A recent commit added code that checks some HAVE_ symbols in this file.
No config.h include was added, so they could be unavailable and break
compilation (in practice, just --hwdec=vaapi-copy would break).
Not sure how I missed this, maybe waf defined these symbols on the
compiler command line for some reason.
The old API is deprecated, and libavcodec prints a warning at runtime.
The new API is a bit nicer and does many things for you, such as
managing the underlying hwaccel decoder. libavutil also provides code
for managing surfaces (we use their surface pool).
The new code does not contain any code from the original MPlayer VAAPI
patch (that was used as base for some of the vaapi code in mpv). Thus
the new code is LGPL.
The new API actually does not add any visible symbols, so the only way
to detect it is a version check. Of course, the versions overlap
between FFmpeg and Libav, which requires additional care. The new
API did not get merged into FFmpeg yet, so there's no check for
FFmpeg.
We usually attach some significant metadata and context to "our"
surfaces. Surfaces created by libavutil (such as we plan to do it when
using the new vaapi decode API in the following commit) don't have this
context, so e.g. copy decoding mode won't work.
Add tons of hacks to make this somehow work.
Eventually we will use libavutil's mechanisms and drop the hacks.
the display refresh rate can't be estimated
correctly in some cases and just increases till it
turns off display-resample. cases are
off-screen rendering (different space), mpv
being completely hidden behind another window or
the mission control view.
this utilise the unused displaylink callback to
limit the refresh rate to the actual display
refresh rate.
This flips the y-coordinate to be consistent with
other platforms and the manual. furthermore it
fixes an unwanted behaviour of the cocoa
convertRectFromBacking method, where the x- and
y-coordinate was divided by the same factor as the
width and height instead of placing the new scaled
rectangle at the same relative position as the
original unscaled rectangle, by manually
calculating the new position.
Fixes#3867
Same deal as with video. Including the EOF handling.
(It would be nice if this code were not duplicated, but right now we're
not even close to unifying the audio and video code paths.)
This is simpler and more robust, especially for the hwdec fallback case.
The most annoying issue is that C doesn't support multiple return values
(or sum types), so the decode call gets all awkward.
The hwdec fallback case does not need to try to produce some output
after the fallback anymore. Instead, it can use the normal "replay"
code path.
We invert the "eof" bool that vd_lavc.c used internally. The
receive_frame decoder API returns the inverse of EOF, because
returning "true" from the decode function if EOF was reached
feels awkward.
Usually they happen at the same time, but conflating them is still a bit
unclean and could possibly cause problems in the future. It's also
really unnecessary.
The ffmpeg cuda wrappers need more than 1 packet for determining whether
hw decoding will work. So do something complicated and keep up to 32
packets when trying to do hw decoding, and replay the packets on the
software decoder if it doesn't work.
This code was written in a delirious state, testing for regressions and
determining whether this is worth the trouble will follow later. All mpv
git users are alpha testers as of this moment.
Fixes#3914.
Cover art handling is a disgusting hack that causes a mess in all
components. And this will stay this way. This is the Xth time I've
changed cover art handling, and that will probably also continue.
But change the code such that cover art is injected into the demux
packet stream, instead of having an explicit special case it in the
decoder glue code. (This is somewhat more similar to the cover art hack
in libavformat.)
To avoid that the over art picture is decoded again on each seek, we
need some additional "caching" in player/video.c. Decoding it after each
seek would work as well, but since cover art pictures can be pretty
huge, it's probably ok to invest some lines of code into caching it.
One weird thing is that the cover art packet will remain queued after
seeks, but that is probably not an issue.
In exchange, we can drop the dec_video.c code, which is pretty
convenient for one of the following commits. This code duplicates a
bunch of lower-level decode calls and does icky messing with this weird
state stuff, so I'm glad it goes away.
It has only 1 caller, and is too far appart within the file. I think it
used to have multiple callers, but now it just doesn't make any sense to
keep it separate anymore.
I'm not sure what systems have <sys/poll.h> (maybe there are historical
reasons why some would), but POSIX defines <poll.h>. Although this code
is full of highly OS specific calls (like ioctl()), there's no reason
not to use the more standard include path.
The property calls will always succeed anyway. On the other hand, the
error handling is kind of incomplete (doesn't check setting ab-loop-a
when ab-loop-b is also set), so drop this code.
Since there's no property yet that uses this type, and the code is used
for property change detection only. this is dead code. Add it anyway for
completeness.
This was probably the intention all along. But I honestly have no idea
what this code even does.
Due to what ebml_read_vlen_int() is used for, this is unlikely to have
mattered anyway as it rarely/never reads huge values. Which is probably
why this has worked for over a decade.
This code used to check/free multiple things, so the argument to free()
was not always NULL. After the code was simplified, the free() became
redundant.
Obvious mistake: we entered EOF drain mode if the decoder returned
AD_WAIT, which is very wrong. AD_WAIT means we should retry after
waiting for a while (or to be precise, until the demuxer/decoder
have more data). We should just pass down this status, and not
change the audio chain state.
This was exposed by a libavfilter EOF handling bug. Feeding a filter
chain with af_dynaudnorm, and sending an EOF before a frame is returned
makes it stuck and keeps returning EAGAIN, instead of returning the
buffered audio. In combination with the bug at hand, which entered
EOG drain mode, it could happen that it got stuck due to libavfilter
discarding buffered data each time the demuxer ran out of data.
Fixes#3997.
This is available since the first commit after libva 0.39.4. Since the
version wasn't bumped since, we just check some random other symbol that
was added since (I'd rather not add a configure check).
The libva message callback repeats the endlessly repeated API mistakes
of libraries using global message callback handlers. But it's the only
way to shut up libva's dumb messages to stderr, so add something
complicated and dumb to workaround libva's stupidity.
The NULL check triggers a gcc warning when passing the address of a
variable to it. I was about to silence the warning with some equivalent
code (that just happens to shut up gcc), but then I decided to remove
the NULL check as I don't see a reason why we should allow this. We
don't use it in the existing code anyway (all callers do something like
TA_FREEP(&structptr->member), which is always non-NULL).
Also fix some of the macro argument "quoting".
Just some minor refactoring within va_initialize() as preparation for
the next commit.
Also, do not call vaTerminate(display) on failures. All callers already
do this, so this would have led to a double-free.
vo_wayland_wait_events() is going to return when its time to swap the
buffers anyway, calling request_frame() before makes no sense.
Fixes the constant high CPU usage by the compositor when mpv is paused
and the window is in view.
According to MSDN, in WM_SYSCOMMAND messages, the four low-order
bits of the wParam parameter are used internally by the system.
To obtain the correct result when testing the value of wParam,
an application must combine the value 0xFFF0 with the wParam
value by using the bitwise AND operator.
Was intended to show a "nice" message on edition switching. In practice,
the message was never visible. The OSD code checks whether a demuxer is
loaded, and if not, discards the message - meaning if the OSD code
happened to run before the demuxer was fully loaded, no message was
shown. This is apparently a regression due to extensions to the OSD and
the situations in which it can be used.
Remove the broken code since it's too annoying to fix. Instead, a
default property message will be shown, which is a bit uglier, but
actually not too unuseful.
Looks quite like a bug. If you have a filter chain with only the
dynaudnorm filter, and send call av_buffersrc_add_frame(s, NULL), then
subsequent av_buffersink_get_frame() calls will return EAGAIN instead of
EOF.
This was apparently caused by a recent change in FFmpeg.
Some other circumstances (which I didn't fully analyze and which is due
to the playloop's absurd temporary-EOF behavior on seeks) then led the
decoder loop to send data again, but since libavfilter was stuck in the
EOF state now, it could never recover. It kept sending new input (due to
missing output), until the demuxer refused to return more audio packets.
Each time a filter error was printed.
Fortunately, it's pretty easy to workaround. We just mark the p->eof
flag as we send an EOF frame to libavfilter. The p->eof flag is used
only to recover from temporary EOF: it resets the filter if new data is
available again. We don't care much about av_buffersink_get_frame()
returning a broken EAGAIN state in this situation and essentially ignore
it, meaning if we get EAGAIN after sending EOF, we assume effectively
that EOF was fully reached.
This is actually a pretty important fix. eglChooseConfig() might be the
first thing that fails when porobing for desktop GL / ES2 / ES3 support,
because EGL_RENDERABLE_TYPE is set values specific to the underlying
APIs.
Not sure how the hell this worked before. EGL 1.4 implementations
certainly could fail the call with EGL_BAD_ATTRIBUTE if
EGL_RENDERABLE_TYPE has EGL_OPENGL_ES3_BIT set. It's quite possible that
many EGL implementations tolerate invalid EGLConfig values steming from
uininitialized EGLConfig values (and eglCreateWindowSurface() even is
specified to return EGL_BAD_CONFIG error code for "not valid"
EGLConfigs).
The way it should (probably) work is that selecting a RGBA framebuffer
format will simply make the compositor use the alpha. It works this way
on Wayland. On X11, this is... not done. Instead, both GLX and EGL
report two FB configs, which are exactly the same, except for the
platform-specific visual. Only the latter (non-default) points to a
visual that actually has alpha. So you can't make the pure GLX and EGL
APIs select alpha mode, and you have to override manually.
Or in other words, alpha was hacked violently into X11, in a way that
doesn't really make sense for the sake of compatibility, and forces API
users to wade through metaphorical cow shit to deal with it.
To be fair, some other platforms actually also require you to enable
alpha explicitly (rather than looking at the framebuffer type), but they
skip the metaphorical cow shit step.
So that the EGL code can use it too.
Also print the actual FB config ID, instead of nonsense. (I _think_ once
in the past a certain GLX implementation just used numeric config IDs
casted to EGLConfig - or at least that would explain this nonsense.)
Preparation for the following commits. Since at least theoretically the
config selection depends on the context type (EGL_RENDERABLE_TYPE has
separate bits for ES 2, ES 3, and desktop GL), doing it any other way
would be too painful.