| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
This updates the copyright header to all be the same, which is
pretty much an update of where to mail request for a copy of the GPL
and the years of the MPD project. This also puts all committers under
'The Music Player Project' umbrella. These entries should go
individually in the AUTHORS file, for consistancy.
|
|
Don't hard code the "bits" parameter to 16. Try to use the input's
sample format, if possible.
|
|
decoder_data() returns a decoder_command, no need to call
decoder_get_command() twice after decoder_command().
|
|
If an input_stream is not seekable, libaudiofile fails to play at all:
Audio File Library: unrecognized audio file format [error 0]
Since we know in advance whether the input_stream is seekable, just
refuse to play on a non-seekable stream.
|
|
Renamed several variables and a function.
|
|
The input_stream object should only be closed by the MPD core
(i.e. decoder_thread.c / decoder_run()). A decoder plugin which
attempts to close it will result in a segmentation fault.
|
|
|
|
Refuse to play audio formats which are not supported by MPD.
|
|
|
|
[mk: by definition, tag_new() cannot fail - removed check]
|
|
The stream_decode() and file_decode() methods returned a boolean,
indicating whether they were able to decode the song. This is
redundant, since we already know that: if decoder_initialized() has
been called (and dc.state==DECODE), the plugin succeeded. Change both
methods to return void.
|
|
Instead of checking the stream_types bit set, we can simply check
whether the methods stream_decode() and file_decode() are implemented.
|
|
Don't pass the "seekable" flag with every decoder_data() invocation.
Since that flag won't change within the file, it is enough to pass it
to decoder_initialized() once per file.
|
|
The strings were constant, but the pointers weren't. C syntax is
somewhat tricky..
|
|
All decoder_plugin structs are initialized at compile time, and must
never change.
|
|
|
|
Don't return 0/-1 on success/error, but true/false. Instead of int,
use bool for storing flags.
|
|
A decoder_flush() invocation was missing in the FLAC plugin, resulting
in casual assertion failures due to a wrong assumption about the last
chunk's audio format. It's much easier to remove that decoder_flush()
function and make the decoder thread call ob_flush().
|
|
Call ob_clear() in decoder_command_finished() instead of implementing
that call in every decoder plugin.
|
|
These plugins are not input plugins, they are decoder plugins. No
CamelCase in the directory name.
|
|
Don't compile the sources of disabled decoder plugins at all, and
don't attempt to register these.
|
|
The last bit of CamelCase in audio_format.h. Additionally, rename a
bunch of local variables.
|
|
When there are standardized headers, use these instead of the bloated
os_compat.h.
|
|
The old struct initializers are error prone and don't allow moving
elements around. Since we are going to overhaul some of the APIs
soon, it's easier to have all implementations use C99 initializers.
|
|
Do full C99 integer type conversion in all modules which were not
touched by Eric's merged patch.
|
|
Get rid of CamelCase, and don't use a typedef, so we can
forward-declare it, and unclutter the include dependencies.
|
|
|
|
Getting rid of CamelCase; not having typedefs also allows us to
forward-declare the structures.
|
|
This releases several include file dependencies. As a side effect,
"CHUNK_SIZE" isn't defined by decoder_api.h anymore, so we have to
define it directly in the plugins which need it. It just isn't worth
it to add it to the decoder plugin API.
|
|
"decoder plugin" is a better name than "input plugin", since the
plugin does not actually do the input - InputStream does. Also don't
use typedef, so we can forward-declare it if required.
|
|
Provide access to seeking for the decoder plugins; they have to know
where to seek, and they need a way to tell us that seeking has failed.
|
|
Some decoder commands are implemented in the decoder plugins, thus
they need to have an API call to signal that their current command has
been finished. Let them use the new decoder_command_finished()
instead of the internal dc_command_finished().
|
|
Another big patch which hides internal mpd APIs from decoder plugins:
decoder plugins regularly poll dc->command; expose it with a
decoder_api.h function.
|
|
Anonymous code blocks just to declare variables look ugly. Move the
variable declarations up and disband the code block.
|
|
Similar to previous patch: eliminate one variable by using "break".
This also simplifies the code since we can remove one level of indent.
|
|
Similar to the previous patch: pass total_time instead of manipulating
dc->totalTime directly.
|
|
dc->audioFormat is set once by the decoder plugins before invoking
decoder_initialized(); hide dc->audioFormat and let the decoder pass
an AudioFormat pointer to decoder_initialized().
|
|
We are now beginning to remove direct structure accesses from the
decoder plugins. decoder_clear() and decoder_flush() mask two very
common buffer functions.
|
|
Moved all of the player-waiting code to decoder_data(), to make
OutputBuffer more generic.
|
|
decoder_initialized() sets the state to DECODE_STATE_DECODE and wakes
up the player thread. It is called by the decoder plugin after its
internal initialization is finished. More arguments will be added
later to prevent direct accesses to the DecoderControl struct.
|
|
The decoder struct should later be made opaque to the decoder plugin,
because maintaining a stable struct ABI is quite difficult. The ABI
should only consist of a small number of stable functions.
|
|
dc_command_finished() is invoked by the decoder thread when it has
finished a command (sent by the player thread). It resets dc.command
and wakes up the player thread. This combination was used at a lot of
places, and by introducing this function, the code will be more
readable.
|
|
Much of the existing code queries all three variables sequentially.
Since only one of them can be set at a time, this can be optimized and
unified by merging all of them into one enum variable. Later, the
"command" checks can be expressed in a "switch" statement.
|
|
Include only headers which are really required. This speeds up
compilation and helps detect cross-layer accesses.
|
|
We had functions names varied between
outputBufferFoo, fooOutputBuffer, and output_buffer_foo
That was too confusing for my little brain to handle.
And the global variable was somehow named 'cb' instead of
the more obvious 'ob'...
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7355 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
|
|
All of our main singleton data structures are implicitly shared,
so there's no reason to keep passing them around and around in
the stack and making our internal API harder to deal with.
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7354 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
|
|
This at least makes the argument list to a lot of our plugin
functions shorter and removes a good amount of line nois^W^Wcode,
hopefully making things easier to read and follow.
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7353 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
|
|
I initially started to do a heavy rewrite that changed the way processes
communicated, but that was too much to do at once. So this change only
focuses on replacing the player and decode processes with threads and
using condition variables instead of polling in loops; so the changeset
itself is quiet small.
* The shared output buffer variables will still need locking
to guard against race conditions. So in this effect, we're probably
just as buggy as before. The reduced context-switching overhead of
using threads instead of processes may even make bugs show up more or
less often...
* Basic functionality appears to be working for playing local (and NFS)
audio, including:
play, pause, stop, seek, previous, next, and main playlist editing
* I haven't tested HTTP streams yet, they should work.
* I've only tested ALSA and Icecast. ALSA works fine, Icecast
metadata seems to get screwy at times and breaks song
advancement in the playlist at times.
* state file loading works, too (after some last-minute hacks with
non-blocking wakeup functions)
* The non-blocking (*_nb) variants of the task management functions are
probably overused. They're more lenient and easier to use because
much of our code is still based on our previous polling-based system.
* It currently segfaults on exit. I haven't paid much attention
to the exit/signal-handling routines other than ensuring it
compiles. At least the state file seems to work. We don't
do any cleanups of the threads on exit, yet.
* Update is still done in a child process and not in a thread.
To do this in a thread, we'll need to ensure it does proper
locking and communication with the main thread; but should
require less memory in the end because we'll be updating
the database "in-place" rather than updating a copy and
then bulk-loading when done.
* We're more sensitive to bugs in 3rd party libraries now.
My plan is to eventually use a master process which forks()
and restarts the child when it dies:
locking and communication with the main thread; but should
require less memory in the end because we'll be updating
the database "in-place" rather than updating a copy and
then bulk-loading when done.
* We're more sensitive to bugs in 3rd party libraries now.
My plan is to eventually use a master process which forks()
and restarts the child when it dies:
master - just does waitpid() + fork() in a loop
\- main thread
\- decoder thread
\- player thread
At the beginning of every song, the main thread will set
a dirty flag and update the state file. This way, if we
encounter a song that triggers a segfault killing the
main thread, the master will start the replacement main
on the next song.
* The main thread still wakes up every second on select()
to check for signals; which affects power management.
[merged r7138 from branches/ew]
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7240 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
|
|
Terminals are 80 columns and that's a hard limit, no exceptions
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7207 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
|
|
Tools like "sparse" check for missing downcasts, since implicit cast
may be dangerous. Although that does not change the compiler result,
it may make the code more readable (IMHO), because you always see when
there may be data cut off.
git-svn-id: https://svn.musicpd.org/mpd/trunk@7196 09075e82-0dd4-0310-85a5-a0d7c8717e4f
|