Because gcc (and clang) is a goddamn PITA and unnecessarily warns if
the universal initializer for structs is used (like mp_image x = {})
and the first member of the struct is also a struct, move the w/h
fields to the top.
Remove the colorspace-related top-level options, add them to vf_format.
They are rather obscure and not needed often, so it's better to get them
out of the way. In particular, this gets rid of the semi-complicated
logic in command.c (most of which was needed for OSD display and the
direct feedback from the VO). It removes the duplicated color-related
name mappings.
This removes the ability to write the colormatrix and related
properties. Since filters can be changed at runtime, there's no loss of
functionality, except that you can't cycle automatically through the
color constants anymore (but who needs to do this).
This also changes the type of the mp_csp_names and related variables, so
they can directly be used with OPT_CHOICE. This probably ended up a bit
awkward, for the sake of not adding a new option type which would have
used the previous format.
Like FFmpeg/Libav do. It seems not all code can actually deal with this
situation, so it's better to shift the special-cases to code which needs
it (possibly OSD code; screenshots of 0x0 windows would just fail).
Normally, the size of an mage plane is assumed to be stride*height. But
in theory, if stride is larger than width*bpp, the last line might not
be padded, simply because it's not necessary. FFmpeg's or mpv's image
allocators always guarantee that this padding exists (it wastes some
insignificant memory for avoiding such subtle issues), but some other
libraries might not.
I suspect one such case might be Xv via vo_xv (see #1698), although my X
server appears to provide full padding. In any case, it can't harm.
There's literally no reason why these functions have to be inline (they
might be performance critical, but then the function call overhead isn't
going to matter at all).
Uninline them and move them to mp_image.c. Drop the header file and fix
all uses of it.
Breaks vo_opengl by default. I'm hot able to fix this myself, because I
have no clue about the overcomplicated color management logic. Also,
whilethis is apparently caused by commit fbacd5, the following commits
all depend on it, so revert them too.
This reverts the following commits:
e141caa97d653b0dd529729c8b3f64fbacd5de31Fixes#1636.
We have MP_CSP_TRC defined, but it wasn't being used by practically
anything. This commit adds missing conversion logic, adds it to
mp_image, and moves the auto-guessing logic to where it should be, in
mp_image_params_guess_csp (and out of vo_opengl).
Note that this also fixes a minor bug: csp_prim was not being copied
between mp_image structs if the format was not YUV in both cases, but
this is wrong - the primaries are always relevant.
This deals with subsampled YUV video that has odd sizes, for example a
5x5 image with 4:2:0 subsampling.
It would be easy to handle if we actually passed separate texture
coordinates for each plane to the shader, but as of now the luma
coordinates are implicitly rescaled to chroma one. If luma and chroma
sizes don't match up, and this is not handled, you'd get a chroma shift
by 1 pixel.
The existing hack worked, but broke separable scaling. This was exposed
by a recent commit which switched to GL_NEAREST sampling for FBOs. The
rendering was accidentally scaled by 1 pixel, because the FBO size used
the original video size, while textures_sizes[0] was set to the padded
texture size (i.e. one pixel larger).
It could be fixed by setting the padded texture size only on the first
shader. But somehow that is annoying, so do something else. Don't pad
textures anymore, and rescale the chroma coordinates in the shader
instead.
Seems like this somehow doesn't work with rectangle textures (and
introduces a chroma shift), but since it's only used when doing VDA
hardware decoding, and the bug occurs only with unaligned video sizes, I
don't care much.
Fixes#1523.
At the time screenshot support was added, images weren't refcounted yet,
so screenshots required specialized implementations in the VOs. But now
we can handle these things much simpler. Also see commit 5bb24980.
If there are VOs in the future which can't do this (e.g. they need to
write to the image passed to vo_driver->draw_image), this still could be
disabled on a per-VO basis etc., so we lose no potential performance
advantages.
Instead of converting the hw surface to an image in the VO, provide a
generic way to convet hw surfaces, and use this in the screenshot code.
It's all relatively straightforward, except vdpau is being terrible. It
needs a huge chunk of new code, because copying back is not simple.
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.
For incomprehensible reasons, AV_PIX_FMT_GRAY8 (and some others) have a
palette. This literally makes no sense and this issue has bitten us
before, but it is how it is.
This also caused a crash with vo_direct3d: this mapped a texture as
IMGFMT_Y8 (i.e. AV_PIX_FMT_GRAY8), and when copying this, it tried to
copy the non-existent palette.
Fixes#1113.
This inserts an automatic conversion filter if a Matroska file is marked
as 3D (StereoMode element). The basic idea is similar to video rotation
and colorspace handling: the 3D mode is added as a property to the video
params. Depending on this property, a video filter can be inserted.
As of this commit, extending mp_image_params is actually completely
unnecessary - but the idea is that it will make it easier to integrate
with VOs supporting stereo 3D mogrification. Although vo_opengl does
support some stereo rendering, it didn't support the mode my sample file
used, so I'll leave that part for later.
Not that most mappings from Matroska mode to vf_stereo3d mode are
probably wrong, and some are missing.
Assuming that Matroska modes, and vf_stereo3d in modes, and out modes
are all the same might be an oversimplification - we'll see.
See issue #1045.
These consult the vertical resolution, matching against 576 for
PAL and 480/486 for NTSC. The documentation has also been updated.
Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>
With this change, XYZ input is directly converted to the output
colorspace wherever possible, and to the colorspace specified by the
tags and/or --primaries option, otherwise.
This commit also restructures some of the CMS code in gl_video.c to
hopefully make it clearer which decision is being done where and why.
This add support for reading primary information from lavc, categorized
into BT.601-525, BT.601-625, BT.709 and BT.2020; and passes it on to the
vo. In vo_opengl, we always generate the 3dlut against the wider BT.2020
and transform our source into this colorspace in the shader.
Make sure every video filter has valid parameters for input and output.
(This also ensures we don't take possibly invalid decoder output, or
feed invalid decodr/filter output to VOs.)
Also, the updated image size check now (almost) works like the
corresponding check in FFmpeg.
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
Commit 5e4e248 added a mp_image_params field to mp_image, and moved many
parameters to that struct. display_w/h was left redundant with
mp_image_params.d_w/d_h. These fields were supposed to be always in
sync, but it seems some code forgot to do this correctly, such as
vf_fix_img_params() or mp_image_copy_attributes(). This led to the
problem in github issue #756, because display_w/_h could become
incorrect.
It turns out that most code didn't use the old fields anyway. Just
remove them. Note that mp_image_params.d_w/d_h are supposed to be always
valid, so the additional checks for 0 shouldn't be needed. Remove these
checks as well.
Fixes#756.
qscale export has been completely removed from Libav 10, and FFmpeg has
an alternative API, so this code does nothing and only causes
deprecation warnings on Libav.
This is pretty obscure, so it didn't matter much. It still breaks
switching output levels at runtime, because the video output is not
reinitialized with the new params.
Image formats used to be FourCCs, so unsigned int was better. But now
it's annoying and the only difference is that unsigned int is more to
type than int.
Larger sizes can introduce overflows, depending on the image format. In
the worst case, something larger than 16000x16000 with 8 bytes per pixel
will overflow 31 bits.
Maybe there should be a proper failure path instead of a hard crash, but
not yet. I imagine anything that sets a higher image size than a known
working size should be forced to call a function to check the size (much
like in ffmpeg/libavutil).
We got a crash in libavutil when encoding with Y8 (GRAY8). The reason
was that libavutil was copying an Y8 image allocated by us, and expected
a palette. This is because GRAY8 is a PSEUDOPAL format. It's not clear
what PSEUDOPAL means, and it makes literally no sense at all. However,
it does expect a palette allocated for some formats that are not
paletted, and libavutil crashed when trying to access the non-existent
palette.
pthreads should be available anywhere. Even if not, for environment
without threads a pthread wrapper could be provided that can't actually
start threads, thus disabling features that require threads.
Make pthreads mandatory in order to simplify build dependencies and to
reduce ifdeffery. (Admittedly, there wasn't much complexity, but maybe
we will use pthreads more in the future, and then it'd become a real
bother.)
Change talloc destructor so that they can never signal failure, and
don't return a status code. This makes our talloc copy even more
incompatible to upstream talloc, but on the other hand this is
preparation for getting rid of talloc entirely.
(The talloc replacement in the next commit won't allow the talloc_free
equivalent to fail, and the destructor return value would be useless.
But I don't want to change any mpv code either; the idea is that the
talloc replacement commit can be reverted for some time in order to
test whether the talloc replacement introduced a regression.)