The previous code tried to disable autocrop for cover-art by testing
that track-list/$vid/albumart is false, however, $vid is completely
unrelated to the track-list index.
It only sometimes succeeded to disable for albumart, by accident,
e.g. with one audio track and one video track where $vid==1 and
track-list/1 happens to be the video (cover art) track.
The new code detects the currently-used video track by finding a track
with type=="video" and selected==true. Unlike the previous code, it
also works in scenarios with many audio/video/sub tracks.
Additionally, autocrop is now enabled also with lavfi-complex, which
should be considered an improvement. The previous code implicitly
disabled it with lavfi-complex because $vid is nil on such case.
in->byte_level_seeks field is written and modified inside
update_bytes_read at the same time when demux_get_reader_state
is executing, which locks the demux thread mutex. This results
in a data race, reported by Thread Sanitizer when playing mp3 file
of sufficient long length.
reinit_audio_filters_and_output function will free mpctx->ao_chain
when there is a failure during audio initialization. So modify it
to return -1 in case of init failure. The return value is checked
to avoid use after free. Reported by Address Sanitizer when manually
specifying --ao which triggers "Failed to initialize audio driver" error.
When using "stty susp ''" to disable sending the TSTP signal with ^Z,
mpv didn't recognize ^Z correctly in the terminal:
[input] No key binding found for key 'Ctrl+2'.
Because ASCII 26 (^Z) and above were incorrectly considered ^<NUMBER>.
This commit moves the cutoff between letters/numbers from 25 to 26 so
that ^Z is now detected correctly as ^<LETTER>.
Additionally, it rephrases the ^<NUMBER> formula for clarity.
The --secondary-sub-visibility options was previously undocumented in
the pull request that added it. This commit adds documentation for it
and clarifies its behavior.
Modifies the sub-seek and sub-step commands with a second <flags>
argument to specify whether to seek/step on the primary or secondary
subtitles. The flag is used to index into the current_track array in
cmd_sub_step_seek.
Adds secondary-sub-start and secondary-sub-end properties by setting
the current_track index in the m_property's priv variable which later
gets accessed in get_times. Also adds a test of the secondary subtitle
time properties in tests/subtimes.js bound to 'T'.
Though, only when the output format is matroska, to avoid muxing errors.
This is quite useful when the input has ASS subtitles, as they tend to
rely on embedded fonts.
I've looked and studied the flow in the recorder, and to my
understanding, the packet queue is moot after the initial sync, maybe
even then - but that's beyond me right now.
With the previous choice to mux trailing packets whatever the case, this
doesn't result in any new ill effects (and some missing packets at the
end is no big deal).
Notably, since we don't have to hold onto the packets after we get
muxing, we'll never run into any issues with veeery long GOPs filling up
our queue (resulting in dropped packets and much user chagrin).
For muxing, FFmpeg expects the FLAC extradata to be just the bare STREAMINFO,
and passing the full FLAC extradata (fLaC header and block size, with any
additional channel layout metadata) will result in malformed output, as
ffmpeg will simply prefix another fLaC header in front.
This can be considered to be a bug.
FFmpeg's own demuxers only store the STREAMINFO, hence the naivety, while
our common source of FLAC streams, the matroska demuxer, holds onto the
full extradata. It has been deemed preferable to adjust the extradata upon
muxing, instead of in the demuxer (ffmpeg's FLAC decoder knows to read
the full fLaC extradata).
This fixes muxing FLAC streams, meaning recorder.c or dump-cache.
dump_cache() calls qsort() to order an array of pointers, while the
comparator forgets it's receiving pointers to pointers.
Since cache-dumping over multiple cache ranges is fairly rare, this
seems to have gone unnoticed.
In commit f7678575a5, wm4 chooses to mux
all remaining packets when mp_recorder_mark_discontinuity() is called and
adds a call to mux_packets(). However, it is called only after flush_packets(),
which clears the packets before they can be muxed out. This has no ill
effects per se - recordings end on keyframes, as before - but judging from
his commit message, the intention explicitly was to output the inter
frames, since long GOPs can mean several seconds of missing content from
the output. So, clear the stream packet queues only after the final mux.
Also, flushing can mean both discarding and committing. What a country!
osc-visibility can already be changed at runtime via script-message
or other means, but until now there was no way to tell what the
current state is.
Now shared-script-properties/osc-visibility reflects this state.
It's output-only by the osc - changing it does not affect the osc.
Useful if a script wants to change osc-visibility temporarily, and
later restore to its original state.
There's no way to coordinate if more than one script wants to change
it, but that would be a hard problem to solve anyway, even if the
osc itself tried to coordinate such requests from different sources.
Another day, another wayland refactor. Way back when, dcc3c2e added
support for the hidpi-window-scale option (something you probably should
never set to no but whatever) to wayland. Well technically, it never had
any runtime toggling support (don't remember if detecting when vo_opts
changed was possible or not then; maybe not). Anyways in the process of
fixing that, I went ahead and refactored how this is all handled. The
key difference is that when hidpi-window-scale is disabled, wl->scaling
is directly set to 1 instead of forcibly setting
wl->current_output->scale to 1. Note that scaling operations don't
always require a geometry reset/resize so set_surface_scaling needs to
be separate from set_geometry. The logic here is kind of complicated but
it (should) be correct.
The wl_surface lives for the entire lifetime of the vo. It's only
neccesary to set the scale initially and when the output scaling changes
(the surface moves to a different output with a different scale or the
output itself changes it scale). All of the calls that were being made
in the egl/vulkan resize functions are not needed. vo_wlshm wasn't
correctly rescaling itself before this commit since it had no logic to
handle scale changes. This should all be shared, common code in the
surface/output listeners.
A subtle regression from c26d833. On sway if mpv was set to be a
floating window in the config, set_buffer_scale would actually get
applied twice according to the wayland log. That meant a 1920x1080
window would appear as a 960x540 window if the scale of the wl_output
was set to 2. This only affected egl on sway (didn't occur on weston and
was too lazy to try anything else; probably they were fine). Since
wl->render is initially false, that meant that the very first run
through the render loop returns false. This probably caused something
weird to happen with the set_buffer_scale calls (the egl window gets
created and everything but mpv doesn't write to it just yet) which makes
the set_buffer_scale call happen an extra time. Since it was always
intended for mpv to initally render, this is worth fixing. Just chnage
wl->render to wl->hidden (again) and flip the bools around. That way,
the initial false value results in render == true and mpv tries to draw
on the first pass. This fixes the weird scaling behavior because
reasons.
Not sure what I was on when I wrote this. wayland-app-id is supposed to
default to "mpv". Just set that in the vo_sub_opts and don't do this
weird m_config_cache_write_opt thing. Also make the doc entry nicer.
Mostly a cosmetic change that (hopefully) makes things look better. Some
functions and structs that were previously being exported in the wayland
header were made static to the wayland_common.c file (these shouldn't be
accessed by anyone else).
When the current file is hidden and `ignore_hidden` is true,
autoload will skip loading other files in the current directory. Make
sure that the current file is always counted for autoloading even if it
is hidden.
In 8a7614a0fb files that start with a '.'
were blacklisted from autoload.lua. Since then
35e8710b86 was introduced and explicitly
whitelisted file extensions. With this change, there is no longer a
reason to blacklist all files starting with '.', because it is valid to
have a file called '.hidden.mkv', and there is no chance of hidden files
such as '.bashrc', '.DS_STORE', '.gitignore', etc. being autoloaded by
mpv.
This commit tries to keep the same behavior as before, which is to by
default not load hidden files, but allows the user to optionally allow
hidden files to be autoloaded.
Commits 4d1ffec and 6e481d0 renamed sub-ass-style-override to
sub-ass-override. But in commit bd603c2, when renaming it in
quit-watch-later's backup_properties, which determines which properties
are saved by quit-watch-later/write-watch-later-config, it was
incorrectly renamed to sub-style-override instead, and thus never got
saved even if modified at runtime. Instead mpv attempted to save the
non-existing property "sub-style-override", but since no error is raised
when saving non-existing properties with quit-watch-later, no one
noticed it. This commit renames the saved property to the correct new
name "sub-ass-override" so that it does get saved.
This fixes two issues, both of which resulted from the timers-wait
period not being re-calculated after idle-observers were executed:
- If timers were added from an idle observer then they could fire long
after they were due (only when/if the next mpv event arrives).
- Idle observers don't execute in zero time, and the wait period for
the next timer was implicitly extended by the idle observers
execution time (because it was calculated before the idle observers).
This commit ensures that if idle-observers were executed, then the
timers wait period is re-calculated, which solves both issues.
Previously, process_timers() kept going as long as there were due
timers, which could be for extended periods of time or even forever
if there were slow timer callbacks with either periodic timers or if
timers were added repeatedly.
This prevented dequeuing mpv events, and subsequently, among others,
prevented mpv from quitting until process_timers() completed.
For instance, this caused process_timers() to never return:
function render() <longer than 1/60 s on a slow system> end
mp.add_periodic_timer(1/60, render)
Similarly, it never returned if a timer callback always added a new
one-shot which was already due by the time the callback completed.
This commit ensures that process_timers() only executes callbacks which
were due when it started, so that timers which are added (or repeated)
during process_timers() will wait for the next iteration - after mpv
events are dequeued.
This has no performance impact under normal conditions (when callbacks
complete before the next timer is due).
Additionally, previously idle-observers were executed unconditionally
after the timers because indeed there was nothing due when (if...)
process_timers() completed. However, now process_timers() can return
even if there are due timers, so skip idle-observers on such case.
This fixes a long-standing apparent issue where mpv would display the last
frame with no subtitles at EOF. This is caused by sub rendering switching from
video timestamps to audio timestamps when the video ends, and audio streams
often running past the timestamp of the last video frame. However, authoring
tools (most notably Aegisub) don't tend to provide easy ways to add meaningful
subtitles after the end of the video, so this is rarely actually useful.
This makes cover-art-auto behave more like sub-auto and audio-file-auto:
- load cover art with a language, e.g. if playing foo.mp3, foo.en.jpg
will be loaded with lang=en
- load cover art containing the media filename with fuzzy and all, e.g.
'foo (large).jpg'
- make all/2 load all images in the directory, and make fuzzy/1 the
default
These are all uncommon use cases, but synchronizing the behavior of the
external file options simplifies the code.
The idle-observers block has at least 3 function calls, and it was
entered every time the script went into idle, however, we can save these
calls by checking first that there are indeed such observers.
Remove the check that the external filename is not the same as the
currently playing one, which prevents mpv from loading images again as
external cover art, but this isn't necessary because cover art is only
added when playing standalone audio. I had only added this check because
I would otherwise get a segfault only when compiling with gcc 10.2 with
optimize and changing position within a playlist of multiple images (and
this couldn't even be reproduced by Dudemanguy on the same gcc version),
but this was caused by the uninitialized lang variable which is now
fixed.
Commit 029ff10 added a goto statement which skipped initializing the
`lang' variable. This could crash depending on compiler optimizations
and other factors: if the lang bstr pointer happened to end up NULL
(which is apparently the case with most compilers) then it's validly
empty, but if it pointed to a random and incorrect memory address then
it crashed.
The crash was observed when mpv was compiled using gcc 10.2 with
optimizations enabled, and affected some third party Windows builds.
This commit ensures the goto doesn't skip the initialization.
Thanks to votemp for figuring this out.
Fixes#8922.
Previously tick() was ensured unconditionally only after mouse-move,
but there are other mouse-events which need re-rendering (tick), like
mouse-down (icons may get grayed-out) or mouse-up (icons may change).
For instance: mpv --pause --myclip.mkv
then move the mouse over the volume/mute OSC button, then - without
moving the mouse - press and release the left mouse button.
The osc was not re-rendered because it's paused and the mouse didn't
move, so the volume icon didn't get grayed-out when held down, and the
icon doesn't change on mouse-up (to reflect the new mute state).
Now both these changes are rendered correctly.
This is not a new issue, however, until the last commit - 96b246d
init probably didn't happen much (or at all) between mouse-down and
mouse-up, but after this commit, if there are chapters in a live-stream
then osc_init() is used to re-render the markers at the adjusted
position - which breaks the OSC buttons functionality if init happened
between mouse-down and mouse-up.
Commit 6abb7e3 updates the markers when the chapters change, but it
doesn't update their relative position at the bar when the duration
changes.
This means that adding chapters to a live stream would result in
corresponding chapter markers which were static while the duration
changed and thus their positions became incorrect over time until the
OSC was reinitialized.
This is fixed by observing the duration property if chapters are present
and reinitializing the OSC when the duration changes.
The live_markers user option, which determines whether the duration
property is observed when there are chapters, has been added in order to
allow disabling this behaviour as calling request_init() frequently
might have some impact on low-end systems.
The impact of request_init() on render() was measured to increase from
1-1.5 ms to 2-3 ms on a 2010 MacBook Air, while the impact was neglible
on a 2016 Surface Book (increasing only to an average of 1.4 ms from
1.3 ms for n=1500 render cycles).
The live_markers option is enabled by default.
If a plane is not connected to any displays, we won't set an entry in
the mapping of planes to displays. So ensure these unset entries are
null and skip them.
Fixes#8913
This is the Vulkan equivalent of the drm context for OpenGL, with
the big difference that it's implemented purely in terms of Vulkan
calls and doesn't actually require drm or kms.
The basic idea is to identify a display, mode, and plane on a device,
and then create a display backed surface for the swapchain. In theory,
past that point, everything is the same, and this is in fact the case
on Intel hardware. I can get a video playing on a vt.
On nvidia, naturally, things don't work that way. Instead, nvidia only
implemented the extension for scenarios where a VR application is
stealing a display from a running window system, and not for
standalone scenarios. With additional code, I've got this scenario to
work but that's a separate incremental change.
Other people have tested on AMD, and report roughly the same behaviour
as on Intel.
Note, that in this change, the VT will not be correctly restored after
qutting. The only way to restore the VT is to introduce some drm
specific code which I will illustrate in a separate change.
The VkDisplayKHR context type requires making calls against the
physical device before the libplacebo context is initialised.
That means we can't simply use the physical device object that
libplacebo would create - instead we have to create a separate one,
but make sure it's referring to the same physical device.
To that end, we need the device name that the user may have requested
so we can pass it on.
This moves the JSON parsing above the main youtube-dl error-handling
block and integrates parsing errors into that block. Now, if a parsing
error occurs, youtube-dl's stderr will be logged as it is with other
errors. This also catches errors that cause youtube-dl to output
"null", which would previously be mishandled as a parsing error and
crash ytdl_hook when it attempted to concatenate the error string from
parse_json.