Code submissions have continually suffered from formatting
inconsistencies that constantly have to be addressed. Using
clang-format simplifies this by making code formatting more consistent,
and allows automation of the code formatting so that maintainers can
focus more on the code itself instead of code formatting.
The message boxes that tell you that the browser is initializing or that
you're authenticating with twitch are annoying on startup. It makes
sense to do it in the settings/autoconfig dialogs where you sort of need
to know what's going on while waiting for it to connect, but on startup
it's not really necessary and can be kind of annoying.
In the auto-configuration dialog, use hardware encoding by default if
NVENC is available due to the fact that the latest generations of NVENC
currently has a better quality to bitrate ratio than veryfast x264 and
most other hardware devices.
Adds the ability to connect/login to an account via the settings and
auto-configuration dialogs. Checks registered Auth objects, and if the
Auth object matches the currently selected service in the settings
window or auto-configuration dialog, will display "connect account"
buttons for the user to be able to click (which are optional, they can
still use stream keys if they'd prefer).
Makes it so that services can have custom handling on a per-service
basis. The bottom part of the service pane is now a stacked widget
which can now be customized for different types of services
(particularly OAuth services).
The "Custom" service has been moved, and is now an item called "Custom"
in the "Services" combo box. This simplifies the stream page of
auto-configuration and removes an unnecessary widget. Overall a minor
but nice slimline/improvement on user experience.
Due to reports that the bandwidth test is randomly causing community
strikes on Youtube (likely due to bad automatic detection), the
bandwidth test will be disabled for Youtube until the Youtube API is
implemented.
(This commit also modifies UI)
Instead of pinging Twitch every time the program starts up, only pings
for new servers when the ingests are actually being used, and when the
UI uses the auto-configuration dialog.
If ingests have not been cached when using the "Auto" server, it will
wait for 3 seconds max to query the Twitch ingest API. If it takes
longer than 3 seconds or fails, it will defer to SF. If ingests were
already cached, then it will use the existing cache immediately.
This reverts commit 2604db6e404cc1719ae779961ca12ed27fd06e89.
The API to get the closest server can be down occasionally, so instead
just revert to its previous behavior.
When custom server is used, it would still use the "common" RTMP service
to cap its bitrate. So if Twitch was selected and you changed over to
custom RTMP server, it would still cap to Twitch's bitrate limits even
though you're not using Twitch anymore.
Changes the default autoconfig test bitrate to 10000kb/s, which will
then be capped by the user's service selection (so it'll still only use
6000 on Twitch for example, but will allow 10000 on Youtube and others).
The auto-configuration wizard is designed to allow first-time or
novice/uneducated users or to set up video and encoding settings in a
very quick and easy way. It'll automatically perform a bandwidth test,
and/or test the user's video settings to determine the most ideal
settings for streaming and recording (assuming a 1-pc setup).