Defining MPV_CPLUGIN_DYNAMIC_SYM during plugin compilation will replace mpv_*
functions with function pointers. Those pointer will be initialized when
loading the plugin.
It is recommended to use this symbol table when targeting Windows. The loader
does not have notion of global symbols. Loading cplugin into mpv process will
not allow this plugin to call any of the symbols that may be available in
other modules. Instead cplugin has to link explicitly to specific PE binary,
libmpv-2.dll/mpv.exe or any other binary that may have linked mpv statically.
This limits portability of cplugin as it would need to be compiled separately
for each of target PE binary that includes mpv's symbols. Which in practice
is unrealictis, as we want one cplugin to be loaded without those restrictions.
Instead of linking to any PE binary, we create function pointer for all mpv's
exported symbols. For convinience names of entrypoints are redefined to those
pointer so no changes are required in cplugin source code, except defining
MPV_CPLUGIN_DYNAMIC_SYM. Those function pointer are exported to make them
available for mpv to init with correct values during runtime, before calling
`mpv_open_cplugin`.
Note that those pointer are decorated with `selectany` attribute, so no need
to worry about multiple definitions, linker will keep only single instance.
This fixes cplugin usability on Windows. Without any API changes, only
recompilation with -DMPV_CPLUGIN_DYNAMIC_SYM is needed.
The goal is to provide simple to understand quality/performance level
profiles for the users.
Instead of default and gpu-hq profile. There main profiles were added:
- fast: can run on any hardware
- default: balanced profile between quality and performance
- high-quality: out of the box high quality experience. Intended
mostly for dGPU.
Summary of three profiles, including default one:
[fast]
scale=bilinear
cscale=bilinear (implicit)
dscale=bilinear
dither=no
correct-downscaling=no
linear-downscaling=no
sigmoid-upscaling=no
hdr-compute-peak=no
[default] (implicit mpv defaults)
scale=lanczos
cscale=lanczos
dscale=mitchell
dither-depth=auto
correct-downscaling=yes
linear-downscaling=yes
sigmoid-upscaling=yes
hdr-compute-peak=yes
[high-quality] (inherits default options)
scale=ewa_lanczossharp
cscale=ewa_lanczossharp (implicit)
hdr-peak-percentile=99.995
hdr-contrast-recovery=0.30
allow-delayed-peak-detect=no
deband=yes
scaler-lut-size=8
After fixing the B and C params for bcspline, it ended up being the same
thing as bicubic. There's no reason to have two names for the same
filter, so remove bcspline and keep bicubic to match libplacebo.
No need for this since it's entirely redundant with just changing the
filter radius directly. In fact, that's the whole *point* of the filter
radius - it does not modify the filter, it modifies the scaling of the
window.
Of course, this does not work for non-resizable kernels. But, really,
who cares?
And make it the default. In libplacebo, this uses internal heuristics to
pick a good size based on the actual ICC characteristics. This is
significantly less wasteful than always generating a 64x64x64 3DLUT (the
old status quo).
In vo_gpu, for simplicity, just default to 65x65x65. Note that this
provides slightly better accuracy than the old default of 64x64x64 for
technical reasons, and matches what libplacebo defaults to for typical
display profiles.
Adds catmull_rom as an example for --scale in the user manual, alongside
a brief description of the filter.
catmull_rom was only exposed to users as an available filter through
--scale=help. However, catmull_rom is very often aliased as "Bicubic" in
other applications such as GIMP and VapourSynth, and is a relatively
popular resizing filter. The documentation lacked any description of
catmull_rom, outside of a brief mention of it in the --tscale section.
While this resolves limitations of lavc decoder crop, it also introduces
artifacts with some of the source files or hwdec.
Depending on chroma sampler it is possible to sample outside the decoder
crop area, pulling dirty pixels into the image. Some decoders left them
zeroed, not black. To fix that we would need specifc solution during
mapping of avframes.
As most of the files require the crop only in bottom/right area, the
AVCodecContext::apply_cropping works ok for those.
For all other cases that require more fancy cropping like 1440x1080+240+0
user can manually set `--vd-apply-cropping=no`.
Limitations of the lavc crop are explained here:
https://ffmpeg.org/doxygen/trunk/structAVCodecContext.html#a4745c7455c317272c4e139d6f369936c
Fixes: 826ce82cad
In the never ending quest of trying to satisfy every possible user
request for subtitle autoselection, I ended up redoing how
--subs-fallback-forced works. The old behavior had it as strictly a
fallback-type option when there were no lang matches, but now we can
make it an active part of compare_track and it works along with slang to
select the desired track. Since it's a three state option, the no option
still works to avoid selecting any forced subtitle tracks. The meaning
of always slightly changes to mean "only select forced subtitle tracks"
and yes remains essentially the same (no special priority given besides
the audio matching subtitle language case).
Cropping by decoder has limitations with regards to aligment and hwdec.
It doesn't work to offset top left corner with hwdec and even with
software decoding it don't crop fully when resulting data would not be
aligned.
VO cropping is way more robust.
Setting `--video-crop=0x0+0+0` applies full frame crop, ignoring the
container one. Setting --video-crop=0 disables manual crop and restores
container one if it is available.
This makes it easier to apply crops without need to manually calc the
offset. I wanted for it to be top-left corner based, but maybe it was
not that good idea in retrospect.
Also rename scrw/scrh, since they don't refer to screen. It was copied
form m_geometry apply.
Third try is the charm? I stupidly missed that this option already
existed in my previous commits. Instead, add an auto value to it and
enable it by default for sd_lavc but not sd_ass. On my limited samples,
it seems to fix the gaps issue that can occur but without regressing
some duration timings for sub_lavc subtitles. Well hopefully anyway.
Fixes#12327.
We currently only allow specifying the Vulkan device to use by name. We
did this to avoid confusion around devices being enumerated in an
unpredictable order. However, there is a valid edge case where a system
may contain multiple devices of the same type - which means they will
have the same name, and so you can't control which one is used.
This change implements picking devices by UUID so that if names don't
work, you have some option available. As Vulkan 1.1 is a hard
requirement for libplacebo, we can just use UUIDs without conditional
checks.
Fixes#10898
The old mplayer / zap style format is not fully standardized across
channel scanners, so autodetection may fail if the file name
does not indicate the delivery system.
This is similar to DVB-T, but requires slightly different treatment
as there is no T/T2 differentiation.
Use a new channels.conf.isdbt file as channels config file.
There are way too many preexisting scripts that rely on this behavior
for video panning, like for example scripts that allow you to use mpv as
an image viewer. If this behavior is desired then it may be better to
add a new option for panning relative to the destination instead.
The restriction of video-pan-x/y being clamped to {-3, 3} also results
in the video being impossible to pan if it was zoomed in beyond a
certain degree.
This reverts commit 7d6f9e3739.
the osc currently allows for changing volume via scrolling when on top
of the volume icon. this does the same thing for the seekbar by allowing
seeking via scroll.
`--vo=gpu-next` no longer uses this option, being replaced entirely by a
luminance-based approach internally. And even for `--vo=gpu`, the values
other than 'hybrid' are universally inferior in quality.
In the interest of gradually reducing the amount of option bloat here,
remove this mostly-pointless option.
64959c450d solved the problems with resuming playback, so default to
--directory-mode=lazy because it's faster, especially on slow drives,
and results in smaller playlists.
If --slang was set to some language and it matched the subtitle track,
then --no-subs-with-matching-audio would do nothing. Fix the logic by
doing the --no-subs-with-matching-audio step at the end to ensure that
it always "wins" over whatever --slang or --subs-fallback has set.
Clarify the docs a bit to make it clearer that this is the intended
behavior. Fixes fbe8f99194.
Since we no longer have the auto choice, this is always exactly equal to
the value of the option (sub-forced-events-only). Remove the property
and alias it.
The old name is pretty bad and users mistakenly think it has something
to do with selecting forced subtitles (that would be
--subs-fallback-forced). Instead of giving it such a generic name, make
it clearer that this has to do specifically with forced sub events
which is only relevant for a small minority of subtitles.
First of all, this never worked. Or if it ever did, it was in some
select few scenarios. c9474dc9ed is what
originally added support for the auto choice. However, that commit
worked by propagating a value to a fake option used internally. This
shouldn't have ever worked because the underlying m_config_cache was
never updated so the value shouldn't have been preserved when accessed
in sd_lavc. And indeed with some testing, the value there is always 0
unsurprisingly.
This was later rewritten in ba7cc07106
along with a lot of other sub changes, but with that, it was still
mostly broken. The reason is because one of the key parts of having to
hit this logic (prefer_forced) required `--no-subs-with-matching-audio`
to be set. If the audio language matches the subtitle language (the
requirement also excludes forced subs), the option makes no subtitle
selection in the first place so pick->forced_only_def is not set to true
and nothing even happens. Another way around this would be to attempt to
change your OS language (like with the LANG environment variable) so
that the subtitle track gets selected but then audio_matches mistakenly
becomes false because it compares the OS language to the audio language
which then make preferred_forced 0, so nothing happens. I don't think
there's a scenario where pick->forced_only_def is actually set to true
(thus meaning `auto` is useless), but maybe someone could contrive
something very strange. Regardless, it's definitely not something even
remotely common.
fbe8f99194 changed track selection again
but didn't consider this particular case. The net result is that DVD/PGS
subs become equivalent to --sub-forced-only being yes, so this a change
in behavior and probably not a good one. Note that I wasn't able to
actually observe any difference in a PGS sample. It still displayed
subtitles fine but that sample probably didn't have the right flags to
hit the sub-forced-only logic.
Anyways, the auto feature is extremely questionable at best and in my
view, not actually worth it. It is meant to be used with
`--no-subs-with-matching-audio` to display forced pictures in subtitle
tracks that are not marked as forced, but that contradicts that
particular option's purpose and description in the manual (secretly
selecting a track under certain conditions even though it says not to).
Instead of trying to shove all this logic into select_default_track
which is already insanely complicated as it is, recognize that this is a
trivial lua script. If you absolutely want to turn --sub-forced-only on
under these certain conditions (DVD/PGS subtitles, matching audio and
subtitle languages, etc.), just look at the current-tracks property and
do your thing. The very, very niche behavior that this option tried to
accomplish basically never worked, no user even knows what this option
does, and well it's just not worth supporting in core mpv code. Drop
all this code for sanity's sake and change --sub-forced-only back to a
bool.
In general, forced tracks should only be shown if they match the
language of the audio. However some people do want them no matter what,
so add an always option to this so such tracks are always selected.
This is the replacement for the previous auto option for slang. It
behaves similar however it never overrides slang if that is set and will
instead try to pick the subtitle that matches the user's language if
appropriately flagged by the file.
This proved to be too problematic. Depending on the value of
--subs-with-matching-audio, you could either end up with cases where
--slang wasn't respected and users didn't get subtitles or alternatively
cases where subtitles were given and the user didn't ask for them.
Fundamentally, the OS language functionality doesn't really map well to
slang (and for alang/vlang it makes zero sense; not that anyone actually
used it). Instead of trying to shove it in an option where it doesn't
belong, we should split this off into something else. So for now, just
remove the special handling of "auto" and flip slang back to NULL.
Ideally, users should be using lavfi-complex instead of lavfi-bridge
for such a use case, however currently lavfi-complex doesn't support
hwdec. So we can allow filters with dynamic inputs to work with
lavfi-bridge, at the cost of them only being able to take in
only one input. This should probably be reverted when/if lavfi-complex
has hwdec, but for now this allows us to use libplacebo
as a video filter with hwdec in mpv again.
--audio-file-auto, --cover-art-auto, and --sub-auto all work by using an
internally hardcoded list that determine what file extensions get
recognized. This is fine and people periodically update it, but we can
actually expose this as a stringlist option instead. This way users can
add or remove any file extension for any type. For the most part, this
is pretty pretty easy and involves making sub_exts, etc. the defaults
for the new options (--audio-file-auto-exts, --cover-art-auto-exts, and
--sub-auto-exts). There's actually one slight complication however. The
input code uses mp_might_be_subtitle_file which guesses if the file drag
and dropped file is a subtitle. The input ctx has no access to mpctx so
we have to be clever here.
For this, the trick is to recognize that we can leverage the
m_option_change_callback. We add a new flag, UPDATE_SUB_EXTS, which
fires when the player starts up. Then in the callback, we can set the
value of sub_exts in external_files to opts->sub_auto_exts. Whenever the
option updates, the callback is fired again and sub_exts updates. That
way mp_might_be_subtitle_file can just operate off of this global
variable instead of trying to mess with the core mpv state directly.
Fixes#12000.
1fa6669bc0e60421f76c7507c3355537ca09fd0e misinterpreted the example and
changed the pixel value from 128 to 168 (thinking that it meant pixels
after scaling), but likely the original calculation was correct because
the line specifically says "of the source video". This is just confusing
not really useful information so instead change the example to a more
common resolution (1920x1080) and remove any references to the source
video resolution. Also mention video-pan-y while we're at it.
It makes it more usable to virtually move dst rect instead of scaled
src.
The issue with the latter is that it is affected by video-zoom
paramters. For example if we do `--video-pan-x=-0.5` in normal case it
will move video -50%, but if we apply video-zoom/scale the video will
float towards the middle in unintuitive way. Extreme case is when one do
--video-zoom-x=0.01, now it is impossible to move video unless you
specify huge video-pan-x value, but it is limited to [-3, 3]. So you
cannot do anything.
With this changes regardless of video scale/zoom, video-pan will keep
center of scaled video in one place.
This completely disables all smoothing. Despite what the manual claims,
a decay rate of 1.0 does *not*.
It's worth pointing out that this depends on the following commit to
work properly in --vo=gpu-next, but I don't think working around such a
minor detail is worth the trouble, considering people building nightly
mpv are probably also building nightly libplacebo it should just work
(tm).
See-Also: 1c464baaf4
See-Also: 83af2d4ebd
This deliberately wasn't being done when mpv was embedded
(fbccddb48b). There are some applications
that would benefit from mpv setting a title since they don't do so
themselves (such as tabbed), but at the same time some others would
probably rather not have this behavior (like smplayer). Add an option
that allows an embedded mpv to set the title if the user wishes.
Fixes#11528.
A bit of a long standing pain with scripting is that when opening a file
that gets interpreted as a playlist (like an m3u), the original path of
the file gets thrown away later. Workarounds basically consist of
getting the filename before mpv expands the path, but that's not really
reliable. Instead of throwing it away, save the original playlist path
by copying to the playlist entries when applicable (demuxer playlist and
the playlist option). Then expose these as properties: playlist-path for
the currently playing entry and playlist/N/playlist-path for each
specific entry. Closes#8508, #7605.
mpv has a generic method for getting the display resolution, so we can
save it in vf_vapoursynth without too much trouble. Unfortunately, the
resolution won't actually be available in many cases (like my own)
because the windowing backend doesn't actually know it yet. It looks
like at least windows always returns the default monitor (maybe we
should do something similar for x11 and wayland), so there's at least
some value. Of course, this still has a bunch of pitfalls like not being
able to cope with multi monitor setups at all but so does display_fps.
As an aside, the vapoursynth API this uses apparently requires R26 (an
ancient version anyway), so bump the build to compensate for this.
Fixes#11510
The OSC reports the speed-adjusted remaining time, but the terminal does
not. This is a weird mismatch and the OSC's default behavior makes
sense, so let's just do some division and add an option to disable it.
Also named "remaining-playtime" after the OSC option. Fixes#10445.
mpv makes this option an integer, but the underlying ass API actually
accepts doubles. From some testing, there is no meaningful precision
difference between float or double (it seems to go in roughly 0.05
steps), so just make it a float. sd_lavc also can handle non-integer
values here. Closes#11583.
This is higher quality but comes with a slight performance hit,
especially for weaker iGPUs, so I don't want to enable it out of the box
even when --hdr-compute-peak=auto.
1669c4698d notably flipped the default of
--subs-with-matching-audio from yes to no as part of a series of changes
that gave more control over sub selection behavior. While the increased
amount of options is definitely nice, changing the default to no results
in very unintuitive behavior. For example, setting alang=en and slang=en
in your config will not show any subtitles since the audio stream is
English as well so --subs-with-matching-audio being no causes the subs
to not be be selected. This is very weird for users who reasonably
expect slang being set to actually result in showing subs and this is
what mpv did for the past decade.
The other case is when a subtitle does not have a language tag but is
flagged as default. Because --subs-fallback (a new option), defaults to
no, these subtitles also will not be loaded. This is also strange for
users since mpv previously loaded these and they would need to change
the value of this option. It's also inconsistent because audio tracks
that are tagged as default are also loaded by default.
The new behavior seems to have mostly just confused users, and it also
regresses their configs for unclear reasons. Let's just set the options
to be back in line with the old behavior with is what most users expect.
--subs-with-matching-audio goes back to being yes and the new option
--subs-fallback should be default. Fixes#11854.
Remove waf entirely in favor of meson as the only supported build
system. Waf was officially deprecated in 0.36.0, and has not been
preferred over meson since 0.35.0.
Make it clearer that you should be using --hwdec with this VO. Also make
some comments about the things that are required for this to work
correctly (i.e. working drivers/GPU and the right compositor).
To remain consistent with our belief that `auto-safe` should be the
recommended mode when turning on hw decoding, let's remap `yes` from
`auto` to `auto-safe`.
It has been odd that ctrl+h toggles `auto` for hwdecs even though we
always recommend people start with `auto-safe`, and `auto` will attempt
various hwdecs that can fail so badly we can't fall back to software
decoding.
With the change to more exhaustively attempt to use hwdecs, it is now
easier to get into situations where these fragile hwdecs will get
attempted in basic scenarios, like pressing ctrl+h.
So it is high time to default to `auto-safe`.
This adds osd support via shm buffers using a similar approach that the
normal buffers do, but it differs in a few key areas. One thing to note
is that sway and weston actually handle this extremely differently which
required all the abstractions here. In particular, weston does not cope
well with destroying the wl_buffer from shm outside of the release
handler at all (i.e. it segfaults). The workaround here is to simply
attach a NULL to the osd surface and do a surface commit before we
destroy the buffers. This is reasonable enough and seems to work well
although it's pretty weird. Sway is more straightforward although it
actually releases the osd buffer when the window goes out of sight.
Also, I found that it doesn't always release every buffer before you
close it unlike weston seems to do which is part of the reason all this
bookkeeping is required. I don't know if there's any other compositor
out there that can possibly handle vo_dmabuf_wayland right now, but
suffering through these two is good enough for now I think.
Directories were always loaded recursively, which can be slow
(e.g. one of the subdirectories is a mounting point to a slow device)
and can unexpectedly expand into a massive playlist.
Due to the problems described in 503dada42f,
this defaults to recursive loading.
ref. https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/issues/9652
--no-config should prevent loading user files of any type: configs,
cache, etc. For cache files, this case wasn't properly handled and it
was assumed they would always get something. vo_gpu's shader cache
actually already handles this, so it was left untouched. In theory,
demuxer cache should never have this issue because saving it to disk is
disabled by default (and likely that will never change), but go ahead
and change it for consistency's sake. Fixes some segfaults with
--no-config and various combinations of settings (particularly
--vo=gpu-next).
4502522a7a changed the way mpv handled and
saved cached files. In particular, it made a separate boolean option for
actually enabling cache and left the *-dir options as purely just a path
(i.e. having a dir set didn't mean you save cache). This technically
regressed people's configs, so let's just turn the cache on by default.
Linux users already expect random stuff in ~/.cache and well everyone
else can just live with some files possibly appearing in their config
directory.
Add an option for allowing pointer events to pass through the mpv
window. This could be useful in cases where a user wants to display
transparent images/video with mpv and interact with applications beneath
the window. This commit implements this functionality for x11 and
wayland. Note that whether or not this actually works likely depends on
your window manager and/or compositor. E.g. sway ignores pointer events
but the entire window becomes draggable when you float it (nothing under
the mpv window receives events). Weston behaves as expected however so
that is a compositor bug. Excuse the couple of completely unrelated
style fixes (both were originally done by me).
Notes:
- converts the (image) write() api to filenames, because using avio
with FILE* is a pain.
- adds more debug logs for screenshots.
build: rename av1 dependency to avif_muxer
wscript: unify lavf dependency with meson
Today, the only way to make mpv consider multiple hwdecs and pick the
first one that works is to use one of the `auto` modes. But the list
that is considered in those cases is hard-coded. If the user wants to
provide their own list, they are out of luck.
And I think that there is now a significant reason to support this -
the new Vulkan hwdec is definitely not ready to be in the auto list,
but if you want to use it by default, it will not work with many codecs
that are normally hardware decodable (only h.264, hevc and av1 if you
are very lucky). Everything else will fall back to software decoding.
Instead, what you really want to say is: use Vulkan for whatever it
supports, and fall back to my old hwdec for everything else.
One side-effect of this implementation is that you can freely mix
hwdec names and special values like `auto` and `no`. The behaviour will
be correct, so I didn't try and prohibit any combinations. However,
some combinations will be silly - eg: sticking any further values after
`no` will result in them being ignored. On the other hand, a
combination like `vulkan,auto` could be very useful as that will use
Vulkan if possible, and if not, run the normal auto routine.
Fixes#11797