This is for the sake of command.c and the "deinterlace" option/property.
Instead of forcing certain "better" defaults when inserting yadif,
change the actual "yadif" defaults.
I pondered not changing vf_yadif, and instead adding a trivial "yadif-
auto" wrapper filter, which would merely have different defaults. But
thinking about it, it doesn't make any sense for "deinterlace" to have
different defaults from vf_yadif, with vf_yadif having the "worse"
defaults. If someone wants the old behavior, the old behavior can be
forced in a backward and forward compatible way by setting the
suboptions.
Fixes#2539 (kind of).
MPlayer traditionally always used the display aspect ratio, e.g. 16:9,
while FFmpeg uses the sample (aka pixel) aspect ratio.
Both have a bunch of advantages and disadvantages. Actually, it seems
using sample aspect ratio is generally nicer. The main reason for the
change is making mpv closer to how FFmpeg works in order to make life
easier. It's also nice that everything uses integer fractions instead
of floats now (except --video-aspect option/property).
Note that there is at least 1 user-visible change: vf_dsize now does
not set the display size, only the display aspect ratio. This is
because the image_params d_w/d_h fields did not just set the display
aspect, but also the size (except in encoding mode).
They are evil and should be eradicated. Some of these were pretty dumb
anyway.
There are probably some more around in platform specific code or other
code not enabled by default on Linux.
The vf_format suboption is replaced with --video-output-levels (a global
option and property). In particular, the parameter is removed from
mp_image_params. The mechanism is moved to the "video equalizer", which
also handles common video output customization like brightness and
contrast controls.
The new code is slightly cleaner, and the top-level option is slightly
more user-friendly than as vf_format sub-option.
This can happen if the hw decoder allocates padded surfaces (e.g.
mod16), but the VPP output surface was allocated with the exact size.
Apparently VPP requires matching input and output sizes, or it will add
artifacts. In this case, it added mirrored pixels to the bottom few
pixels.
Note that the previous commit should have fixed this. But it didn't
work, while this commit does.
Fixes#2320.
If not set, VPP will use the whole surface. This is a problem if the
surfaces are padded, and especially if the surfaces are padded by
different amounts.
This is an attempt to fix#2320, but it appears to do nothing at all.
I took this out because I thought the filter chain would auto-negotiate
using nv12 without the explicit hint, and it does in the basic case
with no intermediate filter, but once you start adding filters, it
can end up negotiating a different format and then failing.
Today, vdpaurb will fail if it's used with non-hardware-decoded
content. This created work for the user as they have to explicitly
add or not add it, depending on the content.
As an improvement, we can make vdpaurb pass through any frames
that aren't hardware decoded, so that it can always be present in the
filter chain, if desired.
I see no point in keeping these around. Keeping wrappers for some select
libavfilter filters just because MPlayer had these filters is not a good
reason.
Ultimately, all real filtering work should go to libavfilter, and users
should get used to using vf_lavfi directly. We might even not require
the awful double-nested syntax for using libavfilter one day.
vf_rotate, vf_yadif, vf_stereo3d are kept because mpv uses them
internally. (They all extend the lavfi filters or change their
defaults.) vf_mirror is kept for symmetry with vf_flip. vf_gradfun and
vf_pullup are probably semi-popular, so I'll remove them not yet - only
after some more discussion.
This was requested by someone.
All code was written by myself; some minor changes by 2 contributors who
agreed to general LGPL relicensing. 1 line of code is by someone unknown
who possibly wasn't asked (setting the "display_fps" variable), and
which can be reasonably ignored as it makes up only 0.1% of the file.
The interlaced frame test needs to be aware that the input mpi might be
NULL - this happens at the end of a stream when the input frames have
all been submitted but frames still need to be drained from the
decoder.
Normally, vdpau decoded frames are passed directly to a suitable
vo (vo_vdpau or vo_opengl) without ever touching system memory. This
is efficient for output purposes, but prevents any of the regular
filters from being used with such frames.
This new filter implements a read-back step to pull the frames back
into system memory where they can be acted on by other filters.
Eventually the frames will be sent to the vo as if they were normal
software-decoded frames.
Note that a vdpau compatible vo must still be used to ensure that
the decoder is properly initialised.
Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>
Drop libva versions below 0.34.0. These are ancient, so I don't care.
Drop the vo_vaapi deinterlacer as well. With 0.34.0, VPP is always
available, and deinterlacing is done with vf_vavpp.
The vaCreateSurfaces() function changes its signature - actually it did
in 0.34.0 or so, and the <va/va_compat.h> defined a macro to make it use
the old signature.
This was missing for extended deinterlacer.
Unfortunately, these deinterlacer still do not work. The provided future
frame (which is all the deinterlacers want) seems to be correct, though.
One minor behavioral change is that this always keeps the previous frame
for PTS computations. This could be avoided (in order to keep exactly
the same behavior as before), but it seems more elegant and should not
do any harm. (Also, if we really cared about reducing hw frame refs,
a more worthy goal is producing the field output incrementally.)
The mapped data (pointed to by the param variable) is not needed before,
so the call can be moved down. Also, this prevents that the buffer
remains mapped forever if the other vaMapBuffer() call above fails (the
cleanup code forgets to unmap the buffer - this commit makes it
unnecessary).
This used a do-while loop, which runs only once, as replacement for a
cleanup goto. While this is ok, doing a goto directly is easier to
follow and is closer to idiomatic C. But mainly remove it so that the
indentation can be reduced.
We do not fill them, so we would pass random IDs to the driver. The code
was originally written to handle bob deinterlacing only, so I guess it
originally passed always 0 anyway, despite having code for reference
surface list allocation.
Also, move down the vaUnmapBuffer() call. This call actually "unmaps"
the param pointer, so accessing it after the unmap call would be
undefined behavior. The "example" in <va/vavpp.h> does this too, but
it's most likely an error.
(Additionally, not even bob deinterlacing worked correctly in my test,
sigh.)
MP_IMGFIELD_TOP/MP_IMGFIELD_BOTTOM were completely unused, and
MP_IMGFIELD_ORDERED was always set (even though vf_vdpaupp.c strangely
checked for the latter).
Vapoursynth made an incompatible API change: clips with unknown length
are not supported anymore. In fact, Vapoursynth abort()s the program
(which by the way invalidate all of its claims of API/ABI stability).
So add some nonsense to make it work again.
It's entirely useless, especially now that vo.c handles screenshots in a
generic way, and requires no special VO support. There are some
potential weird use-cases, but actually I've never seen it being used.