The write functionality is almost unused (only encoding 2-pass mode uses
it to write the log file). Moreover, it almost makes no sense to use
this in a not local scenario. This change is just to prevent people from
duplicating the short write logic across all streams that happen to
support writing. Mostly untested; local log file writing still works.
The "program" property could switch between TS programs. It was rather
complex and rather obscure (even if you deal with TS captures, you
usually don't need it). If anyone actually needs it (did anyone ever
attempt to even use it?), it should be rewritten. The demuxer should
export a program list, and the frontend should handle the "cycling"
logic.
Linux analog TV support (via tv://) was excessively complex, and
whenever I attempted to use it (cameras or loopback devices), it didn't
work well, or would have required some major work to update it. It's
very much stuck in the analog past (my favorite are the frequency tables
in frequencies.c for analog TV channels which don't exist anymore).
Especially cameras and such work fine with libavdevice and better than
tv://, for example:
mpv av://v4l2:/dev/video0
(adding --profile=low-latency --untimed even makes it mostly realtime)
Adding a new input layer that targets such "modern" uses would be
acceptable, if anyone is interested in it. The old TV code is just too
focused on actual analog TV.
DVB is rather obscure, but has an active maintainer, so don't remove it.
However, the demux/stream ctrl layer must go, so remove controls for
channel switching. Most of these could be reimplemented by using the
normal method for option runtime changes.
This was possibly needed by libdvdread, and/or old CD drivers on some
system. It still works with on-filesystem DVD and BD test images, so
this can go.
This removes anything related to DVD/BD/CD that negatively affected the
core code. It includes trying to rewrite timestamps (since DVDs and
Blurays do not set packet stream timestamps to playback time, and can
even have resets mid-stream), export of chapters, stream languages,
export of title/track lists, and all that.
Only basic seeking is supported. It is very much possible that seeking
completely fails on some discs (on some parts of the timeline), because
timestamp rewriting was removed.
Note that I don't give a shit about optical media. If you want to watch
them, rip them. Keeping some bare support for DVD/BD is the most I'm
going to do to appease the type of lazy, obnoxious users who will care.
There are other players which are better at optical discs.
stream_dvd.c contained large amounts of ancient, unmaintained code,
which has been historically moved to libdvdnav. Basically, it's full of
low level parsing of DVD on-disc structures.
Kill it for good. Users can use the remaining dvdnav support (which
basically operates in non-menu mode). Users have reported that
libdvdread sometimes works better, but this is just libdvdnav's problem
and not ours.
Semantics changes are the same as at 548ef078 .
Also, the previous C implementation returnd a string for the `stdout`
value, but stdout of the subprocess command is MPV_FORMAT_BYTE_ARRAY
which js previously didn't support, so support it too (at pushnode)
by returning it as a string - the same as the lua code does.
There were some cases where a js number (double) was blindly casted to
int or uint64, but that can be undefined behavior (out of range to int)
or wrong (negative to uint).
Now the code throws a js error if the value is out of range.
Additionally, commit ec625266 added these checks for the new hooks API,
but incorrectly tested int64 range rather than uint64. Fix this too.
Mesa supports the EGL_CHROMIUM_sync_control extension, and it's
available out of the box with AMD drivers. In practice, this is exactly
the same as GLX_OML_sync_control, but for EGL. The extension
specification is separate from the GLX one though, and buried somewhere
in the Chromium code.
This appears to work, although I don't know if it really works.
In theory, this could be useful for other EGL targets. Support code for
it could have been added to egl_helpers.c to avoid some minor duplicated
glue code if another EGL target were to provide this extension. I didn't
bother with that. ANGLE on Windows can't support it, because the
extension spec. explicitly requires POSIX timers. ANGLE on Linux/OSX is
actively harmful for mpv and hopefully won't ever use it. Wayland uses
EGL, but has its own fancy presentation feedback stuff (and besides, I
don't think basic video player functionality works on Wayland at all).
context_drm_egl maybe? But I think DRM has its own stuff.
So the next commit can make EGL use it. EGL has a quite similar
function, that practically works the same. Although it's relatively
trivial, it's still tricky, and probably shouldn't end up as duplicated
code.
There are no functional changes, except initialization, and how failure
of the glXGetSyncValues call is handled. Also, some comments mention the
EGL extension.
Note that there's no intention for this code to handle anything else
than the very specific OML sync extension (and its EGL equivalent). This
is just too weirdly specific to the weird idiosyncrasies of the
extension, and it makes no sense to extend it to handle anything else.
(Such as Wayland or DXGI presentation feedback.)
In the past, src peak was always equal to or higher than dst peak. But
since `--target-peak` got introduced, this could no longer be the case.
This leads to an incorrect result (scaling for peak mismatch in gamma
light) unless some other option (CMS, --linear-scaling, etc.) forces the
linearization.
Fixes#6533
While they accept the frequency field with MHz for DVB-S,
for DVB-C and DVB-T, it may be in Hz, kHz or MHz.
The official rule is to multiply whatever is in the channels.conf
by 1000 until a value > 1000000 is reached to get correct units for tuning.
* Adds a script to clone and build FFmpeg as well as
to configure and build mpv itself. Currently only used
for macOS and contain hard-coded macOS specific options.
* Still works with the Linux containers.
* Moves our language back to "c" from "generic"
* Defines our Linux distribution as "bionic" to get the latest
Ubuntu base distribution to be the runner for our containers.
* Adds the homebrew add-on for macOS package installation for
dependencies. Installs everything required but FFmpeg, as we want
to have our own FFmpeg snapshots.
We collect a 'vulkan-device' option today but then don't actually
pass it on, so it's useless. Once that's fixed, it can be used
to select a specific vulkan device by name.
Tested with the new nvidia offload feature to select between the
nvidia and intel GPUs.
Somehow I got the idea that compound literals had function-scoped
lifetime. Instead, like all other objects with automatic storage
duration, compound literals are block-scoped, so they become invalid
after exiting the block they were declared in. It seems like a recent
change to GCC actually reuses the memory that the compound literals
used to occupy, which was causing a few bugs.
The pattern of conditionally assigning a pointer to a compound literal
was used in a few places in ra_d3d11 where the Direct3D API expects
either a pointer to an initialised struct or NULL. Change these to
ensure the lifetime of the struct includes the API call.
Should fix#6775.
This is documented as required (although we did not do it in
the old GL codepath, with no visible problems) and I have seen
transient artifacts after seeking which _appear_ to have gone
away after introducing this.
this migrates our current swift code to version 5 and 4. building is
support from 10.12.6 and xcode 9.1 onwards.
dynamic linking is the new default, since Apple removed static libs
from their new toolchains and it's the recommended way.
additionally the found macOS SDK version is printed since it's an
important information for finding possible errors now.
Fixes#6470