Not needed anymore. I'm not opposed to having asm, but inline asm is too
much of a pain, and it was planned long ago to eventually get rid fo all
inline asm uses.
For the note, the inline asm use that was removed with the previous
commits was almost worthless. It was confined to video filters, and most
video filtering is now done with libavfilter. Some mpv filters (like
vf_pullup) actually redirect to libavfilter if possible.
If asm is added in the future, it should happen in the form of external
files.
I hate tabs.
This replaces all tabs in all source files with spaces. The only
exception is old-makefile. The replacement was made by running the
GNU coreutils "expand" command on every file. Since the replacement was
automatic, it's possible that some formatting was destroyed (but perhaps
only if it was assuming that the end of a tab does not correspond to
aligning the end to multiples of 8 spaces).
Current code stolen from waf's extras, only supported 'pe' and 'elf'. OS X
uses the 'Mach-O' binary format (which waf calls 'mac-o'... go figure).
Add support for generating the global symbols file with nm and using it from
clang.
Cygwin's libc (newlib) doesn't obey a lot of unix feature test macros,
including _GNU_SOURCE; as a result, a lot of functions and defines get
masked out -- important defines such as M_PI and strcasecmp. Work around
it by undefining __STRICT_ANSI__ on cygwin systems.
This will still cause compilation issues on any non-cygwin system that
uses newlib, but hopefully nobody does that, or if they do, they will
find this commit message and know to add -U__STRICT_ANSI__ to their
CFLAGS. Hopefully.
This fixes a weird bug with aspect ratio handling. It has to do with
float handling: with -std=gnu99, gcc implicitly enables broken non-
standard semantics giving float variables excess precision. This can for
example make this fail in theory: "float a = 0.1; assert(a == a);"
While standard C allows excess precision _within_ expressions, it
requires truncation when storing float values in variables of types
"float" or "double". The "gnu99" mode breaks this. It can be unbroken by
using "c99", or by specifying -fexcess-precision=standard. The former
seems less likely to break compilers other than modern gcc. Note that
-ffloat-store would also fix this, but also makes float expressions less
efficient and less precise for no reason.
The code that mistakenly fails because of this is dec_video.c line 393.
It caused the container aspect to be ignored in some or all situations,
depending how the compiler optimizes. For example, on gcc-4.6 with -Os,
the aspect is always ignored.
In future, we should probably just get rid of storing aspects as floats.
Some mpv builds identify with e.g. "mpv b'0.3.3' ". The version looks
like str() was called on a Python byte string. I couldn't reproduce it
on my machine (I tried with both Python 2 and 3), so I'm not exactly
sure what's going on here, but I'm hoping this commit does fix it.
This is necessary to start mpv without forcing a console window,
but also breaks console usability. A workaround is to call mpv
from a wrapper process that uses the console subsystem and helps
redirecting the standard streams and WriteConsole output to where
they belong.
Hide --enable variants from [autodetect]'ed options and --enable/--disable
variants for [enable]'d/[disable]'d options. The hidden options are still
usable, just hidden for more readability.
If sys/soundcard.h is actually linux/soundcard.h then it supports only OSSv3
API. This may happen when OSSLIBDIR == /usr while forgetting to replace
sys/soundcard.h from glibc.
However, after fa620ff waf prefers native implementation which is inferior
on Linux. To fix try making waf prefer oss-audio-4front. It's quite unusual
to have 4Front OSS installed where native implementation is superior, anyway.
Signed-off-by: bugmen0t <@>
Make the false positives path also undef the 4Front define.
Signed-off-by: Stefano Pigozzi <stefano.pigozzi@gmail.com>
Fixes#396
This prevents waf from running test programs after compilation. A better
approach would be to only remove this option if the check actually errors,
but we are using this only for Lua anyway.
The OSS checks were a big mess and quite buggy. This reimplementes them using
a declarative approach and clearly distinguishing between the various OSS
implementations. The code should now almost be auto-documenting.
We currently support the following implementations of OSS:
* platform-specific (with `sys/soundcard.h`)
* SunAudio (default on NetBSD and useable on OpenBSD even if we have sndio
support there).
* 4Front (default on FreeBSD)
Since now each OSS check also checks for the appropriate soundcard header,
remove the old soundcard check.
Many thanks to @bugmen0t for in depth info about all the BSDs.
Check #380 and #359 for more info on this commit.
Original commit was implemented differently by @bugmen0t. The problem here was
that the waf API was called directly, instead of using our own check_cc (which
defaults, among other things, to non mandatory checks).
- without Utils.* always returns empty string
- subprocess doesn't need extra quoting for sh -c
- "source" is a bash'ism, not in POSIX sh
- most shell commands embed newline at the end
waf apparently only appends a pkgconfig flag if it doesn't already exist in
the lib storage. Since our configure often checks for multiple libraries in
one call we want to keep the flags as is. This is especially important to
always keep stuff like -lm in the right place.
In Python sets are unordered, so iterating them after converting to a list
always leads to different results. The code iterated on them to collect all
the flags to pass to the compiler, and since the order of the flags changed,
waf would rebuild all of the C files. Seems like in Python 2 this worked as
expected by pure chance.
This commit stores the sets as lists, and converts them to sets when the set
operations are needed.
Fixes#363
Simply override the cprogram Task's __str__ method with our own implementation.
This is way easier on the eyes when compiling mpv during development, since
warnings are not pushed outside of your average screenful of content.
This commit adds a new build system based on waf. configure and Makefile
are deprecated effective immediately and someday in the future they will be
removed (they are still available by running ./old-configure).
You can find how the choice for waf came to be in `DOCS/waf-buildsystem.rst`.
TL;DR: we couldn't get the same level of abstraction and customization with
other build systems we tried (CMake and autotools).
For guidance on how to build the software now, take a look at README.md
and the cross compilation guide.
CREDITS:
This is a squash of ~250 commits. Some of them are not by me, so here is the
deserved attribution:
- @wm4 contributed some Windows fixes, renamed configure to old-configure
and contributed to the bootstrap script. Also, GNU/Linux testing.
- @lachs0r contributed some Windows fixes and the bootstrap script.
- @Nikoli contributed a lot of testing and discovered many bugs.
- @CrimsonVoid contributed changes to the bootstrap script.