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mpv/options/m_config.h

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/*
* This file is part of mpv.
*
* mpv 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.
*
* mpv 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 mpv. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#ifndef MPLAYER_M_CONFIG_H
#define MPLAYER_M_CONFIG_H
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include "misc/bstr.h"
// m_config provides an API to manipulate the config variables in MPlayer.
// It makes use of the Options API to provide a context stack that
// allows saving and later restoring the state of all variables.
typedef struct m_profile m_profile_t;
struct m_option;
struct m_option_type;
struct m_sub_options;
struct m_obj_desc;
struct m_obj_settings;
struct mp_log;
// Config option
struct m_config_option {
bool is_generated : 1; // Automatically added ("no-" options)
bool is_set_from_cmdline : 1; // Set by user from command line
bool is_set_locally : 1; // Has a backup entry
bool warning_was_printed : 1;
const char *name; // Full name (ie option-subopt)
const struct m_option *opt; // Option description
void *data; // Raw value of the option
const void *default_data; // Raw default value
};
// Config object
/** \ingroup Config */
typedef struct m_config {
struct mp_log *log;
struct mpv_global *global; // can be NULL
// Registered options.
struct m_config_option *opts; // all options, even suboptions
int num_opts;
// Creation parameters
size_t size;
const void *defaults;
const struct m_option *options;
// List of defined profiles.
struct m_profile *profiles;
// Depth when recursively including profiles.
int profile_depth;
struct m_opt_backup *backup_opts;
bool use_profiles;
bool is_toplevel;
int (*includefunc)(void *ctx, char *filename, int flags);
void *includefunc_ctx;
// For the command line parser
int recursion_depth;
void *optstruct; // struct mpopts or other
} m_config_t;
// Create a new config object.
// talloc_ctx: talloc parent context for the m_config allocation
// size: size of the optstruct (where option values are stored)
// size==0 creates a config object with no option struct allocated
// defaults: if not NULL, points to a struct of same type as optstruct, which
// contains default values for all options
// options: list of options. Each option defines a member of the optstruct
// and a corresponding option switch or sub-option field.
// suboptinit: if not NULL, initialize the suboption string (used for presets)
// Note that the m_config object will keep pointers to defaults and options.
struct m_config *m_config_new(void *talloc_ctx, struct mp_log *log,
size_t size, const void *defaults,
const struct m_option *options);
options: support parsing values into substructs Add an alternate mode for option parser objects (struct m_config) which is not inherently tied to any particular instance of an option value struct. Instead, this type or parsers can be used to initialize defaults in or parse values into a struct given as a parameter. They do not have the save slot functionality used for main player configuration. The new functionality will be used to replace the separate subopt_helper.c parsing code that is currently used to parse per-object suboptions in VOs etc. Previously, option default values were handled by initializing them in external code before creating a parser. This initialization was done with constants even for dynamically-allocated types like strings. Because trying to free a pointer to a constant would cause a crash when trying to replace the default with another value, parser initialization code then replaced all the original defaults with dynamically-allocated copies. This replace-with-copy behavior is no longer supported for new-style options; instead the option definition itself may contain a default value (new OPTDEF macros), and the new function m_config_initialize() is used to set all options to their default values. Convert the existing initialized dynamically allocated options in main config (the string options --dumpfile, --term-osd-esc, --input=conf) to use this. Other non-dynamic ones could be later converted to use this style of initialization too. There's currently no public call to free all dynamically allocated options in a given option struct because I intend to use talloc functionality for that (make them children of the struct and free with it).
2012-05-17 00:31:11 +00:00
// (Warning: new object references config->log and others.)
struct m_config *m_config_dup(void *talloc_ctx, struct m_config *config);
struct m_config *m_config_from_obj_desc(void *talloc_ctx, struct mp_log *log,
struct m_obj_desc *desc);
struct m_config *m_config_from_obj_desc_noalloc(void *talloc_ctx,
struct mp_log *log,
struct m_obj_desc *desc);
int m_config_set_obj_params(struct m_config *conf, char **args);
// Search for the object with the given name in the defaults list, and apply
// its parameters.
int m_config_apply_defaults(struct m_config *config, const char *name,
struct m_obj_settings *defaults);
// Make sure the option is backed up. If it's already backed up, do nothing.
// All backed up options can be restored with m_config_restore_backups().
void m_config_backup_opt(struct m_config *config, const char *opt);
// Call m_config_backup_opt() on all options.
void m_config_backup_all_opts(struct m_config *config);
// Restore all options backed up with m_config_backup_opt(), and delete the
// backups afterwards.
void m_config_restore_backups(struct m_config *config);
enum {
M_SETOPT_PRE_PARSE_ONLY = 1, // Silently ignore non-M_OPT_PRE_PARSE opt.
M_SETOPT_CHECK_ONLY = 2, // Don't set, just check name/value
M_SETOPT_FROM_CONFIG_FILE = 4, // Reject M_OPT_NOCFG opt. (print error)
M_SETOPT_FROM_CMDLINE = 8, // Mark as set by command line
M_SETOPT_BACKUP = 16, // Call m_config_backup_opt() before
M_SETOPT_PRESERVE_CMDLINE = 32, // Don't set if already marked as FROM_CMDLINE
M_SETOPT_NO_FIXED = 64, // Reject M_OPT_FIXED options
M_SETOPT_NO_PRE_PARSE = 128, // Reject M_OPT_PREPARSE options
};
// Flags for safe option setting during runtime.
#define M_SETOPT_RUNTIME (M_SETOPT_NO_FIXED | M_SETOPT_NO_PRE_PARSE)
// Set the named option to the given string.
// flags: combination of M_SETOPT_* flags (0 for normal operation)
// Returns >= 0 on success, otherwise see OptionParserReturn.
int m_config_set_option_ext(struct m_config *config, struct bstr name,
struct bstr param, int flags);
/* Set an option. (Like: m_config_set_option_ext(config, name, param, 0))
* \param config The config object.
* \param name The option's name.
* \param param The value of the option, can be NULL.
* \return See \ref OptionParserReturn.
*/
int m_config_set_option(struct m_config *config, struct bstr name,
options: get rid of ambiguous option parsing Options parsing used to be ambiguous, as in the splitting into option and values pairs was ambiguous. Example: -option -something It wasn't clear whether -option actually takes an argument or not. The string "-something" could either be a separate option, or an argument to "-option". The code had to call the option specific parser function to resolve this. This made everything complicated and didn't even have a real use. There was only one case where this was actually used: string lists (m_option_type_string_list) and options based on it. That is because this option type actually turns a single option into a proxy for several real arguments, e.g. "vf*" can handle "-vf-add" and "-vf-clr". Options suffixed with "-clr" are the only options of this group which take no arguments. This is ambiguous only with the "old syntax" (as shown above). The "new" option syntax always puts option name and value into same argument. (E.g. "--option=--something" or "--option" "--something".) Simplify the code by making it statically known whether an option takes a parameter or not with the flag M_OPT_TYPE_OLD_SYNTAX_NO_PARAM. If it's set, the option parser assumes the option takes no argument. The only real ambiguity left, string list options that end on "-clr", are special cased in the parser. Remove some duplication of the logic in the command line parser by moving all argument splitting logic into split_opt(). (It's arguable whether that can be considered code duplication, but now the code is a bit simpler anyway. This might be subjective.) Remove the "ambiguous" parameter from all option parsing related code. Make m_config unaware of the pre-parsing concept. Make most CONF_NOCFG options also CONF_GLOBAL (except those explicitly usable as per-file options.)
2012-08-05 21:34:28 +00:00
struct bstr param);
static inline int m_config_set_option0(struct m_config *config,
options: get rid of ambiguous option parsing Options parsing used to be ambiguous, as in the splitting into option and values pairs was ambiguous. Example: -option -something It wasn't clear whether -option actually takes an argument or not. The string "-something" could either be a separate option, or an argument to "-option". The code had to call the option specific parser function to resolve this. This made everything complicated and didn't even have a real use. There was only one case where this was actually used: string lists (m_option_type_string_list) and options based on it. That is because this option type actually turns a single option into a proxy for several real arguments, e.g. "vf*" can handle "-vf-add" and "-vf-clr". Options suffixed with "-clr" are the only options of this group which take no arguments. This is ambiguous only with the "old syntax" (as shown above). The "new" option syntax always puts option name and value into same argument. (E.g. "--option=--something" or "--option" "--something".) Simplify the code by making it statically known whether an option takes a parameter or not with the flag M_OPT_TYPE_OLD_SYNTAX_NO_PARAM. If it's set, the option parser assumes the option takes no argument. The only real ambiguity left, string list options that end on "-clr", are special cased in the parser. Remove some duplication of the logic in the command line parser by moving all argument splitting logic into split_opt(). (It's arguable whether that can be considered code duplication, but now the code is a bit simpler anyway. This might be subjective.) Remove the "ambiguous" parameter from all option parsing related code. Make m_config unaware of the pre-parsing concept. Make most CONF_NOCFG options also CONF_GLOBAL (except those explicitly usable as per-file options.)
2012-08-05 21:34:28 +00:00
const char *name, const char *param)
{
options: get rid of ambiguous option parsing Options parsing used to be ambiguous, as in the splitting into option and values pairs was ambiguous. Example: -option -something It wasn't clear whether -option actually takes an argument or not. The string "-something" could either be a separate option, or an argument to "-option". The code had to call the option specific parser function to resolve this. This made everything complicated and didn't even have a real use. There was only one case where this was actually used: string lists (m_option_type_string_list) and options based on it. That is because this option type actually turns a single option into a proxy for several real arguments, e.g. "vf*" can handle "-vf-add" and "-vf-clr". Options suffixed with "-clr" are the only options of this group which take no arguments. This is ambiguous only with the "old syntax" (as shown above). The "new" option syntax always puts option name and value into same argument. (E.g. "--option=--something" or "--option" "--something".) Simplify the code by making it statically known whether an option takes a parameter or not with the flag M_OPT_TYPE_OLD_SYNTAX_NO_PARAM. If it's set, the option parser assumes the option takes no argument. The only real ambiguity left, string list options that end on "-clr", are special cased in the parser. Remove some duplication of the logic in the command line parser by moving all argument splitting logic into split_opt(). (It's arguable whether that can be considered code duplication, but now the code is a bit simpler anyway. This might be subjective.) Remove the "ambiguous" parameter from all option parsing related code. Make m_config unaware of the pre-parsing concept. Make most CONF_NOCFG options also CONF_GLOBAL (except those explicitly usable as per-file options.)
2012-08-05 21:34:28 +00:00
return m_config_set_option(config, bstr0(name), bstr0(param));
}
// Similar to m_config_set_option_ext(), but set as data in its native format.
// The type data points to is as in co->opt
int m_config_set_option_raw(struct m_config *config, struct m_config_option *co,
void *data, int flags);
// Similar to m_config_set_option_ext(), but set as data using mpv_node.
struct mpv_node;
int m_config_set_option_node(struct m_config *config, bstr name,
struct mpv_node *data, int flags);
mplayer: turn playtree into a list, and change per-file option handling Summary: - There is no playtree anymore. It's reduced to a simple list. - Options are now always global. You can still have per-file options, but these are optional and require special syntax. - The slave command pt_step has been removed, and playlist_next and playlist_prev added. (See etc/input.conf changes.) This is a user visible incompatible change, and will break slave-mode applications. - The pt_clear slave command is renamed to playlist_clear. - Playtree entries could have multiple files. This is not the case anymore, and playlist entries have always exactly one entry. Whenever something adds more than one file (like ASX playlists or dvd:// or dvdnav:// on the command line), all files are added as separate playlist entries. Note that some of the changes are quite deep and violent. Expect regressions. The playlist parsing code in particular is of low quality. I didn't try to improve it, and merely spent to least effort necessary to keep it somehow working. (Especially ASX playlist handling.) The playtree code was complicated and bloated. It was also barely used. Most users don't even know that mplayer manages the playlist as tree, or how to use it. The most obscure features was probably specifying a tree on command line (with '{' and '}' to create/close tree nodes). It filled the player code with complexity and confused users with weird slave commands like pt_up. Replace the playtree with a simple flat playlist. Playlist parsers that actually return trees are changed to append all files to the playlist pre-order. It used to be the responsibility of the playtree code to change per-file config options. Now this is done by the player core, and the playlist code is free of such details. Options are not per-file by default anymore. This was a very obscure and complicated feature that confused even experienced users. Consider the following command line: mplayer file1.mkv file2.mkv --no-audio file3.mkv This will disable the audio for file2.mkv only, because options are per-file by default. To make the option affect all files, you're supposed to put it before the first file. This is bad, because normally you don't need per-file options. They are very rarely needed, and the only reasonable use cases I can imagine are use of the encode backend (mplayer encode branch), or for debugging. The normal use case is made harder, and the feature is perceived as bug. Even worse, correct usage is hard to explain for users. Make all options global by default. The position of an option isn't significant anymore (except for options that compensate each other, consider --shuffle --no-shuffle). One other important change is that no options are reset anymore if a new file is started. If you change settings with slave mode commands, they will not be changed by playing a new file. (Exceptions include settings that are too file specific, like audio/subtitle stream selection.) There is still some need for per-file options. Debugging and encoding are use cases that profit from per-file options. Per-file profiles (as well as per-protocol and per-VO/AO options) need the implementation related mechanisms to backup and restore options when the playback file changes. Simplify the save-slot stuff, which is possible because there is no hierarchical play tree anymore. Now there's a simple backup field. Add a way to specify per-file options on command line. Example: mplayer f1.mkv -o0 --{ -o1 f2.mkv -o2 f3.mkv --} f4.mkv -o3 will have the following options per file set: f1.mkv, f4.mkv: -o0 -o3 f2.mkv, f3.mkv: -o0 -o3 -o1 -o2 The options --{ and --} start and end per-file options. All files inside the { } will be affected by the options equally (similar to how global options and multiple files are handled). When playback of a file starts, the per-file options are set according to the command line. When playback ends, the per-file options are restored to the values when playback started.
2012-07-31 19:33:26 +00:00
int m_config_parse_suboptions(struct m_config *config, char *name,
char *subopts);
options: support parsing values into substructs Add an alternate mode for option parser objects (struct m_config) which is not inherently tied to any particular instance of an option value struct. Instead, this type or parsers can be used to initialize defaults in or parse values into a struct given as a parameter. They do not have the save slot functionality used for main player configuration. The new functionality will be used to replace the separate subopt_helper.c parsing code that is currently used to parse per-object suboptions in VOs etc. Previously, option default values were handled by initializing them in external code before creating a parser. This initialization was done with constants even for dynamically-allocated types like strings. Because trying to free a pointer to a constant would cause a crash when trying to replace the default with another value, parser initialization code then replaced all the original defaults with dynamically-allocated copies. This replace-with-copy behavior is no longer supported for new-style options; instead the option definition itself may contain a default value (new OPTDEF macros), and the new function m_config_initialize() is used to set all options to their default values. Convert the existing initialized dynamically allocated options in main config (the string options --dumpfile, --term-osd-esc, --input=conf) to use this. Other non-dynamic ones could be later converted to use this style of initialization too. There's currently no public call to free all dynamically allocated options in a given option struct because I intend to use talloc functionality for that (make them children of the struct and free with it).
2012-05-17 00:31:11 +00:00
/* Get the option matching the given name.
* \param config The config object.
* \param name The option's name.
*/
const struct m_option *m_config_get_option(const struct m_config *config,
struct bstr name);
struct m_config_option *m_config_get_co(const struct m_config *config,
struct bstr name);
// Return the n-th option by position. n==0 is the first option. If there are
// less than (n + 1) options, return NULL.
const char *m_config_get_positional_option(const struct m_config *config, int n);
// Return a hint to the option parser whether a parameter is/may be required.
// The option may still accept empty/non-empty parameters independent from
// this, and this function is useful only for handling ambiguous options like
// flags (e.g. "--a" is ok, "--a=yes" is also ok).
// Returns: error code (<0), or number of expected params (0, 1)
int m_config_option_requires_param(struct m_config *config, bstr name);
// Return all (visible) option names as NULL terminated string list.
char **m_config_list_options(void *ta_parent, const struct m_config *config);
/* Print a list of all registered options.
* \param config The config object.
*/
void m_config_print_option_list(const struct m_config *config);
/* Find the profile with the given name.
* \param config The config object.
* \param arg The profile's name.
* \return The profile object or NULL.
*/
struct m_profile *m_config_get_profile0(const struct m_config *config,
char *name);
struct m_profile *m_config_get_profile(const struct m_config *config, bstr name);
/* Get the profile with the given name, creating it if necessary.
* \param config The config object.
* \param arg The profile's name.
* \return The profile object.
*/
struct m_profile *m_config_add_profile(struct m_config *config, char *name);
/* Set the description of a profile.
* Used by the config file parser when defining a profile.
*
* \param p The profile object.
* \param arg The profile's name.
*/
void m_profile_set_desc(struct m_profile *p, bstr desc);
/* Add an option to a profile.
* Used by the config file parser when defining a profile.
*
* \param config The config object.
* \param p The profile object.
* \param name The option's name.
* \param val The option's value.
*/
int m_config_set_profile_option(struct m_config *config, struct m_profile *p,
bstr name, bstr val);
/* Enables profile usage
* Used by the config file parser when loading a profile.
*
* \param config The config object.
* \param p The profile object.
* \param flags M_SETOPT_* bits
* Returns error code (<0) or 0 on success
*/
int m_config_set_profile(struct m_config *config, char *name, int flags);
void *m_config_alloc_struct(void *talloc_ctx,
const struct m_sub_options *subopts);
// Create a copy of the struct ptr, described by opts.
// "opts" must live until the struct is free'd.
// Freeing the struct frees all members.
void *m_sub_options_copy(void *talloc_ctx, const struct m_sub_options *opts,
const void *ptr);
#endif /* MPLAYER_M_CONFIG_H */