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mpv/sub/ass_mp.h

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/*
* Copyright (C) 2006 Evgeniy Stepanov <eugeni.stepanov@gmail.com>
*
* This file is part of MPlayer.
*
* MPlayer is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* MPlayer is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
* with libass; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
* 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*/
#ifndef MPLAYER_ASS_MP_H
#define MPLAYER_ASS_MP_H
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include "config.h"
// This is probably arbitrary.
// sd_lavc_conv might indirectly still assume this PlayResY, though.
osd: make the OSD and sub font more customizable Make more aspects of the OSD font customizable. This also affects the font used for unstyled subtitles (such as SRT), or when using the --no-ass option. This adds back some customizability that was lost with commit 74e7a1 (osd: use libass for OSD rendering). Removed options: --ass-border-color --ass-color --font --subfont --subfont-text-scale Added options: --osd-color --osd-border --osd-back-color --osd-shadow-color --osd-font --osd-font-size --osd-border-size --osd-margin-x --osd-margin-y --osd-shadow-offset --osd-spacing --sub-scale The font size is now specified in pixels as it would be rendered on a window with a height of 720 pixels. OSD and subtitles are always scaled with the window height, so specifying or expecting an absolute font size doesn't make sense. Such scaled pixel units are used to specify font border etc. as well. (Note: the font size is directly passed to libass. How the fonts are actually rasterized is outside of our control, but in theory ASS font sizes map to "script" pixels and then are scaled to screen size.) The default settings should be about the same, with slight difference due to rounding to the new scales. The OSD and subtitle fonts are not separately configurable. It has limited use and would double the number of newly added options, which would be more confusing than helpful. It could be easily added later, should the need arise. Other small details that change: - ASS_Style.Encoding is not set to -1 for subs anymore (assuming subs use VSFilter direction in -no-ass mode too) - use a different WrapStyle for OSD - ASS forced styles are not applied to OSD
2012-11-17 19:56:45 +00:00
#define MP_ASS_FONT_PLAYRESY 288
#define MP_ASS_RGBA(r, g, b, a) \
(((unsigned)(r) << 24) | ((g) << 16) | ((b) << 8) | (0xFF - (a)))
osd: make the OSD and sub font more customizable Make more aspects of the OSD font customizable. This also affects the font used for unstyled subtitles (such as SRT), or when using the --no-ass option. This adds back some customizability that was lost with commit 74e7a1 (osd: use libass for OSD rendering). Removed options: --ass-border-color --ass-color --font --subfont --subfont-text-scale Added options: --osd-color --osd-border --osd-back-color --osd-shadow-color --osd-font --osd-font-size --osd-border-size --osd-margin-x --osd-margin-y --osd-shadow-offset --osd-spacing --sub-scale The font size is now specified in pixels as it would be rendered on a window with a height of 720 pixels. OSD and subtitles are always scaled with the window height, so specifying or expecting an absolute font size doesn't make sense. Such scaled pixel units are used to specify font border etc. as well. (Note: the font size is directly passed to libass. How the fonts are actually rasterized is outside of our control, but in theory ASS font sizes map to "script" pixels and then are scaled to screen size.) The default settings should be about the same, with slight difference due to rounding to the new scales. The OSD and subtitle fonts are not separately configurable. It has limited use and would double the number of newly added options, which would be more confusing than helpful. It could be easily added later, should the need arise. Other small details that change: - ASS_Style.Encoding is not set to -1 for subs anymore (assuming subs use VSFilter direction in -no-ass mode too) - use a different WrapStyle for OSD - ASS forced styles are not applied to OSD
2012-11-17 19:56:45 +00:00
// m_color argument
#define MP_ASS_COLOR(c) MP_ASS_RGBA((c).r, (c).g, (c).b, (c).a)
#if HAVE_LIBASS
#include <ass/ass.h>
#include <ass/ass_types.h>
subs: libass: use a single persistent renderer for subtitles To draw libass subtitles, the code used ASS_Renderer objects created in vf_vo (VO rendering) or vf_ass. They were destroyed and recreated together with the video filter chain. Change the code to use a single persistent renderer instance stored in the main osd_state struct. Because libass seems to misbehave if fonts are changed while a renderer exists (even if ass_set_fonts() is called on the renderer afterwards), the renderer is recreated after adding embedded fonts. The known benefits are simpler code and avoiding delays when switching between timeline parts from different files (libass fontconfig initialization, needed when creating a new renderer, can take a long time in some cases; switching between files rebuilds the video filter chain, and this required recreating the renderers). On the other hand, I'm not sure whether this could cause inefficient bitmap caching in libass; explicitly resetting the renderer in some cases could be beneficial. The new code does not keep the distinction of separate renderers for vsfilter munged aspect vs normal; this means that changing subtitle tracks can lose cache for the previous track. The new code always sets some libass parameters on each rendering call, which were previously only set if they had potentially changed. This should be harmless as libass itself has checks to see if the values differ from previous ones. Conflicts: command.c libmpcodecs/vf_ass.c libmpcodecs/vf_vo.c mplayer.c sub/ass_mp.c
2012-08-25 14:47:50 +00:00
struct MPOpts;
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struct mpv_global;
struct mp_osd_res;
osd: make the OSD and sub font more customizable Make more aspects of the OSD font customizable. This also affects the font used for unstyled subtitles (such as SRT), or when using the --no-ass option. This adds back some customizability that was lost with commit 74e7a1 (osd: use libass for OSD rendering). Removed options: --ass-border-color --ass-color --font --subfont --subfont-text-scale Added options: --osd-color --osd-border --osd-back-color --osd-shadow-color --osd-font --osd-font-size --osd-border-size --osd-margin-x --osd-margin-y --osd-shadow-offset --osd-spacing --sub-scale The font size is now specified in pixels as it would be rendered on a window with a height of 720 pixels. OSD and subtitles are always scaled with the window height, so specifying or expecting an absolute font size doesn't make sense. Such scaled pixel units are used to specify font border etc. as well. (Note: the font size is directly passed to libass. How the fonts are actually rasterized is outside of our control, but in theory ASS font sizes map to "script" pixels and then are scaled to screen size.) The default settings should be about the same, with slight difference due to rounding to the new scales. The OSD and subtitle fonts are not separately configurable. It has limited use and would double the number of newly added options, which would be more confusing than helpful. It could be easily added later, should the need arise. Other small details that change: - ASS_Style.Encoding is not set to -1 for subs anymore (assuming subs use VSFilter direction in -no-ass mode too) - use a different WrapStyle for OSD - ASS forced styles are not applied to OSD
2012-11-17 19:56:45 +00:00
struct osd_style_opts;
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void mp_ass_set_style(ASS_Style *style, double res_y,
const struct osd_style_opts *opts);
void mp_ass_add_default_styles(ASS_Track *track, struct MPOpts *opts);
subs: libass: use a single persistent renderer for subtitles To draw libass subtitles, the code used ASS_Renderer objects created in vf_vo (VO rendering) or vf_ass. They were destroyed and recreated together with the video filter chain. Change the code to use a single persistent renderer instance stored in the main osd_state struct. Because libass seems to misbehave if fonts are changed while a renderer exists (even if ass_set_fonts() is called on the renderer afterwards), the renderer is recreated after adding embedded fonts. The known benefits are simpler code and avoiding delays when switching between timeline parts from different files (libass fontconfig initialization, needed when creating a new renderer, can take a long time in some cases; switching between files rebuilds the video filter chain, and this required recreating the renderers). On the other hand, I'm not sure whether this could cause inefficient bitmap caching in libass; explicitly resetting the renderer in some cases could be beneficial. The new code does not keep the distinction of separate renderers for vsfilter munged aspect vs normal; this means that changing subtitle tracks can lose cache for the previous track. The new code always sets some libass parameters on each rendering call, which were previously only set if they had potentially changed. This should be harmless as libass itself has checks to see if the values differ from previous ones. Conflicts: command.c libmpcodecs/vf_ass.c libmpcodecs/vf_vo.c mplayer.c sub/ass_mp.c
2012-08-25 14:47:50 +00:00
ASS_Track *mp_ass_default_track(ASS_Library *library, struct MPOpts *opts);
struct MPOpts;
subs: libass: use a single persistent renderer for subtitles To draw libass subtitles, the code used ASS_Renderer objects created in vf_vo (VO rendering) or vf_ass. They were destroyed and recreated together with the video filter chain. Change the code to use a single persistent renderer instance stored in the main osd_state struct. Because libass seems to misbehave if fonts are changed while a renderer exists (even if ass_set_fonts() is called on the renderer afterwards), the renderer is recreated after adding embedded fonts. The known benefits are simpler code and avoiding delays when switching between timeline parts from different files (libass fontconfig initialization, needed when creating a new renderer, can take a long time in some cases; switching between files rebuilds the video filter chain, and this required recreating the renderers). On the other hand, I'm not sure whether this could cause inefficient bitmap caching in libass; explicitly resetting the renderer in some cases could be beneficial. The new code does not keep the distinction of separate renderers for vsfilter munged aspect vs normal; this means that changing subtitle tracks can lose cache for the previous track. The new code always sets some libass parameters on each rendering call, which were previously only set if they had potentially changed. This should be harmless as libass itself has checks to see if the values differ from previous ones. Conflicts: command.c libmpcodecs/vf_ass.c libmpcodecs/vf_vo.c mplayer.c sub/ass_mp.c
2012-08-25 14:47:50 +00:00
void mp_ass_configure(ASS_Renderer *priv, struct MPOpts *opts,
struct mp_osd_res *dim);
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void mp_ass_configure_fonts(ASS_Renderer *priv, struct osd_style_opts *opts,
struct mpv_global *global, struct mp_log *log);
ASS_Library *mp_ass_init(struct mpv_global *global, struct mp_log *log);
struct sub_bitmap;
struct sub_bitmaps;
void mp_ass_render_frame(ASS_Renderer *renderer, ASS_Track *track, double time,
struct sub_bitmap **parts, struct sub_bitmaps *res);
#endif /* HAVE_LIBASS */
#endif /* MPLAYER_ASS_MP_H */