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* audio/out: fix previous commitwm42014-05-111-9/+11
| | | | | | | | | This didn't quite work. The main issue was that get_space tries to be clever to reduce overall buffering, so it will cause the playloop to decode and queue only as much audio as is needed to refill the AO in reasonable time. Also, even if ignoring the problem, the logic of the previous commit was slightly broken. (This required a few retries, because I couldn't reproduce the issue on my own machine.)
* audio/out: avoid wakeup feedback loopwm42014-05-111-2/+7
| | | | | | | | | | | | | When the audio buffer went low, but could not be refilled yet, it could happen that the AO playback thread and the decode thread could enter a wakeup feedback loop, causing up to 100% CPU usage doing nothing. This happened because the decoder thread would wake up the AO thread when writing 0 bytes of newly decoded data, and the AO thread in reaction wakes up the decoder thread after writing 0 bytes to the AO buffer. Fix this by waking up the decoder thread only if data was actually played or queued. (This will still cause some redundant wakeups, but will eventually settle down, reducing CPU usage close to ideal.)
* audio/out: more debugging info for --dump-statswm42014-05-111-1/+5
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* audio: fix the exact value that is used for the wait timewm42014-05-041-3/+2
| | | | | | | | | The comment says that it wakes up the main thread if 50% has been played, but in reality the value was 0.74/2 => 37.5%. Correct this. This probably changes little, because it's a very fuzzy heuristic in the first place. Also move down the min_wait calculation to where it's actually used.
* audio: minor simplification in wait codewm42014-04-231-2/+1
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* audio: add hack against broken pulseaudio EOF conditionwm42014-04-171-1/+16
| | | | | | | | | | | | This was reported with PulseAudio 2.1. Apparently it still has problems with reporting the correct delay. Since ao_pulse.c still has our custom get_delay implementation, there's a possibility that this is our fault, but this seems unlikely, because it's full of workarounds for issues like this. It's also possible that this problem doesn't exist on PulseAudio 5.0 anymore (I didn't explicitly retest it). The check is general and works for all push based AOs. For pull based AOs, this can't happen as pull.c implements all the logic correctly.
* audio: wake up the core when audio buffer is running lowwm42014-04-151-15/+60
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | And also add a function ao_need_data(), which AO drivers can call if their audio buffer runs low. This change intends to make it easier for the playback thread: instead of making the playback thread calculate a timeout at which the audio buffer should be refilled, make the push.c audio thread wakeup the core instead. ao_need_data() is going to be used by ao_pulse, and we need to workaround a stupid situation with pulseaudio causing a deadlock because its callback still holds the internal pulseaudio lock. For AOs that don't call ao_need_data(), the deadline is calculated by the buffer fill status and latency, as before.
* audio/out: reduce amount of audio bufferingwm42014-03-101-2/+16
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Since the addition of the AO feed thread, 200ms of latency (MIN_BUFFER) was added to all push-based AOs. This is not so nice, because even AOs with relatively small buffering (e.g. ao_alsa on my system with ~170ms of buffer size), the additional latency becomes noticable when e.g. toggling mute with softvol. Fix this by trying to keep not only 200ms minimum buffer, but also 200ms maximum buffer. In other words, never buffer beyond 200ms in total. Do this by estimating the AO's buffer fill status using get_space and the initially known AO buffer size (the get_space return value on initialization, before any audio was played). We limit the maximum amount of data written to the soft buffer so that soft buffer size and audio buffer size equal to 200ms (MIN_BUFFER). To avoid weird problems with weird AOs, we buffer beyond MIN_BUFFER if the AO's get_space requests more data than that, and as long as the soft buffer is large enough. Note that this is just a hack to improve the latency. When the audio chain gains the ability to refilter data, this won't be needed anymore, and instead we can introduce some sort of buffer replacement function in order to update data in the soft buffer.
* audio/out: make draining a separate operationwm42014-03-091-3/+15
| | | | | | | | | | | | Until now, this was always conflated with uninit. This was ugly, and also many AOs emulated this manually (or just ignored it). Make draining an explicit operation, so AOs which support it can provide it, and for all others generic code will emulate it. For ao_wasapi, we keep it simple and basically disable the internal draining implementation (maybe it should be restored later). Tested on Linux only.
* audio/out: feed AOs from a separate threadwm42014-03-091-0/+266
This has 2 goals: - Ensure that AOs have always enough data, even if the device buffers are very small. - Reduce complexity in some AOs, which do their own buffering. One disadvantage is that performance is slightly reduced due to more copying. Implementation-wise, we don't change ao.c much, and instead "redirect" the driver's callback to an API wrapper in push.c. Additionally, we add code for dealing with AOs that have a pull API. These AOs usually do their own buffering (jack, coreaudio, portaudio), and adding a thread is basically a waste. The code in pull.c manages a ringbuffer, and allows callback-based AOs to read data directly.