The problem with DVD/BD and playback resume is that most often, the
filename is just "dvd://", while the actual path to the DVD disk image
is given with --dvd-device. But playback resume works on the filename
only.
Add a pretty bad hack that includes the path to the disk image if the
filename starts with dvd://, and the same for BD respectively. (It's a
bad hack, but I want to go to bed, so here we go. I might revert or
improve it later, depending on user feedback.)
We have to cleanup the global variable mess around the dvd_device.
Ideally, this should go into MPOpts, but it isn't yet. Make the code
paths in mplayer.c take MPOpts anyway.
By default, libavformat uses UDP for rtsp playback. This doesn't work
very well. Apparently the reason is that the buffer sizes libavformat
chooses for UDP are way too small, and switching to TCP gets rid of this
issue entirely (thanks go to Reimar Döffinger for figuring this out).
In theory, you can set buffer sizes as libavformat options, but that
doesn't seem to help.
Add an option to select the rtsp transport, and make TCP the default.
Also remove an outdated comment from stream.c.
Mainly for debugging. Usually, we just set options for all possible
protocols, and we can't really know whether a certain protocol is used
beforehand. That's also the reason why avio_open2() takes a dictionary,
instead of letting the user set options directly with av_opt_set(). Or
in other words, we don't know whether an option that could be set is an
error or not, thus we print the messages only at verbose level.
This is for properties that normally show a bar, and thus do not show an
OSD message (as per classic mplayer behavior). Setting an extra_msg
allows showing an OSD message anyway, except if OSD messages are
explicitly suppressed.
This refactors the whole show_property_osd() function a bit, and
replaces the weird sep field with a more general method.
Allows for example: --status-msg='${?pause==yes:(Paused) } ...' to
emulate the normal terminal status line. It's useful in other situations
too.
I'm a bit worried about extending this mini-DSL, and sure hope nobody
will implement a generic formula evaluator at some point in the future.
But for now we're probably safe.
In most cases, it's better if deinterlacing happens before any other
filtering, so prepend the filter to the user's filter list, instead
of appending it.
Instead of hardcoding a single filter. This might be helpful for
modeling the vaapi deinterlacer as a video filter. The idea is that a
software deinterlacer would be tried first, and if that fails (because
vaapi hardware decoding uses HW surfaces, which a software deinterlacer
does not accept), the vaapi filter would be tried.
Normally, we need this for Xutf8LookupString(). But we can just fall
back to XLookupString(). In fact, the code for this was already there,
the code was just never tested and was actually crashing when active
(see commit 2115c4a).
Calling them separately doesn't really make sense, and all existing
calls to them usually combined them. One subtitle difference was that
af_init() didn't wipe the filter chain if initialization of the chain
itself failed, but that didn't really make sense anyway.
Also remove af_init() from the code for setting balance in mixer.c. The
mixer should be in the initialized state only if audio is fully
initialized, so the af_init() call made no sense.
Note that the filter "editing" code in command.c doesn't really do a
nice job of handling errors in case recreating an _old_ (known to work)
filter chain unexpectedly fails, and this obscure/rare case might be
differently handled after this change.
The volume is set as soon as the audio chain is created again. This
works only in softvol mode. For system wide volume or otherwise
externally user controllable volume, this code is intentionally
disabled. It would be extremely weird if changing volume (while audio is
not initialized) would do nothing, and then suddenly change it when the
audio chain is created.
There's another odd corner case: the user-set volume will be thrown away
if it's set before the _first_ audio chain initialization. This is
because the volume restore logic recognizes a change from nothing to
softvol or an AO, and circumventing that would require additional code.
Also, we don't even know the start volume before that point.
Forcing the volume with --volume will can override the volume set during
no-audio mode, depending on the situation.
Note that this is intentionally never done if the AO or softvolume is
different, or if the current volume control method is thought to control
system wide volume (such as ALSA) or otherwise user controllable (such
as PulseAudio). The intention is to keep things robust and to avoid
messing with the user's audio settings as far as possible, while still
providing the ability to resume volume if it makes sense.
Commit broke text subtitles without embedded fonts. Will look for a better
solution later. Revert it for now, since I'm starting to get bug reports.
This reverts commit 4a9f618d9f.
XOpenIM can fail to find a valid input method, in which case it
returns NULL. Passing a NULL pointer to XCreateIC would cause a
crash, so fail VO init before that happens.
Before this commit there was just an error message, but the file descriptor was
still open. Now we close the file descriptor and prevent it from calling
endlessly. Also a CLOSE_WIN event is sent which closes the window eventually if
the action of CLOSE_WIN is set to quit or quit_watch_later.
Improves display of images and video with alpha channel, especially if
the transparent regions contain (supposed to be invisible) garbage
color values.
Refactor how mixer.c does volume/mute restoration and initialization.
Move to handling of --volume and --mute to mixer.c. Simplify the
implementation of these and hopefully fix bugs/strange behavior related
to using them as file-local options (this uses a somewhat dirty trick:
the option values are reverted to "auto" after initialization). Put most
code related to initialization and volume restoring in probe_softvol()
and restore_volume(). Having this code all in one place is less
confusing.
Instead of trying to detect whether to use softvol at runtime, detect it
at initialization time using AOCONTROL_GET_VOLUME (same with mute,
AOCONTROL_GET_MUTE). This implies we expect SET_VOLUME/SET_MUTE to work
if the GET variants work. Hopefully this is always the case.
This is also preparation for being able to change volume/mute settings
if audio is disabled, and for allowing restoring value with playback
resume.
Softvol always used a linear multiplier for volume control. This was
converted to dB, and then back to linear in af_volume. Remove this non-
sense. We still try to keep the command line argument to af_volume in
dB, though.
This is to avoid the 30s hang while mpv caches fonts. In practice all the
fonts an average user is going to use are embedded in mkv files so there is
no reason to build fontconfig's cache on all of OS X system directories.
I might add something similar for terminal usage, but I am highly undecided.
It's quite unlikely, but functions like mp_find_user_config_file() can
return NULL, e.g. if $HOME is unset.
Fix all the code that didn't check for this correctly yet.
Remove the ifdef hell from mp_find_user_config_file(). Move the win32
specific code (for MinGW and Cygwin) to path-win.c. The behavior should
be about the same, but I can't be sure due to lack of testing and
because the old path.c code was hard to follow. (I expect those who care
about windows will fix things, should issues pop up - sorry.)
One difference is that the new code will always force MPV_HOME. It looks
like the old code preferred the mpv config dir in the exe dir if it
exists.
Also, make sure MP_PATH_MAX has enough space, even if the equivalent
wchar_t string is not 0-terminated with PATH_MAX (because apparently the
winapi doesn't require this). (Actually, maybe we should just kill all
uses of PATH_MAX/MP_PATH_MAX.)
This is a bit "hard", because getenv() returns a static string, and we
can't just return an allocated string. We also want getenv() to be
thread-safe if possible. (If the mpv core is going to be more threaded,
we sure do want the lower layers to be thread-safe as well.)
The homepath variable was static, and its value was set to a stack
buffer. This means a second invocation of the function would trigger
undefined behavior. Moreover the stack buffer always went out of scope
before homepath was used.
This is mainly to avoid spurious cursor states due to the mouse moving inside
or outside the window as a result of the window resize (with cmd-0/1/2).
This avoids complex logic and triggers a mouse move so that the player
recomputes the correct cursor state based on the autohide configuration of
the user.
This keeps the state in sync with the current state in cocoa_common. Infact the
cocoa code in mpv can decide wether it really wants to hide the cursor based on
the result of the `canHideCursor` method (this is so that the cursor is only
hidden when hovering on the video window).
Turns out that these checks were for versions of OS X that mpv doesn't even
support anymore. So just remove the checks since they cause a deprecation
warning.
GetCurrentProcess() is deprecated on 10.9. Make a universal solution by
checking OS version number.
get_system_version() function is the recommended Apple way of getting the
OS version, since Gestalt is also deprecated (and does pretty much the same
thing anyway)
Updating HIDRemote.m to use a similar function would allow to get rid of the
2 other warnings.
This is supposed to reduce the amount of useless error messages shown
during initialization of vo_opengl. If multiple backends are compiled,
usually only one of them will work. For example, on Linux both X and
Wayland backends can be compiled, but usually either Wayland or X is
running. Then, if Wayland is not running, but X is, trying to initialize
the Wayland backend should not spam the terminal with error messages.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Sinz <andreas.sinz@aon.at>
Call update_subtitles() on every iteration of the playloop, so that
subtitle packets are read as soon as possible, instead of every time a
video frame is displayed. This helps in case the packet queue is swamped
with subtitle packets, which can happen with certain insane mkv files.
The change will simply cause the subtitle queue to be emptied on each
playloop iteration.
The timestamps update_subtitles() uses for display are the same before
and after this commit. (Important for files which have subtitle packets
with timestamps or duration not set.)
In insane files with a very huge number of subtitle events, and if the
--demuxer-mkv-subtitle-preroll option is given, seeking can still
overflow the packet queue. Normally, the subtitle_preroll variable
specifies the maximum number of packets that can be added. But once this
number is reached, the normal seeking behavior is enabled, which will
add all subtitle packets with the right timestamps to the packet queue.
At this point the next video keyframe can still be quite far away, with
enough subtitle packets on the way to overflow the packet queue.
Fix this by always setting an upper limit of subtitle packets read
during seeking. This should provide additional robustness even if the
preroll option is not used.
This means that even with normal seeking, at most 500 subtitle packets
are demuxed. Packets after that are discarded.
One slightly questionable aspect of this commit is that subtitle_preroll
is never reset in audio-only mode, but that is probably ok.