Not sure how this symbol becomes visible in glibc (probably accidental
or mandatory recursive inclusion via the other standard or Linux-
specific headers), but normally this include file is needed to get the
symbol.
Probably "needed" to get the correct alignment, although I'm not aware
of actual breakages or performance issues.
In fact we should probably always just allocate AVPackets, but for now
use the simple fix.
FFmpeg requires a bullshit padding after each input buffer, and they
just increased that padding without warning and without ABI or API bump.
We need this only in one file (although mp_image hardcodes something
similar, for which no FFmpeg API define is available), so drop our own
define.
Squashed from the following mplayer-svn commits. The '#' is removed from
the bug ID to prevent github from doing something stupid. Instead of
adding the mplayer configure check for clock_gettime(), the POSIX
identifiers are used for checking presence of the function.
Use correct type of timestamps when recording from v4l2. Fix 2176
Patch by Jarek Czekalski <jarekczek at poczta onet pl>.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@37222 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Allow building of v4l2 without clock_gettime().
Add overly verbose message in case monotone timestamps are required by the kernel.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@37223 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
This call was used limited the buffer size if installed RAM was below 16
MB. This stopped being useful a decade ago. The check could also
overflow on 32 bit systems. Just get rid of it.
old-configure changes skipped when cherry-picking for stable.
Conflicts:
old-configure
This is incomplete; the video chain will still hold some vaapi objects
after destroying the decoder and thus the vaapi context. This is very
bad. Fixing it would require something like refcounting the vaapi
context, but I don't really want to.
Sometimes, Matroska files store monotonic PTS for h264 tracks with
b-frames, which means the decoder actually returns non-monotonic PTS.
Handle this with an evil trick: if DTS is missing, set it to the PTS.
Then the existing logic, which deals with falling back to DTS if PTS is
broken. Actually, this trick is not so evil at all, because usually, PTS
has no errors, and DTS is either always set, or always unset. So this
_should_ provoke no regressions (famous last words).
libavformat actually does something similar: it derives DTS from PTS in
ways unknown to me. The result is very broken, but it causes the DTS
fallback to become active, and thus happens to work.
Also, prevent the heuristic from being active if PTS is merely monotonic
instead of strictly-monotonic. Non-unique PTS is broken, but we can't
fallback to DTS anyway in these cases.
The specific mkv file that is fixed with this commit had the following
fields set:
Muxing application: libebml v1.3.0 + libmatroska v1.4.1
Writing application: mkvmerge v6.7.0 ('Back to the Ground') [...]
But I know that this should also fix playback of mencoder produced mkv
files.
We pass a pointer to a GLint to sscanf, using the %d format. That format
_always_ takes int, and not GLint (whatever the heck that is). If GLint
is always int, then it doesn't make a difference, but is still better
because it doesn't play russian roulette with pointers.
Setting this property was added 12 years ago, and the code was always
incorrect. The underlying data type is "long", not "pid_t". It's well
possible that the data types are different, and the pointer to the pid
variable is directly passed to XChangeProperty, possibly invoking
undefined behavior.
It's funny, because in theory using pid_t for PIDs sounds more correct.
Binding multiple commands at once where always considered not
repeatable, because the MP_CMD_COMMAND_LIST wasn't considered
repeatable.
Fixes#807 (probably).
A playlist_move command that moves an entry onto itself (both arguments
have the same index) should do nothing, but it did something broken. The
underlying reason is that it checks the prev pointer of the entry which
is temporarily removed for moving.
black_pixel is an (apparently necessary) 1x1 black surface used for
clearing the screen. It was allocated in RGB mode only, but is sometimes
used in YUV mode too.
Without this change, the compiler uses by default the "talloc.h" file
installed by the package libtalloc within /usr/local/include. Found and
tested on OpenBSD but FreeBSD has the same patch on its ports tree.
This shouldn't matter, but it's probably better if the code to check is
valid - otherwise an extremely clever compiler might fail to compile it,
and the feature would be misdetected. (Probably.)
Found by cppcheck.
mpv supports per-file config files, basically filename+".conf". We use
a static buffer for the new filename, and if that buffer is too small,
we print a warning. This is confusing for e.g. long URLs, so just hide
the warning by default.
Why not dynamically allocate the buffer? Who cares.
This might shift bits into the sign, which is undefined behavior. Making
the right operand unsigned was supposed to help with this, but it seems
it did nothing, and C99 makes the result type dependent on the left
operand only.
Changing --softvol-max and then resuming would change the volume level
on resume to something different than the original volume. This is
because the user volume setting is always between 0-100, and 100
corresponds to --softvol-max gain.
Avoid that changing -softvol-max and resuming an older file could lead
to a too loud volume level by refusing to restore if --softvol-max
changed.
mp3 has a hack lowering the probescore for format detection. This is
because detecting mp3s is hard due to their nature, and the fact that
ID3v2 tags are sometimes several megabytes big.
When playing mp3 from network, the mime-type is usually set, and that
matches the format hack entry meant for webradios, overriding the normal
mp3 entry. This can lead to network mp3s not being detected. Lower the
network case to the same probescore as on-disk mp3s. The difference is
that for network mp3s, we don't load the full probe-buffer, and we lower
the amount of audio the demuxer will read to collect data on opening
(0.5 seconds instead of typically 5 seconds).
This can happen when the input stream is somehow blocking on network,
and the user still send input in one way or another, and one of the
commands is a compound command ("cmd a ; cmd b").
Newly added metadata (such as the ICY title, sent some seconds after
opening the stream) simply wasn't printed.
This problem doesn't exist in git master.
Fixes#753.
Our code currently tries to link -lpthread and adds stuff like -D_REENTRANT
based on the target platform.
GCC actually supports to just pass a -pthread compiler and linker flag that
will automatically enable threading and define the correct symbols for the
platform, so let's try to just use that as our first choice.
clang also supports -pthread but it must be used only as a compiler flag,
so we also take care of that scenario with this commit.
One problem is that for example stdio functions won't restart syscalls
manually, and instead treat EINTR as an error. So passing SA_RESTART is
the only sane thing to do, unless you have special requirements, which
we don't.