Instead, add a hacky OPT_ASPECT option type, which only exists to accept
a "no" parameter, which in combination with the "--no-..." handling code
makes --no-video-aspect work again.
We can also remove the code in m_config.c, which only existed to make
"--no-aspect" (a deprecated alias) to work.
This is a really old weird MPlayer feature. While the MPlayer requires
you to use the sub-option syntax in these cases, mpv "flattens" them to
normal options. The still-supported alternate sub-option syntax remains
a weird artifact that hopefully nobody uses.
For example you can do "-sub-text font=Foo:color=0.5" instead of using
"--sub-text-font=Foo --sub-text-color=0.5". For --sub-text this is an
accidental feature, but it used to be documented for
--demuxer-rawaudio and some others.
This should just be removed, but for now only print a warning to preempt
complaints from weird users wanting this feature back.
The client API can do this (and there are apparently some libmpv using
projects which rely on this). But it's just unnecessary bloat as it
requires a separate code path from the option parser. It would be better
to remove this code. Formally deprecate it, including API bump and
warning in the API changes file to make it really clear.
OPT_ALIAS redirects the options at a higher level, instead of
introducing "duplicate" options with different name but same backing
storage. This uses the OPT_REPLACED mechanisms - only the deprecation
warning had to be made conditional. Note that e.g. --no-video still
works, because the "--no-..." redirection and OPT_ALIAS are orthogonal.
The deprecated --sub -> --sub-file alias had to be dropped, because it
essentially conflicts with --no-sub. If anyone complains, this could
probably still be undone by letting m_config_find_negation_opt do a
special mapping for --no-sub. (Which would be dumb, but simple and
effective.)
Instead of adding "no-"-prefixed aliases to the internal option list,
which will act like normal options, do it in the parsing stage. This
turns out to be simpler (and cheaper), and avoids adding aliased
options.
More appropriate. Originally it really was for automatically added
options, but now it even needed some stupid comments to indicate that
it was used for simply hiding options.
It's actually redundant with whether m_option_type.free is set. Some
option types were flagged inconsistently. Its only use was for running
an additional sanity check without any real functionality.
We have a warning mechanism for removed and for replaced options, but
none yet for options which have been simply deprecated.
For the following commit.
(Fun fact: just adding the m_option field increases binary size by
14KB.)
Enable m_sub_options_copy() to copy nested sub-options, and also enable
it to create an option struct from defaults. We can get rid of most of
the crap in assign_options() now.
Calling handle_scaler_opt() to get a static allocation for scaler name
is still needed. It's moved to reinit_scaler(), which seems to be a
better place for it. Without it, dangling pointers could be created when
options are changed. (And in fact, this fixes possible dangling pointers
for window.name.) In theory we could create a dynamic copy, but that
seemed even more messy.
Chance of regressions.
They are evil and should be eradicated. Some of these were pretty dumb
anyway.
There are probably some more around in platform specific code or other
code not enabled by default on Linux.
Update msg.c state immediately if a terminal or logging setting is set.
Until now, this was delayed until mp[v]_initialize() was called. When
using the client API, you could easily miss logged error messages, even
when logging was initialized early on by calling
mpv_request_log_messages().
(Properties can't be used for this either, because properties do not
work before mpv_initialize().)
The format doesn't change. Some details are different, though. For
example, it will now accept option values with spaces even if they're
not quoted. (I see no reason why the user should be forced to add
quotes.)
The code is now smaller and should be much easier to extend. It also
can load config from in-memory buffers, which might be helpful in the
future.
read_file() should eventually be replaced with stream_read_complete().
But since the latter function may access options under various
circumstances, and also needs access to the mpv_global struct, there
is a separate implementation for now.
There's actually no reason why we should assert. It's unexpected and
"should" not happen, but actually there are several ways to make it
happen.
Still, add a check m_config_get_co(), to avoid matching pseudo-entries
with no name.
Do this by automatically adding the option, if the aliased option name
also has a "no-..." variant.
Could be easier by manually adding "no-..." variants to the option list,
but this seems better because you can't just forget it.
This is the first of a series of commits that will change the Cocoa way in a
way that is easily embeddable inside parent views. To reach that point common
code must avoid referencing the parent NSWindow since that could be the host
application's window.
It's just confusing; users are encouraged to edit input.conf instead
(changing the argument to the "add" command).
Update input.conf to keep the old behavior.
The memcpy() is actually not enough: the types are incompatible, and no
memcpy, union, etc. will change that. (Although no real compiler will
ever break this.) Attempt to make this theoretically correct by actually
using a struct pointer. It's not the same struct type, but supposedly
it's ok, because all struct pointers always have the same size and
representation in standard C.
Add the --cache-secs option, which literally overrides the value of
--demuxer-readahead-secs if the stream cache is active. The default
value is very high (10 seconds), which means it can act as network
cache.
Remove the old behavior of trying to pause once the byte cache runs
low. Instead, do something similar wit the demuxer cache. The nice
thing is that we can guess how many seconds of video it has cached,
and we can make better decisions. But for now, apply a relatively
naive heuristic: if the cache is below 0.5 secs, pause, and wait
until at least 2 secs are available.
Note that due to timestamp reordering, the estimated cached duration
of video might be inaccurate, depending on the file format. If the
file format has DTS, it's easy, otherwise the duration will seemingly
jump back and forth.
The "classic" sub-option stuff is not really needed anymore. The only
remaining use can be emulated in a simpler way. But note that this
breaks the --screenshot option (instead of the "flat" options like
--screenshot-...). This was undocumented and discouraged, so it
shouldn't affect anyone.
This means use of the min/max fields can be dropped for the flag option
type, which makes some things slightly easier. I'm also not sure if the
client API handled the case of flag not being 0 or 1 correctly, and this
change gets rid of this concern.
Also clarify the semantics.
It seems --idx didn't do anything. Possibly it used to change how the
now removed legacy demuxers like demux_avi used to behave. Or maybe
it was accidental.
--forceidx basically becomes --index=force. It's possible that new
index modes will be added in the future, so I'm keeping it
extensible, instead of e.g. creating --force-index.
While I'm not very fond of "const", it's important for declarations
(it decides whether a symbol is emitted in a read-only or read/write
section). Fix all these cases, so we have writeable global data only
when we really need.
Some options change from percentages to number of kilobytes; there are
no cache options using percentages anymore.
Raise the default values. The cache is now 25000 kilobytes, although if
your connection is slow enough, the maximum is probably never reached.
(Although all the memory will still be used as seekback-cache.)
Remove the separate --audio-file-cache option, and use the cache default
settings for it.
The code paths for setting options by string and by direct "raw" value
were too different, which resulted in some weird code. Make the code
paths closer to each other.
Also, use this to remove the weirdness in the mpv_set_option()
implementation.
Basically, extract the option table from DOCS/man/en/changes.rst, and
search the table if an option wasn't found. If there's an entry about
it, print it. Hopefully this behavior is slightly more userfriendly.
This is strictly bound to option names. It doesn't work for option
values, nor does it attempt to emulate the old option.
This should fix some issues, such as not being able to set the
"no-video" option with MPV_FORMAT_FLAG.
Note that this changes semantics a bit. Now setting an option strictly
overwrite it, even if the corresponding command line option does not.
For example, if we change --sub to append by default, then setting the
"sub" option via the client API would still never append. (Oddly, this
also applies to --vf-add, which will overwrite the old value when using
the client API.)
I'm doing this because there's no proper separation between the command
line parser and setting an option using the MPV_FORMAT_STRING format.
Maybe the solution to this mess would be adding format aware code (i.e.
m_option_set_node) to every option type, and falling back to strings
only if needed - but this would mean that you couldn't set e.g. an
integer option using MPV_FORMAT_STRING, which doesn't seem to be ideal
either.
In conclusion, the current approach seems to be most robust, but I'm
open to suggestions should someone find that these semantics are a
problem.
Often, user configs set options that are not suitable for encoding.
Usually, playback and encoding are pretty different things, so it makes
sense to keep them strictly separate. There are several possible
solutions. The approach taken by this commit is to basically ignore the
default config settings, and switch to an [encoding] config profile
section instead. This also makes it impossible to have --o in a config
file, because --o enables encode mode.
See github issue #727 for discussion.
Commit 2c2c1203 sorted the output of --list-options, but the same code
ias also used for listing sub-options, such as --vo=scale:help. For sub-
options, the order actually matters.
Until now, --list-options printed options in random order. There
literally wasn't any logic in its order, they just appeared as they were
declared. So just sort them.
Note that we can't sort them in advance, because for certain things
internal to m_config, the order actually matters.
Also we're using strcasecmp(), which is bad (locale dependent), but this
is output intended for human consumption, so it's not a problem.
This is only half-implemented: actually the option will first be
converted from mpv_node to its native type, then it's converted to a
string, and then back to its native type. This is because the option
API was made for strings and not anything else.
Other than being grossly inelegant, the only downside is probably with
string lists and key/value lists, which don't escape strings containing
syntax elements correctly.
Always pass around mp_log contexts in the option parser code. This of
course affects all users of this API as well.
In stream.c, pass a mp_null_log, because we can't do it properly yet.
This will be fixed later.
Since m_option.h and options.h are extremely often included, a lot of
files have to be changed.
Moving path.c/h to options/ is a bit questionable, but since this is
mainly about access to config files (which are also handled in
options/), it's probably ok.