mirror of
https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv
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adcf51dccd
Add new header which shows up as tags/metadata (associated with --display-tags). The way this is added means it doesn't always work, because root->meta (see code) can be NULL for some absurd reason. But it works for the one case I intended to use it (ytdl_hook, see next commit), though only in default configurations.
397 lines
14 KiB
ReStructuredText
397 lines
14 KiB
ReStructuredText
EDL files
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=========
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EDL files basically concatenate ranges of video/audio from multiple source
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files into a single continuous virtual file. Each such range is called a
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segment, and consists of source file, source offset, and segment length.
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For example::
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# mpv EDL v0
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f1.mkv,10,20
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f2.mkv
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f1.mkv,40,10
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This would skip the first 10 seconds of the file f1.mkv, then play the next
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20 seconds, then switch to the file f2.mkv and play all of it, then switch
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back to f1.mkv, skip to the 40 second mark, and play 10 seconds, and then
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stop playback. The difference to specifying the files directly on command
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line (and using ``--{ --start=10 --length=20 f1.mkv --}`` etc.) is that the
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virtual EDL file appears as a virtual timeline (like a single file), instead
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as a playlist.
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The general simplified syntax is::
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# mpv EDL v0
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<filename>
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<filename>,<start in seconds>,<length in seconds>
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If the start time is omitted, 0 is used. If the length is omitted, the
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estimated remaining duration of the source file is used.
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Note::
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Usage of relative or absolute paths as well as any protocol prefixes may be
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prevented for security reasons.
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Syntax of mpv EDL files
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=======================
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Generally, the format is relatively strict. No superfluous whitespace (except
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empty lines and commented lines) are allowed. You must use UNIX line breaks.
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The first line in the file must be ``# mpv EDL v0``. This designates that the
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file uses format version 0, which is not frozen yet and may change any time.
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(If you need a stable EDL file format, make a feature request. Likewise, if
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you have suggestions for improvements, it's not too late yet.)
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The rest of the lines belong to one of these classes:
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1) An empty or commented line. A comment starts with ``#``, which must be the
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first character in the line. The rest of the line (up until the next line
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break) is ignored. An empty line has 0 bytes between two line feed bytes.
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2) A header entry if the line starts with ``!``.
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3) A segment entry in all other cases.
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Each segment entry consists of a list of named or unnamed parameters.
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Parameters are separated with ``,``. Named parameters consist of a name,
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followed by ``=``, followed by the value. Unnamed parameters have only a
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value, and the name is implicit from the parameter position.
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Syntax::
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segment_entry ::= <param> ( <param> ',' )*
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param ::= [ <name> '=' ] ( <value> | '%' <number> '%' <valuebytes> )
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The ``name`` string can consist of any characters, except ``=%,;\n!``. The
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``value`` string can consist of any characters except of ``,;\n!``.
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The construct starting with ``%`` allows defining any value with arbitrary
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contents inline, where ``number`` is an integer giving the number of bytes in
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``valuebytes``. If a parameter value contains disallowed characters, it has to
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be guarded by a length specifier using this syntax.
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The parameter name defines the meaning of the parameter:
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1) ``file``, the source file to use for this segment.
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2) ``start``, a time value that specifies the start offset into the source file.
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3) ``length``, a time value that specifies the length of the segment.
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See the section below for the format of timestamps.
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Unnamed parameters carry implicit names. The parameter position determines
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which of the parameters listed above is set. For example, the second parameter
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implicitly uses the name ``start``.
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Example::
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# mpv EDL v0
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%18%filename,with,.mkv,10,length=20,param3=%13%value,escaped,param4=value2
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this sets ``file`` to ``filename,with,.mkv``, ``start`` to ``10``, ``length``
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to ``20``, ``param3`` to ``value,escaped``, ``param4`` to ``value2``.
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Instead of line breaks, the character ``;`` can be used. Line feed bytes and
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``;`` are treated equally.
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Header entries start with ``!`` as first character after a line break. Header
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entries affect all other file entries in the EDL file. Their format is highly
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implementation specific. They should generally follow the file header, and come
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before any file entries.
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Disabling chapter generation and copying
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========================================
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By default, chapters from the source ranges are copied to the virtual file's
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chapters. Also, a chapter is inserted after each range. This can be disabled
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with the ``no_chapters`` header.
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Example::
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!no_chapters
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MP4 DASH
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========
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This is a header that helps implementing DASH, although it only provides a low
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level mechanism.
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If this header is set, the given url designates an mp4 init fragment. It's
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downloaded, and every URL in the EDL is prefixed with the init fragment on the
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byte stream level. This is mostly for use by mpv's internal ytdl support. The
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ytdl script will call youtube-dl, which in turn actually processes DASH
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manifests. It may work only for this very specific purpose and fail to be
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useful in other scenarios. It can be removed or changed in incompatible ways
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at any times.
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Example::
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!mp4_dash,init=url
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The ``url`` is encoded as parameter value as defined in the general EDL syntax.
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It's expected to point to an "initialization fragment", which will be prefixed
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to every entry in the EDL on the byte stream level.
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The current implementation will
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- ignore stream start times
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- use durations as hint for seeking only
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- not adjust source timestamps
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- open and close segments (i.e. fragments) as needed
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- not add segment boundaries as chapter points
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- require full compatibility between all segments (same codec etc.)
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Another header part of this mechanism is ``no_clip``. This header is similar
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to ``mp4_dash``, but does not include on-demand opening/closing of segments,
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and does not support init segments. It also exists solely to support internal
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ytdl requirements. Using ``no_clip`` with segments is not recommended and
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probably breaks. ``mp4_dash`` already implicitly does a variant of ``no_clip``.
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The ``mp4_dash`` and ``no_clip`` headers are not part of the core EDL format.
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They may be changed or removed at any time, depending on mpv's internal
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requirements.
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Separate files for tracks
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=========================
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The special ``new_stream`` header lets you specify separate parts and time
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offsets for separate tracks. This can for example be used to source audio and
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video track from separate files.
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Example::
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# mpv EDL v0
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video.mkv
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!new_stream
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audio.mkv
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This adds all tracks from both files to the virtual track list. Upon playback,
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the tracks will be played at the same time, instead of appending them. The files
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can contain more than 1 stream; the apparent effect is the same as if the second
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part after the ``!new_stream`` part were in a separate ``.edl`` file and added
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with ``--external-file``.
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Note that all metadata between the stream sets created by ``new_stream`` is
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disjoint. Global metadata is taken from the first part only.
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In context of mpv, this is redundant to the ``--audio-file`` and
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``--external-file`` options, but (as of this writing) has the advantage that
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this will use a unified cache for all streams.
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The ``new_stream`` header is not part of the core EDL format. It may be changed
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or removed at any time, depending on mpv's internal requirements.
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If the first ``!new_stream`` is redundant, it is ignored. This is the same
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example as above::
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# mpv EDL v0
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!new_stream
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video.mkv
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!new_stream
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audio.mkv
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Note that ``!new_stream`` must be the first header. Whether the parser accepts
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(i.e. ignores) or rejects other headers before that is implementation specific.
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Track metadata
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==============
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The special ``track_meta`` header can set some specific metadata fields of the
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current ``!new_stream`` partition. The tags are applied to all tracks within
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the partition. It is not possible to set the metadata for individual tracks (the
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feature was needed only for single-track media).
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It provides following parameters change track metadata:
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``lang``
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Set the language tag.
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``title``
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Set the title tag.
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``byterate``
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Number of bytes per second this stream uses. (Purely informational.)
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``index``
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The numeric index of the track this should map to (default: -1). This is
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the 0-based index of the virtual stream as seen by the player, enumerating
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all audio/video/subtitle streams. If nothing matches, this is silently
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discarded. The special index -1 (the default) has two meanings: if there
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was a previous meta data entry (either ``!track_meta`` or ``!delay_open``
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element since the last ``!new_stream``), then this element manipulates
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the previous meta data entry. If there was no previous entry, a new meta
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data entry that matches all streams is created.
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Example::
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# mpv EDL v0
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!track_meta,lang=bla,title=blabla
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file.mkv
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!new_stream
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!track_meta,title=ducks
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sub.srt
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If ``file.mkv`` has an audio and a video stream, both will use ``blabla`` as
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title. The subtitle stream will use ``ducks`` as title.
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The ``track_meta`` header is not part of the core EDL format. It may be changed
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or removed at any time, depending on mpv's internal requirements.
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Global metadata
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===============
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The special ``global_tags`` header can set metadata fields (aka tags) of the EDL
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file. This metadata is supposed to be informational, much like for example ID3
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tags in audio files. Due to lack of separation of different kinds of metadata it
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is unspecified what names are allowed, how they are interpreted, and whether
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some of them affect playback functionally. (Much of this is unfortunately
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inherited from FFmpeg. Another consequence of this is that FFmpeg "normalized"
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tags are recognized, or stuff like replaygain tags.)
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Example::
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!global_tags,title=bla,something_arbitrary=even_more_arbitrary
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Any parameter names are allowed. Repeated use of this adds to the tag list. If
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``!new_stream`` is used, the location doesn't matter.
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May possibly be ignored in some cases, such as delayed media opening.
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Delayed media opening
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=====================
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The special ``delay_open`` header can be used to open the media URL of the
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stream only when the track is selected for the first time. This is supposed to
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be an optimization to speed up opening of a remote stream if there are many
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tracks for whatever reasons.
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This has various tricky restrictions, and also will defer failure to open a
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stream to "later". By design, it's supposed to be used for single-track streams.
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Using multiple segments requires you to specify all offsets and durations (also
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it was never tested whether it works at all). Interaction with ``mp4_dash`` may
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be strange.
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You can describe multiple sub-tracks by using multiple ``delay_open`` headers
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before the same source URL. (If there are multiple sub-tracks of the same media
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type, then the mapping to the real stream is probably rather arbitrary.) If the
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source contains tracks not described, a warning is logged when the delayed
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opening happens, and the track is hidden.
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This has the following parameters:
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``media_type``
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Required. Must be set to ``video``, ``audio``, or ``sub``. (Other tracks in
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the opened URL are ignored.)
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``codec``
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The mpv codec name that is expected. Although mpv tries to initialize a
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decoder with it currently (and will fail track selection if it does not
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initialize successfully), it is not used for decoding - decoding still uses
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the information retrieved from opening the actual media information, and may
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be a different codec (you should try to avoid this, of course). Defaults to
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``null``.
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Above also applies for similar fields such as ``w``. These fields are
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mostly to help with user track pre-selection.
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``flags``
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A ``+`` separated list of boolean flags. Currently defined flags:
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``default``
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Set the default track flag.
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``forced``
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Set the forced track flag.
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Other values are ignored after triggering a warning.
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``w``, ``h``
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For video codecs: expected video size. See ``codec`` for details.
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``fps``
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For video codecs: expected video framerate, as integer. (The rate is usually
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only crudely reported, and it makes no sense to expect exact values.)
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``samplerate``
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For audio codecs: expected sample rate, as integer.
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The ``delay_open`` header is not part of the core EDL format. It may be changed
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or removed at any time, depending on mpv's internal requirements.
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Timestamp format
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================
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Currently, time values are floating point values in seconds.
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As an extension, you can set the ``timestamps=chapters`` option. If this option
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is set, timestamps have to be integers, and refer to chapter numbers, starting
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with 0. The default value for this parameter is ``seconds``, which means the
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time is as described in the previous paragraph.
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Example::
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# mpv EDL v0
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file.mkv,2,4,timestamps=chapters
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Plays chapter 3 and ends with the start of chapter 7 (4 chapters later).
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Implicit chapters
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=================
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mpv will add one chapter per segment entry to the virtual timeline.
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By default, the chapter's titles will match the entries' filenames.
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You can override set the ``title`` option to override the chapter title for
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that segment.
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Example::
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# mpv EDL v0
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cap.ts,5,240
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OP.mkv,0,90,title=Show Opening
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The virtual timeline will have two chapters, one called "cap.ts" from 0-240s
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and a second one called "Show Opening" from 240-330s.
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Entry which defines the track layout
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====================================
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Normally, you're supposed to put only files with compatible layouts into an EDL
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file. However, at least the mpv implementation accepts entries that use
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different codecs, or even have a different number of audio/video/subtitle
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tracks. In this case, it's not obvious, which virtual tracks the EDL show should
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expose when being played.
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Currently, mpv will apply an arbitrary heuristic which tracks the EDL file
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should expose. (Before mpv 0.30.0, it always used the first source file in the
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segment list.)
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You can set the ``layout`` option to ``this`` to make a specific entry define
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the track layout.
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Example::
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# mpv EDL v0
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file_with_2_streams.ts,5,240
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file_with_5_streams.mkv,0,90,layout=this
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The way the different virtual EDL tracks are associated with the per-segment
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ones is highly implementation-defined, and uses a heuristic. If a segment is
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missing a track, there will be a "hole", and bad behavior may result. Improving
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this is subject to further development (due to being fringe cases, they don't
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have a high priority).
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If future versions of mpv change this again, this option may be ignored.
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Syntax of EDL URIs
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==================
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mpv accepts inline EDL data in form of ``edl://`` URIs. Other than the
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header, the syntax is exactly the same. It's far more convenient to use ``;``
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instead of line breaks, but that is orthogonal.
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Example: ``edl://f1.mkv,length=5,start=10;f2.mkv,30,20;f3.mkv``
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