view sub_cc.c @ 29855:5e279f7d7e5d

Remember which subtitle was auto-selected for dvdnav due to -slang and if it is unchanged re-apply -slang on stream reset. This makes -slang work when used with menu navigation or in general when the subtitle is not available for parts of the playback or the subtitle stream ID changes during playback.
author reimar
date Wed, 11 Nov 2009 11:22:12 +0000
parents 0f1b5b68af32
children c1a3f1bbba26
line wrap: on
line source

/*
 * decoder for Closed Captions
 *
 * This decoder relies on MPlayer's OSD to display subtitles.
 * Be warned that decoding is somewhat preliminary, though it basically works.
 *
 * Most notably, only the text information is decoded as of now, discarding
 * color, background and position info (see source below).
 *
 * by Matteo Giani
 *
 * uses source from the xine closed captions decoder
 */


#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>

#include "config.h"
#include "sub_cc.h"

#include "subreader.h"

#include "libvo/video_out.h"
#include "libvo/sub.h"


#define CC_MAX_LINE_LENGTH 64

static char chartbl[128];

static subtitle buf1,buf2;
static subtitle *fb,*bb;

static unsigned int cursor_pos=0;

static int initialized=0;

#define CC_ROLLON 1
#define CC_ROLLUP 2

static int cc_mode=CC_ROLLON;
static int cc_lines=4; ///< number of visible rows in CC roll-up mode, not used in CC roll-on mode

static void display_buffer(subtitle * buf);

static void build_char_table(void)
{
  int i;
  /* first the normal ASCII codes */
  for (i = 0; i < 128; i++)
    chartbl[i] = (char) i;
  /* now the special codes */
  chartbl[0x2a] = 'á';
  chartbl[0x5c] = 'é';
  chartbl[0x5e] = 'í';
  chartbl[0x5f] = 'ó';
  chartbl[0x60] = 'ú';
  chartbl[0x7b] = 'ç';
  chartbl[0x7c] = '÷';
  chartbl[0x7d] = 'Ñ';
  chartbl[0x7e] = 'ñ';
  chartbl[0x7f] = '¤';    /* FIXME: this should be a solid block */
}

static void clear_buffer(subtitle *buf)
{
	int i;
	buf->lines=0;
	for(i=0;i<SUB_MAX_TEXT;i++) if(buf->text[i]) {free(buf->text[i]);buf->text[i]=NULL;}
}


/**
 \brief scroll buffer one line up
 \param buf buffer to scroll
*/
static void scroll_buffer(subtitle* buf)
{
	int i;

	while(buf->lines > cc_lines)
	{
		if(buf->text[0]) free(buf->text[0]);

		for(i = 0; i < (buf->lines - 1); i++) buf->text[i] = buf->text[i+1];

		buf->text[buf->lines-1] = NULL;
		buf->lines--;
	}
}


void subcc_init(void)
{
	int i;
	//printf("subcc_init(): initing...\n");
	build_char_table();
	for(i=0;i<SUB_MAX_TEXT;i++) {buf1.text[i]=buf2.text[i]=NULL;}
	buf1.lines=buf2.lines=0;
	fb=&buf1;
	bb=&buf2;

	initialized=1;
}

static void append_char(char c)
{
	if(!bb->lines) {bb->lines++; cursor_pos=0;}
	if(bb->text[bb->lines - 1]==NULL)
	{
		bb->text[bb->lines - 1]=malloc(CC_MAX_LINE_LENGTH);
		memset(bb->text[bb->lines - 1],0,CC_MAX_LINE_LENGTH);
		cursor_pos=0;
	}

	if(c=='\n')
	{
		if(cursor_pos>0 && bb->lines < SUB_MAX_TEXT)
		{
			bb->lines++;cursor_pos=0;
			if(cc_mode==CC_ROLLUP){ //Carriage return - scroll buffer one line up
				bb->text[bb->lines - 1]=calloc(1, CC_MAX_LINE_LENGTH);
				scroll_buffer(bb);
			}
		}
	}
	else
	{
		if(cursor_pos==CC_MAX_LINE_LENGTH-1)
		{
			fprintf(stderr,"CC: append_char() reached CC_MAX_LINE_LENGTH!\n");
			return;
		}
		bb->text[bb->lines - 1][cursor_pos++]=c;
	}
	//In CC roll-up mode data should be shown immediately
	if(cc_mode==CC_ROLLUP) display_buffer(bb);
}


static void swap_buffers(void)
{
	subtitle *foo;
	foo=fb;
	fb=bb;
	bb=foo;
}

static void display_buffer(subtitle * buf)
{
	vo_sub=buf;
	vo_osd_changed(OSDTYPE_SUBTITLE);
}


static void cc_decode_EIA608(unsigned short int data)
{

  static unsigned short int lastcode=0x0000;
  unsigned char c1 = data & 0x7f;
  unsigned char c2 = (data >> 8) & 0x7f;

  if (c1 & 0x60) {		/* normal character, 0x20 <= c1 <= 0x7f */
	   append_char(chartbl[c1]);
	   if(c2 & 0x60)	/*c2 might not be a normal char even if c1 is*/
		   append_char(chartbl[c2]);
  }
  else if (c1 & 0x10)		// control code / special char
  {
//	  int channel= (c1 & 0x08) >> 3;
	  c1&=~0x08;
	  if(data!=lastcode)
	  {
	  	if(c2 & 0x40) {	/*PAC, Preamble Address Code */
			append_char('\n'); /*FIXME properly interpret PACs*/
		}
		else
			switch(c1)
			{
				case 0x10:	break; // ext attribute
				case 0x11:
					if((c2 & 0x30)==0x30)
					{
						//printf("[debug]:Special char (ignored)\n");
						/*cc_decode_special_char()*/;
					}
					else if (c2 & 0x20)
					{
						//printf("[debug]: midrow_attr (ignored)\n");
						/*cc_decode_midrow_attr()*/;
					}
					break;
				case 0x14:
					switch(c2)
					{
						case 0x00: //CC roll-on mode
							   cc_mode=CC_ROLLON;
							   break;
						case 0x25: //CC roll-up, 2 rows
						case 0x26: //CC roll-up, 3 rows
						case 0x27: //CC roll-up, 4 rows
							   cc_lines=c2-0x23;
							   cc_mode=CC_ROLLUP;
							   break;
						case 0x2C: display_buffer(NULL); //EDM
							   clear_buffer(fb); break;
						case 0x2d: append_char('\n');	//carriage return
							   break;
						case 0x2e: clear_buffer(bb);	//ENM
							   break;
						case 0x2f: swap_buffers();	//Swap buffers
							   display_buffer(fb);
							   clear_buffer(bb);
							   break;
					}
					break;
				case 0x17:
					if( c2>=0x21 && c2<=0x23) //TAB
					{
						break;
					}
			}
	  }
  }
  lastcode=data;
}

static void subcc_decode(unsigned char *inputbuffer, unsigned int inputlength)
{
  /* The first number may denote a channel number. I don't have the
   * EIA-708 standard, so it is hard to say.
   * From what I could figure out so far, the general format seems to be:
   *
   * repeat
   *
   *   0xfe starts 2 byte sequence of unknown purpose. It might denote
   *        field #2 in line 21 of the VBI. We'll ignore it for the
   *        time being.
   *
   *   0xff starts 2 byte EIA-608 sequence, field #1 in line 21 of the VBI.
   *        Followed by a 3-code triplet that starts either with 0xff or
   *        0xfe. In either case, the following triplet needs to be ignored
   *        for line 21, field 1.
   *
   *   0x00 is padding, followed by 2 more 0x00.
   *
   *   0x01 always seems to appear at the beginning, always seems to
   *        be followed by 0xf8, 8-bit number.
   *        The lower 7 bits of this 8-bit number seem to denote the
   *        number of code triplets that follow.
   *        The most significant bit denotes whether the Line 21 field 1
   *        captioning information is at odd or even triplet offsets from this
   *        beginning triplet. 1 denotes odd offsets, 0 denotes even offsets.
   *
   *        Most captions are encoded with odd offsets, so this is what we
   *        will assume.
   *
   * until end of packet
   */
  unsigned char *current = inputbuffer;
  unsigned int curbytes = 0;
  unsigned char data1, data2;
  unsigned char cc_code;
  int odd_offset = 1;

  while (curbytes < inputlength) {
    int skip = 2;

    cc_code = *(current);

    if (inputlength - curbytes < 2) {
#ifdef LOG_DEBUG
      fprintf(stderr, "Not enough data for 2-byte CC encoding\n");
#endif
      break;
    }

    data1 = *(current+1);
    data2 = *(current + 2);
    current++; curbytes++;

    switch (cc_code) {
    case 0xfe:
      /* expect 2 byte encoding (perhaps CC3, CC4?) */
      /* ignore for time being */
      skip = 2;
      break;

    case 0xff:
      /* expect EIA-608 CC1/CC2 encoding */
      // FIXME check parity!
      // Parity check omitted assuming we are reading from a DVD and therefore
      // we should encounter no "transmission errors".
      cc_decode_EIA608(data1 | (data2 << 8));
      skip = 5;
      break;

    case 0x00:
      /* This seems to be just padding */
      skip = 2;
      break;

    case 0x01:
      odd_offset = data2 & 0x80;
      if (odd_offset)
	skip = 2;
      else
	skip = 5;
      break;

    default:
//#ifdef LOG_DEBUG
      fprintf(stderr, "Unknown CC encoding: %x\n", cc_code);
//#endif
      skip = 2;
      break;
    }
    current += skip;
    curbytes += skip;
  }
}


void subcc_process_data(unsigned char *inputdata,unsigned int len)
{
	if(!subcc_enabled) return;
	if(!initialized) subcc_init();

	subcc_decode(inputdata, len);
}