spl_list() provides an interface for enumerating all stored playlists.
This separates the internal playlist logic from the protocol specific
function lsPlaylists().
The two functions clearStoredPlaylist() and addToStoredPlaylist()
don't belong into playlist.c. clearStoredPlaylist() was a wrapper for
spl_clear(), and is converted into a CPP macro for now.
The list of commands is known at compile time. Instead of creating a
linked list on startup, we can just register all commands in a static
sorted array.
The command pointers which are passed around aren't being modified -
in fact, no command pointer must be modified once it has been added to
the commandList.
Instead of manually calling memset(0) on the pcm_convert_state struct,
client code should use a library function from pcm_utils.c. This way,
we can change the semantics of the struct easily.
Casting a pointer to some sort of integer and formatting it into a
string isn't valid. A pointer derived from this hex string won't work
reliably. Since ffmpeg doesn't provide a nice API for passing our
pointer, we have to think of a different hack: ffmpeg passes the exact
URL pointer to mpdurl_open(), and we can make this string part of a
struct. This reduces the problem to casting the string back to the
struct.
This is still a workaround, but this is "sort of portable", unless the
ffmpeg people start messing with the URL pointer (which would be valid
according to the API definition).
Since ffmpeg svn r12865, you have to include libavcodec/avcodec.h
instead of avcodec.h. This cannot be checked at compile time, instead
we have to add a check to configure.ac. Viliam's original ffmpeg
plugin was based on the newer ffmpeg library, while my Debian
installation had the older version. My attempt to correct his include
statements wasn't correct after all.
{song,dir}vec_for_each each failed to gracefully handle deleted
files when iterating through. While we were thread-safe, we
were not safe within the calling thread. If a callback we
passed caused sv->nr to shring, our index would still increment;
causing files to stay in the database.
A way to test this is to remove 10 or so contiguous songs from a
>10 song directory.
Like the songvec nr_lock, only one lock is used for all
traversals since they're rarely changed. This only
projects traversals, but not the individual structures
themselves.
With heavy use of conditionals, I broke Makefile.am for the ancient
automake version 1.6. Instead of supporting this automake version
forever, I'm removing support for it now. Since automake isn't
required on the build machine, nobody should have a serious problem
with that.
Use a literal in the struct declaration, and sizeof(client->buffer)
everywhere else. Also shrink the buffer from 40 kB to 4 kB. The
buffer must only be large enough to hold one line of input, and 4 kB
is still more than enough.
When adding a local file, clients have to use the "file" URI schema
described in RFC 1738 3.10. By adding this schema to "urlhandlers", a
client can detect whether this feature is available.
When building with the ancient automake 1.6 version, the following
errors occur:
Makefile.am:5: invalid variable `doc_DATA'
doc/Makefile.am:2: invalid variable `doc_DATA'
This patches renames some internal variables.
By default, glibc 2.8 hides struct ucred behind the _GNU_SOURCE
macro. I don't want to enable that globally, because it may encourage
the use of non-portable functions. Test if "struct ucred" is
available, and enable _GNU_SOURCE if required.
For details about that issue, see glib's bug database:
http://sources.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=6545