bstr.c doesn't really deserve its own directory, and compat had just
a few files, most of which may as well be in osdep. There isn't really
any justification for these extra directories, so get rid of them.
The compat/libav.h was empty - just delete it. We changed our approach
to API compatibility, and will likely not need it anymore.
If duration<0, it means the duration is unknown. Disable framedropping,
because end_time makes no sense in this case.
Also, strictly never drop the first frame.
This fixes weird behavior with the cover-art case (for the 100th time).
This could be used by VO implementations to report a recent vsync time
to the generic VO code, which in turn will use it and the display FPS
to estimate at which point in time the next vsync will happen.
For debugging (drawing fun plots with TOOLS/stats-conv.py).
Also move last_flip under the correct comment: it's not protected by the
lock, and can be accessed by the VO thread only.
Nvidia's vdpau implementation is pretty good, but other factors make it
much less attractive for use as default VO. For example, Mesa often has
low quality drivers (mess up things with the presentation queue and the
vdpau API time source). Intel ruins things completely, and we're likely
to run on emulation via OpenGL. Compositing has unknown effects (to me
anyway), but appears to reduce the vdpau advantages.
One important reason to prefer vo_vdpau was that it could do proper
framedropping. Framedropping got fixed for the other VOs, so this reason
is going away.
This works only on X11, and only if the refresh rate changes due to the
window being moved to another screen (detected by us). It doesn't
include system screen reconfiguration yet.
This calls VOCTRL_GET_DISPLAY_FPS on every frame, which makes me uneasy.
It means extra thread communication with the win32 and Cocoa backends.
On the other hand, a frame doesn't happen _that_ often, and the
communication should still be pretty cheap and fast, so it's probably
ok.
Also needs some extra fuzz for vo_vdpau.c, because that does everything
differently.
Since the display FPS is currently detected on X11 only (and even there
it's known to be wrong on certain setups), it seems like a good idea to
make this user-configurable.
This mostly uses the same idea as with vo_vdpau.c, but much simplified.
On X11, it tries to get the display framerate with XF86VM, and limits
the frequency of new video frames against it. Note that this is an old
extension, and is confirmed not to work correctly with multi-monitor
setups. But we're using it because it was already around (it is also
used by vo_vdpau).
This attempts to predict the next vsync event by using the time of the
last frame and the display FPS. Even if that goes completely wrong,
the results are still relatively good.
On other systems, or if the X11 code doesn't return a display FPS, a
framerate of 1000 is assumed. This is infinite for all practical
purposes, and means that only frames which are definitely too late are
dropped. This probably has worse results, but is still useful.
"--framedrop=yes" is basically replaced with "--framedrop=decoder". The
old framedropping mode is kept around, and should perhaps be improved.
Dropping on the decoder level is still useful if decoding itself is too
slow.
The previous commit broke these things, and fixing them is separate in
this commit in order to reduce the volume of changes.
Move the image queue from the VO to the playback core. The image queue
is a remnant of the old way how vdpau was implemented, and increasingly
became more and more an artifact. In the end, it did only one thing:
computing the duration of the current frame. This was done by taking the
PTS difference between the current and the future frame. We keep this,
but by moving it out of the VO, we don't have to special-case format
changes anymore. This simplifies the code a lot.
Since we need the queue to compute the duration only, a queue size
larger than 2 makes no sense, and we can hardcode that.
Also change how the last frame is handled. The last frame is a bit of a
problem, because video timing works by showing one frame after another,
which makes it a special case. Make the VO provide a function to notify
us when the frame is done, instead. The frame duration is used for that.
This is not perfect. For example, changing playback speed during the
last frame doesn't update the end time. Pausing will not stop the clock
that times the last frame. But I don't think this matters for such a
corner case.
The VO is run inside its own thread. It also does most of video timing.
The playloop hands the image data and a realtime timestamp to the VO,
and the VO does the rest.
In particular, this allows the playloop to do other things, instead of
blocking for video redraw. But if anything accesses the VO during video
timing, it will block.
This also fixes vo_sdl.c event handling; but that is only a side-effect,
since reimplementing the broken way would require more effort.
Also drop --softsleep. In theory, this option helps if the kernel's
sleeping mechanism is too inaccurate for video timing. In practice, I
haven't ever encountered a situation where it helps, and it just burns
CPU cycles. On the other hand it's probably actively harmful, because
it prevents the libavcodec decoder threads from doing real work.
Side note:
Originally, I intended that multiple frames can be queued to the VO. But
this is not done, due to problems with OSD and other certain features.
OSD in particular is simply designed in a way that it can be neither
timed nor copied, so you do have to render it into the video frame
before you can draw the next frame. (Subtitles have no such restriction.
sd_lavc was even updated to fix this.) It seems the right solution to
queuing multiple VO frames is rendering on VO-backed framebuffers, like
vo_vdpau.c does. This requires VO driver support, and is out of scope
of this commit.
As consequence, the VO has a queue size of 1. The existing video queue
is just needed to compute frame duration, and will be moved out in the
next commit.
With software decoding, images were uploaded to vdpau surfaces as they
were queued to the VO. This makes it slightly more complicated
(especially later on), and has no advantages - so stop doing it.
The only reason why this was done explicitly was due to attempts to keep
the code equivalent (instead of risking performance regressions). The
original code did this naturally for certain reasons, but now that we
can measure that it has no advantages and just requires extra code, we
can just drop it.
Follow up on commit 760548da. Mouse handling is a bit confusing, because
there are at least 3 coordinate systems associated with it, and it
should be cleaned up. But that is hard, so just apply a hack which gets
the currently-annoying issue (VO backends needing access to the VO) out
of the way.
VO backends which are or will run in their own thread have a problem
with vo_mouse_movement() calling vo_control(). Restrict this to VOs
which actually need this.
Until now, failure to allocate image data resulted in a crash (i.e.
abort() was called). This was intentional, because it's pretty silly to
degrade playback, and in almost all situations, the OOM will probably
kill you anyway. (And then there's the standard Linux overcommit
behavior, which also will kill you at some point.)
But I changed my opinion, so here we go. This change does not affect
_all_ memory allocations, just image data. Now in most failure cases,
the output will just be skipped. For video filters, this coincidentally
means that failure is treated as EOF (because the playback core assumes
EOF if nothing comes out of the video filter chain). In other
situations, output might be in some way degraded, like skipping frames,
not scaling OSD, and such.
Functions whose return values changed semantics:
mp_image_alloc
mp_image_new_copy
mp_image_new_ref
mp_image_make_writeable
mp_image_setrefp
mp_image_to_av_frame_and_unref
mp_image_from_av_frame
mp_image_new_external_ref
mp_image_new_custom_ref
mp_image_pool_make_writeable
mp_image_pool_get
mp_image_pool_new_copy
mp_vdpau_mixed_frame_create
vf_alloc_out_image
vf_make_out_image_writeable
glGetWindowScreenshot
Let the VOs draw the OSD on their own, instead of making OSD drawing a
separate VO driver call. Further, let it be the VOs responsibility to
request subtitles with the correct PTS. We also basically allow the VO
to request OSD/subtitles at any time.
OSX changes untested.
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.
Playing a video and then an audio file with cover art kept displaying
the last frame of the video. This was because the hasframe flag was set,
perhaps due to redrawing the last video frame before the cover art image
is decoded.
Until recently, the VO was an unavoidable part of the seeking code path.
This was because vdpau deinterlacing could double the framerate, and hr-
seek and framestepping etc. all had to "see" the additional frames. But
we've removed the frame doubling from the vdpau VO and moved it into a
video filter (vf_vdpaupp), and there's no reason left why the VO should
participate in seeking.
Instead of queuing frames to the VO during seek and skipping them
afterwards, drop the frames early.
This actually might make seeking with vo_vdpau and software decoding
faster, although I haven't measured it.
Currently, vo_reconfig() calculates the requested window size and sets
the vo->dwidth/dheight fields _if_ VOCTRL_UPDATE_SCREENINFO is
implemented by the VO or the windowing backend. The window size can be
different from the display size if e.g. the --geometry option is used.
It will also set the vo->dx/dy fields and read vo->xinerama_x/y.
It turned out that this is very backwards and actually requires the
windowing backends to workaround these things. There's also
MPOpts.screenwidth/screenheight, which used to map to actual options,
but is now used only to communicate the screen size to the vo.c code
calculating the window size and position.
Change this by making the window geometry calculations available as
separate functions. This commit doesn't change any VO code yet, and just
emulates the old way using the new functions. VO code will remove its
usage of VOCTRL_UPDATE_SCREENINFO and use the new functions directly.
Commit 433161 actually broke vo_opengl (and maybe others), because
config_ok is not necessarily set correctly yet _during_ reconfig. So a
vo_get_src_dst_rects() call during reconfig did nothing.
When the VO was not initialized with vo_reconfig(), or if the last
vo_reconfig() failed, changing panscan would cause a crash due to
vo_get_src_dst_rects() dereferencing vo->params (NULL if not
configured).
Just do nothing if that happens, as there is no video that could be
displayed anyway.
Doesn't really seem to be much of use. Get rid of the remaining uses of
it.
Concerning vo_opengl_old, it seems uninitGl() works fine even if called
before initialization.
Change how the video decoding loop works. The structure should now be a
bit easier to follow. The interactions on format changes are (probably)
simpler. This also aligns the decoding loop with future planned changes,
such as moving various things to separate threads.
Remove the special casing of vo_vdpau vs. other VOs. Replace the
complicated interaction between vo.c and vo_vdpau.c with a simple queue
in vo.c. VOs other than vdpau are handled by setting the length of the
queue to 1 (this is essentially what waiting_mpi was).
Note that vo_vdpau.c seems to have buffered only 1 or 2 frames into the
future, while the remaining 3 or 4 frames were past frames. So the new
code buffers 2 frames (vo_vdpau.c requests this queue length by setting
vo->max_video_queue to 2). It should probably be investigated why
vo_vdpau.c kept so many past frames.
The field vo->redrawing is removed. I'm not really sure what that would
be needed for; it seems pointless.
Future directions include making the interface between playloop and VO
simpler, as well as making rendering a frame a single operation, as
opposed to the weird 3-step sequence of rendering, drawing OSD, and
flipping.
Add the event FD after preinit, remove it before destroy. There's no
need to do it on vo_config, and there's no need to remove the event
FD when vo_config fails.
Unfortunately, if a VO can't display something as intended, we can just
complain to the user, and leave it at it. But it's still better than
silently displaying things differently with different VOs.
For now, this is used for rotation only. Other things that we should
check includes colorspace and colorlevels stuff.
For rotation, we assume that the source image will be rotated within the
VO, so the aspect/panscan code needs to calculate its param using
rotated coordinates. VOs which support rotation natively can use this.
Reduce most dependencies on struct mp_csp_details, which was a bad first
attempt at dealing with colorspace stuff. Instead, consistently use
mp_image_params.
Code which retrieves colorspace matrices from csputils.c still uses this
type, though.
The main difference between the old and new callbacks is that the old
callbacks required passing the window size, which is and always was very
inconvenient and confusing, since the window size is already in
vo->dwidth and vo->dheight.
Rename vo_get_src_dst_rects() to mp_get_src_dst_rects() and make it
independent from the VO (it takes a comical amount of parameters now to
pass all required state). Add a convenience wrapper with the name
vo_get_src_dst_rects() to vo.c. Replace all aspdat and vo usages with
immediate parameters.
Functionally, nothing should change, except that the window size is
clamped to a minimum of size 1 much earlier, and some log messages
change the prefix (don't bother with vo.vo_log stuff).
The plan is to make all the code in aspect.c independent from vo.c,
which should make the code easier to understand, will allow removal of
vo->aspdat, and reduces the amount of code that accesses weird mutable
struct vo fields.
For some reason, this made all VO backends both set the screen
resolution in opts->screenwidth/height, and call
aspect_save_screenres(). Remove the latter. Move the code to calculate
the PAR-corrected window size from aspect.c to vo.c, and make it so that
the monitor PAR is recalculated when it makes sense.
Note that we don't try to be clever about detecting the files as
subtitles: we just check the file extension. We could go all the way and
check the files by opening them with a demuxer, but that would probably
do more bad than good.