| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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See [1] for the motivation. Very similar to the fractional scale,
except it's in core and integer-only.
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland/-/merge_requests/220
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Found by codespell
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10 is ludicrously small. How did no one on an CSD compositor complain
about this?
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While adding fractional scale support, the coordinates for wayland
changed to always include the scaling parameter. The pointer stuff
actually did too. However, the check_for_resize function used the
unscaled, local surface coordinates. Likely, it was neccesary at the
time since wl->geometry used to report unscaled coordinates. In light of
that, we can just simply use mouse_x/y instead for this function to make
it work correctly with the right/bottom edges. mouse_unscaled becomes
completely unneccesary, so just drop it.
Some minor style changes included just because.
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`xdg_toplevel_decoration` exists on SSD compositors independent of if
there is a border or not, so resizing didn't work on those.
Checking the border option makes more sense and also works on such
compositors.
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mpv's window resizing logic always automatically resized the window
whenever the video resolution changed (i.e. advancing forward in a
playlist). This simply introduces the option to make this behavior
configurable. Every windowing backend would need to implement this
behavior in their code since a reconfigure event must always be a
resize. The params of the frame changed so you either have to resize the
window to the new size of the params or make the params the same size as
the window. This commit implements it for wayland, win32, and x11.
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Which is wl->video_surface for vo_dmabuf_wayland.
Listening on wl->surface results in freezes if it is occluded and
culled by the compositor. Which mutter does, and the wl_surface::frame
spec warns about:
> A server should avoid signaling the frame callbacks if the
> surface is not visible in any way, e.g. the surface is off-screen,
> or completely obscured by other opaque surfaces.
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ra_ctx_opts.want_alpha and vo_wayland_set_opaque_region's alpha
argument are only used as bool but both are ints. Particularly for the
function argument, passing a 0 or 1 is confusing - at first glance it
looks like you're specifying an alpha value of 0 or 1.
Since they're only used as bools, make them bools.
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c78482045444c488bb7948305d583a55d17cd236 introduced a bool option type
as a replacement for the flag type, but didn't actually transition and
remove the flag type because it would have been too much mundane work.
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This was originally dropped because it was thought to be unneeded at the
time, but at least some devices (rockchip) apparently are still on old
compositors that use linux-dmabuf v2. It's not much code, and for
testing purposes it's good to have around since it's hard to test
drmprime otherwise. Some minor additions are here to support the newly
added vaapi-format mapping in v2 of the protocol.
This reverts commit a5b9d529eec8d4bb6fc858143337c3573ec8afd0.
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Previously, this defaulted to yes and configure-bounds from the
compositor would always apply. In the case where the user explicitly set
autofit or geometry, this could be confusing because configure-bounds
would take precedence over it. Instead, let's add an auto choice and
make that the default. If we detect that the option is on auto and that
there is autofit/geometry being set, then ignore the event. This should
be more intuitive since someone who bothers to explicitly set mpv's
geometry would naturally expect that geometry to actually apply.
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Semi-regression although this option never really did what the manual
said until recently. In the past, this option also controlled whether or
not mpv set the wayland buffer_scale to the value of the wl_output or
force it 1. This had varying effects depending on the exact compositor
configuration. That logic has now all been removed and this option now
only controls whether or not to scale the window with the hidpi scale
factor we get from the compositor. i.e. it actually does what the
manual says now.
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Regressed from 879824a47f50f7e93f85992c92d03f37129605f4. The geometry
needs to be explictly recalculated now. Change up this function a little
bit also give it the ability to directly perform a resize after the
fact. This is a common workflow and we'll be using it in the next
commit.
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This protocol is pretty important since it finally lets us solve the
longstanding issue of fractional scaling in wayland (no more mpv doing
rendering over the target resolution and then being scaled down). This
protocol also can completely replace the buffer_scale usage that we are
currently using for integer scaling so hopefully this can be removed
sometime in the future. Note that vo_dmabuf_wayland is omitted from the
fractional scale handling because we want the compositor to handle all
the scaling for that VO.
Fixes #9443.
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This is in preparation for fractional scaling support. Basically, redo
all the coordinates in wayland so that wl->geometry is equal exactly to
what is being put out to the screen (no extra wl->scaling multiplication
required). The wl->vdparams variable is also eliminated for simplicity.
This changes mpv's behavior on wayland with hidpi scaling but that will
be addressed in more detail with the next commit.
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Officially, the most cursed part of the wayland code in mpv (third or
fourth try now?) This time, let's allocate a pool during init
(arbitrarily set to the maximum swapchain length mpv allows, 8; don't
even know if this actually works in wayland). Then we add/remove
feedbacks from the pool during the lifecycle of the VO, and clean it up
all at the end. Hopefully, this does the trick for good this time.
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This ended up being a bad idea. The problem is that it introduces
ordering when destroying events (something we weren't worried about
before) and Lynne pointed out a problem with the callback not also being
destroyed before the surface in IRC. Just undo this and go with a
different approach (next commit). P.S. the wayland_dispatch_events name
change is kept though because I like that better.
This reverts commit aa8ddfcdf30c4ffb38f3ec5d6663bbabf0b7b4df.
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The only real reason this was ever supported is because it was
dramatically simpler than v4, so it was put in as an initial
implementation. Later, v4 support was added and we left v2 for
compatibility, but let's just drop it. Compositors all use v4 nowadays,
and v2 is significantly limited (no modifier support for example). It's
better to just remove this dead code for simplicity.
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This was already returning true/false but the type was int. Also
simplify a few places in the wayland contexts where we can just return
the value of this function instead of doing redundant checks.
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Instead of just returning true/false, it's better to have this function
cleanup itself. We can eliminate some redundant uninit calls elsewhere
in the code as well.
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There's several functions that are used for initializing mpv on a
certain platform (x11, wayland, etc.). These currently are all int, but
they actually return 1 and 0 like a boolean. This gets a bit confusing
because actual vo preinit functions return 0 and -1 instead. Just make
these all bool instead and return true/false to make it clearer.
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Similar to some other issues we've had with unprocessed compositor
events. When quitting mpv, there's two things we should be doing:
dispatching any last minute wayland events and then waiting for a
compositor reply. Luckily, there's already an internal helper for this
(renamed to wayland_dispatch_events for consistency) that we can use.
All of the special casing of wl->feedback becomes unneccesary and we can
remove this from vo_wayland_state with this method. Fixes #110022.
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In the event of a failed wayland initalization, the display_fd is
actually 0 instead of -1 which would correctly indicate it doesn't
exist. Also move the fd check inside vo_wayland_dispatch_events since
that function shouldn't ever do anything if we don't actually have a
display fd.
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We have a use_present bool that keeps track of whether or not to use
presentation time. However, the creation of the feedback listener
actually wasn't checking this and was instead checking for the existence
of wl->presentation. There's no point in always creating the
listener and feedback if mpv isn't actually going to use it. Just change
it to use_present instead.
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8300830951e2b0b90b22fc7d33b7556ed05e139c rearranged/simplified some of
the wayland touch code mainly because what was there before was
completely broken on my machine in those days (dragging was unreliable,
resizing was really buggy, etc.). However, one user said that touch
input no longer worked for him after that change. I could not ever
reproduce it, but it seems the issue was putting down the key before
testing for resize/move in the code. Now who knows why this actually
matters, but apparently it works for the user in question and I don't
observe any unexpected behavior on my end when swapping the order. Like
the mouse/pointer code, we also now do a test for dragging before
actually trying a resize/move which is a little more consistent than
before. Fixes #9771.
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The new single-pixel-buffer protocol is designed to optimize the case
for using a solid color as an underlay wl_surface. It works the same as
the wl_shm 1x1 pixel trick currently used, but it allows the compositor
to make optimizations with more certainty than the wl_shm trick.
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Never bothered to log this for some reason, but it's pretty convenient
when debugging.
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The content-type protocol allows mpv to send compositor a hint about the
type of content being displayed on its surface so it could potentially
make some sort of optimization. Fundamentally, this is pretty simple but
since this requires a very new wayland-protocols version (1.27), we have
to mess with the build to add a new define and add a bunch of if's in
here. The protocol itself exposes 4 different types of content: none,
photo, video, and game.
To do that, let's add a new option (wayland-content-type) that lets
users control what hint to send to the compossitor. Since the previous
commit adds a VOCTRL that notifies us about the content being displayed,
we can also add an auto value to this option. As you'd expect, the
compositor hint would be set to photo if mpv's core detects an image,
video for other things, and it is set to none for the special case of
forcing a window when there is not a video track. For completion's sake,
game is also allowed as a value for this option, but in practice there
shouldn't be a reason to use that.
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mpv has an internal optimization on a couple of platforms where it will
not render any frames if the window is minimized or hidden. There's at
least once possible use case for wanting to force a render anyway
(screensharing with pipeware) so let's just add a simple switch for
this that always forces mpv to render. Closes #10846.
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Related issue: #10868. While most protocols are in theory optional, a
small amount of them are absolutely essential and nothing will work
without them. We should make sure to error out in those cases and not
try to actually do anything. For wayland support in general,
wl_compositor support is obviously required. If there is no wl_surface,
you can't do anything. Additionally, vo_wlshm quite obviously requires
wl_shm so mark that one as well. vo_dmabuf_wayland needs linux_dmabuf,
viewporter, wl_shm, and wl_subcompositor. In practice, these are all
very standard protocols and shouldn't be missing but the linked issue
above is at least one example where a compositor was stuck on an ancient
version of a wayland interface.
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In practice this never led to any issues due to implementation
details of bstr_sanitize_utf8_latin1, but there's no guarantee that
a bstr is correctly null-terminated.
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A desync between the feedback and the feedback in the context
still happens when closing a hidden surface.
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I was confused in d3a28f12c9ced29982fc831722075bd0c73fb821 why it
actually even worked, but after not being stupid, it's quite obviously
just a dangling pointer. The reason it only happens with
wp_presentation_feedback is because the object and listener actually
created in frame_callback not the presentation events itself (for vsync
timing reasons). So it is possible to free the object, but not
immediately recreate it again before quitting (unlike with the frame
callback). The actual comment is moved into feedback_presented (which is
first) but as of this commit it doesn't have the NULL setting logic
(that's the next one).
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964692ad4cec90888bb437064c53d8844db9f590 added some code to destroy
presentation_feedback we get in the presentation_discarded event. This
is the correct thing to do since the compositor could send us this
instead of feedback_presented. Without that change, mutter could
potentially leak memory on every frame.
Unfortunately, life is not so simple and wlroots and weston act
differently. These compositors only send one presentation_discarded
event if the mpv window is hidden. Not on every single missed frame like
mutter. Now in theory this shouldn't matter, but it also turns out that
mpv attempts to free the presentation feedback twice if you quit it
while it is hidden away (on weston and wlroots compositors only). The
inital wp_presentation_feedback_destroy in feedback_discarded fires, but
then the function goes off again in vo_wayland_uninit because
wl->feedback is apparently not NULL for some reason. Possibly, this is
some race condition but we can't just get rid of what's in
feedback_discarded since mutter needs this line. Instead, just hack it
by explicitly setting wl->feedback to NULL in feedback_discarded after we
destroy the presentation feedback. Some valgrind testing in mutter,
sway, and weston shows that this works correctly on all of those
compositors with various combinations of mpv being visible or not while
quitting. feedback_presented doesn't appear to exhibit this behavior so
we just leave that as-is.
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666cb91cf12a4f8b42087530104513b0fc4ba16d added dmabuf_feedback, but it
was never actually free'd on uninit. Because this function requires
wayland protocols 1.24, we have to wrap it in an #if. Also throw in some
minor cosmetic changes in here.
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666cb91cf12a4f8b42087530104513b0fc4ba16d added support for v4 of the
dmabuf protocol. This was meant to be optional and the fallback support
for the old v2 (dates back to 2017[0] well before the 1.15
wayland-protocol version we depend on) was maintained. However, v4 added
several new functions and structs that of course aren't defined in old
protocol versions so naturally this breaks the build on those systems.
Since this is just a niche feature and not really critical to overall
wayland support in mpv, just give in and add another check in the build
system and #if out the newer stuff in wayland_common. v4 of linux-dmabuf
depends on wayland protocols 1-24[1], so go ahead and make that our new
check. Fixes #10807.
[0]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/-/commit/a840b3634ad637b237f238d2efb9ab8f4712d5f4
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/-/commit/8a5cd28a0e84911a5339855cb32ed63fb57ea40a
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We really need two roundtrips in the init function. The first one is for
running the registry and then second one is for ensuring the xdg_surface
and other potential wayland objects are configured at least once before
mpv does anything. We've been getting away with only doing the first for
a while via luck, but really we should do at least one more wait on the
compositor. Fixes #10791 (half of it).
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Originally, I considered warning once to be useful for figuring
out whether the change in logic regarding resetting requested
mode actually fixed the reported issue or not, but alas not everyone
was happy with that decision. Thus the log level will always be
debug. This enables us to lose one level of indent as well as a
variable, which is always positive.
Additionally, make the message more explicit regarding what could
possibly be implied by the mismatch, as it seems like this was
not always clear.
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Otherwise mpv and the compositor can end up in an eternal loop where
mpv requests one mode, and compositor tells that the mode is not
that (and will most likely not change).
Additionally, log these mismatches - first time as a warning, and
later as debug logging.
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Make it clear that we are passing the original requested border mode
on.
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It is verbose, but makes it more explicit that requested_decoration
takes in three values:
* 0: no specific mode requested by mpv
* ZXDG_TOPLEVEL_DECORATION_V1_MODE_CLIENT_SIDE: (!border)
* ZXDG_TOPLEVEL_DECORATION_V1_MODE_SERVER_SIDE: (border)
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Pulled from https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/pull/10382
The zwp_linux_dmabuf_v1 protocol version 4 provides a file descriptor
containing both formats and modifiers, which makes it possible for the
compositor to import the buffers onto planes using explicit modifiers.
This is an extremely important efficiency improvement, as the 3D
hardware can be left powered off altogether, the vaapi buffer being sent
directly from the video hardware to the display controller.
It could be possible to support zwp_linux_dmabuf_v1 version 3 as well,
but there is no reason beyond compatibility with old stacks. I would
recommend to ditch version 2 as well, as modifier-less formats aren’t
very useful nowadays.
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The wayland presentation time code currently always assumes that only
CLOCK_MONOTONIC can be used. There is a naive attempt to ignore clocks
other than CLOCK_MONOTONIC, but the logic is actually totally wrong and
the timestamps would be used anyway. Fix this by checking a use_present
bool (similar to use_present in xorg) which is set to true if we receive
a valid clock in the clockid event. Additionally, allow
CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW as a valid clockid. In practice, it should be the
same as CLOCK_MONOTONIC for us (ntp/adjustime difference wouldn't
matter). Since this is a linux-specific clock, add a define for it if it
is not found.
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In wayland-protocols 1.25, xdg-shell got a version bump which added the
configure_bounds event. The compositor can send this to clients to
indicate that they should not resize past a certain size. For mpv, we'll
choose to only listen to this on reconfig events (i.e. when the window
first appears and if the video resolution changes later in the
playlist). However, this behavior is still exposed as a user option
(default on) because it will neccesarily conflict with a user setting a
specific geometry size and/or window scale. Presumably, if someone is
setting a really large size that goes beyond the bounds of their
monitor, they actually want it like that. The wayland-protocols version
is newer-ish, but we can get around having to poke the build system by
just using a define that exists in the generated xdg-shell header.
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