MPlayer - Movie Player for LINUX (C) 2000-2002 Arpad Gereoffy (A'rpi/ESP-team)

http://www.mplayerhq.hu

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Table of Contents



Developer Cries


0. How to read this documentation

If you are a first-time installer: be sure to read everything from here to the end of the Installation section, and follow the links you will find. If you have any other questions, return to the TOC (Table of Contents) and search for the topic, read the FAQ, or try grepping though the files.

The main rule of this documentation: if it's not documented, it does not exist. If I don't say you encode audio from TV tuner, you can't. A healthy quantity of combining ability is welcomed, though. Good luck. You'll need it :)

1. Introduction

1.1. Overview

MPlayer is a movie player for LINUX (runs on many other Unices, and non-x86 CPUs, see section 6). It plays most MPEG, VOB, AVI, VIVO, ASF/WMV, QT/MOV, FLI, RM, NuppelVideo, yuv4mpeg, FILM, RoQ files, supported by many native, XAnim, and Win32 DLL codecs. You can watch VideoCD, SVCD, DVD, 3ivx, and even DivX movies too (and you don't need the avifile library at all!). The another big feature of mplayer is the wide range of supported output drivers. It works with X11, Xv, DGA, OpenGL, SVGAlib, fbdev, AAlib, DirectFB, but you can use GGI and SDL (and this way all their drivers) and some lowlevel card-specific drivers (for Matrox, 3Dfx and Radeon) too! Most of them supports software or hardware scaling, so you can enjoy movies in fullscreen. MPlayer supports displaying through some hardware MPEG decoder boards, such as the DVB and DXR3/Hollywood+ ! And what about the nice big antialiased shaded subtitles (10 supported types!!!) with european/ISO 8859-1,2 (hungarian, english, czech, etc), cyrillic, korean fonts, and OSD?

MPlayer is basically GPL, but contains some non-GPL code which is not allowed to be distributed in binary form, and also contains the OpenDivX library which has special license. We are still developing towards GPL.

Distributing MPlayer in the form of binaries and/or binary packages is currently impossible, speaking about both technical and law areas. Detailed information can be found in the second part of this file, and it is recommended to read it.

I didn't write any codecs, just some players. I spent a lot of time finding the best way to parse bad damaged input files (both MPEG and AVI) and to do perfect A-V sync with seeking ability. My player is rock solid playing damaged MPEG files (useful for some VCDs), and it plays bad AVI files which are unplayable with the famous windows media player. Even AVI files without index chunk are playable, and you can rebuild their indexes with the -idx option, thus enabling seeking! As you see, stability and quality are the most important things for me, but the speed is also amazing.

1.2. History

This began a year ago... I've tried lots of players under linux (mtv,xmps,dvdview,livid/oms,VideoLAN, xine,xanim,avifile,xmmp) but they all have some problem. Mostly with special files or with audio/video sync. Most of them is unable to play both MPEG1, MPEG2 and AVI (DivX) files. Many players have image quality or speed problems too. So I've decided to write/modify one...

1.3. Installation

In this chapter I'll try to guide you through the compiling and configuring process of MPlayer. It's not easy, but it won't neccessarily be hard. If you experience a different behaviour than what I explain, please search through this documentation and you'll find your answers. If you see links, please follow them and read carefully what they contain. It will take some time, but it DOES worth it.

You need a fairly recent system. On Linux, 2.4.x kernels are recommended.

SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS

CODECS

VIDEOCARDS

There are generally two kind of videocards. One kind (the newer cards) has hardware YUV acceleration support, the other cards don't.

YUV cards

They can display and scale (zoom) the picture to any size that fits in their memory, with small CPU usage (zooming doesn't increase it!), thus you get a nice and very fast fullscreen playing.

Non-YUV cards

Fullscreen playing can be achieved by either zooming (by software, this is slooow), or changing to a smaller videomode, for example to 352x288. If you don't have YUV accel, this latter method is the recommended one. Throughout MPlayer, this behaviour can be switched on by using the -vm option and with the following drivers :

SOUNDCARDS

FEATURES

Then build MPlayer:

    ./configure
    make
    make install

At this point, MPlayer is ready to use. The directory /usr/local/share/mplayer contains the codecs.conf file, which is used to tell the program all the codecs and their capabilities. This file should always be kept uptodate together with the main binary !

Debian users can build a .deb package for themselves, it's very simple. Just exec fakeroot debian/rules binary in MPlayer's root dir. Detailed instructions can be found here.

ALWAYS browse the output of ./configure, and the configure.log file, they contain info about what will be built, and what won't. You may also want to view config.h and config.mak files.

Though not mandatory, the fonts should be installed in order to gain OSD, and subtitle functionality. Download mp-arial-iso-8859-*.zip and/or optional (if exists) language updates. It's VERY RECOMMENDED to check section 1.5 for details.

    mkdir ~/.mplayer/font
    cd ~/.mplayer/font
    unzip mp-arial-iso-8859-1.zip

1.4. What about the GUI?

The GUI needs GTK (it isn't GTK, but the panels are). The skins are stored in PNG format, so gtk, libpng (and their devel stuff) has to be installed. You can build it by specifying --enable-gui during ./configure . Then, to turn on GUI mode, you either

HINT: use the middle button (on 2 button mice press left and right simultaneously) for a popup GTK menu, with DVD playing option!

As MPlayer doesn't have a skin included, you have to download them if you want to use the GUI. See the download page. They should be extracted to the usual system-wide directory (/usr/local/share/mplayer/Skin), or to $HOME/.mplayer/Skin . MPlayer by default looks in these directories for a default named directory, but you can use the -skin newskin option, or the skin=newskin config file directive to use the skin in */Skin/newskin directory.

1.5. Subtitles and OSD

Yes, MPlayer also supports many kinds of subtitles. Currently 10 kinds of subtitle can be used by the subreader code. To see what are these subtitle formats, see subreader.c, line ~30.

MPlayer supports VobSub subtitles. VobSub subtitles consist of a big (some megabytes) .SUB file, an .IDX file, and/or an .IFO file. Usage : if you have files like sample.sub, sample.ifo, sample.idx - you have to pass the -vobsub sample -vobsubid 0 options (optionally with pathname, of course). The -vobsubid option is like -sid for DVDs, you can choose between subtitle tracks (languages) with it.

About DVD subtitles, read the DVD section.

MPlayer introduces a new subtitle format called MPsub. It was designed by me (Gabucino). Basically its main feature is being dynamically time-based (although it has frame-based mode too). Example (from DOCS/tech/mpsub.sub) :

# first number : wait this much after previous subtitle disappeared
# second number : display the current subtitle for this many seconds

15 3
A long, long time ago...

0 3
in a galaxy far away...

0 3
Naboo was under an attack.

So you see, the main goal was to make subtitle editing/timing/joining/cutting easy. And, if you - say - get an SSA subtitle but it's badly timed/delayed to your version of the movie, you simply do a mplayer dummy.avi -sub source.ssa -dumpmpsub . A dump.mpsub file will be created in the current directory, which will contain the source subtitle's text, but in MPsub format. Then you can freely add/substract seconds to/from the subtitle.

Subtitles are displayed with a technique called 'OSD', On Screen Display. OSD is used to display current time, volume bar, seek bar etc.

INSTALLING OSD and SUB

You need an MPlayer font package to be able to use OSD/SUB feature. There are many ways to get it:

After that, UNZIP the file you downloaded to ~/.mplayer or $PREFIX/share/mplayer. Then rename or symlink one of them to font (like : ln -s ~/.mplayer/arial-24 ~/.mplayer/font). Now you have to see a timer at the upper left corner of the movie (switch it off with 'o').

OSD has 3 states: (switch with 'o')

You can change default behaviour by setting osdlevel= variable in config file.

2. Features

2.1. Supported formats

2.2. Supported codecs

2.3. Video & Audio output devices

2.4. MEncoder - An All-Purpose Encoder

2.5. TV input

2.5.1. Overview

This section is about how to enable watching/grabbing from V4L compatible TV tuner.

2.5.2. Compilation

Hint : are the colors messed up? Then your tuner can't display in YV12 colorspace. Try I420 (you must use the -vc rawi420 option too!), or YUY2, UYVY, RGB32 (this one with -vo sdl) colorspaces. You can specify these with the outfmt=YV12 option see below.

2.5.3. Available options
   on    use TV input
   driver dummy - NULL TV input :) Used for testing only, generates dummy input.
v4l - captures images from standard V4L interface (default /dev/video0)
   device    specify other device than the default /dev/video0
   input    give from which input of the TV tuner you wish to grab from (e.g. television, s-video, composite, ...)
Prints the available ones during init.
   freq    specify the frequency to set the tuner (e.g. 511.250)
   outfmt    in which output format should the tuner transport images to us (rgb32, rgb24, yv12, uyvy, i420 (for i420 you have to pass the -vc i420 option, because of a fourcc conflict))
   width    the width of the output window, in pixels
   height    the height of the output window, in pixels
   norm    available: PAL, SECAM, NTSC
   channel    set the tuner to the given channel
   chanlist    available: us-bcast, us-cable, europe-west, europe-east, etc

2.5.4. Keyboard control

  h or l  select previous/next channel
nchange norm
bchange channel list

2.5.5. Examples

Dummy output, to AAlib :)
    mplayer -tv on:driver=dummy:width=640:height=480 -vo aa

Input from standard V4L
    mplayer -tv on:driver=v4l:width=640:height=480:outfmt=i420 -vc rawi420 -vo xv

3. Usage

3.1. Command line

MPlayer utilizes a complex playtree. It consists of "default" options written as first (for example mplayer -vfm 5), and options written after filenames, that apply only to the given filename/URL/whatever (for example mplayer -vfm 5 movie1.avi movie2.avi -vfm 4).

  file  mplayer [options] [path/]filename
filemplayer [default options] [path/]filename1 [options for filename1] filename2 filename3 [options for filename3]
VCDmplayer [options] -vcd trackno /dev/cdrom
DVDmplayer [options] -dvd titleno [/dev/dvd]
netmplayer [options] http://site.com/file.[mpg|avi] (playtree can also be used here, see above)

  mplayer -vo x11 /mnt/Films/Contact/contact2.mpg
  mplayer -vcd 2 /dev/cdrom
  mplayer -afm 3 /mnt/DVDtrailers/alien4.vob
  mplayer -dvd 1 /dev/dvd
  mplayer -abs 65536 -delay -0.4 -nobps ~/movies/test.avi

3.2. Control from keyboard

  <- or ->  seek backward/forward 10 seconds
up or downseek backward/forward 1 minute
pgup/pgdownseek backward/forward 10 minutes
< or >seek backward/forward in playlist
p or SPACEpause movie (press any key)
q or ESCstop playing and quit program
+ or -adjust audio delay by +/- 0.1 second
/ or *decrease/increase volume
otoggle OSD: none / seek / seek+timer
mtoggle using master/pcm volume
z or xadjust subtitle delay by +/- 0.1 second

(the following keys are valid only when using -vo xv)

1 or 2adjust contrast
3 or 4adjust brightness
5 or 6adjust hue
7 or 8adjust saturation

GUI keyboard control

  , and .  previous / next file
gray - or +decrease / increase volume
enterstart playing
spacepause
sstop
aabout
lload file
bskin browser
etoggle equalizer
ptoggle playlist
ftoggle fullscreen
mtoggle mute

TV input control

  h or l  select previous/next channel
nchange norm
bchange channel list

3.3. Control from LIRC

Linux Infrared Remote Control - use an easy to build home-brewn IR-receiver, an (almost) arbitrary remote control and control your linux box with it! More about it at www.lirc.org.

If you have installed the lirc-package, you can compile MPlayer with LIRC support using ./configure --enable-lirc

If everything went fine, MPlayer will print a message like LIRC init was successful. on startup. If an error occurs it will tell you. If it doesn't tell you anything about LIRC there's no support compiled in. That's it :-)

The application name for MPlayer is - oh wonder - mplayer_lirc. It understands the following commands:

  PAUSE  pause playing. Any other keystroke will continue replay.
QUITexit MPlayer
RWND10 secs back
FRWND60 secs back
FWDskip 10 secs
FFWDskip 60 secs
INCVOLincrease volume one percent
DECVOLdecrease volume one percent
MASTERuse master mixer channel
PCMuse pcm mixer channel

Don't forget to enable the repeat flag for RWND/FWD in .lircrc. Here's an excerpt from my .lircrc:

  begin
   remote = CU-SX070
   prog = mplayer_lirc
   button = Tape_Play
   repeat = 1
   config = FFWD
  end

  begin
   remote = CU-SX070
   prog = mplayer_lirc
   button = Tape_Stop
   config = QUIT
  end

If you don't like the standard location for the lirc-config file (~/.lircrc) use the -lircconf <filename> switch to specify another file.

3.4. Streaming from network or pipes

MPlayer can play files from network, using the HTTP protocol. Configuring it is simple, just recompile MPlayer with

    ./configure --enable-streaming

Playing goes by simply using adding the URL to the command line. MPlayer also honours the HTTP_PROXY environment variable, and uses proxy if available. Proxy usage can also be forced :

    mplayer http_proxy://proxy.micorsops.com:3128/http://micorsops.com:80/stream.asf

MPlayer can read from stdin (NOT named pipes). This can be for example used to play from FTP:

    wget ftp://micorsops.com/something.avi -O - | mplayer -

4. FAQ section

5. CD/DVD section

6. Misc OS'es

6.1. Debian packaging

To build the package, get the cvs version, or .tgz and uncompress it, and cd into programs directory:

    cd main
    fakeroot debian/rules binary

(... mplayer detects hardware/software, builds itself and.. ) dpkg-deb: building package `mplayer' in `../mplayer_0.18-1_i386.deb'.

And now just become root, and:

    dpkg -i ../mplayer_0.18-1_i386.deb as root.

Here's how it looks like:

	eyck@incubus:/src/main$ sudo dpkg -i ../mplayer_0.18-1_i386.deb
	Password:
	(Reading database ... 26946 files and directories currently installed.)
	Preparing to replace mplayer 0.17a-1 (using ../mplayer_0.18-1_i386.deb)
	Unpacking replacement mplayer ...
	Setting up mplayer (0.18-1) ...

6.2. FreeBSD

To build the package you will need GNU make (gmake, /usr/ports/devel/gmake), native BSD make will not work.

To run MPlayer you will need to re-compile the kernel with "options USER_LDT" (unless you are running -CURRENT, where this is default). If you have a CPU with SSE also use "options CPU_ENABLE_SSE" to use it (FreeBSD-STABLE required, or use kernel patches).

If MPlayer complains about "CD-ROM Device '/dev/cdrom' not found!" make a symbolic link: ln -s /dev/(your_cdrom_device) /dev/cdrom

There's no DVD support for FreeBSD yet.

6.3. Solaris

MPlayer should work on Solaris 2.6 or newer.

AVI file playback works best on Solaris x86, because you have the option to use the win32 codecs on the x86 platform, or can use MMX/MMX2/3DNow/etc instructions for MP3/DivX/DVD/whatever. On Solaris SPARC, you'll find quite a few AVI files with non working video and/or audio playback, because the video/audio codecs using the Win32 DLLs are not available. However, DivX/OpenDivX movies should work, when using libavcodec.

On UltraSPARCs, MPlayer takes advantage of their VIS extensions (equivalent to MMX), currently only in libmpeg2, libvo and libavcodec, but not in mp3lib. You can watch a VOB file on a 400Mhz CPU. You'll need mLib installed.

To build the package you will need GNU make (gmake, /opt/sfw/gmake), native Solaris make will not work. Typical error you get when building with solaris' make instead of GNU make:

   % /usr/ccs/bin/make
   make: Fatal error in reader: Makefile, line 25: Unexpected end of line seen

On Solaris SPARC, you need the GNU C/C++ Compiler; it does not matter if GNU C/C++ compiler is configured with or without the GNU assembler.

On Solaris x86, you need the GNU assembler and the GNU C/C++ compiler, configured to use the GNU assembler! The mplayer code on the x86 platform makes heavy use of MMX, SSE and 3DNOW! instructions that cannot be compiled using Sun's assembler /usr/ccs/bin/as.

The configure script tries to find out, which assembler program is used by your "gcc" command (in case the autodetection fails, use the "--as=/whereever/you/have/installed/gnu-as" option to tell the configure script where it can find GNU "as" on your system).

Error message from configure on a Solaris x86 system using GCC without GNU assembler:

   % configure
   ...
   Checking assembler (/usr/ccs/bin/as) ... , failed
   Please upgrade(downgrade) binutils to 2.10.1...

(Solution: Install and use a gcc configured with "--with-as=gas")

Typical error you get when building with a GNU C compiler that does not use GNU as:

   % gmake
   ...
   gcc -c -Iloader -Ilibvo -O4 -march=i686 -mcpu=i686 -pipe -ffast-math
	-fomit-frame-pointer  -I/usr/local/include   -o mplayer.o mplayer.c
   Assembler: mplayer.c
   "(stdin)", line 3567 : Illegal mnemonic
   "(stdin)", line 3567 : Syntax error
   ... more "Illegal mnemonic" and "Syntax error" errors ...

For DVD support you must have the patched libcss installed. Patch: http://www.tools.de/solaris/mplayer/.

Due to two bugs in solaris 8 x86, you cannot reliably play DVDs using a capacity >4GB:

On Solaris with an UltraSPARC CPU, you can get some extra speed by using the CPU's VIS instructions for certain time consuming operations. VIS acceleration can be used in MPlayer by calling functions in Sun's mediaLib.

VIS accelerated operations from mediaLib are used for mpeg2 video decoding and for color space conversion in the video output drivers.

6.4. StrongARM

MPlayer is reported to compile on StrongARM. Use the following command line:

  ./configure --target=arm-linux --disable-css --with-x11libdir=/usr/arm/lib
	      --with-x11incdir=/usr/arm/lib --disable-gcc-checking

6.5. Silicon Graphics Indigo / IRIX

Reported working. You'll probably have to use the sgi ao driver. Anyone has closer info?

6.6. QNX

Works. You'll need to download SDL for QNX, and install it. Then run MPlayer with -vo sdl:photon and -ao sdl:nto options, and it should be fast.

The -vo x11 output will be even slower than on Linux, since QNX has only X emulation which is VERY slow. Use SDL.

Appendix A - Authors

NOTE: Do *NOT* send bugreports, help & feature requests directly to the authors!

Read Appendix C and subscribe to mplayer-users mailing lists.

The MPlayer project:

Main testers:

The codecs, libs:

Their code is not used in current player version, but I've got some ideas or other technical help from:

Appendix A/2 - MPlayer code and documentation maintainers

Homepage

English documentation

Documentation translations

Platforms/ports

MPlayer code:

libvo drivers:

libao2 drivers:

TOOLS:

Misc:

Appendix B - Mailing lists

There are some public mailing lists on MPlayer. Subscribing can be achieved on the following addresses: