As preparation, there shouldn't be any mutable state exposed by the
wrapper. But there's still a large number of corner-caseish crap, so
just use setters/getters for them. This recorder thing will inherently
not work, so it'll have to be disabled if threads are used.

This is a bit painful, but probably still the right thing. Like
speculatively pulling teeth.
2020-02-29 01:23:20 +01:00
wm4 c10ca137a8 player: remove delayed audio seek thing
This was a hack that attempted to line up external audio tracks with
video. The problem is that if you do a keyframe seek backwards, video
will usually seek much farther back than audio (due to much higher
keyframe aka seek point distances). The hack somehow made seeking a 2
step process.

This existed in 4 different forms in the history of this code base, and
it was always very cumbersome. We mostly needed this for ytdl_hook (I
think?), which uses the 4th form, which is nicely confined to
demux_timeline and is unrelated to the "external" audio tracks in the
high level player.

Since this is (probably) not really widely needed anymore, get rid of
it. Better do this now, than when somehow rewriting all the seeking code
(which might happen in this decade or the next or so) and when it
wouldn't be easily revertable anymore in case we find we "really" need
it unlike expected.

There is no issue if hr-seeks are used. Also, you can still use edl
files to "bundle" multiple streams as if it was a single stream (this is
what ytdl_hook does now).
2020-02-29 01:23:05 +01:00
wm4 679e4108f2 player: dumb seeking related stuff, make audio hr-seek default
Try to deal with various corner cases. But when I fix one thing, another
thing breaks. (And it's 50/50 whether I find the breakage immediately or
a few months later.) So results may vary.

The default for--hr-seek is changed to "default" (not creative enough to
find a better name). In this mode, audio seeking is exact if there is no
video, or if the video has only a single frame. This change is actually
pretty dumb, since audio frames are usually small enough that exact
seeking does not really add much. But it gets rid of some weird special
cases.

Internally, the most important change is that is_coverart and is_sparse
handling is merged. is_sparse was originally just a special case for
weird .ts streams that have the corresponding low-level flag set. The
idea is that they're pretty similar anyway, so this would reduce the
number of corner cases. But I'm not sure if this doesn't break the
original intended use case for it (I don't have a sample anyway).

This changes last-frame handling, and respects the duration of the last
frame only if audio is disabled. This is mostly "coincidental" due to
the need to make seeking past EOF trigger player exit, and is caused by
setting STATUS_EOF early. On the other hand, this might have been this
way before (see removed chunk close to it).
2020-02-28 17:15:07 +01:00
wm4 85576f31a9 player: attempt to fix playback end on hr-seeking past EOF again
This tries to fix #7206 (hr-seeking past EOF does not stop playback)
again. Commit 57fbc9cd76 should have fixed this, but trying it again
(using that git revision), it often did not work. Whatever the fuck.

So add another dumb special case that will break within weeks. Note that
the check in handle_eof() had no effect, since execute_queued_seek() is
called later, which cancels EOF in the same case.
2020-02-28 15:41:45 +01:00
wm4 efe43d768f player: set playback_pts in hr-seek past EOF case
Hr-seek past the last frame instantly enters EOF, which means
handle_playback_time() will not set playback_pts to the video PTS (as
all video frames are skipped), which leads to the playback time being
taken from the last seek target. This results in confusing behavior,
especially since the seek time will be clipped to the file duration for
display, but not for further relative seeks.

Obviously, the time should be set to the last video frame, so use the
last video frame as fallback if both audio and video have ended. Also,
since the same problem exists with audio-only playback, add a fallback
for audio PTS too. We don't know which was the "last" fragment of media
played (to decide whether to use the audio or video PTS as the
fallback), but it doesn't matter since the maximum works.

This could lead to some undesired effects. In particular the audio PTS
is basically a bad guess, and is for example not clipped against --end.
(But the ridiculous way audio syncing and clamping currently works, I'm
not going to touch that shit unless I rewrite it completely.) The cover
art case is slightly broken: using --keep-open with keyframe seeks will
result in 0 as playback PTS (the video PTS). OK, who cares, it got late.

Also casually get rid of last_vo_pts, since that barely made any sense
at all.

Fixes: #7487
2020-02-28 02:14:12 +01:00
wm4 5bf433b16f player: consider audio buffer if AO driver does not report underruns
AOs can report audio underruns, but only ao_alsa and ao_sdl (???)
currently do so. If the AO was marked as not reporting it, the cache
state was used to determine whether playback was interrupted due to slow
input.

This caused problems in some cases, such as video with very low video
frame rate: when a new frame is displayed, a new frame has to be
decoded, and since there it's so much further into the file (long frame
durations), the cache gets into an underrun state for a short moment,
even though both audio and video are playing fine. Enlarging the audio
buffer didn't help.

Fix this by making all AOs report underruns. If the AO driver does not
report underruns, fall back to using the buffer state.

pull.c behavior is slightly changed. Pull AOs are normally intended to
be used by pseudo-realtime audio APIs that fetch an audio buffer from
the API user via callback. I think it makes no sense to consider a
buffer underflow not an underrun in any situation, since we return
silence to the reader. (OK, maybe the reader could check the return
value? But let's not go there as long as there's no implementation.)
Remove the flag from ao_sdl.c, since it just worked via the generic
mechanism. Make the redundant underrun message verbose only.

push.c seems to log a redundant underflow message when resuming (because
somehow ao_play_data() is called when there's still no new data in the
buffer). But since ao_alsa does its own underrun reporting, and I only
use ao_alsa, I don't really care.

Also in all my tests, there seemed to be a rather high delay until the
underflow was logged (with audio only). I have no idea why this happened
and didn't try to debug this, but there's probably something wrong
somewhere.

This commit may cause random regressions.

See: #7440
2020-02-13 01:32:58 +01:00
wm4 e9fc53a10b player: add ab-loop-count option/property
As requested I guess. It behaves quite similar to the --loop* options.

Not quite happy with the idea that 1) the option is mutated on each
operation (but at least it's consistent with --loop* and doesn't require
more properties), and 2) the ab-loop command will do nothing once all
loop iterations are done. As a concession, the OSD shows something about
"disabled".

Fixes: #7360
2020-02-08 15:01:33 +01:00
wm4 a3bd8c3b5f player: make screenshot each-frame mode more accurate
Due to asynchronicity, we generally can't guarantee that a video frame
matches up with other events such as playback time change exactly (since
decoding, presentation, and property update all happen at different
times). This is a complaint in the referenced bug report, where
screenshot filenames in each-frame screenshot did not use the correct
timestamp, and instead was lagging behind by 1 frame.

But in this case, synchronicity was already pretty much forced with wait
calls. The only problem was that the playback time was updated at a
later time, which results in the observed 1 frame lag. Fix this by
moving the place where the screenshot is triggered in this mode.

Normal screenshots may still have the old problem. There is no effort
made to guarantee the timestamps absolutely line up, same as with the
OSD. (If you want a guarantee, you need to use a video filter, such as
libavfilter's drawtext. These will obviously use the proper timestamp,
instead of going through the somewhat asynchronous property etc. system
in the player frontend.)

Fixes: #7433
2020-02-07 13:32:21 +01:00
wm4 6a83187b06 player: partially fix backward playback display of cached text subtitles
This simply didn't set the direction flag in most situations, which
meant the timestamps used in the subtitle renderer were nonsense,
leading to invisible subtitles.

This works only for text subtitles that are cached in the ASS_Track
state. Reading new subtitles is broken because the demuxer layer has
trouble returning subtitle packets backwards, and I think for rendering
bitmap subtitles, the pruning direction would have to be adjusted. (Not
sure if reversing the timestamps before the subtitle renderer backend is
even the right thing to do. At least for sd_ass.c, it seems to make
sense, because it caches subtitles with "normal" timestamps.)
2020-02-04 20:26:35 +01:00
dudemanguy 6cb3d024c8 Revert "options: move cursor autohiding opts to mp_vo_opts"
This reverts commit 65a317436d.
2020-01-12 01:54:41 +00:00
wm4 7bb3f53cf5 command, vo: add a mechanism for runtime DPI scale changes
Follow up to commit a58585d5e0. It turned out that the OSX backend
needs this.
2020-01-09 19:13:42 +01:00
wm4 fcf0b80dc9 player: make unpausing directly after seek work with --keep-open
When using --keep-open, and the end of the file is reached, the player's
"pause" property is set to true. Attempting to set it to false reverts
it back to true immediately. That's how it's designed, for better or
worse.

Running "seek -10 ; set pause no" did not work, because the seek is
first queued and pause is unset, but then the decoding functions
determine that EOF is still a thing, and "mpctx->stop_play =
AT_END_OF_FILE;" is set again. handle_keep_open() then sets pause again.
Only then the seek is actually run.

Fix this by not setting stop_play if a seek is queued.
2019-12-30 17:40:21 +01:00
wm4 2c5cb2c53f client API: rewrite property observation (again)
I intend to rewrite this code approximately every 2 months.

Last time, I did this in commit d66eb93e5d (and 065c307e8e and
b2006eeb74). It was intended to remove the roundabout synchronous
thread "ping pong" when observing properties. At first, the original
async. code was replaced with some nice mostly synchronous code. But
then an async. code path had to be added for vo_libmpv, and finally the
sync. code was dropped because it broke in other obscure cases (like the
Objective-C Cocoa backend).

Try again. This time, update properties entirely on the main thread.
Updates get batched out on every playloop iteration. (At first I wanted
it to make it every time the player goes to sleep, but that might starve
API clients if the playloop get saturated.) One nice thing is that
clients only get woken up once all changed events have been sent, which
might reduce overhead.

While this sounds simple, it's not. The main problem is that reading
properties must not block the client API, i.e. no client API locks can
be held while reading the property. Maybe eventually we can avoid this
requirement, but currently it's just a fact. This means we have to
iterate over all clients and then over all properties (of each client),
all while releasing all locks when updating a property. Solve this by
rechecking on each iteration whether the list changed, and if so,
aborting the iteration and redo it "next time".

High risk change, expect bugs such as crashes and missing property
updates.
2019-12-19 11:11:51 +01:00
wm4 2a4d7c4aa8 command, vo: remove old option change notification mechanisms
These all have been replaced recently.

There was a leftover in window.swift. It couldn't have done anything
useful in the current state of the code, so drop these lines.
2019-12-17 23:18:17 +01:00
wm4 aab0116e7d player: fix an outdated comment
The client API doesn't use input_ctx anymore, and the "wakeup" flag is
gone (if it even existed at all).
2019-12-14 14:18:40 +01:00
wm4 1f1d2d5f49 player: move point at which queued seeks are applied
Do it after decoding etc., but before waiting for input. This seems to
make more sense, because whether a queued seek can be applied depends on
the playback state. So it sounds like a good idea to apply the seek
first thing, but it's a bad idea to go to sleep if there's still a
queued seek pending (that couldn't be processed earlier).

Also add an empty line before mp_wait_events(); it doesn't really have
to do with the filter bullshit.
2019-12-14 14:18:10 +01:00
wm4 57fbc9cd76 player: make repeated hr-seeks past EOF trigger EOF as expected
If you have a normal file with audio and video, and keep "spamming"
forward hr-seeks, the player just kept showing the last video frame
instead of exiting or playing the next file. This started happening
since commit 6bcda94cb. Although not a bug per se, it was odd, and very
user-noticable.

The main problem was that the pending seek command was processed before
the EOF was "noticed". Processing the command reset everything, so the
player did not terminate playback, but repeated the seek.

This commit restores the old behavior.

For one, it makes video return the correct status (video.c). The
parameter is a bit ugly, but better than duplicating the logic or having
another MPContext field. (As a minor detail, setting r=VD_EOF makes sure
have_new_frame() returns true, rather than going through another
iteration or whatever the hell will happen instead, which would clobber
logical_eof.)

Another thing is making the seek logic actually wait until the seek
outcome has been determined if audio is also active. Audio needs to wait
for video in order to get the video seek target position. (Which in turn
is because hr-seek still "snaps" to video frames. You can't seek in
between two frames, so audio can't just use the seek target, but always
has to wait on the timestamp of the video frame. This has other
disadvantages and is a misdesign, but not something I'll fix today.)

In theory, this might make hr-seeks less responsive, because it needs to
fully decode/filter the audio too, but in practice most time is spent on
video, which had to be fully decoded before this change. (In general,
hr-seek could probably just show a random frame when a queued hr-seek
overrides the current hr-seek, which would probably lead to a better
user experience, but that's out of scope.)

Fixes: #7206
2019-12-14 14:17:16 +01:00
wm4 23c5965d47 player: cosmetically restructure a small function
No actual functional changes. Just preparation for the next commit, to
reduce its diff.
2019-12-14 14:15:57 +01:00
dudemanguy 65a317436d options: move cursor autohiding opts to mp_vo_opts
Certain backends (i.e. wayland) will need to do special things with the
mouse. It makes sense to expose the values of these options to them, so
they can behave correctly.
2019-12-04 00:47:05 +00:00
wm4 b16cea750f player: change m_config to use new option handling mechanisms
Instead of making m_config a special-case, it more or less uses the
underlying m_config_cache/m_config_shadow APIs properly. This makes the
player core a (relatively) equivalent user of the core option API. In
particular, this means that other threads can change core options with
m_config_cache_write_opt() calls (before this commit, this merely led to
diverging option values).

An important change is that before this commit, mpctx->opts contained
the "master copy" of all option data. Now it's just another copy of the
option data, and the shadow copy is considered the master. This is why
whenever mpctx->opts is written, the change needs to be copied to the
master (thus why this commits add a bunch of m_config_notify... calls).

If another thread (e.g. a VO) changes an option, async_change_cb is now
invoked, which funnels the change notification through the player's
layers.

The new self_notification parameter on mp_option_change_callback is so
that m_config_notify... doesn't trigger recursion, and it's used in
cases where the change was already "processed". It's still needed to
trigger libmpv property updates. (I considered using an extra
m_config_cache for that, but it'd only cause problems with no
advantages.)

I think the recent changes actually forgot to send libmpv property
updates in some cases. This should fix this anyway. In some cases,
property updates are reworked, and the potential for bugs should be
lower (probably).

The primary point of this change is to allow external updates, for
example by a VO writing the fullscreen option if the window state is
changed by the window manager (rather than mpv changing it). This is not
used yet, but the following commits will.
2019-11-29 12:49:15 +01:00
wm4 7c6570402b options: remove options-to-property bridge
The previous bunch of commits made this unnecessary, so this should be
a purely internal change with no user impact.

This may or may not open the way to future improvements. Even if not,
at least the property/option interaction should now be much less buggy.
2019-11-25 20:29:43 +01:00
wm4 78bb1586d3 command: shuffle around even more crap
Convert some remaining properties to work without the option-to-property
bridge. Behavior shouldn't change (except for the corner case that it
tries to reapply the new state when setting a property, while it used to
ignore redundant sets).

As it is the case with many of these changes, much of the code is not in
its final proper state yet, but is rather a temporary workaround. For
example, these "VO flag" properties should just be fully handled in the
VO backend. (Currently, the config or VO layers don't provide enough
mechanism yet as that all the backends like x11, win32, etc. could be
changed yet, but that's another refactoring mess for another time.)

Now nothing relies on this option-to-property bridge anymore, which
opens the way to even more refactoring, which eventually may result in
tiny improvements for the end user.
2019-11-25 20:29:43 +01:00
wm4 d92395d205 player: remove some unnecessary coverart special cases
These should not be needed, since video is in EOF mode in this case
anyway.

Not too sure about the video.c case to be honest, well, here goes
nothing.
2019-11-17 02:11:45 +01:00
wm4 9efdb0368e player: enable "pause caching" code for local playback too
There isn't really a need to disable this for local playback. I think
originally I did this because I was afraid the code could mess up or be
annoying on local mode, but that's not really a good argument. I'd
rather test this code in local mode too. In this case, it shouldn't
really happen that it runs out of cache in the first place.
2019-11-14 13:51:47 +01:00
wm4 f26dfb6e4d player: partially rework --cache-pause
The --cache-pause feature (enabled by default) will pause playback for a
while if network runs out of data. If this is not done, then playback
will go on frame-wise (as packets are slowly read from the network and
then instantly decoded and displayed). This feature is actually useless,
as you won't get nice playback no matter what if network is too slow,
but I guess I still prefer this behavior for some reason.

This commit changes this behavior from using the demuxer cache state
only, to trying to use underrun information from the AO/VO. This means
if you have a very large audio buffer, then cache-pausing will trigger
once that buffer is depleted, which will be some time _after_ the
demuxer cache has run out.

This requires explicit support from the AO. Otherwise, the behavior
should be mostly the same as before this commit.

This does not care about the AO buffer. In theory, the AO may underrun,
then the player will write some data to the AO buffer, then the AO will
recover and play this bit of data, then the player will probably trigger
the cache-pause behavior. The probability of this happening should be
pretty low, so I will hold off fixing this until the next refactor of
the AO chain (if ever).

The VO underflow detection was devised and tested in 5 minutes, and may
not be correct. At least I'm fairly sure that the combination of all the
factors should make incorrect behavior relatively unlikely, but problems
are possible.

Also, the demux_reader_state.underrun field may be inaccurate. It's only
the present state at the time demux_get_reader_state() was called, and
may exclude past underruns. In theory, this could cause "close" cases to
be missed. Then you might get an audio underrun without cache-pausing
acting on it. If the stars align, this could happen multiple times in
the row, effectively making this feature not work.

The most user-visible consequence of this change is that the user
will now see an AO underrun warning every time the cache runs out.

Maybe this cache-pause feature should just be removed...
2019-10-11 20:01:51 +02:00
Dudemanguy911 dd547ddcc2 playloop: don't read playback pos from byte stream
If a file format supports PTS resets, get_current_pos_ratio calculates
the ratio using the stored filepos in the demuxer struct instead of a
standard query of the current time in the stream and its total length.
This seems like a reasonable way to avoid weird PTS values, but in
reality this just causes problems and results in inaccurate ratio
values that can affect other parts of the player (most notably the osc
seekbar).

For libavformat formats, demux->filepos is obtained from the
demux_lavf_fill_buffer function which is called on the next packet. The
problem is that there is a slight delay between packets and in some
cases, this delay can be relatively large. That means the obtained
demuxer->filepos value will be very inaccurate since it obtains the pos
from the end of the upcoming packet and not its actual current position.

This is especially noticeable at the very beginning of playback where
get_current_pos_ratio sometimes returns a value of well over 2% despite
less than a second passing in the stream. Another telltale sign is to
simply watch the osc seekbar as a stream progresses and observe how it
loads in staggered steps as every packet is decoded. In contrast, the
seekbar progresses smoothly on the playback of a format that does not
support PTS resets. The simple solution is to instead use the query of
the current time and length of a stream and calculate the ratio that
way.

get_current_pos_ratio will still fallback on using the byte stream
position if the previous queries fail. However, get_current_time will
be more accurate in the vast majority of cases and should be the
preferred method of calculating the position ratio.
2019-09-21 15:49:28 +00:00
wm4 60a0db39aa player: ensure backward playback state is propagated on track switching
Track switching doesn't run reset_playback_state(), so a track enabled
at runtime during backward playback would lead to a messed up state.

This commit just does a bad code monkey fix to this. It feels like there
needs to be a much better way to propagate this state.
2019-09-19 20:37:05 +02:00