Before these definitions were incorrectly guarded by and #ifdef
but since they aren't macros, this would never be true so that
if they were ever added to mingw headers we would have problems.
rename KSDATAFORMAT constants with the same mp prefix for consistency.
also use DEFINE_GUID rather than defining the bare structure
...because everything is terrible.
strerror() is not documented as having to be thread-safe by POSIX and
C11. (Which is pretty much bullshit, because both mandate threads and
some form of thread-local storage - so there's no excuse why
implementation couldn't implement this in a thread-safe way. Especially
with C11 this is ridiculous, because there is no way to use threads and
convert error numbers to strings at the same time!)
Since we heavily use threads now, we should avoid unsafe functions like
strerror().
strerror_r() is in POSIX, but GNU/glibc deliberately fucks it up and
gives the function different semantics than the POSIX one. It's a bit of
work to convince this piece of shit to expose the POSIX standard
function, and not the messed up GNU one.
strerror_l() is also in POSIX, but only since the 2008 standard, and
thus is not widespread.
The solution is using avlibc (libavutil, by its official name), which
handles the unportable details for us, mostly. We avoid some pain.
This seems safer: otherwise, opening the AO could randomly fail if the
audio formats happens to be not float.
Unfortunately, this only works if the user does not select a device.
Since ALSA devices are arbitrary strings, including plugins with complex
parameters, it's not trivial or maybe even impossible to edit the string
in a way the "plug" plugin is added.
With --audio-device, it would be safe for users to select either
"default" or one of the "plughw" devices. Everything else seems
questionable.
Use the ALSA channel map API for querying and selecting supported
channel maps.
Since we (probably?) want to be compatible with ALSA versions before the
change, we still try to select the device name by channel map, and open
that device. There's no way to negotiate a channel map before opening,
so we're stuck with this approach. Fortunately, it seems these devices
allow selecting and setting any other supported channel layout, so maybe
this is not an issue at all. In particular, this avoids selecting the
default (dmix) device, which can only do stereo.
Most code is based on Martin Herkt <lachs0r@srsfckn.biz>'s alsa_ng
branch, with heavy modifications.
Don't crash if no fallback channel layout could be found (caller can't
handle NULL return from select_chmap()). Apparently this could never
actually happen, though.
Don't treat snd_pcm_hw_params_set_periods_near() failure as fatal error.
Same deal as with snd_pcm_hw_params_set_buffer_time_near().
Actually free channel maps returned by snd_pcm_get_chmap().
Adjust some messages.
No functional changes.
ALSA_PCM_NEW_HW_PARAMS_API was a pre-ALSA 1.0.0 thing and does nothing
with modern ALSA. It stopped being necessary about 10 years ago.
3 functions are moved to avoid forward references.
If ALSA reports a channel map, and it looks like it makes sense (i.e.
could be converted to mpv channel map, and the channel count matches),
then use that instead of the channel map we are assuming.
This is based on code written by lachs0r (alsa_ng branch).
The caller set up the "start" pointer array using the number of planes,
the encode() function used the number of channels. This copied
uninitialized values for packed formats, which makes Coverity warn.
From what I understand the division is to align the dimension of the
value from seconds to milliseconds. Hard to tell whether the "rounding"
was intentional or not; I'm tipping on "not".
Found by Coverity.
When the audio thread fails to properly init, it signals failure
to the main thread, AND THEN starts to clean up. For this to work,
ao_init callback must not return until the thread's cleanup is finished.
This is correctly handled in the ao_uninit callback by waiting for
the thread to exit, so just call that to clean up the main thread.
I have no idea why I didn't do this in the first place.
dsound was set as default, because there were some hard to fix problems
with wasapi. These problems were probably fixed now, so let's try with
wasapi as default again.
Even with change notifications, there are still (rare) cases when the
feed thread gets AUDCLIENT_DEVICE_INVALIDATED. So handle failures in
thread_feed by requesting ao_reload.
on changes to PKEY_AudioEngine_DeviceFormat, device status, and default device.
call ao_reload directly in the change_notify "methods".
this requires keeping a device enumerator around for the duration of
execution, rather than just for initially querying devices
Implement skeleton IMMNotificationClient to watch for changes in the
sound device. This will make recovery possible from changes shared
mode sample rate, bit depth, "enhancements"/effects and even graceful
device removal.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/dd371417%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
Signed-off-by: Kevin Mitchell <kevmitch@gmail.com>