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* vo_opengl: fix row-major vs. column-major confusionwm42016-03-281-2/+5
| | | | | | | | | gl_transform_vec() assumed column-major, while everything else seemed to assumed row-major memory organization for gl_transform.m. Also, gl_transform_trans() seems to contain additional confusion. This didn't matter until now, as everything has been orthogonal, this the swapped matrix entries were always 0.
* vo_opengl: refactor pass_read_video and texture bindingNiklas Haas2016-03-051-1/+19
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This is a pretty major rewrite of the internal texture binding mechanic, which makes it more flexible. In general, the difference between the old and current approaches is that now, all texture description is held in a struct img_tex and only explicitly bound with pass_bind. (Once bound, a texture unit is assumed to be set in stone and no longer tied to the img_tex) This approach makes the code inside pass_read_video significantly more flexible and cuts down on the number of weird special cases and spaghetti logic. It also has some improvements, e.g. cutting down greatly on the number of unnecessary conversion passes inside pass_read_video (which was previously mostly done to cope with the fact that the alternative would have resulted in a combinatorial explosion of code complexity). Some other notable changes (and potential improvements): - texture expansion is now *always* handled in pass_read_video, and the colormatrix never does this anymore. (Which means the code could probably be removed from the colormatrix generation logic, modulo some other VOs) - struct fbo_tex now stores both its "physical" and "logical" (configured) size, which cuts down on the amount of width/height baggage on some function calls - vo_opengl can now technically support textures with different bit depths (e.g. 10 bit luma, 8 bit chroma) - but the APIs it queries inside img_format.c doesn't export this (nor does ffmpeg support it, really) so the status quo of using the same tex_mul for all planes is kept. - dumb_mode is now only needed because of the indirect_fbo being in the main rendering pipeline. If we reintroduce p->use_indirect and thread a transform through the entire program this could be skipped where unnecessary, allowing for the removal of dumb_mode. But I'm not sure how to do this in a clean way. (Which is part of why it got introduced to begin with) - It would be trivial to resurrect source-shader now (it would just be one extra 'if' inside pass_read_video).
* vo_opengl: support 10 bit support with ANGLEwm42016-01-261-0/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | GLES does not support high bit depth fixed point textures for unknown reasons, so direct 10 bit input is not possible. But we can still use integer textures, which are supported by GLES 3.0. These store integer data just like the standard fixed point textures, except they are not normalized on sampling. They also don't support bilinear filtering, and require a special sampler ("usampler2D"). While these texture formats enable us to shuffle the data to the GPU, they're rather impractical with the requirements mentioned above and our current architecture. One problem is that most code assumes it can always use bilinear scaling (even if bilinear is never used when using appropriate scale/cscale options). Another is that we don't have any concept of running a function on a texture in an uniform way. So for now, run a simple conversion step through a FBO. The FBO will use the rgba16f format normally, which gives enough bits for 10 bit, and will at least gracefully degrade with higher depth input. This is bound to be much slower than a more "direct" method, but at least it works and is simple to implement. The odd change of function call order in init_video() is to properly disable "dumb mode" (no FBO use) if these texture formats are in use.
* Change GPL/LGPL dual-licensed files to LGPLwm42016-01-191-12/+7
| | | | | | | | | | | Do this to make the license situation less confusing. This change should be of no consequence, since LGPL is compatible with GPL anyway, and making it LGPL-only does not restrict the use with GPL code. Additionally, the wording implies that this is allowed, and that we can just remove the GPL part.
* vo_opengl: handle GL_ARB_uniform_buffer_object with low GLSL versionswm42015-11-091-0/+1
| | | | Why is this stupid crap being so much a pain for no reason.
* vo_opengl: implement NNEDI3 prescalerBin Jin2015-11-051-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Implement NNEDI3, a neural network based deinterlacer. The shader is reimplemented in GLSL and supports both 8x4 and 8x6 sampling window now. This allows the shader to be licensed under LGPL2.1 so that it can be used in mpv. The current implementation supports uploading the NN weights (up to 51kb with placebo setting) in two different way, via uniform buffer object or hard coding into shader source. UBO requires OpenGL 3.1, which only guarantee 16kb per block. But I find that 64kb seems to be a default setting for recent card/driver (which nnedi3 is targeting), so I think we're fine here (with default nnedi3 setting the size of weights is 9kb). Hard-coding into shader requires OpenGL 3.3, for the "intBitsToFloat()" built-in function. This is necessary to precisely represent these weights in GLSL. I tried several human readable floating point number format (with really high precision as for single precision float), but for some reason they are not working nicely, bad pixels (with NaN value) could be produced with some weights set. We could also add support to upload these weights with texture, just for compatibility reason (etc. upscaling a still image with a low end graphics card). But as I tested, it's rather slow even with 1D texture (we probably had to use 2D texture due to dimension size limitation). Since there is always better choice to do NNEDI3 upscaling for still image (vapoursynth plugin), it's not implemented in this commit. If this turns out to be a popular demand from the user, it should be easy to add it later. For those who wants to optimize the performance a bit further, the bottleneck seems to be: 1. overhead to upload and access these weights, (in particular, the shader code will be regenerated for each frame, it's on CPU though). 2. "dot()" performance in the main loop. 3. "exp()" performance in the main loop, there are various fast implementation with some bit tricks (probably with the help of the intBitsToFloat function). The code is tested with nvidia card and driver (355.11), on Linux. Closes #2230
* vo_opengl: add Super-xBR filter for upscalingBin Jin2015-11-051-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | Add the Super-xBR filter for image doubling, and the prescaling framework to support it. The shader code was ported from MPDN extensions project, with modification to process luma only. This commit is largely inspired by code from #2266, with `gl_transform_trans()` authored by @haasn taken directly.
* vo_opengl: move shader file caching to video.cwm42015-09-231-3/+1
| | | | | | It's just about loading and cachign small files, not does not necessarily have anything to do with shaders. Move it to video.c where it's used.
* vo_opengl: move sampler type mapping to a functionwm42015-09-101-0/+2
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* vo_opengl: implement debanding (and remove source-shader)Niklas Haas2015-09-091-0/+1
| | | | | | | | | | The removal of source-shader is a side effect, since this effectively replaces it - and the video-reading code has been significantly restructured to make more sense and be more readable. This means users no longer have to constantly download and maintain a separate deband.glsl installation alongside mpv, which was the only real use case for source-shader that we found either way.
* vo_opengl: remove gl_ prefixes from files in video/out/openglNiklas Haas2015-09-091-0/+143
This is a bit redundant with the name of the directory itself, and not in line with existing naming conventions.