Commit 884c179 attempted to make it possible to skip backwards through
the playlist, even for files which fail to intitialize, or play for a
very short time. This was also used to prevent mpv from looping forever
and doing nothing if --loop=inf is used, and no file in the playlist is
playable.
This broke looping of very short files, because mpv was assuming that
this case happened. But there are legitimate use cases.
Fix this by making the looping case special. Instead of checking whether
playback was "very short", check whether something could be decoded and
displayed/played. If yes, allow looping.
This is preliminary. There are still tons of issues, and any aspect
of scripting may change in the future. I decided to merge this
(preliminary) work now because it makes it easier to develop it, not
because it's done. lua.rst is clear enough about it (plus some
sarcasm).
This requires linking to Lua. Lua has no official pkg-config file, but
there are distribution specific .pc files, all with different names.
Adding a non-pkg-config based configure test was considered, but we'd
rather not.
One major complication is that libquvi links against Lua too, and if
the Lua version is different from mpv's, you will get a crash as soon
as libquvi uses Lua. (libquvi by design always runs when a file is
opened.) I would consider this the problem of distros and whoever
builds mpv, but to make things easier for users, we add a terrible
runtime test to the configure script, which probes whether libquvi
will crash. This is disabled when cross-compiling, but in that case
we hope the user knows what he is doing.
The problem with DVD/BD and playback resume is that most often, the
filename is just "dvd://", while the actual path to the DVD disk image
is given with --dvd-device. But playback resume works on the filename
only.
Add a pretty bad hack that includes the path to the disk image if the
filename starts with dvd://, and the same for BD respectively. (It's a
bad hack, but I want to go to bed, so here we go. I might revert or
improve it later, depending on user feedback.)
We have to cleanup the global variable mess around the dvd_device.
Ideally, this should go into MPOpts, but it isn't yet. Make the code
paths in mplayer.c take MPOpts anyway.
Refactor how mixer.c does volume/mute restoration and initialization.
Move to handling of --volume and --mute to mixer.c. Simplify the
implementation of these and hopefully fix bugs/strange behavior related
to using them as file-local options (this uses a somewhat dirty trick:
the option values are reverted to "auto" after initialization). Put most
code related to initialization and volume restoring in probe_softvol()
and restore_volume(). Having this code all in one place is less
confusing.
Instead of trying to detect whether to use softvol at runtime, detect it
at initialization time using AOCONTROL_GET_VOLUME (same with mute,
AOCONTROL_GET_MUTE). This implies we expect SET_VOLUME/SET_MUTE to work
if the GET variants work. Hopefully this is always the case.
This is also preparation for being able to change volume/mute settings
if audio is disabled, and for allowing restoring value with playback
resume.
This is for situations when repeated attempts at playing a playlist
entry failed, and playlist navigation becomes impossible due to that.
For example, it wasn't possible to skip backwards past an unplayable
playlist entry:
mpv file1.mkv doesntexist.mkv file3.mkv
You couldn't skip back to file1.mkv from file3.mkv. When running a
single "playlist_prev" command, doesntexist.mkv would be played, which
would fail to load. As reaction to the failure to load it, the next file
would be played, which is file3.mkv.
To make this even worse, the file could successfully load, but run only
for a split second. So just loading successfully isn't good enough.
Attempt to solve this by marking problematic playlist entries as failed,
and by having playlist_prev skip past such playlist entries. We define
failure as not being able to play more than 3 seconds (or failing to
initialize to begin with). (The 3 seconds are in real time, not file
duration.)
"playlist_prev force" still exhibits the old behavior.
Additionally, use the same mechanism to prevent pointless infinite
reloading if none of the files on the playlist exist. (See github issue
All in all, this is a heuristic, and later adjustments might be
necessary.
Note: forward skips (playlist_next) are not affected at all. (Except for
the interaction with --loop.)
The --deinterlace option does on playback start what the "deinterlace"
property normally does at runtime. You could do this before by using the
--vf option or by messing with the vo_vdpau default options, but this
new option is supposed to be a "foolproof" way.
The main motivation for adding this is so that the deinterlace property
can be restored when using the video resume functionality
(quit_watch_later command).
Implementation-wise, this is a bit messy. The video chain is rebuilt in
mpcodecs_reconfig_vo(), where we don't have access to MPContext, so the
usual mechanism for enabling deinterlacing can't be used. Further,
mpcodecs_reconfig_vo() is called by the video decoder, which doesn't
have access to MPContext either. Moving this call to mplayer.c isn't
currently possible either (see below). So we just do this before frames
are filtered, which potentially means setting the deinterlacing every
frame. Fortunately, setting deinterlacing is stable and idempotent, so
this is hopefully not a problem. We also add a counter that is
incremented on each reconfig to reduce the amount of additional work per
frame to nearly zero.
The reason we can't move mpcodecs_reconfig_vo() to mplayer.c is because
of hardware decoding: we need to check whether the video chain works
before we decide that we can use hardware decoding. Changing it so that
this can be decided in advance without building a filter chain sounds
like a good idea and should be done, but we aren't there yet.
This option makes the cursor always visible in windowed mode.
Apparently, this is what (some?) Windows and OSX users expect. It's
disabled by default for now.
Restructure the cursor hide logic a bit for this purpose.
Until now, options could be accessed as properties via "options/name",
but the access was read-only. Change it so that write access is possible
in --idle mode. (All options have to support setting options at that
time, simply because of the way MPlayer designed per-file options.
During playback, normal properties take care of changing things,
including things backed by options.)
This is work in progress. There are some issues: at least setting the
"vf" and "af" options won't work for strange reasons.
This includes the case of passing multiple files to command line
(internally this is the same as loading a playlist).
Resuming works by finding the first playlist entry that can be resumed.
Alternative implementations would be possible, such as hashing the
playlist contents. But this implementation is simpler, and doesn't have
the disadvantage that changes to the playlist (like appending entries)
will throw away the resume point.
This makes loading large playlists a bit slower, because it has to look
into ~/.mpv/watch_later/ for every entry. Loading a 15000 entries
playlist now increases from 150ms to 400ms. Considering you rarely load
playlists this big with mpv (because it's impractical considering the
terminal and non-GUI nature of the player), this is probably ok.
core is used in many unix systems for core dumps. For that reason some tools
work under the assumption that the file is indeed a core dump (for example
autoconf does this).
This commit just renames the files. The following one will change all the
includes to fix compilation. This is done this way because git has a easier
time tracing file changes if there is a pure rename commit.