This should be unneeded, and the packet position is already sufficient
for this case.
Accessing the stream position directly is going to be a problem when the
stream is accessed from another thread later.
Suggested by tholin on github issue #882.
This is not entirely clean, but the fields we're accessing might be
considered internal to libavformat. On the other hand, existence of the
fields is guaranteed by the ABI, and nothing in the libavformat doxygen
suggestes they're not allowed to be accessed.
CC: @mpv-player/stable
DVD and Bluray (and to some extent cdda) require awful hacks all over
the codebase to make them work. The main reason is that they act like
container, but are entirely implemented on the stream layer. The raw
mpeg data resulting from these streams must be "extended" with the
container-like metadata transported via STREAM_CTRLs. The result were
hacks all over demux.c and some higher-level parts.
Add a "disc" pseudo-demuxer, and move all these hacks and special-cases
to it.
(Again.)
This time, we simply make it event-based, as it should be. This is done
for both demuxer metadata and stream metadata.
For some ogg-over-icy streams, 2 updates are reported on stream start.
This is because libavformat reports an update right on start, while
including the same info in the "static" metadata. I don't know if that's
a bug or a feature.
It's unlikely that files with multiple audio tracks and with replaygain
actually happen, but this change might help avoid minor corner cases
with later changes.
Recently, libavformat added demuxers to open image files like normal
demuxers. This is a good thing, but for now they interfere with the
operation of demux_mf. Add them to the blacklist until there is a proper
solution.
(The list doesn't contain _all_ recognized image formats, just those
that might interfere with demux_mf.)
CC: @mpv-player/stable
This returned a stream error value directly to libavformat, which can't
make sense. For example STREAM_ERROR (0) means success in libavformat
error codes. (The meaning of the libavformat read_seek return value is
underdocumented too.)
The intention is to make it obvious which mpv releases certain changes
will apply to.
Also attempt to fix RST formatting of the list. This is not very proper,
but probably good enough.
Cast away the "extra" bits (since apparently Window/XID is always
32 bit unsigned). This is not striclty needed, because you're not
supposed to pass garbage to --wid, just because the upper bits are
possibly not interpreted. But if you do so, this change increases
consistency in behavior and removes a strange behavior that was
thought to be a bug.
Also see github issue #906.
Don't use _x_arguments, as we don't support X arguments.
Get rid of -s, because we don't support multiple single-letter options
in one argument.
Add -S, because we ignore options after "--".
Completion now uses "--opt=value" instead of "--opt value". Once the
user presses space and starts a new argument, the option just
completed is out of the picture, whether or not it was given an
argument. This handles options with no arguments or optional arguments
much better; previously, completing such an option would effectively
disable completion for the next argument.
Custom completed options such as "--ao" and friends will no longer
claim to consume an extra argument.
Previous code was completly wrong. This still doesn't report the device
latency, but we report the buffer latency (as before the AO refactoring) and
the AudioUnit's latency (this is a new 'feature').
Apparently we can also report the device actual latency and we should also
calculate the actual sample rate of the audio device instead of using the
nominal sample rate, but I'll leave this for a later commit.
The mplayer1/2/mpv CoreAudio audio output historically contained both usage
of AUHAL APIs (these go through the CoreAudio audio server) and the Device
based APIs (used only for output of compressed formats in exclusive mode).
The latter is a very unwieldy and low level API and pretty much forces us to
write a lot of code for little workr. Also with the widespread of HDMI, the
actual need for outputting compressed audio directly to the device is getting
lower (it was very useful with S/PDIF for bandwidth constraints not allowing
a number if channels transmitted in LPCM).
Considering how invasive it is (uses hog/exclusive mode), the new AO
(`ao_coreaudio_device`) is not going to be autoprobed but the user will have
to select it.