| 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 = '1.01'; |
| 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 = $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, $event, $data) = @_; |
| 573 |
|
| 574 |
$self->{on_event}($self, $event, $data) 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 |
|