in very rare circumstances, doing a relative seek like +1s will end up
doing an absolute seek to 00:01. this guards against that possibility.
so far i've only ever seen this issue when using --ad=lavc:ac3_at and
doing several relative seeks in quick succession. this is likely either
a bug in the audiotoolbox decoder in ffmpeg, or simply due to inherent
latency in that hardware decoder which causes brief periods of time
where the current audio pts is unknown.
i've seen several mpegts samples where pts jumps backwards and repeats
itself. this usually happens on live tv streams from cable providers,
particularly when the stream switches from one advertisement to another.
when there is a huge delay between audio/video sync, it can take a
really long time to converge back. this speeds up the resync time by
increasing the max_change allowed per iteration.
Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>
Thread-local storage in GCC is platform-specific, and some platforms that
are otherwise perfectly capable of running mpv may lack TLS support in GCC.
This change adds a test for GCC variant of TLS and relies on its result
instead of assumption.
Provided that LLVM's `__thread` support is similar to GCC, the test is
called "GCC/LLVM TLS".
Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>
At this point, all other hwaccels provide -copy modes, and vdpau is the
exception with not having one. Although there is vf_vdpaurb, it's less
convenient in certain situations, and exposes some issues with the
filter chain code as well.
FFmpeg recently got "support" for mov edit lists. This is a terrible
hack that will fail completely at least with some decoders (in
particular wrappers for hardware decoding might be affected). As such it
makes no point to pretend they are supported, even if we assume that the
"intended" functionality works, that there are no implementation bugs
(good luck with all that messy code added to the already huge mov
demuxer), and that it covers enough of the mov edit list feature to be
of value.
So log an error if the FFmpeg code for mov edit lists appears to be
active - AV_PKT_FLAG_DISCARD is used only for "clipping" edit list
segments on non-key frame boundaries.
In the first place, FFmpeg committed this only because Google wanted it
in, and patch review did not even pick up obvious issues. (Just look how
there was no lavc version bump when AV_PKT_FLAG_DISCARD was added.)
We still pass the new packet flag to the decoders (av_common.c change),
which means we "support" FFmpeg's edit list code now. (Until it breaks
due to FFmpeg not caring about all the details.)
Had only tested with luajit which supports the \xHH syntax added
in Lua 5.2.
The arrow is troublesome to use since the ideal way to use it, as
the OSD code uses it, needs \alpha&H00<arrow>\r to work, which
does not in OSC's way of showing messages.
Both AVFrame.pts and AVFrame.pkt_pts have existed for a long time. Until
now, decoders always returned the pts via the pkt_pts field, while the
pts field was used for encoding and libavfilter only. Recently, pkt_pts
was deprecated, and pts was switched to always carry the pts.
This means we have to be careful not to accidentally use the wrong
field, depending on the libavcodec version. We have to explicitly check
the version numbers. Of course the version numbers are completely
idiotic, because idiotically the pkg-config and library names are the
same for FFmpeg and Libav, so we have to deal with this explicitly as
well.
Change a few other defaults accordingly:
- seekbarstyle=bar looks better with bottombar.
- Bigger scalewindowed and scalefullscreen make bottom/topbar more readable.
POSIX leaves poll() behavior on directories unspecified. While on
Linux, it seems to behave the same way as regular files (always
return immediately), this is not guaranteed. At least with OSX
10.12, it seems to wait, which essentially means that opening
directories will "hang".
Fixes#3530 and #3649.
Keyboard input in the console still isn't quite as flexible as it is in
the video window. Ctrl+<letter> and Ctrl+LEFT/RIGHT work, but
Ctrl+Alt+<letter> and Ctrl+<number> do not. Also, in the new Windows 10
console, a bunch of Ctrl keystrokes including Ctrl+UP/DOWN are handled
by the console window and not passed to the application.
Unlike in w32_common.c, we can't really translate keyboaard input
ourselves because the keyboard layout of the console window (in
conhost.exe) doesn't necessarily match the keyboard layout of mpv's
console input thread, however, using ToUnicode as a fallback when the
console doesn't return a unicode value could be a possible future
improvement.
Fixes#3625
The original version of this code in getch2-win.c fetched 128 console
events at once. This was probably to maximize the chance of getting a
key event if there were other events in the buffer, because it returned
the value of the first key event it found and ignored all others. Since
that code was written, it has been modified to receive console input in
an event-based way using an input thread, so it is probably not
necessary to fetch so many events at once any more. Also, I'm not sure
what it would have done if there were more than 128 events in the
console input buffer. It's possible that fetching multiple events at a
time also had performance advantages, but I can't find any other
programs that do this. Even libuv just fetches one console event at a
time.
Change read_input() to fetch only one event at a time and to consume all
available events before returning to WaitForMultipleObjects. Also remove
some outdated comments and pass the console handle through to the input
thread instead of calling GetStdHandle multiple times (I think this is
theoretically more correct because it is possible for the handles
returned by GetStdHandle to be changed by other threads.)
If the "default" device refuses to be opened as spdif device (i.e. it
errors due to the AES0 etc. parameters), we were falling back to the
iec958 device. This is needed on some systems for smooth operation with
PCM vs. spdif.
Now change it to try "hdmi" before "iec958", which supposedly helps in
other situations.
Better suggestions welcome. Apparently kodi does this too, although I
didn't check directly.
- Change connector selection to accept human readable names (such as
eDP-1, HDMI-A-2) rather than arbitrary numbers.
- Change GPU selection to accept GPU number rather than device paths.
- Merge connector and GPU selection into one --drm-connector.
- Add support for --drm-connector=help.
- Add support for --drm-* in EGL backend.
- Refactor KMS; reduce state sharing across drm_common.
The glFlush() call was made optional recently
since it's not needed in most cases. On OSX though
this is needed since we removed kCGLPFADoubleBuffer
from the context creation, so the glFlush() call
was added to the cocoa backend only.
The CGLFlushDrawable() call can be safely removed
since it only does something when a double
buffered context is used. Also fixes a small typo.
Fixes#3627.
In "dumb mode" (where most features are disabled and which only performs
some basic rendering) we explicitly copy a set of whitelisted options,
and leave all the other options at their default values. Add the new
--opengl-early-flush option to this whitelist. Also remove an option
field accidentally added in the commit adding --opengl-early-flush.
Don't require special property code for handling updates, and simply use
the UPDATE_AUDIO flag instead. Also make runtime changes to
--audio-client-name take effect.
Now a reload requested by an AO behaves in exactly the same way as
changing an AO-related options (like --audio-channels or
--audio-exclusive). This is good for testing and uniform behavior. (You
could go as far as saying it's a necessity, because the spotty and
obscure AO reload behavior is hard to reproduce and thus hard to test at
all.)
This affects changing audio configuration options. Explicitly flush and
uninitialize the audio output first before doing the rest. This should
ensure all state attached to the audio output is discarded and not used
during the reconfiguration.
Also add a comment to the reinit_audio_filters() call. It doesn't
necessarily restore the audio chain fully, but makes sure a seek is
issued if the amnount of buffered audio discarded was huge enough to
cause "problems".
It seems this can cause issues with certain platforms, so better to
disable it by default. The original reason for this isn't overly
justified, and display-sync mode should get rid of the need for it
anyway.
The new option is meant for testing, and will probably be removed if
nobody comes up and reports that enabling the option actually improves
anything.