Commit 9a83d03 accidentally removed this. (Overlooked "static"?)
The handling of this rather sucks. Maybe a better solution will be
possible once we clean up the mp_msg code.
This also affects --audiofile. The previous behavior wasn't really
useful. There are even separate switches for that: --audio-demuxer and
--sub-demuxer.
Make the VF/VO/AO option parser available to audio filters. No audio
filter uses this yet, but it's still a quite intrusive change.
In particular, the commands for manipulating filters at runtime
completely change. We delete the old code, and use the same
infrastructure as for video filters. (This forces complete
reinitialization of the filter chain, which hopefully isn't a problem
for any use cases. The old code forced reinitialization too, but it
could potentially allow a filter to cache things; e.g. consider loaded
ladspa plugins and such.)
This code is supposed to run if dynamic filter insertion (such as when
inserting a volume filter in mixer.c) fails. Then it removes all filters
and recreates the default list of filters. But the code just blew up and
entered an endless loop, because it removed even the sentinel in/out
filters. This could happen when trying to use softvol controls while
using spdif, but also other situations. Fix it by calling the correct
code.
Also remove these obnoxious yoda-conditions.
MSDN tells me to multiply the samplerates by 4 (for setting up the S/PDIF
signal frequency), but doesn't mention that I'm only supposed to do it
on the new, NT6.1+ IEC 61937 structs. Works on my Realtek Digital Output,
but as I can't connect any hardware to it I can't hear the result.
Also, always ask for little-endian AC3. I'm not sure if this is supposed
to be LE or NE, but Windows is LE on all platforms, so we go with LE.
Entirely untested as this troper has no S/PDIF hardware.
Refuses trying any other format if we can't use passthrough, or we would
end up sending white noise at the user.
Do an strstr match against the device description and, if we have only
a single match, take it. This works as long as the devices in the system
don't change, but it's not supposed to be reliable; if one wants
reliability, one uses the device ID string.
Formatting.
This could turn valid parameters into syntax errors by the mere presence
or abscence of a device (e.g. USB audio devices), so don't do that.
We do validate that, if the parameter is an integer, it is not negative.
We also respond to the "help" parameter, which does the same as the "list"
suboption but exits after listing.
Demote the validation logging to MSGL_DBG2.
Validates by trying to pick the device using the device enumerator and
aborting with out of range on failure.
Refactors find_and_load_device to not use the wasapi_state; it might be
called during validation. Adds missing CoInitialize/CoUninitialize calls.
Remove unused variables (the SAFE_RELEASE macros keep them referenced so
compiler warnings don't help finding them...).
Remove the IMMDeviceEnumerator from the wasapi_state, it's only needed
during initialization and initialization is now well factored enough to
get rid of it.
Try and connect to unplugged devices as well when using the device ID
string.
Omit "{0.0.0.00000000}." on devices that start with that substring,
re-add when searching for devices by ID.
Log the device ID of the default device.
Log the friendly name of the used device.
Consistently refer to endpoints/devices as devices, as this is more
consistent with mpv terminology.
Uses WASAPI in shared mode by default, add :exclusive flag to choose
exclusive mode (duh). WASAPI works somewhat different in shared mode:
the OS suggests the sample format to use, and the GetBuffer call is
done slightly differently.
The shared mode driver does not consume audio as fast as it notifies
the thread; we need to check how much we're allowed to write. Not doing
this correctly results in spamming the console with
AUDCLNT_E_BUFFER_TOO_LARGE errors.
When guessing formats for exclusive mode, try several sample size and
sample rate combinations instead of just falling back to s16le@44100hz.
If none of the rates are accepted, tries remixing >6 channels to 5.1
channels. Failing that, tries remixing to stereo. Failing everything,
including the CD Red Book format, what else is left to test?
Calculate buffer_block_size based on the configured channels and bytes
per sample; MSDN docs say nBlockAlign is not guaranteed to be set for
anything but integer PCM formats.
Adds the :list suboption to ao_wasapi0, which enumerates the audio endpoints
in the system.
Adds the :device=<n> suboption, which either takes an ID string (as output by
list) or a device number and uses the requested device instead of the system
default.
Doing "mpv --vo=opengl:lscale=help" now lists possible scalers and
exits. The "backend" suboption behaves similar. Make the "stereo"
suboption a choice, instead of using magic integer values.
Commit 6ab2eeb attempted to fix it on Cygwin, but now it broke on MinGW
in turn. Don't think too hard about it and just remove the code. (vo.c
already prints the video rectangle anyway.)
These two options were supported by ALSA and OSS only. Further, their
values were specific to the respective audio systems, so it doesn't make
sense to keep them as top-level options.