--dscale= and --*scale-window= (i.e. an empty string) are respectively
valid settings for their options (and, in fact, the defaults).
This fixes the bug that it was impossible to reset e.g. tscale-window
back to the default "unset" setting after setting it once.
Credit goes to @CounterPillow for locating the cause of this bug.
For testing in VMs I guess?
This features a very broken hack that probably works. Though I didn't
test the packed format case. Again, the mismatch is essentially due to
big endian byte addresses decreasing as bit addresses increase, so you
can't represent a bit position in a byte stream with a single address,
which the mpv metadata does.
OSD is broken because repack.c doesn't support big endian. You'll have
to live with it.
The recent changes to the image format metadata broke big endian, and
that was intentional. Some things are inherent to little endian (like
the idea to coalesce bit and byte offsets into a single bit offset), and
they don't be fixed. But some obvious things can be fixed, such as
marking LE vs. BE formats the right way around on BE hosts.
The metadata is formally still in LE, except that if the LE/BE flag
matches the host endian, the host endian can be used when accessing
packed formats with bit shifts, or when computing byte aligned component
byte offsets. The former may work because formats with LE/BE variants
use the same bit offsets after byte swapping, the latter may work
because little endian is the natural concept for addressing memory. But
it will "subtly" fail to do the right thing in some cases, and code
using this can't know, so have fun.
Many things are broken, but this makes e.g. vo_gpu mostly work.
My general opinion about BE computers is that you should get a better
computer, you can get one for free from any garbage dump.
IMGFMT_RGB30 was added first; FFmpeg added AV_PIX_FMT_X2RGB10 later.
This is exactly the same, so treat them as such. For some reason,
libswscale still seems to output incompatible data - not sure what this
is about, but I'm not going to debug it.
Instead of applying this only to "regular" formats, do it with all
formats.
For some reason, some repackers still have their own endian code. These
could probably be removed, but whatever.
This change attempts to fix detection of how endian swapping is to be
performed. Details can be found in the code comments.
It should not change anything, other than fixing handling of the
X2RGB10BE ffmpeg pixel format. This format was detected incorrectly, and
the component location metadata was discarded due to an internal
consistency check. With this commit, it is handled correctly. At first I
thought the X2RGB10BE ffmpeg pixdesc metadata was wrong, but it appears
to be correct. The problem with this format is that it's the first
packed RGB format that requires bit shift to access, and where the
endian word size is larger than the (rounded up) component size, all
while pixdesc would "require" you to perform 3 memory accesses (instead
of 1), and the code tries to reverse this.
It appears that trying to use the pixdesc metadata is much, much more
work than just duplicating it in a saner form. To be fair, most problems
are with big endian, and the mpv internal format does not care much
about endian _hosts_.
For cases in which the requirements of the GPU API prevent directly
uploading a texture with a given stride, we need to fix the stride
manually in host memory. This incurs an extra memcpy, but there's not
much we can do about it. (Even in `ra_gl` land, the driver will just
hide this memcpy from the user)
Note: This code could be done better. It could only copy as many texels
as needed, and it could pick a stride that's a multiple of
`gpu->limits.align_tex_xfer_stride` for better performance. Patches
welcome (tm)
Fixes#7759
Implementation copy/pasted from:
https://code.videolan.org/videolan/libplacebo/-/commit/f793fc0480f
This brings mpv's tone mapping more in line with industry standard
practices, for a hopefully more consistent result across the board.
Note that we ignore the black point adjustment of the tone mapping
entirely. In theory we could revisit this, if we ever make black point
compensation part of the mpv rendering pipeline.
This standard says we should use a value of 203 nits instead of 100 for
mapping between SDR and HDR.
Code copied from https://code.videolan.org/videolan/libplacebo/-/commit/9d9164773
In particular, that commit also includes a test case to make sure the
implementation doesn't break roundtrips.
Relevant to #4248 and #7357.
glslang accepted this, perhaps erronneously, but mesa does not. It seems
to be incorrect. A caveat is that this means *all* SSBOs are now
coherent, but since we only use SSBOs for peak detection, that's a
non-issue. (And besides, marking something as coherent when we don't
perform any synchronization commands on it should be a no-op anyway)
Fixes#7823
since the title bar catches the mouse up and down events, the underlying
events view doesn't reset the isMoving state and no mouse movements are
signalled to the core. now we also reset the state in mouse up events
on the title bar.
Fixes#7807
The "screenshot window" command (ctrl+s by default) somehow broke video
colors with --gpu-api=vulkan --profile=gpu-hq when playback was paused.
I don't know the cause, but the rest of the code seems to imply
gl_video_reset_surfaces() needs to be called manually to flush some
caches, and it fixes the issue, so I assume there's no great mystery
here.
Commit 07b0c18 introduced some build breakages. Some breakages
were fixed on c1fc535 and a1adafe. This one is still remaining.
This commit fixes the following build error:
[153/521] Compiling video/out/vulkan/context_wayland.c
../video/out/vulkan/context_wayland.c:26:10: fatal error: video/out/wayland/presentation-time.h: No such file or directory
26 | #include "video/out/wayland/presentation-time.h"
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
compilation terminated.
Relevant to: #7802
Commit 6a13954d67 lowered the frequency of wakeups with this
condition. But it seems it sometimes the audio sync mode really should
get the wakeup before the frame is rendered. Normally, vo_thread is
supposed to perform this wakeup. Now the wakeup frequency is twice of
what should be needed - whatever, maybe it can be fixed properly once or
if timing is moved to the VO entirely in the future.
Fixes: #7777 (probably, untested)
When the window is mapped, some ICCCM WM_HINTS are set.
The input field is set to true and state is set to NormalState.
To quote the spec, "The input field is used to communicate to the window
manager the input focus model used by the client" and "[c]lients with
the Passive and Locally Active models should set the input flag to True".
mpv falls under the Passive Input model, since it expects keyboard input,
but only listens for key events on its single, top-level window instead
of subordinate windows (Locally Active) or the root window (Globally
Active).
From the end users prospective, all EWMH/ICCCM compliant WMs (especially
the minimalistic ones) will allow the user to focus mpv, which will allow
mpv to receive key events. If the input field is not set, WMs are
allowed to assume that mpv doesn't require focus.
I'm not sure why it only rendered OSD inside the video. Since OSD
rendering was always done on the X image (after software scaling and
color conversion), there was no technical reason for this. Maybe it was
because the code started out this way, and it was annoying to change it.
Possibly, one reason was that it didn't normally have to clear the black
bars in every frame (if video didn't cover the entire window).
Anyway, simply render OSD to the full window. This gets rid of some
rather weird stuff. It seems to look mostly like vo_wlshm now. The
uncovered regions are cleared every frame, which could probably be
avoided by being clever with the OSD renderer code, but this is where
I'm decidedly losing interest.
There was some mysterious code for aligning the image width to 8 pixels.
Replace that by attempting to align it to SIMD alignment (might matter
for libswscale, or if repack.c gets SIMD). Why are there apparently 4
different ways representing a pixel format (depth, VisualID, Visual,
XVisualInfo), but none of them seem to provide the XImage.bits_per_pixel
value (the actual size of a pixel, including padding)? Even after 33
years, X11 still seems overengineered, confusing, and inconvenient. So
just call X11 a heap of shit, and assume the worst case for alignment.
It may be completely useless, and I can't verify it as no known samples
or other known/accessible software using it, but why not?
Putting this together with he 422 code requires making it slightly more
generic. I'm still staying with a "huge" if tree instead of a table to
select the scanline worker callback, because it's actually small and not
huge (although it not being generic still feels slightly painful).
Now everything is super generic and super undebuggable. Some awkwardness
because the new metadata is basically a transposed version of the
mp_regular_imgfmt metadata, which was used for component info before.
The old code ignored many corner cases, and even wrote "blacker than
black" to YUV images. Use the new pixel format metadata and other
recently added gimmicky crap, which should make this more correct. Even
the almighty fuckup of a format AV_PIX_FMT_UYYVYY411 should work,
although that couldn't be tested for obvious reasons.
This doesn't work for "monow", but this is so extremely fringe while at
the same time painful that I just won't care. In theory, it could be
modeled as some sort of inverted gray colorspace or something.
Make sure to accept only native endian mpv formats. Previously, it
didn't check, and simply matched LE, because these are usually defined
before the BE formats.
red_mask etc. are defined as unsigned long, so use that instead of
hardcoding a 32 bit limit.
A repeat of the previous useless commits.
Pondered whether to use separate fields or just a flags integer for
color and component types; the latter won for now.
Functions like mp_imgfmt_get_component_type() are now discouraged, and
mp_imgfmt_desc.flags is back for defining all information. Some days ago
I felt like the opposite would be the better design. Fortunately, it
doesn't matter.
With this, I think all image format properties that mpv needs are
exhaustively defined all in one place.
Useless, but super generic! Actually may add support for other fringe
formats, however vo_x11 in itself is useless, so nothing won here. Also
I didn't bother with big endian support.
I guess I decided to stuff it all into mp_imgfmt_desc (the "old"
struct). This is probably a mistake. At first I was afraid that this
struct would get too fat (probably justified, and hereby happened), but
on the other hand mp_imgfmt_get_desc() (which builds the struct) calls
the former mp_imgfmt_get_layout(), and the separation doesn't make too
much sense anyway. Just merge them.
Still, try to keep out the extra info for packed YUV bullshit. I think
the result is OK, and there's as much information as there was before.
The test output changes a little. There's no independent bits[] array
anymore, so formats which did not previously have set this now show it.
(These formats are mpv-only and are still missing the metadata. To be
added later). Also, the output for the cursed packed formats changes.
Use the new pixfmt metadata to replace the format tables with weird
generic code.
As you can see, this removes the tables that essentially duplicate
information (which is baaaaaaaaaad), in exchange for code which is
probably more fragile and has less of a chance of being understood by
someone new to the code (which is probably even worse from a maintenance
and robustness point of view, but LALALA I CAN'T HEAR YOU).
There are some more formats which can be handled like this (RGB30 and
packed YUV I guess), maybe later.
My previous commit added support for this format, but it was still
broken, and prevented the allocation code from working. It's unknown
whether it's correct now (because this pixfmt is so obscure and useless,
there are no known samples around), but who cares.
Trying to use anything other than CLOCK_MONOTONIC here would be a
disaster. No idea if it's even possible for the clockid here to be
something other than CLOCK_MONOTONIC in this function but it's better
safe than sorry. Closes#7740.
I thought I'd probably want something like this, so the hardcoded stuff
in repack.c can be removed eventually. Of course this has no purpose at
all, and will not have any. (For now, this provides only metadata, and
nothing uses it, apart from the "test" that dumps it as text.)
This adds full support for AV_PIX_FMT_UYYVYY411 (probably out of spite,
because the format is 100% useless). Support for some mpv-only formats
is missing, ironically.
The code goes through _lengths_ to try to make sense out of the FFmpeg
AVPixFmtDescriptor data. Which is even more amazing that the new
metadata basically mirrors pixdesc, and just adds to it. Considering
code complexity and speed issues (it takes time to crunch through all
this shit all the time), and especially the fact that pixdesc is very
_incomplete_, it would probably better to have our own table to all
formats. But then we'd not scramble every time FFmpeg adds a new format,
which would be annoying. On the other hand, by using pixdesc, we get the
excitement to see whether this code will work, or break everything in
catastrophic ways.
The data structure still sucks a lot. Maybe I'll redo it again. The text
dump is weirdly differently formatted than the C struct - because I'm
not happy with the representation. Maybe I'll redo it all over again.
In summary: this commit does nothing.
Remove the vaguely defined plane_bits and component_bits fields from
struct mp_imgfmt_desc. Add weird replacements for existing uses. Remove
the bytes[] field, replace uses with bpp[].
Fix some potential alignment issues in existing code. As a compromise,
split mp_image_pixel_ptr() into 2 functions, because I think it's a bad
idea to implicitly round, but for some callers being slightly less
strict is convenient.
This shouldn't really change anything. In fact, it's a 100% useless
change. I'm just cleaning up what I started almost 8 years ago (see
commit 00653a3eb0). With this I've decided to keep mp_imgfmt_desc,
just removing the weird parts, and keeping the saner parts.
The image w and h members must match params.w and params.h, so
should not be changed directly. The helper function mp_image_set_size
is designed for this purpose, so just use that instead.
This prevents an assertion error with the rewritten draw_bmp.
Fixes#7721.
Added in libplacebo v60, unfortunately with some changes in design that
make it a bit of an awkward fit for the way timers are used in mpv.
Timer queries in libplacebo don't support "start" and "stop"-style
operations, and instead are attached directly to operations. The only
sane way of implementing this in the ra API is to have a single 'active
timer' that gets attached to every pass, taking care to sort distinct
operations into distinct pl_timer queries within that ra_timer.
This design unfortunately doesn't let us have multiple 'active timers'
concurrently, similar to the current such limitation in ra_gl. But it's
also not a big deal.
Render most of the OSD on the CPU, then draw it using a relatively
simple method. Do this for minimum code maintenance overhead. (While it
doesn't matter for vo_direct3d, and the effort spent here is probably
more than this would ever hope, I do hope to simplify the internal OSD
API for all these fringe VOs. Only vo_gpu should be allowed to do more
sophisticated things.)
If your GPU is shit (which it will be if you "want" to use vo_direct3d),
this might actually improve performance... is what I'd say, but out of
laziness a full screen sized texture gets uploaded on every OSD/subtitle
change, so maybe not.
This isn't useful anymore. We have a much better d3d11 renderer in
vo_gpu. D3D11 is available in all supported Windows versions. The
StretchRect path might still be useful for someone (???), and leaving it
at least evades conflict about users who want to keep using this VO for
inexplicable reasons. (Low power usage might be a justified reason, but
still, no.)
Also fuck the win32 platform, it's a heap of stinky shit. Microsoft is
some sort of psycho clown software company. Granted, maybe still better
than much of the rest of Silly Con Valley.
The original solution for #7017 was sort of a hack, but this hack is no
longer needed because c05e5d9d fixed the underlying issue causing this
error to be spammed in the first place. So just remove the "fix" that
apparently introduced about as many issueas it fixed.
Fixes#7719, hopefully.
This will probably make it slower. But since I don't care about
vo_vaapi, that's perfectly OK. It serves mostly as a test for the
previous commit. In addition, this code was pretty bad (custom broken
scaling and not-blending that probably broke in some situation). If that
wasn't enough, some vaapi drivers also provide only a single overlay at
a time, while this code required a bunch.
There also seems to be a Mesa bug: the overlay gets stretched when
src_x/y was not 0. Or maybe I misunderstood how this is supposed to
work. A bug is probably more likely? Nobody cares about this API.
They are sort of confusing, and they hide the fact that they have an
alpha component. Using the actual formats directly is no problem, sicne
these were useful only for big endian systems, something we can't test
anyway.
This was not intended to be committed in 0e3f893606. It disables
the extra wakeup if working==true. I've convinced myself that the wakeup
was really needed at the time, so no idea how I didn't notice this until
someone pointed it out on the commit diff on github (lol).