These assumed that the buffer provided with fill_buffer() was at least
sector sized, instead of checking the size parameter.
This is just a cleanup, since every caller made sure to align everything
on sector sizes, if a stream has the sector size set.
Of course all of stream_dvd.c (as well as libdvdread) is completely
insane, but at least this hack for ancient broken compilers on really
obscure platforms should be safe to remove.
Some code in mplayer.c did stuff like accessing (dvd_priv_t *)st->priv.
Do this indirectly by introducing STREAM_CTRL_GET_DVD_INFO. This is
extremely specific to DVD, so it's not worth abstracting this further.
This is a preparation for turning the cache into an actual stream, which
simply wraps the cached stream. There are other streams which are
accessed in the way DVD was, at least TV/radio/DVB. We assume these
can't be used with the cache. The code doesn't look thread-safe or fork
aware.
Now it properly hits the "0 times displayed" case when frames get
skipped; this means the candidate frame for the case the next frame is
"long" is set properly.
show_chapters, show_tracks, and show_playlist are killed and replaced
with the properties chapter-list, track-list, and playlist. The code
and the output of these stays the same, this is just moving a lot of
code around and reducing the number of properties.
The "old" commands will still be supported for a while (to avoid making
everyone angry), so handle them with the legacy layer. Add something to
suppress printing the legacy warnings for these commands.
Slightly better output when printing ${metadata}. Print each metadata
item as "name: value", instead of the raw list. It's still not very
great, though. The old format is still available through ${=metadata}
for things which dare to use the broken slave mode.
Fixes crashes when playing with certain numbers of channels. The core
assumes AOs accept data aligned on channels * samplesize, and ao_jack's
play() function broke that assumption:
mpv: core/mplayer.c:2348: fill_audio_out_buffers: Assertion `played % unitsize == 0' failed.
Fix by aligning the buffer and chunk sizes as needed.
This was overlooked in the previous inplementation. Adding it required some
refactoring of the `handleKeyDown:` method in order to extract common parts
with `handleMediaKey:`.
This adds a the property 'clock', which returns the current
local time as the string hh:mm.
Additionally the keybinding 'shift' + 'o' was added to displaying
the clock as '[hh:mm]' .
This commit addresses some issues with the users had with the previous
implementation in commit c39efb9. Here's the changes:
* Use Quartz Event Taps to remove Media Key events mpv handles from
the global OS X queue. This prevents conflicts with iTunes. I did this on
the main thread since it is mostly idling. It's the playloop thread that
actually does all the work so there is no danger of blocking the event tap
callback.
* Introduce `--no-media-keys` switch so that users can disable all of mpv's
media key handling at runtime (some prefer iTunes for example).
* Use mpv's bindings so that users can customize what the media keys do via
input.conf. Current bindings are:
MK_PLAY cycle pause
MK_PREV playlist_prev
MK_NEXT playlist_next
An additional benefit of this implementation is that it is completly handled
by the `macosx_events` file instead of `macosx_application` making the
project organization more straightforward.
This branch heavily refactors the subtitle code (both loading and
rendering), and adds support for a few new formats through FFmpeg.
We don't remove any of the old code yet. There are still some subtleties
related to subreader.c to be resolved: code page detection & conversion,
timing post-processing, UTF-16 subtitle support, support for the -subfps
option. Also, SRT reading and loading ASS via libass should be turned
into proper demuxers. (SRT is needed because Libav's is gravely broken,
and we want ASS loading via libass to cover full libass format support.
Both should be demuxers which are probed _before_ libavformat, so that
all subtitles can be loaded through the demuxer infrastructure, and
libavformat subtitles don't need to be treated in a special way.)
Until now, this happened only when the -no-ass option was used. This
difference in behavior doesn't make much sense, so change it so that
whether -no-ass is used or not doesn't matter. (-no-ass enables the OSD
subtitle renderer, which has the terminal fallback, while the normal
path is video only.)
the changes in set_osd_subtitle() and reinit_video_chain() are for
resetting the state correctly when switching between video/no-video.
Both converters can output \pos and deal with font sizes, so they assume
a specific script resolution (PlayResX/PlayResY). The implicit
assumption was that a specific resolution was guaranteed. The
MP_ASS_FONT_PLAYRESY constant is connected to this.
Better make it explicit, so that the implicit dependency on
MP_ASS_FONT_PLAYRESY is removed. (Unfortunately, libavcodec sub
converters still don't set PlayResX/PlayResY explicitly, so the value
set by that constant can't be declared as arbitrary yet.)
PlayResY=288 is most likely the SSA natural script resolution (or
something like this?), as well as the libass and VSFilter default.
PlayResX=384 is the fallback value set by libass if PlayResY is set to
288, and PlayResX is unset.
The default style is added by mp_ass_default_track(), but not by
ass_new_track(). Considering this, the previous condition at this point
didn't make much sense anymore: the actual (converted) subtitle format
doesn't matter much for what styling should be applied. What matters is
if the subtitle was originally ASS, or if it was converted to it.
Change the code such that the default style is added if there aren't
any, even after reading sub extradata. (The extradata contains the ASS
header, including the style section.) This might change behavior with
scripts that don't define any styles. The change is either with this
commit or with an earlier commit in this branch, depending on the
situation - there are multiple places where default styles are added
in libass API functions, and it's all a big mess.
Other than with very old or broken files (where different behavior
doesn't matter much), the current code should be pretty safe, though.
Audio and video had their own (very similar) functions to initialize an
AVPacket (ffmpeg's packet struct) from a demux_packet (mplayer's packet
struct). Add a common function for these.
Also use this function for sd_lavc_conv. This is actually a functional
change, as some libavfilter subtitle demuxers add weird out-of-band
stuff as side-data.
Before this, subtitle packets were returned as data ptr/len pairs, and
mplayer.c got the rest (pts and duration) directly from the demuxer
data structures. Then mplayer.c reassembled the packet data structure
again.
Pass packets directly instead. The mplayer.c side stays a bit awkward,
because the (now by default unused) DVD path keeps getting in the way.
In demux.c there's lots of weird stuff (3 functions that read packets,
really?), but we want to keep the code equivalent for now to avoid
hitting weird issues and corner cases.
When e.g. converting SRT to ASS, we certainly don't want them stretched
by video aspect ratio, even if that's necessary for native ASS
subtitles.
Annoying weird details...