stream_read_unbuffered() can sometimes return negative values on error.
Change that to return 0 - the negative values are nowhere used anyway.
If distinguishing errors and EOF is really needed, a flag could be added
instead.
This also fixes the stream_read_partial() call in cache.c, which assumes
the return values is always >= 0.
Seems like a completely unnecessary complication. Instead, always add a
1 byte padding (could be extended if a caller needs it), and clear it.
Also add some documentation. There was some, but it was outdated and
incomplete.
This is useless on the cache side. The sector is needed only to deal
with stream implementations which are not byte addressable, and the
cache is always byte addressable.
Also set a default read_chunk value. (This value is never used unless
you chain multiple caches, but it's cleaner.)
This was probably done this way to ensure that after a successful seek,
the reported stream position is the same as the requested seek position.
But it doesn't make too much sense, since both stream->pos and the
stream implementation's internal position will go out of sync.
The stream EOF flag should only be set when trying to read past the end
of the file (relatively similar to unix files). Always clear the EOF
flag on seeking. Trying to set it "properly" (depending whether data is
available at seek destination or not) might be an ok idea, but would
require attention to too many special cases. I suspect before this
commit (and in MPlayer etc. too), the EOF flag wasn't handled
consistently when the stream position was at the end of the file.
Fix one special case in ebml.c and stream_skip(): this function couldn't
distinguish between at-EOF and past-EOF either.
EOF should be set when reading more data fails. The stream
implementations have nothing to say here and should behave correctly
when trying to read when EOF was actually read.
Even when seeking, a correct EOF flag should be guaranteed. stream_seek()
(or actually stream_seek_long()) calls stream_fill_buffer() at least
once, which also updates the EOF flag.
This function was called in various places. Most time, it was used
before a seek. In other cases, the purpose was apparently resetting
the EOF flag. As far as I can see, this makes no sense anymore. At
least the stream_reset() calls paired with stream_seek() are completely
pointless. A seek will either seek inside the buffer (and reset the
EOF flag), or do an actual seek and reset all state.
This happens with something like "mpv https://www.youtube.com/watch".
The URL is obviously not valid, but the stream layer tries to reconnect.
This commit at least allows to use the terminal to abort gracefully.
(Other than killing the process.)
Basically rewrite all the code supporting the cache (i.e. anything other
than the ringbuffer logic). The underlying design is untouched.
Note that the old cache2.c (on which this code is based) already had a
threading implementation. This was mostly unused on Linux, and had some
problems, such as using shared volatile variables for communication and
uninterruptible timeouts, instead of using locks for synchronization.
This commit does use proper locking, while still retaining the way the
old cache worked. It's basically a big refactor.
Simplify the code too. Since we don't need to copy stream ctrl args
anymore (we're always guaranteed a shared address space now), lots of
annoying code just goes away. Likewise, we don't need to care about
sector sizes. The cache uses the high-level stream API to read from
other streams, and sector sizes are handled transparently.
demux_lavf probes up to 2 MB of data in the worst case. When the ffmpeg
demuxer is actually opened, the stream is seeked back to 0, and the
previously read data is thrown away.
This wasn't a problem for playback of local files, but it's less than
ideal for playing from slow media (like web streams), and breaks
completely if the media is not seekable (pipes, some web streams).
This new function is intended to allow fixing this. demux_lavf will use
it to put the read probe data back into the buffer.
The simplest way of implementing this function is by making it
transparently extend the normal stream buffer. This makes sure no
existing code is broken by new weird special cases. For simplicity
and to avoid possible performance loss due to extra dereferencing
when accessing the buffer, we just extend the static buffer from
8 KB to 2 MB. Normally, most of these 2 MB will stay uncommitted, so
there's no associated waste of memory. If demux_lavf really reads all
2 MB, the memory will be committed and stay unused, though.
Before this commit, the cache was franken-hacked on top of the stream
API. You had to use special functions (like cache_stream_fill_buffer()
instead of stream_fill_buffer()), which would access the stream in a
cached manner.
The whole idea about the previous design was that the cache runs in a
thread or in a forked process, while the cache awa functions made sure
the stream instance looked consistent to the user. If you used the
normal functions instead of the special ones while the cache was
running, you were out of luck.
Make it a bit more reasonable by turning the cache into a stream on its
own. This makes it behave exactly like a normal stream. The stream
callbacks call into the original (uncached) stream to do work. No
special cache functions or redirections are needed. The only different
thing about cache streams is that they are created by special functions,
instead of being part of the auto_open_streams[] array.
To make things simpler, remove the threading implementation, which was
messed into the code. The threading code could perhaps be kept, but I
don't really want to have to worry about this special case. A proper
threaded implementation will be added later.
Remove the cache enabling code from stream_radio.c. Since enabling the
cache involves replacing the old stream with a new one, the code as-is
can't be kept. It would be easily possible to enable the cache by
requesting a cache size (which is also much simpler). But nobody uses
stream_radio.c and I can't even test this thing, and the cache is
probably not really important for it either.
Tests with demux_mkv show that the speed doesn't change (or actually,
it seems to be faster after this change). In any case, there is not
the slightest reason why these should be inline. Functions for which
this will (probably) actually matter, like stream_read_char, are
still left inline.
This was tested with demux_mkv's indexing. For broken files without
index, demux_mkv creates an on-the-fly index. If you seek to a later
part of the file, all data has to be read and parsed until the wanted
position is found. This means demux_mkv will do mostly I/O, calling
stream_read_char() and stream_read(). This should be the most I/O
intensive non-deprecated part of mpv that uses the stream interface.
(demux_lavf has its own buffering.)
DVD playback uses a demuxer that signals to the frontend that timestamp
resets are possible. This made the frontend calculate the OSD playback
position based on the byte position and the total size of the stream.
This actually broke DVD playback position display. Since DVD reports a
a linear playback position, we don't have to rely on the demuxer
reported position, so disable this functionality in case of DVD
playback. This reverts the OSD behavior with DVD to the old behavior.
clang printed warnings like:
stream/stream.c:692:65: warning: if statement has empty body [-Wempty-body]
GET_UTF16(c, src < end - 1 ? get_le16_inc(&src) : 0,;
This macro expands to "if(cond) ;". Replace it with an empty statement
that doesn't lead to a clang warning.
This didn't work properly for HTTP with libavformat. The builtin HTTP
implementation reconnects automatically on its own, while libavformat
doesn't. Fix this by adding explicit reconnection support to
stream_lavf.c, which simply destroys and recreates the AVIO context.
It mostly works, though sometimes it mysteriously fails, spamming crap
all over the terminal and feeding broken data to the decoders. This is
probably due to itneractions with the cache. Also, reconnecting to
unseekable HTTP streams will make it read the entire stream until the
previous playback position is reached again.
It's not known whether this change makes behavior with "strange"
protocols like RTP better or worse.
This allowed to move the input stream layer across the network, allowing
the user to play anything that mplayer could play remotely. For example,
playing a DVD related on a remote server (say, with the host name
"remotehost1") could be done by starting the netstream server on that
remote server, and then running:
mplayer mpst://remotehost1/dvd://
This would open the DVD on the remote host, and transfer the raw DVD
sector reads over network. It works the same for other protocols, and
all accesses to the stream layer are marshaled over network. It's
comparable to the way the cache layer (--cache) works.
It has questionable use and most likely was barely used at all. There's
lots of potential for breakage, because it doesn't translate the stream
CTRLs to network packets. Just get rid of it.
The server used to be in TOOLS/netstream.c, and was accidentally removed
earlier.
This is a fix for web radio streams that send raw AAC [1]. libavformat's
AAC demuxer probe is picky enough to request hundreds of KBs data, which
makes for a slow startup. To speed up stream startup, try use the HTTP
MIME type to identify the format. The webstream in question sends an AAC
specific MIME type, for which demux_lavf will force the AAC demuxer,
without probing anything.
ffmpeg/ffplay do the same thing. Note that as of ffmpeg commit 76d851b,
av_probe_input_buffer() does the mapping from MIME type to demuxer. The
actual mapping is not publicly accessible, and can only be used by
calling that function. This will hopefully be rectified, and ideally
ffmpeg would provide a function like find_demuxer_from_mime_type().
[1] http://lr2mp0.latvijasradio.lv:8000
This commit is separate from the previous one to separate our own
changes from changes merged from mplayer2 (as far as that was possible).
Make it easier for stream implementations to request being cached. Set
a default cache size in stream.c, and remove them from various stream
implementations. Only MS streaming support sets a meaningful cache size.
Make querying cache size saner. This reduces the amount of #ifdefs
needed.
Code enabling the cache by default for network streams did that by
modifying the value of the "cache" option. This wasn't sane, as
multiple streams may be created and all share the same options. Change
the code to not modify options but store data in the stream instance
instead.
Conflicts:
core/mplayer.c
demux/demux.c
stream/cache2.c
stream/network.c
stream/network.h
stream/pnm.c
stream/stream.c
stream/stream_rtp.c
Merged from mplayer2 commit e26070. Note that this doesn't solve any
actual bug, as the playlist crashing bug has been fixed before.
Since the global cache size option value is not overwritten anymore, the
option doesn't need to be restored on end of playback (M_OPT_LOCAL).
libavdevice supports various "special" video and audio inputs, such
as screen-capture or libavfilter filter graphs.
libavdevice inputs are implemented as demuxers. They don't use the
custom stream callbacks (in AVFormatContext.pb). Instead, input
parameters are passed as filename. This means the mpv stream layer has
to be disabled. Do this by adding the pseudo stream handler avdevice://,
whose only purpose is passing the filename to demux_lavf, without
actually doing anything.
Change the logic how the filename is passed to libavformat. Remove
handling of the filename from demux_open_lavf() and move it to
lavf_check_file(). (This also fixes a possible bug when skipping the
"lavf://" prefix.)
libavdevice now can be invoked by specifying demuxer and args as in:
mpv avdevice://demuxer:args
The args are passed as filename to libavformat. When using libavdevice
demuxers, their actual meaning is highly implementation specific. They
don't refer to actual filenames.
Note:
libavdevice is disabled by default. There is one problem: libavdevice
pulls in libavfilter, which in turn causes symbol clashes with mpv
internals. The problem is that libavfilter includes a mplayer filter
bridge, which is used to interface with a set of nearly unmodified
mplayer filters copied into libavfilter. This filter bridge uses the
same symbol names as mplayer/mpv's filter chain, which results in symbol
clashes at link-time.
This can be prevented by building ffmpeg with --disable-filter=mp, but
unfortunately this is not the default.
This means linking to libavdevice (which in turn forces linking with
libavfilter by default) must be disabled. We try doing this by compiling
a test file that defines one of the clashing symbols (vf_mpi_clear).
To enable libavdevice input, ffmpeg should be built with the options:
--disable-filter=mp
and mpv with:
--enable-libavdevice
Originally, I tried to auto-detect it. But the resulting complications
in configure did't seem worth the trouble.
Finish renaming directories and moving files. Adjust all include
statements to make the previous commit compile.
The two commits are separate, because git is bad at tracking renames
and content changes at the same time.
Also take this as an opportunity to remove the separation between
"common" and "mplayer" sources in the Makefile. ("common" used to be
shared between mplayer and mencoder.)
Make stream_ffmpeg handle rtsp:// URLs by default, without requiring
ffmpeg://rtsp://. Previously (after removal of other rtsp
implementations) rtsp:// fell back to using HTTP, which was unlikely
to work.
Also add lavf:// as an alternative to ffmpeg:// to force the stream
implementation. Since libavformat can come from Libav rather than
FFmpeg, using the ffmpeg name in the prefix is misleading.
open_stream() and open_output_stream() checked for filename==NULL, and
if true, printed an error message asking to report this as bug.
Internal logic errors should just crash. Use assert() instead.
Clean up handling of libquvi (which resolves URLs of streaming sites
into URLs to the actual media playable by mpv). Move the code out of
open.c to quvi.c, and invoke it explicitly from mplayer.c, instead of
trying to resolve every filename passed to open_stream().
This allows easily passing metadata from the quvi context to the
frontend. Expose QUVIPROP_PAGETITLE as "media-title" property, and use
that instead of "filename" for the mplayer window title. (For YouTube,
this is the video title.) It's cleaner too.
Handle a potential reliability issue: check quvi_getprop return values.
Since open.c contains barely anything but the open_stream() stub, move
that to stream.c and delete open.c.
The main excuse for removing this is that LIVE555 deprecated the API
the mplayer implementation was using. The old API still seems to be
somewhat supported, but must be explicitly enabled at LIVE555
compilation, so mplayer won't always work on any user installation.
The implementation was also very messy, in C++, and FFmpeg support is
available as alternative.
Remove it completely.
When the internal mplayer MPEG demuxer was removed (commit 1fde09db),
the default demuxer when using dvdnav was set to libavformat. Now it
turns out that this doesn't work with libavformat. It will terminate
playback right after the audio runs out (instead of looping it like the
video, or whatever it's supposed to do). I'm not sure what exactly the
problem is, but since 1. even mplayer-svn can't handle DVD menus
directly (missing highlights), 2. DVD menus are essentially worthless,
and 3. I don't directly watch DVDs, don't bother with it and remove it.
For basic playback, there's still libdvdread support.
Also, use pkg-config for libdvdread, and drop support for in-tree
libdvdread. Remove support for in-tree libdvdcss as well.
Options parsing used to be ambiguous, as in the splitting into option
and values pairs was ambiguous. Example:
-option -something
It wasn't clear whether -option actually takes an argument or not. The
string "-something" could either be a separate option, or an argument
to "-option". The code had to call the option specific parser function
to resolve this.
This made everything complicated and didn't even have a real use. There
was only one case where this was actually used: string lists
(m_option_type_string_list) and options based on it. That is because
this option type actually turns a single option into a proxy for several
real arguments, e.g. "vf*" can handle "-vf-add" and "-vf-clr". Options
suffixed with "-clr" are the only options of this group which take no
arguments.
This is ambiguous only with the "old syntax" (as shown above). The "new"
option syntax always puts option name and value into same argument.
(E.g. "--option=--something" or "--option" "--something".)
Simplify the code by making it statically known whether an option takes
a parameter or not with the flag M_OPT_TYPE_OLD_SYNTAX_NO_PARAM. If it's
set, the option parser assumes the option takes no argument.
The only real ambiguity left, string list options that end on "-clr",
are special cased in the parser.
Remove some duplication of the logic in the command line parser by
moving all argument splitting logic into split_opt(). (It's arguable
whether that can be considered code duplication, but now the code is a
bit simpler anyway. This might be subjective.)
Remove the "ambiguous" parameter from all option parsing related code.
Make m_config unaware of the pre-parsing concept.
Make most CONF_NOCFG options also CONF_GLOBAL (except those explicitly
usable as per-file options.)
Detect prematurely closed connection.
Then we get a streaming_stopped status but we have
a end_pos and have not reached it yet, do not accept
it as EOF but instead try reconnection.
For example a forced restart of a webserver will usually
result in the connection being closed before EOF.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@34873 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Author: reimar
Retry reconnecting several times.
Also add a delay, otherwise a server closing any incoming
connection immediately would make MPlayer stop even if it happens
only for 1 second or so.
With this change, no server/network outage of any kind shorter
than 5 seconds should cause MPlayer to give up anymore.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@34871 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Author: reimar
While this was an interesting idea, it wasn't actually useful.
Basically it dumped the raw data (as requested by the demuxer) into a
file. The result is only useful if the file format was raw or maybe
some MPEG packet stream, but not with most modern file formats.
stream_cue, which provided the cue:// protocol handler, was extremely
hacky and didn't even manage to play some samples I tried.
Remove it, because it's plain unneeded. There is much better support
for .cue files elsewhere:
- libcdio can play pairs of .cue/.bin files:
mplayer cdda:// --cdrom-device=your_cue_file.cue
Note that if the .cue file is not accompanied by a .cue file, but
an encoded file for example, this most likely won't work.
- mplayer can play .cue files directly:
mplayer your_cue_file.cue
This works, even if the .cue file comes with encoded files that are
not .bin . Note that if you play .bin files, mplayer will assume a
specific raw audio format. If the format doesn't match, mplayer will
play noise and destroy your speakers. Note that format mismatches are
extremely common, because the endianness seems to be essentially
random. (libcdio uses a clever algorithm to detect the endian, and
doesn't have this problem.)