| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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We should only be printing errors that occur when not probing, to
avoid creating the impression that something is wrong - and errors
during probing isn't a problem.
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Surprisingly, we've managed to get this far without context_glx ever
adding the X11 display as a native resource. But with the recent change
to attempt to enable vdpau when using EGL, the hwdec now requires the
display to be added. So let's add it.
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See aacc194. The same logic all applies to Wayland. In fact, we already
require EGL 1.5 for wayland anyway, so it's better to do it right.
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eglGetPlatform() is a broken API, since it takes a windowing specific
argument, yet is supposed to work for multiple APIs at the same time. On
Linux, it can take both a X11 "Display" and a "wl_display". Obviously
there is no way to specify what kind of display the argument is (it's
just a void*).
Mesa has _eglNativePlatformDetectNativeDisplay, which does funny stuff
to try to guess the display type, including trying to call mincore() to
determine whether the pointer can be accessed at all. I guess this
recently accidentally broke (as a bug), but on the other hand, maybe
it's time to do this properly.
The fix is using eglGetPlaformDisplay(). This requires EGL 1.5, plus
Mesa needs to support the associated platform extension
(EGL_KHR_platform_x11).
Since I see no reasonable way to do this in a compatible way, just
require that EGL 1.5 is available. The problem is that EGL 1.4 seems to
require you to create a display to query EGL version and extension, and
you have a chicken-and-egg problem. It's very stupid. Maybe you could
jump through some more hoops to get something compatible, but fuck that.
Users on "too old" Mesa will fall back to GLX (which we keep around for
a regrettable company known by the name of Nvidia).
I think Wayland and GBM should do the same. They're sufficiently
bleeding-edge that you can expect them to have EGL 1.5. On the other
hand, the cursed RPI code will have to stay with a eglGetDisplay().
Speculative fix for #7154.
(Rant about EGL follows. Actually I deleted it.)
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pass_color_map() (in video_shaders.c) and pass_colormanage() (video.c)
both duplicate the condition on whether to do peak computation. Peak
computation requires a compute shader, so if the duplicated conditions
don't match, video_shaders.c will generate a compute shader, but video.c
will try to run it as fragment shader. This leads to a "blue screen".
This can be reproduced by playing a HDTV video with --target-peak=99.
It's not clear how to fix this. Should pass_tone_map() be only invoked
if mp_trc_is_hdr() == true (what pass_colormanage() uses to decide
whether to enable peak computation), or should pass_colormanage() just
tell pass_color_map() to skip peak computation? Decide for the latter,
as it's more robust.
Even if not correct, at least it gets rid of the blue shit.
Fixes: #7149
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This makes the condition for including each init match the condition for
compiling the file that defines it.
It's possible to e.g. HAVE_GL and HAVE_VAAPI without HAVE_VAAPI_EGL,
which resulted in "undefined reference to `vaapi_gl_init'" with the old
code.
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Probably. It's not like these pixel formats are formally specified -
FFmpeg added them because _some_ file format or decoder supports it, and
while that format/codec may define it precisely, the pixel format is
sort of disconnected and just a FFmpeg thing.
In any case, the yuva sample I had at hand uses the full range the
component data type can provide. The old code used the same "shifted"
range as for Y/U/V components, which must have been wrong.
This will not work correctly for packed YUVA formats, but fortunately
they matter even less.
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Not sure why it assumes that it always succeeds (although generally it
won't fail).
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The use of glXGetCurrentDisplay() restricted this to the GLX backend.
But actually it works under EGL as well. Removing the GLX-specific call
and using the general mpv-internal method to get the X "Display" makes
it work in mpv.
I didn't know this. Nvidia didn't list this as extension in the EGL
context when I still used their GPUs.
Note that this might in theory break use of vdpau in some libmpv clients
using the render API. But only if MPV_RENDER_PARAM_X11_DISPLAY is not
used, and they relied on mpv using glXGetCurrentDisplay(). EGL does not
provide such an API, and hwdec_vaapi.c also uses what hwdec_vdpau.c uses
now. Considering that vaapi is preferable these days, it's not bad at
all if these clients get "broken". They can be easily fixed by passing
the display to mpv correctly.
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For some reason, the first frame displayed on X11 with amdgpu and OpenGL
will be garbled. This is especially visible if the player starts,
displays a frame, but then still takes a while to properly start
playback.
With --interpolation, the behavior somehow changes (usually gets worse).
I'm not sure what exactly is going on, and the code in video.c is way
too abstruse. Maybe there is some slight possibility that a frame with
uncleared contents gets displayed, which somehow also corrupts another
frame that is displayed immediately after that.
If clear is unconditionally run, this somehow doesn't happen, and you
see a video frame. By any logic this shouldn't happen: a video frame
should always overwrite the background. So I can't exclude that this
isn't some sort of driver bug, or at least very obscure interaction.
Clearing should be practically free anyway, so always do it.
Fixes: #7105
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This is slightly helpful for testing, and otherwise useless and without
consequence.
I'm not using the correct output format and using IMGFMT_RGB0 as
placeholder. This doesn't matter currently, as both sws and zimg support
this as output (and support any input for it). I'm doing this because
it's surprisingly tricky to get the correct output format at this point,
without digging deeper into x11 shit or refactoring parts of the VO. I
don't care enough about this.
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This integrates it as "special" format, with no alpha component, as the
equivalent IMGFMT_RGB30 isn't meant to contain any.
Nothing can produce this format in the video chain yet, so the next
commits are needed to make this actually work.
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Normally nobody cares about the WM detection stuff etc., so log this
only at debug log levels.
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Lots of dumb crap to do... something. Instead of adding yet another dumb
helper, just use the main" sws_utils API in both callers. (Which,
unfortunately, has been duplicated for glorious webp screenshots,
despite the fact that webp is crap.)
Good part: can enable zimg for screenshots (as far as needed).
Bad part: uses "default" swscale parameters instead of HQ now.
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Purpose uncertain. I guess it's slightly better, maybe.
The move of the sws/zimg options from VO opts (vo_opt_list) to the
top-level option list is tricky. VO opts have some helper code in vo.c,
that sends VOCTRL_SET_PANSCAN to the VO on every VO opts change. That's
because updating certain VO options used to be this way (and not just
the panscan option). This isn't needed anymore for sws/zimg options, so
explicitly move them away.
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And remove libavutil includes where possible.
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Until now, we only properly initialized two values, leaving the
rest be garbage.
Fixes #7104
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By default utilizes the color space of the desktop on which the
swap chain is located. If a specific value is defined, it will be
instead be utilized.
Enables configuration of the PQ color space (BT.2020 primaries,
PQ transfer function) for HDR.
Additionally, signals the swap chain color space to the renderer,
so that the render looks correct without having to specify
target-trc or target-prim manually.
Due to all of the APIs being Win10+ only, will only work starting
with Windows 10.
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Additionally, define the few enum values that are currently missing
in mingw-w64 headers.
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This lets us set primaries, transfer function and the target peak
based on what the presenting layer would want us to have.
Now that this mechanism is available, warn if the user has
overridden values such as primaries or transfer function.
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SDL_BUTTON_X1 and SDL_BUTTON_X2 are now correctly mapped to MP_MBTN_BACK and MP_MBTN_FORWARD.
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This seems to have been missed when the storable flag was added, since
all the other flags were logged here. It can be useful to know if an RA
format is storable, so log it as well.
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This flag was added in e2976e662d92, but it was only set for Vulkan. In
D3D11 it can be set from info in D3D11_FEATURE_FORMAT_SUPPORT2.
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Using e.g. --vf=format=0bgr showed obviously wrong colors with --vo=gpu.
The reason is that leading padding wasn't handled correctly.
Try to hack fix it. While the code in copy_image() is somewhat
reasonable, I can't tell what the fuck is going on with that HOOKED
shit. For some reason this HOOKED shit doesn't use copy_image() (???),
or uses it incorrectly. It affects debanding. --deband=no works
correctly. If it's enabled, the crap in hook_prelude() is needed.
I bet there are many more bugs with this. For example, the deband shader
will try to deband the alpha channel if the format abgr is used (because
the correct component order is only established later). This can be
tested by inserting a "color.x = 0;" at the end of the deband shader,
and using --vf=format=rgba vs. abgr.
I cannot comprehend why it doesn't just store explicitly which
components a texture contains, and why it doesn't just read the
components always in an uniform way.
There's a big chance this fix works only by coincidence. This shouldn't
have been so hard either. Time for a complete rewrite?
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sdl_gamepad.c and vo_sdl.c both have their own event loops and run in
separate threads. They don't know of each other (and shouldn't). Since
SDL only has one global event loop (why didn't they fix this in SDL2?),
these obviously clash. The actual behavior is relatively subtle, which
event being randomly dispatched to either of the threads.
This is very regrettable. Very.
Work this around. "Fortunately" SDL exposes its global state to some
degree. SDL_WasInit() returns whether a "subsystem" was initialized, and
you could say the one who initialized it owns it. Both SDL_INIT_VIDEO
and SDL_INIT_GAMECONTROLLER implicitly enable SDL_INIT_EVENTS, and the
event loop is indeed the resource that cannot be shared.
Unfortunately, this is still racy, since SDL_InitSubSystem is a second
call, and succeeds if the subsystem is already initialized (increases a
refcount I think). But good enough. Blame SDL for everything.
(I think I made this commit message too long. Nobody cares even.)
Fixes: #7085
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It seems some users try to use it (!). This VO was always an experiment,
and intended for low power devices. Whether this experiment succeeded or
not, it's a rather obscure VO. Recently I've seen a regrettable user,
who seemed to use this only because mpv was built without x11 support
(!). Add this warning, like other fallback VOs have it. (The message was
copied from vo_x11.)
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If expected_sync_pc is greater than submit_count, the unsigned
subtraction will wraparound, which breaks playback. This bug was found
while experimenting with bit-blt model present, but it might be possible
to trigger it with the flip model as well, if there was a dropped frame.
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Internally, vo_gpu uses NaN for some options to indicate a default value
that is different depending on the context (e.g. different scalers).
There are 2 problems with this:
1. you couldn't reset the options to their defaults
2. NaN is a damn mess and shouldn't be part of the API
The option parser already rejected NaN explicitly, which is why 1.
didn't work. Regarding 2., JSON might be a good example, and actually
caused a bug report.
Fix this by mapping NaN to the special value "default". I think I'd
prefer other mechanisms (maybe just having every scaler expose separate
options?), but for now this will do. See you in a future commit, which
painfully deprecates this and replaces it with something else.
I refrained from using "no" (my favorite magic value for "unset" etc.)
because then I'd have e.g. make --no-scale-param1 work, which in
addition to a lot of effort looks dumb and nobody will use it.
Here's also an apology for the shitty added test script.
Fixes: #6691
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The code is very basic:
- only handles gamepads, could be extended for generic joysticks in the
future.
- only has button mappings for controllers natively supported by SDL2.
I heard more can be added through env vars, there's also ways to load
mappings from text files, but I'd rather not go there yet. Common ones
like Dualshock are supported natively.
- analog buttons (TRIGGER and AXIS) are mapped to discrete buttons using an
activation threshold.
- only supports one gamepad at a time. the feature is intented to use
gamepads as evolved remote controls, not play multiplayer games in mpv :)
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There's 2 stupid things here that need to be fixed. First of all,
vulkan wasn't actually using presentation time because somehow the
get_vsync function in context.c disappeared. Secondly, if the mpv window
was hidden it was updating the ust time based on the refresh_usec but
really it should simply just not feed any information to the vsync info
structure. So this adds some logic to assume whether or not a window is
hidden.
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The newest wayland changes have some new logic that make sense to expose
to users as configurable options.
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Use ust/msc/refresh values from wayland's presentation time in mpv's
ra_swapchain_fns.get_vsync for the wayland contexts.
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This will perform conversion and scaling of video with zimg, if
--sws-allow-zimg is used.
The performance probably depends on how well the compiler optimizes the
RGB pack code in zimg.c, which is written in C.
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This was obviously missing from the recent commit, which probably broke
10 bit decoding. The original commit didn't test this for lack of
working hardware; this commit isn't tested either.
Fixes: a1c7d613935424b69b3
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This syscall avoids the need to guess an unused filename in /dev/shm and
allows seals to be placed on it. We immediately return if no fd got
returned, as there isn’t anything we can do otherwise.
Seals especially allow the compositor to drop the SIGBUS protections,
since the kernel promises the fd won’t ever shrink.
This removes support for any platform but Linux from this vo.
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vo_wayland was removed during the wayland rewrite done in 0.28. However,
it is still useful for systems that do not have OpenGL.
The new wayland_common code makes vo_wayland much simpler, and
eliminates many of the issues the previous vo_wayland had.
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Finally. Since with the previous commit we can (probably) handle
P010 directly, this hack isn't needed anymore.
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2 years ago, ANGLE removed the old NV12-specific extension, and added
a new one that supports a number of formats, including P010. Actually
they just renamed it and removed their initial annoying and obvious
design error (bravo, Google).
Since it broke 2 years ago, nobody should give a shit about this code,
and it should just be removed. But for some reason I still dived the
shit-tank (Windows development).
I guess Intel code monkeys can't write drivers (or maybe the issue is
because we're doing zero-copy, which probably maybe is not actually
allowed by D3D11 due to array textures, see --d3d11va-zero-copy), so
the P010 path is completely untested. It doesn't work, I'll delete all
this ANGLE hwdec code.
Fixes: #7054
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mp_to_utf8 will abort in case of either invalid input or OOM.
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This lets users set values such as "intel" or "nvidia" as the
adapter vendor is generally noted in the beginning of the
description string.
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I did ponder if I should have done this right away, and it seems
like not doing it at first was a mistake.
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Query information on the system output most linked to the swap chain,
and either utilize a user-configured format, or either 8bit
RGBA or 10bit RGB with 2bit alpha depending on the system output's
bit depth.
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And if backbuffer is not around, return an error value utilized
elsewhere already.
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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 ha |