Take advantage of the fact that list_devs is called with a
hotplug_inited ao. Also eliminate unnecessary nested function
abstraction of hotplug_(un)init and list_devs. However, keep list_devs
in ao_wasapi_utils.c since it uses the private functions get_device_id,
get_device_name and exposing these would require including headers for
IMMDevice in ao_wasapi_utils.h.
Create a second copy of the change_notify structure for the hotplug
ao. change_notify->is_hotplug distinguishes the hotplug version from
the regular one monitoring the currently playing ao. Also make the
change notification less verbose now that there might be two of them around.
More clearly separate the exclusive and shared mode format discovery.
Make the exclusive mode search more systematic in particular about
channel maps (i.e., use chmap_sel). Assume that the same sample format
/ sample rates work for all channels to narrow the search space.
The code actually uses blocking mode, so opening sound device in non-blocking
mode results in choppy sound. Also, inflating the buffer isn't necessary in
blocking mode, so the function may simply return without doing anything.
This broke with PulseAudio: when changing some audio filters (like for
playback speed), mixer_reinit_audio() was called - and it overwrote the
volume with whatever mpv thought the volume was before. If the volume
was changed externally before and while mpv was running, this would
reset the volume to the old value.
Fixes#1335.
We've been prefering the libavcodec mp3 decoder for half a year now.
There is likely no benefit at all for using the libmpg123 one. It's just
a maintenance burden, and tricks users into thinking it's a required
dependency.
--af=bs2b:help abort()ed because the default value of the "profile"
option is not represented by any choice. Fix it by adding an "unset"
choice. (It's a bit odd because there's already a "default" choice,
which is not default, but I don't care enough about this filter.)
Fixes#1712.
Trying to handle such video is almost worthless, but it was requested by
at least 2 users.
If there are no timestamps, enable byte seeking by setting
ts_resets_possible. Use the video FPS (wherever it comes from) and the
audio samplerate for timing. The latter was already done by making the
first packet emit DTS=0; remove this again and do it "properly" in a
higher level.
To handle seeking correctly, we need to flush the filter. libavfilter
does not support flushing, so we destroy and recreate it. We also need
to handle resume-after-EOF, because the mpv audio code sends an EOF
before and after seeking (the latter happens because the player drains
the filter chain in a generic way, which "causes" EOF).
In commit 5f8b060e I blindly assumed that the packet sizes were in
pseudo-samples, but they were actually in bytes. Oops.
(The effect was that cutting the audio was a bit less precise than it
can be.)
Also remove the packet size from ad_spdif.c; it didn't actually use it,
and simply takes what the spdif "muxer" returns.
Needed for the next commit. This commit should probably be reverted as
soon as we're working with full audio frames internally, instead of
"flat" FIFOs.
Instead of maintaining a private ring buffer, use the generic support
for audio APIs with pull callbacks (internally called AO pull API). This
also fixes latency calculations: instead of just returning the
ringbuffer status, the audio playback state is calculated better and
includes interpolation.
The main reason this wasn't done earlier was mid-stream format
switching. The pull API can now handle it (in a way) by destroying and
recreating the AO. This is a bit brutal, but quite simple. It's untested
in this new AO, though. Some details might not be right, like how ot
restores the old format when reloading.
This could mute a digital passthrough stream by writing zeros. All other
volume values did nothing.
The comment about MPlayer dying hasn't been true in mpv for quite a
while. It's even possible that it's fixed in upstream MPlayer. mpv will
print a scary error message when trying to change volume with spdif, and
continue normally.
If we really want to mute by writing zeros, we should do it in a
separate filter. But I'm not overly fascinated by this approach; is it
even guaranteed receivers will not be confused by a stream of zeros?
The main reason to remove this is that it's in the way of further
cleanups.
Handle the failure gracefully, instead of exploding and disabling audio.
Just set the speed back to 1.0.
Also remove the AF_DETACH from af_scaletempo. This actually created a
dangling pointer in af_add(), a tricky consequence of af_add()
reconfiguring the filter chain and the newly added filter using
AF_DETACH. Fortunately the AF_DETACH is not needed (and probably never
worked - it comes from MPlayer times, and MPlayer also disables audio
when trying to change speed with spdif).
Although the libraries we use for resampling (libavresample and
libswresample) do not support changing sampelrate on the fly, this makes
it easier to make sure no audio buffers are implicitly dropped. In fact,
this commit adds additional code to drain the resampler explicitly.
Changing speed twice without feeding audio in-between made it crash
with libavresample inc ertain cases (libswresample is fine). This is
probably a libavresample bug. Hopefully this will be fixed, and also I
attempted to workaround the situation that crashes it. (It seems to
point in direction of random memory corruption, though.)
This echanges the two events hForceFeed/hFeedDone for hResume. This
like the last commit makes things more deterministic.
Importantly, the forcefeed is only done if there is not already a full
buffer yet to be played by the device. This should fix some of the
problems with exclusive mode.
This commit also removes the necessity to have a proxy to the
AudioClient object in the main thread.
fixes#1529
This makes things a bit more deterministic. It ensures that the audio
thread isn't doing anything between IAudioClient_Stop(),
IAudioClient_Reset() and setting the sample_count to 0.
Buffer overfilling on resume is still a problem in exclusive mode (see
next commit).
This commit adds notifications for hot plugging of devices. It also extends
the old behaviour of the `audio-out-detected-device` property which is now
backed by the hotplugging code. This allows clients to be notified when the
actual audio output device changes.
Maybe hotplugging should be supported for ao_coreaudio_exclusive too, but it's
device selection code is a bit fragile.
This requires jumping through multiple hoops on fire. Since the
PulseAudio API is virtually undocumented, I'm not sure if this is
correct either. We only react to sink events, and only to the NEW/REMOVE
events. CHANGE events are ignored, because PulseAudio fires them far too
often - even if the system is completely idle! If pa_sink_info.name can
change, we're in trouble. pa_sink_info.description is not so important,
but it'd also be a bit un-nice if it can change, and we don't update it.
The weird way how the actual AO and the hotplug context share the same
struct (ao) comes in handy here, although context_success_cb() still had
to be duplicated from success_cb() - the unused argument has a different
type.
Not very important for the command line player; but GUI applications
will want to know about this.
This only adds the internal API; support for specific audio outputs
comes later.
This reuses the ao struct as context for the hotplug event listener,
similar to how the "old" device listing API did. This is probably a bit
unclean and confusing. One argument got reusing it is that otherwise
rewriting parts of ao_pulse would be required (because the PulseAudio
API requires so damn much boilerplate). Another is that --ao-defaults is
applied to the hotplug dummy ao struct, which automatically applies such
defaults even to the hotplug context.
Notification works through the property observation mechanism in the
client API. The notification chain is a bit complicated: the AO notifies
the player, which in turn notifies the clients, which in turn will
actually retrieve the device list. (It still has the advantage that it's
slightly cleaner, since the AO stuff doesn't need to know about client
API issues.)
The weird handling of atomic flags in ao.c is because we still don't
require real atomics from the compiler. Otherwise we'd just use atomic
bitwise operations.
This is a small oversight. The client name (as set on command line
options or, more importantly, the client API) was not set when listing
devices e.g. via the "audio-device-list" property.
Might or might not fix#1578.
Also adjust the log level for an unrelated message.
rubberband_available() can return a negative value, which we assigned to
a size_t variable, leading to the frame allocation to fail. This could
spam "Error filtering frame.". (That it spams this instead of exiting
should probably also be considered a bug.)
At least in the realtime mode and in our case, a negative return value
should not have any different meaning from a 0 return value, in
particular because we call rubberband_get_samples_required() or set the
"final" parameter for rubberband_process() to continue/stop processing.
After some testing, I am fairly convinced that these defaults sound
better than the previous settings. This also eliminates some issue
with random crackling and noise.
Also remove the `stretch` option since it has no effect in
realtime mode.
The previous commit on this filter accidentally removed the
RubberBandOptionProcessRealTime option. Without it, the lib prints a
warning and passes the audio through.
Also add the RubberBandOptionSmoothingOn option back. Though for some
reason the output sounds still very wrong.
librubberband exports a big load of options. Normally, the default
settings (whether they're librubberband defaults or our defaults) should
be sufficient, but since I'm not so sure about this, making it
configurable allows others to figure it out for me.
The problem here is that librubberband can buffer an arbitrary amount
of data, but at the same time doesn't provide a way to query how much
data is buffered. So we keep track of this manually, assuming that
librubberband tries to reach the requested time ratio for input and
output (which is probably true).
The disadvantage is that rounding errors could accumulate over time.
(Maybe it should try to round towards keeping the time ratio.)
In theory it could happen that draining on EOF happens incrementally,
and then the unconditional reset could have dropped the remaining
buffered audio.
If "--af=rubberband" is used, librubberband will be used to speed up or
slow down audio with pitch correction.
This still has some problems: the audio delay is not calculated
correctly, so the audio position jitters around by a few milliseconds.
This will probably ruin video timing.
Staring at the code a bit, it turns out that changing speed without
losing state is quite easy. The initialization code is big and
complicated, but most of it is specific only to the configured audio
format, not the speed.
Refactor the code so that changing speed at runtime could work. (It's
not actually used yet - the player code still does a complete reinit.
This will be fixed in the next commit.)
The "if (s->speed_tempo == s->speed_pitch)" looks a bit strange, but
does the same thing as the code did before: speed can be changed only if
exactly one flag is set. If both are set or none, speed can't be
changed.