When we introduced decoder_read(), we added code which aborts the read
operation when a decoder command arrives. Several plugins however did
not expect that when they were converted to decoder_read(). Add
proper checks to the mp3 and flac decoder plugins.
The code said "decoder_command==STOP" because that was a conversion
from the old "dc->stop" test. As we can now check for all commands in
one test, we can simply rewrite that to decoder_command!=NONE.
This flag is used internally; it is set by decoder_seek_where(), and
indicates that the decoder plugin has begun the seek process. It is
used for the case that the decoder plugin has to read data during the
seek process. Before this patch, that was impossible, because
decoder_read() would refuse to read data unless dc->command is NONE.
This patch is kind of a dirty workaround, and needs to be redesigned
later.
The old code called can_seek() with the uninitialized pointer
"isp.is". Has this ever worked? Anyway, initialize "isp" first, then
call can_seek(&isp).
Move everything related to finding and initializing the WVC stream to
wavpack_open_wvc(). This greatly simplifies its error handling and
the function wavpack_streamdecode().
On our way to stabilize the decoder API, we will one day remove the
input stream functions. The most basic function, read() will be
provided by decoder_api.h with this patch. It already contains a loop
(still with manual polling), error/eof handling and decoder command
checks. This kind of code used to be duplicated in all decoder
plugins.
If the input stream is not seekable, the try_decode() function
consumes valuable data, which is not available to the decode()
function anymore. This means that the decode() function does not
parse the header correctly. Better skip the detection if we cannot
seek. Or implement better buffering, something like unread() or
buffered rewind().
The return value of audio_linear_dither() is always casted to
mpd_sint16. Returning long does not make sense, and consumed 8 bytes
on a 64 bit platform.
The output buffer is always flushed after being appended to, which
allows us to assume it is always empty. Always start writing at
outputBuffer, don't remember outputPtr.
Fill the whole output buffer at a time by using dither_buffer()'s
ability to decode blocks. Calculate how many samples fit into the
output buffer before each invocation.
Simplifying loops for performance: why check dropSamplesAtEnd in every
iteration, when we could modify the loop boundary? The (writable)
variable samplesLeft can be eliminated; add a write-once variable
pcm_length instead, which is used for the loop condition.
The variable samplesPerFrame is used only in one single closure. Make
it local to this closure. The compiler will probably convert it to a
register anyway.
Preparing for simplifying and thus speeding up the dithering code:
moved dithering to a separate function which contains a trivial loop.
With this patch, only one sample is dithered at a time, but the
following patches will allow us to dither a whole block at a time,
without complicated buffer length checks.
Copy some code from aac_decode() to aac_stream_decode() and apply
necessary changes to allow streaming audio data. Both functions might
be merged later.
initAacBuffer() should really only initialize the buffer; currently,
it also reads data from the input stream and parses the header. All
of the AAC buffer code should probably be moved to a separate library
anyway.
Shifting from the buffer queue is a common operation, and should be
provided as a separate function. Move code to aac_buffer_shift() and
add a bunch of assertions.
When checking for EOF, we should not check whether the read request
has been fully satisified. The InputStream API does not guarantee
that readFromInputStream() always fills the whole buffer, if EOF is
not reached. Since there is the function inputStreamAtEOF() dedicated
for this purpose, we should use it for EOF checking after
readFromInputStream()==0.
Fill the AacBuffer even when nothing has been consumed yet. The
function should not check for consumed data, but for free space at the
end of the buffer.
The flag "ready" indicates whether the input stream is ready and it
has parsed all meta data. Previously, it was impossible for
decodeStart() to see the content type of HTTP input streams, because
at that time, the HTTP response wasn't parsed yet.
With the functions decoder_plugin_register() and
decoder_plugin_unregister(), decoder plugins can register a
"secondary" plugin, like the flac input plugin does this for
"oggflac".