The "Resolution" property shows the storage resolution for videos with
non-square pixels.
Currently, display aspect ratio is shown for both "Resolution" and
"Output Resolution" properties which results in a duplicate,
and is incorrect for the "Resolution" property.
The correct aspect ratio is now shown using the sar and sar-name properties.
Display aspect ratio (aspect) and pixel aspect ratio (par) are already
exported, but storage aspect ratio (sar) isn't. This value is needed to
display the storage aspect ratio for non-square pixel sources in stats.lua.
This exports two new properties: video-params/sar and video-params/sar-name.
Docmentation is updated accordingly.
During move of this code from vo_gpu_next.c to video.c someone(TM) tried
to be smart and simplify the expression. The num_vsync includes error
compensation which can cause it to display +-1 vsync at the same rate.
We explicitly don't want to include this in "ideal" parameters.
Also num_vsyncs was already rounded so we produced off timings in
general.
Revert back to proper way of translating the time.
Fixes: 5e5a325
Relative to frame PTS timeline as oposed to display vblank.
Those values are relative to unadjusted video timeline. They will be
used by gpu-next where it expect virtual frame vsync, not display vblank
time.
String formatting of Lua crashes with widths greater then 99, so limit
the value to that.
A nicer solution would be to create our own string padding function that
can handle bigger widths, but such long suggestions aren't common enough
to be worth the effort.
Having the show-progress command obey no-osd is nonsensical and
unintuitive. The show-text command already ignores no-osd, so there's
precedence for this. Fixes#5662.
No longer needed, wrapped status line is supported now. Also this didn't
work correctly if status were decorated with module name or time.
This reverts commit ab6fac43b4.
Currently VOCTRL are completely unusable for frequent data query. Since
the HDR parameter addition to video-params, the parameters can change
each frame. In which case observe on those parameter would be triggered
constantly. The problem is that quering those parameters involves VOCTRL
which in turn involves whole render cycle of delay.
Instead update VO params on each draw_frame. This requires changes to VO
reconfiguration condition, but in practice it should only be triggered
when image size or data layout changes. In other cases it will be
handled internal by VO driver.
I'm not quite happy with this solution, but don't see better one without
changing observe/notify logic significantly. There is no good way
currently to handle VOCTRL that are constantly queried.
This adds unfortunate synchronization of player command with VO thread,
but there is not way around that and if too frequent queries of this
param becomes a problem we can thing of other solutions.
Changes the way to get data from VO driver added by a98c5328dc
Fixes: 84de84bFixes: #12825
The previous commit was already a big improvement, but it was still
somewhat slow on the lua interpreter. By wrapping the table at the top
we loose the consistent placement of items while resizing (at least as
long as the column count didn't change), but we avoid taking all the
off screen items into account.
The fewer items fit on screen the faster this becomes.
Showing all properties was terribly slow.
Instead of starting at one row and increasing the row count until it
fits, the column count can be increased until it doesn't fit anymore.
That alone already reduces the required iterations, but from the column
count an upper and lower bound for the row count can be calculated.
For large tables this dramatically reduces the amount of iterations.
So far completing something like `${some-pro}` with the cursor between
`o}` would result in `${some-property}}`. Adding that superfluous `}` can
be avoided by checking if it's already in the string after the cursor.
In the sub seek code path, there was an arbitrary small offset added to
the pts before the seek. However when seeking backwards, the offset was
an additional subtraction. de6eace6e9
added this logic 10 years ago and perhaps it made sense then, but the
additional subtraction when seeking backwards causes the subtitle seek
to go too far to the previous subtitle if the durations overlap. This
should always be an addition to work correctly. Additionally, the sub
stepping code path also could use this offset for the same reason
(duration overlaps). However, it is only applicable to sd_ass not
sd_lavc. sd_lavc has step_sub support but on a sample it didn't even
work anyway. Perhaps it only works for certain kinds of subtitles
(patches welcome).
Anyways instead of keeping this offset as a magic number, we can define
it in sd.h which is handy for this. For sd_ass, we add the offset when
sub stepping, and the offset is always added for sub seeking like it was
before. Update the comment to be a little more relevant to what actually
happens today. Fixes#11445.
This would cause mpv to, in some very specific scenarios, have a
negative vsync_offset after seeking which would result in mpv requesting
a pts before the first frame to libplacebo.
Fix it by setting it to 0 when we reset state, such as after seeking.
Fixes: https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/issues/12813
This commit replaces all uses of sig_peak and maps all HDR metadata.
Form notable changes mixed usage of maxCLL and max_luma is resolved and
not always max_luma is used which makes vo_gpu and vo_gpu_next behave
the same way.
This change essentially removes mp_thread_self() and instead add
mp_thread_id to track threads and have ability to query current thread
id during runtime.
This will be useful for upcoming win32 implementation, where accessing
thread handle is different than on pthreads. Greatly reduces complexity.
Otherweis locked map of tid <-> handle is required which is completely
unnecessary for all mpv use-cases.
Note that this is the mp_thread_id, not to confuse with system tid. For
example on threads-posix implementation it is simply pthread_t.
UPDATE_SUB_HARD causes all of the ass objects to reset in order to apply
the new style. UPDATE_SUB_FILT doesn't actually reset the sd, but it
should in order to update the actual filters so that was added here.
Doing this causes the current subtitle to be dropped. In the paused
cause, this concidentally works because command.c forces a video refresh
which then reloads the subtitle essentially. But while playing, the
subtitle will be dropped and you won't get anything until the next one
appears.
Instead of using video refreshes, what we can do is just always save the
last two subtitle packets in a cache and redecode them if needed. This
is much easier and also allows us to get rid of all the video refresh
logic in command.c. Fixes#12386.
For whatever reason, some of the lua code (particularly the osc and
ytdl_hook) is full of a bunch of stuff like if (foo), if not (foo ==
nil), etc. The parenthesis aren't needed in lua and actually just look
weird since nobody actually writes lua like this. You can see most of
the other conditionals are written normally. So cleanup the style to
match when the parenthesis clearly aren't doing anything. Not directly
related, but also add some spaces on a few math operations while we're
at it.
This avoids a "Redefined local `options`" LSP warning in
list_option_list() after the previous commit. It still works, but
reusing names for local variables is error-prone.
Previously, the av sync change calculation was only done if the
audio_status was STATUS_PLAYING, but there is at least one or two more
states where this should be done. player/audio is capable of adding
delay if the state is anything besides STATUS_EOF. This means that while
calling adjust_sync, the delay value could have changed from the audio
side of the equation from the previous playloop, and it doesn't
necessarily mean that the current audio_status is STATUS_PLAYING either.
So the old code would technically skip this case. In practice, this is
just one frame so it hardly matters, but it should be taken into
account. For example, STATUS_READY is definitely possible here in
adjust_sync. I'm not sure if it's actually possible for STATUS_SYNCING
to happen but the audio code can change add delay with that status, so
it doesn't hurt. STATUS_DRAINING is probably not relevant, but again
include it to mirror the audio code logic. Of course, STATUS_EOF is
obviously a no-no since that means no audio at all, so we return from
there. I didn't take hard measurements or anything, but this does seem
to result in slightly smaller av sync fluctuations on discontinuities
(like seeking) which makes sense because we're now making an additional
correction that wasn't previously done.
Another change is to always try adjust_sync as long as the frame_time is
nonzero. The old logic only did this if the video_status was playing or
greater, but it is possible to get new frames with a different PTS that
do not have that status. The audio is still playing so logically it
should be adjusted as well. Again, this happens for just one frame, so
it doesn't really matter in practice but it should make more sense. A
zero frame_time is skipped since that would mean the pts did not advance
and the previous playloop should have done the adjustment for that time
already.
3038e578af recently changed the logic here
so it wouldn't trigger on still images, but after thinking about the
code here some more, I don't believe it's needed at all. Doing an ao
reset when you flip the video track is very disruptive and not really
desirable at all. Since the ao no longer adds bogus delay values while
the video is off, there should be no need to do a full reset for syncing
reasons. The delay value will be zero, so we can let the audio just play
normally and let the video code do its thing. There is one slight trick
here however. When using a display sync mode, part of the syncing code
will try to update the audio and video playback speed. This can cause an
audio underrun if we're just turning the video back one. An easy way to
avoid most of these is to not update the speed if we are in the
STATUS_SYNCING state for video. This isn't quite perfect and underruns
are still possible, but it actually seems to depend on the AO. e.g. I
couldn't trigger an underrun with alsa but I could with pipewire. In any
case, the audio artifact here is much less noticeable than doing a full
ao reset, so it's still an improvement.
ytdl lists thumbnails in ascending order according to height/preference.
all_formats=yes adds formats from best to worst, so the same should also
be done for thumbnails.
yt-dlp has a preference field for it's thumbnails, and not all of it's
listed thumbnails have fields with their dimensions.
Therefore prefere the preference field when available and fall back to
height if it's not.
I'd like some names to be more descriptive, but to work with 15 chars
limit we have to make some sacrifice.
Also because of the limit, remove the `mpv/` prefix and prioritize
actuall thread name.
dac977193c changed adding delay to only
when the video is playing but this isn't correct. The video frames
adjust themselves based on the audio, so if we still have audio
processing while the video itself happens to be in some non-playing
state (such as STATUS_READY), the delay still needs to be taken into
account. The correct thing to check is to make sure that it is not
STATUS_EOF. STATUS_EOF covers the case where we have still image, and of
course no video at all is STATUS_EOF. So having a massive bogus delay
value is still avoided.
The MPV_LEAK_REPORT environment variable was previously read in order to
determine whether or not to enable memory reporting for javascript
scripts. This is kind of weird and deviates from the norm of exposing an
option to the user. So let's just add --js-memory-report and disable it
by default instead.
The point of the mpctx->delay field is for calculating a/v sync and
adjusting the frame timings appropriately. However, the frame_time was
always subtracted from mpctx->delay regardless of the audio status. This
meant that for a video with no audio, every single frame had a
subtraction with nothing ever added to it meaning that you get massive
negative delay times. For weird videos where the audio starts way later,
the massive delay leads to the VO sleeping for basically about as long
as the video was previously playing without audio. This results in
nothing being rendered during that brief period of time and just overall
badness. When using display-sync, it happens to work since the video
doesn't adjust itself based on audio and it renders anyway.
The fix is to simply not touch mpctx->delay in player/video.c unless
there's actually audio playing. This is what the rest of the code
already does aside from setting it to 0 on resets or EOFs. Move the
calculation into adjust_sync after the audio status check. It works
exactly the same as before except that we don't constantly subtract
bogus values when there's no audio playing. The reverse situation in
player/audio.c also has the same issue. For something that is only
audio, mpctx->delay is always added to but nothing will ever subtract
from it. It's not really clear if this particular version could ever
cause a real bug, but logically it needs to be guarded in the same way.
The field here should only be updated if the video is actually playing.
Fixes#12025.
The end position of the word to be completed is never used because all
patterns end with $. Remove it or it would complicate implementing
completers with more patterns.
This will allow providing more nested completions without pre-generating
an enormous amount of completions, and it is more efficient since it
only generates the completions needed for each completion attempt.
Any track that has attached picture is also always considered an image.
Not every image is neccesarily an attached picture though. So change the
check here to capture more possible cases where we should be updating
the subtitle. With the previous commits, this fixes#12387.
C standard says that `= {0}` activates and initializes first member of
union. We expect whole union to be zeroed, it is used as default value.
Initialize union with one zeroed default instance to ensure proper init.
Fixes: #12711
Make it not possible to build mpv without the latest libplacebo anymore.
This will allow for less code duplication between mpv and libplacebo,
and in the future also let us delete legacy ifdefs and track libplacebo
better.
Nobody except a chosen few (I'm not one of them) even knows what it
means. Multiple people thought it was actually some kind of rendering
bug. Just disable it by default. Closes#12671.
since i was going to fix the include order of stdatomic, might as well
sort the surrouding includes in accordance with the project's coding
style.
some headers can sometime require specific include order. standard
library headers usually don't. but mpv might "hack into" the standard
headers (e.g pthreads) so that complicates things a bit more.
hopefully nothing breaks. if it does, the style guide is to blame.
replace it with <stdatomic.h> and replace the mp_atomic_* typedefs with
explicit _Atomic qualified types.
also add missing config.h includes on some files.
To avoid switching to scientific notation. Apparently it is "jarring"
for some users.
This preserves status quo from before 9dddfc4f where pretty printer were
truncated to 3 decimal places.
With the previous series of commits, all internal usage has been
replaced by the nanosecond functions. There's not really any point in
keeping these around anymore plus there are macros for unit conversions
now so we can just axe them. It's worth noting that mpv_get_time_us()
obviously still needs to work for API reasons, but we can just divide
mp_time_ns() by 1000 to get the same thing.
The whole mess with setting the option value explictly and saving the
old stop_play value only needs to happen if we're at the end of file.
Doing it in general is unneccessary and breaks other things.
Fixes#12424.
These are ancient and have existed since before stats.lua lived in the
mpv repository. We don't need to worry about ancient mpv versions
anymore, so remove these.
The text didn't line up with with the percentages above it because it
didn't use a monospace font.
Instead insert the text at the same position in the template as the
percentages and convert one o.prefix_sep from the percentages into hard
coded \h\h to ensure alignment even when the user changes o.prefix_sep.
Use "%.7g" to show 7 significant digits. Removes the trailing zeros, and
in general makes it more readable, than fixed 3 decimal digits.
For avsync use "%+.2g" to add plus sign, similar to display-sync
values.
- rename prefix to `Framerate:`
- if both estimated and specified values are the same display fps once
- skip the suffix if both the estimated and specified values agrees
Source video parameters are interesting, but we mix them with video
output/target parameters. Which will differ. Add "Display" showing
true output params from VO, including HDR passthrough info and
everything. This makes much more consistent output and alows to quickly
diagnose how is source video translated to target display.
This was wrongly assuming that playlist_path is always set for the
current playlist entry, but it's only set when a file was added by
expanding a playlist.
The crash in playlist_get_first_in_next_playlist can be reproduced with
mpv foo.mkv foo.zip, playlist-next, playlist-prev,
playlist-next-playlist. You need to run playlist-next, playlist-prev
first because foo.zip's playlist_path is NULL until you do that, which
makes playlist_get_first_in_next_playlist return immediately.
The crash in cmd_playlist_next_prev_playlist can be replicated with mpv
--loop-playlist foo.zip foo.mkv, running playlist-next until foo.mkv,
and playlist-play-next. Again, you need to open foo.zip first or its
playlist_path is NULL which skips running strcmp(entry->playlist_path,
mpctx->playlist->current->playlist_path).
Fixes https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/issues/12495#issuecomment-1760968608
Use EDL for single tracks with metadata to set the uploader, channel url
and description metadata with --ytdl-format=best. Currently, these are
only set with the other ytdl formats with video and audio in different
streams.
The uploader tag is commonly available in sites other than Youtube too,
so it may be simpler to always use EDL with single tracks.
Added to the functions `mp.add_timeout` and `mp.add_periodic_timer`.
If the `disabled` argument is set to `true` or a truthy value, the
timer will wait to be manually started with a call to its `resume()`
method.
9606c3fca9 added mp_time_ns(). Since we
apparently expose the mp_time_us() to clients already, there's no reason
to not also expose the new nanosecond one.
playlist-prev-playlist goes to the beginning of the previous playlist
because this seems more useful and symmetrical to
playlist-next-playlist. It does not go to the beginning when the current
playlist-path starts with the previous playlist-path, e.g. with mpv
--loop-playlist foo/, which expands to foo/{1..9}.zip, the current
playlist path foo/1.zip beings with the playlist-path foo/ of {2..9}.zip
and thus playlist-prev-playlist goes to 9.zip rather than to 2.zip.
Closes#12495.
Lines that would be outside of the visible area are now culled.
The log messages were already culled, however with the introduction
of suggestions, they also needed a small update.
Completion suggestions are now nicely formatted into a table.
Maximum width of the table is estimated based on OSD size and
font size.
This requires a new scaling factor option `font_hw_ratio`.
A factor of 2.15 works great for me,
but the default is 2.0 to avoid problems with other fonts.
The space between columns is automatically adjusted to be
between 2 and 8 spaces.
It tries to use as few rows as possible.
Tab completion now shows a list of all potential completions
between the log messages and prompt.
The text is colored to differentiate it from regular text.
The color matches the theme and is similar to the mpv logo.
The text styles are now in a table.
The color definitions of the theme where the colors were taken from
are now included in a comment for future reference.
The colors have been converted to BGR as is required by ASS.
vo_still_displaying() is racey with vo_request_wakeup_on_done() and above
that it doesn't work as expected. VO can run out of work and go to sleep
for 1000s, while the play thread still returns on vo_still_displaying()
check, because of a check `now < frame_end` so it never advances and go
to sleep itself.
This fixes dead lock that we have when image parameters changes during
playback.
This reverts commit 0c9ac5835b.
Fixes: #12575
fbe154831a added a new VOCTRL to signal
when the OSD changed for gpu-next's handling of subtitles, but this is
both not necessary and actually incomplete. The VOCTRL would signal OSD
changes, but not all subtitle changes (like selecting another
non-external sub track for example). VOCTRL_OSD_CHANGED was used to
increment p->osd_sync which would then redraw the blended subtitles if
the player was paused.
But there's already a VOCTRL_PAUSE and VOCTRL_RESUME. Plus, the
sub_bitmap_list object will have items in it if it changed in any way,
so we don't need the VOCTRL_OSD_CHANGED method at all. That can be
removed.
The check that fp->osd_sync < p->osd_sync stays in place since that's an
optimization while the video is playing, but we also check the pause
state as well since the VO can know this. If we're paused, then always
do update_overlays since core must be signalling a redraw to us if we
get a draw_frame call here. Additionally in update_overlays itself, the
p->osd_sync counter is incremented if we have any items since the frame
signature will need that. As for the actual bug that is fixed, changing
subtitle tracks while paused with blended subtitles now correctly works.
Previously, it was never updated so the old subtitle stayed there
forever until you deselected it (since VOCTRL_OSD_CHANGED triggered
there).
Also include some cosmetic code fixes that were noticed.
e277fadd60 originally added this but it
never actually did anything in the function... wm4 probably changed his
mind but forget to delete it so just remove it here.
2c6a3cb1f2 originally added this struct
member and then 1be863afdb later added
some more logic to loadfile that uses this. There's been more changes
since then of course, but bits using playback_short and playback_start
have mostly stayed the same. It's a bit strange it's worked this way for
so long since it makes an assumption on how long files should be and
leads to weird, broken behavior on playlists with shorter videos. The
main reason for playlist_short, as far as I can tell, is to deal with
some fringe cases with short videos and trying to go back in the
playlist. More specifically, if you use --loop=inf on a very short video
(say less than 1 second) and try to go back in the playlist, you won't
be able to without any of this special logic that deals with it. But the
current approach has several side effects like going back multiple items
in the playlist instead of just one if the video is less than one
second. This is just bad so delete everything related to playlist_short
and playlist_start.
Instead, let's handle this by keeping track of playlist-prev attempts.
Going forward in the playlist doesn't require any special handling since
a bad/broken file will just advance to the next one. So it's only going
backwards that requires some special consideration. If we're going
backwards and the user isn't using force, then mark the playlist entry
with a special flag. If the file loads successfully in
play_current_file, we can just clear the flag and not worry about it.
However if there's a failure, then we set a bool telling
play_current_file that it should go back one more item in the playlist
if possible and try again. This way, we avoid the previously mentioned
--loop=inf edgecase and the user can still attempt to retry previously
failed items in the playlist (like a url or such).
Fixes#6576, fixes#12548.
Combine the cover art whitelist with the extensions in
--cover-art-auto-exts instead of hardcoding them. This is shorter,
checks for more extensions, saves us from updating the whitelist
everytime we add a new image extension, and since the whitelist had
gotten so big and the priority is calculated as
MP_ARRAY_SIZE(cover_files) - n, files like cover.jpg were taking
priority over cover art loaded by --cover-art-auto=exact.
The stream selection state wasn't improved. I didn't realize this messed
with caches. All in all, just not a good idea. Back to drawing board I
guess.
This reverts commit f40bbfec4f.
When seeking chapters, `last_chapter_seek` acts as a projection of
what the current chapter will be once mpv has a chance to seek to it.
This allows for more accurate results from the `chapter` property.
It works by comparing the projection to the actual current chapter
and returning the larger of the two indexes, but this only works when
seeking forward.
If we want it to work for both forward and backward chapter seeking,
we can instead use a boolean called `last_chapter_flag`, which gets
switched on when a chapter seek request is made, and then
switched off when the seek has been performed.
We should also check to ensure that we don't allow the chapter index
to be set to -1 unless there is a span of time between the very
beginning of the track and the start of the first chapter.
Since the new approach to resetting `last_chapter_seek` no longer
depends on `last_chapter_pts`, that member variable can be removed.
External subtitles are always read as eager, so they do not need to be
changed on pause/unpause. Don't do the refresh seek since it will just
buffer forever. Fixes f40bbfec4f.
This replaces the previous commit and makes more sense. The internal
demux marked tracks as eager depending on their type and for subtitles
it would always lazily read them unless there happened to be no
available av stream. However, we want the sub stream to be eager if the
player is paused. The existing subtitle is still preserved on the
screen, but if the user changes tracks that's when the problem occurs.
So to handle this case, propagate the mpctx->paused down to the stream
selection logic. This modifies both demuxer_refresh_track and
demuxer_select_track to take that boolean value. A few other parts of
the player use this, but we can just assume false there (no change in
behavior from before) since they should never be related to subtitles.
The core player code is aware of its own state naturally, and can always
pass the appropriate value so go ahead and do so. When we change the
pause state, a refresh seek is done on all existing subtitle tracks to
make sure their eager state is the appropriate value (i.e. so it's not
still set to eager after a pause and a track switch). Slightly invasive
change, but it works with the existing logic instead of going around it
so ultimately it should be a better approach. We can additionally remove
the old force boolean from sub_read_packets since it is no longer
needed.
The default `z` of an overlay is 0, which is used by e.g. console.lua.
Having the idle logo at a `z` of 1000 means that it ends up above the
console (and anything that don't set a value higher then 1000).
It doesn't make sense for the idle logo to overshadow other things, so
put it at -1000 instead to prevent that.
Evidently I was wrong and mpv only actually warns once on deprecation
(playlist-pos nor display-fps did not and warned every time, but those
were outliers apparently). Someone complained so just hack it into
command_ctx for now.
0b4860248b added user-data which is
completely superior and makes this property obsolete. We've already had
one mpv release with the osc using user-data so drop this.
No wonder wm4 wanted to get rid of this. This option requires touching a
bunch of crap in the core player code. --stream-record works perfectly
fine and is a lot nicer so there's no need for this to exist anymore.
e9e93b4dbe added a warning about writing
the same value to the playlist-pos property that in the future it would
stop restarting playback. Instead, you should use the
playlist-play-index command for that. Well go ahead and drop the old
deprecated behavior now and do what wm4 wanted this to do: just ignore
if the same value is written again.
drop-frame-count and vo-drop-frame-count are ancient and have no reason
to exist anymore. The other change is that support for writing to
display-fps has been removed, and the property is strictly read-only
now. 3a2dc8b22e is what deprecated it with
a warning to users, so we can remove it without much trouble.
Defining MPV_CPLUGIN_DYNAMIC_SYM during plugin compilation will replace mpv_*
functions with function pointers. Those pointer will be initialized when
loading the plugin.
It is recommended to use this symbol table when targeting Windows. The loader
does not have notion of global symbols. Loading cplugin into mpv process will
not allow this plugin to call any of the symbols that may be available in
other modules. Instead cplugin has to link explicitly to specific PE binary,
libmpv-2.dll/mpv.exe or any other binary that may have linked mpv statically.
This limits portability of cplugin as it would need to be compiled separately
for each of target PE binary that includes mpv's symbols. Which in practice
is unrealictis, as we want one cplugin to be loaded without those restrictions.
Instead of linking to any PE binary, we create function pointer for all mpv's
exported symbols. For convinience names of entrypoints are redefined to those
pointer so no changes are required in cplugin source code, except defining
MPV_CPLUGIN_DYNAMIC_SYM. Those function pointer are exported to make them
available for mpv to init with correct values during runtime, before calling
`mpv_open_cplugin`.
Note that those pointer are decorated with `selectany` attribute, so no need
to worry about multiple definitions, linker will keep only single instance.
This fixes cplugin usability on Windows. Without any API changes, only
recompilation with -DMPV_CPLUGIN_DYNAMIC_SYM is needed.
In the never ending quest of trying to satisfy every possible user
request for subtitle autoselection, I ended up redoing how
--subs-fallback-forced works. The old behavior had it as strictly a
fallback-type option when there were no lang matches, but now we can
make it an active part of compare_track and it works along with slang to
select the desired track. Since it's a three state option, the no option
still works to avoid selecting any forced subtitle tracks. The meaning
of always slightly changes to mean "only select forced subtitle tracks"
and yes remains essentially the same (no special priority given besides
the audio matching subtitle language case).
Setting `--video-crop=0x0+0+0` applies full frame crop, ignoring the
container one. Setting --video-crop=0 disables manual crop and restores
container one if it is available.
the osc currently allows for changing volume via scrolling when on top
of the volume icon. this does the same thing for the seekbar by allowing
seeking via scroll.
fbe8f99194 made it possible for mpv to
autoselect forced subtitles again (it was bugged and would ignore
without slang being specified). Unfortunately, I forgot to take slang
into account here, so it would always autoselect the subtitles if they
are available. Fix this by checking both that it matches the lang and
that the previous track pick wasn't already matched (os_langs being true
is essentially equivalent to there not being any specified slang). This
way, it still respects the order of languages in your slang list.
Probably someone out there will be upset that forced subtitles aren't
always preferred regardless of the order, but that can be another option
for later I guess.
DVD/PGS are definitely not common, and ones that make use of the forced
subpictures flag even less so. For this button to be useful, the
subtitle track would need to be DVD or PGS, the track would need to make
use of the forced flag, the user would have to know what forced
subpictures are, and the user would need to have the preference of only
viewing forced subpictures on a subtitle. The function of this button is
too niche to be on the osc, if this behavior is desired the user can
simply bind a key in their input.conf. Moreover, this button only adds
confusion because there's no intuitive way to show what it does, and
there's no explanation for it anywhere in the manuals. osc real-estate
is quite limited as it is, so let's not waste any space on buttons with
highly questionable utility at best and confusing or bad UX at worst.
If --slang was set to some language and it matched the subtitle track,
then --no-subs-with-matching-audio would do nothing. Fix the logic by
doing the --no-subs-with-matching-audio step at the end to ensure that
it always "wins" over whatever --slang or --subs-fallback has set.
Clarify the docs a bit to make it clearer that this is the intended
behavior. Fixes fbe8f99194.
Since we no longer have the auto choice, this is always exactly equal to
the value of the option (sub-forced-events-only). Remove the property
and alias it.
The old name is pretty bad and users mistakenly think it has something
to do with selecting forced subtitles (that would be
--subs-fallback-forced). Instead of giving it such a generic name, make
it clearer that this has to do specifically with forced sub events
which is only relevant for a small minority of subtitles.
First of all, this never worked. Or if it ever did, it was in some
select few scenarios. c9474dc9ed is what
originally added support for the auto choice. However, that commit
worked by propagating a value to a fake option used internally. This
shouldn't have ever worked because the underlying m_config_cache was
never updated so the value shouldn't have been preserved when accessed
in sd_lavc. And indeed with some testing, the value there is always 0
unsurprisingly.
This was later rewritten in ba7cc07106
along with a lot of other sub changes, but with that, it was still
mostly broken. The reason is because one of the key parts of having to
hit this logic (prefer_forced) required `--no-subs-with-matching-audio`
to be set. If the audio language matches the subtitle language (the
requirement also excludes forced subs), the option makes no subtitle
selection in the first place so pick->forced_only_def is not set to true
and nothing even happens. Another way around this would be to attempt to
change your OS language (like with the LANG environment variable) so
that the subtitle track gets selected but then audio_matches mistakenly
becomes false because it compares the OS language to the audio language
which then make preferred_forced 0, so nothing happens. I don't think
there's a scenario where pick->forced_only_def is actually set to true
(thus meaning `auto` is useless), but maybe someone could contrive
something very strange. Regardless, it's definitely not something even
remotely common.
fbe8f99194 changed track selection again
but didn't consider this particular case. The net result is that DVD/PGS
subs become equivalent to --sub-forced-only being yes, so this a change
in behavior and probably not a good one. Note that I wasn't able to
actually observe any difference in a PGS sample. It still displayed
subtitles fine but that sample probably didn't have the right flags to
hit the sub-forced-only logic.
Anyways, the auto feature is extremely questionable at best and in my
view, not actually worth it. It is meant to be used with
`--no-subs-with-matching-audio` to display forced pictures in subtitle
tracks that are not marked as forced, but that contradicts that
particular option's purpose and description in the manual (secretly
selecting a track under certain conditions even though it says not to).
Instead of trying to shove all this logic into select_default_track
which is already insanely complicated as it is, recognize that this is a
trivial lua script. If you absolutely want to turn --sub-forced-only on
under these certain conditions (DVD/PGS subtitles, matching audio and
subtitle languages, etc.), just look at the current-tracks property and
do your thing. The very, very niche behavior that this option tried to
accomplish basically never worked, no user even knows what this option
does, and well it's just not worth supporting in core mpv code. Drop
all this code for sanity's sake and change --sub-forced-only back to a
bool.
- Move window scale to scaled resolution line
- add deinterlacing display
- rename "Gamma" to "Transfer"
- reorder to colormatrix/primaries/transfer as commonly used by
ffmpeg/ffprobe
In general, forced tracks should only be shown if they match the
language of the audio. However some people do want them no matter what,
so add an always option to this so such tracks are always selected.
This is the replacement for the previous auto option for slang. It
behaves similar however it never overrides slang if that is set and will
instead try to pick the subtitle that matches the user's language if
appropriately flagged by the file.
What was previously there is extremely complicated and really confusing.
Poorly named variables like "prefer_forced" that don't neccesarily have
anything to do with prefering forced tracks didn't help either. Try to
rewrite a few things to be saner. The idea is that after you loop
through the tracks, the special sub-specific options (like subs-fallback
and so on) should be handled and the track should be deselected if
appropriate. Another change is to remove the "prefered_forced" argument
in compare_track. This actually was both not neccessary and caused bad
behavior by always depriortizing forced tracks even when it didn't apply
(e.g. forced video tracks were never selected even though the flag
should simply be ignored for anything that's not a subtitle track).
This proved to be too problematic. Depending on the value of
--subs-with-matching-audio, you could either end up with cases where
--slang wasn't respected and users didn't get subtitles or alternatively
cases where subtitles were given and the user didn't ask for them.
Fundamentally, the OS language functionality doesn't really map well to
slang (and for alang/vlang it makes zero sense; not that anyone actually
used it). Instead of trying to shove it in an option where it doesn't
belong, we should split this off into something else. So for now, just
remove the special handling of "auto" and flip slang back to NULL.
It turns out that the code to track redirects (playlists and
directories) never worked correctly, only the last redirect is
remembered and num_redirects is never greater than 1.
You can see this by doing quit-watch-later with the old watch later
system, before dbf244fd2f, on a m3u playlist of files and a m3u playlist
of directories. Only in the first case a redirect entry for the m3u file
is created, because in the second case the m3u redirect is replaced by
the directory one.
If you did mpv --directory-mode=lazy /foo it did create redirect entries
for all subdirectories e.g. /foo/bar, /foo/bar/baz, /foo/bar/baz/qux,
this made it seem like it worked correctly, but actually
/foo/bar/bar/qux was the only redirect entry and thus it was considered
as the first redirect, and mpv created redirect entries for each segment
of the first redirect only.
In the previous commit dbf244fd2f, rather than figuring out how to fix
the code to track redirects, and since creating redirect entries for
multiple redirects is overkill, I just used the new playlist-path
property which does the same thing but only for the last redirect.
By replacing the only other use of the old redirect code with
playlist-path, we can remove it.
35f43dfacb added a system to write resume files for redirects, i.e.
directories and playlists that mpv expands.
It creates a resume file for each redirect, and for the first redirect
only, it writes a resume file for each segment of its path, without even
converting it to an absolute path if it's relative. This is incomplete:
mpv 'Iron Maiden/1982 The Number of the Beast/8 Hallowed Be Thy Name.mp3'
This doesn't save any redirect entry.
mpv --directory-mode=recursive 'Iron Maiden', then quit-watch-later on
Hallowed Be Thy Name
This saves a redirect entry for "Iron Maiden", but not for "1982 The
Number of the Beast". It doesn't save redirect entries for the
directories above "Iron Maiden" either because "Iron Maiden" isn't
converted to an absolute path.
In both of these cases mpv --directory-mode=lazy 'Iron Maiden' won't
resume from "Hallowed Be Thy Name" because "1982 The Number of the
Beast" isn't the first subdirectory and there is no redirect entry for
it.
503dada42f made mpv recursively expand subdirectories precisely to fix
this, and f266eadf1e added back an option not to expand them. But if we
fix how redirect entries are stored, we can make the superior
--directory-mode=lazy (because it's faster and doesn't result in massive
playlists) the default, and also ensure that mpv will resume playback
even when you quit-watch-later a file without redirects and then play
the directories above it.
Fix this by always creating redirect entries for all segments of the absolute
path of the file, so that both
mpv 'Iron Maiden/1982 The Number of the Beast/8 Hallowed Be Thy Name.mp3'
and
mpv --directory-mode=lazy 'Iron Maiden'
will create redirect entries for
/$USER
/$USER/music
/$USER/music/Iron Maiden
/$USER/music/Iron Maiden/1982 The Number of the Beast
making mpv --directory-mode=lazy "Iron Maiden" resume from
"Hallowed Be Thy Name".
This commit also makes mpv delete the redirect entries of parent
directories when resuming playback, because if for example you have a
playlist with all the songs in a discography:
1980 Iron Maiden/1 Prowler.mp3
1980 Iron Maiden/2 Remember Tomorrow.mp3
...
1981 Killers/1 The Ides of March.mp3
1981 Killers/2 Wrathchild.mp3
...
Now mpv will eventually create redirect entries for every album. If you
later decide to play the directories instead and there are 20 albums,
you would have to do mpv * 20 times to clear all the redirect entries.
This ensures the spacing between forced-only sub toggle button and the
volume button matches the spacing between the volume and the fullscreen
button on bottombar/topbar layouts
Fixes: 945d7c1eda
Previously, we would have a button with empty string added to the layout
for non DVD/PGS subtitles. This would cause there to be an invisible
button present that would take up space and could still be clicked
despite being invisible when the current subtitle track was not DVD/PGS.
The idea was that the button would be invisible for regular subtitle
tracks, and be visible as "[ ]"/"[F]" for DVD/PGS subtitle tracks.
This commit modifies the bar and box layouts to only add this button if
the current subtitle track is DVD/PGS. This results in there no longer
being an invisible button, and also prevents it from taking up space.
The button is added to layout as before when the current subtitle track
is DVD/PGS, matching the same logic as before.
--audio-file-auto, --cover-art-auto, and --sub-auto all work by using an
internally hardcoded list that determine what file extensions get
recognized. This is fine and people periodically update it, but we can
actually expose this as a stringlist option instead. This way users can
add or remove any file extension for any type. For the most part, this
is pretty pretty easy and involves making sub_exts, etc. the defaults
for the new options (--audio-file-auto-exts, --cover-art-auto-exts, and
--sub-auto-exts). There's actually one slight complication however. The
input code uses mp_might_be_subtitle_file which guesses if the file drag
and dropped file is a subtitle. The input ctx has no access to mpctx so
we have to be clever here.
For this, the trick is to recognize that we can leverage the
m_option_change_callback. We add a new flag, UPDATE_SUB_EXTS, which
fires when the player starts up. Then in the callback, we can set the
value of sub_exts in external_files to opts->sub_auto_exts. Whenever the
option updates, the callback is fired again and sub_exts updates. That
way mp_might_be_subtitle_file can just operate off of this global
variable instead of trying to mess with the core mpv state directly.
Fixes#12000.
We should account for ao queue when setting playback position on EOF,
previously we were using the pts value corresponding to the start of
the ao queue, rather than the currently playing audio.
This fixes time-remaining being a negative number when mpv seeks to EOF
while playback is paused.
There are a number of ways one can craft a playlist file that refers to
itself or cleverly goes around in a loop to other playlist files. There
is obviously no use for this, but mpv spins around forever trying to
load the files so you have to just SIGTERM/SIGKILL it. We can be smarter
about this and attempt to detect it. The condition for detecting this is
surprisingly simple: the filename of the first entry in the playlist
must match a previous playlist path we stored. If we get this, we can
then log an error and stop playback. If there is a "real" file loaded at
any point in time, then we know it's not an infinite loop and clear out
the saved playlist paths. Fixes#3967.
A bit of a long standing pain with scripting is that when opening a file
that gets interpreted as a playlist (like an m3u), the original path of
the file gets thrown away later. Workarounds basically consist of
getting the filename before mpv expands the path, but that's not really
reliable. Instead of throwing it away, save the original playlist path
by copying to the playlist entries when applicable (demuxer playlist and
the playlist option). Then expose these as properties: playlist-path for
the currently playing entry and playlist/N/playlist-path for each
specific entry. Closes#8508, #7605.
The OSC reports the speed-adjusted remaining time, but the terminal does
not. This is a weird mismatch and the OSC's default behavior makes
sense, so let's just do some division and add an option to disable it.
Also named "remaining-playtime" after the OSC option. Fixes#10445.
mpv makes this option an integer, but the underlying ass API actually
accepts doubles. From some testing, there is no meaningful precision
difference between float or double (it seems to go in roughly 0.05
steps), so just make it a float. sd_lavc also can handle non-integer
values here. Closes#11583.
When printing the name of the video track on the OSC, mpv almost always
prefixes it with "unknown". This is referring to the language tag which
essentially nobody ever does for the video track since it doesn't make
any sense. Instead of putting unknown when there's no language, just
make it an empty string instead. "Unknown" confuses can confuse users
here and practically nobody would guess that it's referring to language.
We still will print the language for a video track in case someone out
there really does tag it, but that should be rare.
When playing a sparse video stream, the debug log gets hit with the
video EOF constantly since the audio is still playing. There's no
practical use for this so just do add some logic to only signal it once
if it is sparse.
There's an edge cause with gapless audio and pausing. Since, gapless
audio works by sending an EOF immediately, it's possible to pause on the
next file before audio actually finishes playing and thus the sound gets
cut off. The fix is to simply just always do an ao_drain if the ao is
about to set a pause on EOF and we still have audio playing.
Fixes#8898.
This is pretty obscure but if you screw around with the play-dir option
to essentially create a ping-pong loop; mpv will get hit by an assertion
error. What's happening here is that changing the play-dir always
requires a seek. This is handled in player/command along with the other
runtime option changes. However, queue_seek can actually clear the value
of mpctx->stop_play if the file is ending. So while loadfile is
terminating playback and the play-dir gets changed, the value of
mpctx->stop_play gets cleared because of seek. This then hits that
assertion later when mpv tries to finish the file.
The fix is to just add some weird logic to play-dir in player/command.
We have to be sure that mpctx->play_dir matches the new direction
immediately when we get the change so explictly set it here and don't
wait for it later. Secondly, keep the old value of mpctx->stop_play
before the seek and restore it afterwards. This ensures that termination
still happens cleanly and allows the ping-pong loop to work. Fixes#10782
Internal subtitles were not shown when switching between tracks while
mpv was paused. The reason for this is simply because the demuxer data
isn't available yet when the track switch happens. Fixing it is
basically just retrying until the packet is actually available when the
player is paused. Fixes#8311.