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* options: deprecate --ff- options and propertieswm42017-12-211-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | Some old crap which nobody needs and which probably nobody uses. This relies on a GCC extension: using "## __VA_ARGS__" to remove the comma from the argument list if the va args are empty. It's supported by clang, and there's some chance newer standards will introduce a proper way to do this. (Even if it breaks somewhere, it will be a problem only for 1 release, since I want to drop the deprecated properties immediately.)
* command: make video-frame-info property observablewm42017-12-201-1/+1
| | | | Pointed out as missing by someone. Not terribly useful, but here we go.
* dvb: Fix long channel switching: next/prev channelrim2017-12-161-4/+4
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* msg: reinterpret a bunch of message levelsNiklas Haas2017-12-151-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | I've decided that MP_TRACE means “noisy spam per frame”, whereas MP_DBG just means “more verbose debugging messages than MSGL_V”. Basically, MSGL_DBG shouldn't create spam per frame like it currently does, and MSGL_V should make sense to the end-user and provide mostly additional informational output. MP_DBG is basically what I want to make the new default for --log-file, so the cut-off point for MP_DBG is if we probably want to know if for debugging purposes but the user most likely doesn't care about on the terminal. Also, the debug callbacks for libass and ffmpeg got bumped in their verbosity levels slightly, because being external components they're a bit less relevant to mpv debugging, and a bit too over-eager in what they consider to be relevant information. I exclusively used the "try it on my machine and remove messages from MSGL_* until it does what I want it to" approach of refactoring, so YMMV.
* vd_lavc: rewrite how --hwdec is handledwm42017-12-011-25/+14
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Change it from explicit metadata about every hwaccel method to trying to get it from libavcodec. As shown by add_all_hwdec_methods(), this is a quite bumpy road, and a bit worse than expected. This will probably cause a bunch of regressions. In particular I didn't check all the strange decoder wrappers, which all cause some sort of special cases each. You're volunteering for beta testing by using this commit. One interesting thing is that we completely get rid of mp_hwdec_ctx in vd_lavc.c, and that HWDEC_* mostly goes away (some filters still use it, and the VO hwdec interops still have a lot of code to set it up, so it's not going away completely for now).
* vo_gpu: make it possible to load multiple hwdec interop driverswm42017-12-011-8/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Make the VO<->decoder interface capable of supporting multiple hwdec APIs at once. The main gain is that this simplifies autoprobing a lot. Before this change, it could happen that the VO loaded the "wrong" hwdec API, and the decoder was stuck with the choice (breaking hw decoding). With the change applied, the VO simply loads all available APIs, so autoprobing trickery is left entirely to the decoder. In the past, we were quite careful about not accidentally loading the wrong interop drivers. This was in part to make sure autoprobing works, but also because libva had this obnoxious bug of dumping garbage to stderr when using the API. libva was fixed, so this is not a problem anymore. The --opengl-hwdec-interop option is changed in various ways (again...), and renamed to --gpu-hwdec-interop. It does not have much use anymore, other than debugging. It's notable that the order in the hwdec interop array ra_hwdec_drivers[] still matters if multiple drivers support the same image formats, so the option can explicitly force one, if that should ever be necessary, or more likely, for debugging. One example are the ra_hwdec_d3d11egl and ra_hwdec_d3d11eglrgb drivers, which both support d3d11 input. vo_gpu now always loads the interop lazily by default, but when it does, it loads them all. vo_opengl_cb now always loads them when the GL context handle is initialized. I don't expect that this causes any problems. It's now possible to do things like changing between vdpau and nvdec decoding at runtime. This is also preparation for cleaning up vd_lavc.c hwdec autoprobing. It's another reason why hwdec_devices_request_all() does not take a hwdec type anymore.
* af: remove deprecated audio filterswm42017-11-291-32/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | These couldn't be relicensed, and won't survive the LGPL transition. The other existing filters are mostly LGPL (except libaf glue code). This remove the deprecated pan option. I guess it could be restored by inserting a libavfilter filter (if there's one), but for now let it be gone. This temporarily breaks volume control (and things related to it, like replaygain).
* player: change 3 remaining GPL-only code pieces to LGPLwm42017-11-241-10/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | There has been no new developments or agreements, but I was uncertain about the copyright status of them. Thus this part of code was marked as being potentially GPL, and was not built in LGPL mode. Now I've taken a close look again, and decided that these can be relicensed using the existing relicensing agreements. OSD level 3 was introduced in commit 8d190244, with the author being unreachable. As I decided in commit 6ddd95fd, OSD level 3 itself can be kept, but the "osd" command had to go, and the "rendering" of OSD level 3 (the HAVE_GPL code in osd.c) was uncertain. But the code for this was rewritten: instead of duplicating the time/percent formatting code, it was changed to use common code, and some weird extra logic was removed. The code inside of the "if" is exactly the same as the code that formats the OSD status line (covered by LGPL relicensing). The current commands for adding/removing sub/audio tracks more or less originated from commit 2f376d1b39, with the author being unreachable. But the original code was very different, mostly due to MPlayer's incredibly messy handling of subtitles in general. Nothing of this remains in the current code. Even the command declarations were rewritten. The commands (as seen from the user side) are rather similar in naming and semantics, but we don't consider this copyrightable. So it doesn't look like anything copyrightable is left. The add/cycle commands were more or less based on step_property, introduced in commit 7a71da01d6, with the patch author disagreeing with the LGPL relicensing. But all code original to the patch has been replaced in later mpv changes, and the original code was mostly copied from MP_CMD_SET_PROPERTY anyway. The underlying property interface was completely changed, the error handling was redone, and all of this is very similar to the changes that were done on SET_PROPERTY. The command declarations are completely different in the first place, because the semantic change from step to add/cycle. The commit also seems to have been co-authored by reimar to some degree. He also had the idea to change the original patch from making the command modify a specific property to making it generic. (The error message line, especially with its %g formatting, might contain some level of originality, so change that just to be sure. This commit Copies and adapts the error message for SET_PROPERTY.) Although I'm a bit on the fence with all the above things, it really doesn't look like there's anything substantial that would cause issues. I thus claim that there is no problem with changing the license to LGPL for the above things. It's probably still slightly below the standard that was usually applied in the code relicensing in mpv, but probably still far above to the usual in open source relicensing (and above commercial standards as well, if you look what certain tech giants do).
* player: minor fix/simplification of OSD time/duration handlingwm42017-11-241-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | Always display the duration as "unknown" if the duration is known. Also fix that at least demux_lavf reported unknown duration as 0 (fix by setting the default to unknown in demux.c). Remove the dumb _u formatter function, and use a different approach to avoiding displaying "unknown" as playback time on playback start (set last_seek_pts for that).
* demux: export demuxer cache sizes in byteswm42017-11-101-0/+2
| | | | | | Plus sort of document them, together with the already existing undocumented fields. (This is mostly for debugging, so use is discouraged.)
* demux: refactor to export seek rangeswm42017-10-301-7/+8
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Even though only 1 seek range is supported at the time. Other than preparation for possibly future features, the main gain is actually that we finally separate the reporting for the buffering, and the seek ranges. These can be subtly different, so it's good to have a clear separation. This commit also fixes that the ts_reader wasn't rebased to the start time, which could make the player show "???" for buffered cache amount in some .ts files and others (especially at the end, when ts_reader could become higher than ts_max). It also fixes writing the cache-end field in the demuxer-cache-state property: it checked ts_start against NOPTS, which makes no sense. ts_start was never used (except for the bug mentioned above), so get rid of it completely. This also makes it convenient to move the segment check for last_ts to the demux_add_packet() function.
* command: change demuxer-cache-state property to return multiple rangeswm42017-10-261-20/+27
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Even if the demuxer cache does not multiple ranges yet. This is to reduce the pain should caching of multiple ranges ever be implemented. Also change it from the sub properties stuff to return a mpv_node directly, which is less roundabout. Sub-property access won't work anymore, though. Remove the seekable-start/-end fields as well, as they're redundant with the ranges. All this would normally be considered an API change, but since it's been only a few days with no known users, change it immediately. This adds some node.c helpers as well, as the code would be too damn fugly otherwise.
* command: read the diff if you want to knowwm42017-10-211-0/+36
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* demux: add a back buffer and the ability to seek into itwm42017-10-211-3/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This improves upon the previous commit, and partially rewrites it (and other code). It does: - disable the seeking within cache by default, and add an option to control it - mess with the buffer estimation reporting code, which will most likely lead to funny regressions even if the new features are not enabled - add a back buffer to the packet cache - enhance the seek code so you can seek into the back buffer - unnecessarily change a bunch of other stuff for no reason - fuck up everything and vomit ponies and rainbows This should actually be pretty usable. One thing we should add are some properties to report the proper buffer state. Then the OSC could show a nice buffer range. Also configuration of the buffers could be made simpler. Once this has been tested enough, it can be enabled by default, and might replace the stream cache's byte ringbuffer. In addition it may or may not be possible to keep other buffer ranges when seeking outside of the current range, but that would be much more complex.
* command: drop "audio-out-detected-device" propertywm42017-10-091-15/+1
| | | | | | Coreaudio stopped setting it a few releases ago (66a958bb4fa). There is not much of a user- or API-visible change, so remove it without deprecation.
* audio: make libaf derived code optionalwm42017-09-211-3/+10
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This code could not be relicensed. The intention was to write new filter code (which could handle both audio and video), but that's a bit of work. Write some code that can do audio conversion (resampling, downmixing, etc.) without the old audio filter chain code in order to speed up the LGPL relicensing. If you build with --disable-libaf, nothing in audio/filter/* is compiled in. It breaks a few features, such as --volume, --af, pitch correction on speed changes, replaygain. Most likely this adds some bugs, even if --disable-libaf is not used. (How the fuck does EOF notification work again anyway?)
* vo: avoid putting large voctrl_performance_data on stackNiklas Haas2017-09-111-10/+17
| | | | | | This is around 512 kB, which is just way too much. Heap-allocate it instead. Also cut down the max pass count to 64, since 128 was unrealistically high even for vo_opengl.
* vo_opengl: refactor/fix mp_pass_perf codeNiklas Haas2017-09-111-6/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | This was needlessly complicated and prone to breakage, because even the references to the ring buffer could end up getting invalidated and containing garbage data on e.g. shader cache flush. For much the same reason why we can't keep around the *timer_pool, we're also forced to hard-copy the entire sample buffer per pass per frame. Not a huge deal, though. This is, what, a few kB per frame? We have more pressing CPU performance concerns anyway. Also simplified/fixed some other code.
* input: merge mouse wheel and axis keycodesJames Ross-Gowan2017-09-031-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Mouse wheel bindings have always been a cause of user confusion. Previously, on Wayland and macOS, precise touchpads would generate AXIS keycodes and notched mouse wheels would generate mouse button keycodes. On Windows, both types of device would generate AXIS keycodes and on X11, both types of device would generate mouse button keycodes. This made it pretty difficult for users to modify their mouse-wheel bindings, since it differed between platforms and in some cases, between devices. To make it more confusing, the keycodes used on Windows were changed in 18a45a42d524 without a deprecation period or adequate communication to users. This change aims to make mouse wheel binds less confusing. Both the mouse button and AXIS keycodes are now deprecated aliases of the new WHEEL keycodes. This will technically break input configs on Wayland and macOS that assign different commands to precise and non-precise scroll events, but this is probably uncommon (if anyone does it at all) and I think it's a fair tradeoff for finally fixing mouse wheel-related confusion on other platforms.
* input: use mnemonic names for mouse buttonsJames Ross-Gowan2017-09-031-1/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | mpv's mouse button numbering is based on X11 button numbering, which allows for an arbitrary number of buttons and includes mouse wheel input as buttons 3-6. This button numbering was used throughout the codebase and exposed in input.conf, and it was difficult to remember which physical button each number actually referred to and which referred to the scroll wheel. In practice, PC mice only have between two and five buttons and one or two scroll wheel axes, which are more or less in the same location and have more or less the same function. This allows us to use names to refer to the buttons instead of numbers, which makes input.conf syntax a lot easier to remember. It also makes the syntax robust to changes in mpv's underlying numbering. The old MOUSE_BTNx names are still understood as deprecated aliases of the named buttons. This changes both the input.conf syntax and the MP_MOUSE_BTNx symbols in the codebase, since I think both would benefit from using names over numbers, especially since some platforms don't use X11 button numbering and handle different mouse buttons in different windowing system events. This also makes the names shorter, since otherwise they would be pretty long, and it removes the high-numbered MOUSE_BTNx_DBL names, since they weren't used. Names are the same as used in Qt: https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qt.html#MouseButton-enum
* command: restore OSD marker for video equalizer propertieswm42017-08-231-7/+8
| | | | | | | Commit 03cf150ff3516 accidentally dropped these. Readd them in a simpler way (so only a property_osd_display[] entry is enough). This commit doesn't actually touch the video equalizer properties, because the default value of 0 for the marker is what they require anyway.
* video: change --deinterlace behaviorwm42017-08-221-26/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | This removes all GPL only code from it, and that's the whole purpose. Also happens to be much simpler. The "deinterlace" option still sort of exists, but only as runtime changeable option. The main change in behavior is that the property will not report back the actual deint state. Or in other words, if inserting or initializing the filter fails, the deinterlace property will still return "yes". This is in line with most recent behavior changes to properties and options.
* video: redo video equalizer option handlingwm42017-08-221-38/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | I really wouldn't care much about this, but some parts of the core code are under HAVE_GPL, so there's some need to get rid of it. Simply turn the video equalizer from its current fine-grained handling with vf/vo fallbacks into global options. This makes updating them much simpler. This removes any possibility of applying video equalizers in filters, which affects vf_scale, and the previously removed vf_eq. Not a big loss, since the preferred VOs have this builtin. Remove video equalizer handling from vo_direct3d, vo_sdl, vo_vaapi, and vo_xv. I'm not going to waste my time on these legacy VOs. vo.eq_opts_cache exists _only_ to send a VOCTRL_SET_EQUALIZER, which exists _only_ to trigger a redraw. This seems silly, but for now I feel like this is less of a pain. The rest of the equalizer using code is self-updating. See commit 96b906a51d5 for how some video equalizer code was GPL only. Some command line option names and ranges can probably be traced back to a GPL only committer, but we don't consider these copyrightable.
* options: add a thread-safe way to notify option updateswm42017-08-221-8/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | So far, we had a thread-safe way to read options, but no option update notification mechanism. Everything was funneled though the main thread's central mp_option_change_callback() function. For example, if the panscan options were changed, the function called vo_control() with VOCTRL_SET_PANSCAN to manually notify the VO thread of updates. This worked, but's pretty inconvenient. Most of these problems come from the fact that MPlayer was written as a single-threaded program. This commit works towards a more flexible mechanism. It adds an update callback to m_config_cache (the thing that is already used for thread-safe access of global options). This alone would still be rather inconvenient, at least in context of VOs. Add another mechanism on top of it that uses mp_dispatch_queue, and takes care of some annoying synchronization issues. We extend mp_dispatch_queue itself to make this easier and slightly more efficient. As a first application, use this to reimplement certain VO scaling and renderer options. The update_opts() function translates these to the "old" VOCTRLs, though. An annoyingly subtle issue is that m_config_cache's destructor now releases pending notifications, and must be released before the associated dispatch queue. Otherwise, it could happen that option updates during e.g. VO destruction queue or run stale entries, which is not expected. Rather untested. The singly-linked list code in dispatch.c is probably buggy, and I bet some aspects about synchronization are not entirely sane.
* audio: introduce a new type to hold audio frameswm42017-08-161-16/+27
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This is pretty pointless, but I believe it allows us to claim that the new code is not affected by the copyright of the old code. This is needed, because the original mp_audio struct was written by someone who has disagreed with LGPL relicensing (it was called af_data at the time, and was defined in af.h). The "GPL'ed" struct contents that surive are pretty trivial: just the data pointer, and some metadata like the format, samplerate, etc. - but at least in this case, any new code would be extremely similar anyway, and I'm not really sure whether it's OK to claim different copyright. So what we do is we just use AVFrame (which of course is LGPL with 100% certainty), and add some accessors around it to adapt it to mpv conventions. Also, this gets rid of some annoying conventions of mp_audio, like the struct fields that require using an accessor to write to them anyway. For the most part, this change is only dumb replacements of mp_audio related functions and fields. One minor actual change is that you can't allocate the new type on the stack anymore. Some code still uses mp_audio. All audio filter code will be deleted, so it makes no sense to convert this code. (Audio filters which are LGPL and which we keep will have to be ported to a new filter infrastructure anyway.) player/audio.c uses it because it interacts with the old filter code. push.c has some complex use of mp_audio and mp_audio_buffer, but this and pull.c will most likely be rewritten to do something else.
* player: make --lavfi-complex changeable at runtimewm42017-08-121-0/+3
| | | | | | | | Tends to be somewhat glitchy if subtitles are enabled, and you enable and disable tracks. On error, this will disable --lavfi-complex, which will result in whatever behavior.
* options: --priority can be LGPLwm42017-08-031-1/+1
| | | | | | | Original author has agreed now. Also fix the notice in dec_video.c - all GPL-only code is gone (unrelated to --priority/its author).
* input: drop deprecated "osd" commandwm42017-07-211-22/+0
| | | | | Complicated situation due to changes by GPL-only author, but also unnecessary due to newer mechanisms.
* command: add missing change notification for playlist-shufflewm42017-07-041-0/+1
| | | | Fixes #4573.
* options: change everything againwm42017-07-021-1/+48
| | | | Fucking bullshit.
* vo_opengl: refactor vo performance subsystemNiklas Haas2017-07-011-14/+59
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This replaces `vo-performance` by `vo-passes`, bringing with it a number of changes and improvements: 1. mpv users can now introspect the vo_opengl passes, which is something that has been requested multiple times. 2. performance data is now measured per-pass, which helps both development and debugging. 3. since adding more passes is cheap, we can now report information for more passes (e.g. the blit pass, and the osd pass). Note: we also switch to nanosecond scale, to be able to measure these passes better. 4. `--user-shaders` authors can now describe their own passes, helping users both identify which user shaders are active at any given time as well as helping shader authors identify performance issues. 5. the timing data per pass is now exported as a full list of samples, so projects like Argon-/mpv-stats can immediately read out all of the samples and render a graph without having to manually poll this option constantly. Due to gl_timer's design being complicated (directly reading performance data would block, so we delay the actual read-back until the next _start command), it's vital not to conflate different passes that might be doing different things from one frame to another. To accomplish this, the actual timers are stored as part of the gl_shader_cache's sc_entry, which makes them unique for that exact shader. Starting and stopping the time measurement is easy to unify with the gl_sc architecture, because the existing API already relies on a "generate, render, reset" flow, so we can just put timer_start and timer_stop in sc_generate and sc_reset, respectively. The ugliest thing about this code is that due to the need to keep pass information relatively stable in between frames, we need to distinguish between "new" and "redrawn" frames, which bloats the code somewhat and also feels hacky and vo_opengl-specific. (But then again, this entire thing is vo_opengl-specific)
* scripting: add wrapper to load scripts with user pathsRicardo Constantino2017-06-301-1/+1
| | | | | Fixes regression since b2f756c80e, which broke load-script command when used with user paths (ex: ~~/script.lua)
* build: change how some OS specific source files are selectedwm42017-06-291-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | In a bunch of cases, we emulate highly platform specific APIs on a higher level across all OSes, such as IPC, terminal, subprocess handling, and more. We have source files for each OS, and they implement all the same mpv internal API. Selecting which source file to use on an OS can be tricky, because there is partially overlapping and emulated APIs (consider Cygwin on Windows). Add a pick_first_matching_dep() function to make this slightly easier and more structured. Also add dummy backends in some cases, to deal with APIs not being available. Clarify the Windows dependency identifiers, as these are the most confusing.
* options: handle suffixes like -add in a more generic waywm42017-06-261-25/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This affects options like --vf or --display-tags. These used a "*" suffix to match all options starting with a specific name, and handled the rest in the option parser. Change this to remove the "*" special case, and require every option parser to declare a list of allowed suffixes via m_option_type.actions. The new way is conceptually simpler, because we don't have to account for the "*" in a bunch of places anymore, and instead everything is centrally handled in the CLI part of the option parser, where it's actually needed. It automatically enables suffixes like -add for a bunch of other stringlist options.
* player: change license of most core files to LGPLwm42017-06-231-7/+9
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