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* demux: remove relative seekingwm42016-02-281-4/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Ever since a change in mplayer2 or so, relative seeks were translated to absolute seeks before sending them to the demuxer in most cases. The only exception in current mpv is DVD seeking. Remove the SEEK_ABSOLUTE flag; it's not the implied default. SEEK_FACTOR is kept, because it's sometimes slightly useful for seeking in things like transport streams. (And maybe mkv files without duration set?) DVD seeking is terrible because DVD and libdvdnav are terrible, but mostly because libdvdnav is terrible. libdvdnav does not expose seeking with seek tables. (Although I know xbmc/kodi use an undocumented API that is not declared in the headers by dladdr()ing it - I think the function is dvdnav_jump_to_sector_by_time().) With the current mpv policy if not giving a shit about DVD, just revert our half-working seek hacks and always use dvdnav_time_search(). Relative seeking might get stuck sometimes; in this case --hr-seek=always is recommended.
* Rewrite ordered chapters and timeline stuffwm42016-02-151-0/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This uses a different method to piece segments together. The old approach basically changes to a new file (with a new start offset) any time a segment ends. This meant waiting for audio/video end on segment end, and then changing to the new segment all at once. It had a very weird impact on the playback core, and some things (like truly gapless segment transitions, or frame backstepping) just didn't work. The new approach adds the demux_timeline pseudo-demuxer, which presents an uniform packet stream from the many segments. This is pretty similar to how ordered chapters are implemented everywhere else. It also reminds of the FFmpeg concat pseudo-demuxer. The "pure" version of this approach doesn't work though. Segments can actually have different codec configurations (different extradata), and subtitles are most likely broken too. (Subtitles have multiple corner cases which break the pure stream-concatenation approach completely.) To counter this, we do two things: - Reinit the decoder with each segment. We go as far as allowing concatenating files with completely different codecs for the sake of EDL (which also uses the timeline infrastructure). A "lighter" approach would try to make use of decoder mechanism to update e.g. the extradata, but that seems fragile. - Clip decoded data to segment boundaries. This is equivalent to normal playback core mechanisms like hr-seek, but now the playback core doesn't need to care about these things. These two mechanisms are equivalent to what happened in the old implementation, except they don't happen in the playback core anymore. In other words, the playback core is completely relieved from timeline implementation details. (Which honestly is exactly what I'm trying to do here. I don't think ordered chapter behavior deserves improvement, even if it's bad - but I want to get it out from the playback core.) There is code duplication between audio and video decoder common code. This is awful and could be shareable - but this will happen later. Note that the audio path has some code to clip audio frames for the purpose of codec preroll/gapless handling, but it's not shared as sharing it would cause more pain than it would help.
* vd_lavc: feed A53_CC side data packets into the demuxer for eia_608 decodingAman Gupta2016-01-181-0/+1
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* demux: remove unused functionwm42016-01-181-2/+0
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* demux: remove unused flagwm42016-01-181-1/+0
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* player: eliminate demux_get_next_pts()wm42016-01-111-1/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This slightly changes behavior when seeking with external audio/subtitle tracks if transport streams and mpeg files are played, as well as behavior when seeking with such external tracks. get_main_demux_pts() is evil because it always blocks on the demuxer (if there isn't already a packet queued). Thus it could lock up the player, which is a shame because all other possible causes have been removed. The reduced "precision" when seeking in the ts/mpeg cases (where SEEK_FACTOR is used, resulting in byte seeks instead of timestamp seeks) might lead to issues. We should probably drop this heuristic. (It was introduced because there is no other way to seek in files with PTS resets with libavformat, but its value is still questionable.)
* demux: remove weird tripple-buffering for the sh_stream listwm42015-12-231-6/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The demuxer infrastructure was originally single-threaded. To make it suitable for multithreading (specifically, demuxing and decoding on separate threads), some sort of tripple-buffering was introduced. There are separate "struct demuxer" allocations. The demuxer thread sets the state on d_thread. If anything changes, the state is copied to d_buffer (the copy is protected by a lock), and the decoder thread is notified. Then the decoder thread copies the state from d_buffer to d_user (again while holding a lock). This avoids the need for locking in the demuxer/decoder code itself (only demux.c needs an internal, "invisible" lock.) Remove the streams/num_streams fields from this tripple-buffering schema. Move them to the internal struct, and protect them with the internal lock. Use accessors for read access outside of demux.c. Other than replacing all field accesses with accessors, this separates allocating and adding sh_streams. This is needed to avoid race conditions. Before this change, this was awkwardly handled by first initializing the sh_stream, and then sending a stream change event. Now the stream is allocated, then initialized, and then declared as immutable and added (at which point it becomes visible to the decoder thread immediately). This change is useful for PR #2626. And eventually, we should probably get entirely of the tripple buffering, and this makes a nice first step.
* player: handle rebasing start time differentlywm42015-11-161-0/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Most of this is explained in the DOCS additions. This gives us slightly more sanity, because there is less interaction between the various parts. The goal is getting rid of the video_offset entirely. The simplification extends to the user API. In particular, we don't need to fix missing parts in the API, such as the lack for a seek command that seeks relatively to the start time. All these things are now transparent. (If someone really wants to know the real timestamps/start time, new properties would have to be added.)
* demux: remove demux_add_packet() return valuewm42015-10-171-1/+1
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* demux: remove redundant demux_chapter.name fieldwm42015-08-121-1/+0
| | | | | | | | | | Instead, force everyone to use the metadata struct and set a "title" field. This is only a problem for the timeline producers, which set up chapters manually. (They do this because a timeline is a separate struct.) This fixes the behavior of the chapter-metadata property, which never returned a "title" property for e.g. ordered chapters.
* demux: add options to control maximum queue sizewm42015-08-051-5/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | Add --demuxer-max-packets and --demuxer-max-bytes, which control the maximum size of the packet queue. These can be helpful to avoid excessive memory usage. Memory usage is the reason why there's a limit in the first place. If a file is more or less broken, and audio and video don't line up, the decoders will fill up the packet queue trying to read more audio or video, and the maximum sizes are required to avoid unbounded memory allocation. Being able to override the maximum sizes is useful; either for restricting memory usage further, or enlarging the sizes when attempting to play various broken files.
* player: use demux_open_url() to open main fileswm42015-08-041-1/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Instead of opening a stream and then a demuxer, do both at once with demux_open_url(). This requires some awkward additions to demuxer_params, because there are some weird features associated with opening the main file. E.g. the relatively useless --stream-capture features requires enabling capturing on the stream before the demuxer is opened, but on the other hand shouldn't be done on secondary files like external subtitles. Also relatively bad: since demux_open_url() returns just a demuxer pointer or NULL, additional error reporting is done via demuxer_params. Still, at least conceptually, it's ok, and simpler than before.
* player: remove higher-level remains of DVD/BD menu supportwm42015-08-031-1/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Nobody wanted to restore this, so it gets the boot. If anyone still wants to volunteer to restore menu support, this would be welcome. (I might even try it myself if I feel masochistic and like wasting a lot of time for nothing.) But if it does get restored, it should be done differently. There were many stupid things about how it was done. For example, it somehow tried to pull mp_nav_events through all the layers (including needing to "buffer" them in the demuxer), which was needlessly complicated. It could be done simpler. This code was already inactive, so this commit actually changes nothing. Also keep in mind that normal DVD/BD playback still works.
* demux: get rid of some bstr thingswm42015-06-241-3/+3
| | | | | Change the demuxer_add_attachment() and demuxer_add_chapter() signatures to take char* instead of bstr, and everything which depends on it.
* demux_mkv: move global options to the demuxerwm42015-04-231-1/+0
| | | | | | | The options don't change, but they're now declared and used privately by demux_mkv.c. This also brings with it a minor refactor of the subpreroll seek handling - merge the code from playloop.c into demux_mkv.c. The change in demux.c is pretty much equivalent as well.
* Update license headersMarcin Kurczewski2015-04-131-5/+4
| | | | Signed-off-by: wm4 <wm4@nowhere>
* demux_mkv: check for playback abortswm42015-03-091-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | Check async abort notification. libavformat already do something equivalent. Before this commit, the demuxer could enter resync mode (and print silly warning messages) when the stream stopped returning data because of an abort.
* demux: add a demux_open_url() functionwm42015-02-201-0/+7
| | | | | Often stream and a demuxer are opened at the same time. Provide a function for this and replace most of its uses.
* demux: change demux_open() signaturewm42015-02-201-2/+2
| | | | Fold the relatively obscure force_format parameter into demuxer_params.
* demux: add free_demuxer_and_stream() functionwm42015-02-201-0/+1
| | | | | Although their lifetimes are conceptually different, it happens often that a demuxer is destroyed together with its stream.
* player: enable cache and demuxer thread for subtitles toowm42015-02-181-0/+5
| | | | | | | | | Includes some logic for not starting the demuxer thread for fully read subtitles. (Well, the cache will still waste _lots_ of resources, and the cache always has to be created, because we don't know whether it'll be needed _before_ opening the file.) See #1597.
* demux, matroska: remove demuxer type fieldwm42015-02-171-8/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | The Matroska timeline code was the only thing which still used the demuxer.type field. This field explicitly identifies a demuxer implementation. The purpose of the Matroska timeline code was to reject files that are not Matroska. But it already forces the Matroska format, meaning loading will explicitly only use the Matroska demuxer. If the demuxer can't open the file, no other demuxer will be tried, and thus checking the field is redundant. The change in demux_mkv_timeline.c removes the if condition, and unindents the if body.
* demux: remove file_contents fieldwm42015-02-171-2/+0
| | | | | | | Only demux_cue and demux_edl used it. It's a weird field and doesn't help with anything anymore - by now, it only saves a priv context in the mentioned demuxers. Reducing the number of confusing things the demuxer struct has is more important than minimizing the code.
* demux_edl: make independent from MPContextwm42015-02-171-1/+0
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* demux_cue: make independent from MPContextwm42015-02-171-1/+0
| | | | Also see previous commit(s).
* player: use a separate context for timeline loader stuffwm42015-02-171-0/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Instead of accessing MPContext in player/timeline/*, create a separate context struct, which the timeline loaders fill out. It turns out that there's not much in the way too big MPContext that these need to access. One major PITA is managing (and closing) the set of open demuxers. The problem is that we need a list of all demuxers to make sure no unneeded streams are enabled. This adds a callback to the demuxer_desc struct, with the intention of leaving to to the demuxer to call the right loader, instead of explicitly checking the demuxer type and dispatching manually in common code. I also considered making the timeline part of the demuxer state, but decided against: it's too much of a mess wrt. memory management and threading, and also doesn't make it clear who owns the child demuxers. With the struct timeline decoupled from the demuxer state, it's at least somewhat clear that the child demuxers are independent from the "main" demuxer. The actual changes to player/timeline/* are separated in the following commits, because they're quite verbose. Some artifacts will be removed later as soon as there's only 1 timeline loading mechanism.
* demux: fix dropped subtitle packets with the new stream switchingwm42015-02-141-1/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | If the previous subtitle packet is too far back, and the refresh seek won't pick it up, and the packet never comes again. As a consequence, the refresh mode was never stopped on the subtitle stream, which caused all packets to be discarded. Fix by assuming the file position is monotonically increasing; then it will resume even if a packet _after_ the intended resume point is returned. This introduces a new requirement on how the demuxer behaves. (I'm not sure if mp4 actually satisfies this requirement in all cases.) Fixes a regression introduced by commit f9f2e1cc.
* demux: hack for instant stream switchingwm42015-02-131-0/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This removes the delay when switching audio tracks in mkv or mp4 files. Other formats are not enabled, because it's not clear whether the demuxers fulfill the requirements listed in demux.h. (Many formats definitely do not with libavformat.) Background: The demuxer packet cache buffers a certain amount of packets. This includes only packets from selected streams. We discard packets from other streams for various reasons. This introduces a problem: switching to a different audio track introduces a delay. The delay is as big as the demuxer packet cache buffer, because while the file was read ahead to fill the packet buffer, the process of reading packets also discarded all packets from the previously not selected audio stream. Once the remaining packet buffer has been played, new audio packets are available and you hear audio again. We could probably just not discard packets from unselected streams. But this would require additional memory and CPU resources, and also it's hard to tell when packets from unused streams should be discarded (we don't want to keep them forever; it'd be a memory leak). We could also issue a player hr-seek to the current playback position, which would solve the problem in 1 line of code or so. But this can be rather slow. So what we do in this commit instead is: we just seek back to the position where our current packet buffer starts, and start demuxing from this position again. This way we can get the "past" packets for the newly selected stream. For streams which were already selected the packets are simply discarded until the previous position is reached again. That latter part is the hard part. We really want to skip packets exactly until the position where we left off previously, or we will skip packets or feed packets to the decoder twice. If we assume that the demuxer is deterministic (returns exactly the same packets after a seek to a previous position), then we can try to check whether it's the same packet as the one at the end of the packet buffer. If it is, we know that the packet after it is where we left off last time. Unfortunately, this is not very robust, and maybe it can't be made robust. Currently we use the demux_packet.pos field as unique packet ID - which works fine in some scenarios, but will break in arbitrary ways if the basic requirement to the demuxer (as listed in the demux.h additions) are broken. Thus, this is enabled only for the internal mkv demuxer and the libavformat mp4 demuxer. (libavformat mkv does not work, because the packet positions are not unique. Probably could be fixed upstream, but it's not clear whether it's a bug or a feature.)
* command: export more details about file seekabilitywm42015-01-261-1/+2
| | | | | | | | | | If a file is unseekable (consider e.g. a http server without resume functionality), but the stream cache is active, the player will enable seeking anyway. Until know, client API user couldn't know that this happens, and it has implications on how well seeking will work. So add a property which exports whether this situation applies. Fixes #1522.
* demux_disc: pass seek flags to stream layerwm42015-01-191-5/+9
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Pass through the seek flags to the stream layer. The STREAM_CTRL semantics become a bit awkward, but that's still the least awkward part about optical disc media. Make demux_disc.c request relative seeks. Now the player will use relative seeks if the user sends relative seek commands, and the demuxer announces it wants these by setting rel_seeks to true. This change probably changes seek behavior for dvd, dvdnav, bluray, cdda, and possibly makes seeking useless if the demuxer-cache is set to a high value. Will be used in the next commit. (Split to make reverting the next commit easier.)
* command: add properties for current bitratewm42014-12-121-0/+1
| | | | Fixes #1192.
* dvd, bd: don't unnecessarily block on demuxer/stream all the timewm42014-12-041-0/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This was completely breaking any low-level caching. Change it so that at least demuxer caching will work. Do this by using the metadata cache mechanism to funnel through the menu commands. For some incomprehensible reason, I had to reorder the events (which affects their delivery priority), or they would be ignored. Probably some crap about the event state being cleared before it could be delivered. I don't give a shit. All this code sucks. It would probably be better to let discnav.c access the menu event "queue" directly, and to synchronize access with a mutex, instead of going through all the caching layers, making things complicated and slow.
* player: always use demux_chapterwm42014-11-021-3/+5
| | | | | | | | | Instead of defining a separate data structure in the core. For some odd reason, demux_chapter exported the chapter time in nano-seconds. Change that to the usual timestamps (rename the field to make any code relying on this to fail compilation), and also remove the unused chapter end time.
* demux: fix demux_seek signaturewm42014-10-291-1/+1
| | | | Probably doesn't matter much.
* demux: get rid of old wrapperwm42014-09-011-2/+0
| | | | | demux_info_get() used to be central, but was turned into a wrapper, and now there was only one caller left. Get rid of it.
* Move compat/ and bstr/ directory contents somewhere elsewm42014-08-291-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | bstr.c doesn't really deserve its own directory, and compat had just a few files, most of which may as well be in osdep. There isn't really any justification for these extra directories, so get rid of them. The compat/libav.h was empty - just delete it. We changed our approach to API compatibility, and will likely not need it anymore.
* player: better cache status on status linewm42014-08-271-0/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | The cache percentage was useless. It showed how much of the total stream cache was in use, but since the cache size is something huge and unrelated to the bitrate or network speed, the information content of the percentage was rather low. Replace this with printing the duration of the demuxer-cached data, and the size of the stream cache in KB. I'm not completely sure about the formatting; suggestions are welcome. Note that it's not easy to know how much playback time the stream cache covers, so it's always in bytes.
* player: redo how stream caching and pausing on low cache workswm42014-08-271-0/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Add the --cache-secs option, which literally overrides the value of --demuxer-readahead-secs if the stream cache is active. The default value is very high (10 seconds), which means it can act as network cache. Remove the old behavior of trying to pause once the byte cache runs low. Instead, do something similar wit the demuxer cache. The nice thing is that we can guess how many seconds of video it has cached, and we can make better decisions. But for now, apply a relatively naive heuristic: if the cache is below 0.5 secs, pause, and wait until at least 2 secs are available. Note that due to timestamp reordering, the estimated cached duration of video might be inaccurate, depending on the file format. If the file format has DTS, it's easy, otherwise the duration will seemingly jump back and forth.
* demux: enable thread by defaultwm42014-08-161-5/+0
| | | | And change the defaults for the other queue options to reduce latency.
* demux: remove unused functionwm42014-08-161-1/+0
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* demux: fix timestamp type for seek callswm42014-07-211-1/+1
| | | | | mpv/mplayer2/MPlayer use double for timestamps, but the demuxer API used float.
* demux: add function to read packets asychronouslywm42014-07-181-0/+1
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* demux: drop some unused definitionswm42014-07-171-2/+0
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* demux: add a demuxer threadwm42014-07-161-13/+36
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This adds a thread to the demuxer which reads packets asynchronously. It will do so until a configurable minimum packet queue size is reached. (See options.rst additions.) For now, the thread is disabled by default. There are some corner cases that have to be fixed, such as fixing cache behavior with webradios. Note that most interaction with the demuxer is still blocking, so if e.g. network dies, the player will still freeze. But this change will make it possible to remove most causes for freezing. Most of the new code in demux.c actually consists of weird caches to compensate for thread-safety issues (with the previously single-threaded design), or to avoid blocking by having to wait on the demuxer thread. Most of the changes in the player are due to the fact that we must not access the source stream directly. the demuxer thread already accesses it, and the stream stuff is not thread-safe. For timeline stuff (like ordered chapters), we enable the thread for the current segment only. We also clear its packet queue on seek, so that the remaining (unconsumed) readahead buffer doesn't waste memory. Keep in mind that insane subtitles (such as ASS typesetting muxed into mkv files) will practically disable the readahead, because the total queue size is considered when checking whether the minimum queue size was reached.
* demux: remove accurate_seek fieldwm42014-07-081-3/+0
| | | | It's unused now. (Only the dvd code used it until recently.)
* Remove stream_pts stuffwm42014-07-061-1/+0
| | | | | This was used by DVD/BD, but its usage was removed with one of the previous commits.
* dvd: fix first subtitle with delayed subtitle streamswm42014-07-061-0/+1
| | | | | | This was accidentally broken with moving the DVD code to demux_disc.c. Also remove an abort() call meant for debugging.
* demux: minor simplificationwm42014-07-061-2/+1
| | | | Oops, should have been part of commit 37085788.
* demux: minor simplification to internal APIwm42014-07-051-3/+1
| | | | Also some other unr