The properties/commands touched in this commit are all for obscure
special inputs (BD/DVD/DVB/TV), and they all block on the demuxer/stream
layer. For network streams, this blocking is very unwelcome. They will
affect playback and probably introduce pauses and frame drops. The
player can even freeze fully, and the logic that tries to make playback
abortable even if frozen complicates the player.
Since the mentioned accesses are not needed for network streams, but
they will block on network streams even though they're going to fail,
add a flag that coarsely enables/disables these accesses. Essentially it
establishes a whitelist of demuxers/streams which support them.
In theory you could to access BD/DVD images over network (or add such
support, I don't think it's a thing in mpv). In these cases these
controls still can block and could even "freeze" the player completely.
Writing to the "program" and "cache-size" properties still can block
even for network streams. Just don't use them if you don't want freezes.
Don't allow it to freeze everything when loading a playlist from network
(although you definitely shouldn't do that, but whatever).
This also affects the really obscure --ordered-chapters-files option.
The --playlist option on the other hand has no choice but to freeze the
shit, because there's no concept of aborting the player during command
line parsing.
Until now, they could be aborted only by ending playback, and calling
mpv_abort_async_command didn't do anything.
This requires furthering the mess how playback abort is done. The main
reason why mp_cancel exists at all is to avoid that a "frozen" demuxer
(blocked on network I/O or whatever) cannot freeze the core. The core
should always get its way. Previously, there was a single mp_cancel
handle, that could be signaled, and all demuxers would unfreeze. With
external files, we might want to abort loading of a certain external
file, which automatically means they need a separate mp_cancel. So give
every demuxer its own mp_cancel, and "slave" it to whatever parent
mp_cancel handles aborting.
Since the mpv demuxer API conflates creating the demuxer and reading the
file headers, mp_cancel strictly need to be created before the demuxer
is created (or we couldn't abort loading). Although we give every
demuxer its own mp_cancel (as "enforced" by cancel_and_free_demuxer),
it's still rather messy to create/destroy it along with the demuxer.
The intention is to avoid that the parent mp_cancel retains the
internally allocated wakeup pipe. File FDs are a relatively scarce
resource, so try to avoid having too many. This might matter for
subtitle files, for which it is relatively likely that they are loaded
in large quantities.
demux_lavf.c will close the underlying stream for most subtitle files,
and now it will free the wakeup pipe too. Actually, there are currently
only 1 or 2 mp_cancel objects per mpv core, but this could change if
every external subtitle track gets its own mp_cancel in later commits.
The OS specifics are merged because the resulting ifdeffery is not much
worse than the old ifdeffery, but the logic that is now shared is
becoming more complex.
Create all objects lazily. The intention is to make mp_cancel instances
cheaper. POSIX pipes and win32 Events are pretty heavy weight, and are
only needed in special situations.
Add a mechanism to "chain" mp_cancel instances. Needed by the later
commits for whatever reasons.
Untested on win32.
This provides macros for managing intrusive doubly linked lists.
There are many ways how to do those in a "generic" way in C. For example
Solaris style lists are pretty nice:
https://github.com/illumos/illumos-gate/blob/master/usr/src/uts/common/sys/list.hhttps://github.com/illumos/illumos-gate/blob/master/usr/src/common/list/list.c
I even have an independent implementation of this, which could be ISC
licensed. But I think it's easier to vomit ~100 lines of preprocessor
garbage, which has a lower footprint, and I think it wins slightly on
the side of type safety, simplicity, and ease of use, even if it doesn't
look as magically nice.
It seems a bit inappropriate to have dumped this into stream.c, even if
it's roughly speaking its main user. At least it made its way somewhat
unfortunately to other components not related to the stream or demuxer
layer at all.
I'm too greedy to give this weird helper its own file, so dump it into
thread_tools.c.
Probably a somewhat pointless change.
This flag is used only by the command parser. Its value overlapped with
some of the existing m_option flags, but only flags that did not matter
for the command parser (i.e. the flag bits used had mostly private uses
in each component). It's still a bit unclean and dangerous to use an
essentially random value, so reuse M_OPT_OPTIONAL_PARAM for it.
Since M_OPT_OPTIONAL_PARAM has a slightly longer name than
MP_CMD_OPT_ARG, I'm going to keep the old name.
Before this change, only 1 command or so had named arguments. There is
no reason why other commands can't have them, except that it's a bit of
work to add them.
Commands with variable number of arguments are inherently incompatible
to named arguments, such as the "run" command. They still have dummy
names, but obviously you can't assign multiple values to a single named
argument (unless the argument has an array type, which would be
something different). For now, disallow using named argument APIs with
these commands. This might change later.
2 commands are adjusted to not need a separate default value by changing
flag constants. (The numeric values are C only and can't be set by
users.)
Make the command syntax in the manpage more consistent. Now none of the
allowed choice/flag names are in the command header, and all arguments
are shown with their proper name and quoted with <...>.
Some places in the manpage and the client.h doxygen are updated to
reflect that most commands support named arguments. In addition, try to
improve the documentation of the syntax and need for escaping etc. as
well.
(Or actually most uses of the word "argument" should be "parameter".)
When changing video filters during initialization, there was a small
time window where video was initialized, but playback restart was not
complete yet. In this time window, playback_pts is not set. But since
issue_refresh_seek() was using this, it could lead to no refresh being
done _if_ the "video" had only 1 frame (such as cover art).
Fix this by using get_current_time() instead, which is the current time
with corner cases such as ongoing loading or seeks taken into account.
See also the previous commit. Without that, get_current_time() could
return NOPTS during init.
Fixes#5831.
This is nonsense. Didn't matter in most situations, because seeking
itself set this after it was cleared. But some callers don't do this,
see e.g. commit ed73ba8964. There is no need to clear it at all, and
it causes issues with the next commit. It only needs to be reset on
loading.
Also move the initialization on loading up, which doesn't change
behavior, but makes the intention clearer.
There is some code that checks a FD for whether it is a regular file or
not. If it's not a regular file, it e.g. enables use of poll() to avoid
blocking forever.
But this was done only for FDs that were open()ed by us, not from stdin
special handling or fd://. Consequently, " | mpv -" could block the
player. Fix this by moving the code and running for it on all FDs.
Also, set p->regular_file even on mingw.
The default get_format does exactly do this, so we don't need to
duplicate it.
The only potential problem with this is that the logic doesn't entirely
prevent that the avcodec_default_get_format hw_device_ctx path is
triggered, which would probably work, but has unknown consequences and
interactions. But the way the logic currently works it can't happen,
provided the hwaccel metadata libavcodec provides is correct.
If a stream starts later than the others at the start of the file, it
shouldn't restrict the seek range to the time stamp where it begins.
This is similar to the previous commit, just for the other end.
Normally, the seek range is the minimum overlap of the cached ranges of
each stream. But if one of the streams ends earlier, this leads to the
seek range getting cut off, even if you could seek there.
Change it so that EOF streams cannot restrict the end of the seek range.
They can only extend it. This is the opposite from not-EOF streams, so
they need to be handled separately. In particular, they get exluded from
normal end range calculation, but when full EOF is reached, all streams
are EOF, and the maximum end time can be used to set the seek end time.
(In theory we could also take the max with the demuxer signaled total
file duration, but let's not for now.)
Also, if a stream is completely empty, essentially skip it, instead of
considering the range unseekable. (Also, we don't need to mess with
seek_start in this case, because it will be NOPTS and is skipped
anyway.)
When the current packet queue was completely empty, and EOF was reached,
the queue->is_eof flag was not correctly set to true. Change this by
reading ds->eof to check whether the stream is considered EOF. We also
need to make sure update_seek_ranges() is called in this case, so change
the code to simply call it when queue->is_eof changes.
Also, read_packet() needs to call adjust_seek_range_on_packet() if
ds->eof changes. In that case, the decoder also needs to be notified
about EOF. So both of these should be called when ds->eof changes to
true. (Other code outside of this function deals with the case when
ds->eof is changed to false.)
In addition, this code was kind of shoddy about calling wakeup_ds()
correctly. It looks like there was an inverted condition, and sent a
wakeup to the decoder only when ds->eof was already true, which is
obviously bogus. The final EOF case tried to be somehow clever about
checking in->last_eof for notifying the codec, which is sort of OK, but
seems to be strictly worse than just checking whether ds->eof changed.
Fix these things.
This affects async commands started by client API, commands with async
capability run in a sync way by client API (think mpv_command_node()
with "subprocess"), and detached async work.
Since scripts might want to do some cleanup work (that might involve
launching processes, don't ask), we don't unconditionally kill
everything on exit, but apply an arbitrary timeout of 2 seconds until
async commands are aborted.
I wanted to put all commands through mpv_command_node_async() instead of
mpv_command_node(). Using synchronous commands over a synchronous
transport doesn't make sense anyway.
This would have used the request_id field in IPC requests as reply ID
for the async commands. But the latter need to be [u]int64, while the
former can be any type. To avoid that we need an extra lookup table for
mapping reply IDs to request_id values, we now require that request_id
fields are integers.
Since this would be an incompatible change, just deprecate non-integers
for now, and plan the change for a later time.
The only effective difference is that the former explicitly checks
whether the JSON value type is string, and errors out if not. The rest
is exactly the same (mpv_set_property_string is mpv_set_property with
MPV_FORMAT_STRING).
It seems silly to keep this, so just remove it.
Many asynchronous commands are potentially long running operations, such
as loading something from network or running a foreign process.
Obviously it shouldn't just be possible for them to freeze the player if
they don't terminate as expected. Also, there will be situations where
you want to explicitly stop some of those operations explicitly. So add
an infrastructure for this.
Commands have to support this explicitly. The next commit uses this to
actually add support to a command.
If a struct as large as MPContext contains a field named "lock", it
creates the impression that it is the primary lock for MPContext. This
is wrong, the lock just protects a single field.
The "run" command is old. I'm not sure why the separate Lua
implementation was added. But maybe it as because the "run" command used
to be limited to a small number of arguments. This limit has been
removed a while ago. In any case, the old implementation is not needed
anymore.
We keep mp.subprocess() with roughly the same semantics for
compatibility with scripts (including the internal ytdl script).
Seems to work with rhe ytdl wrapper. Not tested further.
This supports named arguments. It benefits from the infrastructure of
async commands.
The plan is to reimplement Lua's utils.subprocess() on top of it.
Named arguments should make it easier to have long time compatibility,
even if command arguments get added or removed. They're also much nicer
for commands with a large number of arguments, especially if many
arguments are optional.
As of this commit, this can not be used, because there is no command yet
which supports them. See the following commit.