Seeing the "mpd_" prefix _everywhere_ is mind-numbing as the
mind needs to retrain itself to skip over the first 4 tokens of
a type to get to its meaning. So avoid having extra characters
on my terminal to make it easier to follow code at 2:30 am in
the morning.
Please report any new issues you may come across on Free
toolchains. I realize how difficult it can be to build/maintain
cross-compiling toolchains and I have no intention of forcing
people to upgrade their toolchains to build mpd.
Tested with gcc 2.95.4 and and gcc 4.3.1 on x86-32.
tfing wrote:
> I have quite some files with an empty album tag as they do not come
> from a particular album.
>
> If I want to look for those files and browse them, this happens:
> :: nc localhost 6600
> OK MPD 0.12.0
> find album ""
> ACK [2@0] {find} too few arguments for "find"
>
> I'd like to be able to browse those files in a client like gmpc.
> So these 2 items would have to be developed:
> - list album should report that some files have an empty tag
> - it should be possible to search for an empty tag with the find command
Patch-by: Marc Pavot
ref: http://musicpd.org/mantis/view.php?id=464
This only breaks "update" under list command mode and
no other commands. This can be done more optimally
without the extra heap allocation via xstrdup(); but is
uncommon enough to not matter.
It was a huge confusing mess of parameter passing around
and around. Add a few extra assertions to ensure we're
handling parent/child relationships properly.
This is like basename(3) but with predictable semantics independent
of C library or build options used. This is also much more strict
and does not account for trailing slashes (mpd should never deal with
trailing slashes on internal functions).
If we updated the mpd metadata database; then there's a chance
some of those songs in the playlist will have updated metadata.
So be on the safe side and increment the playlist version number
if _any_ song changed (this is how all released versions of mpd
did it, too).
This bug was introduced recently when making "update" threaded.
Thanks to stonecrest for the bug report.
Make the code more readable by moving the range checks to pcm_range().
gcc does quite a good job at optimizing it: the resulting binary is
exactly the same, although it contains a parametrized shift instead of
hard-coded boundaries.
There was a known deadlocking bug in the notify library: when the
other thread set notify->pending after the according check in
notify_wait(), the latter thread was deadlocked. Resolve this by
synchronizing all accesses to notify->pending with the notify object's
mutex. Since notify_signal_sync() was never used, we can remove it.
As a consequence, we don't need notify_enter() and notify_leave()
anymore; eliminate them, too.
During debugging, I found a deadlock between flushAudioBuffer() and
the audio_output_task(): audio_output_task() didn't notice that there
is a command, and flushAudioBuffer() waited forever in notify_wait().
I am not sure yet what is the real cause; work around this for now by
waking up non-finished audio outputs in every iteration.
Due to a merge error, I broke the function handleUpdate(). It did not
do anything for the global update, and it did not send a proper
response to the client. This patch fixes both bugs.
To check whether a device is really on or off, we should rather check
audio_output.open, instead of managing another variable. Wrap
audio_output.open in the inline function audio_output_is_open() and
use it instead of DEVICE_ON and DEVICE_OFF.
Send an output buffer to all output plugins at the same time, instead
of waiting for each of them separately. Make several functions
non-blocking, and introduce the new function audio_output_wait_all()
to synchronize with all audio output threads.
We have eliminated direct accesses to the audio_output struct from
the all output plugins. Make it opaque for them, and move its real
declaration to output_internal.h, similar to decoder_internal.h.
Pass the opaque structure to plugin.init() only, which will return the
plugin's data pointer on success, and NULL on failure. This data
pointer will be passed to all other methods instead of the
audio_output struct.
The JACK output plugin needs to reset its "opened" flag when the JACK
server fails. To prevent it from accessing the audio_output struct
directly introduce the API function audio_output_closed().
Reduce direct accesses to the audio_output struct from the plugins:
this time, eliminate all accesses to audio_output.name. The name is
required by some plugins for log messages.
Pass the globally configured audio_format as a const pointer to
plugin.init(). plugin.open() gets a writable pointer which contains
the audio_format requested by the plugin. Its initial value is either
the configured audio_format or the input file's audio_format.
To keep I/O nastiness and latencies away from the core, move the audio
output code to a separate thread, one per output. The thread is
created on demand, and currently runs until mpd exits.
Since flacSendChunk() is a trivial function and is only used in one
location, move the code there. The advantage is that calling
decoder_data() directly returns the decoder_command value, so we can
eliminate one decoder_get_command() call.
Support for bit rates except 16 bits (and 8 bits on little endian) has
always been broken. Since we added optimized functions for 8, 16,
24/32 bits, we can remove the generic flac_convert() function.
Instead of removing it, convert it to a wrapper function for
flac_convert_*().
flac_convert_16() runs a lot faster than the generic (and quite buggy)
function flac_convert(). flac_convert_16() is only used for
non-stereo files, since there is already flac_convert_stereo16().
By mistake, I casted the sample value to uint16_t, which is wrong.
This patch simplifies the code by using a int16_t pointer instead of
casting to int16_t* every time.
There is still a lot of duplicated code in flac_plugin.c and
oggflac_plugin.c. Move code from flac_plugin.c to _flac_common.c, and
use the new function flac_common_write() also in oggflac_plugin.c,
porting lots of optimizations over to it.