The "ontop" and "border" properties already used a common
mp_property_vo_flag() function, and the corresponding VOCTRLs used the
same conventions. "fullscreen" is pretty similar, but was handled
slightly similar. Change how VOCTRL_FULLSCREEN behaves, and use the same
helper function for "fullscreen" as the other flags.
Fixes#1472.
(Maybe these options should have been named --autofit-max and
--autofit-min, but since --autofit-larger already exists, use
--autofit-smaller for symmetry.)
Normally the player doesn't read from unselected streams, so this should
be a no-op. But unfortunately, some broken files can severely confuse
the player, and assign the same demuxer stream to multiple front-end
tracks. Then selecting one of the tracks would deselect the other track,
with the end result that the demuxer stream for the selected track is
deselected. This could happen with mkv files that use the same track
number (which is of course broken). timeline_set_part() sets the tracks
using demuxer_stream_by_demuxer_id(), using the broken non-unique IDs.
The observable effect was that the player never quit, because
demux_read_packet_async() told the caller to wait some longer for new
packets. Fix by returning EOF instead.
Fixes#1481.
This is for the ordered chapters case only. In theory this could have
resulted in initial audio, video or subs missing, although it didn't
happen in practice (because no streams were selected, thus the demuxer
thread didn't actually try to read anything). It's still better to make
this explicit.
Also, timeline_set_part() can be private to loadfile.c.
The last video frame is another case that has a separate code path,
although it's pretty similar to the one in commit 73e5aa87. Fix this
in a different way, which also takes care of the last frame case,
although without context the code becomes slightly more tricky.
As further cleanup, move the decision about framedropping itself to
the same place, so the check in vo.c becomes much simpler. The check
for the vo->driver->encode flag, which is remvoed completely, was
redundant too.
Fixes#1480.
If the program name isn't quoted and the .exe it refers to isn't found,
CreateProcess will add the program arguments to the program name and
continue searching, so for "program arg1 arg2", CreateProcess would try
"program.exe", "program arg1.exe", then "program arg1 arg2.exe". This
behaviour is weird and not really desirable, so prevent it by always
quoting the program name.
When quoting argv[0], escape sequences shouldn't be used. msvcrt, .NET
and CommandLineToArgvW all treat argv[0] literally and end it on the
trailing quote, without processing escape sequences.
The "\\" escape was rendered as "\" on the website. I'm hoping quoting
this in ``...`` will render it correctly.
Also add an example for show_text, which awkwardly does not require
escaping the "\".
If the video format changes (e.g. different frame size), a special code
path is entered to wait until the currently displayed frame is done.
Otherwise, the frame before the change would be destroyed by the
vo_reconfig() call.
This code path didn't respect --untimed; correct this.
Fixes#1475.
__STRICT_ANSI__ disables functions and definitions that aren't in ANSI
C. Unfortunately this includes j1(), which is used by the new
ewa_lanczos code. Cygwin's CFLAGS already unset __STRICT_ANSI__, but it
should be unset for both Cygwin and MinGW.
After finding out more about how video mastering is done in the real
world it dawned upon me why the "hack" we figured out in #534 looks so
much better.
Since mastering studios have historically been using only CRTs, the
practice adopted for backwards compatibility was to simulate CRT
responses even on modern digital monitors, a practice so ubiquitous that
the ITU-R formalized it in R-Rec BT.1886 to be precisely gamma 2.40.
As such, we finally have enough proof to get rid of the option
altogether and just always do that.
The value 1.961 is a rounded version of my experimentally obtained
approximation of the BT.709 curve, which resulted in a value of around
1.9610336. This is the closest average match to the source brightness
while preserving the nonlinear response of the BT.1886 ideal monitor.
For playback in dark environments, it's expected that the gamma shift
should be reproduced by a user controlled setting, up to a maximum of
1.224 (2.4/1.961) for a pitch black environment.
More information:
https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/technotes/tn2257/_index.html
This was forgotten when the option was implemented, and makes this
option work as advertised.
Fixes#1473 (though the default behavior is probably still stupid).
Adds about 7 lines of boilerplate per filter. This could be avoided by
providing a different entrypoint (something like af->filter_inplace),
which would basically mirror the old interface exactly for this kind of
filter. But I feel like it would just be a hack to support all those
old, useless filters better. (The ideal solution would be using a
language that can do closures to provide a compat. wrapper, but
whatever.)
af_bs2b has terribly repetitious code for setting up filter functions
for each format (most of them useless, in addition to bs2b being
useless), so I did something terrible with macros.
af_sinesuppress had commented code for float filtering (maybe it was
broken; it has been commented every since it was added in 2006). Remove
this code.
Just to make sure all filters get the correct format. Together wih the
check in af_add_output_frame(), this asserts that
af->prev->fmt_out == af->fmt_in
This also requires setting the "in" pseudo-filter (s->first) formats
correctly. Before this commit, the fmt_in/fmt_out fields weren't used
for this filter.
Support for taking screenshots when doing hardware decoding needs to be
added later.
This takes the last image queued to the VO, which is logically the image
the player thinks is on screen (so e.g. subtitles will match).
forget_frames() does not clear this, because seeking does not remove the
current image from the screen (until the next one is drawn).
Upon the "DEL" key binding or the "disable-osc" message, the OSC should
stay permanently invisible. This was recently broken (not sure by what),
because other code accidentally reenables it anyway, which resulted in
the OSC appearing again when moving the mouse.
The Qt example already does this. I hoped this was restricted to
QApplication only, but apparently Qt repeated this mistake with
QGuiApplication (QGuiApplication was specifically added for QtQuick at a
much later point, even though QApplication inherits from it).
Commit 5e25a3d2 broke handling of the initial frame (the one decoded
with initial_audio_decode()). It didn't update the pts_offset field,
leading to a shift in timestamps by one audio frame.
Fix by calling the actual decode function in a single place. This
requires slightly more changes than what would be necessary to fix the
bug, but it also somewhat simplifies the data flow.
The percent-pos property normally goes by time, except for file formats
like .ts or .ogg, where you can't trust the timestamps and duration info
to compute the position in the overall files. These use the byte
position and size instead.
When the file position was unavailable (e.g. due to an ongoing seek),
the percent-pos was unknown. Change it to use the time position instead.
In most cases, it's actually accurate enough, and the temporary
unavailability of the property can be annoying, e.g. on the terminal
status line.
The goal is switching the whole audio chain to using refcounted frames.
This brings the architecture closer to FFmpeg, enables better
integration with libavfilter, will reduce useless copying somewhat, and
will probably allow better timestamp tracking.
For now, every filter goes through a semi-awful wrapper in
af_do_filter(), though. This will be fixed step by step, and the wrapper
should eventually be removed. Another thing that will have to be done is
improving the timestamp handling and avoiding extra copies for the AO.
Some of the new code is rather similar to the video filter code (the
core filter code basically just has types replaced). Such code
duplication is normally very unwanted, but in this case there's probably
no other choice. On the other hand, this code is pretty simple (even if
somewhat tricky). Maybe there will be unified filter code in the future,
but this is still far away.
The purpose of this function was to filter only as much audio input as
needed to produce a certain amount of audio output. This could (in
theory) avoid excessive buffering when e.g. changing playback speed with
resampling.
Use of this was already removed in commit 5fd8a1e0. No problems were
experienced, so let's assume this feature is practically worthless.
(Though it's possible that it was quite useful over a decade ago, or in
some cornercases with evil files.)
Having any of these set to 0 makes no sense.
I think some code might still be using 0/0 aspect ratio to signal unset
aspect ratio, but I didn't find it. If there is still code like this, it
should be fixed instead.
Fixes#1467.