It's useful for user scripts to be able to use the same ytdl binary that
ytdl_hook uses without having to replicate ytdl_hook's process of
searching for the ytdl binary.
Some user scripts might also find it useful to be able to access ytdl's
json output that the ytdl_hook already receives, sparing user scripts
from having to make a duplicate ytdl binary invocation to get the json
output.
Providing just the json output is not enough though, as ytdl doesn't communicate
errors though it -- if an error occurs, ytdl provides no json output and instead
prints to stderr. So without stderr, there is no way for user scripts to figure
out why ytdl has failed: no such username / video id, the channel is not live
yet, etc. Because of that, the entire result of the subprocess call is provided
to the user scripts, containing stdout (json), stderr, ytdl's exit code, etc.
It is unclear whether there actually is any usecase for this option
which isn't better served by sub-ass-use-video-data and/or LayoutRes
overrides, but prior to the introduction of sub-ass-use-video-data
it was possible to pass along storage resolution while faking an
aspect ratio of 1:1.
sub-ass-video-aspect-override=1 combined with sub-ass-use-video-data=all
now makes this possible again.
The uper limit of a 10:1 aspect matches
the general video-aspect-override option.
The naming for "blur-compat" was misleading since the setting
actually affects more than just blur affects. Additionally
forwarding storage resolution but forcing an aspect ratio
of 1.0 for the video is likely to result in odd rendering
and there’s no known usecase for it.
Both options control which video properties are exposed to libass
so to fix the aforementioned issues merge these settings into one
tri-state sub-ass-use-video-data.
The default V keybind now cycles through all states of
use-video-data instead of toggling vsfilter-aspect-compat.
Resolves: https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/issues/10680
Currently user-data/osc is used for interpolation between the osc and
other internal scripts. Reserve this sub-path and also user-data/mpv
to make sure external scripts can only use these values as directed.
New internal uses of user-data should use user-data/mpv instead.
Follow up to the previous commit. Stop decreasing --ab-loop-count=N on
each iteration so it is preserved across different loops. In particular
it is preserved between different files without adding it to
--reset-on-next-file. Add a property to expose the remaning A-B loop
count instead.
The current behavior of --ab-loop-count=N is even worse than --loop-file
since it also doesn't reset when defining a new A-B loop in the same
file. Defining it has no effect after --ab-loop-count has decreased to
0, and this can't be fixed by adding it to --reset-on-next-file. This
commit also resets remaining-ab-loops every time --ab-loop-a and
--ab-loop-b are set to fix this.
These have been deprecated for 9 years so it's fine to remove them.
Using the replacement properties like video-bitrate in stats.lua will
convert big enough bitrates to Mbps.
These were all deprecated in mpv 0.37.0 or earlier and are not
considered common enough options to warrant keeping the deprecated
mapping longer. Since demux_cue had only a single option in it, the
entire option substract is removed. This can be readded later if someone
wants to introduce a specific option to it again.
VapourSynth introduced their version 4 API in R55, 3 years ago. mpv is
still using the deprecated version 3. I think it is good to migrate
before VapourSynth completely removes it.
The most impacted area is the video format. Previously we have a fixed
table of supported formats, each represented by an integer. In v4, the
integer is replaced by pointer to the full struct of the format.
Second, the way to create video filter is changed. Previously caller
needs to supply a "initialization" callback to `createFilter()`, which
sets up video info etc. In v4, video info is prepared first, passed to
the `createVideoFilter2()` and we get back the node.
Also, previously mpv was using the `fmSerial` filter mode, which means
VapourSynth 1) can only request one frame from mpv at a time, and 2) the
order of frames requested must be sequential. I propose to change it to
the parallel request mode, which requests multiple frames at a time in
semi random order. The reasons are, for 1), the get frame function,
`infiltGetFrame()`, unlocks the mutex during output image generation,
thus can benefit from parallel requests. For 2) thanks to the frame
buffer, unordered frame requests are acceptable. Just make sure the
buffer is large enough.
Third, the way VapourSynth scripting environment works change. In v4,
the scripting API is operated through struct pointer, much like the
exist `vsapi` pointer. The "finalize" function is also no longer needed.
Allow configuring whether to print the media-title, the filename or both
(as `<title> (<filename>)`) in show-text ${playlist}, the OSC playlist
and in the playlist selector.
Showing only titles hides information when files are badly tagged, or
when it hides the track numbers of album songs. But showing filenames is
not as useful as titles e.g. when playing URLs with media titles. This
option lets the user choose which one to show, or show both if switching
is inconvenient.
The OSC's playlist_media_title script-opt is removed because this option
is better since it works everywhere after configuring it once.
Closes#11653.
Also show the full URLs of playlist entries instead of their basenames
in osc.lua and select.lua, consistently with mp_property_playlist().
For simplicity, this just checks if entries contain :// instead of
replicating all of mp_is_url().
Co-authored-by: Kacper Michajłow <kasper93@gmail.com>
There is a subtle behavior difference for built-in/input.conf key bindings
and key bindings registered by scripts: when a key binding is canceled
(e.g. a mouse button is bound to a command, is pressed down, and then
another key is pressed which is bound to another command), the command is
not invoked if the binding is built-in/input.conf, but is invoked if it's
registered by scripts, because it's handled with a different mechanism,
which gives no way for scripts to detect this.
Fix this by using the newly available canceled flag to detect this.
If a key binding is canceled, the callback is now not invoked unless
the key binding is registered with the complex option. In this situation,
the callback is invoked with the canceled state available so that scripts
can detect and handle this situation.
This adds the --input-builtin-dragging option, which allows the built-in
dragging behavior to be disabled. This allows scripts to implement custom
dragging behavior with left button down events and begin-vo-dragging
command, which could only be done for other mouse buttons before.
This allows scripts to make the user choose from a list of entries by
typing part of their text and/or by navigating them with keybindings,
like dmenu or fzf.
Closes#13964.
For platforms which send emulated mouse inputs for touch-unaware clients,
such as Win32 and X11, this option enables the native multitouch handling
and disables emulated mouse inputs. This enables interested scripts to
handle multitouch events while keeping compatibility with touch-unaware
scripts.
This adds --input-touch-emulate-mouse option, which controls whether to
enable legacy touch handling where touch inputs are emulated as mouse
inputs. This establishes a primary touch point (the one with the lowest
index) as the emulated mouse position, and MBTN_LEFT up/down with the
appearance of the first touch point and the disappearance of the last
touch point.
This fixes some problems with touch handling on Wayland, for example
attempting to pinch results in a double click.
This adds touch-pos property, which contains the information of all
current touch points. The property has sub properties:
touch-pos/count: the number of current touch points
touch-pos/N/x,y: the position of touch point N
touch-pos/N/id: unique identifier of the touch point