If on windows, use the windows UTF conversion functions due to the fact
that the existing utf code is meant for 32bit wide characters, while the
windows conversion functions will properly handle 16bit wide characters.
Adds an additional search path for UI-independent and
installation-independent plugins for windows/mac.
Windows:
%appdata%/obs-plugins/
Mac:
~/Library/Application Support/obs-plugins/
Plugin directory format is [module]/bin and [module]/data.
On windows, for 32bit binaries:
[module]/bin/32bit
and 64bit binaries:
[module]/bin/64bit
Before: After:
obs_service_gettype obs_service_get_type
It seems there was an API function that was missed when we were doing
our big API consistency update. Unsquishes obs_service_gettype to
obs_service_get_type.
I didn't think it would ever need to be exported, but this function is
actually useful for applying settings to properties (to call all of
their update callbacks based upon the settings) without necessarily
having to have an object associated with it.
API changed:
--------------------------
void obs_output_set_audio_encoder(
obs_output_t *output,
obs_encoder_t *encoder);
obs_encoder_t *obs_output_get_audio_encoder(
const obs_output_t *output);
obs_encoder_t *obs_audio_encoder_create(
const char *id,
const char *name,
obs_data_t *settings);
Changed to:
--------------------------
/* 'idx' specifies the track index of the output */
void obs_output_set_audio_encoder(
obs_output_t *output,
obs_encoder_t *encoder,
size_t idx);
/* 'idx' specifies the track index of the output */
obs_encoder_t *obs_output_get_audio_encoder(
const obs_output_t *output,
size_t idx);
/* 'mixer_idx' specifies the mixer index to capture audio from */
obs_encoder_t *obs_audio_encoder_create(
const char *id,
const char *name,
obs_data_t *settings,
size_t mixer_idx);
Overview
--------------------------
This feature allows multiple audio mixers to be used at a time. This
capability was able to be added with surprisingly very little extra
overhead. Audio will not be mixed unless it's assigned to a specific
mixer, and mixers will not mix unless they have an active mix
connection.
Mostly this will be useful for being able to separate out specific audio
for recording versus streaming, but will also be useful for certain
streaming services that support multiple audio streams via RTMP.
I didn't want to use a variable amount of mixers due to the desire to
reduce heap allocations, so currently I set the limit to 4 simultaneous
mixers; this number can be increased later if needed, but honestly I
feel like it's just the right number to use.
Sources:
Sources can now specify which audio mixers their audio is mixed to; this
can be a single mixer or multiple mixers at a time. The
obs_source_set_audio_mixers function sets the audio mixer which an audio
source applies to. For example, 0xF would mean that the source applies
to all four mixers.
Audio Encoders:
Audio encoders now must specify which specific audio mixer they use when
they encode audio data.
Outputs:
Outputs that use encoders can now support multiple audio tracks at once
if they have the OBS_OUTPUT_MULTI_TRACK capability flag set. This is
mostly only useful for certain types of RTMP transmissions, though may
be useful for file formats that support multiple audio tracks as well
later on.
The comment says "these are different", but doesn't state why.
Actually, I should really rename the output flags so they're not flags,
but instead just "caps", because that's really all that they are.
obs_data_apply is used to apply the changes of a source object in to a
destination object. Problem with this however is that if sub-objects
are in use, it currently just copies the pointer of the sub-object,
meaning that the source and destination will both share the same
sub-object via reference. If anything modifies that sub-object data,
it'll modify it for both objects, which was not intended.
Instead of copying the object pointer, create a new copy and then
recursively repeat the process to ensure the data is always completely
separate.
Changed:
char *os_get_config_path(const char *name);
To:
int os_get_config_path(char *dst, size_t size, const char *name);
Also added:
char *os_get_config_path_ptr(const char *name);
I don't like this function returning an allocation by default.
Similarly to what was done with the wide character conversion functions,
this function now operates on an array argument, and if you really want
to just get a pointer for convenience, you use the *_ptr version of the
function that clearly indicates that it's returning an allocation.
The gs_enum_adapters function is an optional implementation to allow
enumeration of available graphics adapters that can be used with the
program. The ID associated with the adapter can be an index or a hash
depending on the implementation.
Direct3D textures are usually aligned to a specific pitch, so their
internal width is often not equal to the expected output width; this
means that if we want to use it on our texture output, that we must
de-align the texture while copying the texture data.
However, I unintentionally messed up the calculation at some point with
RGBA textures, so the variable size I was supposed to be using was
supposed to be multiplied by 4 (for RGBA), while I was still expecting
single channel data. So, if the texture width was something like 1332,
the source (directx) texture line size would be somewhere at or above
5328 (because it's RGBA), then destination is at 1332 (YUV luma plane),
and it would unintentionally treat 3996 (or 5328 - 1332) bytes as the
unused alignment data. So this fixes that miscalculation.
Refer to https://www.opengl.org/registry/doc/GLSLangSpec.4.10.6.clean.pdf
for a list of current (reserved) keywords.
In the future the shader compiler in libobs-opengl should probably take
care of avoiding those name conflicts (bonus points for transparently
remapping the names of effect parameters)
Instead of returning a valid string value when there are no more strings
available in the list, return NULL to indicate failure. An empty string
should really be allowed to be a valid value for the list.
The return value of os_sleepto_ns is true if it waited to the specified
time, and false if the current time is past the specified time. So it
basically returns true if it successfully waited.
I just didn't check the return value properly here, so it ended up just
setting the count of frames to 1 if overshot, ultimately causing sync
issues.
The temporary unoptimized code we were using before just completely
allocated a new copy of each frame every single time a new async frame
was output by the source plugin. This just creates a cache of frames as
needed for the current format/width/height to minimize the allocation
and deallocation. If new frames come in that are of a different
format/width/height, it'll just clear the cache. This is a fairly
important optimization.
all the async video related stuff usually started with async_*, and
there were two that didn't. So I just renamed them so they have the
same naming convention
If an async video source stops video for whatever reason, it would get
stuck on the last frame that was played. This was particularly awkward
when I wanted to give the user the ability to deactivate a source such
as a webcam because it would get stuck on the last frame.
This allows us to change the visible UI name of a property after it's
been created (particularly for a case where I want to change an
'Activate' button to 'Deactivate')
A slightly refactored version of R1CH's crash handler, allows crash
handling for windows which provides stack traces of all threads and a
list of all loaded modules. Also shows the processor, windows version,
and current libobs version.
When the encoder is set to scale to a different resolution than the obs
output resolution, make sure it uses the current video colorspace and
range by default.
I actually kind of hate how strstr returns a non-const even though it
takes a const parameter, but I can understand why they made it that way.
They really should have split it in to two functions though, one const
and one non-const or something. But alas, ultimately for a C programmer
who knows what they're doing it isn't a huge deal.