Mercurial > mplayer.hg
view DOCS/tech/codecs.conf.txt @ 15258:c2979462805a
fixed wrong function pointers definitions
author | nicodvb |
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date | Mon, 25 Apr 2005 06:46:30 +0000 |
parents | e2a4a2ce54a8 |
children | 5ee9424d58f3 |
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Understanding MPlayer's etc/codecs.conf File Introduction ------------ MPlayer features a very flexible codec architecture which allows it to use its own open source codecs, as well as open source libraries, Win32 codec DLLs, and XAnim binary codec modules. To the MPlayer user, the most visible piece of this architecture is the etc/codecs.conf file. This is a text-based configuration file that controls which MPlayer components are in charge of handling particular compressed data formats. The codecs.conf file is stored either in a shared directory for all system users to access, or in the .mplayer directory in a user's home directory. When MPlayer starts, it first looks for a codecs.conf file in a user's home directory. Failing that, it searches for the shared file. If no codecs.conf file is found MPlayer falls back on its internal hardcoded configuration. If the file is present but has syntax errors, MPlayer will report the error. The codecs.conf file is really quite simple. It is simply a collection of codec definition blocks that define how different media types should be handled. There are a number of keywords that can occur in a block. Not all of them are required and no particular order is enforced. Editing codecs.conf ------------------- You can edit codecs.conf using your favorite text editor. Anything that comes after a semicolon (;) on a line is regarded as a comment. For example: ; this is a comment format 0x34616d69 ; "ima4" (MOV files) The codec blocks can be in any order; the file parser doesn't care. However, they are organized in a particular order for the benefit of human readers. For example, all of the open source decoders that MPlayer implements natively are grouped in one section. Release Number -------------- Your codecs.conf now requires a release number to avoid codec release incompatibilities. The format is simple: (YYYYMMDD) release 20020520 Whenever changes are made to the codecs that *require* an updated codecs.conf, then MPlayer will no longer accept outdated versions. It is not recommended to change this line unless you know exactly what you are doing. Video Codecs ------------ Let's jump right in with an example. Here is an example video codec block: videocodec indeo5ds info "Intel Indeo 5" status working fourcc IV50,iv50 driver dshow dll "ir50_32.dll" guid 0x30355649, 0x0000, 0x0010, 0x80, 0x00, 0x00, 0xaa, 0x00, 0x38, 0x9b, 0x71 out YV12 out YUY2 out BGR32,BGR24,BGR16,BGR15 This is a particularly full-featured video codec. The "videocodec" keyword identifies the fact that this is the start of a new video codec. "indeo5ds" is MPlayer's unique name for the codec. You have to use this name with the -vc/-ac option. The next line has the keyword "info" which specifies a human-readable comment accompanying this codec. This is printed by -vc help / -ac help. The "status" keyword carries information about the codec's functional status. MPlayer currently recognizes 4 status levels: working, buggy, crashing, and untested. When it gets to codec auto-selection, it tries untested first (to force users to test it for us and report results :)), then working and finally buggy ones. Codecs marked crashing won't be tried, unless explicitly (-vc/-ac) selected. The next line lists 4-character codes (FOURCCs) that are associated with this codec. There can be more than one FOURCC specified on a fourcc line as long as they are separated with a comma. There can also be multiple fourcc lines in the codec. A second fourcc can also be given, separated with a space. MPlayer will replace the original fourcc in the headers with this one before opening the codec. It's useful for win32 codecs checking for the fourccs. The "driver" keyword associates this codec with an internal MPlayer decoder module. MPlayer has a module named "dshow" that handles data encoded by the codec. See -vfm help / -afm help for the available module list. The "dll" keyword specifies which Win32/XAnim/Real binary module needs to be loaded in order to handle the specific media type. This keyword is usually only used in conjunction with the dshow, vfw, acm, xanim and real drivers since they all manage communication with binary-only modules. The "guid" keyword identifies a 16-byte Microsoft GUID that some media files use to identify codecs. Used only for win32 dshow and DMO codecs. The "out" keyword identifies which output format the decoder is known to provide. Just like the fourcc line, there can be multiple out lines or multiple comma-separated output formats on the same line. The output formats should be listed in order of preference. The outfmt values can be followed by one or more flags, like flip, noflip, static, query. The flags are defined as follows: "flip": If this flag is set for a given format, then o_bih->biHeight will NOT be set to -bih->biHeight, i.e. the image will be decoded upside-down. Used only by vfw and vfwex codecs. "noflip": This flag is ignored (no effect) without "flip" being set! If this flag is set, it means the codec doesn't decode upside-down, although it's told to do so. "yuvhack": This flag is required for the old win32 ms-mpeg4 vfw codecs, including MP42 and DIV3 (DivX 3.11). These DLLs actually support YUV formats, but the query/begin functions are buggy and don't accept YUV fourccs (the decode function accepts it and works well!) If this flag is set, then o_bih->biCompression will be set to 0 for the initialization for the YUV modes. Used only by vfw/vfwex codecs. "query": This flag is used to control VDCTRL_QUERY_FORMAT for vfw/vfewx codecs. If this flag is set, the control() will query the codec for the csp support, otherwise it will assume a constant csp table. Required for some DLLs (like huffyuv, CRAM). "static", This flag forces STATIC (instead of TEMP) buffer allocation for the codec. Used for some very old DLLs like Indeo 3 and for some XAnim codecs like cinepak. See dr-methods.txt for details on buffer types. Audio Codecs ------------ Here is an example of a rather full-featured audio codec block: audiocodec mp3 info "MPEG layer-2, layer-3" status working comment "Optimized to MMX/SSE/3Dnow!" format 0x50 format 0x55 format 0x33706d2e ; ".mp3" CBR/VBR MP3 (MOV files) format 0x5500736d ; "ms\0\x55" older mp3 fcc (MOV files) driver mp3lib dll "mp3lib (mpglib)" flags seekable Many of the keywords are the same as a video codec block. However, we see a few that we haven't seen before. The "comment" keyword identifies another human-readable note for this codec. The "format" keyword performs a similar job as the fourcc line. However, since certain media file formats (notably AVI) identify audio formats with 16-bit numbers rather than 32-bit FOURCCs, it's necessary to use this convention to accommodate them. However, as shown in this example, FOURCCs can also be specified with the format keyword as long as they're converted to their hex representation. It's important to note that this can be useful for video codecs as well if a FOURCC contains a space (such as Apple's "rle " codec). The "flags" keywords identifies any additional abilities of this codec. Currently, seekable is the only supported flag. EOF