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author | gpoirier |
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date | Sun, 26 Sep 2004 10:21:17 +0000 |
parents | e0e3eaae127f |
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?> <!-- $Revision$ --> <chapter id="ports" xreflabel="Ports"> <title>Ports</title> <sect1 id="linux"> <title>Linux</title> <para> The main development platform is Linux on x86, although <application>MPlayer</application> works on many other Linux ports. Binary packages of <application>MPlayer</application> are available from several sources. However, <emphasis role="bold">none of these packages are supported</emphasis>. Report problems to the authors, not to us. </para> <sect2 id="debian"> <title>Debian packaging</title> <para> To build a Debian package, run the following command in the <application>MPlayer</application> source directory: <screen>fakeroot debian/rules binary</screen> As root you can then install the <filename>.deb</filename> package as usual: <screen>dpkg -i ../mplayer_<replaceable>version</replaceable>.deb</screen> </para> <para> Christian Marillat has been making unofficial Debian <application>MPlayer</application>, <application>MEncoder</application> and font packages for a while, you can (apt-)get them from his <ulink url="http://marillat.free.fr/">homepage</ulink>. </para> </sect2> <sect2 id="rpm"> <title>RPM packaging</title> <para> Dominik Mierzejewski created and maintains official Red Hat RPM packages of <application>MPlayer</application>. They are available from his <ulink url="http://greysector.rangers.eu.org/mplayer.html">homepage</ulink>. </para> <para> Mandrake RPM packages are available from the <ulink url="http://plf.zarb.org/">P.L.F.</ulink>. SuSE used to include a crippled version of <application>MPlayer</application> in their distribution. They have removed it in their latest releases. You can get working RPMs from <ulink url="http://packman.links2linux.de/?action=128">links2linux.de</ulink>. </para> </sect2> <sect2 id="arm"> <title>ARM</title> <para> <application>MPlayer</application> works on Linux PDAs with ARM CPU e.g. Sharp Zaurus, Compaq Ipaq. The easiest way to obtain <application>MPlayer</application> is to get it from one of the <ulink url="http://www.openzaurus.org">OpenZaurus</ulink> package feeds. If you want to compile it yourself, you should look at the <ulink url="http://openzaurus.bkbits.net:8080/buildroot/src/packages/mplayer?nav=index.html|src/.|src/packages">mplayer</ulink> and the <ulink url="http://openzaurus.bkbits.net:8080/buildroot/src/packages/libavcodec?nav=index.html|src/.|src/packages">libavcodec</ulink> directory in the OpenZaurus distribution buildroot. These always have the latest Makefile and patches used for building a CVS <application>MPlayer</application> with <systemitem class="library">libavcodec</systemitem>. If you need a GUI frontend, you can use xmms-embedded. </para> </sect2> </sect1> <sect1 id="bsd"> <title>*BSD</title> <para> <application>MPlayer</application> runs on FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, BSD/OS and Darwin. There are ports/pkgsrc/fink/etc versions of <application>MPlayer</application> available that are probably easier to use than our raw sources. </para> <para> To build <application>MPlayer</application> you will need GNU make (gmake - native BSD make will not work) and a recent version of binutils. </para> <para> If <application>MPlayer</application> complains about not finding <filename>/dev/cdrom</filename> or <filename>/dev/dvd</filename>, create an appropriate symbolic link: <screen>ln -s /dev/<replaceable>your_cdrom_device</replaceable> /dev/cdrom</screen> </para> <para> To use Win32 DLLs with <application>MPlayer</application> you will need to re-compile the kernel with "<envar>option USER_LDT</envar>" (unless you run FreeBSD-CURRENT, where this is the default). </para> <sect2 id="freebsd"> <title>FreeBSD</title> <para> If your CPU has SSE, recompile your kernel with "<envar>options CPU_ENABLE_SSE</envar>" (FreeBSD-STABLE or kernel patches required). </para> </sect2> <sect2 id="openbsd"> <title>OpenBSD</title> <para> Due to limitations in different versions of gas (relocation vs MMX), you will need to compile in two steps: First make sure that the non-native as is first in your <envar>$PATH</envar> and do a <command>gmake -k</command>, then make sure that the native version is used and do <command>gmake</command>. </para> <para> As of OpenBSD 3.4 the hack above is no longer needed. </para> </sect2> <sect2 id="darwin"> <title>Darwin</title> <para> See the <link linkend="macos">Mac OS</link> section. </para> </sect2> </sect1> <sect1 id="solaris"> <title>Sun Solaris</title> <para> <application>MPlayer</application> should work on Solaris 2.6 or newer. </para> <para> On <emphasis role="bold">UltraSPARCs</emphasis>, <application>MPlayer</application> takes advantage of their <emphasis role="bold">VIS</emphasis> extensions (equivalent to MMX), currently only in <systemitem class="library">libmpeg2</systemitem>, <systemitem class="library">libvo</systemitem> and <systemitem class="library">libavcodec</systemitem>, but not in <systemitem class="library">mp3lib</systemitem>. You can watch a VOB file on a 400MHz CPU. You'll need <ulink url="http://www.sun.com/sparc/vis/mediaLib.html"><systemitem class="library">mLib</systemitem></ulink> installed. </para> <para> To build the package you will need GNU <application>make</application> (<filename>gmake</filename>, <filename>/opt/sfw/gmake</filename>), native Solaris make will not work. Typical error you get when building with Solaris' make instead of GNU make: <screen> % /usr/ccs/bin/make make: Fatal error in reader: Makefile, line 25: Unexpected end of line seen </screen> </para> <para> On Solaris SPARC, you need the GNU C/C++ Compiler; it does not matter if GNU C/C++ compiler is configured with or without the GNU assembler. </para> <para> On Solaris x86, you need the GNU assembler and the GNU C/C++ compiler, configured to use the GNU assembler! The <application>MPlayer</application> code on the x86 platform makes heavy use of MMX, SSE and 3DNOW! instructions that cannot be compiled using Sun's assembler <filename>/usr/ccs/bin/as</filename>. </para> <para> The <filename>configure</filename> script tries to find out, which assembler program is used by your "gcc" command (in case the autodetection fails, use the <option>--as=<replaceable>/wherever/you/have/installed/gnu-as</replaceable></option> option to tell the <filename>configure</filename> script where it can find GNU "as" on your system). </para> <para> Error message from <filename>configure</filename> on a Solaris x86 system using GCC without GNU assembler: <screen> % configure ... Checking assembler (/usr/ccs/bin/as) ... , failed Please upgrade(downgrade) binutils to 2.10.1... </screen> (Solution: Install and use a gcc configured with <option>--with-as=gas</option>) </para> <para> Typical error you get when building with a GNU C compiler that does not use GNU as: <screen> % gmake ... gcc -c -Iloader -Ilibvo -O4 -march=i686 -mcpu=i686 -pipe -ffast-math -fomit-frame-pointer -I/usr/local/include -o mplayer.o mplayer.c Assembler: mplayer.c "(stdin)", line 3567 : Illegal mnemonic "(stdin)", line 3567 : Syntax error ... more "Illegal mnemonic" and "Syntax error" errors ... </screen> </para> <para> Due to bugs in Solaris 8, you may not be able to play DVD discs larger than 4 GB: </para> <itemizedlist> <listitem><para> The sd(7D) driver on Solaris 8 x86 has a bug when accessing a disk block >4GB on a device using a logical blocksize != DEV_BSIZE (i.e. CD-ROM and DVD media). Due to a 32Bit int overflow, a disk address modulo 4GB is accessed (<ulink url="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/solarisonintel/message/22516"/>). This problem does not exist in the SPARC version of Solaris 8. </para></listitem> <listitem><para> A similar bug is present in the hsfs(7FS) filesystem code (AKA ISO9660), hsfs may not not support partitions/disks larger than 4GB, all data is accessed modulo 4GB (<ulink url="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/solarisonintel/message/22592"/>). The hsfs problem can be fixed by installing patch 109764-04 (sparc) / 109765-04 (x86). </para></listitem> </itemizedlist> </sect1> <sect1 id="irix"> <title>Silicon Graphics Irix</title> <para> You can either try to install the GNU install program, and (if you did not put it in your global path) then point to the location with: <screen>./configure --with-install=<replaceable>/path/and/name/of/install</replaceable></screen> </para> <para> Or you can use the default install delivered with IRIX 6.5 in which case you will have to edit the <filename>Makefile</filename> by hand a little bit. Change the following two lines: <programlisting> $(INSTALL) -c -m 644 DOCS/mplayer.1 $(MANDIR)/man1/mplayer.1 $(INSTALL) -c -m 644 etc/codecs.conf $(CONFDIR)/codecs.conf </programlisting> to: <programlisting> $(INSTALL) -m 644 mplayer.1 $(MANDIR)/man1/ $(INSTALL) -m 644 codecs.conf $(CONFDIR)/ </programlisting> And then do (from within the <application>MPlayer</application> source dir): <screen>cp DOCS/mplayer.1 . ; cp etc/codecs.conf .</screen> and then go on with building and installing. </para> </sect1> <sect1 id="qnx"> <title>QNX</title> <para> Works. You'll need to download SDL for QNX, and install it. Then run <application>MPlayer</application> with <option>-vo sdl:photon</option> and <option>-ao sdl:nto</option> options, and it should be fast. </para> <para> The <option>-vo x11</option> output will be even slower than on Linux, since QNX has only X <emphasis>emulation</emphasis> which is VERY slow. Use SDL. </para> </sect1> <sect1 id="windows"> <title>Windows</title> <para>Yes, <application>MPlayer</application> runs on Windows under <ulink url="http://www.cygwin.com/"><application>Cygwin</application></ulink> and <ulink url="http://www.mingw.org/"><application>MinGW</application></ulink>. It does not have a GUI yet, but the command line version is almost completely functional. <ulink url="../../tech/patches.txt">Patches</ulink> are always welcome. You should check out the <ulink url="http://mplayerhq.hu/mailman/listinfo/mplayer-cygwin/">mplayer-cygwin</ulink> mailing list for help and latest information.</para> <para>Best results are achieved with the native DirectX video output driver (<option>-vo directx</option>) and the native Windows waveout audio driver (<option>-ao win32</option>). Alternatives are OpenGL and SDL, but OpenGL performance varies greatly between systems and SDL is known to distort sound and video or crash on some systems. If the image is distorted, try turning off hardware acceleration with <option>-vo directx:noaccel</option>. Download <ulink url="http://www.videolan.org/vlc/dx7headers.tgz">DirectX 7 header files</ulink> to compile the DirectX video output driver. Furthermore you need to have DirectX 7 or later installed for the DirectX video output driver to work. </para> <para><link linkend="vidix">VIDIX</link> now works under Windows as <option>-vo winvidix</option>, although it is still experimental and needs a bit of manual setup. Download <ulink url="http://www.mplayerhq.hu/MPlayer/releases/win32-beta/dhahelper.sys">dhahelper.sys</ulink> and copy it to the <filename class="directory">libdha/dhahelperwin</filename> directory in your <application>MPlayer</application> source tree. Open a console and change to that directory. Then type <screen>gcc -o dhasetup.exe dhasetup.c</screen> and execute <screen>dhasetup.exe install</screen> as Administrator. After that you will have to reboot. When you are done, copy the <systemitem class="library">.so</systemitem> files from <filename class="directory">vidix/drivers</filename> to the <filename class="directory">mplayer/vidix</filename> directory relative to your <filename>mplayer.exe</filename>.</para> <para>For best results <application>MPlayer</application> should use a colorspace that your video card supports in hardware. Unfortunately many Windows graphics drivers wrongly report some colorspaces as supported in hardware. To find out which, try <screen>mplayer -benchmark -nosound -frames 100 -vf format=<replaceable>colorspace</replaceable> <replaceable>movie</replaceable></screen> where <replaceable>colorspace</replaceable> can be any colorspace printed by the <option>-vf format=fmt=help</option> option. If you find a colorspace your card handles particularly bad <option>-vf noformat=<replaceable>colorspace</replaceable></option> will keep it from being used. Add this to your config file to permanently keep it from being used.</para> <para>You can use Win32 codecs and Real Win32 codecs (not Real Linux codecs) if you want to. Put the codecs somewhere in your path or pass <option>--with-codecsdir=<replaceable>c:/path/to/your/codecs</replaceable></option> (alternatively <option>--with-codecsdir=<replaceable>/path/to/your/codecs</replaceable></option> only on <application>Cygwin</application>) to <filename>configure</filename>. We have had some reports that Real DLLs need to be writable by the user running <application>MPlayer</application>, but only on some systems. Try making them writable if you have problems. QuickTime DLLs also work, but you will have to put them in your Windows system directory (<filename class="directory"><replaceable>C:\Windows\system\</replaceable></filename> or similar). As a last resort, try putting them in the same directory as <application>MPlayer</application>.</para> <para>You can play VCDs by playing the <filename>.DAT</filename> or <filename>.MPG</filename> files that Windows exposes on VCDs. It works like this (adjust for the drive letter of your CD-ROM):</para> <screen>mplayer <replaceable>d:/mpegav/avseq01.dat</replaceable></screen> <para>DVDs also work, adjust <option>-dvd-device</option> for the drive letter of your DVD-ROM:</para> <screen>mplayer dvd://<replaceable><title></replaceable> -dvd-device <replaceable>d</replaceable>:</screen> <para>The <application>Cygwin</application>/<application>MinGW</application> console is rather slow. Redirecting output or using the <option>-quiet</option> option has been reported to improve performance on some systems. Direct rendering (<option>-dr</option>) may also help. You can prevent OSD flicker through double buffering with the <option>-double</option> option. If playback is jerky, try <option>-autosync 100</option>. If some of these options help you, you may want to put them in your config file.</para> <para>Sascha Sommer releases official Windows binaries from time to time, Joey Parrish makes unofficial Windows packages complete with installer. Look for these in the Windows section of <ulink url="http://www.mplayerhq.hu/homepage/projects.html#windows">our projects page</ulink>.</para> <sect2 id="cygwin"> <title><application>Cygwin</application></title> <para><application>Cygwin</application> versions prior to 1.5.0 do not include <filename>inttypes.h</filename>. Put this <ulink url="http://www.mplayerhq.hu/MPlayer/releases/win32-beta/contrib/inttypes.h">inttypes.h</ulink> in <filename class="directory">/usr/include/</filename> in order to make <application>MPlayer</application> compile.</para> <para>DirectX header files need to be extracted to <filename class="directory">/usr/include/</filename> or <filename class="directory">/usr/local/include/</filename>.</para> <para>Instructions and files for making SDL run under <application>Cygwin</application> can be found on the <ulink url="http://www.libsdl.org/extras/win32/cygwin/">libsdl site</ulink>.</para> </sect2> <sect2 id="mingw"> <title><application>MinGW</application></title> <para>Installing a version of <application>MinGW</application> that could compile <application>MPlayer</application> used to be quite tricky, but it works out of the box now. Just install <application>MinGW</application> 3.1.0 or later and MSYS 1.0.9 or later and tell the MSYS postinstall that <application>MinGW</application> is installed.</para> <para>If you use a version of <application>MinGW</application> before 3.1.0, you need to replace <filename>/mingw/include/sys/types.h</filename> with this <ulink url="http://www.mplayerhq.hu/MPlayer/releases/win32-beta/contrib/types.h"><filename>types.h</filename></ulink>.</para> <para>Extract DirectX header files to <filename class="directory">/mingw/include/</filename>.</para> <para>MOV compressed header support requires <ulink url="http://www.gzip.org/zlib/">zlib</ulink>, which <application>MinGW</application> does not provide by default. Configure it with <option>--prefix=/mingw</option> and install it before compiling <application>MPlayer</application>.</para> </sect2> </sect1> <sect1 id="macos"> <title>Mac OS</title> <para> Only Mac OS X 10.2 and up is supported by the "raw" <application>MPlayer</application> source. Feel free to make support for older Mac OS versions and send patches! </para> <para> Apple's modified GCC 3.x is preferred for compiling <application>MPlayer</application> especially when using <systemitem class="library">libavcodec</systemitem> as Apple's modified GCC 2.95.x doesn't support C99 syntax well. </para> <para> One can get an Aqua GUI for <application>MPlayer</application> together with compiled <application>MPlayer</application> binaries for Mac OS X from the <ulink url="http://mplayerosx.sf.net/">MPlayerOSX</ulink> project. </para> </sect1> <sect1 id="hp-ux"> <title>HP-UX</title> <para> Martin Gansser maintains a valuable <ulink url="http://cloud.prohosting.com/patos/docs/mplayer_on_hpux11.htm">HOWTO</ulink> about building <application>MPlayer</application> on HP-UX. It even has a FAQ section! </para> <para> Anyway, our "raw" <application>MPlayer</application> source is used to compile on HP-UX without flaws. </para> </sect1> <sect1 id="amiga"> <title>Amiga/MorphOS (GeekGadgets)</title> <para> Nicholas Det at Genesi has done a big and powerful port of <application>MPlayer </application> for MorphOS. Sadly it's based on the 0.90 series. </para> <para> Get if from <ulink url="http://www.morphzone.org/">MorphZone</ulink>: <itemizedlist> <listitem><para> <ulink url="http://www.morphzone.org/modules/mydownloads/singlefile.php?lid=90"> <application>MPlayer</application> 0.91 binary</ulink> </para></listitem> <listitem><para> <ulink url="http://www.morphzone.org/modules/mydownloads/singlefile.php?lid=91"> <application>MPlayer</application> 0.91 source</ulink> </para></listitem> <listitem><para> <ulink url="http://www.morphzone.org/modules/mydownloads/singlefile.php?lid=912"> <application>MEncoder</application> 0.91 binary</ulink> </para></listitem> </itemizedlist> </para> </sect1> </chapter>