This essentially reverts commit 009dfbe3. FFmpeg VideoToolbox support
is being wacky, and can cause major issues, such as not being able
to decode a single frame. (E.g. by playing a .ts file. This should be
fixed in FFmpeg eventually.)
This is not a straight revert of the commit; just a functional one. We
keep the slightly simpler code structure.
It doesn't deal with VDA at all anymore. Rename it to hwdec_osx.c. Not
using hwdec_videotoolbox.c, because that would give it the longest
source path in this project yet. (Also, this code isn't even
VideoToolox-specific, other than the name of the pixel format used.)
VideoToolbox is preferred. Now that FFmpeg released 2.8, there's no
reason to support VDA anymore. In fact, we had a bug that made VDA not
useable with older FFmpeg versions in some newer mpv releases.
VideoToolbox is supported even on slightly older OSX versions, and if
not, you still can run mpv without hw decoding.
Definitely not needed anymore, and fixes a crash in some weird corner-
cases.
The extradata freeing is apparently still needed, though. (Because a
codec context can be opened again, which makes no sense, but ok.)
This can happen with USB audio. There was already code for this, but
something in mpv and ALSA changed - and now the old code is not
necessarily triggered anymore. It probably depends on the exact
situation.
This could sometimes cause crashes in hotplug events. (Apparently in
cases when CoreAudio changes its state asynchronously, or such.)
CA_GET_STR() does not set the string if there was an error, so errors
have to be strictly checked before using it.
There are at least 2 ways of using VAAPI without X11 (Wayland, DRM).
Remove the X11 requirement from the decoder part and the EGL interop.
This will be used by a following commit, which adds Wayland support.
The worst about this is the decoder part, which includes a bad hack for
using the decoder without any VO interop (also known as "vaapi-copy"
mode). Separate the X11 parts so that they're self-contained. For the
EGL interop code we do something similar (it's kept slightly simpler,
because it essentially only has to translate between our silly
MPGetNativeDisplay abstraction and the vaGetDisplay...() call).
It looks like my hope that we can unconditionally include EGL headers in
the OpenGL code is not coming true, because OSX does not support EGL at
all. So I prefer loading the VAAPI EGL/GL specific extensions manually,
because it's less of a mess. Partially reverts commit d47dff3f.
While EGL 1.4 seemed a bit ambiguous about this to me, it actually says
quite clearly that core functions are not supported with
eglGetProcAddress() in the following paragraph.
Normally, we prefer GLX on X11. But for the VAAPI EGL interop, we
obviously want EGL. Since nvidia does not provide EGL with desktop GL
yet, we can leave it to the autoprobing. Just make sure some failure
messages don't unnecessarily show up in the nvidia case.
This breaks VAAPI GLX interop by default, but I don't care much. If
you use --hwdec=auto (which you should if you want hw decoding), this
should fallback to vaapi-copy instead.
Probe the surface format, and check whether it's really something we
support. This also does a complete check whether the EGL interop works
at all (the only way to find this out is actually running this code).
Also, support YV12. Under some circumstances, vaapi (with Intel
drivers) can be made to use this format.
Unfortunately, the Intel drivers show some very weird behavior, which
is hopefully a bug. insane_hack() provides a very evil workaround (see
comments). A proper solution might be passing the hw format as part of
mp_image_params, but as long as hw surfaces appear to be able to change
the format on the fly, attempting this is probably not worth the extra
complexity and likely fragility. The hack allows us to pretend that
there is sane behavior for now.
This makes it much faster if the surface is really mapped from GPU
memory. It's slightly slower than system memcpy if used on system
memory. We don't really know definitely in which type of memory
it's located, so we use the GPU memcpy in all cases.
Fixes#2317.
Make the GPU memcpy from the dxva2 code generally useful to other parts
of the player.
We need to check at configure time whether SSE intrinsics work at all.
(At least in this form, they won't work on clang, for example. It also
won't work on non-x86.)
Introduce a mp_image_copy_gpu(), and make the dxva2 code use it. Do some
awkward stuff to share the existing code used by mp_image_copy(). I'm
hoping that FFmpeg will sooner or later provide a function like this, so
we can remove most of this again. (There is a patch, bit it's stuck in
limbo since forever.)
All this is used by the following commit.
Broken by commit d47dff3f. If something is going to include EGL.h,
header_fixes.h has to know. This definitely affected vo_rpi, and
probably affects wayland builds (with x11egl didabled) as well.
Checking and resetting the VAImage.buf field is non-sense, even if it
happened to work out in the normal case. buf is actually freed when
vaDestroyImage() is called (not quite intuitive), and we need an extra
field to know whether vaReleaseBufferHandle() has to be called.
Printing "Using vaDeriveImage()" every frame is too verbose, so raise
the log level.
mp_image strides are in int and not unsigned int; fix this. It's not
like it actually matters, though.
Finish a comment.
Add the upstream symbolic names as comments. Normally, these should be
defined in libdrm's drm_fourcc.h header. But DRM_FORMAT_R8 and
DRM_FORMAT_GR88 are not defined anywhere, except in the kernel userland
headers of Linux 4.3 (!). We don't want mpv to depend on bleeding-edge
Linux kernel headers, so this will have to do.
Also, just for completeness, add fourccs for the 3 and 4 channel
formats. I didn't manage to test them, though.
Reduces the amount of hardcoded assumptions about the layout
drastically. (Now adding yuv420 support would be just adjusting an if,
if you ignore the other problems, such as determining the hw format at
all early enough.)
Don't call eglDestroyImageKHR() on the same ID possibly more than once.
Clear the image reference on termination, or we would leak up to 1 image
per VO recreation.
Should work much better than the old GLX interop code. Requires Mesa 11,
and explicitly selecting the X11 EGL backend with:
--vo=opengl:backend=x11egl
Should it turn out that the new interop works well, we will try to
autodetect EGL by default.
This code still uses some bad assumptions, like expecting surfaces to be
in NV12. (This is probably ok, because virtually all HW will use this
format. But we should at least check this on init or so, instead of
failing to render an image if our assumption doesn't hold up.)
This repo was a lot of help: https://github.com/gbeauchesne/ffvademo
The kodi code was also helpful (the magic FourCC it uses for
EGL_LINUX_DRM_FOURCC_EXT are nowhere documented, and
EGL_IMAGE_INTERNAL_FORMAT_EXT as used in ffvademo does
not actually exist).
(This is the 3rd VAAPI GL interop that was implemented in this player.)
The VAAPI EGL interop code will need access to the X11 Display. While
GLX could return it from the current GLX context, EGL has no such
mechanism. (At least no standard one supported by all implementations.)
So mpv makes up such a mechanism.
For internal purposes, this is very rather awkward solution, but it's
needed for libmpv anyway.
These extensions use a bunch of EGL types, so we need to include the EGL
headers in common.h to use our GL function loader with this.
In the future, we should probably require presence of the EGL headers to
reduce the hacks. This might be not so simple at least with OSX, so for
now this has to do.
Surfaces used by hardware decoding formats can be mapped exactly like a
specific software pixel format, e.g. RGBA or NV12. p->image_params is
supposed to be set to this format, but it wasn't.
(How did this ever work?)
Also, setting params->imgfmt in the hwdec interop drivers is pointless
and redundant. (Change them to asserts, because why not.)
This is a pseudo-OpenGL extension for letting libmpv query native
windowing system handles from the API user. (It uses the OpenGL
extension mechanism because I'm lazy. In theory it would be nicer to let
the user pass them with mpv_opengl_cb_init_gl(), but this would require
a more intrusive API change to extend its argument list.)
The naming of the extension and associated function was unnecessarily
Windows specific (using "D3D"), even though it would work just fine for
other platforms. So deprecate the old names and introduce new ones. The
old ones still work.
This turns the old scalers (inherited from MPlayer) into a pre-
processing step (after color conversion and before scaling). The code
for the "sharpen5" scaler is reused for this.
The main reason MPlayer implemented this as scalers was perhaps because
FBOs were too expensive, and making it a scaler allowed to implement
this in 1 pass. But unsharp masking is not really a scaler, and I would
guess the result is more like combining bilinear scaling and unsharp
masking.
Usually, libavcodec ignores errors reported by the hardware decoding
API, so it's not like we can actually escape if the hardware is somehow
acting up.
For normal fallback purposes, or if parts of the hw decoding API which
we actually check fails, we do this by setting and checking the
hwdec_failed flag anyway.
This can happen if the hw decoder allocates padded surfaces (e.g.
mod16), but the VPP output surface was allocated with the exact size.
Apparently VPP requires matching input and output sizes, or it will add
artifacts. In this case, it added mirrored pixels to the bottom few
pixels.
Note that the previous commit should have fixed this. But it didn't
work, while this commit does.
Fixes#2320.
If not set, VPP will use the whole surface. This is a problem if the
surfaces are padded, and especially if the surfaces are padded by
different amounts.
This is an attempt to fix#2320, but it appears to do nothing at all.
The comment was largely outdated, and described the old situation when
we used a "violent" fallback by making get_buffer2 fail completely.
Also, for the case when the hw decoder initialization succeeded (in
get_format), but get_buffer2 for some reason requests something
unexpected, we also can fallback more gracefully and in the same way.
Window classes are process-wide (or at least DLL-wide), so you can't
have 2 classes with the same name. Our code attempted to do this when
for example 2 libmpv instances were created within the same process.
This failed, because RegisterWindowEx() fails if the class already
exists.
Fix this by ignoring RegisterWindowEx() errors. If the class can really
not be registered, we will fail on CreateWindowEx() instead. Of course
we also can't unregister the class, as another thread might be using it.
Windows will free the class automatically if the DLL is unloaded or the
process terminates.
Fixes#2319 (hopefully).
It's possible to build vf_vapoursynth with either the Python or Lua
backend (or both or none). The check for the vapoursynth core itself was
hidden away and couldn't be disabled, which would link mpv with
vapoursynth even if all backends were disabled.
Rearrange the checks so that the core will be disabled if no backend is
found (or both are disabled). This duplicates the check for
vapoursynth.pc, but since it's trivial, this is not that bad.
Caused by one of the --force-window commits. The unconditional
uninit_video_out() call (which normally should be idempotent) raised
sporadic MPV_EVENT_VIDEO_RECONFIG events. This is ok, except for the
fact that clients (like a Lua script or libmpv users) would cause the
event loop to run again after receiving it, triggering a feedback loop.
Fix it by sending the events really only on a change.
Sigh... After the recent changes, another regression appeared. This
time, the VO window wasn't cleared when changing from video to a non-
video file (such as audio-only with no cover art). Fix this by properly
taking the handle_force_window() bool parameter into account.
Also, the info message could be printed twice, which is harmless but
ugly. So just remove the message.
Also, do some more minor cleanups (like fixing the comment, which was
completely outdated).