If VO deinterlacing is unavailable, try to insert vf_yadif.
If vf_lavfi is available, actually use vf_yadif from libavfilter. The
libavfilter version of this filter is faster, more correct, etc., so it
is preferred. Unfortunately vf_yadif obviously doesn't support
VFCTRL_GET/SET_DEINTERLACE, and with the current state of the
libavfilter API, it doesn't look like there is any simple way to
emulate it. Instead, we simply insert the filter with a specific label,
and if deinterlacing is to be disabled, the filter is removed again by
label.
This won't do the right thing if the user inserts any deinterlacing
filter manually (except native vf_yadif, which understands the VFCTRL).
For example, with '-vf lavfi=yadif', pressing 'D' (toggle deinterlacing)
will just insert a second deinterlacer filter. In these cases, the user
is supposed to map a command that toggles his own filter instead of
using 'D' and the deinterlace property.
The same applies if the user wants to pass different parameters to the
deinterlacer filters.
If a complete filter description is passed to -vf-del, search for an
existing filter with the same label or the same name/arguments, and
delete it. The rules for filter entry equality are the same as with
the -vf-toggle option.
E.g.
-vf-add gradfun=123:gradfun=456
-vf-del gradfun=456
does what you would expect.
Can be used to refer to filters by name. Intended to be used when the
filter chain is changed at runtime.
A label can be assigned to a filter by prefixing it with '@name:', where
'name' is an user-chosen identifier. For example, a filter added with
'-vf-add @label1:gradfun=123' can be removed with '-vf-del @label1'.
If a filter with an already existing label is added, the existing filter
is replaced with the new filter (this happens for both -vf-add and
-vf-pre). If a filter is replaced, the new filter takes the position of
the old filter, instead of being appended/prepended to the filter chain
as usual. For -vf-toggle, labels are compared if at least one of the
filters has a label; otherwise they are compared by filter name and
arguments (like before). This means two filters are never considered
equal if one has a label and the other one does not.
This prefers ./ on Windows if-and-only-if the file being searched for
already exists there. (If the mpv directory is non-writable, the result
is still intended behavior.) This change is transparent to most users
because the user has to move the config files there intentionally, and
if anything, not being detected would be the surprising behavior.
In the long run this should be done differently. ID_... output sucks.
This commit will be reverted as soon as I have a good idea how this
should be done properly.
The vf-toggle option parsing (normally used for runtime video filter
switching only) was missing comparing the parameter values. Fix this,
and also make the code a bit more robust.
Also add a "raw" prefix for commands, which prevents property expansion.
The idea is that if the commands are generated by a program, it doesn't
have to know whether the command expands properties or not.
This is more consistent, and doesn't bother the user with ordering
rules when new prefixes are added.
Will break obscure uses of legacy commands: if the command is supposed
to be translated by the legacy command bridge, and if that command uses
one of the pausing* prefixes, the command can't be parsed. Well, just
use the new commands in this case.
Add the "vf" command, which allows changing the video filter chain at
runtime. For example, the 'y' key could be bound to toggle deinterlacing
by adding 'y vf toggle yadif' to the input.conf.
Reconfiguring the video filter chain normally resets the VO, so that it
will be "stuck" until a new video frame is rendered. To mitigate this, a
seek to the current position is issued when the filter chain is changed.
This is done only if playback is paused, because normal playback will
show an actual new frame quickly enough.
If vdpau hardware decoding is used, filter insertion (whether it fails
or not) will break the video for a while. This is because vo_vdpau
resets decoding related things on vo_config().
With the current semantics, there's no reason to disallow this.
(Although in my opinion, -vf should rather map to -vf-add than -vf-set,
however that is an independent issue from this change.)
Works like -vf-add, except if a filter already exists and has the same
parameters, it's removed instead of added.
Not really useful on the command line itself, but will make sense for
runtime filter changing in the following commit.
Until now, -vf-del required a list of indexes. This was a bit
inconvenient, so add support for using filter names too. Also simplify
the code a bit, doing the change would have been too painful otherwise.
The main() function is special, and omitting the return statement would
make it always return 0. And also, mpv_main() actually never returns, it
calls exit() through exit_player() instead. But change it anyway,
because it looks misleading.
Apparently useful for dumping DVD. Could also be used to rip streams
with libquvi and such, but for that there are better tools. Actually
I doubt there aren't better tools to dump DVDs, but whatever, this was
a feature request, so I don't need a good reason.
This helps passing the channel layout correctly from decoder to audio
filter chain. (Because that part "reuses" the demuxer level codec
parameters, which is very disgusting.)
Note that ffmpeg stuff already passed the channel layout via
mp_copy_lav_codec_headers(). So other than easier dealing with the
demuxer/decoder parameters mess, there's no real advantage to doing
this.
Make the --channels option accept a channel map. Since simple numbers
map to standard layouts with the given number of channels, this is
downwards compatible. Likewise for demux_rawaudio.
This actually breaks audio for 5/6/8 channels. There's no reordering
done yet. The actual reordering will be done inside of af_lavrresample
and has to be made part of the format negotiation.
This adds Mission Control fullscreen functionality to mpv. Since this doesn't
play well with many of mpv's features disable it by default. Users can activate
this feature by using `--native-fs` when starting mpv.
Fixes#34
This commit is a followup on the previous one and uses a solution I like more
since it totally decouples the Cocoa code from mpv's core and tries to emulate
a generic Cocoa application's lifecycle as much as possible without fighting
the framework.
mpv's main is executed in a pthread while the main thread runs the native cocoa
event loop.
All of the thread safety is mainly accomplished with additional logic in
cocoa_common as to not increase complexity on the crossplatform parts of the
code.
Schedule mpv's playloop as a high frequency timer inside the main Cocoa event
loop. This has the benefit to allow accessing menus as well as resizing the
window without the playback being blocked and allows to remove countless hacks
from the code that involved manually pumping the event loop as well simulating
manually some of the Cocoa default behaviours.
A huge improvement consists in removing NSApplicationLoad. This is a C function
defined in the Cocoa header and implements a minimal OSX application under ther
hood so that you can use the Cocoa GUI toolkit from C/C++ without having to
respect the Cocoa standards in terms of application initialization. This was
bad because the behaviour implemented by NSApplicationLoad was hard to customize
and had several gotchas especially in the menu department.
mpv was changed to be just a nib-less application. All the Cocoa part is still
generated in code but the event handling is now not dissimilar to what is
present in a stock Mac application.
As a part of reviewing the initialization process, I also removed all of
`osdep/macosx_finder_args`. The useful parts of the code were moved to
`osdep/macosx_appication` which has the broaded responsibility of managing the
full lifecycle of the Cocoa application. By consequence the
`--enable-macosx-finder` configure switch was killed as well, as this feature
is always enabled.
Another change the users will notice is that when using a bundle the `--quiet`
option will be inserted much earlier in the initializaion process. This results
in mpv not spamming mpv.log anymore with all the initialization outputs.
Makes it easier to understand... maybe. It's still pretty strange how
this function may either queue the seek or seek immediately. The way
it actually works doesn't change, queuing the seek is just moved into
the function.
Also add a execute_queued_seek() function, which resets the queue state
correctly.
The frontend doesn't use this.
Also use double for returning the chapter times. Everything uses double
for times, and there's no reason to use float here.
These were found by the cppcheck and scan-build static analyzers. Most
of these aren't interesting (the 2 previous commits fix some interesting
cases found by these analyzers), and they don't nearly fix all warnings.
(Most of the unfixed warnings are spam, things MPlayer never cared
about, or false positives.)
A "watch later" command is now mapped to Shift+Q. This quits the player
and stores the playback state in a config file in ~/.mpv/watch_later/.
When calling the player with the same file again, playback is resumed
at that time position.
It's also possible to make mpv save playback state always on quit with
the --save-position-on-quit option. Likewise, resuming can be disabled
with the --no-resume-playback option.
This also attempts to save some playback parameters, like fullscreen
state or track selection. This will unconditionally override config
settings and command line options (which is probably not what you would
expect, but in general nobody will really care about this). Some things
are not backed up, because that would cause various problems. Additional
subtitle files, video filters, etc. are not stored because that would be
too hard and fragile. Volume/mute state are not stored because it would
mess up if the system mixer is used, or if the system mixer was
readjusted in the meantime.
Basically, the tradeoff between perfect state restoration and
complexity/fragility makes it not worth to attempt to implement
it perfectly, even if the result is a little bit inconsistent.
Now vid/aid/sid can be used as properties. video/audio/sub still work,
but they are aliases for the "real" properties.
This guarantees that options/properties use the same value range. One
consequence is that the video/audio/sub properties return "no" as value
if no track is selected instead of -1.