mirror of https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv
124 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
124 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
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How work the playtree ?
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Good question, I try to explain but note that it's the first doc
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I write :)
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First there is two things. The playtree itself and the iterator.
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The playtree represent the data and the iterator is used by
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mplayer to go from entry to entry.
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First the play_tree struct :
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struct play_tree {
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play_tree_t* parent;
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play_tree_t* child;
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play_tree_t* next;
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play_tree_t* prev;
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play_tree_param_t* params;
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int loop;
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char** files;
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int entry_type;
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};
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The play_tree_t* hold the links in the 4 directions, the params hold
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all parameters of this entry, loop is obvious (loop < 0 mean infint loop),
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files hold all the files of this entry and entry_type obviously tell the
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type of this entry (Node, file, dvd, vcd ot tv).
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An entry can hold more than one file, why ?
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Because an entry can be a network stream and usally you have more than
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one server. But all send the same thing, so it's only on entry with sevral
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sources.
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Then how do I use this stuff ?
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First you create an entry using the play_tree_new func. This create the struct
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and fill it with defaults values.
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Then this can become a node or a leaf. It will become a node as soon as you link it
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to another one using either play_tree_set_child or play_tree_set_parent.
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Or it will become a leaf as soon as you use play_tree_add_file on it.
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If an entry contain at least one file it can't become an node (an assert will be
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raised) and if en entry has a child you can't add file to (here also an assert will
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be raised).
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Then to create a list of entry you should use play_tree_append_entry,
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play_tree_prepend_entry or play_tree_insert_entry.
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In all this function you can use any entry of the the list as first argument,
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no need that it's the first one. The same apply when you set the child of a node,
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the child argument can be any entry in a list.
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To remove an entry from the tree use play_tree_remove. If the second arg (free_it)
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is true it will also free it, if the entry should be freed and the third
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arg is true it will also free the childs.
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When your tree is ready you can then use play_tree_cleanup to remove all unuseful
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entries.
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If you want to load a playlist you can use parse_playtree wich take a stream_t
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as argument or parse_playlist_file wich take a filename as argument.
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Both function will return NULL in case of failure or a new (cleaned) tree that
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you can add somewhere in your tree.
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How do I add DVD, VCD or TV entry to the tree ?
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You should use some virtual URL as filename like :
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dvd://x where x is the title number.
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vcd://x where x is the track number
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tv://x where x is the channel
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My playtree is ready now, what with this play_tree_iter ?
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This is an iterator used to go trough the tree. It handle itself
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loop of list and setting mplayer config according to the params
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of each entry.
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It's created with play_tree_iter_new wich take as argument a play_tree_t
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and an m_config_t wich is then used to set/unset the params of each entry.
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After creation the iter point to nothing, you should init with a first step.
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To go to another entry in the list you should use play_tree_iter_step. The
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second argument is the direction of the step : positive value go frontward,
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negative go backward and 0 don't move. The third tell if must care of
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node or not. If it's true, the iterator will stop on nodes, otherwise it go
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to the next valid entry.
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This function return different values :
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PLAY_TREE_ITER_ERROR : obvious
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PLAY_TREE_ITER_ENTRY : we are now on an entry
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PLAY_TREE_ITER_NODE : we are now on a node
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PLAY_TREE_ITER_END : we are now at end
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(( Note : I must add a PLAY_TREE_ITER_BEGINING for the begining. Don't know
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what it will return in a such case. PLAY_TREE_ITER_ERROR ? ))
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There is also play_tree_iter_up_step wich can be used to break a loop or skip
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the current list. The argument are the same than play_tree_iter_step. The
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difference is that it go back to parent of the current list, and then step according
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to the arguments.
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Then when your iter returned PLAY_TREE_ITER_ENTRY you can use
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play_tree_iter_get_file to get the file. If you call it more than one time
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it will return the next file for this entry or loop trough the list if no more
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file are avaible. You can now how many files are avaible using iter->num_files
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and wich one it returned using iter->file.
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In case the entry is a DVD, VCD or TV channel the returned string is not a filename
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but "DVD title x", "VCD track x" or "TV channel x".
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To distinc those case from a normal file you can check iter->tree->entry_type.
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It will contain one of PLAY_TREE_ENTRY_DVD, PLAY_TREE_ENTRY_VCD,
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PLAY_TREE_ENTRY_TV or PLAY_TREE_ENTRY_FILE.
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If you need to make some check with the iter, such as will next entry be valid, etc
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You must create a clone with play_tree_iter_new_copy. This iter will not affect
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the config, so you can do all you want with it.
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Then when you have finish with the iter free it with play_tree_iter_free.
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Ok, that's all for now. To have some exemples look into mplayer.c ;)
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First just after config parsing, the iterator is created there. Also
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after stream opening, in case the stream is a playlist it replace the
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entry wich contained the playlist by the result of the parsing.
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In the event handeling it check if a step can be done, etc. And finnaly
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at the end it go the next entry.
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Suggestion, flames, etc about this doc must go to albeu@free.fr
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