This was too hardcoded to libswscale. In particular, IMGFMT_RGB30 output
is only possible with the zimg wrapper, so the context needs to be taken
into account (since this depends on the --sws-allow-zimg option
dynamically). This is still slightly risky, because zimg currently will
still fall back to swscale in some cases, such as when it refuses to
initialize the particular color conversion that is requested.
f_autoconvert.c could actually handle this better, but I'm tool fucking
lazy right now, and nobody cares anyway, so go away, OK?
This integrates it as "special" format, with no alpha component, as the
equivalent IMGFMT_RGB30 isn't meant to contain any.
Nothing can produce this format in the video chain yet, so the next
commits are needed to make this actually work.
Sometimes the atlas can get so large that it exceeds the maximum allowed
size for an mp_image. Since the atlas will never shrink naturally, this
breaks subtitles entirely until mpv is restarted. Reset the packer so
that subtitles can rendered properly once the atlas fits again.
This is a partial workaround for #6286.
The statement about the display FPS is outdated by several years.
"audio"-sync mode does not use the display FPS anymore, and that it's
X11 only also isn't true anymore.
These modes have separate implementations for audio and display video
sync. modes, so the explanations are separate.
Why the hell are users playing around with this anyway? The explanations
are probably too special to make sense for anyone who doesn't know the
code (and who knows the code doesn't need them anyway), but whatever.
This is mostly just because of the odd RGB default gamma issue, which
shouldn't have any real impact. This also sets allow_approximate_gamma,
which I hope is fine for normal use cases.
Normally, the Y plane can just be passed directly to zimg, and only the
chroma plane needs to be (de)interleaved. It still needs a copy if the Y
pointer is not aligned, though. (Whether this is actually a problem
depends on the CPU and probably zimg's compiler.)
This requires deciding per plane whether the plane should go through the
repack buffer or not. This logic is active in non-nv12 cases, because
not doing so would require extra code (maybe 2 lines or so).
repack_align is now always called, even if it's planar->planar with all
input aligned, but it won't actually do anything in that case. The
assumption is that zimg won't change behavior if you pass a callback
that does nothing versus passing NULL as callback.
This is for formats like nv12 (including p010, nv24, etc.). Might be
important for hardware decoding. Previously, this would have forced a
libswscale fallback.
The genericism makes this only slightly more complicated. The main
complication is due to the fact that mixing planar and packed stuff is
insane (thanks, Nvidia).
P010 output will actually happily set any of the 6 bit "padding" LSB,
that are normally supposed to be 0 (for unpadded data there is P016).
Scaling happens with 16 bit precision. Not going to bother adding an
extra packer which zeros them out, or with shifting them in
packing/unpacking. Lets just hope nobody notices.
This is similar to mp_imgfmt_find(), but probably a bit saner. Used by
the next commit. The previous commit is required to map this
unambiguously between all formats.
As the code comment says, this is needed to disambiguate FFmpeg formats.
This struct only describes the "physical" layout of a format, while
FFmpeg also attaches part of the colorspace information to the format.
We've set all planes to the same zmask. But for subsampled chroma, the
zmask obviously needs to be smaller. This could lead to out of bounds
memory read and write accesses.
Move the align repacker to a single function, since this is now more
convenient.
Make the existing "not found" messages debug only, and add a new verbose
message if a config file was opened. The idea is that logging should
make it apparent whether or not config files are loaded, and it's more
common to use scripts without config files, leading to fewer log
messages in verbose mode.
demux_mkv has lots of logging that shows information about the file. It
sort of reminds of mkvinfo output. While this is sometimes interesting,
it's too much for verbose mode, and should be in debug log level.
In 2017, we lowered this to debug level. But I think setting options is
important enough that it should be logged even in verbose, at least
compared to all the other dumb noise.
This might be reduced again if verbose logging becomes much cleaner.
This probably covers all packed formats which have byte-aligned
component, no alpha, and no subsampling. Everything else needs more
imgfmt metadata, or something even more complicated. Alpha is primarily
not supported, because zimg requires a second scaler instance for it,
and handling packing/unpacking with it is an unacceptable mess.
Raise swscale and zimg default parameters. This restores screenshot
quality settings (maybe) unset in the commit before. Also expose some
more libswscale and zimg options.
Since these options are also used for VOs like x11 and drm, this will
make x11/drm/etc. much slower. For compensation, provide a profile that
sets the old option values: sw-fast. I'm also enabling zimg here, just
as an experiment.
The core problem is that we have a single set of command line options
which control the settings used for most swscale/zimg uses. This was
done in the previous commit. It cannot differentiate between the VOs,
which need to be realtime and may accept/require lower quality options,
and things like screenshots or vo_image, which can be slower, but should
not sacrifice quality by default.
Should this have two sets of options or something similar to do the
right thing depending on the code which calls libswscale? Maybe. Or
should I just ignore the problem, make it someone else's problem (users
who want to use software conversion VOs), provide a sub-optimal
solution, and call it a day? Definitely, sounds good, pushing to master,
goodbye.
Lots of dumb crap to do... something. Instead of adding yet another dumb
helper, just use the main" sws_utils API in both callers. (Which,
unfortunately, has been duplicated for glorious webp screenshots,
despite the fact that webp is crap.)
Good part: can enable zimg for screenshots (as far as needed).
Bad part: uses "default" swscale parameters instead of HQ now.
Purpose uncertain. I guess it's slightly better, maybe.
The move of the sws/zimg options from VO opts (vo_opt_list) to the
top-level option list is tricky. VO opts have some helper code in vo.c,
that sends VOCTRL_SET_PANSCAN to the VO on every VO opts change. That's
because updating certain VO options used to be this way (and not just
the panscan option). This isn't needed anymore for sws/zimg options, so
explicitly move them away.
To be used in the next commit.
According to compiler explorer, __builtin_clz is very widely available,
and it barely makes sense to provide a fallback. clang also eats this
(and identifies at least as GCC 4). Actually, there's doubt that a fast
log2 implementation is needed at all (I guess UTF-8 parsing needs it,
but something UTF-8-specific would probably make it faster than using
log2). So the fallback is just something naive.
By default utilizes the color space of the desktop on which the
swap chain is located. If a specific value is defined, it will be
instead be utilized.
Enables configuration of the PQ color space (BT.2020 primaries,
PQ transfer function) for HDR.
Additionally, signals the swap chain color space to the renderer,
so that the render looks correct without having to specify
target-trc or target-prim manually.
Due to all of the APIs being Win10+ only, will only work starting
with Windows 10.
This lets us set primaries, transfer function and the target peak
based on what the presenting layer would want us to have.
Now that this mechanism is available, warn if the user has
overridden values such as primaries or transfer function.