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Commit Graph

1998 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
wm4
c84460f61f build: add -Wimplicit-fallthrough
This warning seems to be designed well. It doesn't seem to warn on
fallthrough-only case statements, so it's compatible to well written
code.

stream_dvdnav.c had an obscure bug in inactive code, fix it.
stream_dvb.c is the only place where it intentionally falls through, I
guess I'll just leave it alone.
2019-12-11 17:28:47 +01:00
wm4
c26e80d0fd command: shuffle some crap around
This is preparation to get rid of the option-to-property bridge
(mp_on_set_option). This is a pretty insane thing that redirects
accesses to options to properties. It was needed in the ever ongoing
transition from something to... something else.

A good example for the need of this bridge is applying profiles at
runtime. This obviously goes through the config parser, but should also
make all changes effective, for which traditionally the property layer
is used.

There isn't much left that needs this bridge. This commit changes a
bunch of options (which also have a property implementation) to use
option change notifications instead. Many of the properties are still
left, but perform unrelated functions like OSD formatting.

This should be mostly compatible. There may be some subtle behavior
changes. For example, "hwdec" and "record-file" do not check for changes
anymore before applying them, so writing the current value to them
suddenly does something, while it was ignored before.

DVB changes untested, but should work.
2019-11-25 00:26:36 +01:00
wm4
5a99015acf stream_lavf: set --network-timeout to 60 seconds by default
Until now, we've made FFmpeg use the default network timeout - which is
apparently infinite. I don't know if this was changed at some point,
although it seems likely, as I was sure there was a more useful default.

For most use cases, a smaller timeout is more useful (for example
recording something in the background), so force a timeout of 1 minute.

See: #5793
2019-11-14 13:46:03 +01:00
wm4
ac7f67b3f2 demux_mkv, stream: attempt to improve behavior in unseekable streams
stream_skip() semantics were kind of bad, especially after the recent
change to the stream code. Forward stream_skip() calls could still
trigger a seek and fail, even if it was supposed to actually skip data.
(Maybe the idea that stream_skip() should try to seek is worthless in
the first place.)

Rename it to stream_seek_skip() (takes absolute position now because I
think that's better), and make it always skip if the stream is marked as
forward.

While we're at it, make EOF detection more robust. I guess s->eof
shouldn't exist at all, since it's valid only "sometimes". It should be
removed... but not today. A 1-byte stream_read_peek() call is good to
get the s->eof flag set to a correct value.
2019-11-14 12:59:14 +01:00
wm4
19becc8ea9 stats, demux: log byte level stream seeks 2019-11-07 22:53:13 +01:00
wm4
6487abde79 stream: remove unused read_chunk field
It was set, but its value was never used. The stream cache used to use
it, but it was removed. It controlled how much data it tried to read
from the underlying stream at once.

The user can now control the buffer size with --stream-buffer-size,
which achieves a similar effect, because the stream will in the common
case read half of the buffer size at once. In fact, the new default size
is 128KB, i.e. 64KB read size, which is as much as stream_file and
stream_cb requested by default. stream_memory requested more, but it
doesn't matter anyway. Only stream_smb set a larger size with 128KB.
2019-11-07 22:53:13 +01:00
wm4
e5a9b792ec stream: replace STREAM_CTRL_GET_SIZE with a proper entrypoint
This is overlay convoluted as a stream control, and important enough to
warrant "first class" functionality.
2019-11-07 22:53:13 +01:00
wm4
ca75fedaf4 stream_dvdnav: ok, this makes no sense at all
The dvdnav API reads in 2K blocks (dvdnav_get_next_block()). The mpv
wrapper (fill_buffer() in this file) expects that the read size done by
the mpv core is at least 2K for this reason. If not, it returns an
error.

This used to be OK, because there was a thing called section alignment
in the core code. This was removed because the core shouldn't suffer
from optical disc idiosyncrasies. Which means that ever since, it has
been working only by coincidence, or maybe not at all.

Fixing this would require keeping a buffer in the priv struct, and
returning it piece by piece if the core makes smaller reads. I have no
intention of writing such code, so add an error message asking for a
patch. If anyone actually cares about DVD, maybe it'll get fixed.
2019-11-07 22:53:13 +01:00
wm4
6fc0e7e0a0 stream_bluray: remove size getter
This isn't really needed, since it doesn't support byte seeking (only
for avoiding that demux_disc fucks up even more if the nested demux_lavf
tries to seek in the TS).
2019-11-07 22:53:13 +01:00
wm4
d3479018db stream: change buffer argument types from char* to void*
This is slightly better, although not much, and ultimately doesn't
matter.

The public API in stream_cb.h also uses char*, but can't change that.
2019-11-07 22:53:13 +01:00
wm4
f850d82e65 stream: avoid a duplicate condition
stream_read_peek() duplicated what stream_read_more() checks for anyway
(whether the forward buffer is large enough). This can be skipped by
making the stream_read_more() return value more consistent.
2019-11-07 22:53:13 +01:00
wm4
53f17a71f4 stream: fix typos in a comments 2019-11-07 22:53:13 +01:00
wm4
12d1761064 stream: remove eof getter
demux_mkv was the only thing using this, and everything else accessed it
directly. No need to keep the indirection wrapper around.

(Funny how this getter was in the initial commit of MPlayer.)
2019-11-07 22:53:10 +01:00
wm4
e8aae688c3 stream: bump default buffer size from 2K to 64K
(Only half of the buffer is actually used in a useful way, see manpage
or commit which added the option.)

Might have some advantages with broken network filesystem drivers.

See: #6802
2019-11-06 21:57:31 +01:00
wm4
b4466cf0d4 stream: remove inline buffer optimization
Was probably worthless, and I can't measure a difference anymore (I used
to be able and it still seemed worth doing so back then).

When the default buffer size is enlarged in the next commit, the inline
buffer probably won't even be useful in theory, because the data will
rarely be on the same page as the other stream fields. It surely makes
the inline buffer seem like a ridiculous micro-optimization. Farewell...
2019-11-06 21:54:41 +01:00
wm4
f37f4de849 stream: turn into a ring buffer, make size configurable
In some corner cases (see #6802), it can be beneficial to use a larger
stream buffer size. Use this as argument to rewrite everything for no
reason.

Turn stream.c itself into a ring buffer, with configurable size. The
latter would have been easily achievable with minimal changes, and the
ring buffer is the hard part. There is no reason to have a ring buffer
at all, except possibly if ffmpeg don't fix their awful mp4 demuxer, and
some subtle issues with demux_mkv.c wanting to seek back by small
offsets (the latter was handled with small stream_peek() calls, which
are unneeded now).

In addition, this turns small forward seeks into reads (where data is
simply skipped). Before this commit, only stream_skip() did this (which
also mean that stream_skip() simply calls stream_seek() now).

Replace all stream_peek() calls with something else (usually
stream_read_peek()). The function was a problem, because it returned a
pointer to the internal buffer, which is now a ring buffer with
wrapping. The new function just copies the data into a buffer, and in
some cases requires callers to dynamically allocate memory. (The most
common case, demux_lavf.c, required a separate buffer allocation anyway
due to FFmpeg "idiosyncrasies".) This is the bulk of the demuxer_*
changes.

I'm not happy with this. There still isn't a good reason why there
should be a ring buffer, that is complex, and most of the time just
wastes half of the available memory. Maybe another rewrite soon.

It also contains bugs; you're an alpha tester now.
2019-11-06 21:36:02 +01:00
wm4
6d92e55502 Replace uses of FFMIN/MAX with MPMIN/MAX
And remove libavutil includes where possible.
2019-10-31 11:24:20 +01:00
wm4
6fdfa7c991 stream_memory: remove trivial ffmpeg dependency 2019-10-31 11:06:44 +01:00
wm4
a267452b00 stream: move stream_read_line to demux_playlist.c
demux_playlist.c is the only remaining user of this. Not sure if it
should stay this way, but for now I'll say yes.
2019-10-31 11:05:48 +01:00
wm4
c6b08d222f stream: stop accessing buffer internals in stream_read_line()
Getting this out of the way in preparation for reworking stream
internals.
2019-10-31 11:05:45 +01:00
wm4
1c63869d0a demux: restore some of the DVD/BD/CDDA interaction layers
This partially reverts commit a9d83eac40
("Remove optical disc fancification layers").

Mostly due to the timestamp crap, this was never really going to work.
The playback layer is sensitive to timestamps, and derives the playback
time directly from the low level packet timestamps. DVD/BD works
differently, and libdvdnav/libbluray do not make it easy at all to
compensate for this. Which is why it never worked well, but not doing it
at all is even more awful.

demux_disc.c tried this and rewrote packet timestamps from low level TS
to playback time. So restore demux_disc.c, which should bring behavior
back to the old often non-working but slightly better state.

I did not revert anything that affects components above the demuxer
layer. For example, the properties for switching DVD angles or listing
disc titles are still gone. (Disc titles could be reimplemented as
editions. But not by me.)

This commit modifies the reverted code a bit; this can't be avoided,
because the internal API changed quite a bit. The old seek resync in
demux_lavf.c (which was a hack) is replaced with a hack. SEEK_FORCE and
demux_params.external_stream are new additions.

Some of this could/should be further cleaned up. If you don't want
"proper" DVD/BD support to disappear, you should probably volunteer.

Now why am I wasting my time for this? Just because some idiot users are
too lazy to rip their ever-wearing out shitty physical discs? Then why
should I not be lazy and drop support completely? They won't even be
thankful for me maintaining this horrible garbage for no compensation.
2019-10-03 00:22:18 +02:00
Oliver Freyermuth
8c52cd4e4a stream_dvb: Remove now replaced stream-control code for good. 2019-10-02 01:25:45 +02:00
Oliver Freyermuth
12d74e4d95 stream_dvb: Allow actual zapping of channels again.
This is realized by dvbin-channel-switch-offset,
which is a numeric offset on the channel initially tuned to.
Since the channel list is kept in the stream alone
depending on detected hardware and chosen card,
and no available backchannel to the player, there's no direct
property which could be switched.

Using input.conf like:
H cycle dvbin-channel-switch-offset up
K cycle dvbin-channel-switch-offset down
Q set dvbin-prog "ZDF HD"
allow fast and reliable channel switching again.
2019-10-02 01:25:45 +02:00
Oliver Freyermuth
9cd4638d2b stream_dvb: Add dvb_update_config to poll config parameters.
If any parameters have been updated, reinitiate streaming_start.
Throttle checks since we poll from streaming_read.
This also requires the player to re-initialize, since all video
and audio streams and even the transport format may change.
This is added in the next commit.
2019-10-02 01:25:45 +02:00
Oliver Freyermuth
1768ea0d15 stream_dvb: Move stream->is_on initialization to state preparation.
Notably, this allows to call dvb_streaming_start more than once,
simplifying e.g. channel switching.
Also, get rid of unused timeout variable.
2019-10-02 01:25:45 +02:00
Oliver Freyermuth
c15ec393dd stream_dvb: Factor out logic to determine program and card.
This is now treated in dvb_parse_path consistently
instead of logic scattered over various functions.
This is a requirement to sensibly re-evaluate config
after options have been changed, since we have two ways
to configure the stream (decorated URI and config parameters).
2019-10-02 01:25:45 +02:00
Oliver Freyermuth
76918be267 stream_dvb: Use separated out options struct.
This also allows the use of m_config_cache_alloc
which allows to watch config updates.
2019-10-02 01:25:45 +02:00
Leonardo Taccari
c833c095d7 stream_lavf: add support for gopher 2019-09-29 14:27:00 +02:00
wm4
2bb5ab07b7 stream: rearrange open functions
Add yet another variant of the stream open function. This time, make it
so that it's possible to add new open parameters in an extendable way,
which should put an end to having to change this every other year.

Effectively get rid of the overly special stream_create_instance()
function and use the new one instead, which requires changes in
stream_concat.c and stream_memory.c. The function is still in private in
stream.c, but I preferred to make the mentioned users go through the new
function for orthogonality. The error handling (mostly logging) was
adjusted accordingly.

This should not have any functional changes. (To preempt any excuses, I
didn't actually test stream_concat and stream_memory.)
2019-09-29 00:46:54 +02:00
Aman Gupta
c7d0a8f58e stream_cb: add cancel_fn callback
This allows stream_cb backends to implement blocking
behavior inside read_fn, and still get notified when the user
wants to cancel and stop playback.

Signed-off-by: Aman Gupta <aman@tmm1.net>
2019-09-27 13:00:45 -07:00
wm4
9280e6b322 stream_dvb: remove unused variable
(At first I left this intentionally, because the temporarily disabled
stream ctrl code used it, but there's actually no reason to annoy
everyone with the warning.)
2019-09-21 22:05:24 +02:00
James Hilliard
abfc58cad4 stream_libarchive: Always use LC_CTYPE_MASK for libarchive
Using LC_ALL_MASK is unnecessary and unreliable on some systems.

Signed-off-by: James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com>
2019-09-21 12:53:47 +02:00
wm4
43fc314279 stream: add a generic concat implementation
This is not available to users. It can be used only though the
stream_concat_open(). It's unused yet; to be used in the following
commit.
2019-09-19 20:37:05 +02:00
wm4
e40885d963 stream: create memory streams in more straightforward way
Instead of having to rely on the protocol matching, make a function that
creates a stream from a stream_info_t directly. Instead of going through
a weird indirection with STREAM_CTRL, add a direct argument for non-text
arguments to the open callback. Instead of creating a weird dummy
mpv_global, just pass an existing one from all callers. (The latter one
is just an artifact from the past, where mpv_global wasn't available
everywhere.)

Actually I just wanted a function that creates a stream without any of
that bullshit. This goal was slightly missed, since you still need this
heavy "constructor" just to setup a shitty struct with some shitty
callbacks.
2019-09-19 20:37:05 +02:00
wm4
2bf1862bc1 stream: log positions on seek failures 2019-09-19 20:37:04 +02:00
wm4
c91e659f88 stream: redo buffer handling and allow arbitrary size for stream_peek()
struct stream used to include the stream buffer, including peek buffer,
inline in the struct. It could not be resized, which means the maximum
peek size was set in stone. This meant demux_lavf.c could peek only so
much data.

Change it to use a dynamic buffer. Because it's possible, keep the
inline buffer for default buffer sizes (which are basically always used
outside of file opening). It's unknown whether it really helps with
anything. Probably not.

This is also the fallback plan in case we need something like the old
stream cache in order to deal with mp4 + unseekable http: the code can
now be easily changed to use any buffer size.
2019-09-19 20:37:04 +02:00
wm4
f77515ebaf stream_libarchive: remove base filename stuff
Apparently this was so that when playing a video file from a .rar file,
it would load external subtitles with the same name (instead of looking
for mpv's rar:// mangled URL). This was requested on github almost 5
years ago. Seems like a weird feature, and I don't care. Drop it,
because it complicates some in progress change.
2019-09-19 20:37:04 +02:00
wm4
8ca4386366 stream_libarchive: fix another crash with broken rar files
libarchive (sometimes affectionately called libcve) has this annoying
behavior that if after a "fatal" error, you do any operation on the
archive context other than querying the error and closing the context,
you get a free CVE. So we close the archive context in these situations.
This can set p->mpa to NULL, so code accessing this field needs to be
careful.

This was not considered in a certain code path, and a simple truncated
.rar file made it crash. Part of the problem was that the file inside
the rar was a mkv file, which triggered seeking when the demux_mkv
resync code encountered bogus data.

This is probably a regression from a relatively recent change to this
code (in any case mpv 0.29.1 doesn't crash).

Fix this by adding the check.

There's also a mechanism to reopen an archive context used to emulate
seeking, since most libarchive format handlers don't support this
natively. Add a reopen call to the codepath, because obviously it should
always be possible to seek back into a "working" area of the file.

There is a second bug with this: if reopening fails, we don't adjust the
current position back to 0, which in some cases means we accidentally
return bogus data to the reader when we shouldn't. Fix this by always
resetting the position on reopening.
2019-09-19 20:37:03 +02:00
wm4
b04ddcdc0b stream: stop randomly corrupting memory
The intent of the line above the modified one code was raising the
amount of read data, so that many stream_peek() calls with small len
values would not degrade performance by effectively turning every
stream_peak() into an unbuffered read call to the stream implementation.
So this confusing looking MPMAX() was correct, but "chunk" could still
get beyond the buffer.

So just fix that and limit "chunk" correctly.

I'm not sure whether the commit referenced below accidentally removed
some intricate guarantee that this couldn't happen, since the code was
around since 2013. It could have relied on TOTAL_BUFFER_SIZE >
STREAM_BUFFER_SIZE. But not sure. I've rewritten all this code in my own
branch a year ago, so who knows.

Fixes: 162e0f5ad9
Fixes: #6948
2019-09-18 20:47:40 +02:00
wm4
116ab73566 stream_smb: remove unnecessary short write logic
See previous commit. It compiles, but 100% untested.
2019-09-14 13:00:43 +02:00
wm4
22568fece6 stream_file: remove unnecessary short write logic
See previous commit.
2019-09-14 13:00:10 +02:00
wm4
bec218c4ad stream: handle short writes
The write functionality is almost unused (only encoding 2-pass mode uses
it to write the log file). Moreover, it almost makes no sense to use
this in a not local scenario. This change is just to prevent people from
duplicating the short write logic across all streams that happen to
support writing. Mostly untested; local log file writing still works.
2019-09-14 12:55:06 +02:00
wm4
a25b3d61a1 demux, stream: remove old rar support in favor of libarchive
The old rar code could do uncompressed rar, libarchive supports at least
some rar compression algorithms. There is no need to keep the old rar
code.
2019-09-13 17:35:06 +02:00
wm4
ddcbe66768 stream: remove some more optical disc leftovers 2019-09-13 17:32:21 +02:00
wm4
b30e85508a Remove classic Linux analog TV support, and DVB runtime controls
Linux analog TV support (via tv://) was excessively complex, and
whenever I attempted to use it (cameras or loopback devices), it didn't
work well, or would have required some major work to update it. It's
very much stuck in the analog past (my favorite are the frequency tables
in frequencies.c for analog TV channels which don't exist anymore).

Especially cameras and such work fine with libavdevice and better than
tv://, for example:

  mpv av://v4l2:/dev/video0

(adding --profile=low-latency --untimed even makes it mostly realtime)

Adding a new input layer that targets such "modern" uses would be
acceptable, if anyone is interested in it. The old TV code is just too
focused on actual analog TV.

DVB is rather obscure, but has an active maintainer, so don't remove it.
However, the demux/stream ctrl layer must go, so remove controls for
channel switching. Most of these could be reimplemented by using the
normal method for option runtime changes.
2019-09-13 17:32:19 +02:00
wm4
162e0f5ad9 stream: remove BD/DVD/CDDA sector size alignment
This was possibly needed by libdvdread, and/or old CD drivers on some
system. It still works with on-filesystem DVD and BD test images, so
this can go.
2019-09-13 17:32:05 +02:00
wm4
a9d83eac40 Remove optical disc fancification layers
This removes anything related to DVD/BD/CD that negatively affected the
core code. It includes trying to rewrite timestamps (since DVDs and
Blurays do not set packet stream timestamps to playback time, and can
even have resets mid-stream), export of chapters, stream languages,
export of title/track lists, and all that.

Only basic seeking is supported. It is very much possible that seeking
completely fails on some discs (on some parts of the timeline), because
timestamp rewriting was removed.

Note that I don't give a shit about optical media. If you want to watch
them, rip them. Keeping some bare support for DVD/BD is the most I'm
going to do to appease the type of lazy, obnoxious users who will care.
There are other players which are better at optical discs.
2019-09-13 17:31:59 +02:00
wm4
cf36e3d15b stream_dvdnav: merge stream_dvd_common
Isolate icky DVD garbage into a single file.
2019-09-13 15:35:23 +02:00
wm4
6229404985 Remove libdvdread support in favor of libdvdnav
stream_dvd.c contained large amounts of ancient, unmaintained code,
which has been historically moved to libdvdnav. Basically, it's full of
low level parsing of DVD on-disc structures.

Kill it for good. Users can use the remaining dvdnav support (which
basically operates in non-menu mode). Users have reported that
libdvdread  sometimes works better, but this is just libdvdnav's problem
and not ours.
2019-09-13 15:29:27 +02:00
Aman Gupta
877ae46125 stream_file: avoid redundant free
s->priv->cancel will be freed when s is freed, so
freeing it explicitly is not required.

Signed-off-by: Aman Gupta <aman@tmm1.net>
2019-09-11 13:10:03 -07:00