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.
Linux analog TV support (via tv://) was excessively complex, and
whenever I attempted to use it (cameras or loopback devices), it didn't
work well, or would have required some major work to update it. It's
very much stuck in the analog past (my favorite are the frequency tables
in frequencies.c for analog TV channels which don't exist anymore).
Especially cameras and such work fine with libavdevice and better than
tv://, for example:
mpv av://v4l2:/dev/video0
(adding --profile=low-latency --untimed even makes it mostly realtime)
Adding a new input layer that targets such "modern" uses would be
acceptable, if anyone is interested in it. The old TV code is just too
focused on actual analog TV.
DVB is rather obscure, but has an active maintainer, so don't remove it.
However, the demux/stream ctrl layer must go, so remove controls for
channel switching. Most of these could be reimplemented by using the
normal method for option runtime changes.
stream_dvd.c contained large amounts of ancient, unmaintained code,
which has been historically moved to libdvdnav. Basically, it's full of
low level parsing of DVD on-disc structures.
Kill it for good. Users can use the remaining dvdnav support (which
basically operates in non-menu mode). Users have reported that
libdvdread sometimes works better, but this is just libdvdnav's problem
and not ours.
this migrates our current swift code to version 5 and 4. building is
support from 10.12.6 and xcode 9.1 onwards.
dynamic linking is the new default, since Apple removed static libs
from their new toolchains and it's the recommended way.
additionally the found macOS SDK version is printed since it's an
important information for finding possible errors now.
Fixes#6470
this is in preparation for the upcoming swift 5 transition, where static
linking was replaced by dynamic linking the swift libraries as the
preferred way, by Apple. furthermore Apple removed the static swift libs
from their dev Tools starting with xcode 10.2/swift 5.
because of ABI incompatibility dynamic linking for swift versions prior
to 5 doesn't use the system lib path for the dynamic swift libs.
for now static linking is still the default, but that will be changed
when swift 5 support is added and swift 3 support is dropped.
Fixes#6232
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.
New releases of VDPAU support decoding 4:4:4 content, and that comes
back as NV24 when using 'direct mode' in OpenGL Interop. That means we
need to be a little bit smarter about how we set up the OpenGL
textures.
When the D3D11 backend was first written, SPIRV-Cross only had a C++ API
and no guarantee of API or ABI stability, so instead of using
SPIRV-Cross directly, mpv used an unofficial C wrapper called crossc.
Now that KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Cross#611 is resolved, SPIRV-Cross has an
official C API that can be used instead, so remove crossc and use
SPIRV-Cross directly.
This change updates the vulkan interop code to work with the
libplacebo based ra_vk, but also introduces direct VkImage
sharing to avoid the use of the intermediate buffer.
It is also necessary and desirable to introduce explicit
semaphore bsed synchronisation for operations on the shared
images.
Synchronisation means we can safely reuse the same VkImage for every
mapped frame, by ensuring the frame is copied to the VkImage before
mapping the next frame.
This functionality requires a 417.xx or newer nvidia driver, due to
bugs in the VkImage interop in the earlier 411 and 415 drivers.
It's definitely worth the effort, as the raw throughput is about
twice that of implementation using an intermediate buffer.
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.
This option has been deprecated upstream for a long time, probably
doesn't even work anymore, and won't work moving forwards as we replace
the vulkan code by libplacebo wrappers.
I haven't removed the option completely yet since in theory we could
still add support for e.g. a native glslang wrapper in the future. But
most likely the future of this code is deletion.
As an aside, fix an issue where the man page didn't mention d3d11.
`vkGetPhysicalDeviceProperties2KHR` was added in Vulkan 1.0.39,
but 1.0.61 from Ubuntu Xenial (16.04) was the lowest anyone tried
to build mpv with as of late, so we are marking that as the minimum
required version.
This fixes issues arising during build time from having too old
version of vulkan available on a system, instead of causing a failure
to build.
Despite their place in the tree, hwdecs can be loaded and used just
fine by the vulkan GPU backend.
In this change we add Vulkan interop support to the cuda/nvdec hwdec.
The overall process is mostly straight forward, so the main observation
here is that I had to implement it using an intermediate Vulkan buffer
because the direct VkImage usage is blocked by a bug in the nvidia
driver. When that gets fixed, I will revist this.
Nevertheless, the intermediate buffer copy is very cheap as it's all
device memory from start to finish. Overall CPU utilisiation is pretty
much the same as with the OpenGL GPU backend.
Note that we cannot use a single intermediate buffer - rather there
is a pool of them. This is done because the cuda memcpys are not
explicitly synchronised with the texture uploads.
In the basic case, this doesn't matter because the hwdec is not
asked to map and copy the next frame until after the previous one
is rendered. In the interpolation case, we need extra future frames
available immediately, so we'll be asked to map/copy those frames
and vulkan will be asked to render them. So far, harmless right? No.
All the vulkan rendering, including the upload steps, are batched
together and end up running very asynchronously from the CUDA copies.
The end result is that all the copies happen one after another, and
only then do the uploads happen, which means all textures are uploaded
the same, final, frame data. Whoops. Unsurprisingly this results in
the jerky motion because every 3/4 frames are identical.
The buffer pool ensures that we do not overwrite a buffer that is
still waiting to be uploaded. The ra_buf_pool implementation
automatically checks if existing buffers are available for use and
only creates a new one if it really has to. It's hard to say for sure
what the maximum number of buffers might be but we believe it won't
be so large as to make this strategy unusable. The highest I've seen
is 12 when using interpolation with tscale=bicubic.
A future optimisation here is to synchronise the CUDA copies with
respect to the vulkan uploads. This can be done with shared semaphores
that would ensure the copy of the second frames only happens after the
upload of the first frame, and so on. This isn't trivial to implement
as I'd have to first adjust the hwdec code to use asynchronous cuda;
without that, there's no way to use the semaphore for synchronisation.
This should result in fewer intermediate buffers being required.
This started breaking with newer (2.0.x) waf versions, and it was
noticed that a built-in waf module was providing very similar
functionality.
APPNAME definition was required to have `gnu_dirs`' PACKAGE
variable to be defined in order to have f.ex. documentation
installed to the correct directory.
Currently unused options added by `gnu_dirs` were removed to clean
up the output of the help command.
Effective changes to behavior:
- `gnu_dirs` will attempt to figure out if it needs to use lib64
instead of lib within your installation prefix. If you would
like it to not do that, set `--libdir` during configuration.
The way it tries to figure lib/lib64 out is if there's a
`/usr/lib64` and no `/usr/lib32`.
- `--incdir` is now `--includedir` as per standard `gnu_dirs`
behavior.
This was there originally to detect too-old versions of ffmpeg. We now
only support >= 4.0, so it's not relevant. We just need the dependencies
to be present.
The CUDA dynamic loader was broken out of ffmpeg into its own repo
and package. This gives us an opportunity to re-use it in mpv and
remove our custom loader logic.
libavcodec normally drops subtitle lines that fail a check for invalid
UTF-8 (their check is slightly broken too, by the way). This was always
annoying and inconvenient, but now there is a mechanism to prevent
it from doing this. Requires newst libavcodec.
This includes codec/muxer/demuxer iteration (different iteration
function, registration functions deprecated), and the renaming of
AVFormatContext.filename to url (plus making it a malloced string).
Libav doesn't have the new API yet, so it will break. I hope they will
add the new APIs too.
this is meant to replace the old and not properly working vo_gpu/opengl
cocoa backend in the future. the problems are various shortcomings of
Apple's opengl implementation and buggy behaviour in certain
circumstances that couldn't be properly worked around. there are also
certain regressions on newer macOS versions from 10.11 onwards.
- awful opengl performance with a none layer backed context
- huge amount of dropped frames with an early context flush
- flickering of system elements like the dock or volume indicator
- double buffering not properly working with a none layer backed context
- bad performance in fullscreen because of system optimisations
all the problems were caused by using a normal opengl context, that
seems somewhat abandoned by apple, and are fixed by using a layer backed
opengl context instead. problems that couldn't be fixed could be
properly worked around.
this has all features our old backend has sans the wid embedding,
the possibility to disable the automatic GPU switching and taking
screenshots of the window content. the first was deemed unnecessary by
me for now, since i just use the libmpv API that others can use anyway.
second is technically not possible atm because we have to pre-allocate
our opengl context at a time the config isn't read yet, so we can't get
the needed property. third one is a bit tricky because of deadlocking
and it needed to be in sync, hopefully i can work around that in the
future.
this also has at least one additional feature or eye-candy. a properly
working fullscreen animation with the native fs. also since this is a
direct port of the old backend of the parts that could be used, though
with adaptions and improvements, this looks a lot cleaner and easier to
understand.
some credit goes to @pigoz for the initial swift build support which
i could improve upon.
Fixes: #5478, #5393, #5152, #5151, #4615, #4476, #3978, #3746, #3739,
#2392, #2217
This seems to fix issues when building on windows where compiling mpv.rc
after a `waf clean` resulted in a failure because version.h was not
always present
Libav has been broken due to the hwdec changes. This was always a
temporary situation (depended on pending patches to be merged), although
it took a bit longer. This also restores the travis config.
One code change is needed in vd_lavc.c, because it checks the AV_PIX_FMT
for videotoolbox (as opposed to the mpv format identifier), which is not
available in Libav. Add an ifdef; the affected code is for a deprecated
option anyway.
vo_x11 and vo_xv need this. According to the Linux manpage, all involved
functions are POSIX-2001 anyway. (I just assumed they were not, because
they're mostly System V UNIX legacy garbage.)
Looks like this is covered by LGPL relicensing agreements now.
Notes about contributors who could not be reached or who didn't agree:
Commit 7fccb6486e has tons of mp_msg changes look like they are not
copyrightable (even if they were, all mp_msg calls were rewritten in
mpv times again). The additional play() change looks suspicious, but
the function was rewritten several times anyway (first time after that
commit in 4f40ec312).
Commit 89ed1748ae was rewritten in commit 325311af3 and then again
several times after that. Basically all this code is unnecessary in
modern mpv and has been removed.
No code survived from the following commits: 4d31c3c53, 61ecf838f2,
d38968bd, 4deb67c3f. At least two cosmetic typo fixes are not
considered as well.
Commit 22bb046ad is reverted (this wasn't a valid warning anyway, just
a C++-ism icc applied to C). Using the constants is nicer, but at least
I don't have to decide whether that change was copyrightable.