Until now, the --no-config was explicitly checked in multiple places to
suppress loading of config files.
Add such a check to the config path code itself, and refuse to resolve
_any_ configuration file locations if the option is set.
osc.lua needs a small fixup, because it didn't handle the situation when
no path was returned. There may some of such cases in the C code too,
but I didn't find any on a quick look.
Instead, chain them.
Note that there's no logic to prevent the other event handlers to be run
from an event handler (like it's popular in GUI toolkits), because I
think that's not very useful for this purpose.
Cygwin's libc (newlib) doesn't obey a lot of unix feature test macros,
including _GNU_SOURCE; as a result, a lot of functions and defines get
masked out -- important defines such as M_PI and strcasecmp. Work around
it by undefining __STRICT_ANSI__ on cygwin systems.
This will still cause compilation issues on any non-cygwin system that
uses newlib, but hopefully nobody does that, or if they do, they will
find this commit message and know to add -U__STRICT_ANSI__ to their
CFLAGS. Hopefully.
The mplayer decoder (spudec.c) actually handled this. There was explicit
code for binary palettes (16 32 bit values), and the subtitle resolution
was handled by video resolution coincidentally matching the subtitle
resolution.
Whoever puts vobsub into mp4 should be punished.
Fixes the sample gundam_sample.mp4, closes github issue #547.
In particular, this affects drag & drop of subtitles, which uses sub_add
internally. This will make the subtitles show up immediately, instead of
requiring manual selection of the added subtitle.
Might be not so ideal when adding multiple subtitles at once, because
that leads to multiple sub_add commands, and will end up with the last
subtitle instead of the first selected. But this is a minor detail.
The minimum required version was bumped in the old configure script, but
for the waf build system is was somehow forgotten or overlooked.
Probably happened while the waf build system was developed in a separate
branch.
Closes#546.
This is the same issue as addressed by 257d9f1, except this time for
the :srgb option as well. (257d9f1 only addressed :icc-profile)
The conditions of the srgb_compand mix() call are also flipped to
prevent an off-by-one error.
Use a list instead of a table. This makes it easier to provide extended
information about a property, and doesn't require you to fiddle with rhe
RST ASCII-art tables.
Also, extend some property descriptions.
The initialization code was split and refactored for the libmpv changes.
One change, moving a part of cocoa initialization, accidentally broke
--force-window on OSX, which creates a VO in a certain initialization
stage. We still don't know how cocoa should behave with libmpv, so fix
this with a hack to beat it back into working. Untested.
I was unhappy with the old way of handling buffers, especially resizing. But my
original plan to use wl_shm_pool_resize wasn't as good as I initially thought.
I might get back to it.
With the new buffer pools it now possible to select triple buffering. Also the
buffer pools are also needed for the upcoming subsurfaces for osd and subtitles.
I hope this change was worth it.
Use of these is "discouraged", but they're there to select these special
cases with the "aspect" property. They really should use some sort of
choice option type, but since it would be some work to make these work
with float values, the simple and dumb alternative was picked.
Return the error Lua-style, instead of raising it as Lua error. This is
better, because raising errors is reserved for more "fatal" conditions.
Pretending they're exceptions and trying to do exception-style error
handling will just lead to pain in this language.
Print a warning if a library has mismatched compile time and link time
versions.
Refuse to work if the compile time and link time versions are a mix of
ffmpeg and libav. We print an error message and call exit(). Since we'd
randomly crash anyway, I think this is ok.
This doesn't catch the case if you e.g. use a ffmpeg libavcodec and a
libav libavformat, which would of course just crash as quickly, but I
think this checks enough already.
This library will export the client API functions.
Note that this doesn't allow compiling the command line player to link
against this library yet. The reason is that there's lots of weird stuff
required to setup the execution environment (mostly Windows and OSX
specifics), as well as things which are out of scope of the client API
and every application has to do on its own. However, since the mpv
command line player basically reuses functions from the mpv core to
implement these things, it's not very easy to separate the command
line player form the mpv core.
This is partial only, and it still accesses some MPContext internals.
Specifically, chapter and track lists are still read directly, and OSD
access is special-cased too.
The OSC seems to work fine, except using the fast-forward/backward
buttons. These buttons behave differently, because the OSC code had
certain assumptions how often its update code is called.
The Lua interface changes slightly.
Note that this has the odd property that Lua script and video start
at the same time, asynchronously. If this becomes an issue, explicit
synchronization could be added.
Add a client API, which is intended to be a stable API to get some rough
control over the player. Basically, it reflects what can be done with
input.conf commands or the old slavemode. It will replace the old
slavemode (and enable the implementation of a new slave protocol).
This avoids trouble if another mpv instance is initialized in the same
process.
Since timeBeginPeriod/timeEndPeriod are hereby not easily matched
anymore, use an atexit() handler to call timeEndPeriod, so that we
can be sure these calls are matched, even if we allow multiple
initializations later when introducing the client API.