Mercurial > mplayer.hg
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author | diego |
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date | Thu, 23 Sep 2004 10:42:13 +0000 |
parents | 252fb0cf331a |
children | f3d7a1b58a82 |
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How work the playtree ? Good question, I try to explain but note that it's the first doc I write :) First there is two things. The playtree itself and the iterator. The playtree represent the data and the iterator is used by mplayer to go from entry to entry. First the play_tree struct : struct play_tree { play_tree_t* parent; play_tree_t* child; play_tree_t* next; play_tree_t* prev; play_tree_param_t* params; int loop; char** files; int entry_type; }; The play_tree_t* hold the links in the 4 directions, the params hold all parameters of this entry, loop is obvious (loop < 0 mean infint loop), files hold all the files of this entry and entry_type obviously tell the type of this entry (Node, file, dvd, vcd ot tv). An entry can hold more than one file, why ? Because an entry can be a network stream and usually you have more than one server. But all send the same thing, so it's only on entry with sevral sources. Then how do I use this stuff ? First you create an entry using the play_tree_new func. This create the struct and fill it with defaults values. Then this can become a node or a leaf. It will become a node as soon as you link it to another one using either play_tree_set_child or play_tree_set_parent. Or it will become a leaf as soon as you use play_tree_add_file on it. If an entry contain at least one file it can't become an node (an assert will be raised) and if en entry has a child you can't add file to (here also an assert will be raised). Then to create a list of entry you should use play_tree_append_entry, play_tree_prepend_entry or play_tree_insert_entry. In all this function you can use any entry of the the list as first argument, no need that it's the first one. The same apply when you set the child of a node, the child argument can be any entry in a list. To remove an entry from the tree use play_tree_remove. If the second arg (free_it) is true it will also free it, if the entry should be freed and the third arg is true it will also free the childs. When your tree is ready you can then use play_tree_cleanup to remove all unuseful entries. If you want to load a playlist you can use parse_playtree which take a stream_t as argument or parse_playlist_file which take a filename as argument. Both function will return NULL in case of failure or a new (cleaned) tree that you can add somewhere in your tree. How do I add DVD, VCD or TV entry to the tree ? You should use some virtual URL as filename like : dvd://x where x is the title number. vcd://x where x is the track number tv://x where x is the channel My playtree is ready now, what with this play_tree_iter ? This is an iterator used to go trough the tree. It handle itself loop of list and setting mplayer config according to the params of each entry. It's created with play_tree_iter_new which take as argument a play_tree_t and an m_config_t which is then used to set/unset the params of each entry. After creation the iter point to nothing, you should init with a first step. To go to another entry in the list you should use play_tree_iter_step. The second argument is the direction of the step : positive value go frontward, negative go backward and 0 don't move. The third tell if must care of node or not. If it's true, the iterator will stop on nodes, otherwise it go to the next valid entry. This function return different values : PLAY_TREE_ITER_ERROR : obvious PLAY_TREE_ITER_ENTRY : we are now on an entry PLAY_TREE_ITER_NODE : we are now on a node PLAY_TREE_ITER_END : we are now at end (( Note : I must add a PLAY_TREE_ITER_BEGINING for the begining. Don't know what it will return in a such case. PLAY_TREE_ITER_ERROR ? )) There is also play_tree_iter_up_step which can be used to break a loop or skip the current list. The argument are the same than play_tree_iter_step. The difference is that it go back to parent of the current list, and then step according to the arguments. Then when your iter returned PLAY_TREE_ITER_ENTRY you can use play_tree_iter_get_file to get the file. If you call it more than one time it will return the next file for this entry or loop trough the list if no more file are available. You can now how many files are available using iter->num_files and which one it returned using iter->file. In case the entry is a DVD, VCD or TV channel the returned string is not a filename but "DVD title x", "VCD track x" or "TV channel x". To distinc those case from a normal file you can check iter->tree->entry_type. It will contain one of PLAY_TREE_ENTRY_DVD, PLAY_TREE_ENTRY_VCD, PLAY_TREE_ENTRY_TV or PLAY_TREE_ENTRY_FILE. If you need to make some check with the iter, such as will next entry be valid, etc You must create a clone with play_tree_iter_new_copy. This iter will not affect the config, so you can do all you want with it. Then when you have finish with the iter free it with play_tree_iter_free. Ok, that's all for now. To have some exemples look into mplayer.c ;) First just after config parsing, the iterator is created there. Also after stream opening, in case the stream is a playlist it replace the entry which contained the playlist by the result of the parsing. In the event handeling it check if a step can be done, etc. And finnaly at the end it go the next entry. Suggestion, flames, etc about this doc must go to albeu@free.fr