This can happen when the input stream is somehow blocking on network,
and the user still send input in one way or another, and one of the
commands is a compound command ("cmd a ; cmd b").
This essentially reverts commit cca13efb. The code in the if was
supposed to be run only if the mouse button was down, because in this
case the mouse area is never considered to be left. Since it was run
for every mouse button, mouse_leave wasn't sent.
Fixes#745.
pthread_equal() returns 0 if the threads are not the same, and somehow
I got that wrong. The worst is that I actually explicitly checked the
manpage when I wrote this code.
The interrupt callback will can be called from another thread if the
cache is enabled, and the stream disconnects. Then stream_reconnect()
will call this function from within the cache thread.
mp_input_check_interrupt() is not thread-safe due to read_events() not
being thread-safe. It will call input callbacks added with
mp_input_add_fd() - these callbacks lead to code not protected by locks,
such as reading X11 events.
Solve this by adding a stupid hack, which checks whether the calling
thread is the main playback thread (i.e. calling the input callbacks
will be safe). We can remove this hack later, but it requires at least
moving the VO to its own thread first.
This used global variables for the asynchronous interrupt callback.
Pick the simple and dumb solution and stuff the callback into
mpv_global. Do this because interrupt checking should also work in the
connect phase, and currently stream creation equates connecting.
Ideally, this would be passed to the stream on creation instead, or
connecting would be separated from creation. But since I don't know yet
which is better, and since moving stream/demuxer into their own thread
is something that will happen later, go with the mpv_global solution.
This is for the sake of multi-key commands again. This could break:
SPACE ignore
SPACE-SPACE command
while this worked:
SPACE-SPACE command
SPACE ignore
The reason being that if the shorter command was first in the list,
it would obviously match, and searching was stopped.
This is for the sake of multi-key combinations (see github issue #718).
Now a multi-key sequence isn't matched if any of the previous keys were
actually mapped.
We only need to track key up/down for a single key. There may be some
minor loss of robustness, but this can (probably) happen only if a VO or
user sends strange or complicated sequences of events. In the normal
case, what we do is more than enough. Most simplification comes from the
fact that mpv is not a game console, and users normally execute only one
action at once.
The window close button is usually mapped to the CLOSE_WIN pseudo-key.
Until now, --input-test treated this pseudo-key like any other key (like
the rest of the input handling code), so you couldn't close the window
in this mode. The manpage had silly instructions and warnings how to
deal with this.
Just always quit when CLOSE_WIN is received, and improve the
instructions.
The input code always supported combinations of multiple keys (even in
MPlayer, although there the code was active really only for mouse
buttons). This was arcance and also made the code more complicated. I
only know of a single person who ever made use of this feature.
Remove this feature, and repurpose some of the support code (e.g.
parsing, display of key combinations, etc.) to handle such multi-
combinations as sequences, instead of keys to be pressed at the same
time. This is much simpler and implements the feature requested in
github issue #718.
This commit will probably cause a bunch of regressions, since the input
handling code has some weird corner cases. I couldn't find any problems
when testing, though.
The recent change of waking up the playback thread using a wakeup pipe
doesn't work on windows, because windows is horrible. So use a condition
variable instead to wake up the thread. To make things worse, jackaudio
is also horrible and "disallows" the use of mutexes, so all we can do is
implementing a half-solution that is not race condition free.
It would probably better to give up on this lock-free crap in the pull-
API audio path.
Mostly untested.
Same change as in e2184fcb, but this time for pull based AOs. This is
slightly controversial, because it will make a fast syscall from e.g.
ao_jack. And according to JackAudio developers, syscalls are evil and
will destroy realtime operation. But I don't think this is an issue at
all.
Still avoid locking a mutex. I'm not sure what jackaudio does in the
worst case - but if they set the jackaudio thread (and only this thread)
to realtime, we might run into deadlock situations due to priority
inversion and such. I'm not quite sure whether this can happen, but I'll
readily follow the cargo cult if it makes hack happy.
I hate tabs.
This replaces all tabs in all source files with spaces. The only
exception is old-makefile. The replacement was made by running the
GNU coreutils "expand" command on every file. Since the replacement was
automatic, it's possible that some formatting was destroyed (but perhaps
only if it was assuming that the end of a tab does not correspond to
aligning the end to multiples of 8 spaces).
I have some doubts that short reads are even allowed/
possible for /dev/js*, does someone know for sure?
git-svn-id: svn://svn.mplayerhq.hu/mplayer/trunk@37132 b3059339-0415-0410-9bf9-f77b7e298cf2
Change script_message to broadcast the message to all clients. Add a new
script_message_to command, which does what the old script_message
command did.
This is intended as simplification, although it might lead to chaos too.
This might be helpful if we ever want cascading config files. Also, we
will probably need it if we change the default input.conf bindings, and
want to provide compatibility input.conf files.
This was broken by commit bb6b543812. Note that the original pull
request was fine, but it was broken by my own stupidity when I was
"improving" it.
The problem is that the new loadfile argument was not considered
optional anymore after my changes. The original pull request did handle
this by setting .defval to a dummy value, but I removed that part.
Fix it again by introducing a flag that designates that the parameter is
optional. (I didn't want to add it to m_option.h, because technically,
all options are optional, and it's not possible to have non-optional
options.)
Until now, strings were the only allowed dynamically allocated argument
type in input commands. Extend it so that it works for any type. (The
string expansion in command.c is of course still string specific.)
MP_CMD_COMMAND_LIST commands (used to implement key bindings with
multiple commands) were not checked for abort commands. Implement it.
Remove the remarks about multi-commands being special from the manpage.
Seek coalescing is handled differently now, and the issue with abort
commands is fixed with this commit.
This is a regression introduced from moving Lua scripts (including the
OSC) to their own threads. Now OSC and dvdnav can add their bindings at
the same time without coordination, which seems to result in the OSC
winning most time, and thus overriding the dvdnav menu bindings.
Fix this by adding a flag that makes dvdnav menu bindings take priority
over all other bindings.
I don't like this function at all, but it's basically a trick to get the
input's mp_log instance in a case the mp_input_parse_cmd_strv() is
almost certainly not going to output anything. But still make it
somewhat more consistent with mp_input_parse_cmd_strv() - why force the
caller to always use MP_ON_OSD_AUTO?
Both X11 and Wayland support the same format for drag & drop operations
(text/uri-list), and the code for that was copied from x11_common.c to
wayland_common.c. Factor it out.
This code is shared between input.conf parser and option parser. Until
now, the performance didn't really matter. But I want to use this code
for JSON parsing too, and since JSON will have to be parsed a lot, it
should probably try to avoid realloc'ing too much.
This commit moves parsing of C-style escaped strings into a common
function, and allows using it in a way realloc can be completely
avoided, if the already allocated buffer is large enough.
stream_read_complete() fails if the file is larger than the requested
maximum size. But input.c didn't check for this case, and no indication
that something went wrong was printed.