This reverts commit 576e86bfa1 (functionally).
Right now, the --config-dir option silently causes all watch_later and cache
files to be written in the --config-dir as well. This is pretty uninitutive
and also not desirable in most cases so get rid of this.
libmpv users will have to set the corresponding options or env vars if they
want to keep the old behaviour.
Purely cosmetic, but this weird inconsistency bothered me. There's
techincally vd_lacv_params and ad_lavc_params too, but encode is special
and maybe shouldn't exist so we'll just leave that alone.
Similar to the previous commit. There's no reason for --bluray-device to
be in MPOpts. Make a specific subopt for stream_bluray and use that
instead so we can remove the mp_read_option_raw call.
There is zero reason for this to be an MPOpt. Because of how the
OPT_SUBSTRACT works, the option gets renamed to cdda-device instead, but
probably not a big deal since the old alias is still in place.
These were deprecated a long time ago and apparently didn't even work
with lavfi filters. Go ahead and remove them and additionally clean up
some code related to them. m_config_from_obj_desc_and_args becomes much
simpler now and a couple of arguments can be completely removed.
No wonder wm4 wanted to get rid of this. This option requires touching a
bunch of crap in the core player code. --stream-record works perfectly
fine and is a lot nicer so there's no need for this to exist anymore.
A bit different from the OPT_REPLACED/OPT_REMOVED ones in that the
options still possibly do something but they have a deprecation
message. Most of these are old and have no real usage. The only
potentially controversial ones are the removal of --oaffset and
--ovoffset which were deprecated years ago and seemingly have no real
replacement. There's a cryptic message about --audio-delay but who
knows. The less encoding mode code we have, the better so just chuck
it.
We've got an ungodly amount of OPT_REPLACED and OPT_REMOVED sitting
around in the code. This is harmless, but the vast majority of these are
ancient. 26f4f18c06 is the last commit
that touched the majority of these and of course that only changed how
options were declared so all of this stuff was deprecated even before
that. No use in keeping these, so just delete them all. As an aside,
there was actually a cocoa_opts but it had only a single option which
was replaced by something else and empty otherwise. So that entire thing
was just simply removed. OPT_REPLACED/OPT_REMOVED declarations that were
added in 0.35 or later were kept as is.
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.
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.
35f43dfacb added a system to write resume files for redirects, i.e.
directories and playlists that mpv expands.
It creates a resume file for each redirect, and for the first redirect
only, it writes a resume file for each segment of its path, without even
converting it to an absolute path if it's relative. This is incomplete:
mpv 'Iron Maiden/1982 The Number of the Beast/8 Hallowed Be Thy Name.mp3'
This doesn't save any redirect entry.
mpv --directory-mode=recursive 'Iron Maiden', then quit-watch-later on
Hallowed Be Thy Name
This saves a redirect entry for "Iron Maiden", but not for "1982 The
Number of the Beast". It doesn't save redirect entries for the
directories above "Iron Maiden" either because "Iron Maiden" isn't
converted to an absolute path.
In both of these cases mpv --directory-mode=lazy 'Iron Maiden' won't
resume from "Hallowed Be Thy Name" because "1982 The Number of the
Beast" isn't the first subdirectory and there is no redirect entry for
it.
503dada42f made mpv recursively expand subdirectories precisely to fix
this, and f266eadf1e added back an option not to expand them. But if we
fix how redirect entries are stored, we can make the superior
--directory-mode=lazy (because it's faster and doesn't result in massive
playlists) the default, and also ensure that mpv will resume playback
even when you quit-watch-later a file without redirects and then play
the directories above it.
Fix this by always creating redirect entries for all segments of the absolute
path of the file, so that both
mpv 'Iron Maiden/1982 The Number of the Beast/8 Hallowed Be Thy Name.mp3'
and
mpv --directory-mode=lazy 'Iron Maiden'
will create redirect entries for
/$USER
/$USER/music
/$USER/music/Iron Maiden
/$USER/music/Iron Maiden/1982 The Number of the Beast
making mpv --directory-mode=lazy "Iron Maiden" resume from
"Hallowed Be Thy Name".
This commit also makes mpv delete the redirect entries of parent
directories when resuming playback, because if for example you have a
playlist with all the songs in a discography:
1980 Iron Maiden/1 Prowler.mp3
1980 Iron Maiden/2 Remember Tomorrow.mp3
...
1981 Killers/1 The Ides of March.mp3
1981 Killers/2 Wrathchild.mp3
...
Now mpv will eventually create redirect entries for every album. If you
later decide to play the directories instead and there are 20 albums,
you would have to do mpv * 20 times to clear all the redirect entries.
--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.
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.
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 specific option type is only used for the video aspect. The
underlying type was a float to represent the inputted value, but it's
actually not precise enough. When using something like 4:3, the values
of the incorrect digits are actually significant enough to make av_d2q
return a very funky numerator and denominator which is close to 4/3 but
not quite. This leads to some "off by one pixel" errors. Weirdly, mpv's
actual calculations for this were already being done as double, but then
converted to floats for this specific type. Just drop the conversion
step and leave it all as double which has the precision we need (i.e.
AVRational is now 4/3 for the this case). Fixes#8190.
Currently relative time parsing is buggy when any of the non-leading
units are non zero. For example, "-1:30" should result in -90 but
currently it results in -30 (as a result of `-60 + 30`).
Also reject timestamps where non-leading units are out of range. E.g.
"1:100" would be rejected, but "100" will still be accepted as 100
seconds.
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.
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
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).
the reason for these casts are unknown but they were presumably to
silence warnings 9 years ago. but it doesn't seem to be necessary
nowadays, so just drop the casts and also drop the `const` from the
compound literal type.
some small technical notes:
1. while string literals aren't `const` in C, writing to them is
undefined (do not ask me why). and so compilers will typically put
string literals into read only section anyways, regardless of
weather `const` was used in the source or not. so this shouldn't make
any difference codegen wise.
2. making the array of pointers `const` on the other hand might affect
codegen, eg: `(char *const []){...}`. however, that'd trigger a lot
of discarded qualifier warnings.
shorter and more robust this way instead of inserting at an index by
manually counting.
the surrounding code also uses `[STREAM_*] = ..` so it's more consistent
as well.
Some platforms (wayland) apparently have a lot of trouble with drag and
drop. The default behavior is still the same which is basically obeying
what we get from the window manager/compositor, but the --drag-and-drop
option allows forcibly overriding the drag and drop behavior. i.e. you
can force it to always replace the playlist or append at the end. This
only implements this in X11 and Wayland but in theory windows and macos
could find this option useful (both hardcode the shift key for
appending). Patches welcome.