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Revision: 1.17
Committed: Wed Mar 22 19:36:59 2023 UTC (13 months, 3 weeks ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-1_0
Changes since 1.16: +4 -3 lines
Log Message:
1.0

File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 AnyEvent::MPV - remote control mpv (https://mpv.io)
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use AnyEvent::MPV;
8
9 my $videofile = "path/to/file.mkv";
10 use AnyEvent;
11 my $mpv = AnyEvent::MPV->new (trace => 1);
12 $mpv->start ("--idle=yes");
13 $mpv->cmd (loadfile => $mpv->escape_binary ($videofile));
14 my $quit = AE::cv;
15 $mpv->register_event (end_file => $quit);
16 $quit->recv;
17
18
19 =head1 DESCRIPTION
20
21 This module allows you to remote control F<mpv> (a video player). It also
22 is an L<AnyEvent> user, you need to make sure that you use and run a
23 supported event loop.
24
25 There are other modules doing this, and I haven't looked much at them
26 other than to decide that they don't handle encodings correctly, and since
27 none of them use AnyEvent, I wrote my own. When in doubt, have a look at
28 them, too.
29
30 Knowledge of the L<mpv command
31 interface|https://mpv.io/manual/stable/#command-interface> is required to
32 use this module.
33
34 Features of this module are:
35
36 =over
37
38 =item uses AnyEvent, so integrates well into most event-based programs
39
40 =item supports asynchronous and synchronous operation
41
42 =item allows you to properly pass binary filenames
43
44 =item accepts data encoded in any way (does not crash when mpv replies with non UTF-8 data)
45
46 =item features a simple keybind/event system
47
48 =back
49
50 =head2 OVERVIEW OF OPERATION
51
52 This module forks an F<mpv> process and uses F<--input-ipc-client> (or
53 equivalent) to create a bidirectional communication channel between it and
54 the F<mpv> process.
55
56 It then speaks the somewhat JSON-looking (but not really being JSON)
57 protocol that F<mpv> implements to both send it commands, decode and
58 handle replies, and handle asynchronous events.
59
60 Here is a very simple client:
61
62 use AnyEvent;
63 use AnyEvent::MPV;
64
65 my $videofile = "./xyzzy.mkv";
66
67 my $mpv = AnyEvent::MPV->new (trace => 1);
68
69 $mpv->start ("--", $videofile);
70
71 my $timer = AE::timer 2, 0, my $quit = AE::cv;
72 $quit->recv;
73
74 This starts F<mpv> with the two arguments C<--> and C<$videofile>, which
75 it should load and play. It then waits two seconds by starting a timer and
76 quits. The C<trace> argument to the constructor makes F<mpv> more verbose
77 and also prints the commands and responses, so you can have an idea what
78 is going on.
79
80 In my case, the above example would output something like this:
81
82 [uosc] Disabled because original osc is enabled!
83 mpv> {"event":"start-file","playlist_entry_id":1}
84 mpv> {"event":"tracks-changed"}
85 (+) Video --vid=1 (*) (h264 480x480 30.000fps)
86 mpv> {"event":"metadata-update"}
87 mpv> {"event":"file-loaded"}
88 Using hardware decoding (nvdec).
89 mpv> {"event":"video-reconfig"}
90 VO: [gpu] 480x480 cuda[nv12]
91 mpv> {"event":"video-reconfig"}
92 mpv> {"event":"playback-restart"}
93
94 This is not usually very useful (you could just run F<mpv> as a simple
95 shell command), so let us load the file at runtime:
96
97 use AnyEvent;
98 use AnyEvent::MPV;
99
100 my $videofile = "./xyzzy.mkv";
101
102 my $mpv = AnyEvent::MPV->new (
103 trace => 1,
104 args => ["--pause", "--idle=yes"],
105 );
106
107 $mpv->start;
108 $mpv->cmd_recv (loadfile => $mpv->escape_binary ($videofile));
109 $mpv->cmd ("set", "pause", "no");
110
111 my $timer = AE::timer 2, 0, my $quit = AE::cv;
112 $quit->recv;
113
114 This specifies extra arguments in the constructor - these arguments are
115 used every time you C<< ->start >> F<mpv>, while the arguments to C<<
116 ->start >> are only used for this specific clal to0 C<start>. The argument
117 F<--pause> keeps F<mpv> in pause mode (i.e. it does not play the file
118 after loading it), and C<--idle=yes> tells F<mpv> to not quit when it does
119 not have a playlist - as no files are specified on the command line.
120
121 To load a file, we then send it a C<loadfile> command, which accepts, as
122 first argument, the URL or path to a video file. To make sure F<mpv> does
123 not misinterpret the path as a URL, it was prefixed with F<./> (similarly
124 to "protecting" paths in perls C<open>).
125
126 Since commands send I<to> F<mpv> are send in UTF-8, we need to escape the
127 filename (which might be in any encoding) using the C<esscape_binary>
128 method - this is not needed if your filenames are just ascii, or magically
129 get interpreted correctly, but if you accept arbitrary filenamews (e.g.
130 from the user), you need to do this.
131
132 The C<cmd_recv> method then queues the command, waits for a reply and
133 returns the reply data (or croaks on error). F<mpv> would, at this point,
134 load the file and, if everything was successful, show the first frame and
135 pause. Note that, since F<mpv> is implement rather synchronously itself,
136 do not expect commands to fail in many circumstances - for example, fit
137 he file does not exit, you will likely get an event, but the C<loadfile>
138 command itself will run successfully.
139
140 To unpause, we send another command, C<set>, to set the C<pause> property
141 to C<no>, this time using the C<cmd> method, which queues the command, but
142 instead of waiting for a reply, it immediately returns a condvar that cna
143 be used to receive results.
144
145 This should then cause F<mpv> to start playing the video.
146
147 It then again waits two seconds and quits.
148
149 Now, just waiting two seconds is rather, eh, unuseful, so let's look at
150 receiving events (using a somewhat embellished example):
151
152 use AnyEvent;
153 use AnyEvent::MPV;
154
155 my $videofile = "xyzzy.mkv";
156
157 my $quit = AE::cv;
158
159 my $mpv = AnyEvent::MPV->new (
160 trace => 1,
161 args => ["--pause", "--idle=yes"],
162 );
163
164 $mpv->start;
165
166 $mpv->register_event (start_file => sub {
167 $mpv->cmd ("set", "pause", "no");
168 });
169
170 $mpv->register_event (end_file => sub {
171 my ($mpv, $event, $data) = @_;
172
173 print "end-file<$data->{reason}>\n";
174 $quit->send;
175 });
176
177 $mpv->cmd (loadfile => $mpv->escape_binary ($videofile));
178
179 $quit->recv;
180
181 This example uses a global condvar C<$quit> to wait for the file to finish
182 playing. Also, most of the logic is now implement in event handlers.
183
184 The two events handlers we register are C<start-file>, which is emitted by
185 F<mpv> once it has loaded a new file, and C<end-file>, which signals the
186 end of a file (underscores are internally replaced by minus signs, so you
187 cna speicfy event names with either).
188
189 In the C<start-file> event, we again set the C<pause> property to C<no>
190 so the movie starts playing. For the C<end-file> event, we tell the main
191 program to quit by invoking C<$quit>.
192
193 This should conclude the basics of operation. There are a few more
194 examples later in the documentation.
195
196 =head2 ENCODING CONVENTIONS
197
198 As a rule of thumb, all data you pass to this module to be sent to F<mpv>
199 is expected to be in unicode. To pass something that isn't, you need to
200 escape it using C<escape_binary>.
201
202 Data received from F<mpv>, however, is I<not> decoded to unicode, as data
203 returned by F<mpv> is not generally encoded in unicode, and the encoding
204 is usually unspecified. So if you receive data and expect it to be in
205 unicode, you need to first decode it from UTF-8, but note that this might
206 fail. This is not a limitation of this module - F<mpv> simply does not
207 specify nor guarantee a specific encoding, or any encoding at all, in its
208 protocol.
209
210 =head2 METHODS
211
212 =over
213
214 =cut
215
216 package AnyEvent::MPV;
217
218 use common::sense;
219
220 use Fcntl ();
221 use Scalar::Util ();
222
223 use AnyEvent ();
224 use AnyEvent::Util ();
225
226 our $VERSION = '1.0';
227
228 sub OBSID() { 0x10000000000000 } # 2**52
229
230 our $JSON = eval { require JSON::XS; JSON::XS:: }
231 || do { require JSON::PP; JSON::PP:: };
232
233 our $JSON_ENCODER = $JSON->new->utf8;
234 our $JSON_DECODER = $JSON->new->latin1;
235
236 our $mpv_path; # last mpv path used
237 our $mpv_optionlist; # output of mpv --list-options
238
239 =item $mpv = AnyEvent::MPV->new (key => value...)
240
241 Creates a new C<mpv> object, but does not yet do anything. The support key-value pairs are:
242
243 =over
244
245 =item mpv => $path
246
247 The path to the F<mpv> binary to use - by default, C<mpv> is used and
248 therefore, uses your C<PATH> to find it.
249
250 =item args => [...]
251
252 Arguments to pass to F<mpv>. These arguments are passed after the
253 hardcoded arguments used by this module, but before the arguments passed
254 ot C<start>. It does not matter whether you specify your arguments using
255 this key, or in the C<start> call, but when you invoke F<mpv> multiple
256 times, typically the arguments used for all invocations go here, while
257 arguments used for specific invocations (e..g filenames) are passed to
258 C<start>.
259
260 =item trace => false|true|coderef
261
262 Enables tracing if true. In trace mode, output from F<mpv> is printed to
263 standard error using a C<< mpv> >> prefix, and commands sent to F<mpv>
264 are printed with a C<< >mpv >> prefix.
265
266 If a code reference is passed, then instead of printing to standard
267 errort, this coderef is invoked with a first arfgument being either
268 C<< mpv> >> or C<< >mpv >>, and the second argument being a string to
269 display. The default implementation simply does this:
270
271 sub {
272 warn "$_[0] $_[1]\n";
273 }
274
275 =item on_eof => $coderef->($mpv)
276
277 =item on_event => $coderef->($mpv, $event, $data)
278
279 =item on_key => $coderef->($mpv, $string)
280
281 These are invoked by the default method implementation of the same name -
282 see below.
283
284 =back
285
286 =cut
287
288 sub new {
289 my ($class, %kv) = @_;
290
291 bless {
292 mpv => "mpv",
293 args => [],
294 %kv,
295 }, $class
296 }
297
298 =item $string = $mpv->escape_binary ($string)
299
300 This module excects all command data sent to F<mpv> to be in unicode. Some
301 things are not, such as filenames. To pass binary data such as filenames
302 through a comamnd, you need to escape it using this method.
303
304 The simplest example is a C<loadfile> command:
305
306 $mpv->cmd_recv (loadfile => $mpv->escape_binary ($path));
307
308 =cut
309
310 # can be used to escape filenames
311 sub escape_binary {
312 shift;
313 local $_ = shift;
314 # we escape every "illegal" octet using U+10e5df HEX. this is later undone in cmd
315 s/([\x00-\x1f\x80-\xff])/sprintf "\x{10e5df}%02x", ord $1/ge;
316 $_
317 }
318
319 =item $started = $mpv->start (argument...)
320
321 Starts F<mpv>, passing the given arguemnts as extra arguments to
322 F<mpv>. If F<mpv> is already running, it returns false, otherwise it
323 returns a true value, so you can easily start F<mpv> on demand by calling
324 C<start> just before using it, and if it is already running, it will not
325 be started again.
326
327 The arguments passwd to F<mpv> are a set of hardcoded built-in arguments,
328 followed by the arguments specified in the constructor, followed by the
329 arguments passwd to this method. The built-in arguments currently are
330 F<--no-input-terminal>, F<--really-quiet> (or F<--quiet> in C<trace>
331 mode), and C<--input-ipc-client> (or equivalent).
332
333 Some commonly used and/or even useful arguments you might want to pass are:
334
335 =over
336
337 =item F<--idle=yes> or F<--idle=once> to keep F<mpv> from quitting when you
338 don't specify a file to play.
339
340 =item F<--pause>, to keep F<mpv> from instantly starting to play a file, in case you want to
341 inspect/change properties first.
342
343 =item F<--force-window=no> (or similar), to keep F<mpv> from instantly opening a window, or to force it to do so.
344
345 =item F<--audio-client-name=yourappname>, to make sure audio streams are associated witht eh right program.
346
347 =item F<--wid=id>, to embed F<mpv> into another application.
348
349 =item F<--no-terminal>, F<--no-input-default-bindings>, F<--no-input-cursor>, F<--input-conf=/dev/null>, F<--input-vo-keyboard=no> - to ensure only you control input.
350
351 =back
352
353 The return value can be used to decide whether F<mpv> needs initializing:
354
355 if ($mpv->start) {
356 $mpv->bind_key (...);
357 $mpv->cmd (set => property => value);
358 ...
359 }
360
361 You can immediately starting sending commands when this method returns,
362 even if F<mpv> has not yet started.
363
364 =cut
365
366 sub start {
367 my ($self, @extra_args) = @_;
368
369 return 0 if $self->{fh};
370
371 # cache optionlist for same "path"
372 ($mpv_path, $mpv_optionlist) = ($self->{mpv}, scalar qx{\Q$self->{mpv}\E --list-options})
373 if $self->{mpv} ne $mpv_path;
374
375 my $options = $mpv_optionlist;
376
377 my ($fh, $slave) = AnyEvent::Util::portable_socketpair
378 or die "socketpair: $!\n";
379
380 AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking $fh, 1;
381
382 $self->{pid} = fork;
383
384 if ($self->{pid} eq 0) {
385 AnyEvent::Util::fh_nonblocking $slave, 0;
386 fcntl $slave, Fcntl::F_SETFD, 0;
387
388 my $input_file = $options =~ /\s--input-ipc-client\s/ ? "input-ipc-client" : "input-file";
389
390 exec $self->{mpv},
391 qw(--no-input-terminal),
392 ($self->{trace} ? "--quiet" : "--really-quiet"),
393 "--$input_file=fd://" . (fileno $slave),
394 @{ $self->{args} },
395 @extra_args;
396 exit 1;
397 }
398
399 $self->{fh} = $fh;
400
401 my $trace = delete $self->{trace} || sub { };
402
403 $trace = sub { warn "$_[0] $_[1]\n" } if $trace && !ref $trace;
404
405 my $buf;
406
407 Scalar::Util::weaken $self;
408
409 $self->{rw} = AE::io $fh, 0, sub {
410 if (sysread $fh, $buf, 8192, length $buf) {
411 while ($buf =~ s/^([^\n]+)\n//) {
412 $trace->("mpv>" => "$1");
413
414 if ("{" eq substr $1, 0, 1) {
415 eval {
416 my $reply = $JSON_DECODER->decode ($1);
417
418 if (defined (my $event = delete $reply->{event})) {
419 if (
420 $event eq "client-message"
421 and $reply->{args}[0] eq "AnyEvent::MPV"
422 ) {
423 if ($reply->{args}[1] eq "key") {
424 (my $key = $reply->{args}[2]) =~ s/\\x(..)/chr hex $1/ge;
425 $self->on_key ($key);
426 }
427 } elsif (
428 $event eq "property-change"
429 and OBSID <= $reply->{id}
430 ) {
431 if (my $cb = $self->{obscb}{$reply->{id}}) {
432 $cb->($self, $event, $reply->{data});
433 }
434 } else {
435 if (my $cbs = $self->{evtcb}{$event}) {
436 for my $evtid (keys %$cbs) {
437 my $cb = $cbs->{$evtid}
438 or next;
439 $cb->($self, $event, $reply);
440 }
441 }
442
443 $self->on_event ($event, $reply);
444 }
445 } elsif (exists $reply->{request_id}) {
446 my $cv = delete $self->{cmdcv}{$reply->{request_id}};
447
448 unless ($cv) {
449 warn "no cv found for request id <$reply->{request_id}>\n";
450 next;
451 }
452
453 if (exists $reply->{data}) {
454 $cv->send ($reply->{data});
455 } elsif ($reply->{error} eq "success") { # success means error... eh.. no...
456 $cv->send;
457 } else {
458 $cv->croak ($reply->{error});
459 }
460
461 } else {
462 warn "unexpected reply from mpv, pleasew report: <$1>\n";
463 }
464 };
465 warn $@ if $@;
466 } else {
467 $trace->("mpv>" => "$1");
468 }
469 }
470 } else {
471 $self->stop;
472 $self->on_eof;
473 }
474 };
475
476 my $wbuf;
477 my $reqid;
478
479 $self->{_cmd} = sub {
480 my $cv = AE::cv;
481
482 $self->{cmdcv}{++$reqid} = $cv;
483
484 my $cmd = $JSON_ENCODER->encode ({ command => ref $_[0] ? $_[0] : \@_, request_id => $reqid*1 });
485
486 # (un-)apply escape_binary hack
487 $cmd =~ s/\xf4\x8e\x97\x9f(..)/sprintf sprintf "\\x%02x", hex $1/ges; # f48e979f == 10e5df in utf-8
488
489 $trace->(">mpv" => $cmd);
490
491 $wbuf .= "$cmd\n";
492
493 $self->{ww} ||= AE::io $fh, 1, sub {
494 my $len = syswrite $fh, $wbuf;
495 substr $wbuf, 0, $len, "";
496 undef $self->{ww} unless length $wbuf;
497 };
498
499 $cv
500 };
501
502 1
503 }
504
505 sub DESTROY {
506 $_[0]->stop;
507 }
508
509 =item $mpv->stop
510
511 Ensures that F<mpv> is being stopped, by killing F<mpv> with a C<TERM>
512 signal if needed. After this, you can C<< ->start >> a new instance again.
513
514 =cut
515
516 sub stop {
517 my ($self) = @_;
518
519 delete $self->{rw};
520 delete $self->{ww};
521
522 if ($self->{pid}) {
523
524 close delete $self->{fh}; # current mpv versions should cleanup on their own on close
525
526 kill TERM => $self->{pid};
527
528 }
529
530 delete $self->{pid};
531 delete $self->{cmdcv};
532 delete $self->{evtid};
533 delete $self->{evtcb};
534 delete $self->{obsid};
535 delete $self->{obscb};
536 delete $self->{wbuf};
537 }
538
539 =item $mpv->on_eof
540
541 This method is called when F<mpv> quits - usually unexpectedly. The
542 default implementation will call the C<on_eof> code reference specified in
543 the constructor, or do nothing if none was given.
544
545 For subclassing, see I<SUBCLASSING>, below.
546
547 =cut
548
549 sub on_eof {
550 my ($self) = @_;
551
552 $self->{on_eof}($self) if $self->{on_eof};
553 }
554
555 =item $mpv->on_event ($event, $data)
556
557 This method is called when F<mpv> sends an asynchronous event. The default
558 implementation will call the C<on_event> code reference specified in the
559 constructor, or do nothing if none was given.
560
561 The first/implicit argument is the C<$mpv> object, the second is the
562 event name (same as C<< $data->{event} >>, purely for convenience), and
563 the third argument is the event object as sent by F<mpv> (sans C<event>
564 key). See L<List of events|https://mpv.io/manual/stable/#list-of-events>
565 in its documentation.
566
567 For subclassing, see I<SUBCLASSING>, below.
568
569 =cut
570
571 sub on_event {
572 my ($self, $key) = @_;
573
574 $self->{on_event}($self, $key) if $self->{on_event};
575 }
576
577 =item $mpv->on_key ($string)
578
579 Invoked when a key declared by C<< ->bind_key >> is pressed. The default
580 invokes the C<on_key> code reference specified in the constructor with the
581 C<$mpv> object and the key name as arguments, or do nothing if none was
582 given.
583
584 For more details and examples, see the C<bind_key> method.
585
586 For subclassing, see I<SUBCLASSING>, below.
587
588 =cut
589
590 sub on_key {
591 my ($self, $key) = @_;
592
593 $self->{on_key}($self, $key) if $self->{on_key};
594 }
595
596 =item $mpv->cmd ($command => $arg, $arg...)
597
598 Queues a command to be sent to F<mpv>, using the given arguments, and
599 immediately return a condvar.
600
601 See L<the mpv
602 documentation|https://mpv.io/manual/stable/#list-of-input-commands> for
603 details on individual commands.
604
605 The condvar can be ignored:
606
607 $mpv->cmd (set_property => "deinterlace", "yes");
608
609 Or it can be used to synchronously wait for the command results:
610
611 $cv = $mpv->cmd (get_property => "video-format");
612 $format = $cv->recv;
613
614 # or simpler:
615
616 $format = $mpv->cmd (get_property => "video-format")->recv;
617
618 # or even simpler:
619
620 $format = $mpv->cmd_recv (get_property => "video-format");
621
622 Or you can set a callback:
623
624 $cv = $mpv->cmd (get_property => "video-format");
625 $cv->cb (sub {
626 my $format = $_[0]->recv;
627 });
628
629 On error, the condvar will croak when C<recv> is called.
630
631 =cut
632
633 sub cmd {
634 my $self = shift;
635
636 $self->{_cmd}->(@_)
637 }
638
639 =item $result = $mpv->cmd_recv ($command => $arg, $arg...)
640
641 The same as calling C<cmd> and immediately C<recv> on its return
642 value. Useful when you don't want to mess with F<mpv> asynchronously or
643 simply needs to have the result:
644
645 $mpv->cmd_recv ("stop");
646 $position = $mpv->cmd_recv ("get_property", "playback-time");
647
648 =cut
649
650 sub cmd_recv {
651 &cmd->recv
652 }
653
654 =item $mpv->bind_key ($INPUT => $string)
655
656 This is an extension implement by this module to make it easy to get key
657 events. The way this is implemented is to bind a C<client-message> witha
658 first argument of C<AnyEvent::MPV> and the C<$string> you passed. This
659 C<$string> is then passed to the C<on_key> handle when the key is
660 proessed, e.g.:
661
662 my $mpv = AnyEvent::MPV->new (
663 on_key => sub {
664 my ($mpv, $key) = @_;
665
666 if ($key eq "letmeout") {
667 print "user pressed escape\n";
668 }
669 },
670 );
671
672 $mpv_>bind_key (ESC => "letmeout");
673
674 You cna find a list of key names L<in the mpv
675 documentation|https://mpv.io/manual/stable/#key-names>.
676
677 The key configuration is lost when F<mpv> is stopped and must be (re-)done
678 after every C<start>.
679
680 =cut
681
682 sub bind_key {
683 my ($self, $key, $event) = @_;
684
685 $event =~ s/([^A-Za-z0-9\-_])/sprintf "\\x%02x", ord $1/ge;
686 $self->cmd (keybind => $key => "no-osd script-message AnyEvent::MPV key $event");
687 }
688
689 =item [$guard] = $mpv->register_event ($event => $coderef->($mpv, $event, $data))
690
691 This method registers a callback to be invoked for a specific
692 event. Whenever the event occurs, it calls the coderef with the C<$mpv>
693 object, the C<$event> name and the event object, just like the C<on_event>
694 method.
695
696 For a lst of events, see L<the mpv
697 documentation|https://mpv.io/manual/stable/#list-of-events>. Any
698 underscore in the event name is replaced by a minus sign, so you can
699 specify event names using underscores for easier quoting in Perl.
700
701 In void context, the handler stays registered until C<stop> is called. In
702 any other context, it returns a guard object that, when destroyed, will
703 unregister the handler.
704
705 You can register multiple handlers for the same event, and this method
706 does not interfere with the C<on_event> mechanism. That is, you can
707 completely ignore this method and handle events in a C<on_event> handler,
708 or mix both approaches as you see fit.
709
710 Note that unlike commands, event handlers are registered immediately, that
711 is, you can issue a command, then register an event handler and then get
712 an event for this handler I<before> the command is even sent to F<mpv>. If
713 this kind of race is an issue, you can issue a dummy command such as
714 C<get_version> and register the handler when the reply is received.
715
716 =cut
717
718 sub AnyEvent::MPV::Unevent::DESTROY {
719 my ($evtcb, $event, $evtid) = @{$_[0]};
720 delete $evtcb->{$event}{$evtid};
721 }
722
723 sub register_event {
724 my ($self, $event, $cb) = @_;
725
726 $event =~ y/_/-/;
727
728 my $evtid = ++$self->{evtid};
729 $self->{evtcb}{$event}{$evtid} = $cb;
730
731 defined wantarray
732 and bless [$self->{evtcb}, $event, $evtid], AnyEvent::MPV::Unevent::
733 }
734
735 =item [$guard] = $mpv->observe_property ($name => $coderef->($mpv, $name, $value))
736
737 =item [$guard] = $mpv->observe_property_string ($name => $coderef->($mpv, $name, $value))
738
739 These methods wrap a registry system around F<mpv>'s C<observe_property>
740 and C<observe_property_string> commands - every time the named property
741 changes, the coderef is invoked with the C<$mpv> object, the name of the
742 property and the new value.
743
744 For a list of properties that you can observe, see L<the mpv
745 documentation|https://mpv.io/manual/stable/#property-list>.
746
747 Due to the (sane :) way F<mpv> handles these requests, you will always
748 get a property cxhange event right after registering an observer (meaning
749 you don't have to query the current value), and it is also possible to
750 register multiple observers for the same property - they will all be
751 handled properly.
752
753 When called in void context, the observer stays in place until F<mpv>
754 is stopped. In any otrher context, these methods return a guard
755 object that, when it goes out of scope, unregisters the observe using
756 C<unobserve_property>.
757
758 Internally, this method uses observer ids of 2**52 (0x10000000000000) or
759 higher - it will not interfere with lower ovserver ids, so it is possible
760 to completely ignore this system and execute C<observe_property> commands
761 yourself, whilst listening to C<property-change> events - as long as your
762 ids stay below 2**52.
763
764 Example: register observers for changtes in C<aid> and C<sid>. Note that
765 a dummy statement is added to make sure the method is called in void
766 context.
767
768 sub register_observers {
769 my ($mpv) = @_;
770
771 $mpv->observe_property (aid => sub {
772 my ($mpv, $name, $value) = @_;
773 print "property aid (=$name) has changed to $value\n";
774 });
775
776 $mpv->observe_property (sid => sub {
777 my ($mpv, $name, $value) = @_;
778 print "property sid (=$name) has changed to $value\n";
779 });
780
781 () # ensure the above method is called in void context
782 }
783
784 =cut
785
786 sub AnyEvent::MPV::Unobserve::DESTROY {
787 my ($mpv, $obscb, $obsid) = @{$_[0]};
788
789 delete $obscb->{$obsid};
790
791 if ($obscb == $mpv->{obscb}) {
792 $mpv->cmd (unobserve_property => $obsid+0);
793 }
794 }
795
796 sub _observe_property {
797 my ($self, $type, $property, $cb) = @_;
798
799 my $obsid = OBSID + ++$self->{obsid};
800 $self->cmd ($type => $obsid+0, $property);
801 $self->{obscb}{$obsid} = $cb;
802
803 defined wantarray and do {
804 my $unobserve = bless [$self, $self->{obscb}, $obsid], AnyEvent::MPV::Unobserve::;
805 Scalar::Util::weaken $unobserve->[0];
806 $unobserve
807 }
808 }
809
810 sub observe_property {
811 my ($self, $property, $cb) = @_;
812
813 $self->_observe_property (observe_property => $property, $cb)
814 }
815
816 sub observe_property_string {
817 my ($self, $property, $cb) = @_;
818
819 $self->_observe_property (observe_property_string => $property, $cb)
820 }
821
822 =back
823
824 =head2 SUBCLASSING
825
826 Like most perl objects, C<AnyEvent::MPV> objects are implemented as
827 hashes, with the constructor simply storing all passed key-value pairs in
828 the object. If you want to subclass to provide your own C<on_*> methods,
829 be my guest and rummage around in the internals as much as you wish - the
830 only guarantee that this module dcoes is that it will not use keys with
831 double colons in the name, so youc an use those, or chose to simply not
832 care and deal with the breakage.
833
834 If you don't want to go to the effort of subclassing this module, you can
835 also specify all event handlers as constructor keys.
836
837 =head1 EXAMPLES
838
839 Here are some real-world code snippets, thrown in here mainly to give you
840 some example code to copy.
841
842 =head2 doomfrontend
843
844 At one point I replaced mythtv-frontend by my own terminal-based video
845 player (based on rxvt-unicode). I toyed with the diea of using F<mpv>'s
846 subtitle engine to create the user interface, but that is hard to use
847 since you don't know how big your letters are. It is also where most of
848 this modules code has originally been developed in.
849
850 It uses a unified input queue to handle various remote controls, so its
851 event handling needs are very simple - it simply feeds all events into the
852 input queue:
853
854 my $mpv = AnyEvent::MPV->new (
855 mpv => $MPV,
856 args => \@MPV_ARGS,
857 on_event => sub {
858 input_feed "mpv/$_[1]", $_[2];
859 },
860 on_key => sub {
861 input_feed $_[1];
862 },
863 on_eof => sub {
864 input_feed "mpv/quit";
865 },
866 );
867
868 ...
869
870 $mpv->start ("--idle=yes", "--pause", "--force-window=no");
871
872 It also doesn't use complicated command line arguments - the file search
873 options have the most impact, as they prevent F<mpv> from scanning
874 directories with tens of thousands of files for subtitles and more:
875
876 --audio-client-name=doomfrontend
877 --osd-on-seek=msg-bar --osd-bar-align-y=-0.85 --osd-bar-w=95
878 --sub-auto=exact --audio-file-auto=exact
879
880 Since it runs on a TV without a desktop environemnt, it tries to keep complications such as dbus
881 away and the screensaver happy:
882
883 # prevent xscreensaver from doing something stupid, such as starting dbus
884 $ENV{DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS} = "/"; # prevent dbus autostart for sure
885 $ENV{XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP} = "generic";
886
887 It does bind a number of keys to internal (to doomfrontend) commands:
888
889 for (
890 List::Util::pairs qw(
891 ESC return
892 q return
893 ENTER enter
894 SPACE pause
895 [ steprev
896 ] stepfwd
897 j subtitle
898 BS red
899 i green
900 o yellow
901 b blue
902 D triangle
903 UP up
904 DOWN down
905 RIGHT right
906 LEFT left
907 ),
908 (map { ("KP$_" => "num$_") } 0..9),
909 KP_INS => 0, # KP0, but different
910 ) {
911 $mpv->bind_key ($_->[0] => $_->[1]);
912 }
913
914 It also reacts to sponsorblock chapters, so it needs to know when vidoe
915 chapters change. Preadting C<AnyEvent::MPV>, it handles observers
916 manually:
917
918 $mpv->cmd (observe_property => 1, "chapter-metadata");
919
920 It also tries to apply an F<mpv> profile, if it exists:
921
922 eval {
923 # the profile is optional
924 $mpv->cmd ("apply-profile" => "doomfrontend");
925 };
926
927 Most of the complicated parts deal with saving and restoring per-video
928 data, such as bookmarks, playing position, selected audio and subtitle
929 tracks and so on. However, since it uses L<Coro>, it can conveniently
930 block and wait for replies, which is n ot possible in purely event based
931 programs, as you are not allowed to block inside event callbacks in most
932 event loops. This simplifies the code quite a bit.
933
934 When the file to be played is a Tv recording done by mythtv, it uses the
935 C<appending> protocol and deinterlacing:
936
937 if (is_myth $mpv_path) {
938 $mpv_path = "appending://$mpv_path";
939 $initial_deinterlace = 1;
940 }
941
942 Otherwise, it sets some defaults and loads the file (I forgot what the
943 C<dummy> argument is for, but I am sure it is needed by some F<mpv>
944 version):
945
946 $mpv->cmd ("script-message", "osc-visibility", "never", "dummy");
947 $mpv->cmd ("set", "vid", "auto");
948 $mpv->cmd ("set", "aid", "auto");
949 $mpv->cmd ("set", "sid", "no");
950 $mpv->cmd ("set", "file-local-options/chapters-file", $mpv->escape_binary ("$mpv_path.chapters"));
951 $mpv->cmd ("loadfile", $mpv->escape_binary ($mpv_path));
952 $mpv->cmd ("script-message", "osc-visibility", "auto", "dummy");
953
954 Handling events makes the main bulk of video playback code. For example,
955 various ways of ending playback:
956
957 if ($INPUT eq "mpv/quit") { # should not happen, but allows user to kill etc. without consequence
958 $status = 1;
959 mpv_init; # try reinit
960 last;
961
962 } elsif ($INPUT eq "mpv/idle") { # normal end-of-file
963 last;
964
965 } elsif ($INPUT eq "return") {
966 $status = 1;
967 last;
968
969 Or the code that actually starts playback, once the file is loaded:
970
971 our %SAVE_PROPERTY = (aid => 1, sid => 1, "audio-delay" => 1);
972
973 ...
974
975 my $oid = 100;
976
977 } elsif ($INPUT eq "mpv/file-loaded") { # start playing, configure video
978 $mpv->cmd ("seek", $playback_start, "absolute+exact") if $playback_start > 0;
979
980 my $target_fps = eval { $mpv->cmd_recv ("get_property", "container-fps") } || 60;
981 $target_fps *= play_video_speed_mult;
982 set_fps $target_fps;
983
984 unless (eval { $mpv->cmd_recv ("get_property", "video-format") }) {
985 $mpv->cmd ("set", "file-local-options/lavfi-complex", "[aid1] asplit [ao], showcqt=..., format=yuv420p [vo]");
986 };
987
988 for my $prop (keys %SAVE_PROPERTY) {
989 if (exists $PLAYING_STATE->{"mpv_$prop"}) {
990 $mpv->cmd ("set", "$prop", $PLAYING_STATE->{"mpv_$prop"} . "");
991 }
992
993 $mpv->cmd ("observe_property", ++$oid, $prop);
994 }
995
996 play_video_set_speed;
997 $mpv->cmd ("set", "osd-level", "$OSD_LEVEL");
998 $mpv->cmd ("observe_property", ++$oid, "osd-level");
999 $mpv->cmd ("set", "pause", "no");
1000
1001 $mpv->cmd ("set_property", "deinterlace", "yes")
1002 if $initial_deinterlace;
1003
1004 There is a lot going on here. First it seeks to the actual playback
1005 position, if it is not at the start of the file (it would probaby be more
1006 efficient to set the starting position before loading the file, though,
1007 but this is good enough).
1008
1009 Then it plays with the display fps, to set it to something harmonious
1010 w.r.t. the video framerate.
1011
1012 If the file does not have a video part, it assumes it is an audio file and
1013 sets a visualizer.
1014
1015 Also, a number of properties are not global, but per-file. At the moment,
1016 this is C<audio-delay>, and the current audio/subtitle track, which it
1017 sets, and also creates an observer. Again, this doesn'T use the observe
1018 functionality of this module, but handles it itself, assigning obsevrer
1019 ids 100+ to temporary/per-file observers.
1020
1021 Lastly, it sets some global (or per-youtube-uploader) parameters, such as
1022 speed, and unpauses. Property changes are handled like other input events:
1023
1024 } elsif ($INPUT eq "mpv/property-change") {
1025 my $prop = $INPUT_DATA->{name};
1026
1027 if ($prop eq "chapter-metadata") {
1028 if ($INPUT_DATA->{data}{TITLE} =~ /^\[SponsorBlock\]: (.*)/) {
1029 my $section = $1;
1030 my $skip;
1031
1032 $skip ||= $SPONSOR_SKIP{$_}
1033 for split /\s*,\s*/, $section;
1034
1035 if (defined $skip) {
1036 if ($skip) {
1037 # delay a bit, in case we get two metadata changes in quick succession, e.g.
1038 # because we have a skip at file load time.
1039 $skip_delay = AE::timer 2/50, 0, sub {
1040 $mpv->cmd ("no-osd", "add", "chapter", 1);
1041 $mpv->cmd ("show-text", "skipped sponsorblock section \"$section\"", 3000);
1042 };
1043 } else {
1044 undef $skip_delay;
1045 $mpv->cmd ("show-text", "NOT skipping sponsorblock section \"$section\"", 3000);
1046 }
1047 } else {
1048 $mpv->cmd ("show-text", "UNRECOGNIZED sponsorblock section \"$section\"", 60000);
1049 }
1050 } else {
1051 # cancel a queued skip
1052 undef $skip_delay;
1053 }
1054
1055 } elsif (exists $SAVE_PROPERTY{$prop}) {
1056 $PLAYING_STATE->{"mpv_$prop"} = $INPUT_DATA->{data};
1057 ::state_save;
1058 }
1059
1060 This saves back the per-file properties, and also handles chapter changes
1061 in a hacky way.
1062
1063 Most of the handlers are very simple, though. For example:
1064
1065 } elsif ($INPUT eq "pause") {
1066 $mpv->cmd ("cycle", "pause");
1067 $PLAYING_STATE->{curpos} = $mpv->cmd_recv ("get_property", "playback-time");
1068 } elsif ($INPUT eq "right") {
1069 $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar", "seek", 30, "relative+exact");
1070 } elsif ($INPUT eq "left") {
1071 $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar", "seek", -5, "relative+exact");
1072 } elsif ($INPUT eq "up") {
1073 $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar", "seek", +600, "relative+exact");
1074 } elsif ($INPUT eq "down") {
1075 $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar", "seek", -600, "relative+exact");
1076 } elsif ($INPUT eq "select") {
1077 $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar", "add", "audio-delay", "-0.100");
1078 } elsif ($INPUT eq "start") {
1079 $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar", "add", "audio-delay", "0.100");
1080 } elsif ($INPUT eq "intfwd") {
1081 $mpv->cmd ("no-osd", "frame-step");
1082 } elsif ($INPUT eq "audio") {
1083 $mpv->cmd ("osd-auto", "cycle", "audio");
1084 } elsif ($INPUT eq "subtitle") {
1085 $mpv->cmd ("osd-auto", "cycle", "sub");
1086 } elsif ($INPUT eq "triangle") {
1087 $mpv->cmd ("osd-auto", "cycle", "deinterlace");
1088
1089 Once a file has finished playing (or the user strops playback), it pauses,
1090 unobserves the per-file observers, and saves the current position for to
1091 be able to resume:
1092
1093 $mpv->cmd ("set", "pause", "yes");
1094
1095 while ($oid > 100) {
1096 $mpv->cmd ("unobserve_property", $oid--);
1097 }
1098
1099 $PLAYING_STATE->{curpos} = $mpv->cmd_recv ("get_property", "playback-time");
1100
1101 And thats most of the F<mpv>-related code.
1102
1103 =head2 F<Gtk2::CV>
1104
1105 F<Gtk2::CV> is low-feature image viewer that I use many times daily
1106 because it can handle directories with millions of files without falling
1107 over. It also had the ability to play videos for ages, but it used an
1108 older, crappier protocol to talk to F<mpv> and used F<ffprobe> before
1109 playing each file instead of letting F<mpv> handle format/size detection.
1110
1111 After writing this module, I decided to upgprade Gtk2::CV by making use
1112 of it, with the goal of getting rid of F<ffprobe> and being ablew to
1113 reuse F<mpv> processes, which would have a multitude of speed benefits
1114 (for example, fork+exec of F<mpv> caused the kernel to close all file
1115 descriptors, which could take minutes if a large file was being copied via
1116 NFS, as the kernel waited for thr buffers to be flushed on close - not
1117 having to start F<mpv> gets rid of this issue).
1118
1119 Setting up is only complicated by the fact that F<mpv> needs to be
1120 embedded into an existing window. To keep control of all inputs,
1121 F<Gtk2::CV> puts an eventbox in front of F<mpv>, so F<mpv> receives no
1122 input events:
1123
1124 $self->{mpv} = AnyEvent::MPV->new (
1125 trace => $ENV{CV_MPV_TRACE},
1126 );
1127
1128 # create an eventbox, so we receive all input events
1129 my $box = $self->{mpv_eventbox} = new Gtk2::EventBox;
1130 $box->set_above_child (1);
1131 $box->set_visible_window (0);
1132 $box->set_events ([]);
1133 $box->can_focus (0);
1134
1135 # create a drawingarea that mpv can display into
1136 my $window = $self->{mpv_window} = new Gtk2::DrawingArea;
1137 $box->add ($window);
1138
1139 # put the drawingarea intot he eventbox, and the eventbox into our display window
1140 $self->add ($box);
1141
1142 # we need to pass the window id to F<mpv>, which means we need to realise
1143 # the drawingarea, so an X window is allocated for it.
1144 $self->show_all;
1145 $window->realize;
1146 my $xid = $window->window->get_xid;
1147
1148 Then it starts F<mpv> using this setup:
1149
1150 local $ENV{LC_ALL} = "POSIX";
1151 $self->{mpv}->start (
1152 "--no-terminal",
1153 "--no-input-terminal",
1154 "--no-input-default-bindings",
1155 "--no-input-cursor",
1156 "--input-conf=/dev/null",
1157 "--input-vo-keyboard=no",
1158
1159 "--loop-file=inf",
1160 "--force-window=yes",
1161 "--idle=yes",
1162
1163 "--audio-client-name=CV",
1164
1165 "--osc=yes", # --osc=no displays fading play/pause buttons instead
1166
1167 "--wid=$xid",
1168 );
1169
1170 $self->{mpv}->cmd ("script-message" => "osc-visibility" => "never", "dummy");
1171 $self->{mpv}->cmd ("osc-idlescreen" => "no");
1172
1173 It also prepares a hack to force a ConfigureNotify event on every vidoe
1174 reconfig:
1175
1176 # force a configurenotify on every video-reconfig
1177 $self->{mpv_reconfig} = $self->{mpv}->register_event (video_reconfig => sub {
1178 my ($mpv, $event, $data) = @_;
1179
1180 $self->mpv_window_update;
1181 });
1182
1183 The way this is done is by doing a "dummy" resize to 1x1 and back:
1184
1185 $self->{mpv_window}->window->resize (1, 1),
1186 $self->{mpv_window}->window->resize ($self->{w}, $self->{h});
1187
1188 Without this, F<mpv> often doesn't "get" the correct window size. Doing
1189 it this way is not nice, but I didn't fine a nicer way to do it.
1190
1191 When no file is being played, F<mpv> is hidden and prepared:
1192
1193 $self->{mpv_eventbox}->hide;
1194
1195 $self->{mpv}->cmd (set_property => "pause" => "yes");
1196 $self->{mpv}->cmd ("playlist_remove", "current");
1197 $self->{mpv}->cmd (set_property => "video-rotate" => 0);
1198 $self->{mpv}->cmd (set_property => "lavfi-complex" => "");
1199
1200 Loading a file is a bit more complicated, as bluray and DVD rips are
1201 supported:
1202
1203 if ($moviedir) {
1204 if ($moviedir eq "br") {
1205 $mpv->cmd (set => "bluray-device" => $path);
1206 $mpv->cmd (loadfile => "bd://");
1207 } elsif ($moviedir eq "dvd") {
1208 $mpv->cmd (set => "dvd-device" => $path);
1209 $mpv->cmd (loadfile => "dvd://");
1210 }
1211 } elsif ($type eq "video/iso-bluray") {
1212 $mpv->cmd (set => "bluray-device" => $path);
1213 $mpv->cmd (loadfile => "bd://");
1214 } else {
1215 $mpv->cmd (loadfile => $mpv->escape_binary ($path));
1216 }
1217
1218 After this, C<Gtk2::CV> waits for the file to be loaded, video to be
1219 configured, and then queries the video size (to resize its own window)
1220 and video format (to decide whether an audio visualizer is needed for
1221 audio playback). The problematic word here is "wait", as this needs to be
1222 imploemented using callbacks.
1223
1224 This made the code much harder to write, as the whole setup is very
1225 asynchronous (C<Gtk2::CV> talks to the command interface in F<mpv>, which
1226 talks to the decode and playback parts, all of which run asynchronously
1227 w.r.t. each other. In practise, this can mean that C<Gtk2::CV> waits for
1228 a file to be loaded by F<mpv> while the command interface of F<mpv> still
1229 deals with the previous file and the decoder still handles an even older
1230 file). Adding to this fact is that Gtk2::CV is bound by the glib event
1231 loop, which means we cannot wait for replies form F<mpv> anywhere, so
1232 everything has to be chained callbacks.
1233
1234 The way this is handled is by creating a new empty hash ref that is unique
1235 for each loaded file, and use it to detect whether the event is old or
1236 not, and also store C<AnyEvent::MPV> guard objects in it:
1237
1238 # every time we loaded a file, we create a new hash
1239 my $guards = $self->{mpv_guards} = { };
1240
1241 Then, when we wait for an event to occur, delete the handler, and, if the
1242 C<mpv_guards> object has changed, we ignore it. Something like this:
1243
1244 $guards->{file_loaded} = $mpv->register_event (file_loaded => sub {
1245 delete $guards->{file_loaded};
1246 return if $guards != $self->{mpv_guards};
1247
1248 Commands do not have guards since they cnanot be cancelled, so we don't
1249 have to do this for commands. But what prevents us form misinterpreting
1250 an old event? Since F<mpv> (by default) handles commands synchronously,
1251 we can queue a dummy command, whose only purpose is to tell us when all
1252 previous commands are done. We use C<get_version> for this.
1253
1254 The simplified code looks like this:
1255
1256 Scalar::Util::weaken $self;
1257
1258 $mpv->cmd ("get_version")->cb (sub {
1259
1260 $guards->{file_loaded} = $mpv->register_event (file_loaded => sub {
1261 delete $guards->{file_loaded};
1262 return if $guards != $self->{mpv_guards};
1263
1264 $mpv->cmd (get_property => "video-format")->cb (sub {
1265 return if $guards != $self->{mpv_guards};
1266
1267 # video-format handling
1268 return if eval { $_[0]->recv; 1 };
1269
1270 # no video? assume audio and visualize, cpu usage be damned
1271 $mpv->cmd (set => "lavfi-complex" => ...");
1272 });
1273
1274 $guards->{show} = $mpv->register_event (video_reconfig => sub {
1275 delete $guards->{show};
1276 return if $guards != $self->{mpv_guards};
1277
1278 $self->{mpv_eventbox}->show_all;
1279
1280 $w = $mpv->cmd (get_property => "dwidth");
1281 $h = $mpv->cmd (get_property => "dheight");
1282
1283 $h->cb (sub {
1284 $w = eval { $w->recv };
1285 $h = eval { $h->recv };
1286
1287 $mpv->cmd (set_property => "pause" => "no");
1288
1289 if ($w && $h) {
1290 # resize our window
1291 }
1292
1293 });
1294 });
1295
1296 });
1297
1298 });
1299
1300 Most of the rest of the code is much simpler and just deals with forwarding user commands:
1301
1302 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{Right}) { $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar" => seek => "+10");
1303 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{Left} ) { $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar" => seek => "-10");
1304 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{Up} ) { $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar" => seek => "+60");
1305 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{Down} ) { $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar" => seek => "-60");
1306 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{a}) ) { $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-msg" => cycle => "audio");
1307 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{j} ) { $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-msg" => cycle => "sub");
1308 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{o} ) { $mpv->cmd ("no-osd" => "cycle-values", "osd-level", "2", "3", "0", "2");
1309 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{p} ) { $mpv->cmd ("no-osd" => cycle => "pause");
1310 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{9} ) { $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar" => add => "ao-volume", "-2");
1311 } elsif ($key == $Gtk2::Gdk::Keysyms{0} ) { $mpv->cmd ("osd-msg-bar" => add => "ao-volume", "+2");
1312
1313 =head1 SEE ALSO
1314
1315 L<AnyEvent>, L<the mpv command documentation|https://mpv.io/manual/stable/#command-interface>.
1316
1317 =head1 AUTHOR
1318
1319 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
1320 http://home.schmorp.de/
1321
1322 =cut
1323
1324 1
1325