Mercurial > mplayer.hg
view DOCS/tech/vop.txt @ 9122:5ba896a38d75
The two attached patches *should* allow for proper
compilation of the AltiVec stuff on both Darwin
and non-Darwin system. They've only been tested
for compilation on Debian using Debian's gcc-3.2.
Romain Dolbeau <dolbeau@irisa.fr>
author | arpi |
---|---|
date | Mon, 27 Jan 2003 21:47:25 +0000 |
parents | ce4b79769b88 |
children | e93a0dd3ed56 |
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VideoOutPlugins - Video Filters =============== video filters are plugin-like code modules implementing the interface defined in vf.h basically it means video output manipulation, ie. these plugins can modify the image and the image properties (size, colorspace etc) between the video decoders (vd.h) and output layer (libvo or video encoders) the actual API is a mixture of the video decoder (vd.h) and libvo (video_out.h) APIs. the main differences: - vf plugins may be "loaded" multiple times, with different parameters and context - it's new in mplayer, old APIs weren't reentrant - vf plugins don't have to implement all functions - all funcs has 'fallback' version, so the plugins only override these if want - each vf plugin has its own get_image context, and they can interchange images/buffers using these get_image/put_image calls. API details: -- TO DO -- (see vf.h fpr API and vf_*.c for examples) Current plugins: ================ -vop crop[=w:h:x:y] Simple cropping plugin. w,h (cropped width,height) defaults to original width,height x,y (position of cropped subimage on the original image) defaults to center MPI: EXPORT only, using stride manipulation -vop expand[=w:h:x:y:o] Expanding _and_ (optional) OSD rendering plugin. w,h (expanded width,height) defaults (-1) to original width,height x,y (position of original image on the expanded image) defaults (-1) to center o (0=disable/1=enable SUB/OSD rendering) defaults (0) to disabled MPI: DR (if possible) or copy Special: mpcodecs core uses it to solve stride restrictions between filters mencoder uses (autoload) it to render SUB/OSD -vop flip Flips image upside-down (vertical mirroring) No parameters. MPI: DR (if possible) or EXPORT, using stride manipulation Special: dec_video autoloads it when flipping is required and libvo can't do -vop mirror Horizontal mirroring No parameters. MPI: TEMP -vop rectangle[=w:h:x:y] Draw a rectangle. Useful for testing crop plugin parameters. w,h (rectangle's width and height) defaults (-1) to maximum possible width while keeping the boundaries visible. x,y (rectangle's top left corner position) defauts (-1) to upper left most position. The plugin responds to the input.conf directive "change_control" that takes two parameters. The first parameter can be 0 for w, 1 for h, 2 for x or 3 for y. The second parameter is the amount to change the designated rectangle boundary. MPI: TEMP, accepts stride -vop rotate[=x] Rotate image +/- 90 degrees Optional 'x' parameter (0..3) controls horizontal and vertical mirroring MPI: TEMP -vop scale[=w:h[:c[:p]]] Software scaling (zoom) _and_ yuv<->rgb colorspace conversion w,h (new width/height after scaling) defaults to original width,height note: if -zoom is used, and underlaying filters (including libvo) uncapable of scaling, then it defaults to d_width/d_height ! note 2: w/h values -1 means original width/height, 0 means scaled d_width/d_height. -2/-3 means calculating w or h using the other dimension and the original (-3) or prescaled (-2) aspect ratio. c chroma skipping 0 -> use all available input lines for chroma 1 -> use only every 2. input line for chroma 2 -> use only every 4. input line for chroma 3 -> use only every 8. input line for chroma p scaling parameter (depends upon the used scaling method) for -sws 2 (bicubic) its sharpness (0 (soft) - 100 (sharp)) for -sws 7 (gaussian) its sharpness (0 (soft) - 100 (sharp)) for -sws 9 (lanczos) its filter length (1 - 10) MPI: TEMP, accepts stride Special: dec_video and mpcodecs core autoloads it for colorspace conv. -vop yuy2 Forced software YV12/I420 -> YUY2 conversion (usefull for video cards/drivers with slow YV12 but fast YUY2 support) MPI: TEMP, accepts stride -vop rgb2bgr[=swap] RGB 24/32 <-> BGR 24/32 colorspace conversion (default) or RGB 24/32 <-> RGB 24/32 conversion with R<->B swapping ('swap' option) MPI: TEMP, accepts stride -vop palette RGB/BGR 8 -> RGB/BGR 15/16/24/32 colorspace conversion using palette MPI: TEMP, accepts stride -vop format[=fourcc] _restrict_ the list of supported colorspaces (query-format()) to a single, given fourcc. The 'fourcc' option defaults to 'yuy2', but may be any format name, like rgb15, bgr24, yv12 etc... note again, it does NOT do any conversion, it just limits the _next_ plugins format list. MPI: passthru -vop pp=[<filterName>[:<option>[:<option>...]][/[-]<filterName>[:<option>...]]...] Postprocessing filter. (usefull for codecs without built-in postprocessing, like libmpeg12 or libavcodec) see `mplayer -vop pp=help` MPI: DR (if possible) or TEMP Special: dec_video autoloads it if -pp option used but codec can't do pp. -vop lavc[=quality:fps] Fast software YV12->MPEG1 conversion, usefull for dxr3/dvb drivers It uses libavcodec. Currently faster and better quality than -vop fame! Param quality: fixed qscale (1<=quality<32) or bitrate (32<=quality KBits) Param fps: force output fps (float value). If not give, or 0, it's autodetected based on height (240,480->29.97fps, others -> 25fps) MPI: EXPORT special -vop fame Fast software YV12->MPEG1 conversion, usefull for dxr3/dvb drivers It uses libfame. MPI: EXPORT special -vop dvbscale[=aspect] Setup scaling to the optimal values for the DVB card. (use HW for X-scaling, calc sw Y scaling to keep aspect) The 'aspect' parameter controls aspect ratio, it should be calculated as aspect=DVB_HEIGHT*ASPECTRATIO, default is 576*(4/3)=768 (for 16:9 TV set it to 576*(16/9)=1024) It's only usefull together with expand+scale: -vop lavc,expand=-1:576:-1:-1:1,scale=-1:0,dvbscale MPI: passthru -vop cropdetect[=limit] It's a special filter, it doesn't alter the image itself, but detects (using some kind of heuristics) the black borders/bands of the image, and prints the optimal -vop crop= parameters to the stdout/console. It calculates the average value of pixel luminances for a line, and depending on the result it's either black band (result<=limit) or picture (result>limit). Optional parameter 'limit' defaults to 24. MPI: EXPORT -vop test[=first frame number] generate various test patterns MPI: TEMP, accepts stride -vop noise[=lumaNoise[u][t|a][h]:chromaNoise[u][t|a][h] add noise 0<= lumaNoise, chromaNoise <=100 u uniform noise (gaussian otherwise) t temporal noise (noise pattern changes between frames) a averaged temporal (smoother, but a lot slower) h high quality (slightly better looking, slightly slower) p mix random noise with a (semi)regular pattern MPI: DR (if possible) or TEMP, accepts stride -vop eq[=brightness:contrast] software equalizer, for use with cards that don't support brightness and contrast controls in hardware. It might also be useful with mencoder, either for fixing poorly captured movies, or for slightly reducing contrast to mask artifacts and get by with lower bitrates. Initial values in the range -100..100 may be given on the command line, and the eq filter is controllable interactively just like with normal hardware equalizer controls. -vop unsharp=l|cWxH:amount[:l|cWxH:amount] unsharp mask / gaussian blur. l apply effect on luma component c apply effect on chroma components WxH width and height of the matrix, odd sized in both directions min = 3x3, max = 13x11 or 11x13 usually you will use somthing between 3x3 and 7x7 amount relative amount of sharpness / blur to add to the image amount < 0 = blur, amount > 0 = sharpen usually you will use something between -1.5 and 1.5 MPI: DR (if possible) or TEMP, accepts stride -vop swapuv swap U & V plane MPI: EXPORT -vop il=[d|i][s][:[d|i][s]] (de)interleaves lines d deinterleave i interleave s swap fields (exchange even & odd lines) The goal of this filter to add ability of processing interlaced images pre-field without deinterlacing it. You can filter your interlaced dvd and playback on TV without breaking the interlacing. While deinterlacing (with the post processing filter) removes permamently the interlacing (by smoothing averaging etc) deinterleaving splits the frame into 2 fields (so called half pictures), so you can process (filter) them independently and then re-interleave them. MPI: TEMP, accepts stride -vop boxblur=radius:power[:radius:power] radius size of the filter power how often the filter should be applied MPI: TEMP, accepts stride -vop sab=radius:prefilter:colorDiff[:radius:prefilter:colorDiff] radius blur filter strength (~0.1-4.0) (slower if larger) prefilter prefilter strength (~0.1-2.0) colorDiff how different the pixels are allowed to be to be considered (~0.1-100.0) -vop smartblur=radius:stregth:threshold[:radius:stregth:threshold] radius blur filter strength (~0.1-5.0) (slower if larger) strength (0.0-1.0) -> blur, (-1.0-0.0) -> sharpen threshold 0 -> filter all, (0-30) -> filter flat areas, (-30-0) -> filter edges -vop perspective=x0:y0:x1:y1:x2:y2:x3:y3:t x0,y0,... coordinates of the topleft, topright, bottomleft, bottomright corners t 0-> linear, 1->cubic resampling