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mpv/DOCS/tech-overview.txt

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This file intends to give a big picture overview of how mpv is structured.
player/*.c:
Essentially makes up the player applications, including the main() function
and the playback loop.
Generally, it accesses all other subsystems, initializes them, and pushes
data between them during playback.
The structure is as follows (as of commit e13c05366557cb):
* main():
* basic initializations (e.g. init_libav() and more)
* pre-parse command line (verbosity level, config file locations)
* load config files (parse_cfgfiles())
* parse command line, add files from the command line to playlist
(m_config_parse_mp_command_line())
* check help options etc. (call handle_help_options()), possibly exit
* call play_files() function that works down the playlist:
* run idle loop (idle_loop()), until there are files in the
playlist or an exit command was given (only if --idle it set)
* actually load and play a file in play_current_file():
* run all the dozens of functions to load the file and
initialize playback
* run a small loop that does normal playback, until the file is
done or a command terminates playback
(on each iteration, run_playloop() is called, which is rather
big and complicated - it decodes some audio and video on
each frame, waits for input, etc.)
* uninitialize playback
* determine next entry on the playlist to play
* loop, or exit if no next file or quit is requested
(see enum stop_play_reason)
* call exit_player_with_rc()
* run_playloop():
* calls fill_audio_out_buffers()
This checks whether new audio needs to be decoded, and pushes it
to the AO.
* calls write_video()
Decode new video, and push it to the VO.
* determines whether playback of the current file has ended
* determines when to start playback after seeks
* and calls a whole lot of other stuff
(Really, this function does everything.)
Things worth saying about the playback core:
- most state is in MPContext (core.h), which is not available to the
subsystems
- the currently played tracks are in mpctx->current_tracks, and decoder
state in track.d_video/d_audio/d_sub
- the other subsystems rarely call back into the frontend, and the frontend
polls them instead (probably a good thing)
- one exceptions are wakeup callbacks, which notify a "higher" component
of a changed situation in a subsystem
I like to call the player/*.c files the "frontend".
ta.h & ta.c:
Hierarchical memory manager inspired by talloc from Samba. It's like a
malloc() with more features. Most importantly, each talloc allocation can
have a parent, and if the parent is free'd, all children will be free'd as
well. The parent is an arbitrary talloc allocation. It's either set by the
allocation call by passing a talloc parent, usually as first argument to the
allocation function. It can also be set or reset later by other calls (at
least talloc_steal()). A talloc allocation that is used as parent is often
called a talloc context.
One very useful feature of talloc is fast tracking of memory leaks. ("Fast"
as in it doesn't require valgrind.) You can enable it by setting the
MPV_LEAK_REPORT environment variable to "1":
export MPV_LEAK_REPORT=1
This will list all unfree'd allocations on exit.
Documentation can be found here:
http://git.samba.org/?p=samba.git;a=blob;f=lib/talloc/talloc.h;hb=HEAD
For some reason, we're still using API-compatible wrappers instead of TA
directly. The talloc wrapper has only a subset of the functionality, and
in particular the wrappers abort() on memory allocation failure.
Note: unlike tcmalloc, jemalloc, etc., talloc() is not actually a malloc
replacement. It works on top of system malloc and provides additional
features that are supposed to make memory management easier.
player/command.c:
This contains the implementation for client API commands and properties.
Properties are essentially dynamic variables changed by certain commands.
This is basically responsible for all user commands, like initiating
seeking, switching tracks, etc. It calls into other player/*.c files,
where most of the work is done, but also calls other parts of mpv.
player/core.h:
Data structures and function prototypes for most of player/*.c. They are
usually not accessed by other parts of mpv for the sake of modularization.
player/client.c:
This implements the client API (libmpv/client.h). For the most part, this
just calls into other parts of the player. This also manages a ringbuffer
of events from player to clients.
options/options.h, options/options.c
options.h contains the global option struct MPOpts. The option declarations
(option names, types, and MPOpts offsets for the option parser) are in
options.c. Most default values for options and MPOpts are in
mp_default_opts at the end of options.c.
MPOpts is unfortunately quite monolithic, and virtually accessed by
everything.But some components (like video outputs and video filters) have
their own sub-option tables separate from MPOpts.
The actual option parser is spread over m_option.c, m_config.c, and
parse_commandline.c, and uses the option table in options.c.
input/input.c:
This translates keyboard input coming from VOs and other sources (such
as remote control devices like Apple IR or client API commands) to the
key bindings listed in the user's (or the builtin) input.conf and turns
them into items of type struct mp_cmd. These commands are queued, and read
by playloop.c. They get pushed with run_command() to command.c.
Note that keyboard input and commands used by the client API are the same.
The client API only uses the command parser though, and has its own queue
of input commands somewhere else.
common/msg.h:
All terminal output must go through mp_msg().
stream/*:
File input is implemented here. stream.h/.c provides a simple stream based
interface (like reading a number of bytes at a given offset). mpv can
also play from http streams and such, which is implemented here.
E.g. if mpv sees "http://something" on the command line, it will pick
stream_lavf.c based on the prefix, and pass the rest of the filename to it.
Some stream inputs are quite special: stream_dvd.c turns DVDs into mpeg
streams (DVDs are actually a bunch of vob files etc. on a filesystem),
stream_tv.c provides TV input including channel switching.
Some stream inputs are just there to invoke special demuxers, like
stream_mf.c. (Basically to make the prefix "mf://" do something special.)
cache.c is a caching wrapper around streams implementations, needed for
smooth network playback.
demux/:
Demuxers split data streams into audio/video/sub streams, which in turn
are split in packets. Packets (see demux_packet.h) are mostly byte chunks
tagged with a playback time (PTS). These packets are passed to the decoders.
Most demuxers have been removed from this fork, and the only important and
"actual" demuxers left are demux_mkv.c and demux_lavf.c (uses libavformat).
There are some pseudo demuxers like demux_cue.c.
The main interface is in demux.h. The stream headers are in stheader.h.
There is a stream header for each audio/video/sub stream, and each of them
holds codec information about the stream and other information.
video/:
This contains several things related to audio/video decoding, as well as
video filters.
mp_image.h and img_format.h define how mpv stores decoded video frames
internally.
video/decode/:
vd_*.c are video decoders. (There's only vd_lavc.c left.) dec_video.c
handles most of connecting the frontend with the actual decoder.
video/filter/:
vf_*.c and vf.c form the video filter chain. They are fed by the video
decoder, and output the filtered images to the VOs though vf_vo.c. By
default, no video filters (except vf_vo) are used. vf_scale is automatically
inserted if the video output can't handle the video format used by the
decoder.
video/out/:
Video output. They also create GUI windows and handle user input. In most
cases, the windowing code is shared among VOs, like x11_common.c for X11 and
w32_common.c for Windows. The VOs stand between frontend and windowing code.
vo_gpu can pick a windowing system at runtime, e.g. the same binary can
provide both X11 and Cocoa support on OSX.
VOs can be reconfigured at runtime. A vo_reconfig() call can change the video
resolution and format, without destroying the window.
vo_gpu should be taken as reference.
audio/:
format.h/format.c define the uncompressed audio formats. (As well as some
compressed formats used for spdif.)
audio/decode/:
ad_*.c and dec_audio.c handle audio decoding. ad_lavc.c is the
decoder using ffmpeg. ad_spdif.c is not really a decoder, but is used for
compressed audio passthrough.
audio/filter/:
Audio filter chain. af_lavrresample is inserted if any form of conversion
between audio formats is needed.
audio/out/:
Audio outputs.
Unlike VOs, AOs can't be reconfigured on a format change. On audio format
changes, the AO will simply be closed and re-opened.
There are wrappers to support for two types of audio APIs: push.c and
pull.c. ao.c calls into one of these. They contain generic code to deal
with the data flow these APIs impose.
Note that mpv synchronizes the video to the audio. That's the reason
why buggy audio drivers can have a bad influence on playback quality.
sub/:
Contains subtitle and OSD rendering.
osd.c/.h is actually the OSD code. It queries dec_sub.c to retrieve
decoded/rendered subtitles. osd_libass.c is the actual implementation of
the OSD text renderer (which uses libass, and takes care of all the tricky
fontconfig/freetype API usage and text layouting).
The VOs call osd.c to render OSD and subtitle (via e.g. osd_draw()). osd.c
in turn asks dec_sub.c for subtitle overlay bitmaps, which relays the
request to one of the sd_*.c subtitle decoders/renderers.
Subtitle loading is in demux/. The MPlayer subreader.c is mostly gone - parts
of it survive in demux_subreader.c. It's used as last fallback, or to handle
some text subtitle types on Libav. It should go away eventually. Normally,
subtitles are loaded via demux_lavf.c.
The subtitles are passed to dec_sub.c and the subtitle decoders in sd_*.c
as they are demuxed. All text subtitles are rendered by sd_ass.c. If text
subtitles are not in the ASS format, the libavcodec subtitle converters are
used (lavc_conv.c).
Text subtitles can be preloaded, in which case they are read fully as soon
as the subtitle is selected. In this case, they are effectively stored in
sd_ass.c's internal state.
etc/:
The file input.conf is actually integrated into the mpv binary by the
build system. It contains the default keybindings.