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client.h
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client.h
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/* Copyright (C) 2017 the mpv developers
*
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
* purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
* copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
* WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
* ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
* WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
* ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
* OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
*/
/*
* Note: the client API is licensed under ISC (see above) to enable
* other wrappers outside of mpv. But keep in mind that the
* mpv core is by default still GPLv2+ - unless built with
* --enable-lgpl, which makes it LGPLv2+.
*/
#ifndef MPV_CLIENT_API_H_
#define MPV_CLIENT_API_H_
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/**
* Mechanisms provided by this API
* -------------------------------
*
* This API provides general control over mpv playback. It does not give you
* direct access to individual components of the player, only the whole thing.
* It's somewhat equivalent to MPlayer's slave mode. You can send commands,
* retrieve or set playback status or settings with properties, and receive
* events.
*
* The API can be used in two ways:
* 1) Internally in mpv, to provide additional features to the command line
* player. Lua scripting uses this. (Currently there is no plugin API to
* get a client API handle in external user code. It has to be a fixed
* part of the player at compilation time.)
* 2) Using mpv as a library with mpv_create(). This basically allows embedding
* mpv in other applications.
*
* Documentation
* -------------
*
* The libmpv C API is documented directly in this header. Note that most
* actual interaction with this player is done through
* options/commands/properties, which can be accessed through this API.
* Essentially everything is done with them, including loading a file,
* retrieving playback progress, and so on.
*
* These are documented elsewhere:
* * http://mpv.io/manual/master/#options
* * http://mpv.io/manual/master/#list-of-input-commands
* * http://mpv.io/manual/master/#properties
*
* You can also look at the examples here:
* * https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv-examples/tree/master/libmpv
*
* Event loop
* ----------
*
* In general, the API user should run an event loop in order to receive events.
* This event loop should call mpv_wait_event(), which will return once a new
* mpv client API is available. It is also possible to integrate client API
* usage in other event loops (e.g. GUI toolkits) with the
* mpv_set_wakeup_callback() function, and then polling for events by calling
* mpv_wait_event() with a 0 timeout.
*
* Note that the event loop is detached from the actual player. Not calling
* mpv_wait_event() will not stop playback. It will eventually congest the
* event queue of your API handle, though.
*
* Synchronous vs. asynchronous calls
* ----------------------------------
*
* The API allows both synchronous and asynchronous calls. Synchronous calls
* have to wait until the playback core is ready, which currently can take
* an unbounded time (e.g. if network is slow or unresponsive). Asynchronous
* calls just queue operations as requests, and return the result of the
* operation as events.
*
* Asynchronous calls
* ------------------
*
* The client API includes asynchronous functions. These allow you to send
* requests instantly, and get replies as events at a later point. The
* requests are made with functions carrying the _async suffix, and replies
* are returned by mpv_wait_event() (interleaved with the normal event stream).
*
* A 64 bit userdata value is used to allow the user to associate requests
* with replies. The value is passed as reply_userdata parameter to the request
* function. The reply to the request will have the reply
* mpv_event->reply_userdata field set to the same value as the
* reply_userdata parameter of the corresponding request.
*
* This userdata value is arbitrary and is never interpreted by the API. Note
* that the userdata value 0 is also allowed, but then the client must be
* careful not accidentally interpret the mpv_event->reply_userdata if an
* event is not a reply. (For non-replies, this field is set to 0.)
*
* Asynchronous calls may be reordered in arbitrarily with other synchronous
* and asynchronous calls. If you want a guaranteed order, you need to wait
* until asynchronous calls report completion before doing the next call.
*
* See also the section "Asynchronous command details" in the manpage.
*
* Multithreading
* --------------
*
* The client API is generally fully thread-safe, unless otherwise noted.
* Currently, there is no real advantage in using more than 1 thread to access
* the client API, since everything is serialized through a single lock in the
* playback core.
*
* Basic environment requirements
* ------------------------------
*
* This documents basic requirements on the C environment. This is especially
* important if mpv is used as library with mpv_create().
*
* - The LC_NUMERIC locale category must be set to "C". If your program calls
* setlocale(), be sure not to use LC_ALL, or if you do, reset LC_NUMERIC
* to its sane default: setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, "C").
* - If a X11 based VO is used, mpv will set the xlib error handler. This error
* handler is process-wide, and there's no proper way to share it with other
* xlib users within the same process. This might confuse GUI toolkits.
* - mpv uses some other libraries that are not library-safe, such as Fribidi
* (used through libass), ALSA, FFmpeg, and possibly more.
* - The FPU precision must be set at least to double precision.
* - On Windows, mpv will call timeBeginPeriod(1).
* - On memory exhaustion, mpv will kill the process.
* - In certain cases, mpv may start sub processes (such as with the ytdl
* wrapper script).
* - Using UNIX IPC (off by default) will override the SIGPIPE signal handler,
* and set it to SIG_IGN.
*
* Encoding of filenames
* ---------------------
*
* mpv uses UTF-8 everywhere.
*
* On some platforms (like Linux), filenames actually do not have to be UTF-8;
* for this reason libmpv supports non-UTF-8 strings. libmpv uses what the
* kernel uses and does not recode filenames. At least on Linux, passing a
* string to libmpv is like passing a string to the fopen() function.
*
* On Windows, filenames are always UTF-8, libmpv converts between UTF-8 and
* UTF-16 when using win32 API functions. libmpv never uses or accepts
* filenames in the local 8 bit encoding. It does not use fopen() either;
* it uses _wfopen().
*
* On OS X, filenames and other strings taken/returned by libmpv can have
* inconsistent unicode normalization. This can sometimes lead to problems.
* You have to hope for the best.
*
* Also see the remarks for MPV_FORMAT_STRING.
*
* Embedding the video window
* --------------------------
*
* Using the render API (in render_cb.h) is recommended. This API requires
* you to create and maintain an OpenGL context, to which you can render
* video using a specific API call. This API does not include keyboard or mouse
* input directly.
*
* There is an older way to embed the native mpv window into your own. You have
* to get the raw window handle, and set it as "wid" option. This works on X11,
* win32, and OSX only. It's much easier to use than the render API, but
* also has various problems.
*
* Also see client API examples and the mpv manpage. There is an extensive
* discussion here:
* https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv-examples/tree/master/libmpv#methods-of-embedding-the-video-window
*
* Compatibility
* -------------
*
* mpv development doesn't stand still, and changes to mpv internals as well as
* to its interface can cause compatibility issues to client API users.
*
* The API is versioned (see MPV_CLIENT_API_VERSION), and changes to it are
* documented in DOCS/client-api-changes.rst. The C API itself will probably
* remain compatible for a long time, but the functionality exposed by it
* could change more rapidly. For example, it's possible that options are
* renamed, or change the set of allowed values.
*
* Defensive programming should be used to potentially deal with the fact that
* options, commands, and properties could disappear, change their value range,
* or change the underlying datatypes. It might be a good idea to prefer
* MPV_FORMAT_STRING over other types to decouple your code from potential
* mpv changes.
*
* Also see: DOCS/compatibility.rst
*
* Future changes
* --------------
*
* This are the planned changes that will most likely be done on the next major
* bump of the library:
*
* - remove all symbols and include files that are marked as deprecated
* - reassign enum numerical values to remove gaps
* - remove the mpv_opengl_init_params.extra_exts field
* - change the type of mpv_event_end_file.reason
* - disabling all events by default
*/
/**
* The version is incremented on each API change. The 16 lower bits form the
* minor version number, and the 16 higher bits the major version number. If
* the API becomes incompatible to previous versions, the major version
* number is incremented. This affects only C part, and not properties and
* options.
*
* Every API bump is described in DOCS/client-api-changes.rst
*
* You can use MPV_MAKE_VERSION() and compare the result with integer
* relational operators (<, >, <=, >=).
*/
#define MPV_MAKE_VERSION(major, minor) (((major) << 16) | (minor) | 0UL)
#define MPV_CLIENT_API_VERSION MPV_MAKE_VERSION(1, 106)
/**
* The API user is allowed to "#define MPV_ENABLE_DEPRECATED 0" before
* including any libmpv headers. Then deprecated symbols will be excluded
* from the headers. (Of course, deprecated properties and commands and
* other functionality will still work.)
*/
#ifndef MPV_ENABLE_DEPRECATED
#define MPV_ENABLE_DEPRECATED 1
#endif
/**
* Return the MPV_CLIENT_API_VERSION the mpv source has been compiled with.
*/
unsigned long mpv_client_api_version(void);
/**
* Client context used by the client API. Every client has its own private
* handle.
*/
typedef struct mpv_handle mpv_handle;
/**
* List of error codes than can be returned by API functions. 0 and positive
* return values always mean success, negative values are always errors.
*/
typedef enum mpv_error {
/**
* No error happened (used to signal successful operation).
* Keep in mind that many API functions returning error codes can also
* return positive values, which also indicate success. API users can
* hardcode the fact that ">= 0" means success.
*/
MPV_ERROR_SUCCESS = 0,
/**
* The event ringbuffer is full. This means the client is choked, and can't
* receive any events. This can happen when too many asynchronous requests
* have been made, but not answered. Probably never happens in practice,
* unless the mpv core is frozen for some reason, and the client keeps
* making asynchronous requests. (Bugs in the client API implementation
* could also trigger this, e.g. if events become "lost".)
*/
MPV_ERROR_EVENT_QUEUE_FULL = -1,
/**
* Memory allocation failed.
*/
MPV_ERROR_NOMEM = -2,
/**
* The mpv core wasn't configured and initialized yet. See the notes in
* mpv_create().
*/
MPV_ERROR_UNINITIALIZED = -3,
/**
* Generic catch-all error if a parameter is set to an invalid or
* unsupported value. This is used if there is no better error code.
*/
MPV_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER = -4,
/**
* Trying to set an option that doesn't exist.
*/
MPV_ERROR_OPTION_NOT_FOUND = -5,
/**
* Trying to set an option using an unsupported MPV_FORMAT.
*/
MPV_ERROR_OPTION_FORMAT = -6,
/**
* Setting the option failed. Typically this happens if the provided option
* value could not be parsed.
*/
MPV_ERROR_OPTION_ERROR = -7,
/**
* The accessed property doesn't exist.
*/
MPV_ERROR_PROPERTY_NOT_FOUND = -8,
/**
* Trying to set or get a property using an unsupported MPV_FORMAT.
*/
MPV_ERROR_PROPERTY_FORMAT = -9,
/**
* The property exists, but is not available. This usually happens when the
* associated subsystem is not active, e.g. querying audio parameters while
* audio is disabled.
*/
MPV_ERROR_PROPERTY_UNAVAILABLE = -10,
/**
* Error setting or getting a property.
*/
MPV_ERROR_PROPERTY_ERROR = -11,
/**
* General error when running a command with mpv_command and similar.
*/
MPV_ERROR_COMMAND = -12,
/**
* Generic error on loading (usually used with mpv_event_end_file.error).
*/
MPV_ERROR_LOADING_FAILED = -13,
/**
* Initializing the audio output failed.
*/
MPV_ERROR_AO_INIT_FAILED = -14,
/**
* Initializing the video output failed.
*/
MPV_ERROR_VO_INIT_FAILED = -15,
/**
* There was no audio or video data to play. This also happens if the
* file was recognized, but did not contain any audio or video streams,
* or no streams were selected.
*/
MPV_ERROR_NOTHING_TO_PLAY = -16,
/**
* When trying to load the file, the file format could not be determined,
* or the file was too broken to open it.
*/
MPV_ERROR_UNKNOWN_FORMAT = -17,
/**
* Generic error for signaling that certain system requirements are not
* fulfilled.
*/
MPV_ERROR_UNSUPPORTED = -18,
/**
* The API function which was called is a stub only.
*/
MPV_ERROR_NOT_IMPLEMENTED = -19,
/**
* Unspecified error.
*/
MPV_ERROR_GENERIC = -20
} mpv_error;
/**
* Return a string describing the error. For unknown errors, the string
* "unknown error" is returned.
*
* @param error error number, see enum mpv_error
* @return A static string describing the error. The string is completely
* static, i.e. doesn't need to be deallocated, and is valid forever.
*/
const char *mpv_error_string(int error);
/**
* General function to deallocate memory returned by some of the API functions.
* Call this only if it's explicitly documented as allowed. Calling this on
* mpv memory not owned by the caller will lead to undefined behavior.
*
* @param data A valid pointer returned by the API, or NULL.
*/
void mpv_free(void *data);
/**
* Return the name of this client handle. Every client has its own unique
* name, which is mostly used for user interface purposes.
*
* @return The client name. The string is read-only and is valid until the
* mpv_handle is destroyed.
*/
const char *mpv_client_name(mpv_handle *ctx);
/**
* Create a new mpv instance and an associated client API handle to control
* the mpv instance. This instance is in a pre-initialized state,
* and needs to be initialized to be actually used with most other API
* functions.
*
* Some API functions will return MPV_ERROR_UNINITIALIZED in the uninitialized
* state. You can call mpv_set_property() (or mpv_set_property_string() and
* other variants, and before mpv 0.21.0 mpv_set_option() etc.) to set initial
* options. After this, call mpv_initialize() to start the player, and then use
* e.g. mpv_command() to start playback of a file.
*
* The point of separating handle creation and actual initialization is that
* you can configure things which can't be changed during runtime.
*
* Unlike the command line player, this will have initial settings suitable
* for embedding in applications. The following settings are different:
* - stdin/stdout/stderr and the terminal will never be accessed. This is
* equivalent to setting the --no-terminal option.
* (Technically, this also suppresses C signal handling.)
* - No config files will be loaded. This is roughly equivalent to using
* --config=no. Since libmpv 1.15, you can actually re-enable this option,
* which will make libmpv load config files during mpv_initialize(). If you
* do this, you are strongly encouraged to set the "config-dir" option too.
* (Otherwise it will load the mpv command line player's config.)
* For example:
* mpv_set_option_string(mpv, "config-dir", "/my/path"); // set config root
* mpv_set_option_string(mpv, "config", "yes"); // enable config loading
* (call mpv_initialize() _after_ this)
* - Idle mode is enabled, which means the playback core will enter idle mode
* if there are no more files to play on the internal playlist, instead of
* exiting. This is equivalent to the --idle option.
* - Disable parts of input handling.
* - Most of the different settings can be viewed with the command line player
* by running "mpv --show-profile=libmpv".
*
* All this assumes that API users want a mpv instance that is strictly
* isolated from the command line player's configuration, user settings, and
* so on. You can re-enable disabled features by setting the appropriate
* options.
*
* The mpv command line parser is not available through this API, but you can
* set individual options with mpv_set_property(). Files for playback must be
* loaded with mpv_command() or others.
*
* Note that you should avoid doing concurrent accesses on the uninitialized
* client handle. (Whether concurrent access is definitely allowed or not has
* yet to be decided.)
*
* @return a new mpv client API handle. Returns NULL on error. Currently, this
* can happen in the following situations:
* - out of memory
* - LC_NUMERIC is not set to "C" (see general remarks)
*/
mpv_handle *mpv_create(void);
/**
* Initialize an uninitialized mpv instance. If the mpv instance is already
* running, an error is returned.
*
* This function needs to be called to make full use of the client API if the
* client API handle was created with mpv_create().
*
* Only the following options are required to be set _before_ mpv_initialize():
* - options which are only read at initialization time:
* - config
* - config-dir
* - input-conf
* - load-scripts
* - script
* - player-operation-mode
* - input-app-events (OSX)
* - all encoding mode options
*
* @return error code
*/
int mpv_initialize(mpv_handle *ctx);
/**
* Disconnect and destroy the mpv_handle. ctx will be deallocated with this
* API call.
*
* If the last mpv_handle is detached, the core player is destroyed. In
* addition, if there are only weak mpv_handles (such as created by
* mpv_create_weak_client() or internal scripts), these mpv_handles will
* be sent MPV_EVENT_SHUTDOWN. This function may block until these clients
* have responded to the shutdown event, and the core is finally destroyed.
*/
void mpv_destroy(mpv_handle *ctx);
#if MPV_ENABLE_DEPRECATED
/**
* @deprecated use mpv_destroy(), which has exactly the same semantics (the
* deprecation is a mere rename)
*
* Since mpv client API version 1.29:
* If the last mpv_handle is detached, the core player is destroyed. In
* addition, if there are only weak mpv_handles (such as created by
* mpv_create_weak_client() or internal scripts), these mpv_handles will
* be sent MPV_EVENT_SHUTDOWN. This function may block until these clients
* have responded to the shutdown event, and the core is finally destroyed.
*
* Before mpv client API version 1.29:
* This left the player running. If you want to be sure that the
* player is terminated, send a "quit" command, and wait until the
* MPV_EVENT_SHUTDOWN event is received, or use mpv_terminate_destroy().
*/
void mpv_detach_destroy(mpv_handle *ctx);
#endif
/**
* Similar to mpv_destroy(), but brings the player and all clients down
* as well, and waits until all of them are destroyed. This function blocks. The
* advantage over mpv_destroy() is that while mpv_destroy() merely
* detaches the client handle from the player, this function quits the player,
* waits until all other clients are destroyed (i.e. all mpv_handles are
* detached), and also waits for the final termination of the player.
*
* Since mpv_destroy() is called somewhere on the way, it's not safe to
* call other functions concurrently on the same context.
*
* Since mpv client API version 1.29:
* The first call on any mpv_handle will block until the core is destroyed.
* This means it will wait until other mpv_handle have been destroyed. If you
* want asynchronous destruction, just run the "quit" command, and then react
* to the MPV_EVENT_SHUTDOWN event.
* If another mpv_handle already called mpv_terminate_destroy(), this call will
* not actually block. It will destroy the mpv_handle, and exit immediately,
* while other mpv_handles might still be uninitializing.
*
* Before mpv client API version 1.29:
* If this is called on a mpv_handle that was not created with mpv_create(),
* this function will merely send a quit command and then call
* mpv_destroy(), without waiting for the actual shutdown.
*/
void mpv_terminate_destroy(mpv_handle *ctx);
/**
* Create a new client handle connected to the same player core as ctx. This
* context has its own event queue, its own mpv_request_event() state, its own
* mpv_request_log_messages() state, its own set of observed properties, and
* its own state for asynchronous operations. Otherwise, everything is shared.
*
* This handle should be destroyed with mpv_destroy() if no longer
* needed. The core will live as long as there is at least 1 handle referencing
* it. Any handle can make the core quit, which will result in every handle
* receiving MPV_EVENT_SHUTDOWN.
*
* This function can not be called before the main handle was initialized with
* mpv_initialize(). The new handle is always initialized, unless ctx=NULL was
* passed.
*
* @param ctx Used to get the reference to the mpv core; handle-specific
* settings and parameters are not used.
* If NULL, this function behaves like mpv_create() (ignores name).
* @param name The client name. This will be returned by mpv_client_name(). If
* the name is already in use, or contains non-alphanumeric
* characters (other than '_'), the name is modified to fit.
* If NULL, an arbitrary name is automatically chosen.
* @return a new handle, or NULL on error
*/
mpv_handle *mpv_create_client(mpv_handle *ctx, const char *name);
/**
* This is the same as mpv_create_client(), but the created mpv_handle is
* treated as a weak reference. If all mpv_handles referencing a core are
* weak references, the core is automatically destroyed. (This still goes
* through normal uninit of course. Effectively, if the last non-weak mpv_handle
* is destroyed, then the weak mpv_handles receive MPV_EVENT_SHUTDOWN and are
* asked to terminate as well.)
*
* Note if you want to use this like refcounting: you have to be aware that
* mpv_terminate_destroy() _and_ mpv_destroy() for the last non-weak
* mpv_handle will block until all weak mpv_handles are destroyed.
*/
mpv_handle *mpv_create_weak_client(mpv_handle *ctx, const char *name);
/**
* Load a config file. This loads and parses the file, and sets every entry in
* the config file's default section as if mpv_set_option_string() is called.
*
* The filename should be an absolute path. If it isn't, the actual path used
* is unspecified. (Note: an absolute path starts with '/' on UNIX.) If the
* file wasn't found, MPV_ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER is returned.
*
* If a fatal error happens when parsing a config file, MPV_ERROR_OPTION_ERROR
* is returned. Errors when setting options as well as other types or errors
* are ignored (even if options do not exist). You can still try to capture
* the resulting error messages with mpv_request_log_messages(). Note that it's
* possible that some options were successfully set even if any of these errors
* happen.
*
* @param filename absolute path to the config file on the local filesystem
* @return error code
*/
int mpv_load_config_file(mpv_handle *ctx, const char *filename);
#if MPV_ENABLE_DEPRECATED
/**
* This does nothing since mpv 0.23.0 (API version 1.24). Below is the
* description of the old behavior.
*
* Stop the playback thread. This means the core will stop doing anything, and
* only run and answer to client API requests. This is sometimes useful; for
* example, no new frame will be queued to the video output, so doing requests
* which have to wait on the video output can run instantly.
*
* Suspension is reentrant and recursive for convenience. Any thread can call
* the suspend function multiple times, and the playback thread will remain
* suspended until the last thread resumes it. Note that during suspension, all
* clients still have concurrent access to the core, which is serialized through
* a single mutex.
*
* Call mpv_resume() to resume the playback thread. You must call mpv_resume()
* for each mpv_suspend() call. Calling mpv_resume() more often than
* mpv_suspend() is not allowed.
*
* Calling this on an uninitialized player (see mpv_create()) will deadlock.
*
* @deprecated This function, as well as mpv_resume(), are deprecated, and
* will stop doing anything soon. Their semantics were never
* well-defined, and their usefulness is extremely limited. The
* calls will remain stubs in order to keep ABI compatibility.
*/
void mpv_suspend(mpv_handle *ctx);
/**
* See mpv_suspend().
*/
void mpv_resume(mpv_handle *ctx);
#endif
/**
* Return the internal time in microseconds. This has an arbitrary start offset,
* but will never wrap or go backwards.
*
* Note that this is always the real time, and doesn't necessarily have to do
* with playback time. For example, playback could go faster or slower due to
* playback speed, or due to playback being paused. Use the "time-pos" property
* instead to get the playback status.
*
* Unlike other libmpv APIs, this can be called at absolutely any time (even
* within wakeup callbacks), as long as the context is valid.
*
* Safe to be called from mpv render API threads.
*/
int64_t mpv_get_time_us(mpv_handle *ctx);
/**
* Data format for options and properties. The API functions to get/set
* properties and options support multiple formats, and this enum describes
* them.
*/
typedef enum mpv_format {
/**
* Invalid. Sometimes used for empty values.
*/
MPV_FORMAT_NONE = 0,
/**
* The basic type is char*. It returns the raw property string, like
* using ${=property} in input.conf (see input.rst).
*
* NULL isn't an allowed value.
*
* Warning: although the encoding is usually UTF-8, this is not always the
* case. File tags often store strings in some legacy codepage,
* and even filenames don't necessarily have to be in UTF-8 (at
* least on Linux). If you pass the strings to code that requires
* valid UTF-8, you have to sanitize it in some way.
* On Windows, filenames are always UTF-8, and libmpv converts
* between UTF-8 and UTF-16 when using win32 API functions. See
* the "Encoding of filenames" section for details.
*
* Example for reading:
*
* char *result = NULL;
* if (mpv_get_property(ctx, "property", MPV_FORMAT_STRING, &result) < 0)
* goto error;
* printf("%s\n", result);
* mpv_free(result);
*
* Or just use mpv_get_property_string().
*
* Example for writing:
*
* char *value = "the new value";
* // yep, you pass the address to the variable
* // (needed for symmetry with other types and mpv_get_property)
* mpv_set_property(ctx, "property", MPV_FORMAT_STRING, &value);
*
* Or just use mpv_set_property_string().
*
*/
MPV_FORMAT_STRING = 1,
/**
* The basic type is char*. It returns the OSD property string, like
* using ${property} in input.conf (see input.rst). In many cases, this
* is the same as the raw string, but in other cases it's formatted for
* display on OSD. It's intended to be human readable. Do not attempt to
* parse these strings.
*
* Only valid when doing read access. The rest works like MPV_FORMAT_STRING.
*/
MPV_FORMAT_OSD_STRING = 2,
/**
* The basic type is int. The only allowed values are 0 ("no")
* and 1 ("yes").
*
* Example for reading:
*
* int result;
* if (mpv_get_property(ctx, "property", MPV_FORMAT_FLAG, &result) < 0)
* goto error;
* printf("%s\n", result ? "true" : "false");
*
* Example for writing:
*
* int flag = 1;
* mpv_set_property(ctx, "property", MPV_FORMAT_FLAG, &flag);
*/
MPV_FORMAT_FLAG = 3,
/**
* The basic type is int64_t.
*/
MPV_FORMAT_INT64 = 4,
/**
* The basic type is double.
*/
MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE = 5,
/**
* The type is mpv_node.
*
* For reading, you usually would pass a pointer to a stack-allocated
* mpv_node value to mpv, and when you're done you call
* mpv_free_node_contents(&node).
* You're expected not to write to the data - if you have to, copy it
* first (which you have to do manually).
*
* For writing, you construct your own mpv_node, and pass a pointer to the
* API. The API will never write to your data (and copy it if needed), so
* you're free to use any form of allocation or memory management you like.
*
* Warning: when reading, always check the mpv_node.format member. For
* example, properties might change their type in future versions
* of mpv, or sometimes even during runtime.
*
* Example for reading:
*
* mpv_node result;
* if (mpv_get_property(ctx, "property", MPV_FORMAT_NODE, &result) < 0)
* goto error;
* printf("format=%d\n", (int)result.format);
* mpv_free_node_contents(&result).
*
* Example for writing:
*
* mpv_node value;
* value.format = MPV_FORMAT_STRING;
* value.u.string = "hello";
* mpv_set_property(ctx, "property", MPV_FORMAT_NODE, &value);
*/
MPV_FORMAT_NODE = 6,
/**
* Used with mpv_node only. Can usually not be used directly.
*/
MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY = 7,
/**
* See MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY.
*/
MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP = 8,
/**
* A raw, untyped byte array. Only used only with mpv_node, and only in
* some very special situations. (Currently, only for the screenshot-raw
* command.)
*/
MPV_FORMAT_BYTE_ARRAY = 9
} mpv_format;
/**
* Generic data storage.
*
* If mpv writes this struct (e.g. via mpv_get_property()), you must not change
* the data. In some cases (mpv_get_property()), you have to free it with
* mpv_free_node_contents(). If you fill this struct yourself, you're also
* responsible for freeing it, and you must not call mpv_free_node_contents().
*/
typedef struct mpv_node {
union {
char *string; /** valid if format==MPV_FORMAT_STRING */
int flag; /** valid if format==MPV_FORMAT_FLAG */
int64_t int64; /** valid if format==MPV_FORMAT_INT64 */
double double_; /** valid if format==MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE */
/**
* valid if format==MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
* or if format==MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP
*/
struct mpv_node_list *list;
/**
* valid if format==MPV_FORMAT_BYTE_ARRAY
*/
struct mpv_byte_array *ba;
} u;
/**
* Type of the data stored in this struct. This value rules what members in
* the given union can be accessed. The following formats are currently
* defined to be allowed in mpv_node:
*
* MPV_FORMAT_STRING (u.string)
* MPV_FORMAT_FLAG (u.flag)
* MPV_FORMAT_INT64 (u.int64)
* MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE (u.double_)
* MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY (u.list)
* MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP (u.list)
* MPV_FORMAT_BYTE_ARRAY (u.ba)
* MPV_FORMAT_NONE (no member)
*
* If you encounter a value you don't know, you must not make any
* assumptions about the contents of union u.
*/
mpv_format format;
} mpv_node;
/**
* (see mpv_node)
*/
typedef struct mpv_node_list {
/**
* Number of entries. Negative values are not allowed.
*/
int num;
/**
* MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY:
* values[N] refers to value of the Nth item
*
* MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP:
* values[N] refers to value of the Nth key/value pair
*
* If num > 0, values[0] to values[num-1] (inclusive) are valid.
* Otherwise, this can be NULL.
*/
mpv_node *values;
/**
* MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY:
* unused (typically NULL), access is not allowed
*
* MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP:
* keys[N] refers to key of the Nth key/value pair. If num > 0, keys[0] to
* keys[num-1] (inclusive) are valid. Otherwise, this can be NULL.
* The keys are in random order. The only guarantee is that keys[N] belongs
* to the value values[N]. NULL keys are not allowed.
*/
char **keys;
} mpv_node_list;
/**
* (see mpv_node)
*/
typedef struct mpv_byte_array {
/**
* Pointer to the data. In what format the data is stored is up to whatever
* uses MPV_FORMAT_BYTE_ARRAY.
*/
void *data;
/**
* Size of the data pointed to by ptr.
*/
size_t size;
} mpv_byte_array;
/**
* Frees any data referenced by the node. It doesn't free the node itself.
* Call this only if the mpv client API set the node. If you constructed the
* node yourself (manually), you have to free it yourself.
*
* If node->format is MPV_FORMAT_NONE, this call does nothing. Likewise, if
* the client API sets a node with this format, this function doesn't need to
* be called. (This is just a clarification that there's no danger of anything
* strange happening in these cases.)
*/
void mpv_free_node_contents(mpv_node *node);
/**
* Set an option. Note that you can't normally set options during runtime. It
* works in uninitialized state (see mpv_create()), and in some cases in at
* runtime.
*
* Using a format other than MPV_FORMAT_NODE is equivalent to constructing a
* mpv_node with the given format and data, and passing the mpv_node to this
* function.
*
* Note: this is semi-deprecated. For most purposes, this is not needed anymore.
* Starting with mpv version 0.21.0 (version 1.23) most options can be set
* with mpv_set_property() (and related functions), and even before
* mpv_initialize(). In some obscure corner cases, using this function
* to set options might still be required (see below, and also section
* "Inconsistencies between options and properties" on the manpage). Once
* these are resolved, the option setting functions might be fully
* deprecated.
*
* The following options still need to be set either _before_
* mpv_initialize() with mpv_set_property() (or related functions), or
* with mpv_set_option() (or related functions) at any time:
* - options shadowed by deprecated properties:
* - demuxer (property deprecated in 0.21.0)
* - idle (property deprecated in 0.21.0)
* - fps (property deprecated in 0.21.0)
* - cache (property deprecated in 0.21.0)
* - length (property deprecated in 0.10.0)
* - audio-samplerate (property deprecated in 0.10.0)
* - audio-channels (property deprecated in 0.10.0)
* - audio-format (property deprecated in 0.10.0)
* - deprecated options shadowed by properties:
* - chapter (option deprecated in 0.21.0)
* - playlist-pos (option deprecated in 0.21.0)
* The deprecated properties were removed in mpv 0.23.0.
*
* @param name Option name. This is the same as on the mpv command line, but
* without the leading "--".
* @param format see enum mpv_format.
* @param[in] data Option value (according to the format).
* @return error code
*/
int mpv_set_option(mpv_handle *ctx, const char *name, mpv_format format,
void *data);
/**
* Convenience function to set an option to a string value. This is like
* calling mpv_set_option() with MPV_FORMAT_STRING.
*
* @return error code
*/
int mpv_set_option_string(mpv_handle *ctx, const char *name, const char *data);
/**
* Send a command to the player. Commands are the same as those used in
* input.conf, except that this function takes parameters in a pre-split
* form.
*
* The commands and their parameters are documented in input.rst.
*
* Does not use OSD and string expansion by default (unlike mpv_command_string()
* and input.conf).
*
* @param[in] args NULL-terminated list of strings. Usually, the first item
* is the command, and the following items are arguments.
* @return error code
*/
int mpv_command(mpv_handle *ctx, const char **args);
/**
* Same as mpv_command(), but allows passing structured data in any format.
* In particular, calling mpv_command() is exactly like calling
* mpv_command_node() with the format set to MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY, and
* every arg passed in order as MPV_FORMAT_STRING.
*
* Does not use OSD and string expansion by default.
*
* The args argument can have one of the following formats:
*
* MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY:
* Positional arguments. Each entry is an argument using an arbitrary
* format (the format must be compatible to the used command). Usually,
* the first item is the command name (as MPV_FORMAT_STRING). The order
* of arguments is as documented in each command description.
*
* MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP:
* Named arguments. This requires at least an entry with the key "name"
* to be present, which must be a string, and contains the command name.
* The special entry "_flags" is optional, and if present, must be an
* array of strings, each being a command prefix to apply. All other
* entries are interpreted as arguments. They must use the argument names
* as documented in each command description. Some commands do not
* support named arguments at all, and must use MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY.
*
* @param[in] args mpv_node with format set to one of the values documented
* above (see there for details)
* @param[out] result Optional, pass NULL if unused. If not NULL, and if the
* function succeeds, this is set to command-specific return
* data. You must call mpv_free_node_contents() to free it
* (again, only if the command actually succeeds).
* Not many commands actually use this at all.
* @return error code (the result parameter is not set on error)
*/
int mpv_command_node(mpv_handle *ctx, mpv_node *args, mpv_node *result);
/**
* This is essentially identical to mpv_command() but it also returns a result.
*
* Does not use OSD and string expansion by default.
*
* @param[in] args NULL-terminated list of strings. Usually, the first item
* is the command, and the following items are arguments.
* @param[out] result Optional, pass NULL if unused. If not NULL, and if the
* function succeeds, this is set to command-specific return
* data. You must call mpv_free_node_contents() to free it
* (again, only if the command actually succeeds).
* Not many commands actually use this at all.
* @return error code (the result parameter is not set on error)
*/
int mpv_command_ret(mpv_handle *ctx, const char **args, mpv_node *result);
/**
* Same as mpv_command, but use input.conf parsing for splitting arguments.
* This is slightly simpler, but also more error prone, since arguments may
* need quoting/escaping.
*
* This also has OSD and string expansion enabled by default.
*/
int mpv_command_string(mpv_handle *ctx, const char *args);