Video output devicesSetting up MTRR
It is VERY recommended to check if the MTRR registers
are set up properly, because they can give a big performance boost.
Do a /proc/mtrr:
--($:~)-- cat /proc/mtrr
reg00: base=0xe4000000 (3648MB), size= 16MB: write-combining, count=9
reg01: base=0xd8000000 (3456MB), size= 128MB: write-combining, count=1
It's right, shows my Matrox G400 with 16MB memory. I did this from
XFree 4.x.x , which sets up MTRR registers automatically.
If nothing worked, you have to do it manually. First, you have to find the
base address. You have 3 ways to find it:
from X11 startup messages, for example:
(--) SVGA: PCI: Matrox MGA G400 AGP rev 4, Memory @ 0xd8000000, 0xd4000000
(--) SVGA: Linear framebuffer at 0xD8000000
from /proc/pci (use lspci -v
command):
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: Matrox Graphics, Inc.: Unknown device 0525
Memory at d8000000 (32-bit, prefetchable)
from mga_vid kernel driver messages (use dmesg):
mga_mem_base = d8000000
Then let's find the memory size. This is very easy, just convert video RAM
size to hexadecimal, or use this table:
1 MB0x1000002 MB0x2000004 MB0x4000008 MB0x80000016 MB0x100000032 MB0x2000000
You know base address and memory size, let's setup MTRR registers!
For example, for the Matrox card above (base=0xd8000000)
with 32MB ram (size=0x2000000) just execute:
echo "base=0xd8000000 size=0x2000000 type=write-combining" >| /proc/mtrr
Not all CPUs support MTRRs. For example older K6-2's (around 266MHz,
stepping 0) doesn't support MTRR, but stepping 12's do (cat /proc/cpuinfo
to check it).
Video outputs for traditional video cardsXv
Under XFree86 4.0.2 or newer, you can use your card's hardware YUV routines
using the XVideo extension. This is what the option '' uses. Also, this is driver supports adjusting
brightness/contrast/hue/etc (unless you use the old, slow DirectShow DivX
codec, which supports it everywhere), see the man page.
In order to make this work, be sure to check the following:
You have to use XFree86 4.0.2 or newer (former versions don't have XVideo)
Your card actually supports hardware acceleration (modern cards do)
X loads the XVideo extension, it's something like this:
(II) Loading extension XVideo
in /var/log/XFree86.0.log
This loads only the XFree86's extension. In a good install, this is
always loaded, and doesn't mean that the card's
XVideo support is loaded!
Your card has Xv support under Linux. To check, try
xvinfo, it is the part of the XFree86 distribution. It
should display a long text, similar to this:
X-Video Extension version 2.2
screen #0
Adaptor #0: "Savage Streams Engine"
number of ports: 1
port base: 43
operations supported: PutImage
supported visuals:
depth 16, visualID 0x22
depth 16, visualID 0x23
number of attributes: 5
(...)
Number of image formats: 7
id: 0x32595559 (YUY2)
guid: 59555932-0000-0010-8000-00aa00389b71
bits per pixel: 16
number of planes: 1
type: YUV (packed)
id: 0x32315659 (YV12)
guid: 59563132-0000-0010-8000-00aa00389b71
bits per pixel: 12
number of planes: 3
type: YUV (planar)
(...etc...)
It must support YUY2 packed, and YV12 planar pixel formats to be usable
with MPlayer.
And finally, check if MPlayer was compiled
with 'xv' support. ./configure prints this.
3dfx cards
Older 3dfx drivers were known to have problems with XVideo acceleration, it
didn't support either YUY2 or YV12, and so. Verify that you have XFree86
version 4.2.0 or greater, it works OK with YV12 and YUY2. Previous
versions, including 4.1.0, crashes with YV12.
If you experience strange effects using -vo xv, try SDL (it has XVideo too) and
see if it helps. Check the SDL section for details.
OR, try the NEW
driver! See the tdfxfb
section.
S3 cards
S3 Savage3D's should work fine, but for Savage4, use XFree86 version 4.0.3
or greater (in case of image problems, try 16bpp). As for S3 Virge: there is
xv support, but the card itself is very slow, so you better sell it.
It's currently unclear which Savage models lack YV12 support, and convert by
driver (slow). If you suspect your card, get a newer driver, or ask politely
on the mplayer-users mailing list for an MMX/3DNow enabled driver.
nVidia cards
nVidia isn't a very good choice under Linux (according to nVidia, this is
not true)... You'll have to use the
binary closed-source nVidia driver, available at nVidia's web site. The
standard XFree86 driver doesn't support XVideo for these cards, due to
nVidia's closed sources/specifications.
As far as I know the latest XFree86 driver contains XVideo support for
GeForce 2 and 3.
Riva128 cards don't have XVideo support even with the nVidia driver :(
Complain to nVidia.
ATI cards
The GATOS driver
(which you should use, unless you have Rage128 or Radeon) has VSYNC enabled
by default. It means that decoding speed (!) is synced to the monitor's
refresh rate. If playing seems to be slow, try disabling VSYNC somehow, or
set refresh rate to a n*(fps of the movie) Hz.
Radeon VE - currently only XFree86 CVS has driver for this card, version
4.1.0 doesn't. And no TV out support. Of course with
MPlayer you can
happily get accelerated display, with or without
TV output, and no libraries or X are needed.
Read the VIDIX section.
NeoMagic cards
These cards can be found in many laptops. Unfortunately, the driver in X
4.2.0 can't do Xv, but we have a modified, Xv-capable driver for you.
Download from here.
Driver provided by Stefan Seyfried.
To allow playback of DVD sized content change your XF86Config like this:
Section "Device"
[...]
Driver "neomagic"
Option "OverlayMem" "829440"
[...]
EndSectionTrident cards
If you want to use xv with a trident card, provided that it doesn't work
with 4.1.0, install XFree 4.2.0. 4.2.0 adds support for fullscreen xv
support with the Cyberblade XP card.
Kyro/PowerVR cards
If you want to use Xv with a Kyro based card (for example Hercules
Prophet 4000XT), you should download the drivers from the
PowerVR siteDGAPREAMBLE
This document tries to explain in some words what DGA is in general and
what the DGA video output driver for MPlayer
can do (and what it can't).
WHAT IS DGA
DGA is short for Direct Graphics
Access and is a means for a program to bypass the X server and
directly modifying the framebuffer memory. Technically spoken this happens
by mapping the framebuffer memory into the memory range of your process.
This is allowed by the kernel only if you have superuser privileges. You
can get these either by logging in as root or by setting the SUID bit on the
MPlayer executable (not
recommended).
There are two versions of DGA: DGA1 is used by XFree 3.x.x and DGA2 was
introduced with XFree 4.0.1.
DGA1 provides only direct framebuffer access as described above. For
switching the resolution of the video signal you have to rely on the
XVidMode extension.
DGA2 incorporates the features of XVidMode extension and also allows
switching the depth of the display. So you may, although basically
running a 32 bit depth X server, switch to a depth of 15 bits and vice
versa.
However DGA has some drawbacks. It seems it is somewhat dependent on the
graphics chip you use and on the implementation of the X server's video
driver that controls this chip. So it does not work on every system...
INSTALLING DGA SUPPORT FOR MPLAYER
First make sure X loads the DGA extension, see in
/var/log/XFree86.0.log:
(II) Loading extension XFree86-DGA
See, XFree86 4.0.x or greater is VERY RECOMMENDED!
MPlayer's DGA driver is autodetected by
./configure, or you can force it
with .
If the driver couldn't switch to a smaller resolution, experiment with
options (only with X 3.3.x), ,
, to find a video mode that
the movie fits in. There is no converter right now :(
Become root. DGA needs root
access to be able to write directly video memory. If you want to run it as
user, then install MPlayer SUID root:
chown root /usr/local/bin/mplayer
chmod 750 /usr/local/bin/mplayer
chmod +s /usr/local/bin/mplayer
Now it works as a simple user, too.
Security risk
This is a big security risk! Never do this
on a server or on a computer can be accessed by other people because they
can gain root privileges through SUID root
MPlayer.
Now use option, and there you go! (hope so:) You
should also try if the option works for you!
It's much faster!
RESOLUTION SWITCHING
The DGA driver allows for switching the resolution of the output signal.
This avoids the need for doing (slow) software scaling and at the same time
provides a fullscreen image. Ideally it would switch to the exact
resolution (except for honoring aspect ratio) of the video data, but the X
server only allows switching to resolutions predefined in
/etc/X11/XF86Config
(/etc/X11/XF86Config-4 for XFree 4.X.X respectively).
Those are defined by so-called modelines and depend on
the capabilities of your video hardware. The X server scans this config
file on startup and disables the modelines not suitable for your hardware.
You can find out which modes survive with the X11 log file. It can be found
at: /var/log/XFree86.0.log.
These entries are known to work fine with a Riva128 chip, using the nv.o X
server driver module.
Section "Modes"
Identifier "Modes[0]"
Modeline "800x600" 40 800 840 968 1056 600 601 605 628
Modeline "712x600" 35.0 712 740 850 900 400 410 412 425
Modeline "640x480" 25.175 640 664 760 800 480 491 493 525
Modeline "400x300" 20 400 416 480 528 300 301 303 314 Doublescan
Modeline "352x288" 25.10 352 368 416 432 288 296 290 310
Modeline "352x240" 15.750 352 368 416 432 240 244 246 262 Doublescan
Modeline "320x240" 12.588 320 336 384 400 240 245 246 262 Doublescan
EndSection
DGA & MPLAYER
DGA is used in two places with MPlayer: The SDL
driver can be made to make use of it () and
within the DGA driver (). The above said is true
for both; in the following sections I'll explain how the DGA driver for
MPlayer works.
FEATURES
The DGA driver is invoked by specifying at the
command line. The default behavior is to switch to a resolution matching
the original resolution of the video as close as possible. It deliberately
ignores the and options
(enabling of video mode switching and fullscreen) - it always tries to
cover as much area of your screen as possible by switching the video mode,
thus refraining to use a single additional cycle of your CPU to scale the
image. If you don't like the mode it chooses you may force it to choose
the mode matching closest the resolution you specify by
and . By providing the option, the
DGA driver will print, among a lot of other things, a list of all
resolutions supported by your current XF86Config file.
Having DGA2 you may also force it to use a certain depth by using the
option. Valid depths are 15, 16, 24 and 32. It
depends on your hardware whether these depths are natively supported or if
a (possibly slow) conversion has to be done.
If you should be lucky enough to have enough offscreen memory left to
put a whole image there, the DGA driver will use doublebuffering, which
results in much smoother movie replaying. It will tell you whether
double-buffering is enabled or not.
Doublebuffering means that the next frame of your video is being drawn in
some offscreen memory while the current frame is being displayed. When the
next frame is ready, the graphics chip is just told the location in memory
of the new frame and simply fetches the data to be displayed from there.
In the meantime the other buffer in memory will be filled again with new
video data.
Doublebuffering may be switched on by using the option
and may be disabled with
. Current default option is to disable
doublebuffering. When using the DGA driver, onscreen display (OSD) only
works with doublebuffering enabled. However, enabling doublebuffering may
result in a big speed penalty (on my K6-II+ 525 it used an additional 20%
of CPU time!) depending on the implementation of DGA for your hardware.
SPEED ISSUES
Generally spoken, DGA framebuffer access should be at least as fast as
using the X11 driver with the additional benefit of getting a fullscreen
image. The percentage speed values printed by
MPlayer have to be interpreted with some care,
as for example, with the X11 driver they do not include the time used by
the X server needed for the actual drawing. Hook a terminal to a serial
line of your box and start top to see what is really
going on in your box.
Generally spoken, the speedup done by using DGA against 'normal' use of X11
highly depends on your graphics card and how well the X server module for it
is optimized.
If you have a slow system, better use 15 or 16 bit depth since they require
only half the memory bandwidth of a 32 bit display.
Using a depth of 24 bit is even a good idea if your card natively just supports
32 bit depth since it transfers 25% less data compared to the 32/32 mode.
I've seen some AVI files already be replayed on a Pentium MMX 266. AMD K6-2
CPUs might work at 400 MHZ and above.
KNOWN BUGS
Well, according to some developers of XFree, DGA is quite a beast. They
tell you better not to use it. Its implementation is not always flawless
with every chipset driver for XFree out there.
With XFree 4.0.3 and nv.o there is a bug resulting
in strange colors.
ATI driver requires to switch mode back more than once after finishing
using of DGA.
Some drivers simply fail to switch back to normal resolution (use
Ctrl+Alt+Keypad + and
Ctrl+Alt+Keypad -
to switch back manually).
Some drivers simply display strange colors.
Some drivers lie about the amount of memory they map into the process's
address space, thus vo_dga won't use doublebuffering (SIS?).
Some drivers seem to fail to report even a single valid mode. In this
case the DGA driver will crash telling you about a nonsense mode of
100000x100000 or something like that.
OSD only works with doublebuffering enabled (else it flickers).
SDL
SDL (Simple Directmedia Layer) is basically a unified
video/audio interface. Programs that use it know only about SDL, and not
about what video or audio driver does SDL actually use. For example a Doom
port using SDL can run on svgalib, aalib, X, fbdev, and others, you only
have to specify the (for example) video driver to use with the
SDL_VIDEODRIVER environment variable. Well, in theory.
With MPlayer, we used its X11 driver's software
scaler ability for cards/drivers that doesn't support XVideo, until we made
our own (faster, nicer) software scaler. Also we used its aalib output, but
now we have ours which is more comfortable. Its DGA mode was better than
ours, until recently. Get it now? :)
It also helps with some buggy drivers/cards if the video is jerky (not slow
system problem), or audio is lagging.
SDL video output supports displaying subtitles under the movie, on the (if
present) black bar.
There are several command line switches for SDL:
specifies SDL video driver to use (i.e. aalib,
dga, x11)
specifies SDL audio driver to use (i.e. dsp,
esd, arts)
disables XVideo hardware acceleration
tries to force XVideo acceleration
SDL keysKeyActionF
toggles fullscreen/windowed mode
C
cycles available fullscreen modes
W/S
mappings for * and / (mixer control)
Known bugs:
Keys pressed under sdl:aalib console driver repeat forever. (use
!) It's bug in SDL, I can't change it (tested with
SDL 1.2.1).
DO NOT USE SDL with GUI! It won't work as it should.
SVGAlibINSTALLATION
You'll have to install svgalib and its development package in order for
MPlayer build its SVGAlib driver (autodetected,
but can be forced), and don't forget to edit
/etc/vga/libvga.config to suit your card and monitor.
Be sure not to use the switch, since it toggles the
usage of the software scaler, and it's slow. If you really need it, use the
option which will produce bad quality, but is
somewhat faster.
EGA (4BPP) SUPPORT
SVGAlib incorporates EGAlib, and MPlayer has the
possibility to display any movie in 16 colors, thus usable in the following
sets:
EGA card with EGA monitor: 320x200x4bpp, 640x200x4bpp, 640x350x4bpp
EGA card with CGA monitor: 320x200x4bpp, 640x200x4bpp
The bpp (bits per pixel) value must be set to 4 by hand:
The movie probably must be scaled down to fit in EGA mode:
-vf scale=640:350
or
-vf scale=320:200
For that we need fast but bad quality scaling routine:
-sws 4
Maybe automatic aspect correction has to be shut off:
-noaspect
According to my experience the best image quality on
EGA screens can be achieved by decreasing the brightness a bit:
. I also needed to lower the audio
samplerate on my box, because the sound was broken on 44kHz:
.
You can turn on OSD and subtitles only with the expand
filter, see the man page for exact parameters.
Framebuffer output (FBdev)
Whether to build the FBdev target is autodetected during
./configure. Read the framebuffer documentation in
the kernel sources (Documentation/fb/*) for more
information.
If your card doesn't support VBE 2.0 standard (older ISA/PCI cards, such as
S3 Trio64), only VBE 1.2 (or older?): Well, VESAfb is still available, but
you'll have to load SciTech Display Doctor (formerly UniVBE) before booting
Linux. Use a DOS boot disk or whatever. And don't forget to register your
UniVBE ;))
The FBdev output takes some additional parameters above the others:
specify the framebuffer device to use (/dev/fb0)
mode name to use (according to /etc/fb.modes)
config file of modes (default /etc/fb.modes)
important values, see
example.conf
If you want to change to a specific mode, then use
mplayer -vm -fbmode name_of_modefilename
alone will choose the most suitable mode from
/etc/fb.modes. Can be used together with
and options too. The
option is supported only if the movie's pixel
format matches the video mode's pixel format. Pay attention to the bpp
value, fbdev driver tries to use the current, or if you specify the
option, then that.
option isn't supported (software scaling is slow).
option isn't supported. You can't use 8 bpp (or less)
modes.
You possibly want to turn the cursor off:
echo -e '\033[?25l'
or
setterm -cursor off
and the screen saver:
setterm -blank 0
To turn the cursor back on:
echo -e '\033[?25h'
or
setterm -cursor on
FBdev video mode changing does not work with the VESA
framebuffer, and don't ask for it, since it's not an
MPlayer limitation.
Matrox framebuffer (mga_vid)
This section is about the Matrox G200/G400/G450/G550 BES (Back-End Scaler)
support, the mga_vid kernel driver. It's actively developed by A'rpi, and
it has hardware VSYNC support with triple buffering. It works on both
framebuffer console and under X.
This is Linux only! On non-Linux (tested on FreeBSD) systems, you can use
VIDIX instead!
Installation:
To use it, you first have to compile mga_vid.o:
cd drivers
make
Then create /dev/mga_vid device:
mknod /dev/mga_vid c 178 0
and load the driver with
insmod mga_vid.o
You should verify the memory size detection using the
dmesg command. If it's bad, use the
option
(rmmod mga_vid first),
specify card's memory size in MB:
insmod mga_vid.o mga_ram_size=16
To make it load/unload automatically when needed, first insert the
following line at the end of /etc/modules.conf:
alias char-major-178 mga_vid
Then copy the mga_vid.o module to the appropriate
place under /lib/modules/kernel
version/somewhere.
Then run
depmod -a
Now you have to (re)compile MPlayer,
./configure will detect
/dev/mga_vid and build the 'mga' driver. Using it
from MPlayer goes by
if you have matroxfb console, or under XFree86
3.x.x or 4.x.x.
The mga_vid driver cooperates with Xv.
The /dev/mga_vid device file can be read for some
info, for example by
cat /dev/mga_vid
and can be written for brightness change:
echo "brightness=120" > /dev/mga_vid3Dfx YUV support
This driver uses the kernel's tdfx framebuffer driver to play movies with
YUV acceleration. You'll need a kernel with tdfxfb support, and recompile
with
./configure --enable-tdfxfbOpenGL outputMPlayer supports displaying movies using OpenGL,
but if your platform/driver supports xv as should be the case on a PC with
Linux, use xv instead, OpenGL performance is considerably worse. If you
have an X11 implementation without xv support, OpenGL is a viable
alternative.
Unfortunately not all drivers support this feature. The Utah-GLX drivers
(for XFree86 3.3.6) support it for all cards.
See for details about how to
install it.
XFree86(DRI) 4.0.3 or later supports OpenGL with Matrox and Radeon cards,
4.2.0 or later supports Rage128.
See for download and installation
instructions.
AAlib - text mode displaying
AAlib is a library for displaying graphics in text mode, using powerful
ASCII renderer. There are lots of programs already
supporting it, like Doom, Quake, etc. MPlayer
contains a very usable driver for it. If ./configure
detects aalib installed, the aalib libvo driver will be built.
You can use some keys in the AA Window to change rendering options:
KeyAction1
decrease contrast
2
increase contrast
3
decrease brightness
4
increase brightness
5
switch fast rendering on/off
6
set dithering mode (none, error distribution, Floyd Steinberg)
7
invert image
8
toggles between aa and MPlayer control
The following command line options can be used:
change OSD color
change subtitle color
where V can be:
0 (normal),
1 (dark),
2 (bold),
3 (bold font),
4 (reverse),
5 (special).
AAlib itself provides a large sum of options. Here are some
important:
set recommended aa driver (X11, curses, Linux)
use all 256 characters
use eight bit ASCII
prints out all aalib options
The rendering is very CPU intensive, especially when using AA-on-X
(using aalib on X), and it's least CPU intensive on standard,
non-framebuffer console. Use SVGATextMode to set up a big textmode,
then enjoy! (secondary head Hercules cards rock :)) (but imho you
can use -vf 1bpp option to get graphics on hgafb:)
Use the option if your computer isn't fast
enough to render all frames!
Playing on terminal you'll get better speed and quality using the Linux
driver, not curses (). But therefore you
need write access on
/dev/vcsa<terminal>!
That isn't autodetected by aalib, but vo_aa tries to find the best mode.
See for further
tuning issues.
VESA - output to VESA BIOS
This driver was designed and introduced as a generic
driver for any video card which has VESA VBE 2.0 compatible
BIOS. Another advantage of this driver is that it tries to force TV output
on.
VESA BIOS EXTENSION (VBE) Version 3.0 Date: September 16,
1998 (Page 70) says:
Dual-Controller Designs
VBE 3.0 supports the dual-controller design by assuming that since both
controllers are typically provided by the same OEM, under control of a
single BIOS ROM on the same graphics card, it is possible to hide the fact
that two controllers are indeed present from the application. This has the
limitation of preventing simultaneous use of the independent controllers,
but allows applications released before VBE 3.0 to operate normally. The
VBE Function 00h (Return Controller Information) returns the combined
information of both controllers, including the combined list of available
modes. When the application selects a mode, the appropriate controller is
activated. Each of the remaining VBE functions then operates on the active
controller.
So you have chances to get working TV-out by using this driver.
(I guess that TV-out frequently is standalone head or standalone output
at least.)
ADVANTAGES
You have chances to watch movies if Linux even doesn't
know your video hardware.
You don't need to have installed any graphics' related things on your
Linux (like X11 (aka XFree86), fbdev and so on). This driver can be run
from text-mode.
You have chances to get working TV-out.
(It's known at least for ATI's cards).
This driver calls int 10h handler thus it's not
an emulator - it calls real things of
real BIOS in real-mode.
(Finely - in vm86 mode).
You can use VIDIX with it, thus getting accelerated video display
and TV output at the same time!
(Recommended for ATI cards.)
DISADVANTAGES
It works only on x86 systems.
It can be used only by root.
Currently it's available only for Linux.
Don't use this driver with GCC 2.96!
It won't work!
COMMAND LINE OPTIONS AVAILABLE FOR VESA
currently recognized: dga to force dga mode and
nodga to disable dga mode. In dga mode you can enable
double buffering via the -double option. Note: you may omit these parameters
to enable autodetection of dga mode.
KNOWN PROBLEMS AND WORKAROUNDS
If you have installed NLS font on your
Linux box and run VESA driver from text-mode then after terminating
MPlayer you will have
ROM font loaded instead of national.
You can load national font again by using setsysfont
utility from the Mandrake distribution for exemple.
(Hint: The same utility is used for
localization of fbdev).
Some Linux graphics drivers don't update
active BIOS mode in DOS memory.
So if you have such problem - always use VESA driver only from
text-mode. Otherwise text-mode (#03) will
be activated anyway and you will need restart your computer.
Often after terminating VESA driver you get black screen. To return your
screen to original state - simply switch to other console (by pressing
Alt+F<x>)
then switch to your previous console by the same way.
To get working TV-out you need have plugged
TV-connector in before booting your PC since video BIOS initializes
itself only once during POST procedure.
X11
Avoid if possible. Outputs to X11 (uses shared memory extension), with no
hardware acceleration at all. Supports (MMX/3DNow/SSE accelerated, but
still slow) software scaling, use the options .
Most cards have hardware scaling support, use the
output for them, or for Matroxes.
The problem is that most cards' driver doesn't support hardware
acceleration on the second head/TV. In those cases, you see green/blue
colored window instead of the movie. This is where this driver comes in
handy, but you need powerful CPU to use software scaling. Don't use the SDL
driver's software output+scaler, it has worse image quality!
Software scaling is very slow, you better try changing video modes instead.
It's very simple. See the DGA section's
modelines, and insert them into your XF86Config.
If you have XFree86 4.x.x: use the option. It will
change to a resolution your movie fits in. If it doesn't:
With XFree86 3.x.x: you have to cycle through available resolutions
with the
Ctrl+Alt+plus
and
Ctrl+Alt+minus
keys.
If you can't find the modes you inserted, browse XFree86's output. Some
drivers can't use low pixelclocks that are needed for low resolution
video modes.
VIDIXPREAMBLE
VIDIX is the abbreviation for VIDeo
Interface for *niX.
VIDIX was designed and introduced as an interface for fast user-space drivers
providing such video performance as mga_vid does for Matrox cards. It's also very
portable.
This interface was designed as an attempt to fit existing video
acceleration interfaces (known as mga_vid, rage128_vid, radeon_vid,
pm3_vid) into a fixed scheme. It provides highlevel interface to chips
which are known as BES (BackEnd scalers) or OV (Video Overlays). It doesn't
provide lowlevel interface to things which are known as graphics servers.
(I don't want to compete with X11 team in graphics mode switching). I.e.
main goal of this interface is to maximize the speed of video playback.
USAGE
You can use standalone video output driver: .
This driver was developed as X11's front end to VIDIX technology. It
requires X server and can work only under X server.Note that, as it directly
accesses the hardware and circumvents the X driver, pixmaps cached in the
graphics card's memory may be corrupted. You can prevent this by limiting
the amount of video memory used by X with the XF86Config option "VideoRam"
in the device section. You should set this to the amount of memory installed
on your card minus 4MB. If you have less than 8MB of video ram, you can use
the option "XaaNoPixmapCache" in the screen section instead.
You can use VIDIX subdevice which was applied to several video output
drivers, such as:
(Linux only) and
.
Indeed it doesn't matter which video output driver is used with
VIDIX.
REQUIREMENTS
Video card should be in graphics mode (I write should
simply because I tested it in text mode - it works but has awful output ;) Use
AAlib for that).
Note: Everyone can try this trick by commenting out mode
switching in vo_vesa driver.
MPlayer's video output driver should know
active video mode and be able to tell to VIDIX subdevice some video
characteristics of server.
USAGE METHODS
When VIDIX is used as subdevice () then video mode configuration is performed by video
output device (vo_server in short). Therefore you can
pass into command line of MPlayer the same keys
as for vo_server. In addition it understands key
as globally visible parameter. (I recommend using this key with VIDIX at
least for ATI's card). As for : currently it
recognizes the following options: .
Also you can specify VIDIX's driver directly as third subargument in
command line:
mplayer -vo xvidix:mga_vid.so -fs -zoom -double file.avi
or
mplayer -vo vesa:vidix:radeon_vid.so -fs -zoom -double -bpp 32 file.avi
But it's dangerous, and you shouldn't do that. In this case given driver
will be forced and result is unpredictable (it may
freeze your computer). You should do that
ONLY if you are absolutely sure it will work, and
MPlayer doesn't do it automatically. Please tell
about it to the developers. The right way is to use VIDIX without arguments
to enable driver autodetection.
VIDIX is new technology and it's extremely possible that on your
system it won't work. In this case only solution for you
it's port it (mainly libdha). But there is hope that it will work on those
systems where X11 does.
Since VIDIX requires direct hardware access you can either run it as root
or set the SUID bit on the MPlayer binary
(Warning: This is a security risk!
Alternatively, you can use a special kernel module, like this:
Download the development version
of svgalib (for example 1.9.17), OR
download a version made by Alex especially for usage with MPlayer
(it doesn't need the svgalib source to compile) from
here.
Compile the module in the svgalib_helper
directory if you've downloaded the source from the svgalib site) and insmod it.
Move the svgalib_helper directory to
mplayer/main/libdha/svgalib_helper.
Required if you download the source from the svgalib site: Remove the comment before the
CFLAGS line containing "svgalib_helper" string from the
libdha/Makefile.
Recompile and install libdha.
ATI cards
Currently most ATI cards are supported natively, from Mach64 to the
newest Radeons.
There are two compiled binaries: radeon_vid for Radeon and
rage128_vid for Rage 128 cards. You may force one or let
the VIDIX system autoprobe all available drivers.
Matrox cards
Matrox G200,G400,G450 and G550 have been reported to work.
The driver supports video equalizers and should be nearly as fast as the
Matrox framebuffer
Trident cards
There is a driver available for the Trident Cyberblade/i1 chipset, which
can be found on VIA Epia motherboards.
The driver was written and is maintained by Alastair M. Robinson, who
offers the very latest driver versions for download from his
homepage.
The drivers are added to MPlayer with only a short delay, so CVS should always
be up to date.
3DLabs cards
Although there is a driver for the 3DLabs GLINT R3 and Permedia3 chips, no one
has tested it, so reports are welcome.
DirectFB
"DirectFB is a graphics library which was designed with embedded systems
in mind. It offers maximum hardware accelerated performance at a minimum
of resource usage and overhead." - quoted from
I'll exclude DirectFB features from this section.
Though MPlayer is not supported as a "video provider" in DirectFB, this
output driver will enable video playback through DirectFB. It will - of course -
be accelerated, on my Matrox G400 DirectFB's speed was the same as XVideo.
Always try to use the newest version of DirectFB. You can use DirectFB options on
the command line, using the option. Layer selection can
be done by the subdevice method, e.g.:
(layer -1 is default: autodetect)
DirectFB/Matrox (dfbmga)
Please read the main DirectFB section or general
informations.
This video output driver will enable CRTC2 (on the second head) on the
Matrox G400/G450/G550 card, displaying video independently
of the first head.
Instructions on how to make it work can be found in the
tech section
or directly on Ville Syrjala's
home page.
we haven't been able to make this work, but others did. Anyway, porting of
the CRTC2 code to mga_vid is underway.
MPEG decodersDVBMPlayer supports cards with the Siemens DVB chipset
from vendors like Siemens, Technotrend, Galaxis or Hauppauge. The latest DVB
drivers are available from the Linux TV site.
If you want to do software transcoding you should have at least a 1GHz CPU.
Configure should detect your DVB card. If it did not, force detection with
./configure --enable-dvbIf you have ost headers at a non-standard path, set the path with./configure --with-extraincdir=<DVB source directory>/ost/include
Then compile and install as usual.USAGE
Hardware decoding (playing standard MPEG1/2 files) can be done with this command:
mplayer -ao mpegpes -vo mpegpes file.mpg|vob
Software decoding or transcoding different formats to MPEG1 can be achieved using
a command like this:
mplayer -ao mpegpes -vo mpegpes yourfile.ext
mplayer -ao mpegpes -vo mpegpes -vf expand yourfile.ext
Note that DVB cards only support heights 288 and 576 for PAL or 240 and 480 for
NTSC. You must escale for other heights by adding
with the width and height you want to the
option. DVB cards accept various widths, like 720, 704,
640, 512, 480, 352 etc and do hardware scaling in horizontal direction, so you
do not need to scale horizontally in most cases. For a 512x384 (aspect 4:3)
DivX try:
mplayer -ao mpegpes -vo mpegpes -vf scale=512:576If you have a widescreen movie and you do not want to scale it to full height,
you can use the filter to add black bands. To view a
640x384 DivX, try:
mplayer -ao mpegpes -vo mpegpes -vf expand=640:576 file.avi
If your CPU is too slow for a full size 720x576 DivX, try downscaling:mplayer -ao mpegpes -vo mpegpes -vf scale=352:576 file.avi
If speed does not improve, try vertical downscaling, too:mplayer -ao mpegpes -vo mpegpes -vf scale=352:288 file.avi
For OSD and subtitles use the OSD feature of the expand filter. So, instead of
or , use
(the 5th parameter
at the end will enable OSD rendering). You may want to move the image up a bit
to get a bigger black zone for subtitles. You may also want to move subtitles up,
if they are outside your TV screen, use the
option to adjust this ( is a good choice).
In order to play non-25fps movies on a PAL TV or with a slow CPU, add the
option.
To keep the aspect ratio of DivX files and get the optimal scaling
parameters (hardware horizontal scaling and software vertical scaling
while keeping the right aspect ratio), use the new dvbscale filter:
for 3:4 TV: -vf dvbscale,scale=-1:0,expand=-1:576:-1:-1:1
for 16:9 TV: -vf dvbscale=1024,scale=-1:0,expand=-1:576:-1:-1:1
FUTURE
If you have questions or want to hear feature announcements and take part in
discussions on this subject, join our
MPlayer-DVB
mailing list. Please remember that the list language is English.
In the future you may expect the ability to display OSD and subtitles using
the native OSD feature of DVB cards, as well as more fluent playback of
non-25fps movies and realtime transcoding between MPEG2 and MPEG4 (partial
decompression).
DXR2MPlayer supports hardware accelerated playback with the Creative DXR2 card.
First of all you will need properly installed DXR2 drivers. You can find
the drivers and installation instructions at the
DXR2 Resource Center site.
USAGEenable TV output or enable Overlay output in X11This option is used to control the DXR2 driver.
The overlay chipset used on the DXR2 is of pretty bad quality but the
default settings should work for everybody. The OSD may be usable with the
overlay (not on TV) by drawing it in the colorkey. With the default colorkey
settings you may get variable results, usually you will see the colorkey
around the characters or some other funny effect. But if you properly adjust
the colorkey settings you should be able to get acceptable results.
Please see the manpage for available options.DXR3/Hollywood+MPlayer supports hardware accelerated playback
with the Creative DXR3 and Sigma Designs Hollywood Plus cards. These cards
both use the em8300 MPEG decoder chip from Sigma Designs.
First of all you will need properly installed DXR3/H+ drivers, version 0.12.0
or later. You can find the drivers and installation instructions at the
DXR3 & Hollywood Plus for Linux
site. Configure should detect your card automatically, compilation should go
without problems.
USAGE
activates the overlay instead of TVOut. It requires
that you have a properly configured overlay setup to work right. The easiest
way to configure the overlay is to first run autocal. Then run mplayer with
dxr3 output and without overlay turned on, run dxr3view. In dxr3view you can
tweak the overlay settings and see the effects in realtime, perhaps this feature
will be supported by the MPlayer GUI in the future. When overlay is properly set
up you will no longer need to use dxr3view.
turns on prebuffering. Prebuffering is a feature of the
em8300 chip that enables it to hold more than one frame of video at a time. This
means that when you are running with prebuffering MPlayer will try to keep the
video buffer filled with data at all times. If you are on a slow machine MPlayer
will probably use close to, or precisely 100% of CPU. This is especially common
if you play pure MPEG streams (like DVDs, SVCDs a.s.o.) since MPlayer will not
have to reencode it to MPEG it will fill the buffer very fast.
With prebuffering video playback is much
less sensitive to other programs hogging the CPU, it will not drop frames unless
applications hog the CPU for a long time.
When running without prebuffering the em8300 is much more sensitive to CPU load,
so it is highly suggested that you turn on MPlayer's
option to avoid further loss of sync.
will turn on the new sync-engine. This is currently an
experimental feature. With the sync feature turned on the em8300's internal clock
will be monitored at all times, if it starts to deviate from MPlayer's clock it
will be reset causing the em8300 to drop any frames that are lagging behind.
will set the TV norm of the DXR3 card without the need
for external tools like em8300setup. Valid norms are 5 = NTSC, 4 = PAL-60,
3 = PAL. Special norms are 2 (auto-adjust using PAL/PAL-60) and 1 (auto-adjust
using PAL/NTSC) because they decide which norm to use by looking at the frame
rate of the movie. norm = 0 (default) does not change the current norm.
= device number to use if you have more than one em8300
card.
Any of these options may be left out.
seems to work great when playing DivX movies. People
have reported problems using the prebuf option when playing MPEG1/2 files. You
might want to try running without any options first, if you have sync problems,
or DVD subtitle problems, give a try.
For audio output, where X is the device number (0 if one card).
The em8300 cannot play back samplerates lower than 44100Hz. If the sample
rate is below 44100Hz select either 44100Hz or 48000Hz depending on which
one matches closest. I.e. if the movie uses 22050Hz use 44100Hz as
44100 / 2 = 22050, if it is 24000Hz use 48000Hz as 48000 / 2 = 24000 and so on.
This does not work with digital audio output ().
To watch non-MPEG content on the em8300 (i.e. DivX or RealVideo) you have to
specify an MPEG1 video filter such as libavcodec (lavc) or libfame (fame). At
the moment lavc is both faster and gives better image quality, it is suggested
that you use that unless you have problems with it. See the man page for further
info about .
Using lavc is highly recommended. Currently there is no way of setting the fps
of the em8300 which means that it is fixed to 29.97fps. Because of this it is
highly recommended that you use
especially if you are using prebuffering. Then why 25 and not 29.97? Well, the
thing is that when you use 29.97 the picture becomes a bit jumpy. The reason for
this is unknown to us. If you set it to somewhere between 25 and 27 the picture
becomes stable. For now all we can do is accept this for a fact.
Although the DXR3 driver can put some OSD onto the MPEG1/2/4 video, it has
much lower quality than MPlayer's traditional OSD, and has several refresh
problems as well. The command line above will firstly convert the input
video to MPEG4 (this is mandatory, sorry), then apply an expand filter which
won't expand anything (-1: default), but apply the normal OSD onto the picture
(that's what the "1" at the end does).
The em8300 supports playing back AC3 audio (surround sound) through the
digital audio output of the card. See the option above,
it must be used to specify the DXR3's output instead of a soundcard.
Other visualization hardwareZr
This is a display-driver () for a number of MJPEG
capture/playback cards (tested for DC10+ and Buz, and it should work for the
LML33, the DC10). The driver works by encoding the frame to JPEG and then
sending it to the card. For the JPEG encoding libavcodec
is used, and required. With the special cinerama mode,
you can watch movies in true wide screen provided that you have two beamers
and two MJPEG cards. Depending on resolution and quality settings, this driver
may require a lot of CPU power, remember to specify
if your machine is too slow. Note: My AMD K6-2 350MHz is (with
) quite adequate for watching VCD sized material and
downscaled movies.
This driver talks to the kernel driver available at
, so
you must get it working first. The presence of an MJPEG card is autodetected by the
configure script, if autodetection fails, force detection with
./configure --enable-zr
The output can be controlled by several options, a long description of the
options can be found in the man page, a short list of options can be viewed
by running
mplayer -zrhelp
Things like scaling and the OSD (on screen display) are not handled by
this driver but can be done using the video filters. For example, suppose
that you have a movie with a resolution of 512x272 and you want to view it
fullscreen on your DC10+. There are three main possibilities, you may scale
the movie to a width of 768, 384 or 192. For performance and quality reasons,
I would choose to scale the movie to 384x204 using the fast bilinear software
scaler. The commandline is
mplayer -vo zr -sws 0 -vf scale=384:204 movie.avi
Cropping can be done by the crop filter and by this
driver itself. Suppose that a movie is too wide for display on your Buz and
that you want to use to make the movie less wide,
the you would issue the following command
mplayer -vo zr -zrcrop 720x320+80+0 benhur.avi
if you want to use the crop filter, you would do
mplayer -vo zr -vf crop=720:320:80:0 benhur.avi
Extra occurances of invoke cinerama
ode, i.e. you can distribute the movie over several TV's or beamers to create a
larger screen. Suppose you have two beamers. The left one is connected to your
Buz at /dev/video1 and the right one is connected to
your DC10+ at /dev/video0. The movie has a resolution
of 704x288. Suppose also that you want the right beamer in black and white and
that the right beamer should have jpeg frames at quality 10, then you would
issue the following command
mplayer -vo zr -zrdev /dev/video0 -zrcrop 352x288+352+0 -zrxdoff 0 -zrbw \
-zrcrop 352x288+0+0 -zrdev /dev/video1 -zrquality 10 movie.avi
You see that the options appearing before the second
only apply to the DC10+ and that the options after the second
apply to the Buz. The maximum number of MJPEG cards
participating in cinerama is four, so you can buid a
2x2 vidiwall.
inally an important remark: Do not start or stop XawTV on the playback device
during playback, it will crash your computer. It is, however, fine to
FIRST start XawTV, THEN
start MPlayer, wait for MPlayer to finish and THEN
stop XawTV.
Blinkenlights
This driver is capable of playback using the Blinkenlights UDP protocol. If you
don't know what Blinkenlights
is, you don't need this driver.
TV-out supportMatrox G400 cards
Under Linux you have two methods to get G400 TV out working:
for Matrox G450/G550 TV-out instructions, please see the next section!
XFree86
Using the driver and the HAL module, available from Matrox's site. This will give you X
on the TV.
This method doesn't give you accelerated playback
as under Windows! The second head has only YUV framebuffer, the BES
(Back End Scaler, the YUV scaler on G200/G400/G450/G550 cards) doesn't
work on it! The windows driver somehow workarounds this, probably by
using the 3D engine to zoom, and the YUV framebuffer to display the
zoomed image. If you really want to use X, use the options, but it will be SLOW,
and has Macrovision copy protection enabled
(you can "workaround" Macrovision using this
perl
script.
Framebuffer
Using the matroxfb modules in the 2.4
kernels. 2.2 kernels don't have the TVout feature in them, thus unusable
for this. You have to enable ALL matroxfb-specific feature during compilation
(except MultiHead), and compile them into modules!
You'll also need I2C enabled.
Enter TVout/matroxset and type
make. Install matroxset into
somewhere in your PATH.
If you don't have fbset installed, enter
TVout/fbset and type make.
Install fbset into somewhere in your
PATH.
Then enter into the TVout/ directory
in the MPlayer source, and execute
./modules as root. Your text-mode console will
enter into framebuffer mode (no way back!).
Next, EDIT and run the ./matroxtv script. This will
present you to a very simple menu. Press 2 and
Enter. Now you should have the same picture on your
monitor, and TV. The 3rd option will turn on independent display, but
then you can't use X! If the TV (PAL by default)
picture has some weird stripes on it, the script wasn't able to set the
resolution correctly (to 640x512 by default). Try other resolutions
from the menu and/or experiment with fbset.
Yoh. Next task is to make the cursor on tty1 (or whatever) to
disappear, and turn off screen blanking. Execute the following
commands:
echo -e '\033[?25l'
setterm -blank 0
or
setterm -cursor off
setterm -blank 0
You possibly want to put the above into a script, and also clear the
screen. To turn the cursor back:
echo -e '\033[?25h' or
setterm -cursor on
Yeah kewl. Start movie playing with
mplayer -vo mga -fs -screenw 640 -screenh 512 filename
(If you use X, now change to matroxfb with for example
Ctrl+Alt+F1.)
Change 640 and 512 if you set
the resolution to other...
Enjoy the ultra-fast ultra-featured Matrox TV
output (better than Xv)!Building a Matrox TV-out cable
No one takes any responsibility, nor guarantee for any damage caused
by this documentation.
Cable for G400
The CRTC2 connector's fourth pin is the composite video signal. The
ground are the sixth, seventh and eighth pins. (info contributed
from Balázs Rácz)
Cable for G450
The CRTC2 connector's first pin is the composite video signal. The
ground are the fifth, sixth, seventh, and fifteenth (5, 6, 7, 15)
pins. (info contributed from Balázs Kerekes)
Matrox G450/G550 cards
TV output support for these cards has only been recently introduced, and is
not yet in the mainstream kernel. Currently the mga_vid
module can't be used AFAIK, because the G450/G550 driver works only in one
configuration: the first CRTC chip (with much more features) on the first display
(on monitor), and the second CRTC (no BES - for
explanation on BES, please see the G400 section above) on TV. So you can only
use MPlayer's fbdev output driver
at the present.
The first CRTC can't be routed to the second head currently. The author of the
kernel matroxfb driver - Petr Vandrovec - will maybe make support for this, by
displaying the first CRTC's output onto both of the heads at once, as currently
recommended for G400, see the section above.
The necessary kernel patch and the detailed howto is downloadable from
ATI cardsPREAMBLE
Currently ATI doesn't want to support any of its TV-out chips under Linux,
because of their licensed Macrovision technology.
ATI CARDS TV-OUT STATUS ON LINUXATI Mach64:
supported by gatos.
ASIC Radeon VIVO:
supported by gatos.
Radeon and Rage128:
supported by MPlayer!
Check VESA driver and
VIDIX sections.
Rage Mobility P/M, Radeon, Rage 128, Mobility M3/M4:
supported by atitvout.
On other cards, just use the VESA driver,
without VIDIX. Powerful CPU is needed, though.
Only thing you need to do - Have the TV connector
plugged in before booting your PC since video BIOS initializes
itself only once during POST procedure.
Voodoo 3
Check this URL.
Voodoo 3
First, you MUST download the closed-source drivers from .
I will not describe the installation and configuration process because it does not cover
the scope of this documentation.
After XFree86, XVideo, and 3D acceleration is properly working, edit your
card's Device section in the XF86Config file, according
to the following example (adapt for your card/TV):
Section "Device"
Identifier "GeForce"
VendorName "ASUS"
BoardName "nVidia GeForce2/MX 400"
Driver "nvidia"
#Option "NvAGP" "1"
Option "NoLogo"
Option "CursorShadow" "on"
Option "TwinView"
Option "TwinViewOrientation" "Clone"
Option "MetaModes" "1024x768,640x480"
Option "ConnectedMonitor" "CRT, TV"
Option "TVStandard" "PAL-B"
Option "TVOutFormat" "Composite"
EndSection
Of course the important thing is the TwinView part.