The most user visible change is that "420p" is now displayed as
"yuv420p". This is what FFmpeg uses (almost), and is also less confusing
since "420p" is often confused with "420 pixels vertical resolution".
In general, we return the FFmpeg pixel format name. We still use our own
old mechanism to keep a list of exceptions to provide compatibility for
a while.
Also, never return NULL for image format names. If the format is unset
(0/IMGFMT_NONE), return "none". If the format has no name (probably
never happens, FFmpeg seems to guarantee that a name is set), return
"unknown".
Before this commit, the filter attempted to keep the vsscript state
(p->se) even when the script was reloaded. Change it to destroy the
script state too on reloading. Now no workaround for LoadPlugin is
necessary, and this also fixes a weird theoretical race condition when
destroying and recreating the mpv source filter.
I hate tabs.
This replaces all tabs in all source files with spaces. The only
exception is old-makefile. The replacement was made by running the
GNU coreutils "expand" command on every file. Since the replacement was
automatic, it's possible that some formatting was destroyed (but perhaps
only if it was assuming that the end of a tab does not correspond to
aligning the end to multiples of 8 spaces).
mpv was resizing to the same size before it went to fullscreen, we don't need to schedule a resize because the compositor will send a configure event with the new dimensions and thats when we should do it.
Mainly meant to apply simple VapourSynth filters to video at runtime.
This has various restrictions, which are listed in the manpage.
Additionally, this actually copies video frames when converting frame
references from mpv to VapourSynth, and a second time when going from
VapourSynth to mpv. This is inefficient and could probably be easily
improved. But for now, this is simpler, and in fact I'm not sure if
we even can references VapourSynth frames after the core has been
destroyed.
The stats were retrieved and written on every encode call, instead of
every encode call that actually returned a packet. ffmpeg.c also does it
this way, so it must be "more correct". Fixes 2-pass encoding.
We needed this because the OSD rendering path used GBRP for RGB
rendering, and not all swscale versions supported this conversion. But
recently we've dropped support for very old ffmpeg/libav versions, so
this isn't needed anymore.
This might be a good idea in order to prevent queuing a frame too far in
the future (causing apparent freezing of the video display), or dropping
an infinite number of frames (also apparent as freezing).
I think at this point this is most of what we can do if the vdpau time
source is unreliable (like with Mesa). There are still inherent race
conditions which can't be fixed.
The strange thing about this code was the shift parameter of the
prev_vs2 function. The parameter is used to handle timestamps before the
last vsync, since the % operator handles negative values incorrectly.
Most callers set shift to 0, and _usually_ pass a timestamp after the
last vsync. One caller sets it to 16, and can pass a timestamp before
the last timestamp.
The mystery is why prev_vs2 doesn't just compensate for the % operator
semantics in the most simple way: if the result of the operator is
negative, add the divisor to it. Instead, it adds a huge value to it
(how huge is influenced by shift). If shift is 0, the result of the
function will not be aligned to vsyncs.
I have no idea why it was written in this way. Were there concerns about
certain numeric overflows that could happen in the calculations? But I
can't think of any (the difference between ts and vc->recent_vsync_time
is usually not that huge). Or is there something more clever about it,
which is important for the timing code? I can't think of anything
either.
So scrap it and simplify it.
vo_vdpau used a somewhat complicated and fragile mechanism to convert
the vdpau time to internal mpv time. This was fragile as in it couldn't
deal well with Mesa's (apparently) random timestamps, which can change
the base offset in multiple situations. It can happen when moving the
mpv window to a different screen, and somehow it also happens when
pausing the player.
It seems this mechanism to synchronize the vdpau time is not actually
needed. There are only 2 places where sync_vdptime() is used (i.e.
returning the current vdpau time interpolated by system time).
The first call is for determining the PTS used to queue a frame. This
also uses convert_to_vdptime(). It's easily replaced by querying the
time directly, and adding the wait time to it (rel_pts_ns in the patch).
The second call is pretty odd: it updates the vdpau time a second time
in the same function. From what I can see, this can matter only if
update_presentation_queue_status() is very slow. I'm not sure what to
make out of this, because the call merely queries the presentation
queue. Just assume it isn't slow, and that we don't have to update the
time.
Another potential issue with this is that we call VdpPresentationQueueGetTime()
every frame now, instead of every 5 seconds and interpolating the other
calls via system time. More over, this is per video frame (which can be
portantially dropped, and not per actually displayed frame. Assume this
doesn't matter.
This simplifies the code, and should make it more robust on Mesa. But
note that what Mesa does is obviously insane - this is one situation
where you really need a stable time source. There are still plenty of
race condition windows where things can go wrong, although this commit
should drastically reduce the possibility of this.
In my tests, everything worked well. But I have no access to a Mesa
system with vdpau, so it needs testing by others.
See github issues #520, #694, #695.
This commit adds support for automatic selection of color profiles based on
the display where mpv is initialized, and automatically changes the color
profile when display is changed or the profile itself is changed from
System Preferences.
@UliZappe was responsible with the testing and implementation of a lot of this
commit, including the original implementation of `cocoa_get_icc_profile_path`
(See #594).
Fixes#594
Reduce most dependencies on struct mp_csp_details, which was a bad first
attempt at dealing with colorspace stuff. Instead, consistently use
mp_image_params.
Code which retrieves colorspace matrices from csputils.c still uses this
type, though.
This is pretty obscure, so it didn't matter much. It still breaks
switching output levels at runtime, because the video output is not
reinitialized with the new params.
There were some bad interactions with the OSC.
For one, dragging the OSC bar, and then moving the mouse outside of the
OSC (while mouse button still held) would suddenly initiate window
dragging. This was because win_drag_button1_down was not reset when
sending a normal mouse event, which means the window dragging code can
become active even after we've basically decided that the preceding
click didn't initiate window dragging.
Second, dragging the window and clicking on the OSC bar after that did
nothing. This was because no mouse button up event was sent to the core,
even though a mouse down event was sent. So make sure the key state is
erased with MP_INPUT_RELEASE_ALL.
We don't check whether the WM supports _NET_WM_MOVERESIZE_MOVE, but
if it doesn't, nothing bad happens. There might be a race condition
when pressing a button, and then moving the mouse and releasing the
button at the same time; then the WM might get the message to initiate
moving the window after the mouse button has been released, in which
case the result will probably be annoying. This could possibly be fixed
by sending _NET_WM_MOVERESIZE_CANCEL on button release, but on the
other hand, we probably won't receive a button release event in this
situation, so ignore this problem.
The dragging is initiated only when moving the mouse pointer after a
click in order to reduce annoying behavior when the user is e.g.
doubleclicking.
Closes#608.
VAAPI has some ambiguous image formats, like VA_FOURCC_I420,
VA_FOURCC_IYUV, VA_FOURCC_YV12 (the latter exactly the same as the first
two, just with swapped planes). There is potentially a problem when one
specific VAAPI format was picked, and converting it to a mpv format and
back to a VAAPI FourCC would result in a numerically different format
(even if it's actually the same). Then it could e.g. happen that
functions like va_surface_upload() reallocate the underlying VAImage,
which would be inefficient. Change the code so that this can't happen.
(Probably not a problem in practice with the current VAAPI usage.)
It's not really needed to be public. Other code can just use mp_image.
The only disadvantage is that the other code needs to call an accessor
to get the VASurfaceID.
Although I at first thought it would be better to have a separate
implementation for hwaccels because the difference to software images
are too large, it turns out you can actually save some code with it.
Note that the old implementation had a small memory management bug. This
got painted over in commit 269c1e1, but is hereby solved properly.
Also note that I couldn't test vf_vavpp.c (due to lack of hardware), and
I hope I didn't accidentally break it.
The plan is to get rid of the custom VAAPI and possibly VDPAU surface
allocators.
Add custom surface allocation, because hwaccel surfaces are allocated
completely differently from software surfaces.
Add optional LRU allocation, which is (probably) helpful for hwaccel,
but (probably) less optimal for software surfaces.
mp_image_pool_get_no_alloc() is specifically for VAAPI, which can't
allocate new decoder surfaces after decoder init.
They were used by ancient libavcodec versions. This also removes the
need to distinguish vdpau image formats at all (since there is only
one), and some code can be simplified.
Image formats used to be FourCCs, so unsigned int was better. But now
it's annoying and the only difference is that unsigned int is more to
type than int.
Instead of doing it on every seek (libavcodec calls get_format on every
seek), reinitialize the decoder only if the video resolution changes.
Note that this may be relatively naive, since we e.g. (or: in
particular) don't check for profile changes. But it's not worse than the
state before the get_format change, and at least it paints over the
current vaapi breakage (issue #646).