...because everything is terrible.
strerror() is not documented as having to be thread-safe by POSIX and
C11. (Which is pretty much bullshit, because both mandate threads and
some form of thread-local storage - so there's no excuse why
implementation couldn't implement this in a thread-safe way. Especially
with C11 this is ridiculous, because there is no way to use threads and
convert error numbers to strings at the same time!)
Since we heavily use threads now, we should avoid unsafe functions like
strerror().
strerror_r() is in POSIX, but GNU/glibc deliberately fucks it up and
gives the function different semantics than the POSIX one. It's a bit of
work to convince this piece of shit to expose the POSIX standard
function, and not the messed up GNU one.
strerror_l() is also in POSIX, but only since the 2008 standard, and
thus is not widespread.
The solution is using avlibc (libavutil, by its official name), which
handles the unportable details for us, mostly. We avoid some pain.
Always create the context in mpgl_init(), instead of doing it when
mpgl_config_window() is called the first time. This is a small step
towards cleaning up the GL backend interface, and adding other things
like perhaps GLES support, or a callback-driven backend for libmpv.
this currently uses a sketchy but apparently working workaround,
which will be removed once the neccessary changes in youtube-dl
are implemented
Fixes#1277
This seems safer: otherwise, opening the AO could randomly fail if the
audio formats happens to be not float.
Unfortunately, this only works if the user does not select a device.
Since ALSA devices are arbitrary strings, including plugins with complex
parameters, it's not trivial or maybe even impossible to edit the string
in a way the "plug" plugin is added.
With --audio-device, it would be safe for users to select either
"default" or one of the "plughw" devices. Everything else seems
questionable.
Use the ALSA channel map API for querying and selecting supported
channel maps.
Since we (probably?) want to be compatible with ALSA versions before the
change, we still try to select the device name by channel map, and open
that device. There's no way to negotiate a channel map before opening,
so we're stuck with this approach. Fortunately, it seems these devices
allow selecting and setting any other supported channel layout, so maybe
this is not an issue at all. In particular, this avoids selecting the
default (dmix) device, which can only do stereo.
Most code is based on Martin Herkt <lachs0r@srsfckn.biz>'s alsa_ng
branch, with heavy modifications.
Don't crash if no fallback channel layout could be found (caller can't
handle NULL return from select_chmap()). Apparently this could never
actually happen, though.
Don't treat snd_pcm_hw_params_set_periods_near() failure as fatal error.
Same deal as with snd_pcm_hw_params_set_buffer_time_near().
Actually free channel maps returned by snd_pcm_get_chmap().
Adjust some messages.
Currently, --ytdl is off by default, but even if this is changed, never
enable it by default for the client API. It would be inappropriate to
start an intrusive external subprocess behind the host application's
back.
No functional changes.
ALSA_PCM_NEW_HW_PARAMS_API was a pre-ALSA 1.0.0 thing and does nothing
with modern ALSA. It stopped being necessary about 10 years ago.
3 functions are moved to avoid forward references.
Makeshift-solution for working around certain fontconfig issues.
With --use-text-osd=no, libass and fontconfig won't be initialized, and
fontconfig won't block everything with scanning for fonts.
If ALSA reports a channel map, and it looks like it makes sense (i.e.
could be converted to mpv channel map, and the channel count matches),
then use that instead of the channel map we are assuming.
This is based on code written by lachs0r (alsa_ng branch).
We don't actually want to test all possible combinations; we just want
to make sure that each thing (e.g. linux/osx, ffmpeg/libav) is tested
once.
Exclude Linux + ffmpeg-stable, because ffmpeg-stable is already tested
on OSX.
Exclude clang on Linux, because OSX needs clang, but Coverity (running
on Linux) needs gcc - so we use gcc only on Linux.
I also wanted to reduce the matrix to a single configuration when
running Coverity, but apparently this is not possible.
(See travis-ci/travis-ci#1975.)
For the purpose of running Coverity correctly.
Although I'm not sure how well this works. gcc won't work on OSX, and
also I'm not sure if Coverity will act up if the build matrix has more
than 1 configuration (will it submit multiple scans?).
Simpler, and leaves the decision to repeat or not fully to the script
(instead of requiring the user to care about it when remapping a script
binding).
Use a fixed size array for the client name, which also limits the client
name in size. Sanitize the client name string, and replace characters
that are not in [A-Za-z0-9] with '_'.
Otherwise, mouse button bindings added by mp.add_key_binding() would be
ignored.
It's possible that this "breaks" some older scripts using undocumented
Lua script functions, but it should be safe otherwise.
Fixes#1283.
The subprocess code was already split into fairly general functions,
separate from the Lua code. It's getting pretty big though, especially
the Windows-specific parts, so move it into its own files.
Normally, when creating a process with inherited handles on Windows, the
process inherits all inheritable handles from the parent, including ones
that were created on other threads. This can cause a race condition,
where unintended handles are copied into the new process, preventing
them from being closed correctly while the process is running. The only
way to prevent this on Windows XP was to serialise the creation of all
inheritable handles, which is clearly unacceptable for libmpv.
Windows Vista solves this problem by allowing programs to specify
exactly which handles are inherited, so do that on Vista and up.
See http://blogs.msdn.com/b/oldnewthing/archive/2011/12/16/10248328.aspx
The CREATE_NO_WINDOW flag is used to prevent the subprocess from
creating an empty console window when mpv is not running in a console.
When mpv is running in a console, it causes the subprocess to detach
itself, and prevents it from seeing Ctrl+C events, so it hangs around in
the background after mpv is killed.
Fix this by only specifying CREATE_NO_WINDOW when mpv is not attached to
a console. When it is attached to a console, subprocesses will
automatically inherit the console and correctly receive Ctrl+C events.
I'm not sure if this is necessary, but it can't hurt, and it's what
you're supposed to do before leaving the stack frame that contains the
OVERLAPPED object and the buffer. If there is no pending I/O, CancelIo
will do nothing and GetOverlappedResult will silently fail.