This readds a more or less completely new dvdnav implementation, though
it's based on the code from before commit 41fbcee. Note that this is
rather basic, and might be broken or not quite usable in many cases.
Most importantly, navigation highlights are not correctly implemented.
This would require changes in the FFmpeg dvdsub decoder (to apply a
different internal CLUT), so supporting it is not really possible right
now. And in fact, I don't think I ever want to support it, because it's
a very small gain for a lot of work. Instead, mpv will display fake
highlights, which are an approximate bounding box around the real
highlights.
Some things like mouse input or switching audio/subtitles stream using
the dvdnav VM are not supported.
Might be quite fragile on transitions: if dvdnav initiates a transition,
and doesn't give us enough mpeg data to initialize video playback, the
player will just quit.
This is added only because some users seem to want it. I don't intend to
make mpv a good DVD player, so the very basic minimum will have to do.
How about you just convert your DVD to proper video files?
The code to remove a section from the active section array wasn't
correct (it should have tried to copy the elements in reverse), so just
replace it with a macro that does the intended thing.
Add some debug output to print the section stack.
Until now, the player didn't care to drain frames on video reconfig.
Instead, the VO was reconfigured (i.e. resized) before the queued frames
finished displaying. This can for example be observed by passing
multiple images with different size as mf:// filename. Then the window
would resize one frame before image with the new size is displayed. With
--vo=vdpau, the effect is worse, because this VO queues more than 1
frame internally.
Fix this by explicitly draining buffered frames before video reconfig.
Raise the display time of the last frame. Otherwise, the last frame
would be shown for a very short time only. This usually doesn't matter,
but helps when playing image files. This is a byproduct of frame
draining, because normally, video timing is based on the frames queued
to the VO, and we can't do that with frames of different size or format.
So we pretend that the frame before the change is the last frame in
order to time it. This code is incorrect though: it tries to use the
framerate, which often doesn't make sense. But it's good enough to test
this code with mf://.
This gets rid of the vf_vo pseudo-filter. It ends the idea of MPlayer's
architecture that the VO is just a (terminating) video filter. It didn't
really work for us with respect to video timing (the "end" of the video
chain isn't really made for video timing, and making it do so would be
awkward), and now we're removing it entirely. We will be able to fix
some things, such as properly draining video on reconfiguration.
I don't think this has any reason to exist. It's likely that this used
to be required by the old direct rendering infrastructure. (See
git blame output.)
This should help fixing some issues (like not draining video frames
correctly on reinit), as well as decoupling the decoder, filter chain,
and VO code.
I also wanted to make the hardware video decoding fallback work properly
if software-only video filters are inserted. This currently has the
issue that the fallback is too violent, and throws away a bunch of
demuxer packets needed to restart software decoding properly. But
keeping "backup" packets turned out as too hacky, so I'm not doing this,
at least not yet.
Libav 9 still uses the unprefixed PIX_FMT_... symbols, but they will
probably be removed some time in the future.
There are some other deprecations we have yet to take care of, but
there are no clear replacements yet.
The previous RING_BUFFER_COUNT value, 64, would have ao_wasapi buffer 64
frames of audio in the ring buffer; a delay of 1280ms, which is clearly
overkill for everything. A value of 8 buffers 8 frames for a total of
160ms.
When get_space was converted to returning samples instead of bytes, a
unit type mismatch in get_delay's calculation returned bogus values. Fix
by converting get_space's value back to bytes.
Fixes playback with ao_wasapi when reaching EOF, or seeking past it.
There are 3 users of the image format option type: demux_raw,
vf_format, vf_noformat. Allow the hwaccel formats (like vdpau etc.)
in general, so that the filters can use it. This won't work for
demux_raw, so explicitly reject these formats there.
Remove the inconsistent, duplicated, and insufficient scale filter
insertion code, and do it in one place instead. This also compensates
for the earlier removal of vf_match_csp() (which was in fact duplicated
code).
The algorithm to determine where to insert a filter etc. is probably the
same, though it also comes with some changes that should make debugging
easier when trying to figure out why a chain is failing to configure.
Add an "in" pseudo filter, which makes insertion of conversion filters
easier. Also change the vf->reconfig signature. At a later point, I'll
probably change format negotiation such that the generic filter code
will choose the output format, so having separate in and out params will
be useful.
Reason: I never liked it being recursive. Generally, this seems to
cause more problems than trouble, and is less flexible for access
outside of the chain.
I don't think we need these flags anymore. Simplify the code and get rid
of the vf_format struct.
There still is the vf_format.configured field, but this can be replaced
by checking for a valid image format.
This adds vf_chain, which unlike vf_instance refers to the filter chain
as a whole. This makes the filter API less awkward, and will allow
handling format negotiation better.
This function improves automatic filter insertion, but this really
should be done by the generic filter code. Remove vf_match_csp() and all
code using it as preparation for that.
This commit temporarily makes handling of filter insertion worse for
now, but it will be fixed with the following commits.
If sys/soundcard.h is actually linux/soundcard.h then it supports only OSSv3
API. This may happen when OSSLIBDIR == /usr while forgetting to replace
sys/soundcard.h from glibc.
However, after fa620ff waf prefers native implementation which is inferior
on Linux. To fix try making waf prefer oss-audio-4front. It's quite unusual
to have 4Front OSS installed where native implementation is superior, anyway.
Signed-off-by: bugmen0t <@>
Make the false positives path also undef the 4Front define.
Signed-off-by: Stefano Pigozzi <stefano.pigozzi@gmail.com>
Fixes#396
Bug introduced by commit 6fb020f5. It doesn't always happen, since it is
caused by the playloop and cocoa UI code running in separate threads.
Fixes#398.
Uncompressed rar archives can be transparently opened, but the filename
the player doesn't have the direct filename (but something starting
with rar://... instead). This will lead to external subtitles not
being loaded.
This doesn't handle multi-volume rar files, but in that cases just use
the --autosub-match=fuzzy option.
Fixes#397 on github.
If only coreaudio was activativated and not cocoa, the build failed for
missing CoreFoundation.
Signed-off-by: Stefano Pigozzi <stefano.pigozzi@gmail.com>
Fixes#395
They didn't do anything.
vf_screenshot.c actually did release the previous image, but that's not
really required. At worst you could take a screenshot and get an old
frame when there's no new frame yet.
The --flip option flipped the image upside-down, by trying to use VO
support, or if not available, by inserting a video filter. I'm not sure
why it existed. Maybe it was important in ancient times when VfW based
decoders output an image this way (but even then, flipping an image is a
free operation by negating the stride).
One nice thing about this is that it provided a possible path for
implementing video orientation, which is a feature we should probably
support eventually. The important part is that it would be for free for
VOs that support it, and would work even with hardware decoding.
But for now get rid of it. It's useless, trivial, stands in the way, and
supporting video orientation would require solving other problems first.
In particular, this disables mpeg4. There are some files out there that
use GMC, a usually rarely used and ineffective feature, which is not
supported by most hardware decoders. In these cases the hw decoder
outputs garbage, while software decoding works perfectly fine. We can't
really fallback to software decoding in these cases, because we don't
know that something is wrong in the first place. I can't see any
advantages of hw decoding of mpeg4, so it's better to disable it.