e125da2096 changed the z order of the
surfaces a bit, but it turns out this has a side effect. If the aspect
ratio of the actual video doesn't match your display, the osd surface
doesn't scale properly and gets clipped. Put the z ordering back where
it used to be. Instead when we have the force window case, simply attach
the already existing solid buffer to the video surface. This allows the
osd surface to actually draw over it instead of always being obscured so
it satisfies the case of not having any real video frames but still
wanting to draw the osd. Also don't mess with any of the viewport source
setting stuff with force window. Weston complains about it, and it's
nonsensical anyway. Fixes#12547.
0739cfc209 added the draw_frame API
deprecated draw_image internally. VOs that still used draw_image were
around, but really there's no reason to not just "upgrade" them anyway.
draw_frame is what the "real" VOs that people care about (gpu/gpu-next)
use. So we can just simplfy the code a bit now. VOCTRL_REDRAW_FRAME is
also no longer needed so that can be completely deleted as well. Note
that several of these VOs are legacy crap anyway (e.g. vaapi) and maybe
should just be deleted but whatever. vo_direct3d was also completely
untested (not that anyone should ever use it).
This causes only problems, because we convert mp_time to realtime, which
is not atomic, so we introduce error. And even though on sane platforms
it should work fine, after all the sleep time is in the past.
winpthreads like to sleep for like over 10ms when the time is less than
current time, but not more than 1s.
In practice, most compositors implement the rotation clockwise which
matches mpv's option, but amusingly this is actually incorrect.
According to the spec*, wayland buffer rotations are counter-clockwise.
So with this assumption in mind, in order for the rotation to match
mpv's usual semantics, the 90 degree and 270 degree positions need to be
flipped. Of course, this will make the VO rotate the wrong way on most
compositors, but this is what the spec says (sway master is known to
currently be correct). Fixes#12508 (sort of but will break the rotation
direction on other compositors. Oh well).
*: https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/apa.html#protocol-spec-wl_output-enum-transform
NV16 is the half subsampled version of NV12 format. Decoders which
support High 4:2:2 of h264 provide the frame in NV16 format to establish
richer colorspace. Similar profiles are also available in HEVC and other
popular codecs. This commit allows NV16 frames to be displayed over
drmprime layers.
Signed-off-by: hbiyik <boogiepop@gmx.com>
Calling wl_display_disconnect closes the file descriptor, no need to
manually do it ourselves beforehand which causes a double close on the
fd.
Signed-off-by: Jack Mitchell <jack.mitchell@tuxable.co.uk>
Apparently removing WS_CAPTION disables some window animations. Instead
adjust non-client area to not draw title bar.
Note that we do not account for difference in real border size and
invisible one, but seems to work correctly.
I don't think in fullscreen mode it makes sense to enable rounded corners.
We can add another option if someone needs it, but for now `window_corners`
affects only the window as one would expect.
With the addition of fractional scaling support, wl->scaling was
converted to a double. Some compositors (Plasma) can report values under
1 for fractional scaling, so this meant wl->scaling could be some
small fractional value. This is fine except that when using the legacy
code for drawing the mouse cursor (i.e. not the cursor-shape protocol),
it still uses the old integer scaling method in core wayland. The reason
for this is simply because fractionally scaling the mouse cursor surface
is nonsense and nobody even has cursor images for anything besides a
select few sizes anyways (32x32, 48x48, etc.). The existing integer
scaling sort of works but it's pretty bad too and you can get some weird
sizes anyway. This is why cursor-shape is preferred since it fixes this.
Anyways, since buffer scaling for the cursor only takes integers, there
could be truncation to 0 in the previously mentioned fractional scale
this. This naturally causes the compositor to send us an error and mpv
quits. The fix is to always make sure that the scale value used for the
cursor is at least 1. Anything less makes no sense. Fixes#12309.
There was assumption in the code that default settings are compatible
with dumb mode and are only one that should be used in this case.
Force bilinear if dumb mode is enabled.
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.
The osd support was originally written with the requirement that we have
actual frames getting delivered to the VO. This isn't always the case
though. If you force a window on a blank audio file for example, then
there will be no frame thus draw_frame did nothing. Since the previous
commit allows us to reliably detect this, we can rearrange the code
around a little bit to make this possible. A key change is to make the
osd_subsurface have wl->surface as the parent. This is seemingly
required otherwise the osd_surface buffers are never visible above the
empty video_surface when we have a black window. Also nuke the desync
call since it's completely pointless. Fixes#12429.
The defaults were awful and horribly regressed many files while also not
fixing banding on files that actually needed it, sometimes even
*increasing* banding due to the low threshold.
Fixes: 12ffce0f22
See-Also: haasn/libplacebo@e1e43376d1
This probably makes `vo_gpu` tone mapping worse, or something, but who
cares. The status quo for a while now has been to use `vo_gpu_next` if
you care about HDR rendering at all.
See-Also: haasn/libplacebo@ec60dd156b
See-Also: haasn/libplacebo@0903cbd05d
This new filter is slightly sharper, and significantly faster, than
mitchell. It also tends to preserve detail better. All in all, there is
no reason not to use it by default, especially from a performance PoV.
(In vo_gpu_next, hermite is implemented efficiently using hardware
accelerated bilinear interpolation)
See-Also: 75b3947b2c
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
296d40dc6f changed how the vo handled
redraw requests in order to fix a race condition that can occur with
pausing. However, there was a slight oversight because a redraw request
that occurred while the core was unlocked and the video was still
playing would still be kept true (previously, this was always cleared).
That redraw is essential if mpv is paused otherwise the old issue comes
back, but if the video is playing it's unnecessary since the next loop
around will simply draw whatever we needed. The extra redraw could cause
a frame drop for some people in certain instances, so the solution is to
simply always clear redraw requests if !in->paused. This eliminates the
extra redraw but still keeps it when pausing.
Fixes#12426 and fixes#11579.