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* wayland: use callback flag + poll for buffer swapdudemanguy2019-10-101-1/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The old way of using wayland in mpv relied on an external renderloop for semi-accurate timings. This had multiple issues though. Display sync would break whenever the window was hidden (since the frame callback stopped being executed) which was really annoying. Also the entire external renderloop logic was kind of fragile and didn't play well with mpv's internal structure (i.e. using presentation time in that old paradigm breaks stats.lua). Basically the problem is that swap buffers blocks on wayland which is crap whenever you hide the mpv window since it looks up the entire player. So you have to make swap buffers not block, but this has a different problem. Timings will be terrible if you use the unblocked swap buffers call. Based on some discussion in #wayland, the trick here is relatively simple and works well enough for our purposes. Instead we basically build a way to block with a timeout in the wayland buffer swap functions. A bool is set in the frame callback function that indicates whether or not mpv is waiting for a frame to be displayed. In the actual buffer swap function, we enter into a while loop waiting for this flag to be set. At the same time, the wl_display is polled to block the thread and wakeup if it receives any events from the compositor. This loop only breaks if enough time has passed or if the frame callback bool is received. In the near future, it is better to set whether or not frame a frame has been displayed in the presentation feedback. However as a first pass, doing it in the frame callback is more than good enough. The "downside" is that we render frames that aren't actually shown on screen when the player is hidden (it seems like wayland people don't like that). But who cares. Accurate timings are way more important. It's probably not too hard to add that behavior back in the player though.
* vo_gpu: hwdec_vaapi: Add Vulkan interopPhilip Langdale2019-07-081-0/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This change introduces a vulkan interop path for the vaapi hwdec. The basic principles are mostly the same as for EGL, with the exported dma_buf being imported by Vukan. The biggest difference is that we cannot reuse the texture as we do with OpenGL - there's no way to rebind a VkImage to a different piece of memory, as far as I can see. So, a new texture is created on each map call. I did not bother implementing a code path for the old libva API as I think it's safe to assume any system with a working vulkan driver will have access to a newer libva. Note that we are using separate layers for the vaapi surface, just as is done for EGL. This is because libplacebo doesn't support multiplane images. This change does not include format negotiation because no driver implements the vk_ext_image_drm_format_modifier extension that would be required to do that. In practice, the two formats we care about (nv12, p010) work correctly, so we are not blocked. A separate change had to be made in libplacebo to filter out non-fatal validation errors related to surface sizes due to the lack of format negotiation.
* vo_gpu: vulkan: use libplacebo insteadNiklas Haas2019-04-211-6/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This commit rips out the entire mpv vulkan implementation in favor of exposing lightweight wrappers on top of libplacebo instead, which provides much of the same except in a more up-to-date and polished form. This (finally) unifies the code base between mpv and libplacebo, which is something I've been hoping to do for a long time. Note: The ra_pl wrappers are abstract enough from the actual libplacebo device type that we can in theory re-use them for other devices like d3d11 or even opengl in the future, so I moved them to a separate directory for the time being. However, the rest of the code is still vulkan-specific, so I've kept the "vulkan" naming and file paths, rather than introducing a new `--gpu-api` type. (Which would have been ended up with significantly more code duplicaiton) Plus, the code and functionality is similar enough that for most users this should just be a straight-up drop-in replacement. Note: This commit excludes some changes; specifically, the updates to context_win and hwdec_cuda are deferred to separate commits for authorship reasons.
* vo_gpu: semi-fix --gpu-context/--gpu-api options and help outputwm42017-10-161-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This was confusing at best. Change it to output the actual choices. (Seems like in the end it's always me who has to clean up other people's bullshit.) Context names were not unique - but they should be, so fix it. The whole point of the original --opengl-backend option was to side-step the tricky auto-detection, so you know exactly what you get. The goal of this commit is to make --gpu-context work the same way. Fix the non-unique names by appending "vk" to the names. Keep in mind that this was not suitable for slecting the "UI" backend anyway, since "x11" would force GLX, whereas people on not-NVIDIA actually want "x11egl". Users trying to use --gpu-context=x11 to force the X11 backend would always end up with GLX, which would at least break VAAPI hardware decoding for them. Basically the idea that this option could select the "UI" type is completely broken - it selects an implementation, which implies a UI. Selecting the UI type This would require a separate mechanism. (Although in theory this separate mechanism could be part of the --gpu-context option - in any case, someone would have to implement it.) To achieve help output that can actually be understood, just duplicate the code. Most of that code is duplicated anyway, and trying to share just the list code with the result of making the output unreadable doesn't make too much sense. If we wanted to save code/effort, we could just remove the help output altogether. --gpu-api has non-unique entries, and it would be nice to group them (e.g. list all OpenGL capable contexts with "opengl"), but C makes this simple idea too much of a pain, so don't do it. Also remove a stray tab from the android entry on the manpage.
* vo_gpu: vulkan: add support for waylandRostislav Pehlivanov2017-09-261-3/+4
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* vo_gpu: vulkan: initial implementationNiklas Haas2017-09-261-0/+116
This time based on ra/vo_gpu. 2017 is the year of the vulkan desktop! Current problems / limitations / improvement opportunities: 1. The swapchain/flipping code violates the vulkan spec, by assuming that the presentation queue will be bounded (in cases where rendering is significantly faster than vsync). But apparently, there's simply no better way to do this right now, to the point where even the stupid cube.c examples from LunarG etc. do it wrong. (cf. https://github.com/KhronosGroup/Vulkan-Docs/issues/370) 2. The memory allocator could be improved. (This is a universal constant) 3. Could explore using push descriptors instead of descriptor sets, especially since we expect to switch descriptors semi-often for some passes (like interpolation). Probably won't make a difference, but the synchronization overhead might be a factor. Who knows. 4. Parallelism across frames / async transfer is not well-defined, we either need to use a better semaphore / command buffer strategy or a resource pooling layer to safely handle cross-frame parallelism. (That said, I gave resource pooling a try and was not happy with the result at all - so I'm still exploring the semaphore strategy) 5. We aggressively use pipeline barriers where events would offer a much more fine-grained synchronization mechanism. As a result of this, we might be suffering from GPU bubbles due to too-short dependencies on objects. (That said, I'm also exploring the use of semaphores as a an ordering tactic which would allow cross-frame time slicing in theory) Some minor changes to the vo_gpu and infrastructure, but nothing consequential. NOTE: For safety, all use of asynchronous commands / multiple command pools is currently disabled completely. There are some left-over relics of this in the code (e.g. the distinction between dev_poll and pool_poll), but that is kept in place mostly because this will be re-extended in the future (vulkan rev 2). The queue count is also currently capped to 1, because of the lack of cross-frame semaphores means we need the implicit synchronization from the same-queue semantics to guarantee a correct result.