e56d8a200d
GetTimer() is generally replaced with mp_time_us(). Both calls return microseconds, but the latter uses int64_t, us defined to never wrap, and never returns 0 or negative values. GetTimerMS() has no direct replacement. Instead the other functions are used. For some code, switch to mp_time_sec(), which returns the time as double float value in seconds. The returned time is offset to program start time, so there is enough precision left to deliver microsecond resolution for at least 100 years. Unless it's casted to a float (or the CPU reduces precision), which is why we still use mp_time_us() out of paranoia in places where precision is clearly needed. Always switch to the correct time. The whole point of the new timer calls is that they don't wrap, and storing microseconds in unsigned int variables would negate this. In some cases, remove wrap-around handling for time values. |
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audio | ||
compat | ||
core | ||
demux | ||
DOCS | ||
etc | ||
osdep | ||
stream | ||
sub | ||
TOOLS | ||
video | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
AUTHORS | ||
configure | ||
Copyright | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
talloc.c | ||
talloc.h | ||
travis-deps | ||
version.sh |
mpv
Overview
mpv is a movie player based on MPlayer and mplayer2. It supports a wide variety of video file formats, audio and video codecs, and subtitle types.
If you are wondering what's different from mplayer2 and MPlayer you can read more about the changes.
Compilation
Compiling with full features requires development files for several
external libraries. Below is a list of some important requirements. For
more information see the output of ./configure --help
for a list of options,
or look at the list of enabled and disabled features printed after running
./configure
. If you think you have support for some feature installed
but configure fails to detect it, the file config.log
may contain
information about the reasons for the failure.
Essential dependencies (incomplete list):
- gcc or clang
- X development headers (xlib, X extensions, libvdpau, libGL, libXv, ...)
- Audio output development headers (libasound, pulseaudio)
- fribidi, freetype, fontconfig development headers (for libass)
- libass
- FFmpeg libraries (libavutil libavcodec libavformat libswscale libpostproc)
- libjpeg
- libquvi if you want to play Youtube videos directly
- libx264 if you want to use encoding (has to be explicitly enabled when compiling ffmpeg)
Most of the above libraries are available in suitable versions on normal Linux distributions. However FFmpeg is an exception (distro versions may be too old to work at all or work well). For that reason you may want to use the separately available build wrapper (mpv-build) that first compiles FFmpeg libraries and libass, and then compiles the player statically linked against those.
If you are running Mac OSX and using homebrew we provide homebrew-mpv, an up to date formula that compiles mpv with sensible dependencies and defaults for OSX.
Bug reports
Please use the issue tracker provided by GitHub to send us bug reports or feature requests.
Contributing
For small changes you can just send us pull requests through GitHub. For bigger changes come and talk to us on IRC before you start working on them. It will make code review easier for both parties later on.
Contacts
You can find us on IRC in #mpv-player
on irc.freenode.net