| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Conflicts:
audio/out/ao_lavc.c
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This helps passing the channel layout correctly from decoder to audio
filter chain. (Because that part "reuses" the demuxer level codec
parameters, which is very disgusting.)
Note that ffmpeg stuff already passed the channel layout via
mp_copy_lav_codec_headers(). So other than easier dealing with the
demuxer/decoder parameters mess, there's no real advantage to doing
this.
Make the --channels option accept a channel map. Since simple numbers
map to standard layouts with the given number of channels, this is
downwards compatible. Likewise for demux_rawaudio.
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These were found by the cppcheck and scan-build static analyzers. Most
of these aren't interesting (the 2 previous commits fix some interesting
cases found by these analyzers), and they don't nearly fix all warnings.
(Most of the unfixed warnings are spam, things MPlayer never cared
about, or false positives.)
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This bug was introduced in commit 06eee1b.
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This check was always false:
if (num == EBML_UINT_INVALID)
Fix it by using the proper type for the num variable.
This case actually doesn't really matter, and this is just for hiding
the warning and for being 100% correct.
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Otherwise audio/video/sub track handling code would dereference the NULL
pointer.
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Even if the codec is unknown.
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Get rid of the 1-char subtitle type field. Use sh_stream->codec instead
just like audio and video do. Use codec names as defined by libavcodec
for simplicity, even if they're somewhat verbose and annoying.
Note that ffmpeg might switch to "ass" as codec name for ASS, so we
don't bother with the current silly "ssa" name.
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mkv_track_t now references sh_stream directly, instead of using an ID.
Also remove all accesses to demux_stream (demuxer->video etc.).
Remove some slave-mode things on the way, like "ID_SID_..." messages.
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Cleanup based on results from cppcheck-1.59
Reduce the scope of several variables
Replace 2 calloc/realloc calls with a single malloc
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Since demux_mkv queries the demuxer state when reading packets, track
switching is completely passive. Cycling etc. is done by the frontend.
As result, all track switching code can be removed.
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Possibly once needed, now it's just redundant code.
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Note that ffmpeg doesn't provide a decoder by default yet.
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Matroska files can contain multiple segments, which are literally
further Matroska files appended to the main file. They can be referenced
by segment linking.
While this is an extraordinarily useless and dumb feature, we support it
for the hell of it.
This is implemented by adding a further demuxer parameter for skipping
segments. When scanning for linked segments, each file is opened
multiple times, until there are no further segments found. Each segment
will have a separate demuxer instance (with a separate file handle
etc.).
It appears the Matroska spec. has an even worse feature for segments:
live streaming can completely reconfigure the stream by starting a new
segment. We won't add support for it, because there are 0 people on this
earth who think Matroska life streaming is a good idea. (As opposed to
serving Matroska/WebM files via HTTP.)
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Matroska segment linking allows abusing Matroska files as playlists
without any actual video/audio/sub data, making files without any
clusters still useful for the frontend.
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Also change the extracting of the lace type bitfield from flags to
make it more apparent that the value range is 0-3.
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The lace number is stored with an offset of 1, so the maximum number
of laces is 255+1=256.
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Should help avoiding out-of-bounds reads.
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Avoid messy memory management and error handling.
remove tmp_lace_buffer non-sense
Not sure how my mind got 8k, or how this made sense at all.
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Relative seeks backwards didn't work too well with incomplete files, or
other files that are missing the seek index. The problem was that the
on-the-fly seek index generation simply added cluster positions as seek
entries. While this is perfectly fine, the seek code had no information
about the location of video key frames. For example, a 5 second long
cluster can have only 1 video key frame, which is located 4 seconds into
the cluster. Seeking backwards by one second while still located in the
same cluster would select this cluster as seek target again. Decoding
would resume with the key frame, giving the impression that seeking is
"stuck" at this frame.
Make the generated index aware of key frame and track information, so
that video can always be seeked in an idea way. This also uses the
normal block parsing code for indexing the clusters, instead of the
suspicious looking special code. (This code didn't parse the Matroska
elements correctly, but was fine for files with normal structure. Files
with corrupted clusters or clusters formatted for streaming were not
handled properly.)
Skipping is now quite a bit slower (takes about twice as long as
before), but it removes the special cased skipping code, and it's still
much faster (at least twice as fast) than libavformat. It needs to do
more I/O (no more skipping entire clusters, all data is read), and has
more CPU usage (more data needs to be parsed).
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Move parts of the Block element parsing to read_block(). This way
read_block() can return block time and track information in
struct block_info.
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Move most code from demux_mkv_fill_buffer() to read_next_block(). The
former is supposed to read raw blocks, while ..fill_buffer() reads
blocks and turns them into packets.
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Somehow this was setup such that a BlockGroup can be incrementally
read (at least in theory). This makes no sense, as BlockGroup can
contain only one Block (despite its name). There's no need to read
this incrementally, and makes the code confusing for no gain.
Read all the BlockGroup sub-elements with a single function call,
without keeping global state for BlockGroup parsing.
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The code for reading block data was duplicated. Move it into a function.
Instead of returning on error (possibly due to corrupt data) and
signalling EOF, continue by trying to find the next block. This makes
error handling slightly simpler too, because you don't have to care
about freeing the current block. We could still signal EOF in this case,
but trying to resync sounds better for dealing with corrupted files.
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Matroska files prepared for streaming have clusters with unknown size.
These files are pretty rare, see e.g. test4.mkv from the official
Matroska test file collection.
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The end positions of the current cluster and block were managed by
tracking their size and how much of them were read, instead of just
using the absolute end positions.
I'm not sure about the reasons why this code was originally written
this way. One obvious concern is reading from pipes and such, but the
stream layers hides this. stream_tell(s) works even when reading from
pipes. It's also a fast call, and doesn't involve the stream
implementation or syscalls. Keeping track of the cluster/block end is
simpler and there's no reason why this wouldn't work.
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Incomplete files don't have a valid index, because the index is usually
located near the end of a file. In this case, an index is created on the
fly during demuxing, or when seeks are done.
This used a completely different code path, which leads to unnecessary
complications and code duplication. Use the normal index data structure
instead. The seeking code at the end of seek_creating_index() (in this
commit renamed to create_index_until()) is removed. The normal seek code
does the same thing instead.
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No subtitle selected was supposed to disable the preroll logic
completely. However, the packet skipping logic was not properly enabled,
so the demuxer would still return subtitle packets from before the seek
target timecode. This shouldn't matter at all in practice, but fixing
this makes the code clearer.
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Makes sure that seeking to a given time position shows the subtitle at
that position. This can fail if the subtitle packet is not close enough
to the seek target. Always enabled for hr-seeks, and can be manually
enabled for normal seeks with --mkv-subtitle-preroll.
This helps displaying subtitles correctly with ordered chapters. When
switching ordered chapter segments, a seek is performed. If the subtitle
is timed slightly before the start of the segment, it normally won't be
demuxed. This is a problem with all seeks, but in this case normal
playback is affected. Since switching segments always uses hr-seeks,
the code added by this commit is always active in this situation.
If no subtitles are selected or the subtitles come from an external
file, the demuxer should behave exactly as before this commit.
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Commit 546ae23 fixed aspect ratio if the DisplayWidth or DisplayHeight
elements were missing. However, some bogus files [1] can have these
elements present in the file, but set to 0. Use 1:1 pixel aspect for
such files.
[1] https://ffmpeg.org/trac/ffmpeg/ticket/2424
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Commit ac1c5e6 (demux_mkv: improve robustness against broken files)
added code to skip to the next cluster on error conditions. However,
reaching normal EOF triggers this code as well, so explicitly check
for EOF before this happens. Note that the EOF flag is only set _after_
reading the last byte, so EOF needs to be checked after the fact. (Or
in other words, we must check for EOF after the ebml_read_id() call.)
(To answer the question why reading packets actually reaches EOF, even
if there's the seek index between the last packet and the end of the
file: the cluster reading code skips the seeking related EBML elements
as normal part of operation, so it hits EOF gracefully when trying to
find the next cluster.)
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Fixes test7.mkv from the Matroska test file collection, as well as some
real broken files I've found in the wild. (Unfortunately, true recovery
requires resetting the decoders and playback state with a manual seek,
but it's still better than just exiting.)
If there are broken EBML elements, try harder to skip them correctly.
Do this by searching for the next cluster element. The cluster element
intentionally has a long ID, so it's a suitable element for
resynchronizing (mkvmerge does something similar).
We know that data is corrupt if the ID or length fields of an element
are malformed. Additionally, if skipping an unknown element goes past
the end of the file, we assume it's corrupt and undo the seek. Do this
because it often happens that corrupt data is interpreted as correct
EBML elements. Since these elements will have a ridiculous values in
their length fields due to the large value range that is possible
(0-2^56-2), they will go past the end of the file. So instead of
skipping them (which would result in playback termination), try to
find the next cluster instead. (We still skip unknown elements that
are within the file, as this is needed for correct operation. Also, we
first execute the seek, because we don't really know where the file
ends. Doing it this way is better for unseekable streams too, because
it will still work in the non-error case.)
This is done as special case in the packet reading function only. On
the other hand, that's the only part of the file that's read after
initialization is done.
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Fixes test4.mkv from the Matroska test file collection.
demux_mkv_open() contains a loop that reads header elements. It starts
by reading the EBML element ID with ebml_read_id(). If there is broken
data in the header, ebml_read_id() might return EBML_ID_INVALID.
However, that is not handled specially, and the code for handling
unknown tags is invoked. This reads the EBML element length in order to
skip data, which, if the EBML ID is broken, is entirely random. This
caused a seek beyond the end of the file, making the demuxer fail.
So don't skip any data if the EBML ID was invalid, and simply try to
read the next element. ebml_read_id() reads at least one byte, so the
parsing loop won't get stuck.
All in all this is rather questionable, but since this affects error
situations only, makes behavior a bit more robust (no random seeks), and
actually fixes at least one sample, it's ok.
libavformat's demuxer handled this.
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Fixes the file test2.mkv from the official Matroska test file
collection.
libavformat does the same thing.
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Test sample was produced with ffmpeg. Extradata handling closely follows
libavformat/matroskadec.c.
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FFmpeg recently changed how it writes Opus-in-Matroska to match
the A_OPUS/EXPERIMENTAL name that mkvmerge uses, with the caveat
that things will change and compatibility with old files can get
worked out when the spec is finalized.
This adds both A_OPUS and A_OPUS/EXPERIMENTAL so that *hopefully*
it can play both the newer files that use A_OPUS/EXPERIMENTAL, and
older ones muxed by FFmpeg that were simply A_OPUS, since this is
also what FFmpeg seems to be doing to handle the situation.
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The percent position is used for the OSD, the status line, and for the
OSD bar (shown on seeks). By default, the PTS of the last demuxed packet
was used to calculate it. This led to a "jumpy" display when the
percentage value (casted to int) was changing. The reasons for this were
the presence of video frame reordering (packet PTS is not monotonic), or
getting PTS values from different streams (like audio/subs).
Since these rely on PTS values and correct file durations anyway,
simplify it by calculating it with the current playback position in
mplayer.c instead.
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Also move the lang field into the general stream header. (SH_COMMON is
an old hack to "share" code between audio/video/sub headers.)
There should be no functional changes, other than not printing stream
info in verbose mode or with slave mode. (The frontend already prints
stream info, and this is just a leftover when individual demuxers did
this, and slave mode remains broken.)
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Use codec names instead of FourCCs to identify codecs. Rewrite how
codecs are selected and initialized. Now each decoder exports a list
of decoders (and the codec it supports) via add_decoders(). The order
matters, and the first decoder for a given decoder is preferred over
the other decoders. E.g. all ad_mpg123 decoders are preferred over
ad_lavc, because it comes first in the mpcodecs_ad_drivers array.
Likewise, decoders within ad_lavc that are enumerated first by
libavcodec (using av_codec_next()) are preferred. (This is actually
critical to select h264 software decoding by default instead of vdpau.
libavcodec and ffmpeg/avconv use the same method to select decoders by
default, so we hope this is sane.)
The codec names follow libavcodec's codec names as defined by
AVCodecDescriptor.name (see libavcodec/codec_desc.c). Some decoders
have names different from the canonical codec name. The AVCodecDescriptor
API is relatively new, so we need a compatibility layer for older
libavcodec versions for codec names that are referenced internally,
and which are different from the decoder name. (Add a configure check
for that, because checking versions is getting way too messy.)
demux/codec_tags.c is generated from the former codecs.conf (minus
"special" decoders like vdpau, and excluding the mappings that are the
same as the mappings libavformat's exported RIFF tables). It contains
all the mappings from FourCCs to codec name. This is needed for
demux_mkv, demux_mpg, demux_avi and demux_asf. demux_lavf will set the
codec as determined by libavformat, while the other demuxers have to do
this on their own, using the mp_set_audio/video_codec_from_tag()
functions. Note that the sh_audio/video->format members don't uniquely
identify the codec anymore, and sh->codec takes over this role.
Replace the --ac/--vc/--afm/--vfm with new --vd/--ad options, which
provide cover the functionality of the removed switched.
Note: there's n |