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* vo_gpu: vulkan: add Android contextsfan52019-09-272-0/+98
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* context_android: move common code to a separate filesfan52019-09-274-52/+152
| | | | | | In preparation for a Vulkan Android context. This also replaces querying for EGL_WIDTH and EGL_HEIGHT with equivalent ANativeWindow calls.
* vo_gpu: d3d11: don't reset frame stats after pauseJames Ross-Gowan2019-09-261-9/+0
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | I think I was wrong about having to reset the stats when mpv stops producing frames, eg. when it's paused. As long as the swapchain doesn't underflow, last_queue_display_time will still be accurate, because the next frame produced should still be presented one vsync after the last one in the swapchain. If the swapchain underflows (which is the common case for when mpv is paused for more than 150ms,) the next predicted frame time should be in the past. It should be fine to leave last_queue_display_time unset in this case, since vo.c will use the current time instead, which is a decent guess (though it doesn't take vsync phase into account.) last_sync_refresh_count and last_sync_qpc_time should be kept on swapchain underflow as well. Assuming the display refresh rate doesn't change while mpv is paused, they'll only provide a more accurate guess of the vsync duration when mpv starts playing again. Also, vsync_duration_qpc never needs to get reset. It will get overwritten immediately in most cases, and when it doesn't, it's still a better guess of the vsync duration than nothing.
* client API: fix potential deadlock problems by throwing more shit at itwm42019-09-264-21/+63
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | The render API (vo_libmpv) had potential deadlock problems with MPV_RENDER_PARAM_ADVANCED_CONTROL. This required vd-lavc-dr to be enabled (the default). I never observed these deadlocks in the wild (doesn't mean they didn't happen), although I could specifically provoke them with some code changes. The problem was mostly about DR (direct rendering, letting the video decoder write to OpenGL buffer memory). Allocating/freeing a DR image needs to be done on the OpenGL thread, even though _lots_ of threads are involved with handling images. Freeing a DR image is a special case that can happen any time. dr_helper.c does most of the evil magic of achieving this. Unfortunately, there was a (sort of) circular lock dependency: freeing an image while certain internal locks are held would trigger the user's context update callback, which in turn would call mpv_render_context_update(), which processed all pending free requests, and then acquire an internal lock - which the caller might not release until a further DR image could be freed. "Solve" this by making freeing DR images asynchronous. This is slightly risky, but actually not much. The DR images will be free'd eventually. The biggest disadvantage is probably that debugging might get trickier. Any solution to this problem will probably add images to free to some sort of queue, and then process it later. I considered making this more explicit (so there'd be a point where the caller forcibly waits for all queued items to be free'd), but discarded these ideas as this probably would only increase complexity. Another consequence is that freeing DR images on the GL thread is not synchronous anymore. Instead, it mpv_render_context_update() will do it with a delay. This seems roundabout, but doesn't actually change anything, and avoids additional code. This also fixes that the render API required the render API user to remain on the same thread, even though this wasn't documented. As such, it was a bug. OpenGL essentially forces you to do all GL usage on a single thread, but in theory the API user could for example move the GL context to another thread. The API bump is because I think you can't make enough noise about this. Since we don't backport fixes to old versions, I'm specifically stating that old versions are broken, and I'm supplying workarounds. Internally, dr_helper_create() does not use pthread_self() anymore, thus the vo.c change. I think it's better to make binding to the current thread as explicit as possible. Of course it's not sure that this fixes all deadlocks (probably not).
* cocoa-cb: add support for 10bit opengl renderingder richter2019-09-261-19/+38
| | | | | | | this will request a 16bit half-float framebuffer instead if a 8bit integer framebuffer. Fixes #3613
* drm_common: add missing zero-initialization of struct vt_mode variableAnton Kindestam2019-09-241-1/+1
| | | | | Some fields were being left uninitialized. This could be a problem particularly on non-Linux OS:s with vt_mode (see PR #6976).
* cocoa-cb: fix title bar button state on start upder richter2019-09-231-0/+2
| | | | | on start up it was possible to click the hidden buttons. hide the buttons ons tart up to make the state consistent with the visible state.
* context_drm_egl: Don't get stuck forever if drmHandleEvent failsAnton Kindestam2019-09-221-1/+3
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* vo_drm: 30bpp supportAnton Kindestam2019-09-221-8/+53
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* vo_gpu: d3d11: add support for presentation feedbackJames Ross-Gowan2019-09-221-0/+124
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This adds vsync reporting to the D3D11 backend using the presentation feedback provided by DXGI, which is pretty similar to what's provided by GLX_OML_sync_control in the GLX backend. In DirectX, PresentCount is the SBC, PresentRefreshCount and SyncRefreshCount are kind of like the MSC and SyncQPCTime is the UST. Unlike GLX, the DXGI API makes it possible for PresentCount and SyncQPCTime to refer to different physical vsyncs, in which case PresentRefreshCount and SyncRefreshCount will be different. The code supports this possibility, even though it's not clear whether it can happen when using flip-model presentation. The docs say for flip-model apps, PresentRefreshCount is equal to SyncRefreshCount "when the app presents on every vsync," but on my hardware, they're always equal, even when mpv misses a vsync. They can definitely be different in exclusive fullscreen bitblt mode, though, which mpv doesn't support now, but might support in future. Another difference to GLX is that, at least on my hardware, PresentRefreshCount and SyncRefreshCount always refer to the last physical vsync on which mpv presented a frame, but glxGetSyncValues can apparently return a MSC and UST from the most recent physical vsync, even if mpv didn't present a new frame on it. This might result in different behaviour between the two backends after dropped frames or brief pauses. Also note, the docs for the DXGI presentation feedback APIs are pretty awful, even by Microsoft standards. In particular the docs for DXGI_FRAME_STATISTICS are misleading (PresentCount really is the number of times Present() has been called for that frame, not "the running total count of times that an image was presented to the monitor since the computer booted.") For good documentation, try these: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/direct3ddxgi/dxgi-flip-model https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/direct3d9/d3dpresentstats https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/ddi/content/d3dkmthk/ns-d3dkmthk-_d3dkmt_present_stats (Yeah, the docs for the D3D9Ex and even the kernel-mode version of this structure are better than the DXGI ones. It seems possible that they're all rewordings of the same internal Microsoft docs, but whoever wrote the DXGI one didn't really understand it.)
* wayland: create current_output in wayland_reconfigdudemanguy2019-09-221-5/+6
| | | | | | | | Certain mpv config options require wl->current_output to be created before the video can actually start rendering. Just always create it here if the current_output doesn't exist (the one exception being the --fs option with no --fs-screen flag). Incidentally, this also fixes --fs-screen not working on wayland.
* wayland: avoid handling a 0-value axis eventDudemanguy9112019-09-211-0/+2
| | | | This shouldn't be possible, but an extra check never hurts.
* wayland: read xcursor size from XCURSOR_SIZE envemersion2019-09-211-1/+13
| | | | | This allows compositors to set the cursor size from user configuration.
* x11: fix ICC profiling for multiple monitorsslatchurie2019-09-212-2/+22
| | | | | | | | | To find the correct ICC profile X atom, the screen number was calculated directly from the xrandr order of the screens. But if a primary screen is set, it should be the first Xinerama screen, even if it is not the first xrandr screen. Calculate the the proper atom id for each screen.
* wayland: don't show cursor when fullscreeningdudemanguy2019-09-212-0/+7
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* wayland: reconfigure cursor on pointer enter eventThomas Weißschuh2019-09-212-1/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | On wayland the cursor has to be configured each time the pointer enters. Currently if the window (re)gains the focus, the pointer is not hidden, even when configured. After the mouse has been moved the pointer hides correctly. https://wayland.freedesktop.org/docs/html/apa.html#protocol-spec-wl_pointer: wl_pointer::enter - enter event ... When a seat's focus enters a surface, the pointer image is undefined and a client should respond to this event by setting an appropriate pointer image with the set_cursor request. Fixes #6185. Signed-off-by: Thomas Weißschuh <thomas@t-8ch.de>
* wayland: add mouse buttons and fix axis scalingdudemanguy2019-09-211-4/+24
| | | | | | | | | | Previously, the only mouse buttons supported in wayland were left, right, and middle click. This adds the thumb back/forward buttons as valid bindings. Also it removes the old, default behavior of always sending a right click if an unrecognized mouse button is clicked. In a related but different fix, the magnitude of an axis event in wayland is not important to mpv since it internally handles all scaling. The only thing we care about is getting the sign when the event occurs.
* vo_sdl: Only create the SDL window onceCameron Cawley2019-09-211-54/+23
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* context_drm_egl: Use eglGetPlatformDisplayEXT if availablememeka2019-09-201-1/+20
| | | | | | | | Check if eglGetPlatformDisplayEXT is available and try to use it to obtain the display connection. Fall back to eglGetDisplay if eglGetPlatformDisplayEXT is not available or failing. From PR #5992
* client API, vo_libmpv: document random deadlock problemswm42019-09-201-0/+16
| | | | | | | I guess trying to make DR work on libmpv was a mistake. I never observed such a deadlock, but it's looks like it's theoretically possible.
* vo_libmpv: fix some more uninit issueswm42019-09-201-24/+35
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This is mostly for the case when mpv_render_context_free() is called while video is going on. This is supposed to gracefully stop video and deinitialize everything properly. (I feel like it would put too much on the API user to require that video is stopped before calling this function. Whether video is running or not is a fairly highlevel thing, and the API user could not do it in a race-free way.) One problem was that unit() accessed ctx after ctx->in_use was set to false. The update(ctx) call was basically a racy use-after-free. It needed that call to wake up the mpv_render_context_free() loop that waited for VO uninit. Fix this by triggering the wakeup inside the lock, and then doing "barrier" locking in mpv_render_context_free(). Another problem was that the wait loop didn't really wait properly. IT seems the had_kill_update field was a botched attempt to do that. It's indeed quite hairy to do that with update(). Instead make use of the dispatch queue (infinite timeout, using mp_dispatch_interrupt()), which handles the problem of having to wait both for dispatch queue updates and VO uninit at the same time.
* vo_libmpv: always create ctx->dispatchwm42019-09-201-19/+12
| | | | | | | | Preparation for the next commit. Until now, it was only needed if DR was involved. One reason for not always creating it was that you normally must not use it if advanced_control is not enabled. This is why e.g. VOCTRL_SCREENSHOT now checks for that variable; it still can't use ctx->dispatch if the render API user did not enable it.
* render api: fix use-after-freewnoun2019-09-201-12/+2
| | | | | | | | render api needs to wait for vo to be destroyed before frees the context. The purpose of kill_cb is to wake up render api after vo is destroyed, but uninit did that before kill_cb, so kill_cb tries using the freed memory. Remove kill_cb to fix the issue as uninit is able to do the work.
* rpi: Update for modern systemsCameron Cawley2019-09-203-6/+6
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* vo: remove unused equalizer control remainswm42019-09-201-14/+1
| | | | | | | | | | Equalizer control was redone in 03cf150ff3516789d5812 (over 2 years ago). Ever since, the equalizer control structs and the GET voctrl have been unused. Only the SET voctrl is still used as notification mechanism (actually a bad hack to avoid some further option change handling complexity). Remove the unused parts.
* oml_sync: fix typo in commentwm42019-09-201-2/+2
| | | | I think... Also reword another part of the text.
* vo: fix missed option updates under rare circumstanceswm42019-09-191-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Dear diary, today I fixed a shitty bug that was all my fault because I made a horrible mess. (Except it was a horrible mess before I even touched this shit, but let's not blame others.) Sometimes, updates to VO option that control video sizing (like panscan) didn't update the screen correctly. They were delayed until the next option change or so. It turns out that if the option update happens at the "same" time as a VOCTRL, update_opts() doesn't actually notify the vo_driver of the change. This in turn happened because run_control() called m_config_cache_update(). The latter function returns true if the options changed since the last call, and update_opts() also calls it (on the same config cache) for the same purpose. The update_opts() call, which is triggered by a third mechanism, comes later, but the cache update call will return false (as it should). Basically, given the config API, you can't act differently on multiple update calls and expect it to work. The skipped handling in update_opts() meant that the notification required to apply the changed option wasn't run. Fix this by simply calling update_opts() directly instead. Now there's only 1 m_config_cache_update() call on this specific instance. Fix the call in run_reconfig() too, so the previous sentence isn't a lie (but it probably doesn't make a difference in practice due to certain details). I'm not sure how I even ran into this sort-of race condition. The VOCTRL that messed up the option update was VOCTRL_UPDATE_PLAYBACK_STATE, which happens semi-regularly. Why this config cache shit and all the other shit? Rediscovering this crap wasn't pleasant. It's a bunch of hacks that became necessary when the ancient MPlayer architecture made it hard to move the VO to a separate thread. All the VO code typically accesses vo->opts (whose fields all used to be global variables in MPlayer). The frontend changes these on user input. Putting locking around all the options would be a nightmare, and keeping a copy of the options in the thread was much simpler. You need a way to propagate option changes, notify the thread, and update the local copy too. And the result of these thoughts was the config cache mechanism. In this specific case, the relevant cache update call in update_opts() triggers a VOCTRL_SET_PANSCAN to the VO driver, which isn't related to its former function anymore. Instead, it causes the VO driver to update the video sizing/placing options, which the generic VO code can't do. (Mostly because the VO driver includes the windowing stuff and is responsible for resizing etc. itself.) VOCTRLs sent by the frontend are even worse. MPlayer had no real runtime option change mechanism. Some options were vaguely duplicated by properties, so you could effectively change those options at runtime. Each of these options had its own VOCTRL, which still exist today, e.g. VOCTRL_FULLSCREEN, or VOCTRL_ONTOP. I tried to make all options runtime changeable, and to unify properties with options. But I couldn't be bothered with updating all VO drivers to listen to option changes directly, because that would be pretty tedious. So the property code is still all there and sends the old VOCTRLs. But of course you need to sync up the options, which is why the run_control() code did that. (Unrelated: VO_EVENT_FULLSCREEN_STATE is the worst shithack of them all. Currently, only the frontend can actually write to options (for awful reasons), so if the fullscreen state changes due to outside interaction, the VO driver can't update the corresponding option fields. So the VO notifies the frontend with said VO_EVENT_, and the frontend then sends VOCTRL_GET_FULLSCREEN, and updates the global copy of the option with the value returned by that. I still like to think the situation is not that bad considering the monstrous effort of converting single-threaded code that had hundreds of options in global variables to multi-threaded code with no global variables at all.)
* win_state: silence a valgrind warningwm42019-09-191-1/+1
| | | | | | | m_geometry_apply() will read and modify the dummy variable. It's not actually used for anything, but valgrind will still warn against uninitialized data. I'm not sure whether this was UB, but in any case it's annoying when running valgrind.
* vo_gpu: hwdec_vaegl: silence confusing message during probingwm42019-09-191-2/+47
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | During probing on a system with AMD GPU, mpv used to output the following messages if hardware decoding was enabled: [ffmpeg] AVHWFramesContext: Failed to create surface: 2 (resource allocation failed). [ffmpeg] AVHWFramesContext: Unable to allocate a surface from internal buffer pool. This commit removed the message, with hopefully no other side effects. Long explanations follow, better don't read them, it's just tedious drivel about the details. People should learn to write concise commit messages, not drone on and on endlessly all while they have no fucking point. The code probes supported hardware pixel format, and checks whether they can be mapped as textures. av_hwdevice_get_hwframe_constraints() returns a list of hardware pixel formats in the valid_sw_formats field (the "sw" means software, but they're still hardware pixel formats, makes sense). This contained the format yuv420p, even though this is not a valid hardware format. Trying to create a surface of this type results in VA surface creation failure, upon which FFmpeg prints the error messages above. We'd be fine with this, except FFmpeg has a global log callback, and there's no way to suppress these messages without creating other issues. It turns out that FFmpeg's vaapi implementation returns all formats from vaQueryImageFormats() if no "hwconfig" is provided. This list includes yuv420p, which is probably supported for surface upload/download, but not as native format. Following FFmpeg's logic, it should not appear in the valid_sw_formats list, because formats for transfers are returned by another roundabout API. Idiotically, there doesn't seem to be any vaapi call that determines whether a format is a valid surface format. All mechanisms to do this are bound to a VAConfigID (= video codec or video processor), all while the actual surface creation API strangely does not take a VAConfigID (a big WTF). Also, calling the vaCreateSurfaces() API ourselves for probing is out of the question, because that functions is utterly and idiotically complex. Look at the FFmpeg code and how much effort it requires to setup a complete set of attributes - we can't duplicate this. So the only way left to do this is the most idiotic and tedious way: enumerating all VAProfile (and VAEntrypoints) to create all possible VAConfigIDs. Each of the VAConfigIDs is associated with a list of formats, which FFmpeg can return (by passing the ID along with the "hwconfig"), and which is probed separately. Note that VAConfigID actually refers to a dynamic instance of something, and creating a VAConfigID takes not only the VAProfile and the VAEntrypoint, but also an arbitrary attribute array. In theory, this means our attempt to get to know all possible configurations cannot work, but in practice this attribute array seems to be pointless for decoding and video processing, and FFmpeg doesn't use it (though the encoding path does use it). This probably just makes it _barely_ OK to do it this way. Could we discard all this probing shit, and somehow do it another way? Probably not. The EGL API for mapping surfaces doesn't even seem to provide a way to enumerate supported formats, we may not even know whether DRM/dmabuf interop is actually supported (AFAIR the EGL extensions are present even if they don't work), nor do we know whether the VAAPI driver supports this interop (not sure). So actually trying is the only way. Further, mpv initializes the decoder on a another thread, where you can't just access OpenGL state. This suckage is mostly to be blamed on OpenGL itself and its crazy thread boundedness. In theory, this could be done anyway (see how software decoding "direct rendering" tries to get around this). But to make it worse, the decoder never cares about the list of supported formats determined by this code; instead, f_autoconvert.c tries to deal with it and insert a video processor (well, good luck with this crap, I bet it doesn't even work). So this whole endeavor might be pointless, other than the fact that failed probing can disable use of vaapi (which is correct and necessary). But if you have a shovel, you don't use it to smash the flat end on the heap of shit that's piled up before you, or do you? While this method probably works, it's still orgasmically tedious. It was tedious before: we had to create a real surface, create a GL texture, map the surface with it, then destroy everything again. But the added code is tedious on its own. Highlights include the need to malloc a FFmpeg struct just to pass a single damn integer, the need to enumerate "entrypoints" for each VA profile, even though all profiles have exactly 1 entrypoint, and the kind of obnoxious way how vaapi requires you to preallocate arrays for returned things, even they could for example reasonably be returned as immutable arrays or have some other simpler API. The main grand fuckup is of course that vaapi requires a VAConfigID to query surface properties, but not for creating surfaces. This awkwardness even affected the FFmpeg API design, which has a "hwconfig" concept that is only used by vaapi (vaapi is only 1 out of 10 hardware decoding APIs supported by the FFmpeg hwcontext stuff). Maybe I'm just missing something. It's as if vaapi required setting radioactive shit on fire. Look how clean the native D3D11 code is instead. (Even the ANGLE code manages to avoid being this fucked up. Or the VDPAU code, despite supporting multiple mapping methods.) Another only barely related change is that the valid_sw_formats field can be NULL, and the API explicitly documents this. Technically, the mpv code was buggy for not checking this, although until now the FFmpeg implementation so far could not return it when we still passed NULL for the hwconfig parameter.
* vo_gpu: hwdec_vaegl: refactor format probingwm42019-09-191-40/+64
| | | | | | | | | | | No functional changes, just preparation for the next commit. Split the probing into multiple functions. Prepare for the yet unused possibility to pass AVVAAPIHWConfig to probing. try_format_pixfmt() now assumes it can be called multiple times with the same format, so it filters the format. The format probing is now something like O(n^2) for n formats, but n will most likely remain something under 50 or so.
* vo_gpu: remove vdpau/GLX backendwm42019-09-192-421/+0
| | | | | | | Useless garbage. This was once added to test whether vdpau presentation feedback could be used. Results were always unsatisfactory, and now vdpau is dead.
* vo_gpu: remove mali-fbdevwm42019-09-192-162/+0
| | | | | Useless at this point, I don't even know if it still works, or how to test it.
* aspect: add video margin optionswm42019-09-191-5/+43
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Semantics a bit questionable. This is done for the OSC (next commit), and a comment added the manpage explicitly states this. Meaning this is probably garbage and needs to revisit when the OSC changes and/or someone wants to use this margin feature for something else. Not sure about the subtitle thing. It's imaginable that someone uses these options to create empty borders for subtitles on the bottom, so subtitles should be located there. On the other hand, this gives a rather unpolished user experience when using the (later added) OSC feature to not overlap with the video. There's not much of a point if the OSC still overlaps the video. However, I'm too lazy to think about this, so it stays like it is.
* aspect: fix some UB problems in corner caseswm42019-09-191-6/+6
| | | | | | | | | | | --video-margin-ratio-left=0.2 --video-margin-ratio-right=0.9 (added in the the next commit) will set f_w to inf, resulting in some garbage being propagated. Later, the OSD margins are computed from values before various sanity clamping is applied, which makes libass suffer from bullshit values. I'm very sure it's OK and more correct to compute the OSD margins using the later values, but I'm not sure about that.
* wayland: fix wl_proxy leakdudemanguy2019-09-191-0/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This one is probably not terribly obvious from just the valgrind log, but a wayland dev explained it to me just a second ago. Whenever mpv sends events to the screen with wl_display_dispatch, wayland internally allocates memory to a struct wl_proxy object if a new id is found. Quite a few more things happen to that proxy object, but eventually mpv stores the data on the client-side in a wrapper type of struct (struct wl_data_offer). mpv's data_device_listener keeps track of those proxies and frees the memory when appropriate. Of course, mpv is constantly sending events to the screen and does so until the user quits the player. What happens here is that one final wl_display_dispatch is called right before the user quits the player and before mpv's data_device_listener can handle that object. So the result is that you always have one extra dangling proxy that doesn't get properly freed. The solution is to just simply call wl_data_offer_destroy before closing the wl_display to free that final dangling wl_proxy.
* drm: fix libmpv ABI breakage introduced in ↵Anton Kindestam2019-09-184-13/+13
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 351c083487050c88adb0e3d60f2174850f869018 Extending the client-allocated mpv_opengl_drm_params struct constituted a break of ABI that could cause UB. Create a clean break by deprecating "drm_params" and related structs and enum values, and replacing it with "drm_params_v2". Also fix some comments and code that wrongly assumed that open could return any other negative number than -1 for failure. This commit updates the libmpv version to 1.104
* vo_gpu: hwdec_vaapi: Refactor Vulkan and OpenGL interops for VAAPIPhilip Langdale2019-09-155-326/+471
| | | | | | Like hwdec_cuda, you get a big #ifdef mess if you try and keep the OpenGL and Vulkan interops in the same file. So, I've refactored them into separate files in a similar way.
* vo_gpu: hwdec_cuda: Improve interop selection mechanismPhilip Langdale2019-09-154-15/+20
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