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November 2022
- 1 participants
- 565 discussions
commit adfba044b4ff83135715cf77cf983b3a568f5603
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:12:28 2022 +0000
shaderc: minor change
diff --git a/shaderc/.signature b/shaderc/.signature
index 7f68fed56..7166dd63b 100644
--- a/shaderc/.signature
+++ b/shaderc/.signature
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF37wtEOZO9E32ryL8VmgicKXLiIxV6U6wapeCDfBOLu15TAysS5f24l1i6YPL/ftmg8Wkl1h0OPtPNdG3s4oP9QI=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 03effeaa2ab1f9c156d580c417608734d44a8fa5c76cd8b6a50a85f292e72003
+RWSagIOpLGJF37YRpZzVotbIaPFhQRKjZO72EDq/iEzMgpnoL6cvxQ6DehzX8p0the1p1qqMjx+Fafy6ItvgsDzOFQA1Be3Qawk=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 6e75d055ff4b4d6dbb74d5f44f257bcc98f03ce674041c04bdc70e2a4b0192b6
SHA256 (.footprint) = 768c5796cba31503e5e8a1c1d874f1d8699d410d17d6b98d9a6588ae17462816
SHA256 (shaderc-v2022.3.tar.gz) = c1dee49535cfdf86994990b21fe129a74bb0d628a647f4aae8905bd61df32607
SHA256 (glslc.1) = f1bdc5600cea87f3b8088e3304764949fa67df3975be48b76af547d6b30ef859
diff --git a/shaderc/Pkgfile b/shaderc/Pkgfile
index f0a716b7e..09b33d3ee 100644
--- a/shaderc/Pkgfile
+++ b/shaderc/Pkgfile
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
name=shaderc
version=2022.3
-release=1
+release=2
source=(https://github.com/google/shaderc/archive/v$version/$name-v$version…
glslc.1)
@@ -19,10 +19,10 @@ build() {
"$(prt-get info spirv-tools | awk '/^Version:/ {print $2}')\\n"
"$(prt-get info glslang | awk '/^Version:/ {print $2}')\\n"
EOF
+ sed -i -e "s|\$<TARGET_FILE:spirv-dis>|spirv-dis|" \
+ $name-$version/glslc/test/CMakeLists.txt
- prt-get isinst ninja && PKGMK_SHADERC+=' -G Ninja'
-
- cmake -S $name-$version -B build $PKGMK_SHADERC \
+ cmake -S $name-$version -B build -G Ninja $PKGMK_SHADERC \
-D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr \
-D CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR=lib \
-D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
1
0
01 Nov '22
commit f0068d66656ac71dcc923d4289e5d84f97a23a41
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:11:32 2022 +0000
libplacebo: explicitly set vulkan registry
diff --git a/libplacebo/.signature b/libplacebo/.signature
index e0b1e3e2e..c67117e7d 100644
--- a/libplacebo/.signature
+++ b/libplacebo/.signature
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF39oHj7m+PNTtmUUE9T/e8SRzEAR7LegyPF9hz8NPGPvz5HontEgT/3KLoirBkvJfSE3V3wmlvMXykqEWFXfguQc=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 7dbce42226c9a9f083e11e50551d1d6252cfcf0e5d1cdbf9c553c44eaa627ade
+RWSagIOpLGJF3zf2jnOM76d/FfJl4URO7Fbh5JNhbbrqq+usto1uosoWkTz3IDvexXZB+/6+rw1Zqgdf8HDC59IlczNYT/cBJAM=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 3778ed22fa76455ba712584bfc0a8e0cce17ba7772eb029351a9174731bf4209
SHA256 (.footprint) = d96e8bca396f0e276af631d2a8c4e343bd071d7924491104aeb2f31a984fa63e
SHA256 (libplacebo-v5.229.0.tar.gz) = d8754fa6ad125e43339f0bd71e9783b0098208ac70b005cc11efe3f8eda4b52e
diff --git a/libplacebo/Pkgfile b/libplacebo/Pkgfile
index b04c2c4b1..0e85619bb 100644
--- a/libplacebo/Pkgfile
+++ b/libplacebo/Pkgfile
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ release=1
source=(https://code.videolan.org/videolan/libplacebo/-/archive/v$version/$…
build() {
- CXXFLAGS+=" -I/usr/include/glslang"
+ CXXFLAGS+=' -I/usr/include/glslang' \
meson setup build $name-v$version \
--prefix=/usr \
--buildtype=plain \
@@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ build() {
-D b_lto=true \
-D b_pie=true \
-D vulkan=enabled \
+ -D vulkan-registry=/usr/share/vulkan/registry/vk.xml \
-D glslang=enabled \
-D shaderc=enabled \
-D lcms=enabled \
1
0
ports/contrib (3.7): mpv: switched to current master checkout to fix build/runtime issues
by crux@crux.nu 01 Nov '22
by crux@crux.nu 01 Nov '22
01 Nov '22
commit 1813837af53e61e80eed9ba125639a231f4f5d92
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:11:05 2022 +0000
mpv: switched to current master checkout to fix build/runtime issues
diff --git a/mpv/.footprint b/mpv/.footprint
index 26ca4c7e6..b59d8e25e 100644
--- a/mpv/.footprint
+++ b/mpv/.footprint
@@ -1,28 +1,21 @@
+drwxr-xr-x root/root etc/
+drwxr-xr-x root/root etc/mpv/
+-rw-r--r-- root/root etc/mpv/encoding-profiles.conf
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/bin/
-rwxr-xr-x root/root usr/bin/mpv
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/etc/
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/etc/mpv/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/etc/mpv/encoding-profiles.conf
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/include/
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/include/mpv/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/include/mpv/client.h
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/include/mpv/opengl_cb.h
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/include/mpv/render.h
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/include/mpv/render_gl.h
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/include/mpv/stream_cb.h
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/
-lrwxrwxrwx root/root usr/lib/libmpv.so -> libmpv.so.1.109.0
-lrwxrwxrwx root/root usr/lib/libmpv.so.1 -> libmpv.so.1.109.0
--rwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/libmpv.so.1.109.0
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/pkgconfig/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/pkgconfig/mpv.pc
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/applications/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/applications/mpv.desktop
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/bash-completion/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/bash-completion/completions/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/bash-completion/completions/mpv
+drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/doc/
+drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/doc/mpv/
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/doc/mpv/input.conf
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/doc/mpv/mplayer-input.conf
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/doc/mpv/mpv.conf
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/doc/mpv/restore-old-bindings.conf
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/icons/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/icons/hicolor/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/icons/hicolor/128x128/
@@ -43,9 +36,8 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/icons/hicolor/scalable/apps/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/icons/hicolor/symbolic/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/icons/hicolor/symbolic/apps/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/icons/hicolor/symbolic/apps/mpv-symbolic.svg
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/man/
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/man/man1/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/man/man1/mpv.1.gz
+drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/metainfo/
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/metainfo/mpv.metainfo.xml
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/zsh/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/share/zsh/site-functions/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/share/zsh/site-functions/_mpv
diff --git a/mpv/.signature b/mpv/.signature
index c8f3e980d..401af7039 100644
--- a/mpv/.signature
+++ b/mpv/.signature
@@ -1,7 +1,5 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF37D7C1RHKhfYX1RZIDcCKhvXe8fwrE49ORyy9kAVoTYqWoBH82tR8ukfincjC0rRn6S21NeDC9WagsL6Fq+/rgs=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = e0eff13ae4c9623514c1296539418e257a42f01ea4161eb33fc586cda024df7a
-SHA256 (.footprint) = f14555b474f5c94353678e03ba77450f3c745c12b1786ae3740039d17fa35bcd
-SHA256 (mpv-v0.34.1.tar.gz) = 32ded8c13b6398310fa27767378193dc1db6d78b006b70dbcbd3123a1445e746
-SHA256 (waf-2.0.9) = 2a8e0816f023995e557f79ea8940d322bec18f286917c8f9a6fa2dc3875dfa48
-SHA256 (mpv.1) = eedccbc958ac9f8d95b2973a6a7452680ee99503c8c87d8221fe0581d95ae592
+RWSagIOpLGJF3x0jARRjITc8RFds9hx8/9amfL7bdNxYy0+eyKoW3qOFH7a+tBKcGd3N3UxbsldVOXNR1DOTUboed24rmy5rSAY=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 3a1776f11780ee522153e215eed648f2f27ff9ff4add41767a4d239249728402
+SHA256 (.footprint) = 7b618425e174a11bfbe920d45e584211150b692f5a17f09839ab2ff8e7ce4d03
+SHA256 (mpv-v0.34.1-4.tar.gz) = 041ed375835ab38f4a73d99f5bc7419cba402cab13cc18b834994969ea4a932f
diff --git a/mpv/Pkgfile b/mpv/Pkgfile
index 8451fe3b6..c0c13c9e1 100644
--- a/mpv/Pkgfile
+++ b/mpv/Pkgfile
@@ -6,28 +6,18 @@
name=mpv
version=0.34.1
-release=2
-source=(https://github.com/$name-player/$name/archive/v$version/$name-v$version.tar.gz
- https://waf.io/waf-2.0.9
- mpv.1)
+release=4
+_commit=d3a28f12c9ced29982fc831722075bd0c73fb821
+source=(https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/archive/$_commit/$name-v$version-$release.tar.gz)
build() {
- cd $name-$version
+ meson setup $name-$_commit build \
+ --prefix=/usr \
+ --buildtype=plain \
+ --wrap-mode nodownload \
+ -D b_lto=true \
+ -D b_pie=true
- install -m0755 $SRC/waf-2.0.9 waf
-
- [[ -e '/usr/lib/pkgconfig/libcdio_cdda.pc' ]] && PKGMK_MPV+=' --enable-cdda'
- [[ -e '/usr/lib/pkgconfig/dvdnav.pc' ]] && PKGMK_MPV+=' --enable-dvdnav'
-
- /usr/bin/python3 waf configure ${PKGMK_MPV} \
- --prefix=/usr \
- --enable-libarchive \
- --enable-libmpv-shared \
- -j ${JOBS-1}
-
- /usr/bin/python3 waf build
- /usr/bin/python3 waf install --destdir=$PKG
- rm -r $PKG/usr/share/doc
-
- [ -e '/usr/bin/rst2man.py' ] || install -D -m 0644 -t $PKG/usr/share/man/man1 $SRC/mpv.1
+ meson compile -C build
+ DESTDIR=$PKG meson install -C build
}
diff --git a/mpv/mpv.1 b/mpv/mpv.1
deleted file mode 100644
index 9d1cda3ed..000000000
--- a/mpv/mpv.1
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19522 +0,0 @@
-.\" Man page generated from reStructuredText.
-.
-.
-.nr rst2man-indent-level 0
-.
-.de1 rstReportMargin
-\\$1 \\n[an-margin]
-level \\n[rst2man-indent-level]
-level margin: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
--
-\\n[rst2man-indent0]
-\\n[rst2man-indent1]
-\\n[rst2man-indent2]
-..
-.de1 INDENT
-.\" .rstReportMargin pre:
-. RS \\$1
-. nr rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level] \\n[an-margin]
-. nr rst2man-indent-level +1
-.\" .rstReportMargin post:
-..
-.de UNINDENT
-. RE
-.\" indent \\n[an-margin]
-.\" old: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
-.nr rst2man-indent-level -1
-.\" new: \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]
-.in \\n[rst2man-indent\\n[rst2man-indent-level]]u
-..
-.TH "MPV" 1 "" "" "multimedia"
-.SH NAME
-mpv \- a media player
-.SH SYNOPSIS
-.nf
-\fBmpv\fP [options] [file|URL|PLAYLIST|\-]
-\fBmpv\fP [options] files
-.fi
-.sp
-.SH DESCRIPTION
-.sp
-\fBmpv\fP is a media player based on MPlayer and mplayer2. It supports a wide variety of video
-file formats, audio and video codecs, and subtitle types. Special input URL
-types are available to read input from a variety of sources other than disk
-files. Depending on platform, a variety of different video and audio output
-methods are supported.
-.sp
-Usage examples to get you started quickly can be found at the end of this man
-page.
-.SH INTERACTIVE CONTROL
-.sp
-mpv has a fully configurable, command\-driven control layer which allows you
-to control mpv using keyboard, mouse, or remote control (there is no
-LIRC support \- configure remotes as input devices instead).
-.sp
-See the \fB\-\-input\-\fP options for ways to customize it.
-.sp
-The following listings are not necessarily complete. See \fBetc/input.conf\fP for
-a list of default bindings. User \fBinput.conf\fP files and Lua scripts can
-define additional key bindings.
-.sp
-See also \fB\-\-input\-test\fP for interactive binding details by key, and the
-\fI\%stats\fP built\-in script for key bindings list (including print to terminal).
-.SS Keyboard Control
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B LEFT and RIGHT
-Seek backward/forward 5 seconds. Shift+arrow does a 1 second exact seek
-(see \fB\-\-hr\-seek\fP).
-.TP
-.B UP and DOWN
-Seek forward/backward 1 minute. Shift+arrow does a 5 second exact seek (see
-\fB\-\-hr\-seek\fP).
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+LEFT and Ctrl+RIGHT
-Seek to the previous/next subtitle. Subject to some restrictions and
-might not always work; see \fBsub\-seek\fP command.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+Shift+Left and Ctrl+Shift+Right
-Adjust subtitle delay so that the next or previous subtitle is displayed
-now. This is especially useful to sync subtitles to audio.
-.TP
-.B [ and ]
-Decrease/increase current playback speed by 10%.
-.TP
-.B { and }
-Halve/double current playback speed.
-.TP
-.B BACKSPACE
-Reset playback speed to normal.
-.TP
-.B Shift+BACKSPACE
-Undo the last seek. This works only if the playlist entry was not changed.
-Hitting it a second time will go back to the original position.
-See \fBrevert\-seek\fP command for details.
-.TP
-.B Shift+Ctrl+BACKSPACE
-Mark the current position. This will then be used by \fBShift+BACKSPACE\fP
-as revert position (once you seek back, the marker will be reset). You can
-use this to seek around in the file and then return to the exact position
-where you left off.
-.TP
-.B < and >
-Go backward/forward in the playlist.
-.TP
-.B ENTER
-Go forward in the playlist.
-.TP
-.B p / SPACE
-Pause (pressing again unpauses).
-.TP
-.B \&.
-Step forward. Pressing once will pause, every consecutive press will
-play one frame and then go into pause mode again.
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B ,
-Step backward. Pressing once will pause, every consecutive press will
-play one frame in reverse and then go into pause mode again.
-.TP
-.B q
-Stop playing and quit.
-.TP
-.B Q
-Like \fBq\fP, but store the current playback position. Playing the same file
-later will resume at the old playback position if possible.
-.TP
-.B / and *
-Decrease/increase volume.
-.TP
-.B 9 and 0
-Decrease/increase volume.
-.TP
-.B m
-Mute sound.
-.TP
-.B _
-Cycle through the available video tracks.
-.TP
-.B #
-Cycle through the available audio tracks.
-.TP
-.B f
-Toggle fullscreen (see also \fB\-\-fs\fP).
-.TP
-.B ESC
-Exit fullscreen mode.
-.TP
-.B T
-Toggle stay\-on\-top (see also \fB\-\-ontop\fP).
-.TP
-.B w and W
-Decrease/increase pan\-and\-scan range. The \fBe\fP key does the same as
-\fBW\fP currently, but use is discouraged.
-.TP
-.B o (also P)
-Show progression bar, elapsed time and total duration on the OSD.
-.TP
-.B O
-Toggle OSD states between normal and playback time/duration.
-.TP
-.B v
-Toggle subtitle visibility.
-.TP
-.B j and J
-Cycle through the available subtitles.
-.TP
-.B z and Z
-Adjust subtitle delay by +/\- 0.1 seconds. The \fBx\fP key does the same as
-\fBZ\fP currently, but use is discouraged.
-.TP
-.B l
-Set/clear A\-B loop points. See \fBab\-loop\fP command for details.
-.TP
-.B L
-Toggle infinite looping.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl + and Ctrl \-
-Adjust audio delay (A/V sync) by +/\- 0.1 seconds.
-.TP
-.B Shift+g and Shift+f
-Adjust subtitle font size by +/\- 10%.
-.TP
-.B u
-Switch between applying no style overrides to SSA/ASS subtitles, and
-overriding them almost completely with the normal subtitle style. See
-\fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override\fP for more info.
-.TP
-.B V
-Toggle subtitle VSFilter aspect compatibility mode. See
-\fB\-\-sub\-ass\-vsfilter\-aspect\-compat\fP for more info.
-.TP
-.B r and R
-Move subtitles up/down. The \fBt\fP key does the same as \fBR\fP currently, but
-use is discouraged.
-.TP
-.B s
-Take a screenshot.
-.TP
-.B S
-Take a screenshot, without subtitles. (Whether this works depends on VO
-driver support.)
-.TP
-.B Ctrl s
-Take a screenshot, as the window shows it (with subtitles, OSD, and scaled
-video).
-.TP
-.B PGUP and PGDWN
-Seek to the beginning of the previous/next chapter. In most cases,
-"previous" will actually go to the beginning of the current chapter; see
-\fB\-\-chapter\-seek\-threshold\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B Shift+PGUP and Shift+PGDWN
-Seek backward or forward by 10 minutes. (This used to be mapped to
-PGUP/PGDWN without Shift.)
-.TP
-.B d
-Activate/deactivate deinterlacer.
-.TP
-.B A
-Cycle aspect ratio override.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl h
-Toggle hardware video decoding on/off.
-.TP
-.B Alt+LEFT, Alt+RIGHT, Alt+UP, Alt+DOWN
-Move the video rectangle (panning).
-.TP
-.B Alt + and Alt \-
-Combining \fBAlt\fP with the \fB+\fP or \fB\-\fP keys changes video zoom.
-.TP
-.B Alt+BACKSPACE
-Reset the pan/zoom settings.
-.TP
-.B F8
-Show the playlist and the current position in it (useful only if a UI window
-is used, broken on the terminal).
-.TP
-.B F9
-Show the list of audio and subtitle streams (useful only if a UI window is
-used, broken on the terminal).
-.TP
-.B i and I
-Show/toggle an overlay displaying statistics about the currently playing
-file such as codec, framerate, number of dropped frames and so on. See
-\fI\%STATS\fP for more information.
-.TP
-.B del
-Cycle OSC visibility between never / auto (mouse\-move) / always
-.TP
-.B \(ga
-Show the console. (ESC closes it again. See \fI\%CONSOLE\fP\&.)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-(The following keys are valid only when using a video output that supports the
-corresponding adjustment.)
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B 1 and 2
-Adjust contrast.
-.TP
-.B 3 and 4
-Adjust brightness.
-.TP
-.B 5 and 6
-Adjust gamma.
-.TP
-.B 7 and 8
-Adjust saturation.
-.TP
-.B Alt+0 (and command+0 on macOS)
-Resize video window to half its original size.
-.TP
-.B Alt+1 (and command+1 on macOS)
-Resize video window to its original size.
-.TP
-.B Alt+2 (and command+2 on macOS)
-Resize video window to double its original size.
-.TP
-.B command + f (macOS only)
-Toggle fullscreen (see also \fB\-\-fs\fP).
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-(The following keys are valid if you have a keyboard with multimedia keys.)
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B PAUSE
-Pause.
-.TP
-.B STOP
-Stop playing and quit.
-.TP
-.B PREVIOUS and NEXT
-Seek backward/forward 1 minute.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If you miss some older key bindings, look at \fBetc/restore\-old\-bindings.conf\fP
-in the mpv git repository.
-.SS Mouse Control
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B Left double click
-Toggle fullscreen on/off.
-.TP
-.B Right click
-Toggle pause on/off.
-.TP
-.B Forward/Back button
-Skip to next/previous entry in playlist.
-.TP
-.B Wheel up/down
-Seek forward/backward 10 seconds.
-.TP
-.B Wheel left/right
-Decrease/increase volume.
-.UNINDENT
-.SH USAGE
-.sp
-Command line arguments starting with \fB\-\fP are interpreted as options,
-everything else as filenames or URLs. All options except \fIflag\fP options (or
-choice options which include \fByes\fP) require a parameter in the form
-\fB\-\-option=value\fP\&.
-.sp
-One exception is the lone \fB\-\fP (without anything else), which means media data
-will be read from stdin. Also, \fB\-\-\fP (without anything else) will make the
-player interpret all following arguments as filenames, even if they start with
-\fB\-\fP\&. (To play a file named \fB\-\fP, you need to use \fB\&./\-\fP\&.)
-.sp
-Every \fIflag\fP option has a \fIno\-flag\fP counterpart, e.g. the opposite of the
-\fB\-\-fs\fP option is \fB\-\-no\-fs\fP\&. \fB\-\-fs=yes\fP is same as \fB\-\-fs\fP, \fB\-\-fs=no\fP
-is the same as \fB\-\-no\-fs\fP\&.
-.sp
-If an option is marked as \fI(XXX only)\fP, it will only work in combination with
-the \fIXXX\fP option or if \fIXXX\fP is compiled in.
-.SS Legacy option syntax
-.sp
-The \fB\-\-option=value\fP syntax is not strictly enforced, and the alternative
-legacy syntax \fB\-option value\fP and \fB\-option=value\fP will also work. This is
-mostly for compatibility with MPlayer. Using these should be avoided. Their
-semantics can change any time in the future.
-.sp
-For example, the alternative syntax will consider an argument following the
-option a filename. \fBmpv \-fs no\fP will attempt to play a file named \fBno\fP,
-because \fB\-\-fs\fP is a flag option that requires no parameter. If an option
-changes and its parameter becomes optional, then a command line using the
-alternative syntax will break.
-.sp
-Until mpv 0.31.0, there was no difference whether an option started with \fB\-\-\fP
-or a single \fB\-\fP\&. Newer mpv releases strictly expect that you pass the option
-value after a \fB=\fP\&. For example, before \fBmpv \-\-log\-file f.txt\fP would write
-a log to \fBf.txt\fP, but now this command line fails, as \fB\-\-log\-file\fP expects
-an option value, and \fBf.txt\fP is simply considered a normal file to be played
-(as in \fBmpv f.txt\fP).
-.sp
-The future plan is that \fB\-option value\fP will not work anymore, and options
-with a single \fB\-\fP behave the same as \fB\-\-\fP options.
-.SS Escaping spaces and other special characters
-.sp
-Keep in mind that the shell will partially parse and mangle the arguments you
-pass to mpv. For example, you might need to quote or escape options and
-filenames:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBmpv "filename with spaces.mkv" \-\-title="window title"\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-It gets more complicated if the suboption parser is involved. The suboption
-parser puts several options into a single string, and passes them to a
-component at once, instead of using multiple options on the level of the
-command line.
-.sp
-The suboption parser can quote strings with \fB"\fP and \fB[...]\fP\&.
-Additionally, there is a special form of quoting with \fB%n%\fP described below.
-.sp
-For example, assume the hypothetical \fBfoo\fP filter can take multiple options:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBmpv test.mkv \-\-vf=foo:option1=value1:option2:option3=value3,bar\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This passes \fBoption1\fP and \fBoption3\fP to the \fBfoo\fP filter, with \fBoption2\fP
-as flag (implicitly \fBoption2=yes\fP), and adds a \fBbar\fP filter after that. If
-an option contains spaces or characters like \fB,\fP or \fB:\fP, you need to quote
-them:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBmpv \(aq\-\-vf=foo:option1="option value with spaces",bar\(aq\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Shells may actually strip some quotes from the string passed to the commandline,
-so the example quotes the string twice, ensuring that mpv receives the \fB"\fP
-quotes.
-.sp
-The \fB[...]\fP form of quotes wraps everything between \fB[\fP and \fB]\fP\&. It\(aqs
-useful with shells that don\(aqt interpret these characters in the middle of
-an argument (like bash). These quotes are balanced (since mpv 0.9.0): the \fB[\fP
-and \fB]\fP nest, and the quote terminates on the last \fB]\fP that has no matching
-\fB[\fP within the string. (For example, \fB[a[b]c]\fP results in \fBa[b]c\fP\&.)
-.sp
-The fixed\-length quoting syntax is intended for use with external
-scripts and programs.
-.sp
-It is started with \fB%\fP and has the following format:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-%n%string_of_length_n
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.sp
-\fBmpv \(aq\-\-vf=foo:option1=%11%quoted text\(aq test.avi\fP
-.sp
-Or in a script:
-.sp
-\fBmpv \-\-vf=foo:option1=%\(gaexpr length "$NAME"\(ga%"$NAME" test.avi\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note: where applicable with JSON\-IPC, \fB%n%\fP is the length in UTF\-8 bytes,
-after decoding the JSON data.
-.sp
-Suboptions passed to the client API are also subject to escaping. Using
-\fBmpv_set_option_string()\fP is exactly like passing \fB\-\-name=data\fP to the
-command line (but without shell processing of the string). Some options
-support passing values in a more structured way instead of flat strings, and
-can avoid the suboption parsing mess. For example, \fB\-\-vf\fP supports
-\fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP, which lets you pass suboptions as a nested data structure
-of maps and arrays.
-.SS Paths
-.sp
-Some care must be taken when passing arbitrary paths and filenames to mpv. For
-example, paths starting with \fB\-\fP will be interpreted as options. Likewise,
-if a path contains the sequence \fB://\fP, the string before that might be
-interpreted as protocol prefix, even though \fB://\fP can be part of a legal
-UNIX path. To avoid problems with arbitrary paths, you should be sure that
-absolute paths passed to mpv start with \fB/\fP, and prefix relative paths with
-\fB\&./\fP\&.
-.sp
-Using the \fBfile://\fP pseudo\-protocol is discouraged, because it involves
-strange URL unescaping rules.
-.sp
-The name \fB\-\fP itself is interpreted as stdin, and will cause mpv to disable
-console controls. (Which makes it suitable for playing data piped to stdin.)
-.sp
-The special argument \fB\-\-\fP can be used to stop mpv from interpreting the
-following arguments as options.
-.sp
-When using the client API, you should strictly avoid using \fBmpv_command_string\fP
-for invoking the \fBloadfile\fP command, and instead prefer e.g. \fBmpv_command\fP
-to avoid the need for filename escaping.
-.sp
-For paths passed to suboptions, the situation is further complicated by the
-need to escape special characters. To work this around, the path can be
-additionally wrapped in the fixed\-length syntax, e.g. \fB%n%string_of_length_n\fP
-(see above).
-.sp
-Some mpv options interpret paths starting with \fB~\fP\&.
-Currently, the prefix \fB~~home/\fP expands to the mpv configuration directory
-(usually \fB~/.config/mpv/\fP).
-\fB~/\fP expands to the user\(aqs home directory. (The trailing \fB/\fP is always
-required.) The following paths are currently recognized:
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-Name
-T} T{
-Meaning
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB~~/\fP
-T} T{
-If the subpath exists in any of the mpv\(aqs config directories
-the path of the existing file/dir is returned. Otherwise this
-is equivalent to \fB~~home/\fP\&.
-Note that if \-\-no\-config is used \fB~~/foobar\fP will resolve to
-\fBfoobar\fP which can be unexpected.
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB~/\fP
-T} T{
-user home directory root (similar to shell, \fB$HOME\fP)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB~~home/\fP
-T} T{
-mpv config dir (for example \fB~/.config/mpv/\fP)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB~~global/\fP
-T} T{
-the global config path, if available (not on win32)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB~~osxbundle/\fP
-T} T{
-the macOS bundle resource path (macOS only)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB~~desktop/\fP
-T} T{
-the path to the desktop (win32, macOS)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB~~exe_dir/\fP
-T} T{
-win32 only: the path to the directory containing the exe (for
-config file purposes; \fB$MPV_HOME\fP overrides it)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB~~old_home/\fP
-T} T{
-do not use
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.SS Per\-File Options
-.sp
-When playing multiple files, any option given on the command line usually
-affects all files. Example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv \-\-a file1.mkv \-\-b file2.mkv \-\-c
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-File
-T} T{
-Active options
-T}
-_
-T{
-file1.mkv
-T} T{
-\fB\-\-a \-\-b \-\-c\fP
-T}
-_
-T{
-file2.mkv
-T} T{
-\fB\-\-a \-\-b \-\-c\fP
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.sp
-(This is different from MPlayer and mplayer2.)
-.sp
-Also, if any option is changed at runtime (via input commands), they are not
-reset when a new file is played.
-.sp
-Sometimes, it is useful to change options per\-file. This can be achieved by
-adding the special per\-file markers \fB\-\-{\fP and \fB\-\-}\fP\&. (Note that you must
-escape these on some shells.) Example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv \-\-a file1.mkv \-\-b \-\-\e{ \-\-c file2.mkv \-\-d file3.mkv \-\-e \-\-\e} file4.mkv \-\-f
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-File
-T} T{
-Active options
-T}
-_
-T{
-file1.mkv
-T} T{
-\fB\-\-a \-\-b \-\-f\fP
-T}
-_
-T{
-file2.mkv
-T} T{
-\fB\-\-a \-\-b \-\-f \-\-c \-\-d \-\-e\fP
-T}
-_
-T{
-file3.mkv
-T} T{
-\fB\-\-a \-\-b \-\-f \-\-c \-\-d \-\-e\fP
-T}
-_
-T{
-file4.mkv
-T} T{
-\fB\-\-a \-\-b \-\-f\fP
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.sp
-Additionally, any file\-local option changed at runtime is reset when the current
-file stops playing. If option \fB\-\-c\fP is changed during playback of
-\fBfile2.mkv\fP, it is reset when advancing to \fBfile3.mkv\fP\&. This only affects
-file\-local options. The option \fB\-\-a\fP is never reset here.
-.SS List Options
-.sp
-Some options which store lists of option values can have action suffixes. For
-example, the \fB\-\-display\-tags\fP option takes a \fB,\fP\-separated list of tags, but
-the option also allows you to append a single tag with \fB\-\-display\-tags\-append\fP,
-and the tag name can for example contain a literal \fB,\fP without the need for
-escaping.
-.SS String list and path list options
-.sp
-String lists are separated by \fB,\fP\&. The strings are not parsed or interpreted
-by the option system itself. However, most
-.sp
-Path or file list options use \fB:\fP (Unix) or \fB;\fP (Windows) as separator,
-instead of \fB,\fP\&.
-.sp
-They support the following operations:
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-Suffix
-T} T{
-Meaning
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-set
-T} T{
-Set a list of items (using the list separator, escaped with backslash)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-append
-T} T{
-Append single item (does not interpret escapes)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-add
-T} T{
-Append 1 or more items (same syntax as \-set)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-pre
-T} T{
-Prepend 1 or more items (same syntax as \-set)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-clr
-T} T{
-Clear the option (remove all items)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-remove
-T} T{
-Delete item if present (does not interpret escapes)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-del
-T} T{
-Delete 1 or more items by integer index (deprecated)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-toggle
-T} T{
-Append an item, or remove if if it already exists (no escapes)
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.sp
-\fB\-append\fP is meant as a simple way to append a single item without having
-to escape the argument (you may still need to escape on the shell level).
-.SS Key/value list options
-.sp
-A key/value list is a list of key/value string pairs. In programming languages,
-this type of data structure is often called a map or a dictionary. The order
-normally does not matter, although in some cases the order might matter.
-.sp
-They support the following operations:
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-Suffix
-T} T{
-Meaning
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-set
-T} T{
-Set a list of items (using \fB,\fP as separator)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-append
-T} T{
-Append a single item (escapes for the key, no escapes for the value)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-add
-T} T{
-Append 1 or more items (same syntax as \-set)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-remove
-T} T{
-Delete item by key if present (does not interpret escapes)
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.sp
-Keys are unique within the list. If an already present key is set, the existing
-key is removed before the new value is appended.
-.sp
-If you want to pass a value without interpreting it for escapes or \fB,\fP, it is
-recommended to use the \fB\-add\fP variant. When using libmpv, prefer using
-\fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP\fP; when using a scripting backend or the JSON IPC, use an
-appropriate structured data type.
-.sp
-Prior to mpv 0.33, \fB:\fP was also recognized as separator by \fB\-set\fP\&.
-.SS Filter options
-.sp
-This is a very complex option type for the \fB\-\-af\fP and \fB\-\-vf\fP options only.
-They often require complicated escaping. See \fI\%VIDEO FILTERS\fP for details. They
-support the following operations:
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-Suffix
-T} T{
-Meaning
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-set
-T} T{
-Set a list of filters (using \fB,\fP as separator)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-append
-T} T{
-Append single filter
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-add
-T} T{
-Append 1 or more filters (same syntax as \-set)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-pre
-T} T{
-Prepend 1 or more filters (same syntax as \-set)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-clr
-T} T{
-Clear the option (remove all filters)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-remove
-T} T{
-Delete filter if present
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-del
-T} T{
-Delete 1 or more filters by integer index or filter label (deprecated)
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-toggle
-T} T{
-Append a filter, or remove if if it already exists
-T}
-_
-T{
-\-help
-T} T{
-Pseudo operation that prints a help text to the terminal
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.SS General
-.sp
-Without suffix, the operation used is normally \fB\-set\fP\&.
-.sp
-Although some operations allow specifying multiple items, using this is strongly
-discouraged and deprecated, except for \fB\-set\fP\&. There is a chance that
-operations like \fB\-add\fP and \fB\-pre\fP will work like \fB\-append\fP and accept a
-single, unescaped item only (so the \fB,\fP separator will not be interpreted and
-is passed on as part of the value).
-.sp
-Some options (like \fB\-\-sub\-file\fP, \fB\-\-audio\-file\fP, \fB\-\-glsl\-shader\fP) are
-aliases for the proper option with \fB\-append\fP action. For example,
-\fB\-\-sub\-file\fP is an alias for \fB\-\-sub\-files\-append\fP\&.
-.sp
-Options of this type can be changed at runtime using the \fBchange\-list\fP
-command, which takes the suffix (without the \fB\-\fP) as separate operation
-parameter.
-.SH CONFIGURATION FILES
-.SS Location and Syntax
-.sp
-You can put all of the options in configuration files which will be read every
-time mpv is run. The system\-wide configuration file \(aqmpv.conf\(aq is in your
-configuration directory (e.g. \fB/etc/mpv\fP or \fB/usr/local/etc/mpv\fP), the
-user\-specific one is \fB~/.config/mpv/mpv.conf\fP\&. For details and platform
-specifics (in particular Windows paths) see the \fI\%FILES\fP section.
-.sp
-User\-specific options override system\-wide options and options given on the
-command line override either. The syntax of the configuration files is
-\fBoption=value\fP\&. Everything after a \fI#\fP is considered a comment. Options
-that work without values can be enabled by setting them to \fIyes\fP and disabled by
-setting them to \fIno\fP\&. Even suboptions can be specified in this way.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example configuration file"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-# Use GPU\-accelerated video output by default.
-vo=gpu
-# Use quotes for text that can contain spaces:
-term\-status\-msg="Time: ${time\-pos}"
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Escaping spaces and special characters
-.sp
-This is done like with command line options. The shell is not involved here,
-but option values still need to be quoted as a whole if it contains certain
-characters like spaces. A config entry can be quoted with \fB"\fP,
-as well as with the fixed\-length syntax (\fB%n%\fP) mentioned before. This is like
-passing the exact contents of the quoted string as command line option. C\-style
-escapes are currently _not_ interpreted on this level, although some options do
-this manually. (This is a mess and should probably be changed at some point.)
-.SS Putting Command Line Options into the Configuration File
-.sp
-Almost all command line options can be put into the configuration file. Here
-is a small guide:
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-Option
-T} T{
-Configuration file entry
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB\-\-flag\fP
-T} T{
-\fBflag\fP
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB\-opt val\fP
-T} T{
-\fBopt=val\fP
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB\-\-opt=val\fP
-T} T{
-\fBopt=val\fP
-T}
-_
-T{
-\fB\-opt "has spaces"\fP
-T} T{
-\fBopt="has spaces"\fP
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.SS File\-specific Configuration Files
-.sp
-You can also write file\-specific configuration files. If you wish to have a
-configuration file for a file called \(aqvideo.avi\(aq, create a file named
-\(aqvideo.avi.conf\(aq with the file\-specific options in it and put it in
-\fB~/.config/mpv/\fP\&. You can also put the configuration file in the same directory
-as the file to be played. Both require you to set the \fB\-\-use\-filedir\-conf\fP
-option (either on the command line or in your global config file). If a
-file\-specific configuration file is found in the same directory, no
-file\-specific configuration is loaded from \fB~/.config/mpv\fP\&. In addition, the
-\fB\-\-use\-filedir\-conf\fP option enables directory\-specific configuration files.
-For this, mpv first tries to load a mpv.conf from the same directory
-as the file played and then tries to load any file\-specific configuration.
-.SS Profiles
-.sp
-To ease working with different configurations, profiles can be defined in the
-configuration files. A profile starts with its name in square brackets,
-e.g. \fB[my\-profile]\fP\&. All following options will be part of the profile. A
-description (shown by \fB\-\-profile=help\fP) can be defined with the
-\fBprofile\-desc\fP option. To end the profile, start another one or use the
-profile name \fBdefault\fP to continue with normal options.
-.sp
-You can list profiles with \fB\-\-profile=help\fP, and show the contents of a
-profile with \fB\-\-show\-profile=<name>\fP (replace \fB<name>\fP with the profile
-name). You can apply profiles on start with the \fB\-\-profile=<name>\fP option,
-or at runtime with the \fBapply\-profile <name>\fP command.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example mpv config file with profiles"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-# normal top\-level option
-fullscreen=yes
-
-# a profile that can be enabled with \-\-profile=big\-cache
-[big\-cache]
-cache=yes
-demuxer\-max\-bytes=123400KiB
-demuxer\-readahead\-secs=20
-
-[slow]
-profile\-desc="some profile name"
-# reference a builtin profile
-profile=gpu\-hq
-
-[fast]
-vo=vdpau
-
-# using a profile again extends it
-[slow]
-framedrop=no
-# you can also include other profiles
-profile=big\-cache
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Runtime profiles
-.sp
-Profiles can be set at runtime with \fBapply\-profile\fP command. Since this
-operation is "destructive" (every item in a profile is simply set as an
-option, overwriting the previous value), you can\(aqt just enable and disable
-profiles again.
-.sp
-As a partial remedy, there is a way to make profiles save old option values
-before overwriting them with the profile values, and then restoring the old
-values at a later point using \fBapply\-profile <profile\-name> restore\fP\&.
-.sp
-This can be enabled with the \fBprofile\-restore\fP option, which takes one of
-the following options:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBdefault\fP
-Does nothing, and nothing can be restored (default).
-.TP
-.B \fBcopy\fP
-When applying a profile, copy the old values of all profile options to a
-backup before setting them from the profile. These options are reset to
-their old values using the backup when restoring.
-.sp
-Every profile has its own list of backed up values. If the backup
-already exists (e.g. if \fBapply\-profile name\fP was called more than
-once in a row), the existing backup is no changed. The restore operation
-will remove the backup.
-.sp
-It\(aqs important to know that restoring does not "undo" setting an option,
-but simply copies the old option value. Consider for example \fBvf\-add\fP,
-appends an entry to \fBvf\fP\&. This mechanism will simply copy the entire
-\fBvf\fP list, and does _not_ execute the inverse of \fBvf\-add\fP (that
-would be \fBvf\-remove\fP) on restoring.
-.sp
-Note that if a profile contains recursive profiles (via the \fBprofile\fP
-option), the options in these recursive profiles are treated as if they
-were part of this profile. The referenced profile\(aqs backup list is not
-used when creating or using the backup. Restoring a profile does not
-restore referenced profiles, only the options of referenced profiles (as
-if they were part of the main profile).
-.TP
-.B \fBcopy\-equal\fP
-Similar to \fBcopy\fP, but restore an option only if it has the same value
-as the value effectively set by the profile. This tries to deal with
-the situation when the user does not want the option to be reset after
-interactively changing it.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[something]
-profile\-restore=copy\-equal
-vf\-add=rotate=90
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Then running these commands will result in behavior as commented:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-set vf vflip
-apply\-profile something
-vf\-add=hflip
-apply\-profile something
-# vf == vflip,rotate=90,hflip,rotate=90
-apply\-profile something restore
-# vf == vflip
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Conditional auto profiles
-.sp
-Profiles which have the \fBprofile\-cond\fP option set are applied automatically
-if the associated condition matches (unless auto profiles are disabled). The
-option takes a string, which is interpreted as Lua condition. If evaluating the
-expression returns true, the profile is applied, if it returns false, it is
-ignored. This Lua code execution is not sandboxed.
-.sp
-Any variables in condition expressions can reference properties. If an
-identifier is not already defined by Lua or mpv, it is interpreted as property.
-For example, \fBpause\fP would return the current pause status. You cannot
-reference properties with \fB\-\fP this way since that would denote a subtraction,
-but if the variable name contains any \fB_\fP characters, they are turned into
-\fB\-\fP\&. For example, \fBplayback_time\fP would return the property
-\fBplayback\-time\fP\&.
-.sp
-A more robust way to access properties is using \fBp.property_name\fP or
-\fBget("property\-name", default_value)\fP\&. The automatic variable to property
-magic will break if a new identifier with the same name is introduced (for
-example, if a function named \fBpause()\fP were added, \fBpause\fP would return a
-function value instead of the value of the \fBpause\fP property).
-.sp
-Note that if a property is not available, it will return \fBnil\fP, which can
-cause errors if used in expressions. These are logged in verbose mode, and the
-expression is considered to be false.
-.sp
-Whenever a property referenced by a profile condition changes, the condition
-is re\-evaluated. If the return value of the condition changes from false or
-error to true, the profile is applied.
-.sp
-This mechanism tries to "unapply" profiles once the condition changes from true
-to false. If you want to use this, you need to set \fBprofile\-restore\fP for the
-profile. Another possibility it to create another profile with an inverse
-condition to undo the other profile.
-.sp
-Recursive profiles can be used. But it is discouraged to reference other
-conditional profiles in a conditional profile, since this can lead to tricky
-and unintuitive behavior.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-Make only HD video look funny:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[something]
-profile\-desc=HD video sucks
-profile\-cond=width >= 1280
-hue=\-50
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If you want the profile to be reverted if the condition goes to false again,
-you can set \fBprofile\-restore\fP:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[something]
-profile\-desc=Mess up video when entering fullscreen
-profile\-cond=fullscreen
-profile\-restore=copy
-vf\-add=rotate=90
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This appends the \fBrotate\fP filter to the video filter chain when entering
-fullscreen. When leaving fullscreen, the \fBvf\fP option is set to the value
-it had before entering fullscreen. Note that this would also remove any
-other filters that were added during fullscreen mode by the user. Avoiding
-this is trickier, and could for example be solved by adding a second profile
-with an inverse condition and operation:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[something]
-profile\-cond=fullscreen
-vf\-add=@rot:rotate=90
-
-[something\-inv]
-profile\-cond=not fullscreen
-vf\-remove=@rot
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Every time an involved property changes, the condition is evaluated again.
-If your condition uses \fBp.playback_time\fP for example, the condition is
-re\-evaluated approximately on every video frame. This is probably slow.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This feature is managed by an internal Lua script. Conditions are executed as
-Lua code within this script. Its environment contains at least the following
-things:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB(function environment table)\fP
-Every Lua function has an environment table. This is used for identifier
-access. There is no named Lua symbol for it; it is implicit.
-.sp
-The environment does "magic" accesses to mpv properties. If an identifier
-is not already defined in \fB_G\fP, it retrieves the mpv property of the same
-name. Any occurrences of \fB_\fP in the name are replaced with \fB\-\fP before
-reading the property. The returned value is as retrieved by
-\fBmp.get_property_native(name)\fP\&. Internally, a cache of property values,
-updated by observing the property is used instead, so properties that are
-not observable will be stuck at the initial value forever.
-.sp
-If you want to access properties, that actually contain \fB_\fP in the name,
-use \fBget()\fP (which does not perform transliteration).
-.sp
-Internally, the environment table has a \fB__index\fP meta method set, which
-performs the access logic.
-.TP
-.B \fBp\fP
-A "magic" table similar to the environment table. Unlike the latter, this
-does not prefer accessing variables defined in \fB_G\fP \- it always accesses
-properties.
-.TP
-.B \fBget(name [, def])\fP
-Read a property and return its value. If the property value is \fBnil\fP (e.g.
-if the property does not exist), \fBdef\fP is returned.
-.sp
-This is superficially similar to \fBmp.get_property_native(name)\fP\&. An
-important difference is that this accesses the property cache, and enables
-the change detection logic (which is essential to the dynamic runtime
-behavior of auto profiles). Also, it does not return an error value as
-second return value.
-.sp
-The "magic" tables mentioned above use this function as backend. It does not
-perform the \fB_\fP transliteration.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-In addition, the same environment as in a blank mpv Lua script is present. For
-example, \fBmath\fP is defined and gives access to the Lua standard math library.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This feature is subject to change indefinitely. You might be forced to
-adjust your profiles on mpv updates.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Legacy auto profiles
-.sp
-Some profiles are loaded automatically using a legacy mechanism. The following
-example demonstrates this:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Auto profile loading"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[extension.mkv]
-profile\-desc="profile for .mkv files"
-vf=vflip
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The profile name follows the schema \fBtype.name\fP, where type can be
-\fBprotocol\fP for the input/output protocol in use (see \fB\-\-list\-protocols\fP),
-and \fBextension\fP for the extension of the path of the currently played file
-(\fInot\fP the file format).
-.sp
-This feature is very limited, and is considered soft\-deprecated. Use conditional
-auto profiles.
-.SH USING MPV FROM OTHER PROGRAMS OR SCRIPTS
-.sp
-There are three choices for using mpv from other programs or scripts:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP 1. 3
-Calling it as UNIX process. If you do this, \fIdo not parse terminal output\fP\&.
-The terminal output is intended for humans, and may change any time. In
-addition, terminal behavior itself may change any time. Compatibility
-cannot be guaranteed.
-.sp
-Your code should work even if you pass \fB\-\-no\-terminal\fP\&. Do not attempt
-to simulate user input by sending terminal control codes to mpv\(aqs stdin.
-If you need interactive control, using \fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server\fP is
-recommended. This gives you access to the \fI\%JSON IPC\fP over unix domain
-sockets (or named pipes on Windows).
-.sp
-Depending on what you do, passing \fB\-\-no\-config\fP or \fB\-\-config\-dir\fP may
-be a good idea to avoid conflicts with the normal mpv user configuration
-intended for CLI playback.
-.sp
-Using \fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server\fP is also suitable for purposes like remote
-control (however, the IPC protocol itself is not "secure" and not
-intended to be so).
-.IP 2. 3
-Using libmpv. This is generally recommended when mpv is used as playback
-backend for a completely different application. The provided C API is
-very close to CLI mechanisms and the scripting API.
-.sp
-Note that even though libmpv has different defaults, it can be configured
-to work exactly like the CLI player (except command line parsing is
-unavailable).
-.sp
-See \fI\%EMBEDDING INTO OTHER PROGRAMS (LIBMPV)\fP\&.
-.IP 3. 3
-As a user script (\fI\%LUA SCRIPTING\fP, \fI\%JAVASCRIPT\fP, \fI\%C PLUGINS\fP). This is
-recommended when the goal is to "enhance" the CLI player. Scripts get
-access to the entire client API of mpv.
-.sp
-This is the standard way to create third\-party extensions for the player.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-All these access the client API, which is the sum of the various mechanisms
-provided by the player core, as documented here: \fI\%OPTIONS\fP,
-\fI\%List of Input Commands\fP, \fI\%Properties\fP, \fI\%List of events\fP (also see C API),
-\fI\%Hooks\fP\&.
-.SH TAKING SCREENSHOTS
-.sp
-Screenshots of the currently played file can be taken using the \(aqscreenshot\(aq
-input mode command, which is by default bound to the \fBs\fP key. Files named
-\fBmpv\-shotNNNN.jpg\fP will be saved in the working directory, using the first
-available number \- no files will be overwritten. In pseudo\-GUI mode, the
-screenshot will be saved somewhere else. See \fI\%PSEUDO GUI MODE\fP\&.
-.sp
-A screenshot will usually contain the unscaled video contents at the end of the
-video filter chain and subtitles. By default, \fBS\fP takes screenshots without
-subtitles, while \fBs\fP includes subtitles.
-.sp
-Unlike with MPlayer, the \fBscreenshot\fP video filter is not required. This
-filter was never required in mpv, and has been removed.
-.SH TERMINAL STATUS LINE
-.sp
-During playback, mpv shows the playback status on the terminal. It looks like
-something like this:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBAV: 00:03:12 / 00:24:25 (13%) A\-V: \-0.000\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The status line can be overridden with the \fB\-\-term\-status\-msg\fP option.
-.sp
-The following is a list of things that can show up in the status line. Input
-properties, that can be used to get the same information manually, are also
-listed.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBAV:\fP or \fBV:\fP (video only) or \fBA:\fP (audio only)
-.IP \(bu 2
-The current time position in \fBHH:MM:SS\fP format (\fBplayback\-time\fP property)
-.IP \(bu 2
-The total file duration (absent if unknown) (\fBduration\fP property)
-.IP \(bu 2
-Playback speed, e.g. \fBx2.0\fP\&. Only visible if the speed is not normal. This
-is the user\-requested speed, and not the actual speed (usually they should
-be the same, unless playback is too slow). (\fBspeed\fP property.)
-.IP \(bu 2
-Playback percentage, e.g. \fB(13%)\fP\&. How much of the file has been played.
-Normally calculated out of playback position and duration, but can fallback
-to other methods (like byte position) if these are not available.
-(\fBpercent\-pos\fP property.)
-.IP \(bu 2
-The audio/video sync as \fBA\-V: 0.000\fP\&. This is the difference between
-audio and video time. Normally it should be 0 or close to 0. If it\(aqs growing,
-it might indicate a playback problem. (\fBavsync\fP property.)
-.IP \(bu 2
-Total A/V sync change, e.g. \fBct: \-0.417\fP\&. Normally invisible. Can show up
-if there is audio "missing", or not enough frames can be dropped. Usually
-this will indicate a problem. (\fBtotal\-avsync\-change\fP property.)
-.IP \(bu 2
-Encoding state in \fB{...}\fP, only shown in encoding mode.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Display sync state. If display sync is active (\fBdisplay\-sync\-active\fP
-property), this shows \fBDS: 2.500/13\fP, where the first number is average
-number of vsyncs per video frame (e.g. 2.5 when playing 24Hz videos on 60Hz
-screens), which might jitter if the ratio doesn\(aqt round off, or there are
-mistimed frames (\fBvsync\-ratio\fP), and the second number of estimated number
-of vsyncs which took too long (\fBvo\-delayed\-frame\-count\fP property). The
-latter is a heuristic, as it\(aqs generally not possible to determine this with
-certainty.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Dropped frames, e.g. \fBDropped: 4\fP\&. Shows up only if the count is not 0. Can
-grow if the video framerate is higher than that of the display, or if video
-rendering is too slow. May also be incremented on "hiccups" and when the video
-frame couldn\(aqt be displayed on time. (\fBframe\-drop\-count\fP property.)
-If the decoder drops frames, the number of decoder\-dropped frames is appended
-to the display as well, e.g.: \fBDropped: 4/34\fP\&. This happens only if
-decoder frame dropping is enabled with the \fB\-\-framedrop\fP options.
-(\fBdecoder\-frame\-drop\-count\fP property.)
-.IP \(bu 2
-Cache state, e.g. \fBCache: 2s/134KB\fP\&. Visible if the stream cache is enabled.
-The first value shows the amount of video buffered in the demuxer in seconds,
-the second value shows the estimated size of the buffered amount in kilobytes.
-(\fBdemuxer\-cache\-duration\fP and \fBdemuxer\-cache\-state\fP properties.)
-.UNINDENT
-.SH LOW LATENCY PLAYBACK
-.sp
-mpv is optimized for normal video playback, meaning it actually tries to buffer
-as much data as it seems to make sense. This will increase latency. Reducing
-latency is possible only by specifically disabling features which increase
-latency.
-.sp
-The builtin \fBlow\-latency\fP profile tries to apply some of the options which can
-reduce latency. You can use \fB\-\-profile=low\-latency\fP to apply all of them. You
-can list the contents with \fB\-\-show\-profile=low\-latency\fP (some of the options
-are quite obscure, and may change every mpv release).
-.sp
-Be aware that some of the options can reduce playback quality.
-.sp
-Most latency is actually caused by inconvenient timing behavior. You can disable
-this with \fB\-\-untimed\fP, but it will likely break, unless the stream has no
-audio, and the input feeds data to the player at a constant rate.
-.sp
-Another common problem is with MJPEG streams. These do not signal the correct
-framerate. Using \fB\-\-untimed\fP or \fB\-\-no\-correct\-pts \-\-fps=60\fP might help.
-.sp
-For livestreams, data can build up due to pausing the stream, due to slightly
-lower playback rate, or "buffering" pauses. If the demuxer cache is enabled,
-these can be skipped manually. The experimental \fBdrop\-buffers\fP command can
-be used to discard any buffered data, though it\(aqs very disruptive.
-.sp
-In some cases, manually tuning TCP buffer sizes and such can help to reduce
-latency.
-.sp
-Additional options that can be tried:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-opengl\-glfinish=yes\fP, can reduce buffering in the graphics driver
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-opengl\-swapinterval=0\fP, same
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-vo=xv\fP, same
-.IP \(bu 2
-without audio \fB\-\-framedrop=no \-\-speed=1.01\fP may help for live sources
-(results can be mixed)
-.UNINDENT
-.SH PROTOCOLS
-.sp
-\fBhttp://...\fP, \fBhttps://\fP, ...
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Many network protocols are supported, but the protocol prefix must always
-be specified. mpv will never attempt to guess whether a filename is
-actually a network address. A protocol prefix is always required.
-.sp
-Note that not all prefixes are documented here. Undocumented prefixes are
-either aliases to documented protocols, or are just redirections to
-protocols implemented and documented in FFmpeg.
-.sp
-\fBdata:\fP is supported in FFmpeg (not in Libav), but needs to be in the
-format \fBdata://\fP\&. This is done to avoid ambiguity with filenames. You
-can also prefix it with \fBlavf://\fP or \fBffmpeg://\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBytdl://...\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-By default, the youtube\-dl hook script only looks at http(s) URLs. Prefixing
-an URL with \fBytdl://\fP forces it to be always processed by the script. This
-can also be used to invoke special youtube\-dl functionality like playing a
-video by ID or invoking search.
-.sp
-Keep in mind that you can\(aqt pass youtube\-dl command line options by this,
-and you have to use \fB\-\-ytdl\-raw\-options\fP instead.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fB\-\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Play data from stdin.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBsmb://PATH\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Play a path from Samba share. (Requires FFmpeg support.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBbd://[title][/device]\fP \fB\-\-bluray\-device=PATH\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Play a Blu\-ray disc. Since libbluray 1.0.1, you can read from ISO files
-by passing them to \fB\-\-bluray\-device\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBtitle\fP can be: \fBlongest\fP or \fBfirst\fP (selects the default
-playlist); \fBmpls/<number>\fP (selects <number>.mpls playlist);
-\fB<number>\fP (select playlist with the same index). mpv will list
-the available playlists on loading.
-.sp
-\fBbluray://\fP is an alias.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBdvd://[title][/device]\fP \fB\-\-dvd\-device=PATH\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Play a DVD. DVD menus are not supported. If no title is given, the longest
-title is auto\-selected. Without \fB\-\-dvd\-device\fP, it will probably try
-to open an actual optical drive, if available and implemented for the OS.
-.sp
-\fBdvdnav://\fP is an old alias for \fBdvd://\fP and does exactly the same
-thing.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBdvb://[cardnumber@]channel\fP \fB\-\-dvbin\-...\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Digital TV via DVB. (Linux only.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBmf://[filemask|@listfile]\fP \fB\-\-mf\-...\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Play a series of images as video.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBcdda://[device]\fP \fB\-\-cdrom\-device=PATH\fP \fB\-\-cdda\-...\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Play CD.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBlavf://...\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Access any FFmpeg/Libav libavformat protocol. Basically, this passed the
-string after the \fB//\fP directly to libavformat.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBav://type:options\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is intended for using libavdevice inputs. \fBtype\fP is the libavdevice
-demuxer name, and \fBoptions\fP is the (pseudo\-)filename passed to the
-demuxer.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv av://v4l2:/dev/video0 \-\-profile=low\-latency \-\-untimed
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This plays video from the first v4l input with nearly the lowest latency
-possible. It\(aqs a good replacement for the removed \fBtv://\fP input.
-Using \fB\-\-untimed\fP is a hack to output a captured frame immediately,
-instead of respecting the input framerate. (There may be better ways to
-handle this in the future.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBavdevice://\fP is an alias.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBfile://PATH\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-A local path as URL. Might be useful in some special use\-cases. Note that
-\fBPATH\fP itself should start with a third \fB/\fP to make the path an
-absolute path.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBappending://PATH\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Play a local file, but assume it\(aqs being appended to. This is useful for
-example for files that are currently being downloaded to disk. This will
-block playback, and stop playback only if no new data was appended after
-a timeout of about 2 seconds.
-.sp
-Using this is still a bit of a bad idea, because there is no way to detect
-if a file is actually being appended, or if it\(aqs still written. If you\(aqre
-trying to play the output of some program, consider using a pipe
-(\fBsomething | mpv \-\fP). If it really has to be a file on disk, use tail to
-make it wait forever, e.g. \fBtail \-f \-c +0 file.mkv | mpv \-\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBfd://123\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Read data from the given file descriptor (for example 123). This is similar
-to piping data to stdin via \fB\-\fP, but can use an arbitrary file descriptor.
-mpv may modify some file descriptor properties when the stream layer "opens"
-it.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBfdclose://123\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Like \fBfd://\fP, but the file descriptor is closed after use. When using this
-you need to ensure that the same fd URL will only be used once.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBedl://[edl specification as in edl\-mpv.rst]\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Stitch together parts of multiple files and play them.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBslice://start[\-end]@URL\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Read a slice of a stream.
-.sp
-\fBstart\fP and \fBend\fP represent a byte range and accept
-suffixes such as \fBKiB\fP and \fBMiB\fP\&. \fBend\fP is optional.
-.sp
-if \fBend\fP starts with \fB+\fP, it is considered as offset from \fBstart\fP\&.
-.sp
-Only works with seekable streams.
-.sp
-Examples:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv slice://1g\-2g@cap.ts
-
-This starts reading from cap.ts after seeking 1 GiB, then
-reads until reaching 2 GiB or end of file.
-
-mpv slice://1g\-+2g@cap.ts
-
-This starts reading from cap.ts after seeking 1 GiB, then
-reads until reaching 3 GiB or end of file.
-
-mpv slice://100m@appending://cap.ts
-
-This starts reading from cap.ts after seeking 100MiB, then
-reads until end of file.
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBnull://\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Simulate an empty file. If opened for writing, it will discard all data.
-The \fBnull\fP demuxer will specifically pass autoprobing if this protocol
-is used (while it\(aqs not automatically invoked for empty files).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBmemory://data\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Use the \fBdata\fP part as source data.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBhex://data\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Like \fBmemory://\fP, but the string is interpreted as hexdump.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH PSEUDO GUI MODE
-.sp
-mpv has no official GUI, other than the OSC (\fI\%ON SCREEN CONTROLLER\fP), which
-is not a full GUI and is not meant to be. However, to compensate for the lack
-of expected GUI behavior, mpv will in some cases start with some settings
-changed to behave slightly more like a GUI mode.
-.sp
-Currently this happens only in the following cases:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-if started using the \fBmpv.desktop\fP file on Linux (e.g. started from menus
-or file associations provided by desktop environments)
-.IP \(bu 2
-if started from explorer.exe on Windows (technically, if it was started on
-Windows, and all of the stdout/stderr/stdin handles are unset)
-.IP \(bu 2
-started out of the bundle on macOS
-.IP \(bu 2
-if you manually use \fB\-\-player\-operation\-mode=pseudo\-gui\fP on the command line
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This mode applies options from the builtin profile \fBbuiltin\-pseudo\-gui\fP, but
-only if these haven\(aqt been set in the user\(aqs config file or on the command line,
-which is the main difference to using \fB\-\-profile=builtin\-pseudo\-gui\fP\&.
-.sp
-The profile is currently defined as follows:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[builtin\-pseudo\-gui]
-terminal=no
-force\-window=yes
-idle=once
-screenshot\-directory=~~desktop/
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The \fBpseudo\-gui\fP profile exists for compatibility. The options in the
-\fBpseudo\-gui\fP profile are applied unconditionally. In addition, the profile
-makes sure to enable the pseudo\-GUI mode, so that \fB\-\-profile=pseudo\-gui\fP
-works like in older mpv releases:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[pseudo\-gui]
-player\-operation\-mode=pseudo\-gui
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Currently, you can extend the \fBpseudo\-gui\fP profile in the config file the
-normal way. This is deprecated. In future mpv releases, the behavior might
-change, and not apply your additional settings, and/or use a different
-profile name.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH LINUX DESKTOP ISSUES
-.sp
-This subsection describes common problems on the Linux desktop. None of these
-problems exist on systems like Windows or macOS.
-.SS Disabling Screensaver
-.sp
-By default, mpv tries to disable the OS screensaver during playback (only if
-a VO using the OS GUI API is active). \fB\-\-stop\-screensaver=no\fP disables this.
-.sp
-A common problem is that Linux desktop environments ignore the standard
-screensaver APIs on which mpv relies. In particular, mpv uses the Screen Saver
-extension (XSS) on X11, and the idle\-inhibit on Wayland.
-.sp
-GNOME is one of the worst offenders, and ignores even the now widely supported
-idle\-inhibit protocol. (This is either due to a combination of malice and
-incompetence, but since implementing this protocol would only take a few lines
-of code, it is most likely the former. You will also notice how GNOME advocates
-react offended whenever their sabotage is pointed out, which indicates either
-hypocrisy, or even worse ignorance.)
-.sp
-Such incompatible desktop environments (i.e. which ignore standards) typically
-require using a DBus API. This is ridiculous in several ways. The immediate
-practical problem is that it would require adding a quite unwieldy dependency
-for a DBus library, somehow integrating its mainloop into mpv, and other
-generally unacceptable things.
-.sp
-However, since mpv does not officially support GNOME, this is not much of a
-problem. If you are one of those miserable users who want to use mpv on GNOME,
-report a bug on the GNOME issue tracker:
-\fI\%https://gitlab.gnome.org/groups/GNOME/\-/issues\fP
-.sp
-Alternatively, you may be able to write a Lua script that calls the
-\fBxdg\-screensaver\fP command line program. (By the way, this a command line
-program is an utterly horrible kludge that tries to identify your DE, and then
-tries to send the correct DBus command via a DBus CLI tool.) If you find the
-idea of having to write a script just so your screensaver doesn\(aqt kick in
-ridiculous, do not use GNOME, or use GNOME video software instead of mpv (good
-luck).
-.sp
-Before mpv 0.33.0, the X11 backend ran \fBxdg\-screensaver reset\fP in 10 second
-intervals when not paused. This hack was removed in 0.33.0.
-.SH OPTIONS
-.SS Track Selection
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alang=<languagecode[,languagecode,...]>\fP
-Specify a priority list of audio languages to use. Different container
-formats employ different language codes. DVDs use ISO 639\-1 two\-letter
-language codes, Matroska, MPEG\-TS and NUT use ISO 639\-2 three\-letter
-language codes, while OGM uses a free\-form identifier. See also \fB\-\-aid\fP\&.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBmpv dvd://1 \-\-alang=hu,en\fP chooses the Hungarian language track
-on a DVD and falls back on English if Hungarian is not available.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBmpv \-\-alang=jpn example.mkv\fP plays a Matroska file with Japanese
-audio.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-slang=<languagecode[,languagecode,...]>\fP
-Specify a priority list of subtitle languages to use. Different container
-formats employ different language codes. DVDs use ISO 639\-1 two letter
-language codes, Matroska uses ISO 639\-2 three letter language codes while
-OGM uses a free\-form identifier. See also \fB\-\-sid\fP\&.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBmpv dvd://1 \-\-slang=hu,en\fP chooses the Hungarian subtitle track on
-a DVD and falls back on English if Hungarian is not available.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBmpv \-\-slang=jpn example.mkv\fP plays a Matroska file with Japanese
-subtitles.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vlang=<...>\fP
-Equivalent to \fB\-\-alang\fP and \fB\-\-slang\fP, for video tracks.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-aid=<ID|auto|no>\fP
-Select audio track. \fBauto\fP selects the default, \fBno\fP disables audio.
-See also \fB\-\-alang\fP\&. mpv normally prints available audio tracks on the
-terminal when starting playback of a file.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-audio\fP is an alias for \fB\-\-aid\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-aid=no\fP or \fB\-\-audio=no\fP or \fB\-\-no\-audio\fP disables audio playback.
-(The latter variant does not work with the client API.)
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-The track selection options (\fB\-\-aid\fP but also \fB\-\-sid\fP and the
-others) sometimes expose behavior that may appear strange. Also, the
-behavior tends to change around with each mpv release.
-.sp
-The track selection properties will return the option value outside of
-playback (as expected), but during playback, the affective track
-selection is returned. For example, with \fB\-\-aid=auto\fP, the \fBaid\fP
-property will suddenly return \fB2\fP after playback initialization
-(assuming the file has at least 2 audio tracks, and the second is the
-default).
-.sp
-At mpv 0.32.0 (and some releases before), if you passed a track value
-for which a corresponding track didn\(aqt exist (e.g. \fB\-\-aid=2\fP and there
-was only 1 audio track), the \fBaid\fP property returned \fBno\fP\&. However if
-another audio track was added during playback, and you tried to set the
-\fBaid\fP property to \fB2\fP, nothing happened, because the \fBaid\fP option
-still had the value \fB2\fP, and writing the same value has no effect.
-.sp
-With mpv 0.33.0, the behavior was changed. Now track selection options
-are reset to \fBauto\fP at playback initialization, if the option had
-tries to select a track that does not exist. The same is done if the
-track exists, but fails to initialize. The consequence is that unlike
-before mpv 0.33.0, the user\(aqs track selection parameters are clobbered
-in certain situations.
-.sp
-Also since mpv 0.33.0, trying to select a track by number will strictly
-select this track. Before this change, trying to select a track which
-did not exist would fall back to track default selection at playback
-initialization. The new behavior is more consistent.
-.sp
-Setting a track selection property at runtime, and then playing a new
-file might reset the track selection to defaults, if the fingerprint
-of the track list of the new file is different.
-.sp
-Be aware of tricky combinations of all of all of the above: for example,
-\fBmpv \-\-aid=2 file_with_2_audio_tracks.mkv file_with_1_audio_track.mkv\fP
-would first play the correct track, and the second file without audio.
-If you then go back the first file, its first audio track will be played,
-and the second file is played with audio. If you do the same thing again
-but instead of using \fB\-\-aid=2\fP you run \fBset aid 2\fP while the file is
-playing, then changing to the second file will play its audio track.
-This is because runtime selection enables the fingerprint heuristic.
-.sp
-Most likely this is not the end.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sid=<ID|auto|no>\fP
-Display the subtitle stream specified by \fB<ID>\fP\&. \fBauto\fP selects
-the default, \fBno\fP disables subtitles.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-sub\fP is an alias for \fB\-\-sid\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-sid=no\fP or \fB\-\-sub=no\fP or \fB\-\-no\-sub\fP disables subtitle decoding.
-(The latter variant does not work with the client API.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vid=<ID|auto|no>\fP
-Select video channel. \fBauto\fP selects the default, \fBno\fP disables video.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-video\fP is an alias for \fB\-\-vid\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-vid=no\fP or \fB\-\-video=no\fP or \fB\-\-no\-video\fP disables video playback.
-(The latter variant does not work with the client API.)
-.sp
-If video is disabled, mpv will try to download the audio only if media is
-streamed with youtube\-dl, because it saves bandwidth. This is done by
-setting the ytdl_format to "bestaudio/best" in the ytdl_hook.lua script.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-edition=<ID|auto>\fP
-(Matroska files only)
-Specify the edition (set of chapters) to use, where 0 is the first. If set
-to \fBauto\fP (the default), mpv will choose the first edition declared as a
-default, or if there is no default, the first edition defined.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-track\-auto\-selection=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable the default track auto\-selection (default: yes). Enabling this will
-make the player select streams according to \fB\-\-aid\fP, \fB\-\-alang\fP, and
-others. If it is disabled, no tracks are selected. In addition, the player
-will not exit if no tracks are selected, and wait instead (this wait mode
-is similar to pausing, but the pause option is not set).
-.sp
-This is useful with \fB\-\-lavfi\-complex\fP: you can start playback in this
-mode, and then set select tracks at runtime by setting the filter graph.
-Note that if \fB\-\-lavfi\-complex\fP is set before playback is started, the
-referenced tracks are always selected.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-subs\-with\-matching\-audio=<yes|no>\fP
-When autoselecting a subtitle track, select a non\-forced one even if the selected
-audio stream matches your preferred subtitle language (default: yes). Disable this
-if you\(aqd like to only show subtitles for foreign audio or onscreen text.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Playback Control
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-start=<relative time>\fP
-Seek to given time position.
-.sp
-The general format for times is \fB[+|\-][[hh:]mm:]ss[.ms]\fP\&. If the time is
-prefixed with \fB\-\fP, the time is considered relative from the end of the
-file (as signaled by the demuxer/the file). A \fB+\fP is usually ignored (but
-see below).
-.sp
-The following alternative time specifications are recognized:
-.sp
-\fBpp%\fP seeks to percent position pp (0\-100).
-.sp
-\fB#c\fP seeks to chapter number c. (Chapters start from 1.)
-.sp
-\fBnone\fP resets any previously set option (useful for libmpv).
-.sp
-If \fB\-\-rebase\-start\-time=no\fP is given, then prefixing times with \fB+\fP
-makes the time relative to the start of the file. A timestamp without
-prefix is considered an absolute time, i.e. should seek to a frame with a
-timestamp as the file contains it. As a bug, but also a hidden feature,
-putting 1 or more spaces before the \fB+\fP or \fB\-\fP always interprets the
-time as absolute, which can be used to seek to negative timestamps (useful
-for debugging at most).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-start=+56\fP, \fB\-\-start=00:56\fP
-Seeks to the start time + 56 seconds.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-start=\-56\fP, \fB\-\-start=\-00:56\fP
-Seeks to the end time \- 56 seconds.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-start=01:10:00\fP
-Seeks to 1 hour 10 min.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-start=50%\fP
-Seeks to the middle of the file.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-start=30 \-\-end=40\fP
-Seeks to 30 seconds, plays 10 seconds, and exits.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-start=\-3:20 \-\-length=10\fP
-Seeks to 3 minutes and 20 seconds before the end of the file, plays
-10 seconds, and exits.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-start=\(aq#2\(aq \-\-end=\(aq#4\(aq\fP
-Plays chapters 2 and 3, and exits.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-end=<relative time>\fP
-Stop at given time. Use \fB\-\-length\fP if the time should be relative
-to \fB\-\-start\fP\&. See \fB\-\-start\fP for valid option values and examples.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-length=<relative time>\fP
-Stop after a given time relative to the start time.
-See \fB\-\-start\fP for valid option values and examples.
-.sp
-If both \fB\-\-end\fP and \fB\-\-length\fP are provided, playback will stop when it
-reaches either of the two endpoints.
-.sp
-Obscurity note: this does not work correctly if \fB\-\-rebase\-start\-time=no\fP,
-and the specified time is not an "absolute" time, as defined in the
-\fB\-\-start\fP option description.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-rebase\-start\-time=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to move the file start time to \fB00:00:00\fP (default: yes). This
-is less awkward for files which start at a random timestamp, such as
-transport streams. On the other hand, if there are timestamp resets, the
-resulting behavior can be rather weird. For this reason, and in case you
-are actually interested in the real timestamps, this behavior can be
-disabled with \fBno\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-speed=<0.01\-100>\fP
-Slow down or speed up playback by the factor given as parameter.
-.sp
-If \fB\-\-audio\-pitch\-correction\fP (on by default) is used, playing with a
-speed higher than normal automatically inserts the \fBscaletempo2\fP audio
-filter.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-pause\fP
-Start the player in paused state.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-shuffle\fP
-Play files in random order.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-playlist\-start=<auto|index>\fP
-Set which file on the internal playlist to start playback with. The index
-is an integer, with 0 meaning the first file. The value \fBauto\fP means that
-the selection of the entry to play is left to the playback resume mechanism
-(default). If an entry with the given index doesn\(aqt exist, the behavior is
-unspecified and might change in future mpv versions. The same applies if
-the playlist contains further playlists (don\(aqt expect any reasonable
-behavior). Passing a playlist file to mpv should work with this option,
-though. E.g. \fBmpv playlist.m3u \-\-playlist\-start=123\fP will work as expected,
-as long as \fBplaylist.m3u\fP does not link to further playlists.
-.sp
-The value \fBno\fP is a deprecated alias for \fBauto\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-playlist=<filename>\fP
-Play files according to a playlist file. Supports some common formats. If
-no format is detected, it will be treated as list of files, separated by
-newline characters. You may need this option to load plaintext files as
-a playlist. Note that XML playlist formats are not supported.
-.sp
-This option forces \fB\-\-demuxer=playlist\fP to interpret the playlist file.
-Some playlist formats, notably CUE and optical disc formats, need to use
-different demuxers and will not work with this option. They still can be
-played directly, without using this option.
-.sp
-You can play playlists directly, without this option. Before mpv version
-0.31.0, this option disabled any security mechanisms that might be in
-place, but since 0.31.0 it uses the same security mechanisms as playing a
-playlist file directly. If you trust the playlist file, you can disable
-any security checks with \fB\-\-load\-unsafe\-playlists\fP\&. Because playlists
-can load other playlist entries, consider applying this option only to the
-playlist itself and not its entries, using something along these lines:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBmpv \-\-{ \-\-playlist=filename \-\-load\-unsafe\-playlists \-\-}\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-The way older versions of mpv played playlist files via \fB\-\-playlist\fP
-was not safe against maliciously constructed files. Such files may
-trigger harmful actions. This has been the case for all verions of
-mpv prior to 0.31.0, and all MPlayer versions, but unfortunately this
-fact was not well documented earlier, and some people have even
-misguidedly recommended the use of \fB\-\-playlist\fP with untrusted
-sources. Do NOT use \fB\-\-playlist\fP with random internet sources or
-files you do not trust if you are not sure your mpv is at least 0.31.0.
-.sp
-In particular, playlists can contain entries using protocols other than
-local files, such as special protocols like \fBavdevice://\fP (which are
-inherently unsafe).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-chapter\-merge\-threshold=<number>\fP
-Threshold for merging almost consecutive ordered chapter parts in
-milliseconds (default: 100). Some Matroska files with ordered chapters
-have inaccurate chapter end timestamps, causing a small gap between the
-end of one chapter and the start of the next one when they should match.
-If the end of one playback part is less than the given threshold away from
-the start of the next one then keep playing video normally over the
-chapter change instead of doing a seek.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-chapter\-seek\-threshold=<seconds>\fP
-Distance in seconds from the beginning of a chapter within which a backward
-chapter seek will go to the previous chapter (default: 5.0). Past this
-threshold, a backward chapter seek will go to the beginning of the current
-chapter instead. A negative value means always go back to the previous
-chapter.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hr\-seek=<no|absolute|yes|default>\fP
-Select when to use precise seeks that are not limited to keyframes. Such
-seeks require decoding video from the previous keyframe up to the target
-position and so can take some time depending on decoding performance. For
-some video formats, precise seeks are disabled. This option selects the
-default choice to use for seeks; it is possible to explicitly override that
-default in the definition of key bindings and in input commands.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Never use precise seeks.
-.TP
-.B absolute
-Use precise seeks if the seek is to an absolute position in the
-file, such as a chapter seek, but not for relative seeks like
-the default behavior of arrow keys (default).
-.TP
-.B default
-Like \fBabsolute\fP, but enable hr\-seeks in audio\-only cases. The
-exact behavior is implementation specific and may change with
-new releases.
-.TP
-.B yes
-Use precise seeks whenever possible.
-.TP
-.B always
-Same as \fByes\fP (for compatibility).
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hr\-seek\-demuxer\-offset=<seconds>\fP
-This option exists to work around failures to do precise seeks (as in
-\fB\-\-hr\-seek\fP) caused by bugs or limitations in the demuxers for some file
-formats. Some demuxers fail to seek to a keyframe before the given target
-position, going to a later position instead. The value of this option is
-subtracted from the time stamp given to the demuxer. Thus, if you set this
-option to 1.5 and try to do a precise seek to 60 seconds, the demuxer is
-told to seek to time 58.5, which hopefully reduces the chance that it
-erroneously goes to some time later than 60 seconds. The downside of
-setting this option is that precise seeks become slower, as video between
-the earlier demuxer position and the real target may be unnecessarily
-decoded.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hr\-seek\-framedrop=<yes|no>\fP
-Allow the video decoder to drop frames during seek, if these frames are
-before the seek target. If this is enabled, precise seeking can be faster,
-but if you\(aqre using video filters which modify timestamps or add new
-frames, it can lead to precise seeking skipping the target frame. This
-e.g. can break frame backstepping when deinterlacing is enabled.
-.sp
-Default: \fByes\fP
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-index=<mode>\fP
-Controls how to seek in files. Note that if the index is missing from a
-file, it will be built on the fly by default, so you don\(aqt need to change
-this. But it might help with some broken files.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B default
-use an index if the file has one, or build it if missing
-.TP
-.B recreate
-don\(aqt read or use the file\(aqs index
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This option only works if the underlying media supports seeking
-(i.e. not with stdin, pipe, etc).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-load\-unsafe\-playlists\fP
-Load URLs from playlists which are considered unsafe (default: no). This
-includes special protocols and anything that doesn\(aqt refer to normal files.
-Local files and HTTP links on the other hand are always considered safe.
-.sp
-In addition, if a playlist is loaded while this is set, the added playlist
-entries are not marked as originating from network or potentially unsafe
-location. (Instead, the behavior is as if the playlist entries were provided
-directly to mpv command line or \fBloadfile\fP command.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-access\-references=<yes|no>\fP
-Follow any references in the file being opened (default: yes). Disabling
-this is helpful if the file is automatically scanned (e.g. thumbnail
-generation). If the thumbnail scanner for example encounters a playlist
-file, which contains network URLs, and the scanner should not open these,
-enabling this option will prevent it. This option also disables ordered
-chapters, mov reference files, opening of archives, and a number of other
-features.
-.sp
-On older FFmpeg versions, this will not work in some cases. Some FFmpeg
-demuxers might not respect this option.
-.sp
-This option does not prevent opening of paired subtitle files and such. Use
-\fB\-\-autoload\-files=no\fP to prevent this.
-.sp
-This option does not always work if you open non\-files (for example using
-\fBdvd://directory\fP would open a whole bunch of files in the given
-directory). Prefixing the filename with \fB\&./\fP if it doesn\(aqt start with
-a \fB/\fP will avoid this.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-loop\-playlist=<N|inf|force|no>\fP, \fB\-\-loop\-playlist\fP
-Loops playback \fBN\fP times. A value of \fB1\fP plays it one time (default),
-\fB2\fP two times, etc. \fBinf\fP means forever. \fBno\fP is the same as \fB1\fP and
-disables looping. If several files are specified on command line, the
-entire playlist is looped. \fB\-\-loop\-playlist\fP is the same as
-\fB\-\-loop\-playlist=inf\fP\&.
-.sp
-The \fBforce\fP mode is like \fBinf\fP, but does not skip playlist entries
-which have been marked as failing. This means the player might waste CPU
-time trying to loop a file that doesn\(aqt exist. But it might be useful for
-playing webradios under very bad network conditions.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-loop\-file=<N|inf|no>\fP, \fB\-\-loop=<N|inf|no>\fP
-Loop a single file N times. \fBinf\fP means forever, \fBno\fP means normal
-playback. For compatibility, \fB\-\-loop\-file\fP and \fB\-\-loop\-file=yes\fP are
-also accepted, and are the same as \fB\-\-loop\-file=inf\fP\&.
-.sp
-The difference to \fB\-\-loop\-playlist\fP is that this doesn\(aqt loop the playlist,
-just the file itself. If the playlist contains only a single file, the
-difference between the two option is that this option performs a seek on
-loop, instead of reloading the file.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB\-\-loop\-file\fP counts the number of times it causes the player to
-seek to the beginning of the file, not the number of full playthroughs. This
-means \fB\-\-loop\-file=1\fP will end up playing the file twice. Contrast with
-\fB\-\-loop\-playlist\fP, which counts the number of full playthroughs.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fB\-\-loop\fP is an alias for this option.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ab\-loop\-a=<time>\fP, \fB\-\-ab\-loop\-b=<time>\fP
-Set loop points. If playback passes the \fBb\fP timestamp, it will seek to
-the \fBa\fP timestamp. Seeking past the \fBb\fP point doesn\(aqt loop (this is
-intentional).
-.sp
-If \fBa\fP is after \fBb\fP, the behavior is as if the points were given in
-the right order, and the player will seek to \fBb\fP after crossing through
-\fBa\fP\&. This is different from old behavior, where looping was disabled (and
-as a bug, looped back to \fBa\fP on the end of the file).
-.sp
-If either options are set to \fBno\fP (or unset), looping is disabled. This
-is different from old behavior, where an unset \fBa\fP implied the start of
-the file, and an unset \fBb\fP the end of the file.
-.sp
-The loop\-points can be adjusted at runtime with the corresponding
-properties. See also \fBab\-loop\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ab\-loop\-count=<N|inf>\fP
-Run A\-B loops only N times, then ignore the A\-B loop points (default: inf).
-Every finished loop iteration will decrement this option by 1 (unless it is
-set to \fBinf\fP or 0). \fBinf\fP means that looping goes on forever. If this
-option is set to 0, A\-B looping is ignored, and even the \fBab\-loop\fP command
-will not enable looping again (the command will show \fB(disabled)\fP on the
-OSD message if both loop points are set, but \fBab\-loop\-count\fP is 0).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ordered\-chapters\fP, \fB\-\-no\-ordered\-chapters\fP
-Enabled by default.
-Disable support for Matroska ordered chapters. mpv will not load or
-search for video segments from other files, and will also ignore any
-chapter order specified for the main file.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ordered\-chapters\-files=<playlist\-file>\fP
-Loads the given file as playlist, and tries to use the files contained in
-it as reference files when opening a Matroska file that uses ordered
-chapters. This overrides the normal mechanism for loading referenced
-files by scanning the same directory the main file is located in.
-.sp
-Useful for loading ordered chapter files that are not located on the local
-filesystem, or if the referenced files are in different directories.
-.sp
-Note: a playlist can be as simple as a text file containing filenames
-separated by newlines.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-chapters\-file=<filename>\fP
-Load chapters from this file, instead of using the chapter metadata found
-in the main file.
-.sp
-This accepts a media file (like mkv) or even a pseudo\-format like ffmetadata
-and uses its chapters to replace the current file\(aqs chapters. This doesn\(aqt
-work with OGM or XML chapters directly.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sstep=<sec>\fP
-Skip <sec> seconds after every frame.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Without \fB\-\-hr\-seek\fP, skipping will snap to keyframes.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-stop\-playback\-on\-init\-failure=<yes|no>\fP
-Stop playback if either audio or video fails to initialize (default: no).
-With \fBno\fP, playback will continue in video\-only or audio\-only mode if one
-of them fails. This doesn\(aqt affect playback of audio\-only or video\-only
-files.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-play\-dir=<forward|+|backward|\->\fP
-Control the playback direction (default: forward). Setting \fBbackward\fP
-will attempt to play the file in reverse direction, with decreasing
-playback time. If this is set on playback starts, playback will start from
-the end of the file. If this is changed at during playback, a hr\-seek will
-be issued to change the direction.
-.sp
-\fB+\fP and \fB\-\fP are aliases for \fBforward\fP and \fBbackward\fP\&.
-.sp
-The rest of this option description pertains to the \fBbackward\fP mode.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Backward playback is extremely fragile. It may not always work, is much
-slower than forward playback, and breaks certain other features. How
-well it works depends mainly on the file being played. Generally, it
-will show good results (or results at all) only if the stars align.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-mpv, as well as most media formats, were designed for forward playback
-only. Backward playback is bolted on top of mpv, and tries to make a medium
-effort to make backward playback work. Depending on your use\-case, another
-tool may work much better.
-.sp
-Backward playback is not exactly a 1st class feature. Implementation
-tradeoffs were made, that are bad for backward playback, but in turn do not
-cause disadvantages for normal playback. Various possible optimizations are
-not implemented in order to keep the complexity down. Normally, a media
-player is highly pipelined (future data is prepared in separate threads, so
-it is available in realtime when the next stage needs it), but backward
-playback will essentially stall the pipeline at various random points.
-.sp
-For example, for intra\-only codecs are trivially backward playable, and
-tools built around them may make efficient use of them (consider video
-editors or camera viewers). mpv won\(aqt be efficient in this case, because it
-uses its generic backward playback algorithm, that on top of it is not very
-optimized.
-.sp
-If you just want to quickly go backward through the video and just show
-"keyframes", just use forward playback, and hold down the left cursor key
-(which on CLI with default config sends many small relative seek commands).
-.sp
-The implementation consists of mostly 3 parts:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-Backward demuxing. This relies on the demuxer cache, so the demuxer cache
-should (or must, didn\(aqt test it) be enabled, and its size will affect
-performance. If the cache is too small or too large, quadratic runtime
-behavior may result.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Backward decoding. The decoder library used (libavcodec) does not support
-this. It is emulated by feeding bits of data in forward, putting the
-result in a queue, returning the queue data to the VO in reverse, and
-then starting over at an earlier position. This can require buffering an
-extreme amount of decoded data, and also completely breaks pipelining.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Backward output. This is relatively simple, because the decoder returns
-the frames in the needed order. However, this may cause various problems
-because filters see audio and video going backward.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Known problems:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-It\(aqs fragile. If anything doesn\(aqt work, random non\-useful behavior may
-occur. In simple cases, the player will just play nonsense and artifacts.
-In other cases, it may get stuck or heat the CPU. (Exceeding memory usage
-significantly beyond the user\-set limits would be a bug, though.)
-.IP \(bu 2
-Performance and resource usage isn\(aqt good. In part this is inherent to
-backward playback of normal media formats, and in parts due to
-implementation choices and tradeoffs.
-.IP \(bu 2
-This is extremely reliant on good demuxer behavior. Although backward
-demuxing requires no special demuxer support, it is required that the
-demuxer performs seeks reliably, fulfills some specific requirements
-about packet metadata, and has deterministic behavior.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Starting playback exactly from the end may or may not work, depending on
-seeking behavior and file duration detection.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Some container formats, audio, and video codecs are not supported due to
-their behavior. There is no list, and the player usually does not detect
-them. Certain live streams (including TV captures) may exhibit problems
-in particular, as well as some lossy audio codecs. h264 intra\-refresh is
-known not to work due to problems with libavcodec. WAV and some other raw
-audio formats tend to have problems \- there are hacks for dealing with
-them, which may or may not work.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Backward demuxing of subtitles is not supported. Subtitle display still
-works for some external text subtitle formats. (These are fully read into
-memory, and only backward display is needed.) Text subtitles that are
-cached in the subtitle renderer also have a chance to be displayed
-correctly.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Some features dealing with playback of broken or hard to deal with files
-will not work fully (such as timestamp correction).
-.IP \(bu 2
-If demuxer low level seeks (i.e. seeking the actual demuxer instead of
-just within the demuxer cache) are performed by backward playback, the
-created seek ranges may not join, because not enough overlap is achieved.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Trying to use this with hardware video decoding will probably exhaust all
-your GPU memory and then crash a thing or two. Or it will fail because
-\fB\-\-hwdec\-extra\-frames\fP will certainly be set too low.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Stream recording is broken. \fB\-\-stream\-record\fP may keep working if you
-backward play within a cached region only.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Relative seeks may behave weird. Small seeks backward (towards smaller
-time, i.e. \fBseek \-1\fP) may not really seek properly, and audio will
-remain muted for a while. Using hr\-seek is recommended, which should have
-none of these problems.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Some things are just weird. For example, while seek commands manipulate
-playback time in the expected way (provided they work correctly), the
-framestep commands are transposed. Backstepping will perform very
-expensive work to step forward by 1 frame.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Tuning:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-Remove all \fB\-\-vf\fP/\fB\-\-af\fP filters you have set. Disable hardware
-decoding. Disable idiotic nonsense like SPDIF passthrough.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Increasing \fB\-\-video\-reversal\-buffer\fP might help if reversal queue
-overflow is reported, which may happen in high bitrate video, or video
-with large GOP. Hardware decoding mostly ignores this, and you need to
-increase \fB\-\-hwdec\-extra\-frames\fP instead (until you get playback without
-logged errors).
-.IP \(bu 2
-The demuxer cache is essential for backward demuxing. Make sure to set
-\fB\-\-cache=yes\fP\&. The cache size might matter. If it\(aqs too small, a queue
-overflow will be logged, and backward playback cannot continue, or it
-performs too many low level seeks. If it\(aqs too large, implementation
-tradeoffs may cause general performance issues. Use
-\fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-bytes\fP to potentially increase the amount of packets the
-demuxer layer can queue for reverse demuxing (basically it\(aqs the
-\fB\-\-video\-reversal\-buffer\fP equivalent for the demuxer layer).
-.IP \(bu 2
-Setting \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-enable=yes\fP can help a lot to make playback smooth
-(once it works).
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-demuxer\-backward\-playback\-step\fP also factors into how many seeks may
-be performed, and whether backward demuxing could break due to queue
-overflow. If it\(aqs set too high, the backstep operation needs to search
-through more packets all the time, even if the cache is large enough.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Setting \fB\-\-demuxer\-cache\-wait\fP may be useful to cache the entire file
-into the demuxer cache. Set \fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-bytes\fP to a large size to
-make sure it can read the entire cache; \fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-back\-bytes\fP
-should also be set to a large size to prevent that tries to trim the
-cache.
-.IP \(bu 2
-If audio artifacts are audible, even though the AO does not underrun,
-increasing \fB\-\-audio\-backward\-overlap\fP might help in some cases.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-reversal\-buffer=<bytesize>\fP, \fB\-\-audio\-reversal\-buffer=<bytesize>\fP
-For backward decoding. Backward decoding decodes forward in steps, and then
-reverses the decoder output. These options control the approximate maximum
-amount of bytes that can be buffered. The main use of this is to avoid
-unbounded resource usage; during normal backward playback, it\(aqs not supposed
-to hit the limit, and if it does, it will drop frames and complain about it.
-.sp
-Use this option if you get reversal queue overflow errors during backward
-playback. Increase the size until the warning disappears. Usually, the video
-buffer will overflow first, especially if it\(aqs high resolution video.
-.sp
-This does not work correctly if video hardware decoding is used. The video
-frame size will not include the referenced GPU and driver memory. Some
-hardware decoders may also be limited by \fB\-\-hwdec\-extra\-frames\fP\&.
-.sp
-How large the queue size needs to be depends entirely on the way the media
-was encoded. Audio typically requires a very small buffer, while video can
-require excessively large buffers.
-.sp
-(Technically, this allows the last frame to exceed the limit. Also, this
-does not account for other buffered frames, such as inside the decoder or
-the video output.)
-.sp
-This does not affect demuxer cache behavior at all.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-list\-options\fP for defaults and value range. \fB<bytesize>\fP options
-accept suffixes such as \fBKiB\fP and \fBMiB\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-backward\-overlap=<auto|number>\fP, \fB\-\-audio\-backward\-overlap=<auto|number>\fP
-Number of overlapping keyframe ranges to use for backward decoding (default:
-auto) ("keyframe" to be understood as in the mpv/ffmpeg specific meaning).
-Backward decoding works by forward decoding in small steps. Some codecs
-cannot restart decoding from any packet (even if it\(aqs marked as seek point),
-which becomes noticeable with backward decoding (in theory this is a problem
-with seeking too, but \fB\-\-hr\-seek\-demuxer\-offset\fP can fix it for seeking).
-In particular, MDCT based audio codecs are affected.
-.sp
-The solution is to feed a previous packet to the decoder each time, and then
-discard the output. This option controls how many packets to feed. The
-\fBauto\fP choice is currently hardcoded to 0 for video, and uses 1 for lossy
-audio, 0 for lossless audio. For some specific lossy audio codecs, this is
-set to 2.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-video\-backward\-overlap\fP can potentially handle intra\-refresh video,
-depending on the exact conditions. You may have to use the
-\fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-show\-all\fP option as well.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-backward\-batch=<number>\fP, \fB\-\-audio\-backward\-batch=<number>\fP
-Number of keyframe ranges to decode at once when backward decoding (default:
-1 for video, 10 for audio). Another pointless tuning parameter nobody should
-use. This should affect performance only. In theory, setting a number higher
-than 1 for audio will reduce overhead due to less frequent backstep
-operations and less redundant decoding work due to fewer decoded overlap
-frames (see \fB\-\-audio\-backward\-overlap\fP). On the other hand, it requires
-a larger reversal buffer, and could make playback less smooth due to
-breaking pipelining (e.g. by decoding a lot, and then doing nothing for a
-while).
-.sp
-It probably never makes sense to set \fB\-\-video\-backward\-batch\fP\&. But in
-theory, it could help with intra\-only video codecs by reducing backstep
-operations.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-backward\-playback\-step=<seconds>\fP
-Number of seconds the demuxer should seek back to get new packets during
-backward playback (default: 60). This is useful for tuning backward
-playback, see \fB\-\-play\-dir\fP for details.
-.sp
-Setting this to a very low value or 0 may make the player think seeking is
-broken, or may make it perform multiple seeks.
-.sp
-Setting this to a high value may lead to quadratic runtime behavior.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Program Behavior
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-help\fP, \fB\-\-h\fP
-Show short summary of options.
-.sp
-You can also pass a string to this option, which will list all top\-level
-options which contain the string in the name, e.g. \fB\-\-h=scale\fP for all
-options that contain the word \fBscale\fP\&. The special string \fB*\fP lists
-all top\-level options.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-v\fP
-Increment verbosity level, one level for each \fB\-v\fP found on the command
-line.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-version, \-V\fP
-Print version string and exit.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-config\fP
-Do not load default configuration files. This prevents loading of both the
-user\-level and system\-wide \fBmpv.conf\fP and \fBinput.conf\fP files. Other
-configuration files are blocked as well, such as resume playback files.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Files explicitly requested by command line options, like
-\fB\-\-include\fP or \fB\-\-use\-filedir\-conf\fP, will still be loaded.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See also: \fB\-\-config\-dir\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-list\-options\fP
-Prints all available options.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-list\-properties\fP
-Print a list of the available properties.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-list\-protocols\fP
-Print a list of the supported protocols.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-log\-file=<path>\fP
-Opens the given path for writing, and print log messages to it. Existing
-files will be truncated. The log level is at least \fB\-v \-v\fP, but
-can be raised via \fB\-\-msg\-level\fP (the option cannot lower it below the
-forced minimum log level).
-.sp
-A special case is the macOS bundle, it will create a log file at
-\fB~/Library/Logs/mpv.log\fP by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-config\-dir=<path>\fP
-Force a different configuration directory. If this is set, the given
-directory is used to load configuration files, and all other configuration
-directories are ignored. This means the global mpv configuration directory
-as well as per\-user directories are ignored, and overrides through
-environment variables (\fBMPV_HOME\fP) are also ignored.
-.sp
-Note that the \fB\-\-no\-config\fP option takes precedence over this option.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-save\-position\-on\-quit\fP
-Always save the current playback position on quit. When this file is
-played again later, the player will seek to the old playback position on
-start. This does not happen if playback of a file is stopped in any other
-way than quitting. For example, going to the next file in the playlist
-will not save the position, and start playback at beginning the next time
-the file is played.
-.sp
-This behavior is disabled by default, but is always available when quitting
-the player with Shift+Q.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-watch\-later\-directory=<path>\fP
-The directory in which to store the "watch later" temporary files.
-.sp
-The default is a subdirectory named "watch_later" underneath the
-config directory (usually \fB~/.config/mpv/\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dump\-stats=<filename>\fP
-Write certain statistics to the given file. The file is truncated on
-opening. The file will contain raw samples, each with a timestamp. To
-make this file into a readable, the script \fBTOOLS/stats\-conv.py\fP can be
-used (which currently displays it as a graph).
-.sp
-This option is useful for debugging only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-idle=<no|yes|once>\fP
-Makes mpv wait idly instead of quitting when there is no file to play.
-Mostly useful in input mode, where mpv can be controlled through input
-commands. (Default: \fBno\fP)
-.sp
-\fBonce\fP will only idle at start and let the player close once the
-first playlist has finished playing back.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-include=<configuration\-file>\fP
-Specify configuration file to be parsed after the default ones.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-load\-scripts=<yes|no>\fP
-If set to \fBno\fP, don\(aqt auto\-load scripts from the \fBscripts\fP
-configuration subdirectory (usually \fB~/.config/mpv/scripts/\fP).
-(Default: \fByes\fP)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-script=<filename>\fP, \fB\-\-scripts=file1.lua:file2.lua:...\fP
-Load a Lua script. The second option allows you to load multiple scripts by
-separating them with the path separator (\fB:\fP on Unix, \fB;\fP on Windows).
-.sp
-\fB\-\-scripts\fP is a path list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-script\-opts=key1=value1,key2=value2,...\fP
-Set options for scripts. A script can query an option by key. If an
-option is used and what semantics the option value has depends entirely on
-the loaded scripts. Values not claimed by any scripts are ignored.
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-merge\-files\fP
-Pretend that all files passed to mpv are concatenated into a single, big
-file. This uses timeline/EDL support internally.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-resume\-playback\fP
-Do not restore playback position from the \fBwatch_later\fP configuration
-subdirectory (usually \fB~/.config/mpv/watch_later/\fP).
-See \fBquit\-watch\-later\fP input command.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-resume\-playback\-check\-mtime\fP
-Only restore the playback position from the \fBwatch_later\fP configuration
-subdirectory (usually \fB~/.config/mpv/watch_later/\fP) if the file\(aqs
-modification time is the same as at the time of saving. This may prevent
-skipping forward in files with the same name which have different content.
-(Default: \fBno\fP)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-profile=<profile1,profile2,...>\fP
-Use the given profile(s), \fB\-\-profile=help\fP displays a list of the
-defined profiles.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-reset\-on\-next\-file=<all|option1,option2,...>\fP
-Normally, mpv will try to keep all settings when playing the next file on
-the playlist, even if they were changed by the user during playback. (This
-behavior is the opposite of MPlayer\(aqs, which tries to reset all settings
-when starting next file.)
-.sp
-Default: Do not reset anything.
-.sp
-This can be changed with this option. It accepts a list of options, and
-mpv will reset the value of these options on playback start to the initial
-value. The initial value is either the default value, or as set by the
-config file or command line.
-.sp
-In some cases, this might not work as expected. For example, \fB\-\-volume\fP
-will only be reset if it is explicitly set in the config file or the
-command line.
-.sp
-The special name \fBall\fP resets as many options as possible.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-reset\-on\-next\-file=pause\fP
-Reset pause mode when switching to the next file.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-reset\-on\-next\-file=fullscreen,speed\fP
-Reset fullscreen and playback speed settings if they were changed
-during playback.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-reset\-on\-next\-file=all\fP
-Try to reset all settings that were changed during playback.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-watch\-later\-options=option1,option2,...\fP
-The options that are saved in "watch later" files if they have been changed
-since when mpv started. These values will be restored the next time the
-files are played. The playback position is always saved as \fBstart\fP, so
-adding \fBstart\fP to this list has no effect.
-.sp
-When removing options, existing watch later data won\(aqt be modified and will
-still be applied fully, but new watch later data won\(aqt contain these
-options.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-watch\-later\-options\-remove=fullscreen\fP
-The fullscreen state won\(aqt be saved to watch later files.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-watch\-later\-options\-remove=volume\fP
-\fB\-\-watch\-later\-options\-remove=mute\fP
-The volume and mute state won\(aqt be saved to watch later files.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-watch\-later\-options\-clr\fP
-No option will be saved to watch later files except the starting
-position.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-write\-filename\-in\-watch\-later\-config\fP
-Prepend the watch later config files with the name of the file they refer
-to. This is simply written as comment on the top of the file.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This option may expose privacy\-sensitive information and is thus
-disabled by default.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ignore\-path\-in\-watch\-later\-config\fP
-Ignore path (i.e. use filename only) when using watch later feature.
-(Default: disabled)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-show\-profile=<profile>\fP
-Show the description and content of a profile. Lists all profiles if no
-parameter is provided.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-use\-filedir\-conf\fP
-Look for a file\-specific configuration file in the same directory as the
-file that is being played. See \fI\%File\-specific Configuration Files\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-May be dangerous if playing from untrusted media.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ytdl\fP, \fB\-\-no\-ytdl\fP
-Enable the youtube\-dl hook\-script. It will look at the input URL, and will
-play the video located on the website. This works with many streaming sites,
-not just the one that the script is named after. This requires a recent
-version of youtube\-dl to be installed on the system. (Enabled by default.)
-.sp
-If the script can\(aqt do anything with an URL, it will do nothing.
-.sp
-This accepts a set of options, which can be passed to it with the
-\fB\-\-script\-opts\fP option (using \fBytdl_hook\-\fP as prefix):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBtry_ytdl_first=<yes|no>\fP
-If \(aqyes\(aq will try parsing the URL with youtube\-dl first, instead of the
-default where it\(aqs only after mpv failed to open it. This mostly depends
-on whether most of your URLs need youtube\-dl parsing.
-.TP
-.B \fBexclude=<URL1|URL2|...\fP
-A \fB|\fP\-separated list of URL patterns which mpv should not use with
-youtube\-dl. The patterns are matched after the \fBhttp(s)://\fP part of
-the URL.
-.sp
-\fB^\fP matches the beginning of the URL, \fB$\fP matches its end, and you
-should use \fB%\fP before any of the characters \fB^$()%|,.[]*+\-?\fP to
-match that character.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-script\-opts=ytdl_hook\-exclude=\(aq^youtube%.com\(aq\fP
-will exclude any URL that starts with \fBhttp://youtube.com\fP or
-\fBhttps://youtube.com\fP\&.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-script\-opts=ytdl_hook\-exclude=\(aq%.mkv$|%.mp4$\(aq\fP
-will exclude any URL that ends with \fB\&.mkv\fP or \fB\&.mp4\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See more lua patterns here: \fI\%https://www.lua.org/manual/5.1/manual.html#5.4.1\fP
-.TP
-.B \fBall_formats=<yes|no>\fP
-If \(aqyes\(aq will attempt to add all formats found reported by youtube\-dl
-(default: no). Each format is added as a separate track. In addition,
-they are delay\-loaded, and actually opened only when a track is selected
-(this should keep load times as low as without this option).
-.sp
-It adds average bitrate metadata, if available, which means you can use
-\fB\-\-hls\-bitrate\fP to decide which track to select. (HLS used to be the
-only format whose alternative quality streams were exposed in a similar
-way, thus the option name.)
-.sp
-Tracks which represent formats that were selected by youtube\-dl as
-default will have the default flag set. This means mpv should generally
-still select formats chosen with \fB\-\-ytdl\-format\fP by default.
-.sp
-Although this mechanism makes it possible to switch streams at runtime,
-it\(aqs not suitable for this purpose for various technical reasons. (It\(aqs
-slow, which can\(aqt be really fixed.) In general, this option is not
-useful, and was only added to show that it\(aqs possible.
-.sp
-There are two cases that must be considered when doing quality/bandwidth
-selection:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP 1. 3
-Completely separate audio and video streams (DASH\-like). Each of
-these streams contain either only audio or video, so you can
-mix and combine audio/video bandwidths without restriction. This
-intuitively matches best with the concept of selecting quality
-by track (what \fBall_formats\fP is supposed to do).
-.IP 2. 3
-Separate sets of muxed audio and video streams. Each version of
-the media contains both an audio and video stream, and they are
-interleaved. In order not to waste bandwidth, you should only
-select one of these versions (if, for example, you select an
-audio stream, then video will be downloaded, even if you selected
-video from a different stream).
-.sp
-mpv will still represent them as separate tracks, but will set
-the title of each track to \fBmuxed\-N\fP, where \fBN\fP is replaced
-with the youtube\-dl format ID of the originating stream.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Some sites will mix 1. and 2., but we assume that they do so for
-compatibility reasons, and there is no reason to use them at all.
-.TP
-.B \fBforce_all_formats=<yes|no>\fP
-If set to \(aqyes\(aq, and \fBall_formats\fP is also set to \(aqyes\(aq, this will
-try to represent all youtube\-dl reported formats as tracks, even if
-mpv would normally use the direct URL reported by it (default: yes).
-.sp
-It appears this normally makes a difference if youtube\-dl works on a
-master HLS playlist.
-.sp
-If this is set to \(aqno\(aq, this specific kind of stream is treated like
-\fBall_formats\fP is set to \(aqno\(aq, and the stream selection as done by
-youtube\-dl (via \fB\-\-ytdl\-format\fP) is used.
-.TP
-.B \fBuse_manifests=<yes|no>\fP
-Make mpv use the master manifest URL for formats like HLS and DASH,
-if available, allowing for video/audio selection in runtime (default:
-no). It\(aqs disabled ("no") by default for performance reasons.
-.TP
-.B \fBytdl_path=youtube\-dl\fP
-Configure paths to youtube\-dl\(aqs executable or a compatible fork\(aqs. The
-paths should be separated by : on Unix and ; on Windows. mpv looks in
-order for the configured paths in PATH and in mpv\(aqs config directory.
-The defaults are "yt\-dlp", "yt\-dlp_x86" and "youtube\-dl". On Windows
-the suffix extension ".exe" is always appended.
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Why do the option names mix \fB_\fP and \fB\-\fP?"
-.sp
-I have no idea.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ytdl\-format=<ytdl|best|worst|mp4|webm|...>\fP
-Video format/quality that is directly passed to youtube\-dl. The possible
-values are specific to the website and the video, for a given url the
-available formats can be found with the command
-\fByoutube\-dl \-\-list\-formats URL\fP\&. See youtube\-dl\(aqs documentation for
-available aliases.
-(Default: \fBbestvideo+bestaudio/best\fP)
-.sp
-The \fBytdl\fP value does not pass a \fB\-\-format\fP option to youtube\-dl at all,
-and thus does not override its default. Note that sometimes youtube\-dl
-returns a format that mpv cannot use, and in these cases the mpv default
-may work better.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ytdl\-raw\-options=<key>=<value>[,<key>=<value>[,...]]\fP
-Pass arbitrary options to youtube\-dl. Parameter and argument should be
-passed as a key\-value pair. Options without argument must include \fB=\fP\&.
-.sp
-There is no sanity checking so it\(aqs possible to break things (i.e.
-passing invalid parameters to youtube\-dl).
-.sp
-A proxy URL can be passed for youtube\-dl to use it in parsing the website.
-This is useful for geo\-restricted URLs. After youtube\-dl parsing, some
-URLs also require a proxy for playback, so this can pass that proxy
-information to mpv. Take note that SOCKS proxies aren\(aqt supported and
-https URLs also bypass the proxy. This is a limitation in FFmpeg.
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-ytdl\-raw\-options=username=user,password=pass\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-ytdl\-raw\-options=force\-ipv6=\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-ytdl\-raw\-options=proxy=[http://127.0.0.1:3128]\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-ytdl\-raw\-options\-append=proxy=http://127.0.0.1:3128\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-load\-stats\-overlay=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable the builtin script that shows useful playback information on a key
-binding (default: yes). By default, the \fBi\fP key is used (\fBI\fP to make
-the overlay permanent).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-load\-osd\-console=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable the builtin script that shows a console on a key binding and lets
-you enter commands (default: yes). By default,. The \fB\'\fP key is used to
-show the console, and \fBESC\fP to hide it again. (This is based on a user
-script called \fBrepl.lua\fP\&.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-load\-auto\-profiles=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Enable the builtin script that does auto profiles (default: auto). See
-\fI\%Conditional auto profiles\fP for details. \fBauto\fP will load the script,
-but immediately unload it if there are no conditional profiles.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-player\-operation\-mode=<cplayer|pseudo\-gui>\fP
-For enabling "pseudo GUI mode", which means that the defaults for some
-options are changed. This option should not normally be used directly, but
-only by mpv internally, or mpv\-provided scripts, config files, or .desktop
-files. See \fI\%PSEUDO GUI MODE\fP for details.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Video
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo=<driver>\fP
-Specify the video output backend to be used. See \fI\%VIDEO OUTPUT DRIVERS\fP for
-details and descriptions of available drivers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd=<...>\fP
-Specify a priority list of video decoders to be used, according to their
-family and name. See \fB\-\-ad\fP for further details. Both of these options
-use the same syntax and semantics; the only difference is that they
-operate on different codec lists.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-See \fB\-\-vd=help\fP for a full list of available decoders.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf=<filter1[=parameter1:parameter2:...],filter2,...>\fP
-Specify a list of video filters to apply to the video stream. See
-\fI\%VIDEO FILTERS\fP for details and descriptions of the available filters.
-The option variants \fB\-\-vf\-add\fP, \fB\-\-vf\-pre\fP, \fB\-\-vf\-del\fP and
-\fB\-\-vf\-clr\fP exist to modify a previously specified list, but you
-should not need these for typical use.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-untimed\fP
-Do not sleep when outputting video frames. Useful for benchmarks when used
-with \fB\-\-no\-audio.\fP
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-framedrop=<mode>\fP
-Skip displaying some frames to maintain A/V sync on slow systems, or
-playing high framerate video on video outputs that have an upper framerate
-limit.
-.sp
-The argument selects the drop methods, and can be one of the following:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <no>
-Disable any frame dropping. Not recommended, for testing only.
-.TP
-.B <vo>
-Drop late frames on video output (default). This still decodes and
-filters all frames, but doesn\(aqt render them on the VO. Drops are
-indicated in the terminal status line as \fBDropped:\fP field.
-.sp
-In audio sync. mode, this drops frames that are outdated at the time of
-display. If the decoder is too slow, in theory all frames would have to
-be dropped (because all frames are too late) \- to avoid this, frame
-dropping stops if the effective framerate is below 10 FPS.
-.sp
-In display\-sync. modes (see \fB\-\-video\-sync\fP), this affects only how
-A/V drops or repeats frames. If this mode is disabled, A/V desync will
-in theory not affect video scheduling anymore (much like the
-\fBdisplay\-resample\-desync\fP mode). However, even if disabled, frames
-will still be skipped (i.e. dropped) according to the ratio between
-video and display frequencies.
-.sp
-This is the recommended mode, and the default.
-.TP
-.B <decoder>
-Old, decoder\-based framedrop mode. (This is the same as \fB\-\-framedrop=yes\fP
-in mpv 0.5.x and before.) This tells the decoder to skip frames (unless
-they are needed to decode future frames). May help with slow systems,
-but can produce unwatchable choppy output, or even freeze the display
-completely.
-.sp
-This uses a heuristic which may not make sense, and in general cannot
-achieve good results, because the decoder\(aqs frame dropping cannot be
-controlled in a predictable manner. Not recommended.
-.sp
-Even if you want to use this, prefer \fBdecoder+vo\fP for better results.
-.sp
-The \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-framedrop\fP option controls what frames to drop.
-.TP
-.B <decoder+vo>
-Enable both modes. Not recommended. Better than just \fBdecoder\fP mode.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB\-\-vo=vdpau\fP has its own code for the \fBvo\fP framedrop mode. Slight
-differences to other VOs are possible.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-latency\-hacks=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable some things which tend to reduce video latency by 1 or 2 frames
-(default: no). Note that this option might be removed without notice once
-the player\(aqs timing code does not inherently need to do these things
-anymore.
-.sp
-This does:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-Use the demuxer reported FPS for frame dropping. This avoids the
-player needing to decode 1 frame in advance, lowering total latency in
-effect. This also means that if the demuxer reported FPS is wrong, or
-the video filter chain changes FPS (e.g. deinterlacing), then it could
-drop too many or not enough frames.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Disable waiting for the first video frame. Normally the player waits for
-the first video frame to be fully rendered before starting playback
-properly. Some VOs will lazily initialize stuff when rendering the first
-frame, so if this is not done, there is some likeliness that the VO has
-to drop some frames if rendering the first frame takes longer than needed.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-override\-display\-fps=<fps>\fP
-Set the display FPS used with the \fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-*\fP modes. By
-default, a detected value is used. Keep in mind that setting an incorrect
-value (even if slightly incorrect) can ruin video playback. On multi\-monitor
-systems, there is a chance that the detected value is from the wrong
-monitor.
-.sp
-Set this option only if you have reason to believe the automatically
-determined value is wrong.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-display\-fps=<fps>\fP
-Deprecated alias for \fB\-\-override\-display\-fps\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hwdec=<api>\fP
-Specify the hardware video decoding API that should be used if possible.
-Whether hardware decoding is actually done depends on the video codec. If
-hardware decoding is not possible, mpv will fall back on software decoding.
-.sp
-Hardware decoding is not enabled by default, because it is typically an
-additional source of errors. It is worth using only if your CPU is too
-slow to decode a specific video.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Use the \fBCtrl+h\fP shortcut to toggle hardware decoding at runtime. It
-toggles this option between \fBauto\fP and \fBno\fP\&.
-.sp
-Always enabling HW decoding by putting it into the config file is
-discouraged. If you use the Ubuntu package, delete \fB/etc/mpv/mpv.conf\fP,
-as the package tries to enable HW decoding by default by setting
-\fBhwdec=vaapi\fP (which is less than ideal, and may even cause
-sub\-optimal wrappers to be used). Or at least change it to
-\fBhwdec=auto\-safe\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Use one of the auto modes if you want to enable hardware decoding.
-Explicitly selecting the mode is mostly meant for testing and debugging.
-It\(aqs a bad idea to put explicit selection into the config file if you
-want thing to just keep working after updates and so on.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Even if enabled, hardware decoding is still only white\-listed for some
-codecs. See \fB\-\-hwdec\-codecs\fP to enable hardware decoding in more cases.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Which method to choose?"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-If you only want to enable hardware decoding at runtime, don\(aqt set the
-parameter, or put \fBhwdec=no\fP into your \fBmpv.conf\fP (relevant on
-distros which force\-enable it by default, such as on Ubuntu). Use the
-\fBCtrl+h\fP default binding to enable it at runtime.
-.IP \(bu 2
-If you\(aqre not sure, but want hardware decoding always enabled by
-default, put \fBhwdec=auto\-safe\fP into your \fBmpv.conf\fP, and
-acknowledge that this use case is not "really" supported and may cause
-problems.
-.IP \(bu 2
-If you want to test available hardware decoding methods, pass
-\fB\-\-hwdec=auto \-\-hwdec\-codecs=all\fP and look at the terminal output.
-.IP \(bu 2
-If you\(aqre a developer, or want to perform elaborate tests, you may
-need any of the other possible option values.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fB<api>\fP can be one of the following:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-always use software decoding (default)
-.TP
-.B auto
-forcibly enable any hw decoder found (see below)
-.TP
-.B yes
-exactly the same as \fBauto\fP
-.TP
-.B auto\-safe
-enable any whitelisted hw decoder (see below)
-.TP
-.B auto\-copy
-enable best hw decoder with copy\-back (see below)
-.TP
-.B vdpau
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP with X11, or \fB\-\-vo=vdpau\fP (Linux only)
-.TP
-.B vdpau\-copy
-copies video back into system RAM (Linux with some GPUs only)
-.TP
-.B vaapi
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP or \fB\-\-vo=vaapi\fP (Linux only)
-.TP
-.B vaapi\-copy
-copies video back into system RAM (Linux with some GPUs only)
-.TP
-.B videotoolbox
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP (macOS 10.8 and up),
-or \fB\-\-vo=libmpv\fP (iOS 9.0 and up)
-.TP
-.B videotoolbox\-copy
-copies video back into system RAM (macOS 10.8 or iOS 9.0 and up)
-.TP
-.B dxva2
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP with \fB\-\-gpu\-context=d3d11\fP,
-\fB\-\-gpu\-context=angle\fP or \fB\-\-gpu\-context=dxinterop\fP
-(Windows only)
-.TP
-.B dxva2\-copy
-copies video back to system RAM (Windows only)
-.TP
-.B d3d11va
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP with \fB\-\-gpu\-context=d3d11\fP or
-\fB\-\-gpu\-context=angle\fP (Windows 8+ only)
-.TP
-.B d3d11va\-copy
-copies video back to system RAM (Windows 8+ only)
-.TP
-.B mediacodec
-requires \fB\-\-vo=mediacodec_embed\fP (Android only)
-.TP
-.B mediacodec\-copy
-copies video back to system RAM (Android only)
-.TP
-.B mmal
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP (Raspberry Pi only \- default if available)
-.TP
-.B mmal\-copy
-copies video back to system RAM (Raspberry Pi only)
-.TP
-.B nvdec
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP (Any platform CUDA is available)
-.TP
-.B nvdec\-copy
-copies video back to system RAM (Any platform CUDA is available)
-.TP
-.B cuda
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP (Any platform CUDA is available)
-.TP
-.B cuda\-copy
-copies video back to system RAM (Any platform CUDA is available)
-.TP
-.B crystalhd
-copies video back to system RAM (Any platform supported by hardware)
-.TP
-.B rkmpp
-requires \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP (some RockChip devices only)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBauto\fP tries to automatically enable hardware decoding using the first
-available method. This still depends what VO you are using. For example,
-if you are not using \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP or \fB\-\-vo=vdpau\fP, vdpau decoding will
-never be enabled. Also note that if the first found method doesn\(aqt actually
-work, it will always fall back to software decoding, instead of trying the
-next method (might matter on some Linux systems).
-.sp
-\fBauto\-safe\fP is similar to \fBauto\fP, but allows only whitelisted methods
-that are considered "safe". This is supposed to be a reasonable way to
-enable hardware decdoding by default in a config file (even though you
-shouldn\(aqt do that anyway; prefer runtime enabling with \fBCtrl+h\fP). Unlike
-\fBauto\fP, this will not try to enable unknown or known\-to\-be\-bad methods. In
-addition, this may disable hardware decoding in other situations when it\(aqs
-known to cause problems, but currently this mechanism is quite primitive.
-(As an example for something that still causes problems: certain
-combinations of HEVC and Intel chips on Windows tend to cause mpv to crash,
-most likely due to driver bugs.)
-.sp
-\fBauto\-copy\-safe\fP selects the union of methods selected with \fBauto\-safe\fP
-and \fBauto\-copy\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBauto\-copy\fP selects only modes that copy the video data back to system
-memory after decoding. This selects modes like \fBvaapi\-copy\fP (and so on).
-If none of these work, hardware decoding is disabled. This mode is usually
-guaranteed to incur no additional quality loss compared to software
-decoding (assuming modern codecs and an error free video stream), and will
-allow CPU processing with video filters. This mode works with all video
-filters and VOs.
-.sp
-Because these copy the decoded video back to system RAM, they\(aqre often less
-efficient than the direct modes, and may not help too much over software
-decoding.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Most non\-copy methods only work with the OpenGL GPU backend. Currently,
-only the \fBvaapi\fP, \fBnvdec\fP and \fBcuda\fP methods work with Vulkan.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The \fBvaapi\fP mode, if used with \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP, requires Mesa 11, and most
-likely works with Intel and AMD GPUs only. It also requires the opengl EGL
-backend.
-.sp
-\fBnvdec\fP and \fBnvdec\-copy\fP are the newest, and recommended method to do
-hardware decoding on Nvidia GPUs.
-.sp
-\fBcuda\fP and \fBcuda\-copy\fP are an older implementation of hardware decoding
-on Nvidia GPUs that uses Nvidia\(aqs bitstream parsers rather than FFmpeg\(aqs.
-This can lead to feature deficiencies, such as incorrect playback of HDR
-content, and \fBnvdec\fP/\fBnvdec\-copy\fP should always be preferred unless you
-specifically need Nvidia\(aqs deinterlacing algorithms. To use this
-deinterlacing you must pass the option:
-\fBvd\-lavc\-o=deint=[weave|bob|adaptive]\fP\&.
-Pass \fBweave\fP (or leave the option unset) to not attempt any
-deinterlacing.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Quality reduction with hardware decoding"
-.sp
-In theory, hardware decoding does not reduce video quality (at least
-for the codecs h264 and HEVC). However, due to restrictions in video
-output APIs, as well as bugs in the actual hardware decoders, there can
-be some loss, or even blatantly incorrect results.
-.sp
-In some cases, RGB conversion is forced, which means the RGB conversion
-is performed by the hardware decoding API, instead of the shaders
-used by \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP\&. This means certain colorspaces may not display
-correctly, and certain filtering (such as debanding) cannot be applied
-in an ideal way. This will also usually force the use of low quality
-chroma scalers instead of the one specified by \fB\-\-cscale\fP\&. In other
-cases, hardware decoding can also reduce the bit depth of the decoded
-image, which can introduce banding or precision loss for 10\-bit files.
-.sp
-\fBvdpau\fP always does RGB conversion in hardware, which does not
-support newer colorspaces like BT.2020 correctly. However, \fBvdpau\fP
-doesn\(aqt support 10 bit or HDR encodings, so these limitations are
-unlikely to be relevant.
-.sp
-\fBvaapi\fP and \fBd3d11va\fP are safe. Enabling deinterlacing (or simply
-their respective post\-processing filters) will possibly at least reduce
-color quality by converting the output to a 8 bit format.
-.sp
-\fBdxva2\fP is not safe. It appears to always use BT.601 for forced RGB
-conversion, but actual behavior depends on the GPU drivers. Some drivers
-appear to convert to limited range RGB, which gives a faded appearance.
-In addition to driver\-specific behavior, global system settings might
-affect this additionally. This can give incorrect results even with
-completely ordinary video sources.
-.sp
-\fBrpi\fP always uses the hardware overlay renderer, even with
-\fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBcuda\fP should usually be safe, but depending on how a file/stream
-has been mixed, it has been reported to corrupt the timestamps causing
-glitched, flashing frames. It can also sometimes cause massive
-framedrops for unknown reasons. Caution is advised, and \fBnvdec\fP
-should always be preferred.
-.sp
-\fBcrystalhd\fP is not safe. It always converts to 4:2:2 YUV, which
-may be lossy, depending on how chroma sub\-sampling is done during
-conversion. It also discards the top left pixel of each frame for
-some reason.
-.sp
-All other methods, in particular the copy\-back methods (like
-\fBdxva2\-copy\fP etc.) should hopefully be safe, although they can still
-cause random decoding issues. At the very least, they shouldn\(aqt affect
-the colors of the image.
-.sp
-In particular, \fBauto\-copy\fP will only select "safe" modes
-(although potentially slower than other methods), but there\(aqs still no
-guarantee the chosen hardware decoder will actually work correctly.
-.sp
-In general, it\(aqs very strongly advised to avoid hardware decoding
-unless \fBabsolutely\fP necessary, i.e. if your CPU is insufficient to
-decode the file in questions. If you run into any weird decoding issues,
-frame glitches or discoloration, and you have \fB\-\-hwdec\fP turned on,
-the first thing you should try is disabling it.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gpu\-hwdec\-interop=<auto|all|no|name>\fP
-This option is for troubleshooting hwdec interop issues. Since it\(aqs a
-debugging option, its semantics may change at any time.
-.sp
-This is useful for the \fBgpu\fP and \fBlibmpv\fP VOs for selecting which
-hwdec interop context to use exactly. Effectively it also can be used
-to block loading of certain backends.
-.sp
-If set to \fBauto\fP (default), the behavior depends on the VO: for \fBgpu\fP,
-it does nothing, and the interop context is loaded on demand (when the
-decoder probes for \fB\-\-hwdec\fP support). For \fBlibmpv\fP, which has
-has no on\-demand loading, this is equivalent to \fBall\fP\&.
-.sp
-The empty string is equivalent to \fBauto\fP\&.
-.sp
-If set to \fBall\fP, it attempts to load all interop contexts at GL context
-creation time.
-.sp
-Other than that, a specific backend can be set, and the list of them can
-be queried with \fBhelp\fP (mpv CLI only).
-.sp
-Runtime changes to this are ignored (the current option value is used
-whenever the renderer is created).
-.sp
-The old aliases \fB\-\-opengl\-hwdec\-interop\fP and \fB\-\-hwdec\-preload\fP are
-barely related to this anymore, but will be somewhat compatible in some
-cases.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hwdec\-extra\-frames=<N>\fP
-Number of GPU frames hardware decoding should preallocate (default: see
-\fB\-\-list\-options\fP output). If this is too low, frame allocation may fail
-during decoding, and video frames might get dropped and/or corrupted.
-Setting it too high simply wastes GPU memory and has no advantages.
-.sp
-This value is used only for hardware decoding APIs which require
-preallocating surfaces (known examples include \fBd3d11va\fP and \fBvaapi\fP).
-For other APIs, frames are allocated as needed. The details depend on the
-libavcodec implementations of the hardware decoders.
-.sp
-The required number of surfaces depends on dynamic runtime situations. The
-default is a fixed value that is thought to be sufficient for most uses. But
-in certain situations, it may not be enough.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hwdec\-image\-format=<name>\fP
-Set the internal pixel format used by hardware decoding via \fB\-\-hwdec\fP
-(default \fBno\fP). The special value \fBno\fP selects an implementation
-specific standard format. Most decoder implementations support only one
-format, and will fail to initialize if the format is not supported.
-.sp
-Some implementations might support multiple formats. In particular,
-videotoolbox is known to require \fBuyvy422\fP for good performance on some
-older hardware. d3d11va can always use \fByuv420p\fP, which uses an opaque
-format, with likely no advantages.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cuda\-decode\-device=<auto|0..>\fP
-Choose the GPU device used for decoding when using the \fBcuda\fP or
-\fBnvdec\fP hwdecs with the OpenGL GPU backend, and with the \fBcuda\-copy\fP
-or \fBnvdec\-copy\fP hwdecs in all cases.
-.sp
-For the OpenGL GPU backend, the default device used for decoding is the one
-being used to provide \fBgpu\fP output (and in the vast majority of cases,
-only one GPU will be present).
-.sp
-For the \fBcopy\fP hwdecs, the default device will be the first device
-enumerated by the CUDA libraries \- however that is done.
-.sp
-For the Vulkan GPU backend, decoding must always happen on the display
-device, and this option has no effect.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vaapi\-device=<device file>\fP
-Choose the DRM device for \fBvaapi\-copy\fP\&. This should be the path to a
-DRM device file. (Default: \fB/dev/dri/renderD128\fP)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-panscan=<0.0\-1.0>\fP
-Enables pan\-and\-scan functionality (cropping the sides of e.g. a 16:9
-video to make it fit a 4:3 display without black bands). The range
-controls how much of the image is cropped. May not work with all video
-output drivers.
-.sp
-This option has no effect if \fB\-\-video\-unscaled\fP option is used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override=<ratio|no>\fP
-Override video aspect ratio, in case aspect information is incorrect or
-missing in the file being played.
-.sp
-These values have special meaning:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 0
-disable aspect ratio handling, pretend the video has square pixels
-.TP
-.B no
-same as \fB0\fP
-.TP
-.B \-1
-use the video stream or container aspect (default)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-But note that handling of these special values might change in the future.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override=4:3\fP or \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override=1.3333\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override=16:9\fP or \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override=1.7777\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-no\-video\-aspect\-override\fP or \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override=no\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-method=<bitstream|container>\fP
-This sets the default video aspect determination method (if the aspect is
-_not_ overridden by the user with \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override\fP or others).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B container
-Strictly prefer the container aspect ratio. This is apparently
-the default behavior with VLC, at least with Matroska. Note that
-if the container has no aspect ratio set, the behavior is the
-same as with bitstream.
-.TP
-.B bitstream
-Strictly prefer the bitstream aspect ratio, unless the bitstream
-aspect ratio is not set. This is apparently the default behavior
-with XBMC/kodi, at least with Matroska.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The current default for mpv is \fBcontainer\fP\&.
-.sp
-Normally you should not set this. Try the various choices if you encounter
-video that has the wrong aspect ratio in mpv, but seems to be correct in
-other players.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-unscaled=<no|yes|downscale\-big>\fP
-Disable scaling of the video. If the window is larger than the video,
-black bars are added. Otherwise, the video is cropped, unless the option
-is set to \fBdownscale\-big\fP, in which case the video is fit to window. The
-video still can be influenced by the other \fB\-\-video\-...\fP options. This
-option disables the effect of \fB\-\-panscan\fP\&.
-.sp
-Note that the scaler algorithm may still be used, even if the video isn\(aqt
-scaled. For example, this can influence chroma conversion. The video will
-also still be scaled in one dimension if the source uses non\-square pixels
-(e.g. anamorphic widescreen DVDs).
-.sp
-This option is disabled if the \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP option is used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-pan\-x=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-video\-pan\-y=<value>\fP
-Moves the displayed video rectangle by the given value in the X or Y
-direction. The unit is in fractions of the size of the scaled video (the
-full size, even if parts of the video are not visible due to panscan or
-other options).
-.sp
-For example, displaying a 1280x720 video fullscreen on a 1680x1050 screen
-with \fB\-\-video\-pan\-x=\-0.1\fP would move the video 168 pixels to the left
-(making 128 pixels of the source video invisible).
-.sp
-This option is disabled if the \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP option is used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-rotate=<0\-359|no>\fP
-Rotate the video clockwise, in degrees. If \fBno\fP is given, the video is
-never rotated, even if the file has rotation metadata. (The rotation value
-is added to the rotation metadata, which means the value \fB0\fP would rotate
-the video according to the rotation metadata.)
-.sp
-When using hardware decoding without copy\-back, only 90° steps work, while
-software decoding and hardware decoding methods that copy the video back to
-system memory support all values between 0 and 359.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-zoom=<value>\fP
-Adjust the video display scale factor by the given value. The parameter is
-given log 2. For example, \fB\-\-video\-zoom=0\fP is unscaled,
-\fB\-\-video\-zoom=1\fP is twice the size, \fB\-\-video\-zoom=\-2\fP is one fourth of
-the size, and so on.
-.sp
-This option is disabled if the \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP option is used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-scale\-x=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-video\-scale\-y=<value>\fP
-Multiply the video display size with the given value (default: 1.0). If a
-non\-default value is used, this will be different from the window size, so
-video will be either cut off, or black bars are added.
-.sp
-This value is multiplied with the value derived from \fB\-\-video\-zoom\fP and
-the normal video aspect aspect ratio. This option is disabled if the
-\fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP option is used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-align\-x=<\-1\-1>\fP, \fB\-\-video\-align\-y=<\-1\-1>\fP
-Moves the video rectangle within the black borders, which are usually added
-to pad the video to screen if video and screen aspect ratios are different.
-\fB\-\-video\-align\-y=\-1\fP would move the video to the top of the screen
-(leaving a border only on the bottom), a value of \fB0\fP centers it
-(default), and a value of \fB1\fP would put the video at the bottom of the
-screen.
-.sp
-If video and screen aspect match perfectly, these options do nothing.
-.sp
-This option is disabled if the \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP option is used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-margin\-ratio\-left=<val>\fP, \fB\-\-video\-margin\-ratio\-right=<val>\fP, \fB\-\-video\-margin\-ratio\-top=<val>\fP, \fB\-\-video\-margin\-ratio\-bottom=<val>\fP
-Set extra video margins on each border (default: 0). Each value is a ratio
-of the window size, using a range 0.0\-1.0. For example, setting the option
-\fB\-\-video\-margin\-ratio\-right=0.2\fP at a window size of 1000 pixels will add
-a 200 pixels border on the right side of the window.
-.sp
-The video is "boxed" by these margins. The window size is not changed. In
-particular it does not enlarge the window, and the margins will cause the
-video to be downscaled by default. This may or may not change in the future.
-.sp
-The margins are applied after 90° video rotation, but before any other video
-transformations.
-.sp
-This option is disabled if the \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP option is used.
-.sp
-Subtitles still may use the margins, depending on \fB\-\-sub\-use\-margins\fP and
-similar options.
-.sp
-These options were created for the OSC. Some odd decisions, such as making
-the margin values a ratio (instead of pixels), were made for the sake of
-the OSC. It\(aqs possible that these options may be replaced by ones that are
-more generally useful. The behavior of these options may change to fit
-OSC requirements better, too.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-correct\-pts\fP, \fB\-\-no\-correct\-pts\fP
-\fB\-\-no\-correct\-pts\fP switches mpv to a mode where video timing is
-determined using a fixed framerate value (either using the \fB\-\-fps\fP
-option, or using file information). Sometimes, files with very broken
-timestamps can be played somewhat well in this mode. Note that video
-filters, subtitle rendering, seeking (including hr\-seeks and backstepping),
-and audio synchronization can be completely broken in this mode.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-fps=<float>\fP
-Override video framerate. Useful if the original value is wrong or missing.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Works in \fB\-\-no\-correct\-pts\fP mode only.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-deinterlace=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable or disable interlacing (default: no).
-Interlaced video shows ugly comb\-like artifacts, which are visible on
-fast movement. Enabling this typically inserts the yadif video filter in
-order to deinterlace the video, or lets the video output apply deinterlacing
-if supported.
-.sp
-This behaves exactly like the \fBdeinterlace\fP input property (usually
-mapped to \fBd\fP).
-.sp
-Keep in mind that this \fBwill\fP conflict with manually inserted
-deinterlacing filters, unless you take care. (Since mpv 0.27.0, even the
-hardware deinterlace filters will conflict. Also since that version,
-\fB\-\-deinterlace=auto\fP was removed, which used to mean that the default
-interlacing option of possibly inserted video filters was used.)
-.sp
-Note that this will make video look worse if it\(aqs not actually interlaced.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-frames=<number>\fP
-Play/convert only first \fB<number>\fP video frames, then quit.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-frames=0\fP loads the file, but immediately quits before initializing
-playback. (Might be useful for scripts which just want to determine some
-file properties.)
-.sp
-For audio\-only playback, any value greater than 0 will quit playback
-immediately after initialization. The value 0 works as with video.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-output\-levels=<outputlevels>\fP
-RGB color levels used with YUV to RGB conversion. Normally, output devices
-such as PC monitors use full range color levels. However, some TVs and
-video monitors expect studio RGB levels. Providing full range output to a
-device expecting studio level input results in crushed blacks and whites,
-the reverse in dim gray blacks and dim whites.
-.sp
-Not all VOs support this option. Some will silently ignore it.
-.sp
-Available color ranges are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-automatic selection (equals to full range) (default)
-.TP
-.B limited
-limited range (16\-235 per component), studio levels
-.TP
-.B full
-full range (0\-255 per component), PC levels
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-It is advisable to use your graphics driver\(aqs color range option
-instead, if available.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hwdec\-codecs=<codec1,codec2,...|all>\fP
-Allow hardware decoding for a given list of codecs only. The special value
-\fBall\fP always allows all codecs.
-.sp
-You can get the list of allowed codecs with \fBmpv \-\-vd=help\fP\&. Remove the
-prefix, e.g. instead of \fBlavc:h264\fP use \fBh264\fP\&.
-.sp
-By default, this is set to \fBh264,vc1,hevc,vp8,vp9,av1\fP\&. Note that
-the hardware acceleration special codecs like \fBh264_vdpau\fP are not
-relevant anymore, and in fact have been removed from Libav in this form.
-.sp
-This is usually only needed with broken GPUs, where a codec is reported
-as supported, but decoding causes more problems than it solves.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv \-\-hwdec=vdpau \-\-vo=vdpau \-\-hwdec\-codecs=h264,mpeg2video\fP
-Enable vdpau decoding for h264 and mpeg2 only.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-check\-hw\-profile=<yes|no>\fP
-Check hardware decoder profile (default: yes). If \fBno\fP is set, the
-highest profile of the hardware decoder is unconditionally selected, and
-decoding is forced even if the profile of the video is higher than that.
-The result is most likely broken decoding, but may also help if the
-detected or reported profiles are somehow incorrect.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-software\-fallback=<yes|no|N>\fP
-Fallback to software decoding if the hardware\-accelerated decoder fails
-(default: 3). If this is a number, then fallback will be triggered if
-N frames fail to decode in a row. 1 is equivalent to \fByes\fP\&.
-.sp
-Setting this to a higher number might break the playback start fallback: if
-a fallback happens, parts of the file will be skipped, approximately by to
-the number of packets that could not be decoded. Values below an unspecified
-count will not have this problem, because mpv retains the packets.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-dr=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable direct rendering (default: yes). If this is set to \fByes\fP, the
-video will be decoded directly to GPU video memory (or staging buffers).
-This can speed up video upload, and may help with large resolutions or
-slow hardware. This works only with the following VOs:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBgpu\fP: requires at least OpenGL 4.4 or Vulkan.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-(In particular, this can\(aqt be made work with \fBopengl\-cb\fP, but the libmpv
-render API has optional support.)
-.sp
-Using video filters of any kind that write to the image data (or output
-newly allocated frames) will silently disable the DR code path.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-bitexact\fP
-Only use bit\-exact algorithms in all decoding steps (for codec testing).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-fast\fP (MPEG\-2, MPEG\-4, and H.264 only)
-Enable optimizations which do not comply with the format specification and
-potentially cause problems, like simpler dequantization, simpler motion
-compensation, assuming use of the default quantization matrix, assuming YUV
-4:2:0 and skipping a few checks to detect damaged bitstreams.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-o=<key>=<value>[,<key>=<value>[,...]]\fP
-Pass AVOptions to libavcodec decoder. Note, a patch to make the \fBo=\fP
-unneeded and pass all unknown options through the AVOption system is
-welcome. A full list of AVOptions can be found in the FFmpeg manual.
-.sp
-Some options which used to be direct options can be set with this
-mechanism, like \fBbug\fP, \fBgray\fP, \fBidct\fP, \fBec\fP, \fBvismv\fP,
-\fBskip_top\fP (was \fBst\fP), \fBskip_bottom\fP (was \fBsb\fP), \fBdebug\fP\&.
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-o=debug=pict\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-show\-all=<yes|no>\fP
-Show even broken/corrupt frames (default: no). If this option is set to
-no, libavcodec won\(aqt output frames that were either decoded before an
-initial keyframe was decoded, or frames that are recognized as corrupted.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-skiploopfilter=<skipvalue> (H.264 only)\fP
-Skips the loop filter (AKA deblocking) during H.264 decoding. Since
-the filtered frame is supposed to be used as reference for decoding
-dependent frames, this has a worse effect on quality than not doing
-deblocking on e.g. MPEG\-2 video. But at least for high bitrate HDTV,
-this provides a big speedup with little visible quality loss.
-.sp
-\fB<skipvalue>\fP can be one of the following:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B none
-Never skip.
-.TP
-.B default
-Skip useless processing steps (e.g. 0 size packets in AVI).
-.TP
-.B nonref
-Skip frames that are not referenced (i.e. not used for
-decoding other frames, the error cannot "build up").
-.TP
-.B bidir
-Skip B\-Frames.
-.TP
-.B nonkey
-Skip all frames except keyframes.
-.TP
-.B all
-Skip all frames.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-skipidct=<skipvalue> (MPEG\-1/2 only)\fP
-Skips the IDCT step. This degrades quality a lot in almost all cases
-(see skiploopfilter for available skip values).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-skipframe=<skipvalue>\fP
-Skips decoding of frames completely. Big speedup, but jerky motion and
-sometimes bad artifacts (see skiploopfilter for available skip values).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-framedrop=<skipvalue>\fP
-Set framedropping mode used with \fB\-\-framedrop\fP (see skiploopfilter for
-available skip values).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-threads=<N>\fP
-Number of threads to use for decoding. Whether threading is actually
-supported depends on codec (default: 0). 0 means autodetect number of cores
-on the machine and use that, up to the maximum of 16. You can set more than
-16 threads manually.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-lavc\-assume\-old\-x264=<yes|no>\fP
-Assume the video was encoded by an old, buggy x264 version (default: no).
-Normally, this is autodetected by libavcodec. But if the bitstream contains
-no x264 version info (or it was somehow skipped), and the stream was in fact
-encoded by an old x264 version (build 150 or earlier), and if the stream
-uses \fB4:4:4\fP chroma, then libavcodec will by default show corrupted video.
-This option sets the libavcodec \fBx264_build\fP option to \fB150\fP, which
-means that if the stream contains no version info, or was not encoded by
-x264 at all, it assumes it was encoded by the old version. Enabling this
-option is pretty safe if you want your broken files to work, but in theory
-this can break on streams not encoded by x264, or if a stream encoded by a
-newer x264 version contains no version info.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-swapchain\-depth=<N>\fP
-Allow up to N in\-flight frames. This essentially controls the frame
-latency. Increasing the swapchain depth can improve pipelining and prevent
-missed vsyncs, but increases visible latency. This option only mandates an
-upper limit, the implementation can use a lower latency than requested
-internally. A setting of 1 means that the VO will wait for every frame to
-become visible before starting to render the next frame. (Default: 3)
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Audio
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-pitch\-correction=<yes|no>\fP
-If this is enabled (default), playing with a speed different from normal
-automatically inserts the \fBscaletempo2\fP audio filter. For details, see
-audio filter section.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-device=<name>\fP
-Use the given audio device. This consists of the audio output name, e.g.
-\fBalsa\fP, followed by \fB/\fP, followed by the audio output specific device
-name. The default value for this option is \fBauto\fP, which tries every audio
-output in preference order with the default device.
-.sp
-You can list audio devices with \fB\-\-audio\-device=help\fP\&. This outputs the
-device name in quotes, followed by a description. The device name is what
-you have to pass to the \fB\-\-audio\-device\fP option. The list of audio devices
-can be retrieved by API by using the \fBaudio\-device\-list\fP property.
-.sp
-While the option normally takes one of the strings as indicated by the
-methods above, you can also force the device for most AOs by building it
-manually. For example \fBname/foobar\fP forces the AO \fBname\fP to use the
-device \fBfoobar\fP\&. However, the \fB\-\-ao\fP option will strictly force a
-specific AO. To avoid confusion, don\(aqt use \fB\-\-ao\fP and \fB\-\-audio\-device\fP
-together.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example for ALSA"
-.sp
-MPlayer and mplayer2 required you to replace any \(aq,\(aq with \(aq.\(aq and
-any \(aq:\(aq with \(aq=\(aq in the ALSA device name. For example, to use the
-device named \fBdmix:default\fP, you had to do:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB\-ao alsa:device=dmix=default\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-In mpv you could instead use:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB\-\-audio\-device=alsa/dmix:default\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-exclusive=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable exclusive output mode. In this mode, the system is usually locked
-out, and only mpv will be able to output audio.
-.sp
-This only works for some audio outputs, such as \fBwasapi\fP and
-\fBcoreaudio\fP\&. Other audio outputs silently ignore this options. They either
-have no concept of exclusive mode, or the mpv side of the implementation is
-missing.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-fallback\-to\-null=<yes|no>\fP
-If no audio device can be opened, behave as if \fB\-\-ao=null\fP was given. This
-is useful in combination with \fB\-\-audio\-device\fP: instead of causing an
-error if the selected device does not exist, the client API user (or a
-Lua script) could let playback continue normally, and check the
-\fBcurrent\-ao\fP and \fBaudio\-device\-list\fP properties to make high\-level
-decisions about how to continue.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao=<driver>\fP
-Specify the audio output drivers to be used. See \fI\%AUDIO OUTPUT DRIVERS\fP for
-details and descriptions of available drivers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-af=<filter1[=parameter1:parameter2:...],filter2,...>\fP
-Specify a list of audio filters to apply to the audio stream. See
-\fI\%AUDIO FILTERS\fP for details and descriptions of the available filters.
-The option variants \fB\-\-af\-add\fP, \fB\-\-af\-pre\fP, \fB\-\-af\-del\fP and
-\fB\-\-af\-clr\fP exist to modify a previously specified list, but you
-should not need these for typical use.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-spdif=<codecs>\fP
-List of codecs for which compressed audio passthrough should be used. This
-works for both classic S/PDIF and HDMI.
-.sp
-Possible codecs are \fBac3\fP, \fBdts\fP, \fBdts\-hd\fP, \fBeac3\fP, \fBtruehd\fP\&.
-Multiple codecs can be specified by separating them with \fB,\fP\&. \fBdts\fP
-refers to low bitrate DTS core, while \fBdts\-hd\fP refers to DTS MA (receiver
-and OS support varies). If both \fBdts\fP and \fBdts\-hd\fP are specified, it
-behaves equivalent to specifying \fBdts\-hd\fP only.
-.sp
-In earlier mpv versions you could use \fB\-\-ad\fP to force the spdif wrapper.
-This does not work anymore.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-There is not much reason to use this. HDMI supports uncompressed
-multichannel PCM, and mpv supports lossless DTS\-HD decoding via
-FFmpeg\(aqs new DCA decoder (based on libdcadec).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ad=<decoder1,decoder2,...[\-]>\fP
-Specify a priority list of audio decoders to be used, according to their
-decoder name. When determining which decoder to use, the first decoder that
-matches the audio format is selected. If that is unavailable, the next
-decoder is used. Finally, it tries all other decoders that are not
-explicitly selected or rejected by the option.
-.sp
-\fB\-\fP at the end of the list suppresses fallback on other available
-decoders not on the \fB\-\-ad\fP list. \fB+\fP in front of an entry forces the
-decoder. Both of these should not normally be used, because they break
-normal decoder auto\-selection! Both of these methods are deprecated.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ad=mp3float\fP
-Prefer the FFmpeg/Libav \fBmp3float\fP decoder over all other MP3
-decoders.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ad=help\fP
-List all available decoders.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-Enabling compressed audio passthrough (AC3 and DTS via SPDIF/HDMI) with
-this option is not possible. Use \fB\-\-audio\-spdif\fP instead.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-volume=<value>\fP
-Set the startup volume. 0 means silence, 100 means no volume reduction or
-amplification. Negative values can be passed for compatibility, but are
-treated as 0.
-.sp
-Since mpv 0.18.1, this always controls the internal mixer (aka "softvol").
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-replaygain=<no|track|album>\fP
-Adjust volume gain according to replaygain values stored in the file
-metadata. With \fB\-\-replaygain=no\fP (the default), perform no adjustment.
-With \fB\-\-replaygain=track\fP, apply track gain. With \fB\-\-replaygain=album\fP,
-apply album gain if present and fall back to track gain otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-replaygain\-preamp=<db>\fP
-Pre\-amplification gain in dB to apply to the selected replaygain gain
-(default: 0).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-replaygain\-clip=<yes|no>\fP
-Prevent clipping caused by replaygain by automatically lowering the
-gain (default). Use \fB\-\-replaygain\-clip=no\fP to disable this.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-replaygain\-fallback=<db>\fP
-Gain in dB to apply if the file has no replay gain tags. This option
-is always applied if the replaygain logic is somehow inactive. If this
-is applied, no other replaygain options are applied.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-delay=<sec>\fP
-Audio delay in seconds (positive or negative float value). Positive values
-delay the audio, and negative values delay the video.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-mute=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Set startup audio mute status (default: no).
-.sp
-\fBauto\fP is a deprecated possible value that is equivalent to \fBno\fP\&.
-.sp
-See also: \fB\-\-volume\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-softvol=<no|yes|auto>\fP
-Deprecated/unfunctional. Before mpv 0.18.1, this used to control whether
-to use the volume controls of the audio output driver or the internal mpv
-volume filter.
-.sp
-The current behavior is that softvol is always enabled, i.e. as if this
-option is set to \fByes\fP\&. The other behaviors are not available anymore,
-although \fBauto\fP almost matches current behavior in most cases.
-.sp
-The \fBno\fP behavior is still partially available through the \fBao\-volume\fP
-and \fBao\-mute\fP properties. But there are no options to reset these.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-demuxer=<[+]name>\fP
-Use this audio demuxer type when using \fB\-\-audio\-file\fP\&. Use a \(aq+\(aq before
-the name to force it; this will skip some checks. Give the demuxer name as
-printed by \fB\-\-audio\-demuxer=help\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ad\-lavc\-ac3drc=<level>\fP
-Select the Dynamic Range Compression level for AC\-3 audio streams.
-\fB<level>\fP is a float value ranging from 0 to 1, where 0 means no
-compression (which is the default) and 1 means full compression (make loud
-passages more silent and vice versa). Values up to 6 are also accepted, but
-are purely experimental. This option only shows an effect if the AC\-3 stream
-contains the required range compression information.
-.sp
-The standard mandates that DRC is enabled by default, but mpv (and some
-other players) ignore this for the sake of better audio quality.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ad\-lavc\-downmix=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to request audio channel downmixing from the decoder (default: no).
-Some decoders, like AC\-3, AAC and DTS, can remix audio on decoding. The
-requested number of output channels is set with the \fB\-\-audio\-channels\fP option.
-Useful for playing surround audio on a stereo system.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ad\-lavc\-threads=<0\-16>\fP
-Number of threads to use for decoding. Whether threading is actually
-supported depends on codec. As of this writing, it\(aqs supported for some
-lossless codecs only. 0 means autodetect number of cores on the
-machine and use that, up to the maximum of 16 (default: 1).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ad\-lavc\-o=<key>=<value>[,<key>=<value>[,...]]\fP
-Pass AVOptions to libavcodec decoder. Note, a patch to make the o=
-unneeded and pass all unknown options through the AVOption system is
-welcome. A full list of AVOptions can be found in the FFmpeg manual.
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ad\-spdif\-dtshd=<yes|no>\fP, \fB\-\-dtshd\fP, \fB\-\-no\-dtshd\fP
-If DTS is passed through, use DTS\-HD.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-This and enabling passthrough via \fB\-\-ad\fP are deprecated in favor of
-using \fB\-\-audio\-spdif=dts\-hd\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-channels=<auto\-safe|auto|layouts>\fP
-Control which audio channels are output (e.g. surround vs. stereo). There
-are the following possibilities:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-.INDENT 2.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-channels=auto\-safe\fP
-Use the system\(aqs preferred channel layout. If there is none (such
-as when accessing a hardware device instead of the system mixer),
-force stereo. Some audio outputs might simply accept any layout and
-do downmixing on their own.
-.sp
-This is the default.
-.UNINDENT
-.IP \(bu 2
-.INDENT 2.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-channels=auto\fP
-Send the audio device whatever it accepts, preferring the audio\(aqs
-original channel layout. Can cause issues with HDMI (see the warning
-below).
-.UNINDENT
-.IP \(bu 2
-.INDENT 2.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-channels=layout1,layout2,...\fP
-List of \fB,\fP\-separated channel layouts which should be allowed.
-Technically, this only adjusts the filter chain output to the best
-matching layout in the list, and passes the result to the audio API.
-It\(aqs possible that the audio API will select a different channel
-layout.
-.sp
-Using this mode is recommended for direct hardware output, especially
-over HDMI (see HDMI warning below).
-.UNINDENT
-.IP \(bu 2
-.INDENT 2.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-channels=stereo\fP
-Force a plain stereo downmix. This is a special\-case of the previous
-item. (See paragraphs below for implications.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If a list of layouts is given, each item can be either an explicit channel
-layout name (like \fB5.1\fP), or a channel number. Channel numbers refer to
-default layouts, e.g. 2 channels refer to stereo, 6 refers to 5.1.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-audio\-channels=help\fP output for defined default layouts. This also
-lists speaker names, which can be used to express arbitrary channel
-layouts (e.g. \fBfl\-fr\-lfe\fP is 2.1).
-.sp
-If the list of channel layouts has only 1 item, the decoder is asked to
-produce according output. This sometimes triggers decoder\-downmix, which
-might be different from the normal mpv downmix. (Only some decoders support
-remixing audio, like AC\-3, AAC or DTS. You can use \fB\-\-ad\-lavc\-downmix=no\fP
-to make the decoder always output its native layout.) One consequence is
-that \fB\-\-audio\-channels=stereo\fP triggers decoder downmix, while \fBauto\fP
-or \fBauto\-safe\fP never will, even if they end up selecting stereo. This
-happens because the decision whether to use decoder downmix happens long
-before the audio device is opened.
-.sp
-If the channel layout of the media file (i.e. the decoder) and the AO\(aqs
-channel layout don\(aqt match, mpv will attempt to insert a conversion filter.
-You may need to change the channel layout of the system mixer to achieve
-your desired output as mpv does not have control over it. Another
-work\-around for this on some AOs is to use \fB\-\-audio\-exclusive=yes\fP to
-circumvent the system mixer entirely.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-Using \fBauto\fP can cause issues when using audio over HDMI. The OS will
-typically report all channel layouts that _can_ go over HDMI, even if
-the receiver does not support them. If a receiver gets an unsupported
-channel layout, random things can happen, such as dropping the
-additional channels, or adding noise.
-.sp
-You are recommended to set an explicit whitelist of the layouts you
-want. For example, most A/V receivers connected via HDMI and that can
-do 7.1 would be served by: \fB\-\-audio\-channels=7.1,5.1,stereo\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-display=<no|embedded\-first|external\-first>\fP
-Determines whether to display cover art when playing audio files and with
-what priority. It will display the first image found, and additional images
-are available as video tracks.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Disable display of video entirely when playing audio
-files.
-.TP
-.B embedded\-first
-Display embedded images and external cover art, giving
-priority to embedded images (default).
-.TP
-.B external\-first
-Display embedded images and external cover art, giving
-priority to external files.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This option has no influence on files with normal video tracks.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-files=<files>\fP
-Play audio from an external file while viewing a video.
-.sp
-This is a path list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-file=<file>\fP
-CLI/config file only alias for \fB\-\-audio\-files\-append\fP\&. Each use of this
-option will add a new audio track. The details are similar to how
-\fB\-\-sub\-file\fP works.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-format=<format>\fP
-Select the sample format used for output from the audio filter layer to
-the sound card. The values that \fB<format>\fP can adopt are listed below in
-the description of the \fBformat\fP audio filter.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-samplerate=<Hz>\fP
-Select the output sample rate to be used (of course sound cards have
-limits on this). If the sample frequency selected is different from that
-of the current media, the lavrresample audio filter will be inserted into
-the audio filter layer to compensate for the difference.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gapless\-audio=<no|yes|weak>\fP
-Try to play consecutive audio files with no silence or disruption at the
-point of file change. Default: \fBweak\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Disable gapless audio.
-.TP
-.B yes
-The audio device is opened using parameters chosen for the first
-file played and is then kept open for gapless playback. This
-means that if the first file for example has a low sample rate, then
-the following files may get resampled to the same low sample rate,
-resulting in reduced sound quality. If you play files with different
-parameters, consider using options such as \fB\-\-audio\-samplerate\fP
-and \fB\-\-audio\-format\fP to explicitly select what the shared output
-format will be.
-.TP
-.B weak
-Normally, the audio device is kept open (using the format it was
-first initialized with). If the audio format the decoder output
-changes, the audio device is closed and reopened. This means that
-you will normally get gapless audio with files that were encoded
-using the same settings, but might not be gapless in other cases.
-The exact conditions under which the audio device is kept open is
-an implementation detail, and can change from version to version.
-Currently, the device is kept even if the sample format changes,
-but the sample formats are convertible.
-If video is still going on when there is still audio, trying to use
-gapless is also explicitly given up.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This feature is implemented in a simple manner and relies on audio
-output device buffering to continue playback while moving from one file
-to another. If playback of the new file starts slowly, for example
-because it is played from a remote network location or because you have
-specified cache settings that require time for the initial cache fill,
-then the buffered audio may run out before playback of the new file
-can start.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-initial\-audio\-sync\fP, \fB\-\-no\-initial\-audio\-sync\fP
-When starting a video file or after events such as seeking, mpv will by
-default modify the audio stream to make it start from the same timestamp
-as video, by either inserting silence at the start or cutting away the
-first samples. Disabling this option makes the player behave like older
-mpv versions did: video and audio are both started immediately even if
-their start timestamps differ, and then video timing is gradually adjusted
-if necessary to reach correct synchronization later.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-volume\-max=<100.0\-1000.0>\fP, \fB\-\-softvol\-max=<...>\fP
-Set the maximum amplification level in percent (default: 130). A value of
-130 will allow you to adjust the volume up to about double the normal level.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-softvol\-max\fP is a deprecated alias and should not be used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-file\-auto=<no|exact|fuzzy|all>\fP, \fB\-\-no\-audio\-file\-auto\fP
-Load additional audio files matching the video filename. The parameter
-specifies how external audio files are matched.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Don\(aqt automatically load external audio files (default).
-.TP
-.B exact
-Load the media filename with audio file extension.
-.TP
-.B fuzzy
-Load all audio files containing the media filename.
-.TP
-.B all
-Load all audio files in the current and \fB\-\-audio\-file\-paths\fP
-directories.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-file\-paths=<path1:path2:...>\fP
-Equivalent to \fB\-\-sub\-file\-paths\fP option, but for auto\-loaded audio files.
-.sp
-This is a path list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-client\-name=<name>\fP
-The application name the player reports to the audio API. Can be useful
-if you want to force a different audio profile (e.g. with PulseAudio),
-or to set your own application name when using libmpv.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-buffer=<seconds>\fP
-Set the audio output minimum buffer. The audio device might actually create
-a larger buffer if it pleases. If the device creates a smaller buffer,
-additional audio is buffered in an additional software buffer.
-.sp
-Making this larger will make soft\-volume and other filters react slower,
-introduce additional issues on playback speed change, and block the
-player on audio format changes. A smaller buffer might lead to audio
-dropouts.
-.sp
-This option should be used for testing only. If a non\-default value helps
-significantly, the mpv developers should be contacted.
-.sp
-Default: 0.2 (200 ms).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-stream\-silence=<yes|no>\fP
-Cash\-grab consumer audio hardware (such as A/V receivers) often ignore
-initial audio sent over HDMI. This can happen every time audio over HDMI
-is stopped and resumed. In order to compensate for this, you can enable
-this option to not to stop and restart audio on seeks, and fill the gaps
-with silence. Likewise, when pausing playback, audio is not stopped, and
-silence is played while paused. Note that if no audio track is selected,
-the audio device will still be closed immediately.
-.sp
-Not all AOs support this.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-This modifies certain subtle player behavior, like A/V\-sync and underrun
-handling. Enabling this option is strongly discouraged.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-wait\-open=<secs>\fP
-This makes sense for use with \fB\-\-audio\-stream\-silence=yes\fP\&. If this option
-is given, the player will wait for the given amount of seconds after opening
-the audio device before sending actual audio data to it. Useful if your
-expensive hardware discards the first 1 or 2 seconds of audio data sent to
-it. If \fB\-\-audio\-stream\-silence=yes\fP is not set, this option will likely
-just waste time.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Subtitles
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Changing styling and position does not work with all subtitles. Image\-based
-subtitles (DVD, Bluray/PGS, DVB) cannot changed for fundamental reasons.
-Subtitles in ASS format are normally not changed intentionally, but
-overriding them can be controlled with \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override\fP\&.
-.sp
-Previously some options working on text subtitles were called
-\fB\-\-sub\-text\-*\fP, they are now named \fB\-\-sub\-*\fP, and those specifically
-for ASS have been renamed from \fB\-\-ass\-*\fP to \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-*\fP\&.
-They are now all in this section.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-demuxer=<[+]name>\fP
-Force subtitle demuxer type for \fB\-\-sub\-file\fP\&. Give the demuxer name as
-printed by \fB\-\-sub\-demuxer=help\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-delay=<sec>\fP
-Delays subtitles by \fB<sec>\fP seconds. Can be negative.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-files=<file\-list>\fP, \fB\-\-sub\-file=<filename>\fP
-Add a subtitle file to the list of external subtitles.
-.sp
-If you use \fB\-\-sub\-file\fP only once, this subtitle file is displayed by
-default.
-.sp
-If \fB\-\-sub\-file\fP is used multiple times, the subtitle to use can be
-switched at runtime by cycling subtitle tracks. It\(aqs possible to show
-two subtitles at once: use \fB\-\-sid\fP to select the first subtitle index,
-and \fB\-\-secondary\-sid\fP to select the second index. (The index is printed
-on the terminal output after the \fB\-\-sid=\fP in the list of streams.)
-.sp
-\fB\-\-sub\-files\fP is a path list option (see \fI\%List Options\fP for details), and
-can take multiple file names separated by \fB:\fP (Unix) or \fB;\fP (Windows),
-while \fB\-\-sub\-file\fP takes a single filename, but can be used multiple
-times to add multiple files. Technically, \fB\-\-sub\-file\fP is a CLI/config
-file only alias for \fB\-\-sub\-files\-append\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-secondary\-sid=<ID|auto|no>\fP
-Select a secondary subtitle stream. This is similar to \fB\-\-sid\fP\&. If a
-secondary subtitle is selected, it will be rendered as toptitle (i.e. on
-the top of the screen) alongside the normal subtitle, and provides a way
-to render two subtitles at once.
-.sp
-There are some caveats associated with this feature. For example, bitmap
-subtitles will always be rendered in their usual position, so selecting a
-bitmap subtitle as secondary subtitle will result in overlapping subtitles.
-Secondary subtitles are never shown on the terminal if video is disabled.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Styling and interpretation of any formatting tags is disabled for the
-secondary subtitle. Internally, the same mechanism as \fB\-\-no\-sub\-ass\fP
-is used to strip the styling.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-If the main subtitle stream contains formatting tags which display the
-subtitle at the top of the screen, it will overlap with the secondary
-subtitle. To prevent this, you could use \fB\-\-no\-sub\-ass\fP to disable
-styling in the main subtitle stream.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-scale=<0\-100>\fP
-Factor for the text subtitle font size (default: 1).
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This affects ASS subtitles as well, and may lead to incorrect subtitle
-rendering. Use with care, or use \fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP instead.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-scale\-by\-window=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to scale subtitles with the window size (default: yes). If this is
-disabled, changing the window size won\(aqt change the subtitle font size.
-.sp
-Like \fB\-\-sub\-scale\fP, this can break ASS subtitles.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-scale\-with\-window=<yes|no>\fP
-Make the subtitle font size relative to the window, instead of the video.
-This is useful if you always want the same font size, even if the video
-doesn\(aqt cover the window fully, e.g. because screen aspect and window
-aspect mismatch (and the player adds black bars).
-.sp
-Default: yes.
-.sp
-This option is misnamed. The difference to the confusingly similar sounding
-option \fB\-\-sub\-scale\-by\-window\fP is that \fB\-\-sub\-scale\-with\-window\fP still
-scales with the approximate window size, while the other option disables
-this scaling.
-.sp
-Affects plain text subtitles only (or ASS if \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override\fP is set
-high enough).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-scale\-with\-window=<yes|no>\fP
-Like \fB\-\-sub\-scale\-with\-window\fP, but affects subtitles in ASS format only.
-Like \fB\-\-sub\-scale\fP, this can break ASS subtitles.
-.sp
-Default: no.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-embeddedfonts=<yes|no>\fP
-Use fonts embedded in Matroska container files and ASS scripts (default:
-yes). These fonts can be used for SSA/ASS subtitle rendering.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-pos=<0\-150>\fP
-Specify the position of subtitles on the screen. The value is the vertical
-position of the subtitle in % of the screen height. 100 is the original
-position, which is often not the absolute bottom of the screen, but with
-some margin between the bottom and the subtitle. Values above 100 move the
-subtitle further down.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-Text subtitles (as opposed to image subtitles) may be cut off if the
-value of the option is above 100. This is a libass restriction.
-.sp
-This affects ASS subtitles as well, and may lead to incorrect subtitle
-rendering in addition to the problem above.
-.sp
-Using \fB\-\-sub\-margin\-y\fP can achieve this in a better way.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-speed=<0.1\-10.0>\fP
-Multiply the subtitle event timestamps with the given value. Can be used
-to fix the playback speed for frame\-based subtitle formats. Affects text
-subtitles only.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fB\-\-sub\-speed=25/23.976\fP plays frame based subtitles which have been
-loaded assuming a framerate of 23.976 at 25 FPS.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-force\-style=<[Style.]Param=Value[,...]>\fP
-Override some style or script info parameters.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-ass\-force\-style=FontName=Arial,Default.Bold=1\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-ass\-force\-style=PlayResY=768\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Using this option may lead to incorrect subtitle rendering.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-hinting=<none|light|normal|native>\fP
-Set font hinting type. <type> can be:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B none
-no hinting (default)
-.TP
-.B light
-FreeType autohinter, light mode
-.TP
-.B normal
-FreeType autohinter, normal mode
-.TP
-.B native
-font native hinter
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-Enabling hinting can lead to mispositioned text (in situations it\(aqs
-supposed to match up video background), or reduce the smoothness
-of animations with some badly authored ASS scripts. It is recommended
-to not use this option, unless really needed.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-line\-spacing=<value>\fP
-Set line spacing value for SSA/ASS renderer.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-shaper=<simple|complex>\fP
-Set the text layout engine used by libass.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B simple
-uses Fribidi only, fast, doesn\(aqt render some languages correctly
-.TP
-.B complex
-uses HarfBuzz, slower, wider language support
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBcomplex\fP is the default. If libass hasn\(aqt been compiled against HarfBuzz,
-libass silently reverts to \fBsimple\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-styles=<filename>\fP
-Load all SSA/ASS styles found in the specified file and use them for
-rendering text subtitles. The syntax of the file is exactly like the \fB[V4
-Styles]\fP / \fB[V4+ Styles]\fP section of SSA/ASS.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Using this option may lead to incorrect subtitle rendering.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override=<yes|no|force|scale|strip>\fP
-Control whether user style overrides should be applied. Note that all of
-these overrides try to be somewhat smart about figuring out whether or not
-a subtitle is considered a "sign".
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Render subtitles as specified by the subtitle scripts, without
-overrides.
-.TP
-.B yes
-Apply all the \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-*\fP style override options. Changing the
-default for any of these options can lead to incorrect subtitle
-rendering (default).
-.TP
-.B force
-Like \fByes\fP, but also force all \fB\-\-sub\-*\fP options. Can break
-rendering easily.
-.TP
-.B scale
-Like \fByes\fP, but also apply \fB\-\-sub\-scale\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B strip
-Radically strip all ASS tags and styles from the subtitle. This
-is equivalent to the old \fB\-\-no\-ass\fP / \fB\-\-no\-sub\-ass\fP options.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This also controls some bitmap subtitle overrides, as well as HTML tags in
-formats like SRT, despite the name of the option.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-force\-margins\fP
-Enables placing toptitles and subtitles in black borders when they are
-available, if the subtitles are in the ASS format.
-.sp
-Default: no.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-use\-margins\fP
-Enables placing toptitles and subtitles in black borders when they are
-available, if the subtitles are in a plain text format (or ASS if
-\fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override\fP is set high enough).
-.sp
-Default: yes.
-.sp
-Renamed from \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-use\-margins\fP\&. To place ASS subtitles in the borders
-too (like the old option did), also add \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-force\-margins\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-vsfilter\-aspect\-compat=<yes|no>\fP
-Stretch SSA/ASS subtitles when playing anamorphic videos for compatibility
-with traditional VSFilter behavior. This switch has no effect when the
-video is stored with square pixels.
-.sp
-The renderer historically most commonly used for the SSA/ASS subtitle
-formats, VSFilter, had questionable behavior that resulted in subtitles
-being stretched too if the video was stored in anamorphic format that
-required scaling for display. This behavior is usually undesirable and
-newer VSFilter versions may behave differently. However, many existing
-scripts compensate for the stretching by modifying things in the opposite
-direction. Thus, if such scripts are displayed "correctly", they will not
-appear as intended. This switch enables emulation of the old VSFilter
-behavior (undesirable but expected by many existing scripts).
-.sp
-Enabled by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-vsfilter\-blur\-compat=<yes|no>\fP
-Scale \fB\eblur\fP tags by video resolution instead of script resolution
-(enabled by default). This is bug in VSFilter, which according to some,
-can\(aqt be fixed anymore in the name of compatibility.
-.sp
-Note that this uses the actual video resolution for calculating the
-offset scale factor, not what the video filter chain or the video output
-use.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-vsfilter\-color\-compat=<basic|full|force\-601|no>\fP
-Mangle colors like (xy\-)vsfilter do (default: basic). Historically, VSFilter
-was not color space aware. This was no problem as long as the color space
-used for SD video (BT.601) was used. But when everything switched to HD
-(BT.709), VSFilter was still converting RGB colors to BT.601, rendered
-them into the video frame, and handled the frame to the video output, which
-would use BT.709 for conversion to RGB. The result were mangled subtitle
-colors. Later on, bad hacks were added on top of the ASS format to control
-how colors are to be mangled.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B basic
-Handle only BT.601\->BT.709 mangling, if the subtitles seem to
-indicate that this is required (default).
-.TP
-.B full
-Handle the full \fBYCbCr Matrix\fP header with all video color spaces
-supported by libass and mpv. This might lead to bad breakages in
-corner cases and is not strictly needed for compatibility
-(hopefully), which is why this is not default.
-.TP
-.B force\-601
-Force BT.601\->BT.709 mangling, regardless of subtitle headers
-or video color space.
-.TP
-.B no
-Disable color mangling completely. All colors are RGB.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Choosing anything other than \fBno\fP will make the subtitle color depend on
-the video color space, and it\(aqs for example in theory not possible to reuse
-a subtitle script with another video file. The \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override\fP
-option doesn\(aqt affect how this option is interpreted.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-stretch\-dvd\-subs=<yes|no>\fP
-Stretch DVD subtitles when playing anamorphic videos for better looking
-fonts on badly mastered DVDs. This switch has no effect when the
-video is stored with square pixels \- which for DVD input cannot be the case
-though.
-.sp
-Many studios tend to use bitmap fonts designed for square pixels when
-authoring DVDs, causing the fonts to look stretched on playback on DVD
-players. This option fixes them, however at the price of possibly
-misaligning some subtitles (e.g. sign translations).
-.sp
-Disabled by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-stretch\-image\-subs\-to\-screen=<yes|no>\fP
-Stretch DVD and other image subtitles to the screen, ignoring the video
-margins. This has a similar effect as \fB\-\-sub\-use\-margins\fP for text
-subtitles, except that the text itself will be stretched, not only just
-repositioned. (At least in general it is unavoidable, as an image bitmap
-can in theory consist of a single bitmap covering the whole screen, and
-the player won\(aqt know where exactly the text parts are located.)
-.sp
-This option does not display subtitles correctly. Use with care.
-.sp
-Disabled by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-image\-subs\-video\-resolution=<yes|no>\fP
-Override the image subtitle resolution with the video resolution
-(default: no). Normally, the subtitle canvas is fit into the video canvas
-(e.g. letterboxed). Setting this option uses the video size as subtitle
-canvas size. Can be useful to test broken subtitles, which often happen
-when the video was trancoded, while attempting to keep the old subtitles.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\fP, \fB\-\-no\-sub\-ass\fP
-Render ASS subtitles natively (enabled by default).
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This has been deprecated by \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override=strip\fP\&. You also
-may need \fB\-\-embeddedfonts=no\fP to get the same behavior. Also,
-using \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override=style\fP should give better results
-without breaking subtitles too much.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If \fB\-\-no\-sub\-ass\fP is specified, all tags and style declarations are
-stripped and ignored on display. The subtitle renderer uses the font style
-as specified by the \fB\-\-sub\-\fP options instead.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Using \fB\-\-no\-sub\-ass\fP may lead to incorrect or completely broken
-rendering of ASS/SSA subtitles. It can sometimes be useful to forcibly
-override the styling of ASS subtitles, but should be avoided in general.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-auto=<no|exact|fuzzy|all>\fP, \fB\-\-no\-sub\-auto\fP
-Load additional subtitle files matching the video filename. The parameter
-specifies how external subtitle files are matched. \fBexact\fP is enabled by
-default.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Don\(aqt automatically load external subtitle files.
-.TP
-.B exact
-Load the media filename with subtitle file extension and possibly
-language suffixes (default).
-.TP
-.B fuzzy
-Load all subs containing the media filename.
-.TP
-.B all
-Load all subs in the current and \fB\-\-sub\-file\-paths\fP directories.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-codepage=<codepage>\fP
-You can use this option to specify the subtitle codepage. uchardet will be
-used to guess the charset. (If mpv was not compiled with uchardet, then
-\fButf\-8\fP is the effective default.)
-.sp
-The default value for this option is \fBauto\fP, which enables autodetection.
-.sp
-The following steps are taken to determine the final codepage, in order:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-if the specific codepage has a \fB+\fP, use that codepage
-.IP \(bu 2
-if the data looks like UTF\-8, assume it is UTF\-8
-.IP \(bu 2
-if \fB\-\-sub\-codepage\fP is set to a specific codepage, use that
-.IP \(bu 2
-run uchardet, and if successful, use that
-.IP \(bu 2
-otherwise, use \fBUTF\-8\-BROKEN\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-codepage=latin2\fP Use Latin 2 if input is not UTF\-8.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-codepage=+cp1250\fP Always force recoding to cp1250.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The pseudo codepage \fBUTF\-8\-BROKEN\fP is used internally. If it\(aqs set,
-subtitles are interpreted as UTF\-8 with "Latin 1" as fallback for bytes
-which are not valid UTF\-8 sequences. iconv is never involved in this mode.
-.sp
-This option changed in mpv 0.23.0. Support for the old syntax was fully
-removed in mpv 0.24.0.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This works for text subtitle files only. Other types of subtitles (in
-particular subtitles in mkv files) are always assumed to be UTF\-8.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-fix\-timing=<yes|no>\fP
-Adjust subtitle timing is to remove minor gaps or overlaps between
-subtitles (if the difference is smaller than 210 ms, the gap or overlap
-is removed).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-forced\-only=<auto|yes|no>\fP
-Display only forced subtitles for the DVD subtitle stream selected by e.g.
-\fB\-\-slang\fP (default: \fBauto\fP). When set to \fBauto\fP, enabled when the
-\fB\-\-subs\-with\-matching\-audio\fP option is on and a non\-forced stream is selected.
-Enabling this will hide all subtitles in streams that don\(aqt make a distinction
-between forced and unforced events within a stream.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-fps=<rate>\fP
-Specify the framerate of the subtitle file (default: video fps). Affects
-text subtitles only.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB<rate>\fP > video fps speeds the subtitles up for frame\-based
-subtitle files and slows them down for time\-based ones.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See also: \fB\-\-sub\-speed\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-gauss=<0.0\-3.0>\fP
-Apply Gaussian blur to image subtitles (default: 0). This can help to make
-pixelated DVD/Vobsubs look nicer. A value other than 0 also switches to
-software subtitle scaling. Might be slow.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Never applied to text subtitles.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-gray\fP
-Convert image subtitles to grayscale. Can help to make yellow DVD/Vobsubs
-look nicer.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Never applied to text subtitles.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-paths=<path1:path2:...>\fP
-Deprecated, use \fB\-\-sub\-file\-paths\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-file\-paths=<path\-list>\fP
-Specify extra directories to search for subtitles matching the video.
-Multiple directories can be separated by ":" (";" on Windows).
-Paths can be relative or absolute. Relative paths are interpreted relative
-to video file directory.
-If the file is a URL, only absolute paths and \fBsub\fP configuration
-subdirectory will be scanned.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-Assuming that \fB/path/to/video/video.avi\fP is played and
-\fB\-\-sub\-file\-paths=sub:subtitles\fP is specified, mpv
-searches for subtitle files in these directories:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB/path/to/video/\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB/path/to/video/sub/\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB/path/to/video/subtitles/\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-the \fBsub\fP configuration subdirectory (usually \fB~/.config/mpv/sub/\fP)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This is a path list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-visibility\fP, \fB\-\-no\-sub\-visibility\fP
-Can be used to disable display of subtitles, but still select and decode
-them.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-secondary\-sub\-visibility\fP, \fB\-\-no\-secondary\-sub\-visibility\fP
-Can be used to disable display of secondary subtitles, but still select and
-decode them.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-If \fB\-\-sub\-visibility=no\fP, secondary subtitles are hidden regardless of
-\fB\-\-secondary\-sub\-visibility\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-clear\-on\-seek\fP
-(Obscure, rarely useful.) Can be used to play broken mkv files with
-duplicate ReadOrder fields. ReadOrder is the first field in a
-Matroska\-style ASS subtitle packets. It should be unique, and libass
-uses it for fast elimination of duplicates. This option disables caching
-of subtitles across seeks, so after a seek libass can\(aqt eliminate subtitle
-packets with the same ReadOrder as earlier packets.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-teletext\-page=<1\-999>\fP
-This works for \fBdvb_teletext\fP subtitle streams, and if FFmpeg has been
-compiled with support for it.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-past\-video\-end\fP
-After the last frame of video, if this option is enabled, subtitles will
-continue to update based on audio timestamps. Otherwise, the subtitles
-for the last video frame will stay onscreen.
-.sp
-Default: disabled
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-font=<name>\fP
-Specify font to use for subtitles that do not themselves
-specify a particular font. The default is \fBsans\-serif\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-font=\(aqBitstream Vera Sans\(aq\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-font=\(aqComic Sans MS\(aq\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-The \fB\-\-sub\-font\fP option (and many other style related \fB\-\-sub\-\fP
-options) are ignored when ASS\-subtitles are rendered, unless the
-\fB\-\-no\-sub\-ass\fP option is specified.
-.sp
-This used to support fontconfig patterns. Starting with libass 0.13.0,
-this stopped working.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-font\-size=<size>\fP
-Specify the sub font size. The unit is the size in scaled pixels at a
-window height of 720. The actual pixel size is scaled with the window
-height: if the window height is larger or smaller than 720, the actual size
-of the text increases or decreases as well.
-.sp
-Default: 55.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-back\-color=<color>\fP
-See \fB\-\-sub\-color\fP\&. Color used for sub text background. You can use
-\fB\-\-sub\-shadow\-offset\fP to change its size relative to the text.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-blur=<0..20.0>\fP
-Gaussian blur factor. 0 means no blur applied (default).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-bold=<yes|no>\fP
-Format text on bold.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-italic=<yes|no>\fP
-Format text on italic.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-border\-color=<color>\fP
-See \fB\-\-sub\-color\fP\&. Color used for the sub font border.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-ignored when \fB\-\-sub\-back\-color\fP is
-specified (or more exactly: when that option is not set to completely
-transparent).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-border\-size=<size>\fP
-Size of the sub font border in scaled pixels (see \fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP
-for details). A value of 0 disables borders.
-.sp
-Default: 3.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-color=<color>\fP
-Specify the color used for unstyled text subtitles.
-.sp
-The color is specified in the form \fBr/g/b\fP, where each color component
-is specified as number in the range 0.0 to 1.0. It\(aqs also possible to
-specify the transparency by using \fBr/g/b/a\fP, where the alpha value 0
-means fully transparent, and 1.0 means opaque. If the alpha component is
-not given, the color is 100% opaque.
-.sp
-Passing a single number to the option sets the sub to gray, and the form
-\fBgray/a\fP lets you specify alpha additionally.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-color=1.0/0.0/0.0\fP set sub to opaque red
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-color=1.0/0.0/0.0/0.75\fP set sub to opaque red with 75% alpha
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-color=0.5/0.75\fP set sub to 50% gray with 75% alpha
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Alternatively, the color can be specified as a RGB hex triplet in the form
-\fB#RRGGBB\fP, where each 2\-digit group expresses a color value in the
-range 0 (\fB00\fP) to 255 (\fBFF\fP). For example, \fB#FF0000\fP is red.
-This is similar to web colors. Alpha is given with \fB#AARRGGBB\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-color=\(aq#FF0000\(aq\fP set sub to opaque red
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-sub\-color=\(aq#C0808080\(aq\fP set sub to 50% gray with 75% alpha
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-margin\-x=<size>\fP
-Left and right screen margin for the subs in scaled pixels (see
-\fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP for details).
-.sp
-This option specifies the distance of the sub to the left, as well as at
-which distance from the right border long sub text will be broken.
-.sp
-Default: 25.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-margin\-y=<size>\fP
-Top and bottom screen margin for the subs in scaled pixels (see
-\fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP for details).
-.sp
-This option specifies the vertical margins of unstyled text subtitles.
-If you just want to raise the vertical subtitle position, use \fB\-\-sub\-pos\fP\&.
-.sp
-Default: 22.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-align\-x=<left|center|right>\fP
-Control to which corner of the screen text subtitles should be
-aligned to (default: \fBcenter\fP).
-.sp
-Never applied to ASS subtitles, except in \fB\-\-no\-sub\-ass\fP mode. Likewise,
-this does not apply to image subtitles.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-align\-y=<top|center|bottom>\fP
-Vertical position (default: \fBbottom\fP).
-Details see \fB\-\-sub\-align\-x\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-justify=<auto|left|center|right>\fP
-Control how multi line subs are justified irrespective of where they
-are aligned (default: \fBauto\fP which justifies as defined by
-\fB\-\-sub\-align\-y\fP).
-Left justification is recommended to make the subs easier to read
-as it is easier for the eyes.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-justify=<yes|no>\fP
-Applies justification as defined by \fB\-\-sub\-justify\fP on ASS subtitles
-if \fB\-\-sub\-ass\-override\fP is not set to \fBno\fP\&.
-Default: \fBno\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-shadow\-color=<color>\fP
-See \fB\-\-sub\-color\fP\&. Color used for sub text shadow.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-shadow\-offset=<size>\fP
-Displacement of the sub text shadow in scaled pixels (see
-\fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP for details). A value of 0 disables shadows.
-.sp
-Default: 0.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-spacing=<size>\fP
-Horizontal sub font spacing in scaled pixels (see \fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP
-for details). This value is added to the normal letter spacing. Negative
-values are allowed.
-.sp
-Default: 0.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-sdh=<yes|no>\fP
-Applies filter removing subtitle additions for the deaf or hard\-of\-hearing (SDH).
-This is intended for English, but may in part work for other languages too.
-The intention is that it can be always enabled so may not remove
-all parts added.
-It removes speaker labels (like MAN:), upper case text in parentheses and
-any text in brackets.
-.sp
-Default: \fBno\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-sdh\-harder=<yes|no>\fP
-Do harder SDH filtering (if enabled by \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-sdh\fP).
-Will also remove speaker labels and text within parentheses using both
-lower and upper case letters.
-.sp
-Default: \fBno\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\-...=...\fP
-Set a list of regular expressions to match on text subtitles, and remove any
-lines that match (default: empty). This is a string list option. See
-\fI\%List Options\fP for details. Normally, you should use
-\fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\-append=<regex>\fP, where each option use will append a
-new regular expression, without having to fight escaping problems.
-.sp
-List items are matched in order. If a regular expression matches, the
-process is stopped, and the subtitle line is discarded. The text matched
-against is, by default, the \fBText\fP field of ASS events (if the
-subtitle format is different, it is always converted). This may include
-formatting tags. Matching is case\-insensitive, but how this is done depends
-on the libc, and most likely works in ASCII only. It does not work on
-bitmap/image subtitles. Unavailable on inferior OSes (requires POSIX regex
-support).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\-append=opensubtitles\e.org\fP filters some ads.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Technically, using a list for matching is redundant, since you could just
-use a single combined regular expression. But it helps with diagnosis,
-ease of use, and temporarily disabling or enabling individual filters.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is experimental. The semantics most likely will change, and if you
-use this, you should be prepared to update the option later. Ideas
-include replacing the regexes with a very primitive and small subset of
-sed, or some method to control case\-sensitivity.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-jsre\-...=...\fP
-Same as \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\fP but with JavaScript regular expressions.
-Shares/affected\-by all \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\-*\fP control options (see below),
-and also experimental. Requires only JavaScript support.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\-plain=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to first convert the ASS "Text" field to plain\-text (default: no).
-This strips ASS tags and applies ASS directives, like \fB\eN\fP to new\-line.
-If the result is multi\-line then the regexp anchors \fB^\fP and \fB$\fP match
-each line, but still any match discards all lines.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\-warn=<yes|no>\fP
-Log dropped lines with warning log level, instead of verbose (default: no).
-Helpful for testing.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\-enable=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to enable regex filtering (default: yes). Note that if no regexes
-are added to the \fB\-\-sub\-filter\-regex\fP list, setting this option to \fByes\fP
-has no effect. It\(aqs meant to easily disable or enable filtering
-temporarily.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-create\-cc\-track=<yes|no>\fP
-For every video stream, create a closed captions track (default: no). The
-only purpose is to make the track available for selection at the start of
-playback, instead of creating it lazily. This applies only to
-\fBATSC A53 Part 4 Closed Captions\fP (displayed by mpv as subtitle tracks
-using the codec \fBeia_608\fP). The CC track is marked "default" and selected
-according to the normal subtitle track selection rules. You can then use
-\fB\-\-sid\fP to explicitly select the correct track too.
-.sp
-If the video stream contains no closed captions, or if no video is being
-decoded, the CC track will remain empty and will not show any text.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sub\-font\-provider=<auto|none|fontconfig>\fP
-Which libass font provider backend to use (default: auto). \fBauto\fP will
-attempt to use the native font provider: fontconfig on Linux, CoreText on
-macOS, DirectWrite on Windows. \fBfontconfig\fP forces fontconfig, if libass
-was built with support (if not, it behaves like \fBnone\fP).
-.sp
-The \fBnone\fP font provider effectively disables system fonts. It will still
-attempt to use embedded fonts (unless \fB\-\-embeddedfonts=no\fP is set; this is
-the same behavior as with all other font providers), \fBsubfont.ttf\fP if
-provided, and fonts in the \fBfonts\fP sub\-directory if provided. (The
-fallback is more strict than that of other font providers, and if a font
-name does not match, it may prefer not to render any text that uses the
-missing font.)
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Window
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-title=<string>\fP
-Set the window title. This is used for the video window, and if possible,
-also sets the audio stream title.
-.sp
-Properties are expanded. (See \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.)
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-There is a danger of this causing significant CPU usage, depending on
-the properties used. Changing the window title is often a slow
-operation, and if the title changes every frame, playback can be ruined.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screen=<default|0\-32>\fP
-In multi\-monitor configurations (i.e. a single desktop that spans across
-multiple displays), this option tells mpv which screen to display the
-video on.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Note (X11)"
-.sp
-This option does not work properly with all window managers. In these
-cases, you can try to use \fB\-\-geometry\fP to position the window
-explicitly. It\(aqs also possible that the window manager provides native
-features to control which screens application windows should use.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See also \fB\-\-fs\-screen\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screen\-name=<string>\fP
-In multi\-monitor configurations, this option tells mpv which screen to
-display the video on based on the screen name from the video backend. The
-same caveats in the \fB\-\-screen\fP option also apply here. This option is
-ignored and does nothing if \fB\-\-screen\fP is explicitly set.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-fullscreen\fP, \fB\-\-fs\fP
-Fullscreen playback.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-fs\-screen=<all|current|0\-32>\fP
-In multi\-monitor configurations (i.e. a single desktop that spans across
-multiple displays), this option tells mpv which screen to go fullscreen to.
-If \fBcurrent\fP is used mpv will fallback on what the user provided with
-the \fBscreen\fP option.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Note (X11)"
-.sp
-This option works properly only with window managers which
-understand the EWMH \fB_NET_WM_FULLSCREEN_MONITORS\fP hint.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Note (macOS)"
-.sp
-\fBall\fP does not work on macOS and will behave like \fBcurrent\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See also \fB\-\-screen\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-fs\-screen\-name=<string>\fP
-In multi\-monitor configurations, this option tells mpv which screen to go
-fullscreen to based on the screen name from the video backend. The same
-caveats in the \fB\-\-fs\-screen\fP option also apply here. This option is
-ignored and does nothing if \fB\-\-fs\-screen\fP is explicitly set.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-keep\-open=<yes|no|always>\fP
-Do not terminate when playing or seeking beyond the end of the file, and
-there is not next file to be played (and \fB\-\-loop\fP is not used).
-Instead, pause the player. When trying to seek beyond end of the file, the
-player will attempt to seek to the last frame.
-.sp
-Normally, this will act like \fBset pause yes\fP on EOF, unless the
-\fB\-\-keep\-open\-pause=no\fP option is set.
-.sp
-The following arguments can be given:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-If the current file ends, go to the next file or terminate.
-(Default.)
-.TP
-.B yes
-Don\(aqt terminate if the current file is the last playlist entry.
-Equivalent to \fB\-\-keep\-open\fP without arguments.
-.TP
-.B always
-Like \fByes\fP, but also applies to files before the last playlist
-entry. This means playback will never automatically advance to
-the next file.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This option is not respected when using \fB\-\-frames\fP\&. Explicitly
-skipping to the next file if the binding uses \fBforce\fP will terminate
-playback as well.
-.sp
-Also, if errors or unusual circumstances happen, the player can quit
-anyway.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Since mpv 0.6.0, this doesn\(aqt pause if there is a next file in the playlist,
-or the playlist is looped. Approximately, this will pause when the player
-would normally exit, but in practice there are corner cases in which this
-is not the case (e.g. \fBmpv \-\-keep\-open file.mkv /dev/null\fP will play
-file.mkv normally, then fail to open \fB/dev/null\fP, then exit). (In
-mpv 0.8.0, \fBalways\fP was introduced, which restores the old behavior.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-keep\-open\-pause=<yes|no>\fP
-If set to \fBno\fP, instead of pausing when \fB\-\-keep\-open\fP is active, just
-stop at end of file and continue playing forward when you seek backwards
-until end where it stops again. Default: \fByes\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-image\-display\-duration=<seconds|inf>\fP
-If the current file is an image, play the image for the given amount of
-seconds (default: 1). \fBinf\fP means the file is kept open forever (until
-the user stops playback manually).
-.sp
-Unlike \fB\-\-keep\-open\fP, the player is not paused, but simply continues
-playback until the time has elapsed. (It should not use any resources
-during "playback".)
-.sp
-This affects image files, which are defined as having only 1 video frame
-and no audio. The player may recognize certain non\-images as images, for
-example if \fB\-\-length\fP is used to reduce the length to 1 frame, or if
-you seek to the last frame.
-.sp
-This option does not affect the framerate used for \fBmf://\fP or
-\fB\-\-merge\-files\fP\&. For that, use \fB\-\-mf\-fps\fP instead.
-.sp
-Setting \fB\-\-image\-display\-duration\fP hides the OSC and does not track
-playback time on the command\-line output, and also does not duplicate
-the image frame when encoding. To force the player into "dumb mode"
-and actually count out seconds, or to duplicate the image when
-encoding, you need to use \fB\-\-demuxer=lavf \-\-demuxer\-lavf\-o=loop=1\fP,
-and use \fB\-\-length\fP or \fB\-\-frames\fP to stop after a particular time.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-force\-window=<yes|no|immediate>\fP
-Create a video output window even if there is no video. This can be useful
-when pretending that mpv is a GUI application. Currently, the window
-always has the size 640x480, and is subject to \fB\-\-geometry\fP,
-\fB\-\-autofit\fP, and similar options.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-The window is created only after initialization (to make sure default
-window placement still works if the video size is different from the
-\fB\-\-force\-window\fP default window size). This can be a problem if
-initialization doesn\(aqt work perfectly, such as when opening URLs with
-bad network connection, or opening broken video files. The \fBimmediate\fP
-mode can be used to create the window always on program start, but this
-may cause other issues.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-taskbar\-progress\fP, \fB\-\-no\-taskbar\-progress\fP
-(Windows only)
-Enable/disable playback progress rendering in taskbar (Windows 7 and above).
-.sp
-Enabled by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-snap\-window\fP
-(Windows only) Snap the player window to screen edges.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ontop\fP
-Makes the player window stay on top of other windows.
-.sp
-On Windows, if combined with fullscreen mode, this causes mpv to be
-treated as exclusive fullscreen window that bypasses the Desktop Window
-Manager.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ontop\-level=<window|system|desktop|level>\fP
-(macOS only)
-Sets the level of an ontop window (default: window).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B window
-On top of all other windows.
-.TP
-.B system
-On top of system elements like Taskbar, Menubar and Dock.
-.TP
-.B desktop
-On top of the Dekstop behind windows and Desktop icons.
-.TP
-.B level
-A level as integer.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-focus\-on\-open\fP, \fB\-\-no\-focus\-on\-open\fP
-(macOS only)
-Focus the video window on creation and makes it the front most window. This
-is on by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-border\fP, \fB\-\-no\-border\fP
-Play video with window border and decorations. Since this is on by
-default, use \fB\-\-no\-border\fP to disable the standard window decorations.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-on\-all\-workspaces\fP
-(X11 and macOS only)
-Show the video window on all virtual desktops.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-geometry=<[W[xH]][+\-x+\-y][/WS]>\fP, \fB\-\-geometry=<x:y>\fP
-Adjust the initial window position or size. \fBW\fP and \fBH\fP set the window
-size in pixels. \fBx\fP and \fBy\fP set the window position, measured in pixels
-from the top\-left corner of the screen to the top\-left corner of the image
-being displayed. If a percentage sign (\fB%\fP) is given after the argument,
-it turns the value into a percentage of the screen size in that direction.
-Positions are specified similar to the standard X11 \fB\-\-geometry\fP option
-format, in which e.g. +10\-50 means "place 10 pixels from the left border and
-50 pixels from the lower border" and "\-\-20+\-10" means "place 20 pixels
-beyond the right and 10 pixels beyond the top border". A trailing \fB/\fP
-followed by an integer denotes on which workspace (virtual desktop) the
-window should appear (X11 only).
-.sp
-If an external window is specified using the \fB\-\-wid\fP option, this
-option is ignored.
-.sp
-The coordinates are relative to the screen given with \fB\-\-screen\fP for the
-video output drivers that fully support \fB\-\-screen\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Generally only supported by GUI VOs. Ignored for encoding.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.\" admonition: Note (macOS)
-.\"
-.\" On macOS, the origin of the screen coordinate system is located on the
-.\" bottom-left corner. For instance, ``0:0`` will place the window at the
-.\" bottom-left of the screen.
-.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Note (X11)"
-.sp
-This option does not work properly with all window managers.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB50:40\fP
-Places the window at x=50, y=40.
-.TP
-.B \fB50%:50%\fP
-Places the window in the middle of the screen.
-.TP
-.B \fB100%:100%\fP
-Places the window at the bottom right corner of the screen.
-.TP
-.B \fB50%\fP
-Sets the window width to half the screen width. Window height is set
-so that the window has the video aspect ratio.
-.TP
-.B \fB50%x50%\fP
-Forces the window width and height to half the screen width and
-height. Will show black borders to compensate for the video aspect
-ratio (with most VOs and without \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB50%+10+10/2\fP
-Sets the window to half the screen widths, and positions it 10
-pixels below/left of the top left corner of the screen, on the
-second workspace.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See also \fB\-\-autofit\fP and \fB\-\-autofit\-larger\fP for fitting the window into
-a given size without changing aspect ratio.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-autofit=<[W[xH]]>\fP
-Set the initial window size to a maximum size specified by \fBWxH\fP, without
-changing the window\(aqs aspect ratio. The size is measured in pixels, or if
-a number is followed by a percentage sign (\fB%\fP), in percents of the
-screen size.
-.sp
-This option never changes the aspect ratio of the window. If the aspect
-ratio mismatches, the window\(aqs size is reduced until it fits into the
-specified size.
-.sp
-Window position is not taken into account, nor is it modified by this
-option (the window manager still may place the window differently depending
-on size). Use \fB\-\-geometry\fP to change the window position. Its effects
-are applied after this option.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-geometry\fP for details how this is handled with multi\-monitor
-setups.
-.sp
-Use \fB\-\-autofit\-larger\fP instead if you just want to limit the maximum size
-of the window, rather than always forcing a window size.
-.sp
-Use \fB\-\-geometry\fP if you want to force both window width and height to a
-specific size.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Generally only supported by GUI VOs. Ignored for encoding.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB70%\fP
-Make the window width 70% of the screen size, keeping aspect ratio.
-.TP
-.B \fB1000\fP
-Set the window width to 1000 pixels, keeping aspect ratio.
-.TP
-.B \fB70%x60%\fP
-Make the window as large as possible, without being wider than 70%
-of the screen width, or higher than 60% of the screen height.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-autofit\-larger=<[W[xH]]>\fP
-This option behaves exactly like \fB\-\-autofit\fP, except the window size is
-only changed if the window would be larger than the specified size.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB90%x80%\fP
-If the video is larger than 90% of the screen width or 80% of the
-screen height, make the window smaller until either its width is 90%
-of the screen, or its height is 80% of the screen.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-autofit\-smaller=<[W[xH]]>\fP
-This option behaves exactly like \fB\-\-autofit\fP, except that it sets the
-minimum size of the window (just as \fB\-\-autofit\-larger\fP sets the maximum).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB500x500\fP
-Make the window at least 500 pixels wide and 500 pixels high
-(depending on the video aspect ratio, the width or height will be
-larger than 500 in order to keep the aspect ratio the same).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-window\-scale=<factor>\fP
-Resize the video window to a multiple (or fraction) of the video size. This
-option is applied before \fB\-\-autofit\fP and other options are applied (so
-they override this option).
-.sp
-For example, \fB\-\-window\-scale=0.5\fP would show the window at half the
-video size.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-window\-minimized=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether the video window is minimized or not. Setting this will minimize,
-or unminimize, the video window if the current VO supports it. Note that
-some VOs may support minimization while not supporting unminimization
-(eg: Wayland).
-.sp
-Whether this option and \fB\-\-window\-maximized\fP work on program start or
-at runtime, and whether they\(aqre (at runtime) updated to reflect the actual
-window state, heavily depends on the VO and the windowing system. Some VOs
-simply do not implement them or parts of them, while other VOs may be
-restricted by the windowing systems (especially Wayland).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-window\-maximized=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether the video window is maximized or not. Setting this will maximize,
-or unmaximize, the video window if the current VO supports it. See
-\fB\-\-window\-minimized\fP for further remarks.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cursor\-autohide=<number|no|always>\fP
-Make mouse cursor automatically hide after given number of milliseconds.
-\fBno\fP will disable cursor autohide. \fBalways\fP means the cursor will stay
-hidden.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cursor\-autohide\-fs\-only\fP
-If this option is given, the cursor is always visible in windowed mode. In
-fullscreen mode, the cursor is shown or hidden according to
-\fB\-\-cursor\-autohide\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-fixed\-vo\fP, \fB\-\-fixed\-vo\fP
-\fB\-\-no\-fixed\-vo\fP enforces closing and reopening the video window for
-multiple files (one (un)initialization for each file).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-force\-rgba\-osd\-rendering\fP
-Change how some video outputs render the OSD and text subtitles. This
-does not change appearance of the subtitles and only has performance
-implications. For VOs which support native ASS rendering (like \fBgpu\fP,
-\fBvdpau\fP, \fBdirect3d\fP), this can be slightly faster or slower,
-depending on GPU drivers and hardware. For other VOs, this just makes
-rendering slower.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-force\-window\-position\fP
-Forcefully move mpv\(aqs video output window to default location whenever
-there is a change in video parameters, video stream or file. This used to
-be the default behavior. Currently only affects X11 VOs.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP, \fB\-\-keepaspect\fP
-\fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\fP will always stretch the video to window size, and will
-disable the window manager hints that force the window aspect ratio.
-(Ignored in fullscreen mode.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\-window\fP, \fB\-\-keepaspect\-window\fP
-\fB\-\-keepaspect\-window\fP (the default) will lock the window size to the
-video aspect. \fB\-\-no\-keepaspect\-window\fP disables this behavior, and will
-instead add black bars if window aspect and video aspect mismatch. Whether
-this actually works depends on the VO backend.
-(Ignored in fullscreen mode.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-monitoraspect=<ratio>\fP
-Set the aspect ratio of your monitor or TV screen. A value of 0 disables a
-previous setting (e.g. in the config file). Overrides the
-\fB\-\-monitorpixelaspect\fP setting if enabled.
-.sp
-See also \fB\-\-monitorpixelaspect\fP and \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-monitoraspect=4:3\fP or \fB\-\-monitoraspect=1.3333\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-monitoraspect=16:9\fP or \fB\-\-monitoraspect=1.7777\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hidpi\-window\-scale\fP, \fB\-\-no\-hidpi\-window\-scale\fP
-(macOS, Windows, X11, and Wayland only)
-Scale the window size according to the backing scale factor (default: yes).
-On regular HiDPI resolutions the window opens with double the size but appears
-as having the same size as on non\-HiDPI resolutions. This is enabled by
-default on macOS.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-native\-fs\fP, \fB\-\-no\-native\-fs\fP
-(macOS only)
-Uses the native fullscreen mechanism of the OS (default: yes).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-monitorpixelaspect=<ratio>\fP
-Set the aspect of a single pixel of your monitor or TV screen (default:
-1). A value of 1 means square pixels (correct for (almost?) all LCDs). See
-also \fB\-\-monitoraspect\fP and \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-stop\-screensaver\fP, \fB\-\-no\-stop\-screensaver\fP
-Turns off the screensaver (or screen blanker and similar mechanisms) at
-startup and turns it on again on exit (default: yes). The screensaver is
-always re\-enabled when the player is paused.
-.sp
-This is not supported on all video outputs or platforms. Sometimes it is
-implemented, but does not work (especially with Linux "desktops"). Read the
-\fI\%Disabling Screensaver\fP section very carefully.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-wid=<ID>\fP
-This tells mpv to attach to an existing window. If a VO is selected that
-supports this option, it will use that window for video output. mpv will
-scale the video to the size of this window, and will add black bars to
-compensate if the aspect ratio of the video is different.
-.sp
-On X11, the ID is interpreted as a \fBWindow\fP on X11. Unlike
-MPlayer/mplayer2, mpv always creates its own window, and sets the wid
-window as parent. The window will always be resized to cover the parent
-window fully. The value \fB0\fP is interpreted specially, and mpv will
-draw directly on the root window.
-.sp
-On win32, the ID is interpreted as \fBHWND\fP\&. Pass it as value cast to
-\fBintptr_t\fP\&. mpv will create its own window, and set the wid window as
-parent, like with X11.
-.sp
-On macOS/Cocoa, the ID is interpreted as \fBNSView*\fP\&. Pass it as value cast
-to \fBintptr_t\fP\&. mpv will create its own sub\-view. Because macOS does not
-support window embedding of foreign processes, this works only with libmpv,
-and will crash when used from the command line.
-.sp
-On Android, the ID is interpreted as \fBandroid.view.Surface\fP\&. Pass it as a
-value cast to \fBintptr_t\fP\&. Use with \fB\-\-vo=mediacodec_embed\fP and
-\fB\-\-hwdec=mediacodec\fP for direct rendering using MediaCodec, or with
-\fB\-\-vo=gpu \-\-gpu\-context=android\fP (with or without \fB\-\-hwdec=mediacodec\-copy\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-window\-dragging\fP
-Don\(aqt move the window when clicking on it and moving the mouse pointer.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-x11\-name\fP
-Set the window class name for X11\-based video output methods.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-x11\-netwm=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-(X11 only)
-Control the use of NetWM protocol features.
-.sp
-This may or may not help with broken window managers. This provides some
-functionality that was implemented by the now removed \fB\-\-fstype\fP option.
-Actually, it is not known to the developers to which degree this option
-was needed, so feedback is welcome.
-.sp
-Specifically, \fByes\fP will force use of NetWM fullscreen support, even if
-not advertised by the WM. This can be useful for WMs that are broken on
-purpose, like XMonad. (XMonad supposedly doesn\(aqt advertise fullscreen
-support, because Flash uses it. Apparently, applications which want to
-use fullscreen anyway are supposed to either ignore the NetWM support hints,
-or provide a workaround. Shame on XMonad for deliberately breaking X
-protocols (as if X isn\(aqt bad enough already).
-.sp
-By default, NetWM support is autodetected (\fBauto\fP).
-.sp
-This option might be removed in the future.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-x11\-bypass\-compositor=<yes|no|fs\-only|never>\fP
-If set to \fByes\fP, then ask the compositor to unredirect the mpv window
-(default: \fBfs\-only\fP). This uses the \fB_NET_WM_BYPASS_COMPOSITOR\fP hint.
-.sp
-\fBfs\-only\fP asks the window manager to disable the compositor only in
-fullscreen mode.
-.sp
-\fBno\fP sets \fB_NET_WM_BYPASS_COMPOSITOR\fP to 0, which is the default value
-as declared by the EWMH specification, i.e. no change is done.
-.sp
-\fBnever\fP asks the window manager to never disable the compositor.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Disc Devices
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdrom\-device=<path>\fP
-Specify the CD\-ROM device (default: \fB/dev/cdrom\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvd\-device=<path>\fP
-Specify the DVD device or .iso filename (default: \fB/dev/dvd\fP). You can
-also specify a directory that contains files previously copied directly
-from a DVD (with e.g. vobcopy).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fBmpv dvd:// \-\-dvd\-device=/path/to/dvd/\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-bluray\-device=<path>\fP
-(Blu\-ray only)
-Specify the Blu\-ray disc location. Must be a directory with Blu\-ray
-structure.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fBmpv bd:// \-\-bluray\-device=/path/to/bd/\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-...\fP
-These options can be used to tune the CD Audio reading feature of mpv.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-speed=<value>\fP
-Set CD spin speed.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-paranoia=<0\-2>\fP
-Set paranoia level. Values other than 0 seem to break playback of
-anything but the first track.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 0
-disable checking (default)
-.TP
-.B 1
-overlap checking only
-.TP
-.B 2
-full data correction and verification
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-sector\-size=<value>\fP
-Set atomic read size.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-overlap=<value>\fP
-Force minimum overlap search during verification to <value> sectors.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-toc\-bias\fP
-Assume that the beginning offset of track 1 as reported in the TOC
-will be addressed as LBA 0. Some discs need this for getting track
-boundaries correctly.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-toc\-offset=<value>\fP
-Add \fB<value>\fP sectors to the values reported when addressing tracks.
-May be negative.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-skip=<yes|no>\fP
-(Never) accept imperfect data reconstruction.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cdda\-cdtext=<yes|no>\fP
-Print CD text. This is disabled by default, because it ruins performance
-with CD\-ROM drives for unknown reasons.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvd\-speed=<speed>\fP
-Try to limit DVD speed (default: 0, no change). DVD base speed is 1385
-kB/s, so an 8x drive can read at speeds up to 11080 kB/s. Slower speeds
-make the drive more quiet. For watching DVDs, 2700 kB/s should be quiet and
-fast enough. mpv resets the speed to the drive default value on close.
-Values of at least 100 mean speed in kB/s. Values less than 100 mean
-multiples of 1385 kB/s, i.e. \fB\-\-dvd\-speed=8\fP selects 11080 kB/s.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-You need write access to the DVD device to change the speed.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvd\-angle=<ID>\fP
-Some DVDs contain scenes that can be viewed from multiple angles.
-This option tells mpv which angle to use (default: 1).
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Equalizer
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-brightness=<\-100\-100>\fP
-Adjust the brightness of the video signal (default: 0). Not supported by
-all video output drivers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-contrast=<\-100\-100>\fP
-Adjust the contrast of the video signal (default: 0). Not supported by all
-video output drivers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-saturation=<\-100\-100>\fP
-Adjust the saturation of the video signal (default: 0). You can get
-grayscale output with this option. Not supported by all video output
-drivers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gamma=<\-100\-100>\fP
-Adjust the gamma of the video signal (default: 0). Not supported by all
-video output drivers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hue=<\-100\-100>\fP
-Adjust the hue of the video signal (default: 0). You can get a colored
-negative of the image with this option. Not supported by all video output
-drivers.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Demuxer
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer=<[+]name>\fP
-Force demuxer type. Use a \(aq+\(aq before the name to force it; this will skip
-some checks. Give the demuxer name as printed by \fB\-\-demuxer=help\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-analyzeduration=<value>\fP
-Maximum length in seconds to analyze the stream properties.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-probe\-info=<yes|no|auto|nostreams>\fP
-Whether to probe stream information (default: auto). Technically, this
-controls whether libavformat\(aqs \fBavformat_find_stream_info()\fP function
-is called. Usually it\(aqs safer to call it, but it can also make startup
-slower.
-.sp
-The \fBauto\fP choice (the default) tries to skip this for a few know\-safe
-whitelisted formats, while calling it for everything else.
-.sp
-The \fBnostreams\fP choice only calls it if and only if the file seems to
-contain no streams after opening (helpful in cases when calling the function
-is needed to detect streams at all, such as with FLV files).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-probescore=<1\-100>\fP
-Minimum required libavformat probe score. Lower values will require
-less data to be loaded (makes streams start faster), but makes file
-format detection less reliable. Can be used to force auto\-detected
-libavformat demuxers, even if libavformat considers the detection not
-reliable enough. (Default: 26.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-allow\-mimetype=<yes|no>\fP
-Allow deriving the format from the HTTP MIME type (default: yes). Set
-this to no in case playing things from HTTP mysteriously fails, even
-though the same files work from local disk.
-.sp
-This is default in order to reduce latency when opening HTTP streams.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-format=<name>\fP
-Force a specific libavformat demuxer.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-hacks=<yes|no>\fP
-By default, some formats will be handled differently from other formats
-by explicitly checking for them. Most of these compensate for weird or
-imperfect behavior from libavformat demuxers. Passing \fBno\fP disables
-these. For debugging and testing only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-o=<key>=<value>[,<key>=<value>[,...]]\fP
-Pass AVOptions to libavformat demuxer.
-.sp
-Note, a patch to make the \fIo=\fP unneeded and pass all unknown options
-through the AVOption system is welcome. A full list of AVOptions can
-be found in the FFmpeg manual. Note that some options may conflict
-with mpv options.
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-o=fflags=+ignidx\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-probesize=<value>\fP
-Maximum amount of data to probe during the detection phase. In the
-case of MPEG\-TS this value identifies the maximum number of TS packets
-to scan.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-buffersize=<value>\fP
-Size of the stream read buffer allocated for libavformat in bytes
-(default: 32768). Lowering the size could lower latency. Note that
-libavformat might reallocate the buffer internally, or not fully use all
-of it.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-linearize\-timestamps=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Attempt to linearize timestamp resets in demuxed streams (default: auto).
-This was tested only for single audio streams. It\(aqs unknown whether it
-works correctly for video (but likely won\(aqt). Note that the implementation
-is slightly incorrect either way, and will introduce a discontinuity by
-about 1 codec frame size.
-.sp
-The \fBauto\fP mode enables this for OGG audio stream. This covers the common
-and annoying case of OGG web radio streams. Some of these will reset
-timestamps to 0 every time a new song begins. This breaks the mpv seekable
-cache, which can\(aqt deal with timestamp resets. Note that FFmpeg/libavformat\(aqs
-seeking API can\(aqt deal with this either; it\(aqs likely that if this option
-breaks this even more, while if it\(aqs disabled, you can at least seek within
-the first song in the stream. Well, you won\(aqt get anything useful either
-way if the seek is outside of mpv\(aqs cache.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-propagate\-opts=<yes|no>\fP
-Propagate FFmpeg\-level options to recursively opened connections (default:
-yes). This is needed because FFmpeg will apply these settings to nested
-AVIO contexts automatically. On the other hand, this could break in certain
-situations \- it\(aqs the FFmpeg API, you just can\(aqt win.
-.sp
-This affects in particular the \fB\-\-timeout\fP option and anything passed
-with \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-o\fP\&.
-.sp
-If this option is deemed unnecessary at some point in the future, it will
-be removed without notice.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll=<yes|index|no>\fP, \fB\-\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll\fP
-Try harder to show embedded soft subtitles when seeking somewhere. Normally,
-it can happen that the subtitle at the seek target is not shown due to how
-some container file formats are designed. The subtitles appear only if
-seeking before or exactly to the position a subtitle first appears. To
-make this worse, subtitles are often timed to appear a very small amount
-before the associated video frame, so that seeking to the video frame
-typically does not demux the subtitle at that position.
-.sp
-Enabling this option makes the demuxer start reading data a bit before the
-seek target, so that subtitles appear correctly. Note that this makes
-seeking slower, and is not guaranteed to always work. It only works if the
-subtitle is close enough to the seek target.
-.sp
-Works with the internal Matroska demuxer only. Always enabled for absolute
-and hr\-seeks, and this option changes behavior with relative or imprecise
-seeks only.
-.sp
-You can use the \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll\-secs\fP option to specify
-how much data the demuxer should pre\-read at most in order to find subtitle
-packets that may overlap. Setting this to 0 will effectively disable this
-preroll mechanism. Setting a very large value can make seeking very slow,
-and an extremely large value would completely reread the entire file from
-start to seek target on every seek \- seeking can become slower towards the
-end of the file. The details are messy, and the value is actually rounded
-down to the cluster with the previous video keyframe.
-.sp
-Some files, especially files muxed with newer mkvmerge versions, have
-information embedded that can be used to determine what subtitle packets
-overlap with a seek target. In these cases, mpv will reduce the amount
-of data read to a minimum. (Although it will still read \fIall\fP data between
-the cluster that contains the first wanted subtitle packet, and the seek
-target.) If the \fBindex\fP choice (which is the default) is specified, then
-prerolling will be done only if this information is actually available. If
-this method is used, the maximum amount of data to skip can be additionally
-controlled by \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll\-secs\-index\fP (it still uses
-the value of the option without \fB\-index\fP if that is higher).
-.sp
-See also \fB\-\-hr\-seek\-demuxer\-offset\fP option. This option can achieve a
-similar effect, but only if hr\-seek is active. It works with any demuxer,
-but makes seeking much slower, as it has to decode audio and video data
-instead of just skipping over it.
-.sp
-\fB\-\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll\fP is a deprecated alias.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll\-secs=<value>\fP
-See \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll\-secs\-index=<value>\fP
-See \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-subtitle\-preroll\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-probe\-start\-time=<yes|no>\fP
-Check the start time of Matroska files (default: yes). This simply reads the
-first cluster timestamps and assumes it is the start time. Technically, this
-also reads the first timestamp, which may increase latency by one frame
-(which may be relevant for live streams).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-mkv\-probe\-video\-duration=<yes|no|full>\fP
-When opening the file, seek to the end of it, and check what timestamp the
-last video packet has, and report that as file duration. This is strictly
-for compatibility with Haali only. In this mode, it\(aqs possible that opening
-will be slower (especially when playing over http), or that behavior with
-broken files is much worse. So don\(aqt use this option.
-.sp
-The \fByes\fP mode merely uses the index and reads a small number of blocks
-from the end of the file. The \fBfull\fP mode actually traverses the entire
-file and can make a reliable estimate even without an index present (such
-as partial files).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawaudio\-channels=<value>\fP
-Number of channels (or channel layout) if \fB\-\-demuxer=rawaudio\fP is used
-(default: stereo).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawaudio\-format=<value>\fP
-Sample format for \fB\-\-demuxer=rawaudio\fP (default: s16le).
-Use \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawaudio\-format=help\fP to get a list of all formats.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawaudio\-rate=<value>\fP
-Sample rate for \fB\-\-demuxer=rawaudio\fP (default: 44 kHz).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-fps=<value>\fP
-Rate in frames per second for \fB\-\-demuxer=rawvideo\fP (default: 25.0).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-w=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-h=<value>\fP
-Image dimension in pixels for \fB\-\-demuxer=rawvideo\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-Play a raw YUV sample:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv sample\-720x576.yuv \-\-demuxer=rawvideo \e
-\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-w=720 \-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-h=576
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-format=<value>\fP
-Color space (fourcc) in hex or string for \fB\-\-demuxer=rawvideo\fP
-(default: \fBYV12\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-mp\-format=<value>\fP
-Color space by internal video format for \fB\-\-demuxer=rawvideo\fP\&. Use
-\fB\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-mp\-format=help\fP for a list of possible formats.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-codec=<value>\fP
-Set the video codec instead of selecting the rawvideo codec when using
-\fB\-\-demuxer=rawvideo\fP\&. This uses the same values as codec names in
-\fB\-\-vd\fP (but it does not accept decoder names).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-rawvideo\-size=<value>\fP
-Frame size in bytes when using \fB\-\-demuxer=rawvideo\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-cue\-codepage=<codepage>\fP
-Specify the CUE sheet codepage. (See \fB\-\-sub\-codepage\fP for details.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-bytes=<bytesize>\fP
-This controls how much the demuxer is allowed to buffer ahead. The demuxer
-will normally try to read ahead as much as necessary, or as much is
-requested with \fB\-\-demuxer\-readahead\-secs\fP\&. The option can be used to
-restrict the maximum readahead. This limits excessive readahead in case of
-broken files or desynced playback. The demuxer will stop reading additional
-packets as soon as one of the limits is reached. (The limits still can be
-slightly overstepped due to technical reasons.)
-.sp
-Set these limits higher if you get a packet queue overflow warning, and
-you think normal playback would be possible with a larger packet queue.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-list\-options\fP for defaults and value range. \fB<bytesize>\fP options
-accept suffixes such as \fBKiB\fP and \fBMiB\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-back\-bytes=<bytesize>\fP
-This controls how much past data the demuxer is allowed to preserve. This
-is useful only if the cache is enabled.
-.sp
-Unlike the forward cache, there is no control how many seconds are actually
-cached \- it will simply use as much memory this option allows. Setting this
-option to 0 will strictly disable any back buffer, but this will lead to
-the situation that the forward seek range starts after the current playback
-position (as it removes past packets that are seek points).
-.sp
-If the end of the file is reached, the remaining unused forward buffer space
-is "donated" to the backbuffer (unless the backbuffer size is set to 0, or
-\fB\-\-demuxer\-donate\-buffer\fP is set to \fBno\fP).
-This still limits the total cache usage to the sum of the forward and
-backward cache, and effectively makes better use of the total allowed memory
-budget. (The opposite does not happen: free backward buffer is never
-"donated" to the forward buffer.)
-.sp
-Keep in mind that other buffers in the player (like decoders) will cause the
-demuxer to cache "future" frames in the back buffer, which can skew the
-impression about how much data the backbuffer contains.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-list\-options\fP for defaults and value range.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-donate\-buffer=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to let the back buffer use part of the forward buffer (default: yes).
-If set to \fByes\fP, the "donation" behavior described in the option
-description for \fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-back\-bytes\fP is enabled. This means the
-back buffer may use up memory up to the sum of the forward and back buffer
-options, minus the active size of the forward buffer. If set to \fBno\fP, the
-options strictly limit the forward and back buffer sizes separately.
-.sp
-Note that if the end of the file is reached, the buffered data stays the
-same, even if you seek back within the cache. This is because the back
-buffer is only reduced when new data is read.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-seekable\-cache=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Debugging option to control whether seeking can use the demuxer cache
-(default: auto). Normally you don\(aqt ever need to set this; the default
-\fBauto\fP does the right thing and enables cache seeking it if \fB\-\-cache\fP
-is set to \fByes\fP (or is implied \fByes\fP if \fB\-\-cache=auto\fP).
-.sp
-If enabled, short seek offsets will not trigger a low level demuxer seek
-(which means for example that slow network round trips or FFmpeg seek bugs
-can be avoided). If a seek cannot happen within the cached range, a low
-level seek will be triggered. Seeking outside of the cache will start a new
-cached range, but can discard the old cache range if the demuxer exhibits
-certain unsupported behavior.
-.sp
-The special value \fBauto\fP means \fByes\fP in the same situation as
-\fB\-\-cache\-secs\fP is used (i.e. when the stream appears to be a network
-stream or the stream cache is enabled).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-force\-retry\-on\-eof=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to keep retrying making the demuxer thread read more packets each
-time the decoder dequeues a packet, even if the end of the file was reached
-(default: no). This does not really make sense, but was the default behavior
-in mpv 0.32.0 and earlier. This option will be silently removed after a
-while, and exists only to restore the old behavior for testing, in case this
-was actually needed somewhere. This does _not_ help with files that are
-being appended to (in these cases use \fBappending://\fP, or disable the
-cache).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-thread=<yes|no>\fP
-Run the demuxer in a separate thread, and let it prefetch a certain amount
-of packets (default: yes). Having this enabled leads to smoother playback,
-enables features like prefetching, and prevents that stuck network freezes
-the player. On the other hand, it can add overhead, or the background
-prefetching can hog CPU resources.
-.sp
-Disabling this option is not recommended. Use it for debugging only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-termination\-timeout=<seconds>\fP
-Number of seconds the player should wait to shutdown the demuxer (default:
-0.1). The player will wait up to this much time before it closes the
-stream layer forcefully. Forceful closing usually means the network I/O is
-given no chance to close its connections gracefully (of course the OS can
-still close TCP connections properly), and might result in annoying messages
-being logged, and in some cases, confused remote servers.
-.sp
-This timeout is usually only applied when loading has finished properly. If
-loading is aborted by the user, or in some corner cases like removing
-external tracks sourced from network during playback, forceful closing is
-always used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-readahead\-secs=<seconds>\fP
-If \fB\-\-demuxer\-thread\fP is enabled, this controls how much the demuxer
-should buffer ahead in seconds (default: 1). As long as no packet has
-a timestamp difference higher than the readahead amount relative to the
-last packet returned to the decoder, the demuxer keeps reading.
-.sp
-Note that enabling the cache (such as \fB\-\-cache=yes\fP, or if the input
-is considered a network stream, and \fB\-\-cache=auto\fP is used), this option
-is mostly ignored. (\fB\-\-cache\-secs\fP will override this. Technically, the
-maximum of both options is used.)
-.sp
-The main purpose of this option is to limit the readhead for local playback,
-since a large readahead value is not overly useful in this case.
-.sp
-(This value tends to be fuzzy, because many file formats don\(aqt store linear
-timestamps.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-prefetch\-playlist=<yes|no>\fP
-Prefetch next playlist entry while playback of the current entry is ending
-(default: no).
-.sp
-This does not prefill the cache with the video data of the next URL.
-Prefetching video data is supported only for the current playlist entry,
-and depends on the demuxer cache settings (on by default). This merely
-opens the URL of the next playlist entry as soon the current URL is fully
-read.
-.sp
-This does \fBnot\fP work with URLs resolved by the \fByoutube\-dl\fP wrapper,
-and it won\(aqt.
-.sp
-This can give subtly wrong results if per\-file options are used, or if
-options are changed in the time window between prefetching start and next
-file played.
-.sp
-This can occasionally make wrong prefetching decisions. For example, it
-can\(aqt predict whether you go backwards in the playlist, and assumes you
-won\(aqt edit the playlist.
-.sp
-Highly experimental.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-force\-seekable=<yes|no>\fP
-If the player thinks that the media is not seekable (e.g. playing from a
-pipe, or it\(aqs an http stream with a server that doesn\(aqt support range
-requests), seeking will be disabled. This option can forcibly enable it.
-For seeks within the cache, there\(aqs a good chance of success.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-demuxer\-cache\-wait=<yes|no>\fP
-Before starting playback, read data until either the end of the file was
-reached, or the demuxer cache has reached maximum capacity. Only once this
-is done, playback starts. This intentionally happens before the initial
-seek triggered with \fB\-\-start\fP\&. This does not change any runtime behavior
-after the initial caching. This option is useless if the file cannot be
-cached completely.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-rar\-list\-all\-volumes=<yes|no>\fP
-When opening multi\-volume rar files, open all volumes to create a full list
-of contained files (default: no). If disabled, only the archive entries
-whose headers are located within the first volume are listed (and thus
-played when opening a .rar file with mpv). Doing so speeds up opening, and
-the typical idiotic use\-case of playing uncompressed multi\-volume rar files
-that contain a single media file is made faster.
-.sp
-Opening is still slow, because for unknown, idiotic, and unnecessary reasons
-libarchive opens all volumes anyway when playing the main file, even though
-mpv iterated no archive entries yet.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Input
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-native\-keyrepeat\fP
-Use system settings for keyrepeat delay and rate, instead of
-\fB\-\-input\-ar\-delay\fP and \fB\-\-input\-ar\-rate\fP\&. (Whether this applies
-depends on the VO backend and how it handles keyboard input. Does not
-apply to terminal input.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-ar\-delay\fP
-Delay in milliseconds before we start to autorepeat a key (0 to disable).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-ar\-rate\fP
-Number of key presses to generate per second on autorepeat.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-conf=<filename>\fP
-Specify input configuration file other than the default location in the mpv
-configuration directory (usually \fB~/.config/mpv/input.conf\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-input\-default\-bindings\fP
-Disable default\-level ("weak") key bindings. These are bindings which config
-files like \fBinput.conf\fP can override. It currently affects the builtin key
-bindings, and keys which scripts bind using \fBmp.add_key_binding\fP (but not
-\fBmp.add_forced_key_binding\fP because this overrides \fBinput.conf\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-input\-builtin\-bindings\fP
-Disable loading of built\-in key bindings during start\-up. This option is
-applied only during (lib)mpv initialization, and if used then it will not
-be not possible to enable them later. May be useful to libmpv clients.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-cmdlist\fP
-Prints all commands that can be bound to keys.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-doubleclick\-time=<milliseconds>\fP
-Time in milliseconds to recognize two consecutive button presses as a
-double\-click (default: 300).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-keylist\fP
-Prints all keys that can be bound to commands.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-key\-fifo\-size=<2\-65000>\fP
-Specify the size of the FIFO that buffers key events (default: 7). If it
-is too small, some events may be lost. The main disadvantage of setting it
-to a very large value is that if you hold down a key triggering some
-particularly slow command then the player may be unresponsive while it
-processes all the queued commands.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-test\fP
-Input test mode. Instead of executing commands on key presses, mpv
-will show the keys and the bound commands on the OSD. Has to be used
-with a dummy video, and the normal ways to quit the player will not
-work (key bindings that normally quit will be shown on OSD only, just
-like any other binding). See \fI\%INPUT.CONF\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-terminal\fP, \fB\-\-no\-input\-terminal\fP
-\fB\-\-no\-input\-terminal\fP prevents the player from reading key events from
-standard input. Useful when reading data from standard input. This is
-automatically enabled when \fB\-\fP is found on the command line. There are
-situations where you have to set it manually, e.g. if you open
-\fB/dev/stdin\fP (or the equivalent on your system), use stdin in a playlist
-or intend to read from stdin later on via the loadfile or loadlist input
-commands.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server=<filename>\fP
-Enable the IPC support and create the listening socket at the given path.
-.sp
-On Linux and Unix, the given path is a regular filesystem path. On Windows,
-named pipes are used, so the path refers to the pipe namespace
-(\fB\e\e.\epipe\e<name>\fP). If the \fB\e\e.\epipe\e\fP prefix is missing, mpv will add
-it automatically before creating the pipe, so
-\fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server=/tmp/mpv\-socket\fP and
-\fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server=\e\e.\epipe\etmp\empv\-socket\fP are equivalent for IPC on
-Windows.
-.sp
-See \fI\%JSON IPC\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-ipc\-client=fd://<N>\fP
-Connect a single IPC client to the given FD. This is somewhat similar to
-\fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server\fP, except no socket is created, and instead the passed
-FD is treated like a socket connection received from \fBaccept()\fP\&. In
-practice, you could pass either a FD created by \fBsocketpair()\fP, or a pipe.
-In both cases, you must sure the FD is actually inherited by mpv (do not
-set the POSIX \fBCLOEXEC\fP flag).
-.sp
-The player quits when the connection is closed.
-.sp
-This is somewhat similar to the removed \fB\-\-input\-file\fP option, except it
-supports only integer FDs, and cannot open actual paths.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fB\-\-input\-ipc\-client=fd://123\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Does not and will not work on Windows.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Writing to the \fBinput\-ipc\-server\fP option at runtime will start another
-instance of an IPC client handler for the \fBinput\-ipc\-client\fP option,
-because initialization is bundled, and this thing is stupid. This is a
-bug. Writing to \fBinput\-ipc\-client\fP at runtime will start another IPC
-client handler for the new value, without stopping the old one, even if
-the FD value is the same (but the string is different e.g. due to
-whitespace). This is not a bug.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-gamepad=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable/disable SDL2 Gamepad support. Disabled by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-cursor\fP, \fB\-\-no\-input\-cursor\fP
-Permit mpv to receive pointer events reported by the video output
-driver. Necessary to use the OSC, or to select the buttons in DVD menus.
-Support depends on the VO in use.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-media\-keys=<yes|no>\fP
-On systems where mpv can choose between receiving media keys or letting
-the system handle them \- this option controls whether mpv should receive
-them.
-.sp
-Default: yes (except for libmpv). macOS and Windows only, because elsewhere
-mpv doesn\(aqt have a choice \- the system decides whether to send media keys
-to mpv. For instance, on X11 or Wayland, system\-wide media keys are not
-implemented. Whether media keys work when the mpv window is focused is
-implementation\-defined.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-right\-alt\-gr\fP, \fB\-\-no\-input\-right\-alt\-gr\fP
-(Cocoa and Windows only)
-Use the right Alt key as Alt Gr to produce special characters. If disabled,
-count the right Alt as an Alt modifier key. Enabled by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-input\-vo\-keyboard=<yes|no>\fP
-Disable all keyboard input on for VOs which can\(aqt participate in proper
-keyboard input dispatching. May not affect all VOs. Generally useful for
-embedding only.
-.sp
-On X11, a sub\-window with input enabled grabs all keyboard input as long
-as it is 1. a child of a focused window, and 2. the mouse is inside of
-the sub\-window. It can steal away all keyboard input from the
-application embedding the mpv window, and on the other hand, the mpv
-window will receive no input if the mouse is outside of the mpv window,
-even though mpv has focus. Modern toolkits work around this weird X11
-behavior, but naively embedding foreign windows breaks it.
-.sp
-The only way to handle this reasonably is using the XEmbed protocol, which
-was designed to solve these problems. GTK provides \fBGtkSocket\fP, which
-supports XEmbed. Qt doesn\(aqt seem to provide anything working in newer
-versions.
-.sp
-If the embedder supports XEmbed, input should work with default settings
-and with this option disabled. Note that \fBinput\-default\-bindings\fP is
-disabled by default in libmpv as well \- it should be enabled if you want
-the mpv default key bindings.
-.sp
-(This option was renamed from \fB\-\-input\-x11\-keyboard\fP\&.)
-.UNINDENT
-.SS OSD
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osc\fP, \fB\-\-no\-osc\fP
-Whether to load the on\-screen\-controller (default: yes).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-osd\-bar\fP, \fB\-\-osd\-bar\fP
-Disable display of the OSD bar.
-.sp
-You can configure this on a per\-command basis in input.conf using \fBosd\-\fP
-prefixes, see \fBInput Command Prefixes\fP\&. If you want to disable the OSD
-completely, use \fB\-\-osd\-level=0\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-on\-seek=<no,bar,msg,msg\-bar>\fP
-Set what is displayed on the OSD during seeks. The default is \fBbar\fP\&.
-.sp
-You can configure this on a per\-command basis in input.conf using \fBosd\-\fP
-prefixes, see \fBInput Command Prefixes\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-duration=<time>\fP
-Set the duration of the OSD messages in ms (default: 1000).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-font=<name>\fP
-Specify font to use for OSD. The default is \fBsans\-serif\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-osd\-font=\(aqBitstream Vera Sans\(aq\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-osd\-font=\(aqComic Sans MS\(aq\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-font\-size=<size>\fP
-Specify the OSD font size. See \fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP for details.
-.sp
-Default: 55.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-msg1=<string>\fP
-Show this string as message on OSD with OSD level 1 (visible by default).
-The message will be visible by default, and as long as no other message
-covers it, and the OSD level isn\(aqt changed (see \fB\-\-osd\-level\fP).
-Expands properties; see \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-msg2=<string>\fP
-Similar to \fB\-\-osd\-msg1\fP, but for OSD level 2. If this is an empty string
-(default), then the playback time is shown.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-msg3=<string>\fP
-Similar to \fB\-\-osd\-msg1\fP, but for OSD level 3. If this is an empty string
-(default), then the playback time, duration, and some more information is
-shown.
-.sp
-This is used for the \fBshow\-progress\fP command (by default mapped to \fBP\fP),
-and when seeking if enabled with \fB\-\-osd\-on\-seek\fP or by \fBosd\-\fP prefixes
-in input.conf (see \fBInput Command Prefixes\fP).
-.sp
-\fB\-\-osd\-status\-msg\fP is a legacy equivalent (but with a minor difference).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-status\-msg=<string>\fP
-Show a custom string during playback instead of the standard status text.
-This overrides the status text used for \fB\-\-osd\-level=3\fP, when using the
-\fBshow\-progress\fP command (by default mapped to \fBP\fP), and when seeking if
-enabled with \fB\-\-osd\-on\-seek\fP or \fBosd\-\fP prefixes in input.conf (see
-\fBInput Command Prefixes\fP). Expands properties. See \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.sp
-This option has been replaced with \fB\-\-osd\-msg3\fP\&. The only difference is
-that this option implicitly includes \fB${osd\-sym\-cc}\fP\&. This option is
-ignored if \fB\-\-osd\-msg3\fP is not empty.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-playing\-msg=<string>\fP
-Show a message on OSD when playback starts. The string is expanded for
-properties, e.g. \fB\-\-osd\-playing\-msg=\(aqfile: ${filename}\(aq\fP will show the
-message \fBfile:\fP followed by a space and the currently played filename.
-.sp
-See \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-bar\-align\-x=<\-1\-1>\fP
-Position of the OSD bar. \-1 is far left, 0 is centered, 1 is far right.
-Fractional values (like 0.5) are allowed.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-bar\-align\-y=<\-1\-1>\fP
-Position of the OSD bar. \-1 is top, 0 is centered, 1 is bottom.
-Fractional values (like 0.5) are allowed.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-bar\-w=<1\-100>\fP
-Width of the OSD bar, in percentage of the screen width (default: 75).
-A value of 50 means the bar is half the screen wide.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-bar\-h=<0.1\-50>\fP
-Height of the OSD bar, in percentage of the screen height (default: 3.125).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-back\-color=<color>\fP
-See \fB\-\-sub\-color\fP\&. Color used for OSD text background.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-blur=<0..20.0>\fP
-Gaussian blur factor. 0 means no blur applied (default).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-bold=<yes|no>\fP
-Format text on bold.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-italic=<yes|no>\fP
-Format text on italic.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-border\-color=<color>\fP
-See \fB\-\-sub\-color\fP\&. Color used for the OSD font border.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-ignored when \fB\-\-osd\-back\-color\fP is
-specified (or more exactly: when that option is not set to completely
-transparent).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-border\-size=<size>\fP
-Size of the OSD font border in scaled pixels (see \fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP
-for details). A value of 0 disables borders.
-.sp
-Default: 3.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-color=<color>\fP
-Specify the color used for OSD.
-See \fB\-\-sub\-color\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-fractions\fP
-Show OSD times with fractions of seconds (in millisecond precision). Useful
-to see the exact timestamp of a video frame.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-level=<0\-3>\fP
-Specifies which mode the OSD should start in.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 0
-OSD completely disabled (subtitles only)
-.TP
-.B 1
-enabled (shows up only on user interaction)
-.TP
-.B 2
-enabled + current time visible by default
-.TP
-.B 3
-enabled + \fB\-\-osd\-status\-msg\fP (current time and status by default)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-margin\-x=<size>\fP
-Left and right screen margin for the OSD in scaled pixels (see
-\fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP for details).
-.sp
-This option specifies the distance of the OSD to the left, as well as at
-which distance from the right border long OSD text will be broken.
-.sp
-Default: 25.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-margin\-y=<size>\fP
-Top and bottom screen margin for the OSD in scaled pixels (see
-\fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP for details).
-.sp
-This option specifies the vertical margins of the OSD.
-.sp
-Default: 22.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-align\-x=<left|center|right>\fP
-Control to which corner of the screen OSD should be
-aligned to (default: \fBleft\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-align\-y=<top|center|bottom>\fP
-Vertical position (default: \fBtop\fP).
-Details see \fB\-\-osd\-align\-x\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-scale=<factor>\fP
-OSD font size multiplier, multiplied with \fB\-\-osd\-font\-size\fP value.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-scale\-by\-window=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to scale the OSD with the window size (default: yes). If this is
-disabled, \fB\-\-osd\-font\-size\fP and other OSD options that use scaled pixels
-are always in actual pixels. The effect is that changing the window size
-won\(aqt change the OSD font size.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-shadow\-color=<color>\fP
-See \fB\-\-sub\-color\fP\&. Color used for OSD shadow.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-shadow\-offset=<size>\fP
-Displacement of the OSD shadow in scaled pixels (see
-\fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP for details). A value of 0 disables shadows.
-.sp
-Default: 0.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-spacing=<size>\fP
-Horizontal OSD/sub font spacing in scaled pixels (see \fB\-\-sub\-font\-size\fP
-for details). This value is added to the normal letter spacing. Negative
-values are allowed.
-.sp
-Default: 0.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-osd=<yes|no>\fP
-Enabled OSD rendering on the video window (default: yes). This can be used
-in situations where terminal OSD is preferred. If you just want to disable
-all OSD rendering, use \fB\-\-osd\-level=0\fP\&.
-.sp
-It does not affect subtitles or overlays created by scripts (in particular,
-the OSC needs to be disabled with \fB\-\-no\-osc\fP).
-.sp
-This option is somewhat experimental and could be replaced by another
-mechanism in the future.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-osd\-font\-provider=<...>\fP
-See \fB\-\-sub\-font\-provider\fP for details and accepted values. Note that
-unlike subtitles, OSD never uses embedded fonts from media files.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Screenshot
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-format=<type>\fP
-Set the image file type used for saving screenshots.
-.sp
-Available choices:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B png
-PNG
-.TP
-.B jpg
-JPEG (default)
-.TP
-.B jpeg
-JPEG (alias for jpg)
-.TP
-.B webp
-WebP
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-tag\-colorspace=<yes|no>\fP
-Tag screenshots with the appropriate colorspace.
-.sp
-Note that not all formats are supported.
-.sp
-Default: \fBno\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-high\-bit\-depth=<yes|no>\fP
-If possible, write screenshots with a bit depth similar to the source
-video (default: yes). This is interesting in particular for PNG, as this
-sometimes triggers writing 16 bit PNGs with huge file sizes. This will also
-include an unused alpha channel in the resulting files if 16 bit is used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-template=<template>\fP
-Specify the filename template used to save screenshots. The template
-specifies the filename without file extension, and can contain format
-specifiers, which will be substituted when taking a screenshot.
-By default, the template is \fBmpv\-shot%n\fP, which results in filenames like
-\fBmpv\-shot0012.png\fP for example.
-.sp
-The template can start with a relative or absolute path, in order to
-specify a directory location where screenshots should be saved.
-.sp
-If the final screenshot filename points to an already existing file, the
-file will not be overwritten. The screenshot will either not be saved, or if
-the template contains \fB%n\fP, saved using different, newly generated
-filename.
-.sp
-Allowed format specifiers:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB%[#][0X]n\fP
-A sequence number, padded with zeros to length X (default: 04). E.g.
-passing the format \fB%04n\fP will yield \fB0012\fP on the 12th screenshot.
-The number is incremented every time a screenshot is taken or if the
-file already exists. The length \fBX\fP must be in the range 0\-9. With
-the optional # sign, mpv will use the lowest available number. For
-example, if you take three screenshots\-\-0001, 0002, 0003\-\-and delete
-the first two, the next two screenshots will not be 0004 and 0005, but
-0001 and 0002 again.
-.TP
-.B \fB%f\fP
-Filename of the currently played video.
-.TP
-.B \fB%F\fP
-Same as \fB%f\fP, but strip the file extension, including the dot.
-.TP
-.B \fB%x\fP
-Directory path of the currently played video. If the video is not on
-the filesystem (but e.g. \fBhttp://\fP), this expand to an empty string.
-.TP
-.B \fB%X{fallback}\fP
-Same as \fB%x\fP, but if the video file is not on the filesystem, return
-the fallback string inside the \fB{...}\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB%p\fP
-Current playback time, in the same format as used in the OSD. The
-result is a string of the form "HH:MM:SS". For example, if the video is
-at the time position 5 minutes and 34 seconds, \fB%p\fP will be replaced
-with "00:05:34".
-.TP
-.B \fB%P\fP
-Similar to \fB%p\fP, but extended with the playback time in milliseconds.
-It is formatted as "HH:MM:SS.mmm", with "mmm" being the millisecond
-part of the playback time.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is a simple way for getting unique per\-frame timestamps. (Frame
-numbers would be more intuitive, but are not easily implementable
-because container formats usually use time stamps for identifying
-frames.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB%wX\fP
-Specify the current playback time using the format string \fBX\fP\&.
-\fB%p\fP is like \fB%wH:%wM:%wS\fP, and \fB%P\fP is like \fB%wH:%wM:%wS.%wT\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B Valid format specifiers:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB%wH\fP
-hour (padded with 0 to two digits)
-.TP
-.B \fB%wh\fP
-hour (not padded)
-.TP
-.B \fB%wM\fP
-minutes (00\-59)
-.TP
-.B \fB%wm\fP
-total minutes (includes hours, unlike \fB%wM\fP)
-.TP
-.B \fB%wS\fP
-seconds (00\-59)
-.TP
-.B \fB%ws\fP
-total seconds (includes hours and minutes)
-.TP
-.B \fB%wf\fP
-like \fB%ws\fP, but as float
-.TP
-.B \fB%wT\fP
-milliseconds (000\-999)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB%tX\fP
-Specify the current local date/time using the format \fBX\fP\&. This format
-specifier uses the UNIX \fBstrftime()\fP function internally, and inserts
-the result of passing "%X" to \fBstrftime\fP\&. For example, \fB%tm\fP will
-insert the number of the current month as number. You have to use
-multiple \fB%tX\fP specifiers to build a full date/time string.
-.TP
-.B \fB%{prop[:fallback text]}\fP
-Insert the value of the input property \(aqprop\(aq. E.g. \fB%{filename}\fP is
-the same as \fB%f\fP\&. If the property does not exist or is not available,
-an error text is inserted, unless a fallback is specified.
-.TP
-.B \fB%%\fP
-Replaced with the \fB%\fP character itself.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-directory=<path>\fP
-Store screenshots in this directory. This path is joined with the filename
-generated by \fB\-\-screenshot\-template\fP\&. If the template filename is already
-absolute, the directory is ignored.
-.sp
-If the directory does not exist, it is created on the first screenshot. If
-it is not a directory, an error is generated when trying to write a
-screenshot.
-.sp
-This option is not set by default, and thus will write screenshots to the
-directory from which mpv was started. In pseudo\-gui mode
-(see \fI\%PSEUDO GUI MODE\fP), this is set to the desktop.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-jpeg\-quality=<0\-100>\fP
-Set the JPEG quality level. Higher means better quality. The default is 90.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-jpeg\-source\-chroma=<yes|no>\fP
-Write JPEG files with the same chroma subsampling as the video
-(default: yes). If disabled, the libjpeg default is used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-png\-compression=<0\-9>\fP
-Set the PNG compression level. Higher means better compression. This will
-affect the file size of the written screenshot file and the time it takes
-to write a screenshot. Too high compression might occupy enough CPU time to
-interrupt playback. The default is 7.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-png\-filter=<0\-5>\fP
-Set the filter applied prior to PNG compression. 0 is none, 1 is "sub", 2 is
-"up", 3 is "average", 4 is "Paeth", and 5 is "mixed". This affects the level
-of compression that can be achieved. For most images, "mixed" achieves the
-best compression ratio, hence it is the default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-webp\-lossless=<yes|no>\fP
-Write lossless WebP files. \fB\-\-screenshot\-webp\-quality\fP is ignored if this
-is set. The default is no.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-webp\-quality=<0\-100>\fP
-Set the WebP quality level. Higher means better quality. The default is 75.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-webp\-compression=<0\-6>\fP
-Set the WebP compression level. Higher means better compression, but takes
-more CPU time. Note that this also affects the screenshot quality when used
-with lossy WebP files. The default is 4.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-screenshot\-sw=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to use software rendering for screenshots (default: no).
-.sp
-If set to no, the screenshot will be rendered by the current VO if possible
-(only vo_gpu currently). The advantage is that this will (probably) always
-show up as in the video window, because the same code is used for rendering.
-But since the renderer needs to be reinitialized, this can be slow and
-interrupt playback. (Unless the \fBwindow\fP mode is used with the
-\fBscreenshot\fP command.)
-.sp
-If set to yes, the software scaler is used to convert the video to RGB (or
-whatever the target screenshot requires). In this case, conversion will
-run in a separate thread and will probably not interrupt playback. The
-software renderer may lack some capabilities, such as HDR rendering.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Software Scaler
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-scaler=<name>\fP
-Specify the software scaler algorithm to be used with \fB\-\-vf=scale\fP\&. This
-also affects video output drivers which lack hardware acceleration,
-e.g. \fBx11\fP\&. See also \fB\-\-vf=scale\fP\&.
-.sp
-To get a list of available scalers, run \fB\-\-sws\-scaler=help\fP\&.
-.sp
-Default: \fBbicubic\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-lgb=<0\-100>\fP
-Software scaler Gaussian blur filter (luma). See \fB\-\-sws\-scaler\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-cgb=<0\-100>\fP
-Software scaler Gaussian blur filter (chroma). See \fB\-\-sws\-scaler\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-ls=<\-100\-100>\fP
-Software scaler sharpen filter (luma). See \fB\-\-sws\-scaler\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-cs=<\-100\-100>\fP
-Software scaler sharpen filter (chroma). See \fB\-\-sws\-scaler\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-chs=<h>\fP
-Software scaler chroma horizontal shifting. See \fB\-\-sws\-scaler\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-cvs=<v>\fP
-Software scaler chroma vertical shifting. See \fB\-\-sws\-scaler\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-bitexact=<yes|no>\fP
-Unknown functionality (default: no). Consult libswscale source code. The
-primary purpose of this, as far as libswscale API goes), is to produce
-exactly the same output for the same input on all platforms (output has the
-same "bits" everywhere, thus "bitexact"). Typically disables optimizations.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-fast=<yes|no>\fP
-Allow optimizations that help with performance, but reduce quality (default:
-no).
-.sp
-VOs like \fBdrm\fP and \fBx11\fP will benefit a lot from using \fB\-\-sws\-fast\fP\&.
-You may need to set other options, like \fB\-\-sws\-scaler\fP\&. The builtin
-\fBsws\-fast\fP profile sets this option and some others to gain performance
-for reduced quality. Also see \fB\-\-sws\-allow\-zimg\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sws\-allow\-zimg=<yes|no>\fP
-Allow using zimg (if the component using the internal swscale wrapper
-explicitly allows so) (default: yes). In this case, zimg \fImay\fP be used, if
-the internal zimg wrapper supports the input and output formats. It will
-silently or noisily fall back to libswscale if one of these conditions does
-not apply.
-.sp
-If zimg is used, the other \fB\-\-sws\-\fP options are ignored, and the
-\fB\-\-zimg\-\fP options are used instead.
-.sp
-If the internal component using the swscale wrapper hooks up logging
-correctly, a verbose priority log message will indicate whether zimg is
-being used.
-.sp
-Most things which need software conversion can make use of this.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Do note that zimg \fImay\fP be slower than libswscale. Usually,
-it\(aqs faster on x86 platforms, but slower on ARM (due to lack of ARM
-specific optimizations). The mpv zimg wrapper uses unoptimized repacking
-for some formats, for which zimg cannot be blamed.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler=<point|bilinear|bicubic|spline16|spline36|lanczos>\fP
-Zimg luma scaler to use (default: lanczos).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\-param\-a=<default|float>\fP, \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\-param\-b=<default|float>\fP
-Set scaler parameters. By default, these are set to the special string
-\fBdefault\fP, which maps to a scaler\-specific default value. Ignored if the
-scaler is not tunable.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBlanczos\fP
-\fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\-param\-a\fP is the number of taps.
-.TP
-.B \fBbicubic\fP
-a and b are the bicubic b and c parameters.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\-chroma=...\fP
-Same as \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\fP, for for chroma interpolation (default: bilinear).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\-chroma\-param\-a\fP, \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\-chroma\-param\-b\fP
-Same as \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\-param\-a\fP / \fB\-\-zimg\-scaler\-param\-b\fP, for chroma.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-zimg\-dither=<no|ordered|random|error\-diffusion>\fP
-Dithering (default: random).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-zimg\-threads=<auto|integer>\fP
-Set the maximum number of threads to use for scaling (default: auto).
-\fBauto\fP uses the number of logical cores on the current machine. Note that
-the scaler may use less threads (or even just 1 thread) depending on stuff.
-Passing a value of 1 disables threading and always scales the image in a
-single operation. Higher thread counts waste resources, but make it
-typically faster.
-.sp
-Note that some zimg git versions had bugs that will corrupt the output if
-threads are used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-zimg\-fast=<yes|no>\fP
-Allow optimizations that help with performance, but reduce quality (default:
-yes). Currently, this may simplify gamma conversion operations.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Audio Resampler
-.sp
-This controls the default options of any resampling done by mpv (but not within
-libavfilter, within the system audio API resampler, or any other places).
-.sp
-It also sets the defaults for the \fBlavrresample\fP audio filter.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-resample\-filter\-size=<length>\fP
-Length of the filter with respect to the lower sampling rate. (default:
-16)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-resample\-phase\-shift=<count>\fP
-Log2 of the number of polyphase entries. (..., 10\->1024, 11\->2048,
-12\->4096, ...) (default: 10\->1024)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-resample\-cutoff=<cutoff>\fP
-Cutoff frequency (0.0\-1.0), default set depending upon filter length.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-resample\-linear=<yes|no>\fP
-If set then filters will be linearly interpolated between polyphase
-entries. (default: no)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-normalize\-downmix=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable/disable normalization if surround audio is downmixed to stereo
-(default: no). If this is disabled, downmix can cause clipping. If it\(aqs
-enabled, the output might be too quiet. It depends on the source audio.
-.sp
-Technically, this changes the \fBnormalize\fP suboption of the
-\fBlavrresample\fP audio filter, which performs the downmixing.
-.sp
-If downmix happens outside of mpv for some reason, or in the decoder
-(decoder downmixing), or in the audio output (system mixer), this has no
-effect.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-resample\-max\-output\-size=<length>\fP
-Limit maximum size of audio frames filtered at once, in ms (default: 40).
-The output size size is limited in order to make resample speed changes
-react faster. This is necessary especially if decoders or filters output
-very large frame sizes (like some lossless codecs or some DRC filters).
-This option does not affect the resampling algorithm in any way.
-.sp
-For testing/debugging only. Can be removed or changed any time.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-audio\-swresample\-o=<string>\fP
-Set AVOptions on the SwrContext or AVAudioResampleContext. These should
-be documented by FFmpeg or Libav.
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Terminal
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-quiet\fP
-Make console output less verbose; in particular, prevents the status line
-(i.e. AV: 3.4 (00:00:03.37) / 5320.6 ...) from being displayed.
-Particularly useful on slow terminals or broken ones which do not properly
-handle carriage return (i.e. \fB\er\fP).
-.sp
-See also: \fB\-\-really\-quiet\fP and \fB\-\-msg\-level\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-really\-quiet\fP
-Display even less output and status messages than with \fB\-\-quiet\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-terminal\fP, \fB\-\-terminal\fP
-Disable any use of the terminal and stdin/stdout/stderr. This completely
-silences any message output.
-.sp
-Unlike \fB\-\-really\-quiet\fP, this disables input and terminal initialization
-as well.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-msg\-color\fP
-Disable colorful console output on terminals.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-msg\-level=<module1=level1,module2=level2,...>\fP
-Control verbosity directly for each module. The \fBall\fP module changes the
-verbosity of all the modules. The verbosity changes from this option are
-applied in order from left to right, and each item can override a previous
-one.
-.sp
-Run mpv with \fB\-\-msg\-level=all=trace\fP to see all messages mpv outputs. You
-can use the module names printed in the output (prefixed to each line in
-\fB[...]\fP) to limit the output to interesting modules.
-.sp
-This also affects \fB\-\-log\-file\fP, and in certain cases libmpv API logging.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Some messages are printed before the command line is parsed and are
-therefore not affected by \fB\-\-msg\-level\fP\&. To control these messages,
-you have to use the \fBMPV_VERBOSE\fP environment variable; see
-\fI\%ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES\fP for details.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Available levels:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B no
-complete silence
-.TP
-.B fatal
-fatal messages only
-.TP
-.B error
-error messages
-.TP
-.B warn
-warning messages
-.TP
-.B info
-informational messages
-.TP
-.B status
-status messages (default)
-.TP
-.B v
-verbose messages
-.TP
-.B debug
-debug messages
-.TP
-.B trace
-very noisy debug messages
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv \-\-msg\-level=ao/sndio=no
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Completely silences the output of ao_sndio, which uses the log
-prefix \fB[ao/sndio]\fP\&.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv \-\-msg\-level=all=warn,ao/alsa=error
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Only show warnings or worse, and let the ao_alsa output show errors
-only.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-term\-osd=<auto|no|force>\fP
-Control whether OSD messages are shown on the console when no video output
-is available (default: auto).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-use terminal OSD if no video output active
-.TP
-.B no
-disable terminal OSD
-.TP
-.B force
-use terminal OSD even if video output active
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The \fBauto\fP mode also enables terminal OSD if \fB\-\-video\-osd=no\fP was set.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-term\-osd\-bar\fP, \fB\-\-no\-term\-osd\-bar\fP
-Enable printing a progress bar under the status line on the terminal.
-(Disabled by default.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-term\-osd\-bar\-chars=<string>\fP
-Customize the \fB\-\-term\-osd\-bar\fP feature. The string is expected to
-consist of 5 characters (start, left space, position indicator,
-right space, end). You can use Unicode characters, but note that double\-
-width characters will not be treated correctly.
-.sp
-Default: \fB[\-+\-]\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-term\-playing\-msg=<string>\fP
-Print out a string after starting playback. The string is expanded for
-properties, e.g. \fB\-\-term\-playing\-msg=\(aqfile: ${filename}\(aq\fP will print the string
-\fBfile:\fP followed by a space and the currently played filename.
-.sp
-See \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-term\-status\-msg=<string>\fP
-Print out a custom string during playback instead of the standard status
-line. Expands properties. See \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-term\-title=<string>\fP
-Set the terminal title. Currently, this simply concatenates the escape
-sequence setting the window title with the provided (property expanded)
-string. This will mess up if the expanded string contain bytes that end the
-escape sequence, or if the terminal does not understand the sequence. The
-latter probably includes the regrettable win32.
-.sp
-Expands properties. See \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-msg\-module\fP
-Prepend module name to each console message.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-msg\-time\fP
-Prepend timing information to each console message. The time is in
-seconds since the player process was started (technically, slightly
-later actually), using a monotonic time source depending on the OS. This
-is \fBCLOCK_MONOTONIC\fP on sane UNIX variants.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Cache
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cache=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Decide whether to use network cache settings (default: auto).
-.sp
-If enabled, use up to \fB\-\-cache\-secs\fP for the cache size (but still limited
-to \fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-bytes\fP), and make the cached data seekable (if possible).
-If disabled, \fB\-\-cache\-pause\fP and related are implicitly disabled.
-.sp
-The \fBauto\fP choice enables this depending on whether the stream is thought
-to involve network accesses or other slow media (this is an imperfect
-heuristic).
-.sp
-Before mpv 0.30.0, this used to accept a number, which specified the size
-of the cache in kilobytes. Use e.g. \fB\-\-cache \-\-demuxer\-max\-bytes=123k\fP
-instead.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-cache\fP
-Turn off input stream caching. See \fB\-\-cache\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cache\-secs=<seconds>\fP
-How many seconds of audio/video to prefetch if the cache is active. This
-overrides the \fB\-\-demuxer\-readahead\-secs\fP option if and only if the cache
-is enabled and the value is larger. The default value is set to something
-very high, so the actually achieved readahead will usually be limited by
-the value of the \fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-bytes\fP option. Setting this option is
-usually only useful for limiting readahead.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cache\-on\-disk=<yes|no>\fP
-Write packet data to a temporary file, instead of keeping them in memory.
-This makes sense only with \fB\-\-cache\fP\&. If the normal cache is disabled,
-this option is ignored.
-.sp
-You need to set \fB\-\-cache\-dir\fP to use this.
-.sp
-The cache file is append\-only. Even if the player appears to prune data, the
-file space freed by it is not reused. The cache file is deleted when
-playback is closed.
-.sp
-Note that packet metadata is still kept in memory. \fB\-\-demuxer\-max\-bytes\fP
-and related options are applied to metadata \fIonly\fP\&. The size of this
-metadata varies, but 50 MB per hour of media is typical. The cache
-statistics will report this metadats size, instead of the size of the cache
-file. If the metadata hits the size limits, the metadata is pruned (but not
-the cache file).
-.sp
-When the media is closed, the cache file is deleted. A cache file is
-generally worthless after the media is closed, and it\(aqs hard to retrieve
-any media data from it (it\(aqs not supported by design).
-.sp
-If the option is enabled at runtime, the cache file is created, but old data
-will remain in the memory cache. If the option is disabled at runtime, old
-data remains in the disk cache, and the cache file is not closed until the
-media is closed. If the option is disabled and enabled again, it will
-continue to use the cache file that was opened first.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cache\-dir=<path>\fP
-Directory where to create temporary files (default: none).
-.sp
-Currently, this is used for \fB\-\-cache\-on\-disk\fP only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cache\-pause=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether the player should automatically pause when the cache runs out of
-data and stalls decoding/playback (default: yes). If enabled, it will
-pause and unpause once more data is available, aka "buffering".
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cache\-pause\-wait=<seconds>\fP
-Number of seconds the packet cache should have buffered before starting
-playback again if "buffering" was entered (default: 1). This can be used
-to control how long the player rebuffers if \fB\-\-cache\-pause\fP is enabled,
-and the demuxer underruns. If the given time is higher than the maximum
-set with \fB\-\-cache\-secs\fP or \fB\-\-demuxer\-readahead\-secs\fP, or prefetching
-ends before that for some other reason (like file end or maximum configured
-cache size reached), playback resumes earlier.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cache\-pause\-initial=<yes|no>\fP
-Enter "buffering" mode before starting playback (default: no). This can be
-used to ensure playback starts smoothly, in exchange for waiting some time
-to prefetch network data (as controlled by \fB\-\-cache\-pause\-wait\fP). For
-example, some common behavior is that playback starts, but network caches
-immediately underrun when trying to decode more data as playback progresses.
-.sp
-Another thing that can happen is that the network prefetching is so CPU
-demanding (due to demuxing in the background) that playback drops frames
-at first. In these cases, it helps enabling this option, and setting
-\fB\-\-cache\-secs\fP and \fB\-\-cache\-pause\-wait\fP to roughly the same value.
-.sp
-This option also triggers when playback is restarted after seeking.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cache\-unlink\-files=<immediate|whendone|no>\fP
-Whether or when to unlink cache files (default: immediate). This affects
-cache files which are inherently temporary, and which make no sense to
-remain on disk after the player terminates. This is a debugging option.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBimmediate\fP
-Unlink cache file after they were created. The cache files won\(aqt be
-visible anymore, even though they\(aqre in use. This ensures they are
-guaranteed to be removed from disk when the player terminates, even if
-it crashes.
-.TP
-.B \fBwhendone\fP
-Delete cache files after they are closed.
-.TP
-.B \fBno\fP
-Don\(aqt delete cache files. They will consume disk space without having a
-use.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Currently, this is used for \fB\-\-cache\-on\-disk\fP only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-stream\-buffer\-size=<bytesize>\fP
-Size of the low level stream byte buffer (default: 128KB). This is used as
-buffer between demuxer and low level I/O (e.g. sockets). Generally, this
-can be very small, and the main purpose is similar to the internal buffer
-FILE in the C standard library will have.
-.sp
-Half of the buffer is always used for guaranteed seek back, which is
-important for unseekable input.
-.sp
-There are known cases where this can help performance to set a large buffer:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP 1. 3
-mp4 files. libavformat may trigger many small seeks in both
-directions, depending on how the file was muxed.
-.IP 2. 3
-Certain network filesystems, which do not have a cache, and where
-small reads can be inefficient.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-In other cases, setting this to a large value can reduce performance.
-.sp
-Usually, read accesses are at half the buffer size, but it may happen that
-accesses are done alternating with smaller and larger sizes (this is due to
-the internal ring buffer wrap\-around).
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-list\-options\fP for defaults and value range. \fB<bytesize>\fP options
-accept suffixes such as \fBKiB\fP and \fBMiB\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-enable=<yes|no>, \-\-ad\-queue\-enable\fP
-Enable running the video/audio decoder on a separate thread (default: no).
-If enabled, the decoder is run on a separate thread, and a frame queue is
-put between decoder and higher level playback logic. The size of the frame
-queue is defined by the other options below.
-.sp
-This is probably quite pointless. libavcodec already has multithreaded
-decoding (enabled by default), which makes this largely unnecessary. It
-might help in some corner cases with high bandwidth video that is slow to
-decode (in these cases libavcodec would block the playback logic, while
-using a decoding thread would distribute the decoding time evenly without
-affecting the playback logic). In other situations, it will simply make
-seeking slower and use significantly more memory.
-.sp
-The queue size is restricted by the other \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-...\fP options. The
-final queue size is the minimum as indicated by the option with the lowest
-limit. Each decoder/track has its own queue that may use the full configured
-queue size.
-.sp
-Most queue options can be changed at runtime. \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-enable\fP itself
-(and the audio equivalent) update only if decoding is completely
-reinitialized. However, setting \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-max\-samples=1\fP should almost
-lead to the same behavior as \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-enable=no\fP, so that value can
-be used for effectively runtime enabling/disabling the queue.
-.sp
-This should not be used with hardware decoding. It is possible to enable
-this for audio, but it makes even less sense.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-max\-bytes=<bytesize>\fP, \fB\-\-ad\-queue\-max\-bytes\fP
-Maximum approximate allowed size of the queue. If exceeded, decoding will
-be stopped. The maximum size can be exceeded by about 1 frame.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-list\-options\fP for defaults and value range. \fB<bytesize>\fP options
-accept suffixes such as \fBKiB\fP and \fBMiB\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-max\-samples=<int>\fP, \fB\-\-ad\-queue\-max\-samples\fP
-Maximum number of frames (video) or samples (audio) of the queue. The audio
-size may be exceeded by about 1 frame.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-list\-options\fP for defaults and value range.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vd\-queue\-max\-secs=<seconds>\fP, \fB\-\-ad\-queue\-max\-secs\fP
-Maximum number of seconds of media in the queue. The special value 0 means
-no limit is set. The queue size may be exceeded by about 2 frames. Timestamp
-resets may lead to random queue size usage.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-list\-options\fP for defaults and value range.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Network
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-user\-agent=<string>\fP
-Use \fB<string>\fP as user agent for HTTP streaming.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cookies\fP, \fB\-\-no\-cookies\fP
-Support cookies when making HTTP requests. Disabled by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cookies\-file=<filename>\fP
-Read HTTP cookies from <filename>. The file is assumed to be in Netscape
-format.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-http\-header\-fields=<field1,field2>\fP
-Set custom HTTP fields when accessing HTTP stream.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv \-\-http\-header\-fields=\(aqField1: value1\(aq,\(aqField2: value2\(aq \e
-http://localhost:1234
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Will generate HTTP request:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-GET / HTTP/1.0
-Host: localhost:1234
-User\-Agent: MPlayer
-Icy\-MetaData: 1
-Field1: value1
-Field2: value2
-Connection: close
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-http\-proxy=<proxy>\fP
-URL of the HTTP/HTTPS proxy. If this is set, the \fBhttp_proxy\fP environment
-is ignored. The \fBno_proxy\fP environment variable is still respected. This
-option is silently ignored if it does not start with \fBhttp://\fP\&. Proxies
-are not used for https URLs. Setting this option does not try to make the
-ytdl script use the proxy.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tls\-ca\-file=<filename>\fP
-Certificate authority database file for use with TLS. (Silently fails with
-older FFmpeg or Libav versions.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tls\-verify\fP
-Verify peer certificates when using TLS (e.g. with \fBhttps://...\fP).
-(Silently fails with older FFmpeg or Libav versions.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tls\-cert\-file\fP
-A file containing a certificate to use in the handshake with the
-peer.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tls\-key\-file\fP
-A file containing the private key for the certificate.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-referrer=<string>\fP
-Specify a referrer path or URL for HTTP requests.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-network\-timeout=<seconds>\fP
-Specify the network timeout in seconds (default: 60 seconds). This affects
-at least HTTP. The special value 0 uses the FFmpeg/Libav defaults. If a
-protocol is used which does not support timeouts, this option is silently
-ignored.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This breaks the RTSP protocol, because of inconsistent FFmpeg API
-regarding its internal timeout option. Not only does the RTSP timeout
-option accept different units (seconds instead of microseconds, causing
-mpv to pass it huge values), it will also overflow FFmpeg internal
-calculations. The worst is that merely setting the option will put RTSP
-into listening mode, which breaks any client uses. At time of this
-writing, the fix was not made effective yet. For this reason, this
-option is ignored (or should be ignored) on RTSP URLs. You can still
-set the timeout option directly with \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-o\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-rtsp\-transport=<lavf|udp|udp_multicast|tcp|http>\fP
-Select RTSP transport method (default: tcp). This selects the underlying
-network transport when playing \fBrtsp://...\fP URLs. The value \fBlavf\fP
-leaves the decision to libavformat.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hls\-bitrate=<no|min|max|<rate>>\fP
-If HLS streams are played, this option controls what streams are selected
-by default. The option allows the following parameters:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Don\(aqt do anything special. Typically, this will simply pick the
-first audio/video streams it can find.
-.TP
-.B min
-Pick the streams with the lowest bitrate.
-.TP
-.B max
-Same, but highest bitrate. (Default.)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Additionally, if the option is a number, the stream with the highest rate
-equal or below the option value is selected.
-.sp
-The bitrate as used is sent by the server, and there\(aqs no guarantee it\(aqs
-actually meaningful.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS DVB
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvbin\-prog=<string>\fP
-This defines the program to tune to. Usually, you may specify this
-by using a stream URI like \fB"dvb://ZDF HD"\fP, but you can tune to a
-different channel by writing to this property at runtime.
-Also see \fBdvbin\-channel\-switch\-offset\fP for more useful channel
-switching functionality.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvbin\-card=<0\-15>\fP
-Specifies using card number 0\-15 (default: 0).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvbin\-file=<filename>\fP
-Instructs mpv to read the channels list from \fB<filename>\fP\&. The default is
-in the mpv configuration directory (usually \fB~/.config/mpv\fP) with the
-filename \fBchannels.conf.{sat,ter,cbl,atsc}\fP (based on your card type) or
-\fBchannels.conf\fP as a last resort.
-For DVB\-S/2 cards, a VDR 1.7.x format channel list is recommended
-as it allows tuning to DVB\-S2 channels, enabling subtitles and
-decoding the PMT (which largely improves the demuxing).
-Classic mplayer format channel lists are still supported (without
-these improvements), and for other card types, only limited VDR
-format channel list support is implemented (patches welcome).
-For channels with dynamic PID switching or incomplete
-\fBchannels.conf\fP, \fB\-\-dvbin\-full\-transponder\fP or the magic PID
-\fB8192\fP are recommended.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvbin\-timeout=<1\-30>\fP
-Maximum number of seconds to wait when trying to tune a frequency before
-giving up (default: 30).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvbin\-full\-transponder=<yes|no>\fP
-Apply no filters on program PIDs, only tune to frequency and pass full
-transponder to demuxer.
-The player frontend selects the streams from the full TS in this case,
-so the program which is shown initially may not match the chosen channel.
-Switching between the programs is possible by cycling the \fBprogram\fP
-property.
-This is useful to record multiple programs on a single transponder,
-or to work around issues in the \fBchannels.conf\fP\&.
-It is also recommended to use this for channels which switch PIDs
-on\-the\-fly, e.g. for regional news.
-.sp
-Default: \fBno\fP
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dvbin\-channel\-switch\-offset=<integer>\fP
-This value is not meant for setting via configuration, but used in channel
-switching. An \fBinput.conf\fP can \fBcycle\fP this value \fBup\fP and \fBdown\fP
-to perform channel switching. This number effectively gives the offset
-to the initially tuned to channel in the channel list.
-.sp
-An example \fBinput.conf\fP could contain:
-\fBH cycle dvbin\-channel\-switch\-offset up\fP, \fBK cycle dvbin\-channel\-switch\-offset down\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.SS ALSA audio output options
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-device=<device>\fP
-Deprecated, use \fB\-\-audio\-device\fP (requires \fBalsa/\fP prefix).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-resample=yes\fP
-Enable ALSA resampling plugin. (This is disabled by default, because
-some drivers report incorrect audio delay in some cases.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-mixer\-device=<device>\fP
-Set the mixer device used with \fBao\-volume\fP (default: \fBdefault\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-mixer\-name=<name>\fP
-Set the name of the mixer element (default: \fBMaster\fP). This is for
-example \fBPCM\fP or \fBMaster\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-mixer\-index=<number>\fP
-Set the index of the mixer channel (default: 0). Consider the output of
-"\fBamixer scontrols\fP", then the index is the number that follows the
-name of the element.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-non\-interleaved\fP
-Allow output of non\-interleaved formats (if the audio decoder uses
-this format). Currently disabled by default, because some popular
-ALSA plugins are utterly broken with non\-interleaved formats.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-ignore\-chmap\fP
-Don\(aqt read or set the channel map of the ALSA device \- only request the
-required number of channels, and then pass the audio as\-is to it. This
-option most likely should not be used. It can be useful for debugging,
-or for static setups with a specially engineered ALSA configuration (in
-this case you should always force the same layout with \fB\-\-audio\-channels\fP,
-or it will work only for files which use the layout implicit to your
-ALSA device).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-buffer\-time=<microseconds>\fP
-Set the requested buffer time in microseconds. A value of 0 skips requesting
-anything from the ALSA API. This and the \fB\-\-alsa\-periods\fP option uses the
-ALSA \fBnear\fP functions to set the requested parameters. If doing so results
-in an empty configuration set, setting these parameters is skipped.
-.sp
-Both options control the buffer size. A low buffer size can lead to higher
-CPU usage and audio dropouts, while a high buffer size can lead to higher
-latency in volume changes and other filtering.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alsa\-periods=<number>\fP
-Number of periods requested from the ALSA API. See \fB\-\-alsa\-buffer\-time\fP
-for further remarks.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS GPU renderer options
-.sp
-The following video options are currently all specific to \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP and
-\fB\-\-vo=libmpv\fP only, which are the only VOs that implement them.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale=<filter>\fP
-The filter function to use when upscaling video.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBbilinear\fP
-Bilinear hardware texture filtering (fastest, very low quality). This
-is the default for compatibility reasons.
-.TP
-.B \fBspline36\fP
-Mid quality and speed. This is the default when using \fBgpu\-hq\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBlanczos\fP
-Lanczos scaling. Provides mid quality and speed. Generally worse than
-\fBspline36\fP, but it results in a slightly sharper image which is good
-for some content types. The number of taps can be controlled with
-\fBscale\-radius\fP, but is best left unchanged.
-.sp
-(This filter is an alias for \fBsinc\fP\-windowed \fBsinc\fP)
-.TP
-.B \fBewa_lanczos\fP
-Elliptic weighted average Lanczos scaling. Also known as Jinc.
-Relatively slow, but very good quality. The radius can be controlled
-with \fBscale\-radius\fP\&. Increasing the radius makes the filter sharper
-but adds more ringing.
-.sp
-(This filter is an alias for \fBjinc\fP\-windowed \fBjinc\fP)
-.TP
-.B \fBewa_lanczossharp\fP
-A slightly sharpened version of ewa_lanczos, preconfigured to use an
-ideal radius and parameter. If your hardware can run it, this is
-probably what you should use by default.
-.TP
-.B \fBmitchell\fP
-Mitchell\-Netravali. The \fBB\fP and \fBC\fP parameters can be set with
-\fB\-\-scale\-param1\fP and \fB\-\-scale\-param2\fP\&. This filter is very good at
-downscaling (see \fB\-\-dscale\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBoversample\fP
-A version of nearest neighbour that (naively) oversamples pixels, so
-that pixels overlapping edges get linearly interpolated instead of
-rounded. This essentially removes the small imperfections and judder
-artifacts caused by nearest\-neighbour interpolation, in exchange for
-adding some blur. This filter is good at temporal interpolation, and
-also known as "smoothmotion" (see \fB\-\-tscale\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBlinear\fP
-A \fB\-\-tscale\fP filter.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-There are some more filters, but most are not as useful. For a complete
-list, pass \fBhelp\fP as value, e.g.:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv \-\-scale=help
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cscale=<filter>\fP
-As \fB\-\-scale\fP, but for interpolating chroma information. If the image is
-not subsampled, this option is ignored entirely.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dscale=<filter>\fP
-Like \fB\-\-scale\fP, but apply these filters on downscaling instead. If this
-option is unset, the filter implied by \fB\-\-scale\fP will be applied.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tscale=<filter>\fP
-The filter used for interpolating the temporal axis (frames). This is only
-used if \fB\-\-interpolation\fP is enabled. The only valid choices for
-\fB\-\-tscale\fP are separable convolution filters (use \fB\-\-tscale=help\fP to
-get a list). The default is \fBmitchell\fP\&.
-.sp
-Common \fB\-\-tscale\fP choices include \fBoversample\fP, \fBlinear\fP,
-\fBcatmull_rom\fP, \fBmitchell\fP, \fBgaussian\fP, or \fBbicubic\fP\&. These are
-listed in increasing order of smoothness/blurriness, with \fBbicubic\fP
-being the smoothest/blurriest and \fBoversample\fP being the sharpest/least
-smooth.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-param1=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-scale\-param2=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-param1=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-param2=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-param1=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-param2=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-param1=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-param2=<value>\fP
-Set filter parameters. By default, these are set to the special string
-\fBdefault\fP, which maps to a scaler\-specific default value. Ignored if the
-filter is not tunable. Currently, this affects the following filter
-parameters:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B bcspline
-Spline parameters (\fBB\fP and \fBC\fP). Defaults to 0.5 for both.
-.TP
-.B gaussian
-Scale parameter (\fBt\fP). Increasing this makes the result blurrier.
-Defaults to 1.
-.TP
-.B oversample
-Minimum distance to an edge before interpolation is used. Setting this
-to 0 will always interpolate edges, whereas setting it to 0.5 will
-never interpolate, thus behaving as if the regular nearest neighbour
-algorithm was used. Defaults to 0.0.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-blur=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-scale\-wblur=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-blur=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-wblur=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-blur=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-wblur=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-blur=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-wblur=<value>\fP
-Kernel/window scaling factor (also known as a blur factor). Decreasing this
-makes the result sharper, increasing it makes it blurrier (default 0). If
-set to 0, the kernel\(aqs preferred blur factor is used. Note that setting
-this too low (eg. 0.5) leads to bad results. It\(aqs generally recommended to
-stick to values between 0.8 and 1.2.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-clamp=<0.0\-1.0>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-clamp\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-clamp\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-clamp\fP
-Specifies a weight bias to multiply into negative coefficients. Specifying
-\fB\-\-scale\-clamp=1\fP has the effect of removing negative weights completely,
-thus effectively clamping the value range to [0\-1]. Values between 0.0 and
-1.0 can be specified to apply only a moderate diminishment of negative
-weights. This is especially useful for \fB\-\-tscale\fP, where it reduces
-excessive ringing artifacts in the temporal domain (which typically
-manifest themselves as short flashes or fringes of black, mostly around
-moving edges) in exchange for potentially adding more blur. The default for
-\fB\-\-tscale\-clamp\fP is 1.0, the others default to 0.0.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-cutoff=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-cutoff=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-cutoff=<value>\fP
-Cut off the filter kernel prematurely once the value range drops below
-this threshold. Doing so allows more aggressive pruning of skippable
-coefficients by disregarding parts of the LUT which are effectively zeroed
-out by the window function. Only affects polar (EWA) filters. The default
-is 0.001 for each, which is perceptually transparent but provides a 10%\-20%
-speedup, depending on the exact radius and filter kernel chosen.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-taper=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-scale\-wtaper=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-taper=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-wtaper=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-taper=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-wtaper=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-taper=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-wtaper=<value>\fP
-Kernel/window taper factor. Increasing this flattens the filter function.
-Value range is 0 to 1. A value of 0 (the default) means no flattening, a
-value of 1 makes the filter completely flat (equivalent to a box function).
-Values in between mean that some portion will be flat and the actual filter
-function will be squeezed into the space in between.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-radius=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-radius=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-radius=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-radius=<value>\fP
-Set radius for tunable filters, must be a float number between 0.5 and
-16.0. Defaults to the filter\(aqs preferred radius if not specified. Doesn\(aqt
-work for every scaler and VO combination.
-.sp
-Note that depending on filter implementation details and video scaling
-ratio, the radius that actually being used might be different (most likely
-being increased a bit).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-antiring=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-antiring=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-antiring=<value>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-antiring=<value>\fP
-Set the antiringing strength. This tries to eliminate ringing, but can
-introduce other artifacts in the process. Must be a float number between
-0.0 and 1.0. The default value of 0.0 disables antiringing entirely.
-.sp
-Note that this doesn\(aqt affect the special filters \fBbilinear\fP and
-\fBbicubic_fast\fP, nor does it affect any polar (EWA) scalers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-window=<window>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-window=<window>\fP, \fB\-\-dscale\-window=<window>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-window=<window>\fP
-(Advanced users only) Choose a custom windowing function for the kernel.
-Defaults to the filter\(aqs preferred window if unset. Use
-\fB\-\-scale\-window=help\fP to get a list of supported windowing functions.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scale\-wparam=<window>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-wparam=<window>\fP, \fB\-\-cscale\-wparam=<window>\fP, \fB\-\-tscale\-wparam=<window>\fP
-(Advanced users only) Configure the parameter for the window function given
-by \fB\-\-scale\-window\fP etc. By default, these are set to the special string
-\fBdefault\fP, which maps to a window\-specific default value. Ignored if the
-window is not tunable. Currently, this affects the following window
-parameters:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B kaiser
-Window parameter (alpha). Defaults to 6.33.
-.TP
-.B blackman
-Window parameter (alpha). Defaults to 0.16.
-.TP
-.B gaussian
-Scale parameter (t). Increasing this makes the window wider. Defaults
-to 1.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scaler\-lut\-size=<4..10>\fP
-Set the size of the lookup texture for scaler kernels (default: 6). The
-actual size of the texture is \fB2^N\fP for an option value of \fBN\fP\&. So the
-lookup texture with the default setting uses 64 samples.
-.sp
-All weights are linearly interpolated from those samples, so increasing
-the size of lookup table might improve the accuracy of scaler.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-scaler\-resizes\-only\fP
-Disable the scaler if the video image is not resized. In that case,
-\fBbilinear\fP is used instead of whatever is set with \fB\-\-scale\fP\&. Bilinear
-will reproduce the source image perfectly if no scaling is performed.
-Enabled by default. Note that this option never affects \fB\-\-cscale\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-correct\-downscaling\fP
-When using convolution based filters, extend the filter size when
-downscaling. Increases quality, but reduces performance while downscaling.
-.sp
-This will perform slightly sub\-optimally for anamorphic video (but still
-better than without it) since it will extend the size to match only the
-milder of the scale factors between the axes.
-.sp
-Note: this option is ignored when using bilinear downscaling (the default).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-linear\-downscaling\fP
-Scale in linear light when downscaling. It should only be used with a
-\fB\-\-fbo\-format\fP that has at least 16 bit precision. This option
-has no effect on HDR content.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-linear\-upscaling\fP
-Scale in linear light when upscaling. Like \fB\-\-linear\-downscaling\fP, it
-should only be used with a \fB\-\-fbo\-format\fP that has at least 16 bits
-precisions. This is not usually recommended except for testing/specific
-purposes. Users are advised to either enable \fB\-\-sigmoid\-upscaling\fP or
-keep both options disabled (i.e. scaling in gamma light).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sigmoid\-upscaling\fP
-When upscaling, use a sigmoidal color transform to avoid emphasizing
-ringing artifacts. This is incompatible with and replaces
-\fB\-\-linear\-upscaling\fP\&. (Note that sigmoidization also requires
-linearization, so the \fBLINEAR\fP rendering step fires in both cases)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sigmoid\-center\fP
-The center of the sigmoid curve used for \fB\-\-sigmoid\-upscaling\fP, must be a
-float between 0.0 and 1.0. Defaults to 0.75 if not specified.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sigmoid\-slope\fP
-The slope of the sigmoid curve used for \fB\-\-sigmoid\-upscaling\fP, must be a
-float between 1.0 and 20.0. Defaults to 6.5 if not specified.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-interpolation\fP
-Reduce stuttering caused by mismatches in the video fps and display refresh
-rate (also known as judder).
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This requires setting the \fB\-\-video\-sync\fP option to one
-of the \fBdisplay\-\fP modes, or it will be silently disabled.
-This was not required before mpv 0.14.0.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This essentially attempts to interpolate the missing frames by convoluting
-the video along the temporal axis. The filter used can be controlled using
-the \fB\-\-tscale\fP setting.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-interpolation\-threshold=<0..1,\-1>\fP
-Threshold below which frame ratio interpolation gets disabled (default:
-\fB0.01\fP). This is calculated as \fBabs(disphz/vfps \- 1) < threshold\fP,
-where \fBvfps\fP is the speed\-adjusted video FPS, and \fBdisphz\fP the
-display refresh rate. (The speed\-adjusted video FPS is roughly equal to
-the normal video FPS, but with slowdown and speedup applied. This matters
-if you use \fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-resample\fP to make video run synchronously
-to the display FPS, or if you change the \fBspeed\fP property.)
-.sp
-The default is intended to enable interpolation in scenarios where
-retiming with the \fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-*\fP cannot adjust the speed of
-the video sufficiently for smooth playback. For example if a video is
-60.00 FPS and your display refresh rate is 59.94 Hz, interpolation will
-never be activated, since the mismatch is within 1% of the refresh
-rate. The default also handles the scenario when mpv cannot determine the
-container FPS, such as during certain live streams, and may dynamically
-toggle interpolation on and off. In this scenario, the default would be to
-not use interpolation but rather to allow \fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-*\fP to
-retime the video to match display refresh rate. See
-\fB\-\-video\-sync\-max\-video\-change\fP for more information about how mpv
-will retime video.
-.sp
-Also note that if you use e.g. \fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-vdrop\fP, small
-deviations in the rate can disable interpolation and introduce a
-discontinuity every other minute.
-.sp
-Set this to \fB\-1\fP to disable this logic.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-opengl\-pbo\fP
-Enable use of PBOs. On some drivers this can be faster, especially if the
-source video size is huge (e.g. so called "4K" video). On other drivers it
-might be slower or cause latency issues.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dither\-depth=<N|no|auto>\fP
-Set dither target depth to N. Default: no.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Disable any dithering done by mpv.
-.TP
-.B auto
-Automatic selection. If output bit depth cannot be detected, 8 bits per
-component are assumed.
-.TP
-.B 8
-Dither to 8 bit output.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note that the depth of the connected video display device cannot be
-detected. Often, LCD panels will do dithering on their own, which conflicts
-with this option and leads to ugly output.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dither\-size\-fruit=<2\-8>\fP
-Set the size of the dither matrix (default: 6). The actual size of the
-matrix is \fB(2^N) x (2^N)\fP for an option value of \fBN\fP, so a value of 6
-gives a size of 64x64. The matrix is generated at startup time, and a large
-matrix can take rather long to compute (seconds).
-.sp
-Used in \fB\-\-dither=fruit\fP mode only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-dither=<fruit|ordered|error\-diffusion|no>\fP
-Select dithering algorithm (default: fruit). (Normally, the
-\fB\-\-dither\-depth\fP option controls whether dithering is enabled.)
-.sp
-The \fBerror\-diffusion\fP option requires compute shader support. It also
-requires large amount of shared memory to run, the size of which depends on
-both the kernel (see \fB\-\-error\-diffusion\fP option below) and the height of
-video window. It will fallback to \fBfruit\fP dithering if there is no enough
-shared memory to run the shader.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-temporal\-dither\fP
-Enable temporal dithering. (Only active if dithering is enabled in
-general.) This changes between 8 different dithering patterns on each frame
-by changing the orientation of the tiled dithering matrix. Unfortunately,
-this can lead to flicker on LCD displays, since these have a high reaction
-time.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-temporal\-dither\-period=<1\-128>\fP
-Determines how often the dithering pattern is updated when
-\fB\-\-temporal\-dither\fP is in use. 1 (the default) will update on every video
-frame, 2 on every other frame, etc.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-error\-diffusion=<kernel>\fP
-The error diffusion kernel to use when \fB\-\-dither=error\-diffusion\fP is set.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBsimple\fP
-Propagate error to only two adjacent pixels. Fastest but low quality.
-.TP
-.B \fBsierra\-lite\fP
-Fast with reasonable quality. This is the default.
-.TP
-.B \fBfloyd\-steinberg\fP
-Most notable error diffusion kernel.
-.TP
-.B \fBatkinson\fP
-Looks different from other kernels because only fraction of errors will
-be propagated during dithering. A typical use case of this kernel is
-saving dithered screenshot (in window mode). This kernel produces
-slightly smaller file, with still reasonable dithering quality.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-There are other kernels (use \fB\-\-error\-diffusion=help\fP to list) but most of
-them are much slower and demanding even larger amount of shared memory.
-Among these kernels, \fBburkes\fP achieves a good balance between performance
-and quality, and probably is the one you want to try first.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gpu\-debug\fP
-Enables GPU debugging. What this means depends on the API type. For OpenGL,
-it calls \fBglGetError()\fP, and requests a debug context. For Vulkan, it
-enables validation layers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-opengl\-swapinterval=<n>\fP
-Interval in displayed frames between two buffer swaps. 1 is equivalent to
-enable VSYNC, 0 to disable VSYNC. Defaults to 1 if not specified.
-.sp
-Note that this depends on proper OpenGL vsync support. On some platforms
-and drivers, this only works reliably when in fullscreen mode. It may also
-require driver\-specific hacks if using multiple monitors, to ensure mpv
-syncs to the right one. Compositing window managers can also lead to bad
-results, as can missing or incorrect display FPS information (see
-\fB\-\-override\-display\-fps\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-device=<device name>\fP
-The name of the Vulkan device to use for rendering and presentation. Use
-\fB\-\-vulkan\-device=help\fP to see the list of available devices and their
-names. If left unspecified, the first enumerated hardware Vulkan device will
-be used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-swap\-mode=<mode>\fP
-Controls the presentation mode of the vulkan swapchain. This is similar
-to the \fB\-\-opengl\-swapinterval\fP option.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-Use the preferred swapchain mode for the vulkan context. (Default)
-.TP
-.B fifo
-Non\-tearing, vsync blocked. Similar to "VSync on".
-.TP
-.B fifo\-relaxed
-Tearing, vsync blocked. Late frames will tear instead of stuttering.
-.TP
-.B mailbox
-Non\-tearing, not vsync blocked. Similar to "triple buffering".
-.TP
-.B immediate
-Tearing, not vsync blocked. Similar to "VSync off".
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-queue\-count=<1..8>\fP
-Controls the number of VkQueues used for rendering (limited by how many
-your device supports). In theory, using more queues could enable some
-parallelism between frames (when using a \fB\-\-swapchain\-depth\fP higher than
-1), but it can also slow things down on hardware where there\(aqs no true
-parallelism between queues. (Default: 1)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-async\-transfer\fP
-Enables the use of async transfer queues on supported vulkan devices. Using
-them allows transfer operations like texture uploads and blits to happen
-concurrently with the actual rendering, thus improving overall throughput
-and power consumption. Enabled by default, and should be relatively safe.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-async\-compute\fP
-Enables the use of async compute queues on supported vulkan devices. Using
-this, in theory, allows out\-of\-order scheduling of compute shaders with
-graphics shaders, thus enabling the hardware to do more effective work while
-waiting for pipeline bubbles and memory operations. Not beneficial on all
-GPUs. It\(aqs worth noting that if async compute is enabled, and the device
-supports more compute queues than graphics queues (bound by the restrictions
-set by \fB\-\-vulkan\-queue\-count\fP), mpv will internally try and prefer the
-use of compute shaders over fragment shaders wherever possible. Enabled by
-default, although Nvidia users may want to disable it.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-disable\-events\fP
-Disable the use of VkEvents, for debugging purposes or for compatibility
-with some older drivers / vulkan portability layers that don\(aqt provide
-working VkEvent support.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-display\-display=<n>\fP
-The index of the display, on the selected Vulkan device, to present on when
-using the \fBdisplayvk\fP GPU context. Use \fB\-\-vulkan\-display\-display=help\fP
-to see the list of available displays. If left unspecified, the first
-enumerated display will be used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-display\-mode=<n>\fP
-The index of the display mode, of the selected Vulkan display, to use when
-using the \fBdisplayvk\fP GPU context. Use \fB\-\-vulkan\-display\-mode=help\fP
-to see the list of available modes. If left unspecified, the first
-enumerated mode will be used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vulkan\-display\-plane=<n>\fP
-The index of the plane, on the selected Vulkan device, to present on when
-using the \fBdisplayvk\fP GPU context. Use \fB\-\-vulkan\-display\-plane=help\fP
-to see the list of available planes. If left unspecified, the first
-enumerated plane will be used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11\-exclusive\-fs=<yes|no>\fP
-Switches the D3D11 swap chain fullscreen state to \(aqfullscreen\(aq when
-fullscreen video is requested. Also known as "exclusive fullscreen" or
-"D3D fullscreen" in other applications. Gives mpv full control of
-rendering on the swap chain\(aqs screen. Off by default.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11\-warp=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Use WARP (Windows Advanced Rasterization Platform) with the D3D11 GPU
-backend (default: auto). This is a high performance software renderer. By
-default, it is only used when the system has no hardware adapters that
-support D3D11. While the extended GPU features will work with WARP, they
-can be very slow.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11\-feature\-level=<12_1|12_0|11_1|11_0|10_1|10_0|9_3|9_2|9_1>\fP
-Select a specific feature level when using the D3D11 GPU backend. By
-default, the highest available feature level is used. This option can be
-used to select a lower feature level, which is mainly useful for debugging.
-Most extended GPU features will not work at 9_x feature levels.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11\-flip=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable flip\-model presentation, which avoids unnecessarily copying the
-backbuffer by sharing surfaces with the DWM (default: yes). This may cause
-performance issues with older drivers. If flip\-model presentation is not
-supported (for example, on Windows 7 without the platform update), mpv will
-automatically fall back to the older bitblt presentation model.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11\-sync\-interval=<0..4>\fP
-Schedule each frame to be presented for this number of VBlank intervals.
-(default: 1) Setting to 1 will enable VSync, setting to 0 will disable it.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11\-adapter=<adapter name|help>\fP
-Select a specific D3D11 adapter to utilize for D3D11 rendering.
-Will pick the default adapter if unset. Alternatives are listed
-when the name "help" is given.
-.sp
-Checks for matches based on the start of the string, case
-insensitive. Thus, if the description of the adapter starts with
-the vendor name, that can be utilized as the selection parameter.
-.sp
-Hardware decoders utilizing the D3D11 rendering abstraction\(aqs helper
-functionality to receive a device, such as D3D11VA or DXVA2\(aqs DXGI
-mode, will be affected by this choice.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11\-output\-format=<auto|rgba8|bgra8|rgb10_a2|rgba16f>\fP
-Select a specific D3D11 output format to utilize for D3D11 rendering.
-"auto" is the default, which will pick either rgba8 or rgb10_a2 depending
-on the configured desktop bit depth. rgba16f and bgra8 are left out of
-the autodetection logic, and are available for manual testing.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Desktop bit depth querying is only available from an API available
-from Windows 10. Thus on older systems it will only automatically
-utilize the rgba8 output format.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11\-output\-csp=<auto|srgb|linear|pq|bt.2020>\fP
-Select a specific D3D11 output color space to utilize for D3D11 rendering.
-"auto" is the default, which will select the color space of the desktop
-on which the swap chain is located.
-.sp
-Values other than "srgb" and "pq" have had issues in testing, so they
-are mostly available for manual testing.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Swap chain color space configuration is only available from an API
-available from Windows 10. Thus on older systems it will not work.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-d3d11va\-zero\-copy=<yes|no>\fP
-By default, when using hardware decoding with \fB\-\-gpu\-api=d3d11\fP, the
-video image will be copied (GPU\-to\-GPU) from the decoder surface to a
-shader resource. Set this option to avoid that copy by sampling directly
-from the decoder image. This may increase performance and reduce power
-usage, but can cause the image to be sampled incorrectly on the bottom and
-right edges due to padding, and may invoke driver bugs, since Direct3D 11
-technically does not allow sampling from a decoder surface (though most
-drivers support it.)
-.sp
-Currently only relevant for \fB\-\-gpu\-api=d3d11\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-wayland\-app\-id=<string>\fP
-Set the client app id for Wayland\-based video output methods (default: \fBmpv\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-wayland\-disable\-vsync=<yes|no>\fP
-Disable vsync for the wayland contexts (default: no). Useful for benchmarking
-the wayland context when combined with \fBvideo\-sync=display\-desync\fP,
-\fB\-\-no\-audio\fP, and \fB\-\-untimed=yes\fP\&. Only works with \fB\-\-gpu\-context=wayland\fP
-and \fB\-\-gpu\-context=waylandvk\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-wayland\-edge\-pixels\-pointer=<value>\fP
-Defines the size of an edge border (default: 10) to initiate client side
-resize events in the wayland contexts with the mouse. This is only active if
-there are no server side decorations from the compositor.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-wayland\-edge\-pixels\-touch=<value>\fP
-Defines the size of an edge border (default: 32) to initiate client side
-resizes events in the wayland contexts with touch events.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-spirv\-compiler=<compiler>\fP
-Controls which compiler is used to translate GLSL to SPIR\-V. This is
-(currently) only relevant for \fB\-\-gpu\-api=vulkan\fP and \fI\-\-gpu\-api=d3d11\fP\&.
-The possible choices are currently only:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-Use the first available compiler. (Default)
-.TP
-.B shaderc
-Use libshaderc, which is an API wrapper around glslang. This is
-generally the most preferred, if available.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This option is deprecated, since there is only one reasonable value.
-It may be removed in the future.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-glsl\-shader=<file>\fP, \fB\-\-glsl\-shaders=<file\-list>\fP
-Custom GLSL hooks. These are a flexible way to add custom fragment shaders,
-which can be injected at almost arbitrary points in the rendering pipeline,
-and access all previous intermediate textures.
-.sp
-Each use of the \fB\-\-glsl\-shader\fP option will add another file to the
-internal list of shaders, while \fB\-\-glsl\-shaders\fP takes a list of files,
-and overwrites the internal list with it. The latter is a path list option
-(see \fI\%List Options\fP for details).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-The syntax is not stable yet and may change any time.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The general syntax of a user shader looks like this:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-//!METADATA ARGS...
-//!METADATA ARGS...
-
-vec4 hook() {
- ...
- return something;
-}
-
-//!METADATA ARGS...
-//!METADATA ARGS...
-
-\&...
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Each section of metadata, along with the non\-metadata lines after it,
-defines a single block. There are currently two types of blocks, HOOKs and
-TEXTUREs.
-.sp
-A \fBTEXTURE\fP block can set the following options:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B TEXTURE <name> (required)
-The name of this texture. Hooks can then bind the texture under this
-name using BIND. This must be the first option of the texture block.
-.TP
-.B SIZE <width> [<height>] [<depth>] (required)
-The dimensions of the texture. The height and depth are optional. The
-type of texture (1D, 2D or 3D) depends on the number of components
-specified.
-.TP
-.B FORMAT <name> (required)
-The texture format for the samples. Supported texture formats are listed
-in debug logging when the \fBgpu\fP VO is initialized (look for
-\fBTexture formats:\fP). Usually, this follows OpenGL naming conventions.
-For example, \fBrgb16\fP provides 3 channels with normalized 16 bit
-components. One oddity are float formats: for example, \fBrgba16f\fP has
-16 bit internal precision, but the texture data is provided as 32 bit
-floats, and the driver converts the data on texture upload.
-.sp
-Although format names follow a common naming convention, not all of them
-are available on all hardware, drivers, GL versions, and so on.
-.TP
-.B FILTER <LINEAR|NEAREST>
-The min/magnification filter used when sampling from this texture.
-.TP
-.B BORDER <CLAMP|REPEAT|MIRROR>
-The border wrapping mode used when sampling from this texture.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Following the metadata is a string of bytes in hexadecimal notation that
-define the raw texture data, corresponding to the format specified by
-\fIFORMAT\fP, on a single line with no extra whitespace.
-.sp
-A \fBHOOK\fP block can set the following options:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B HOOK <name> (required)
-The texture which to hook into. May occur multiple times within a
-metadata block, up to a predetermined limit. See below for a list of
-hookable textures.
-.TP
-.B DESC <title>
-User\-friendly description of the pass. This is the name used when
-representing this shader in the list of passes for property
-\fIvo\-passes\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B BIND <name>
-Loads a texture (either coming from mpv or from a \fBTEXTURE\fP block)
-and makes it available to the pass. When binding textures from mpv,
-this will also set up macros to facilitate accessing it properly. See
-below for a list. By default, no textures are bound. The special name
-HOOKED can be used to refer to the texture that triggered this pass.
-.TP
-.B SAVE <name>
-Gives the name of the texture to save the result of this pass into. By
-default, this is set to the special name HOOKED which has the effect of
-overwriting the hooked texture.
-.TP
-.B WIDTH <szexpr>, HEIGHT <szexpr>
-Specifies the size of the resulting texture for this pass. \fBszexpr\fP
-refers to an expression in RPN (reverse polish notation), using the
-operators + \- * / > < !, floating point literals, and references to
-sizes of existing texture (such as MAIN.width or CHROMA.height),
-OUTPUT, or NATIVE_CROPPED (size of an input texture cropped after
-pan\-and\-scan, video\-align\-x/y, video\-pan\-x/y, etc. and possibly
-prescaled). By default, these are set to HOOKED.w and HOOKED.h,
-espectively.
-.TP
-.B WHEN <szexpr>
-Specifies a condition that needs to be true (non\-zero) for the shader
-stage to be evaluated. If it fails, it will silently be omitted. (Note
-that a shader stage like this which has a dependency on an optional
-hook point can still cause that hook point to be saved, which has some
-minor overhead)
-.TP
-.B OFFSET <ox oy | ALIGN>
-Indicates a pixel shift (offset) introduced by this pass. These pixel
-offsets will be accumulated and corrected during the next scaling pass
-(\fBcscale\fP or \fBscale\fP). The default values are 0 0 which correspond
-to no shift. Note that offsets are ignored when not overwriting the
-hooked texture.
-.sp
-A special value of \fBALIGN\fP will attempt to fix existing offset of
-HOOKED by align it with reference. It requires HOOKED to be resizable
-(see below). It works transparently with fragment shader. For compute
-shader, the predefined \fBtexmap\fP macro is required to handle coordinate
-mapping.
-.TP
-.B COMPONENTS <n>
-Specifies how many components of this pass\(aqs output are relevant and
-should be stored in the texture, up to 4 (rgba). By default, this value
-is equal to the number of components in HOOKED.
-.TP
-.B COMPUTE <bw> <bh> [<tw> <th>]
-Specifies that this shader should be treated as a compute shader, with
-the block size bw and bh. The compute shader will be dispatched with
-however many blocks are necessary to completely tile over the output.
-Within each block, there will be tw*th threads, forming a single work
-group. In other words: tw and th specify the work group size, which can
-be different from the block size. So for example, a compute shader with
-bw, bh = 32 and tw, th = 8 running on a 500x500 texture would dispatch
-16x16 blocks (rounded up), each with 8x8 threads.
-.sp
-Compute shaders in mpv are treated a bit different from fragment
-shaders. Instead of defining a \fBvec4 hook\fP that produces an output
-sample, you directly define \fBvoid hook\fP which writes to a fixed
-writeonly image unit named \fBout_image\fP (this is bound by mpv) using
-\fIimageStore\fP\&. To help translate texture coordinates in the absence of
-vertices, mpv provides a special function \fBNAME_map(id)\fP to map from
-the texel space of the output image to the texture coordinates for all
-bound textures. In particular, \fBNAME_pos\fP is equivalent to
-\fBNAME_map(gl_GlobalInvocationID)\fP, although using this only really
-makes sense if (tw,th) == (bw,bh).
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Each bound mpv texture (via \fBBIND\fP) will make available the following
-definitions to that shader pass, where NAME is the name of the bound
-texture:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B vec4 NAME_tex(vec2 pos)
-The sampling function to use to access the texture at a certain spot
-(in texture coordinate space, range [0,1]). This takes care of any
-necessary normalization conversions.
-.TP
-.B vec4 NAME_texOff(vec2 offset)
-Sample the texture at a certain offset in pixels. This works like
-NAME_tex but additionally takes care of necessary rotations, so that
-sampling at e.g. vec2(\-1,0) is always one pixel to the left.
-.TP
-.B vec2 NAME_pos
-The local texture coordinate of that texture, range [0,1].
-.TP
-.B vec2 NAME_size
-The (rotated) size in pixels of the texture.
-.TP
-.B mat2 NAME_rot
-The rotation matrix associated with this texture. (Rotates pixel space
-to texture coordinates)
-.TP
-.B vec2 NAME_pt
-The (unrotated) size of a single pixel, range [0,1].
-.TP
-.B float NAME_mul
-The coefficient that needs to be multiplied into the texture contents
-in order to normalize it to the range [0,1].
-.TP
-.B sampler NAME_raw
-The raw bound texture itself. The use of this should be avoided unless
-absolutely necessary.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Normally, users should use either NAME_tex or NAME_texOff to read from the
-texture. For some shaders however , it can be better for performance to do
-custom sampling from NAME_raw, in which case care needs to be taken to
-respect NAME_mul and NAME_rot.
-.sp
-In addition to these parameters, the following uniforms are also globally
-available:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B float random
-A random number in the range [0\-1], different per frame.
-.TP
-.B int frame
-A simple count of frames rendered, increases by one per frame and never
-resets (regardless of seeks).
-.TP
-.B vec2 input_size
-The size in pixels of the input image (possibly cropped and prescaled).
-.TP
-.B vec2 target_size
-The size in pixels of the visible part of the scaled (and possibly
-cropped) image.
-.TP
-.B vec2 tex_offset
-Texture offset introduced by user shaders or options like panscan, video\-align\-x/y, video\-pan\-x/y.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Internally, vo_gpu may generate any number of the following textures.
-Whenever a texture is rendered and saved by vo_gpu, all of the passes
-that have hooked into it will run, in the order they were added by the
-user. This is a list of the legal hook points:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B RGB, LUMA, CHROMA, ALPHA, XYZ (resizable)
-Source planes (raw). Which of these fire depends on the image format of
-the source.
-.TP
-.B CHROMA_SCALED, ALPHA_SCALED (fixed)
-Source planes (upscaled). These only fire on subsampled content.
-.TP
-.B NATIVE (resizable)
-The combined image, in the source colorspace, before conversion to RGB.
-.TP
-.B MAINPRESUB (resizable)
-The image, after conversion to RGB, but before
-\fB\-\-blend\-subtitles=video\fP is applied.
-.TP
-.B MAIN (resizable)
-The main image, after conversion to RGB but before upscaling.
-.TP
-.B LINEAR (fixed)
-Linear light image, before scaling. This only fires when
-\fB\-\-linear\-upscaling\fP, \fB\-\-linear\-downscaling\fP or
-\fB\-\-sigmoid\-upscaling\fP is in effect.
-.TP
-.B SIGMOID (fixed)
-Sigmoidized light, before scaling. This only fires when
-\fB\-\-sigmoid\-upscaling\fP is in effect.
-.TP
-.B PREKERNEL (fixed)
-The image immediately before the scaler kernel runs.
-.TP
-.B POSTKERNEL (fixed)
-The image immediately after the scaler kernel runs.
-.TP
-.B SCALED (fixed)
-The final upscaled image, before color management.
-.TP
-.B OUTPUT (fixed)
-The final output image, after color management but before dithering and
-drawing to screen.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Only the textures labelled with \fBresizable\fP may be transformed by the
-pass. When overwriting a texture marked \fBfixed\fP, the WIDTH, HEIGHT and
-OFFSET must be left at their default values.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-glsl\-shader=<file>\fP
-CLI/config file only alias for \fB\-\-glsl\-shaders\-append\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-deband\fP
-Enable the debanding algorithm. This greatly reduces the amount of visible
-banding, blocking and other quantization artifacts, at the expense of
-very slightly blurring some of the finest details. In practice, it\(aqs
-virtually always an improvement \- the only reason to disable it would be
-for performance.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-deband\-iterations=<1..16>\fP
-The number of debanding steps to perform per sample. Each step reduces a
-bit more banding, but takes time to compute. Note that the strength of each
-step falls off very quickly, so high numbers (>4) are practically useless.
-(Default 1)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-deband\-threshold=<0..4096>\fP
-The debanding filter\(aqs cut\-off threshold. Higher numbers increase the
-debanding strength dramatically but progressively diminish image details.
-(Default 32)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-deband\-range=<1..64>\fP
-The debanding filter\(aqs initial radius. The radius increases linearly for
-each iteration. A higher radius will find more gradients, but a lower
-radius will smooth more aggressively. (Default 16)
-.sp
-If you increase the \fB\-\-deband\-iterations\fP, you should probably decrease
-this to compensate.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-deband\-grain=<0..4096>\fP
-Add some extra noise to the image. This significantly helps cover up
-remaining quantization artifacts. Higher numbers add more noise. (Default
-48)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sharpen=<value>\fP
-If set to a value other than 0, enable an unsharp masking filter. Positive
-values will sharpen the image (but add more ringing and aliasing). Negative
-values will blur the image. If your GPU is powerful enough, consider
-alternatives like the \fBewa_lanczossharp\fP scale filter, or the
-\fB\-\-scale\-blur\fP option.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-opengl\-glfinish\fP
-Call \fBglFinish()\fP before swapping buffers (default: disabled). Slower,
-but might improve results when doing framedropping. Can completely ruin
-performance. The details depend entirely on the OpenGL driver.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-opengl\-waitvsync\fP
-Call \fBglXWaitVideoSyncSGI\fP after each buffer swap (default: disabled).
-This may or may not help with video timing accuracy and frame drop. It\(aqs
-possible that this makes video output slower, or has no effect at all.
-.sp
-X11/GLX only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-opengl\-dwmflush=<no|windowed|yes|auto>\fP
-Calls \fBDwmFlush\fP after swapping buffers on Windows (default: auto). It
-also sets \fBSwapInterval(0)\fP to ignore the OpenGL timing. Values are: no
-(disabled), windowed (only in windowed mode), yes (also in full screen).
-.sp
-The value \fBauto\fP will try to determine whether the compositor is active,
-and calls \fBDwmFlush\fP only if it seems to be.
-.sp
-This may help to get more consistent frame intervals, especially with
-high\-fps clips \- which might also reduce dropped frames. Typically, a value
-of \fBwindowed\fP should be enough, since full screen may bypass the DWM.
-.sp
-Windows only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-angle\-d3d11\-feature\-level=<11_0|10_1|10_0|9_3>\fP
-Selects a specific feature level when using the ANGLE backend with D3D11.
-By default, the highest available feature level is used. This option can be
-used to select a lower feature level, which is mainly useful for debugging.
-Note that OpenGL ES 3.0 is only supported at feature level 10_1 or higher.
-Most extended OpenGL features will not work at lower feature levels
-(similar to \fB\-\-gpu\-dumb\-mode\fP).
-.sp
-Windows with ANGLE only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-angle\-d3d11\-warp=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Use WARP (Windows Advanced Rasterization Platform) when using the ANGLE
-backend with D3D11 (default: auto). This is a high performance software
-renderer. By default, it is used when the Direct3D hardware does not
-support Direct3D 11 feature level 9_3. While the extended OpenGL features
-will work with WARP, they can be very slow.
-.sp
-Windows with ANGLE only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-angle\-egl\-windowing=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Use ANGLE\(aqs built in EGL windowing functions to create a swap chain
-(default: auto). If this is set to \fBno\fP and the D3D11 renderer is in use,
-ANGLE\(aqs built in swap chain will not be used and a custom swap chain that
-is optimized for video rendering will be created instead. If set to
-\fBauto\fP, a custom swap chain will be used for D3D11 and the built in swap
-chain will be used for D3D9. This option is mainly for debugging purposes,
-in case the custom swap chain has poor performance or does not work.
-.sp
-If set to \fByes\fP, the \fB\-\-angle\-max\-frame\-latency\fP,
-\fB\-\-angle\-swapchain\-length\fP and \fB\-\-angle\-flip\fP options will have no
-effect.
-.sp
-Windows with ANGLE only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-angle\-flip=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable flip\-model presentation, which avoids unnecessarily copying the
-backbuffer by sharing surfaces with the DWM (default: yes). This may cause
-performance issues with older drivers. If flip\-model presentation is not
-supported (for example, on Windows 7 without the platform update), mpv will
-automatically fall back to the older bitblt presentation model.
-.sp
-If set to \fBno\fP, the \fB\-\-angle\-swapchain\-length\fP option will have no
-effect.
-.sp
-Windows with ANGLE only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-angle\-renderer=<d3d9|d3d11|auto>\fP
-Forces a specific renderer when using the ANGLE backend (default: auto). In
-auto mode this will pick D3D11 for systems that support Direct3D 11 feature
-level 9_3 or higher, and D3D9 otherwise. This option is mainly for
-debugging purposes. Normally there is no reason to force a specific
-renderer, though \fB\-\-angle\-renderer=d3d9\fP may give slightly better
-performance on old hardware. Note that the D3D9 renderer only supports
-OpenGL ES 2.0, so most extended OpenGL features will not work if this
-renderer is selected (similar to \fB\-\-gpu\-dumb\-mode\fP).
-.sp
-Windows with ANGLE only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-macos\-force\-dedicated\-gpu=<yes|no>\fP
-Deactivates the automatic graphics switching and forces the dedicated GPU.
-(default: no)
-.sp
-macOS only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cocoa\-cb\-sw\-renderer=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Use the Apple Software Renderer when using cocoa\-cb (default: auto). If set
-to \fBno\fP the software renderer is never used and instead fails when a the
-usual pixel format could not be created, \fByes\fP will always only use the
-software renderer, and \fBauto\fP only falls back to the software renderer
-when the usual pixel format couldn\(aqt be created.
-.sp
-macOS only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cocoa\-cb\-10bit\-context=<yes|no>\fP
-Creates a 10bit capable pixel format for the context creation (default: yes).
-Instead of 8bit integer framebuffer a 16bit half\-float framebuffer is
-requested.
-.sp
-macOS only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-macos\-title\-bar\-appearance=<appearance>\fP
-Sets the appearance of the title bar (default: auto). Not all combinations
-of appearances and \fB\-\-macos\-title\-bar\-material\fP materials make sense or
-are unique. Appearances that are not supported by you current macOS version
-fall back to the default value.
-macOS and cocoa\-cb only
-.sp
-\fB<appearance>\fP can be one of the following:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-Detects the system settings and sets the title
-bar appearance appropriately. On macOS 10.14 it
-also detects run time changes.
-.TP
-.B aqua
-The standard macOS Light appearance.
-.TP
-.B darkAqua
-The standard macOS Dark appearance. (macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B vibrantLight
-Light vibrancy appearance with.
-.TP
-.B vibrantDark
-Dark vibrancy appearance with.
-.TP
-.B aquaHighContrast
-Light Accessibility appearance. (macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B darkAquaHighContrast
-Dark Accessibility appearance. (macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B vibrantLightHighContrast
-Light vibrancy Accessibility appearance.
-(macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B vibrantDarkHighContrast
-Dark vibrancy Accessibility appearance.
-(macOS 10.14+)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-macos\-title\-bar\-material=<material>\fP
-Sets the material of the title bar (default: titlebar). All deprecated
-materials should not be used on macOS 10.14+ because their functionality
-is not guaranteed. Not all combinations of materials and
-\fB\-\-macos\-title\-bar\-appearance\fP appearances make sense or are unique.
-Materials that are not supported by you current macOS version fall back to
-the default value.
-macOS and cocoa\-cb only
-.sp
-\fB<material>\fP can be one of the following:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B titlebar
-The standard macOS titel bar material.
-.TP
-.B selection
-The standard macOS selection material.
-.TP
-.B menu
-The standard macOS menu material. (macOS 10.11+)
-.TP
-.B popover
-The standard macOS popover material. (macOS 10.11+)
-.TP
-.B sidebar
-The standard macOS sidebar material. (macOS 10.11+)
-.TP
-.B headerView
-The standard macOS header view material.
-(macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B sheet
-The standard macOS sheet material. (macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B windowBackground
-The standard macOS window background material.
-(macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B hudWindow
-The standard macOS hudWindow material. (macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B fullScreen
-The standard macOS full screen material.
-(macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B toolTip
-The standard macOS tool tip material. (macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B contentBackground
-The standard macOS content background material.
-(macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B underWindowBackground
-The standard macOS under window background material.
-(macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B underPageBackground
-The standard macOS under page background material.
-(deprecated in macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B dark
-The standard macOS dark material.
-(deprecated in macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B light
-The standard macOS light material.
-(macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B mediumLight
-The standard macOS mediumLight material.
-(macOS 10.11+, deprecated in macOS 10.14+)
-.TP
-.B ultraDark
-The standard macOS ultraDark material.
-(macOS 10.11+ deprecated in macOS 10.14+)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-macos\-title\-bar\-color=<color>\fP
-Sets the color of the title bar (default: completely transparent). Is
-influenced by \fB\-\-macos\-title\-bar\-appearance\fP and
-\fB\-\-macos\-title\-bar\-material\fP\&.
-See \fB\-\-sub\-color\fP for color syntax.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-macos\-fs\-animation\-duration=<default|0\-1000>\fP
-Sets the fullscreen resize animation duration in ms (default: default).
-The default value is slightly less than the system\(aqs animation duration
-(500ms) to prevent some problems when the end of an async animation happens
-at the same time as the end of the system wide fullscreen animation. Setting
-anything higher than 500ms will only prematurely cancel the resize animation
-after the system wide animation ended. The upper limit is still set at
-1000ms since it\(aqs possible that Apple or the user changes the system
-defaults. Anything higher than 1000ms though seems too long and shouldn\(aqt be
-set anyway.
-(macOS and cocoa\-cb only)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-macos\-app\-activation\-policy=<regular|accessory|prohibited>\fP
-Changes the App activation policy. With accessory the mpv icon in the Dock
-can be hidden. (default: regular)
-.sp
-macOS only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-macos\-geometry\-calculation=<visible|whole>\fP
-This changes the rectangle which is used to calculate the screen position
-and size of the window (default: visible). \fBvisible\fP takes the the menu
-bar and Dock into account and the window is only positioned/sized within the
-visible screen frame rectangle, \fBwhole\fP takes the whole screen frame
-rectangle and ignores the menu bar and Dock. Other previous restrictions
-still apply, like the window can\(aqt be placed on top of the menu bar etc.
-.sp
-macOS only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-android\-surface\-size=<WxH>\fP
-Set dimensions of the rendering surface used by the Android gpu context.
-Needs to be set by the embedding application if the dimensions change during
-runtime (i.e. if the device is rotated), via the surfaceChanged callback.
-.sp
-Android with \fB\-\-gpu\-context=android\fP only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gpu\-sw\fP
-Continue even if a software renderer is detected.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gpu\-context=<sys>\fP
-The value \fBauto\fP (the default) selects the GPU context. You can also pass
-\fBhelp\fP to get a complete list of compiled in backends (sorted by
-autoprobe order).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-auto\-select (default)
-.TP
-.B cocoa
-Cocoa/macOS (deprecated, use \-\-vo=libmpv instead)
-.TP
-.B win
-Win32/WGL
-.TP
-.B winvk
-VK_KHR_win32_surface
-.TP
-.B angle
-Direct3D11 through the OpenGL ES translation layer ANGLE. This supports
-almost everything the \fBwin\fP backend does (if the ANGLE build is new
-enough).
-.TP
-.B dxinterop (experimental)
-Win32, using WGL for rendering and Direct3D 9Ex for presentation. Works
-on Nvidia and AMD. Newer Intel chips with the latest drivers may also
-work.
-.TP
-.B d3d11
-Win32, with native Direct3D 11 rendering.
-.TP
-.B x11
-X11/GLX
-.TP
-.B x11vk
-VK_KHR_xlib_surface
-.TP
-.B wayland
-Wayland/EGL
-.TP
-.B waylandvk
-VK_KHR_wayland_surface
-.TP
-.B drm
-DRM/EGL
-.TP
-.B displayvk
-VK_KHR_display. This backend is roughly the Vukan equivalent of
-DRM/EGL, allowing for direct rendering via Vulkan without a display
-manager.
-.TP
-.B x11egl
-X11/EGL
-.TP
-.B android
-Android/EGL. Requires \fB\-\-wid\fP be set to an \fBandroid.view.Surface\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gpu\-api=<type>\fP
-Controls which type of graphics APIs will be accepted:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-Use any available API (default)
-.TP
-.B opengl
-Allow only OpenGL (requires OpenGL 2.1+ or GLES 2.0+)
-.TP
-.B vulkan
-Allow only Vulkan (requires a valid/working \fB\-\-spirv\-compiler\fP)
-.TP
-.B d3d11
-Allow only \fB\-\-gpu\-context=d3d11\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-opengl\-es=<mode>\fP
-Controls which type of OpenGL context will be accepted:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-Allow all types of OpenGL (default)
-.TP
-.B yes
-Only allow GLES
-.TP
-.B no
-Only allow desktop/core GL
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-fbo\-format=<fmt>\fP
-Selects the internal format of textures used for FBOs. The format can
-influence performance and quality of the video output. \fBfmt\fP can be one
-of: rgb8, rgb10, rgb10_a2, rgb16, rgb16f, rgb32f, rgba12, rgba16, rgba16f,
-rgba16hf, rgba32f.
-.sp
-Default: \fBauto\fP, which first attempts to utilize 16bit float
-(rgba16f, rgba16hf), and falls back to rgba16 if those are not available.
-Finally, attempts to utilize rgb10_a2 or rgba8 if all of the previous formats
-are not available.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gamma\-factor=<0.1..2.0>\fP
-Set an additional raw gamma factor (default: 1.0). If gamma is adjusted in
-other ways (like with the \fB\-\-gamma\fP option or key bindings and the
-\fBgamma\fP property), the value is multiplied with the other gamma value.
-.sp
-Recommended values based on the environmental brightness:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 1.0
-Pitch black or dimly lit room (default)
-.TP
-.B 1.1
-Moderately lit room, home
-.TP
-.B 1.2
-Brightly illuminated room, office
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-NOTE: This is based around the assumptions of typical movie content, which
-contains an implicit end\-to\-end of about 0.8 from scene to display. For
-bright environments it can be useful to cancel that out.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gamma\-auto\fP
-Automatically corrects the gamma value depending on ambient lighting
-conditions (adding a gamma boost for bright rooms).
-.sp
-With ambient illuminance of 16 lux, mpv will pick the 1.0 gamma value (no
-boost), and slightly increase the boost up until 1.2 for 256 lux.
-.sp
-NOTE: Only implemented on macOS.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-target\-prim=<value>\fP
-Specifies the primaries of the display. Video colors will be adapted to
-this colorspace when ICC color management is not being used. Valid values
-are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-Disable any adaptation, except for atypical color spaces. Specifically,
-wide/unusual gamuts get automatically adapted to BT.709, while standard
-gamut (i.e. BT.601 and BT.709) content is not touched. (default)
-.TP
-.B bt.470m
-ITU\-R BT.470 M
-.TP
-.B bt.601\-525
-ITU\-R BT.601 (525\-line SD systems, eg. NTSC), SMPTE 170M/240M
-.TP
-.B bt.601\-625
-ITU\-R BT.601 (625\-line SD systems, eg. PAL/SECAM), ITU\-R BT.470 B/G
-.TP
-.B bt.709
-ITU\-R BT.709 (HD), IEC 61966\-2\-4 (sRGB), SMPTE RP177 Annex B
-.TP
-.B bt.2020
-ITU\-R BT.2020 (UHD)
-.TP
-.B apple
-Apple RGB
-.TP
-.B adobe
-Adobe RGB (1998)
-.TP
-.B prophoto
-ProPhoto RGB (ROMM)
-.TP
-.B cie1931
-CIE 1931 RGB (not to be confused with CIE XYZ)
-.TP
-.B dci\-p3
-DCI\-P3 (Digital Cinema Colorspace), SMPTE RP431\-2
-.TP
-.B v\-gamut
-Panasonic V\-Gamut (VARICAM) primaries
-.TP
-.B s\-gamut
-Sony S\-Gamut (S\-Log) primaries
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-target\-trc=<value>\fP
-Specifies the transfer characteristics (gamma) of the display. Video colors
-will be adjusted to this curve when ICC color management is not being used.
-Valid values are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-Disable any adaptation, except for atypical transfers. Specifically,
-HDR or linear light source material gets automatically converted to
-gamma 2.2, while SDR content is not touched. (default)
-.TP
-.B bt.1886
-ITU\-R BT.1886 curve (assuming infinite contrast)
-.TP
-.B srgb
-IEC 61966\-2\-4 (sRGB)
-.TP
-.B linear
-Linear light output
-.TP
-.B gamma1.8
-Pure power curve (gamma 1.8), also used for Apple RGB
-.TP
-.B gamma2.0
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.0)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.2
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.2)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.4
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.4)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.6
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.6)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.8
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.8), also used for BT.470\-BG
-.TP
-.B prophoto
-ProPhoto RGB (ROMM)
-.TP
-.B pq
-ITU\-R BT.2100 PQ (Perceptual quantizer) curve, aka SMPTE ST2084
-.TP
-.B hlg
-ITU\-R BT.2100 HLG (Hybrid Log\-gamma) curve, aka ARIB STD\-B67
-.TP
-.B v\-log
-Panasonic V\-Log (VARICAM) curve
-.TP
-.B s\-log1
-Sony S\-Log1 curve
-.TP
-.B s\-log2
-Sony S\-Log2 curve
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-When using HDR output formats, mpv will encode to the specified
-curve but it will not set any HDMI flags or other signalling that might
-be required for the target device to correctly display the HDR signal.
-The user should independently guarantee this before using these signal
-formats for display.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-target\-peak=<auto|nits>\fP
-Specifies the measured peak brightness of the output display, in cd/m^2
-(AKA nits). The interpretation of this brightness depends on the configured
-\fB\-\-target\-trc\fP\&. In all cases, it imposes a limit on the signal values
-that will be sent to the display. If the source exceeds this brightness
-level, a tone mapping filter will be inserted. For HLG, it has the
-additional effect of parametrizing the inverse OOTF, in order to get
-colorimetrically consistent results with the mastering display. For SDR, or
-when using an ICC (profile (\fB\-\-icc\-profile\fP), setting this to a value
-above 203 essentially causes the display to be treated as if it were an HDR
-display in disguise. (See the note below)
-.sp
-In \fBauto\fP mode (the default), the chosen peak is an appropriate value
-based on the TRC in use. For SDR curves, it uses 203. For HDR curves, it
-uses 203 * the transfer function\(aqs nominal peak.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-When using an SDR transfer function, this is normally not needed, and
-setting it may lead to very unexpected results. The one time it \fIis\fP
-useful is if you want to calibrate a HDR display using traditional
-transfer functions and calibration equipment. In such cases, you can
-set your HDR display to a high brightness such as 800 cd/m^2, and then
-calibrate it to a standard curve like gamma2.8. Setting this value to
-800 would then instruct mpv to essentially treat it as an HDR display
-with the given peak. This may be a good alternative in environments
-where PQ or HLG input to the display is not possible, and makes it
-possible to use HDR displays with mpv regardless of operating system
-support for HDMI HDR metadata.
-.sp
-In such a configuration, we highly recommend setting \fB\-\-tone\-mapping\fP
-to \fBmobius\fP or even \fBclip\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tone\-mapping=<value>\fP
-Specifies the algorithm used for tone\-mapping images onto the target
-display. This is relevant for both HDR\->SDR conversion as well as gamut
-reduction (e.g. playing back BT.2020 content on a standard gamut display).
-Valid values are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B clip
-Hard\-clip any out\-of\-range values. Use this when you care about
-perfect color accuracy for in\-range values at the cost of completely
-distorting out\-of\-range values. Not generally recommended.
-.TP
-.B mobius
-Generalization of Reinhard to a Möbius transform with linear section.
-Smoothly maps out\-of\-range values while retaining contrast and colors
-for in\-range material as much as possible. Use this when you care about
-color accuracy more than detail preservation. This is somewhere in
-between \fBclip\fP and \fBreinhard\fP, depending on the value of
-\fB\-\-tone\-mapping\-param\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B reinhard
-Reinhard tone mapping algorithm. Very simple continuous curve.
-Preserves overall image brightness but uses nonlinear contrast, which
-results in flattening of details and degradation in color accuracy.
-.TP
-.B hable
-Similar to \fBreinhard\fP but preserves both dark and bright details
-better (slightly sigmoidal), at the cost of slightly darkening /
-desaturating everything. Developed by John Hable for use in video
-games. Use this when you care about detail preservation more than
-color/brightness accuracy. This is roughly equivalent to
-\fB\-\-tone\-mapping=reinhard \-\-tone\-mapping\-param=0.24\fP\&. If possible,
-you should also enable \fB\-\-hdr\-compute\-peak\fP for the best results.
-.TP
-.B bt.2390
-Perceptual tone mapping curve (EETF) specified in ITU\-R Report BT.2390.
-This is the recommended curve to use for typical HDR\-mastered content.
-(Default)
-.TP
-.B gamma
-Fits a logarithmic transfer between the tone curves.
-.TP
-.B linear
-Linearly stretches the entire reference gamut to (a linear multiple of)
-the display.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tone\-mapping\-param=<value>\fP
-Set tone mapping parameters. By default, this is set to the special string
-\fBdefault\fP, which maps to an algorithm\-specific default value. Ignored if
-the tone mapping algorithm is not tunable. This affects the following tone
-mapping algorithms:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B clip
-Specifies an extra linear coefficient to multiply into the signal
-before clipping. Defaults to 1.0.
-.TP
-.B mobius
-Specifies the transition point from linear to mobius transform. Every
-value below this point is guaranteed to be mapped 1:1. The higher the
-value, the more accurate the result will be, at the cost of losing
-bright details. Defaults to 0.3, which due to the steep initial slope
-still preserves in\-range colors fairly accurately.
-.TP
-.B reinhard
-Specifies the local contrast coefficient at the display peak. Defaults
-to 0.5, which means that in\-gamut values will be about half as bright
-as when clipping.
-.TP
-.B gamma
-Specifies the exponent of the function. Defaults to 1.8.
-.TP
-.B linear
-Specifies the scale factor to use while stretching. Defaults to 1.0.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tone\-mapping\-max\-boost=<1.0..10.0>\fP
-Upper limit for how much the tone mapping algorithm is allowed to boost
-the average brightness by over\-exposing the image. The default value of 1.0
-allows no additional brightness boost. A value of 2.0 would allow
-over\-exposing by a factor of 2, and so on. Raising this setting can help
-reveal details that would otherwise be hidden in dark scenes, but raising
-it too high will make dark scenes appear unnaturally bright.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hdr\-compute\-peak=<auto|yes|no>\fP
-Compute the HDR peak and frame average brightness per\-frame instead of
-relying on tagged metadata. These values are averaged over local regions as
-well as over several frames to prevent the value from jittering around too
-much. This option basically gives you dynamic, per\-scene tone mapping.
-Requires compute shaders, which is a fairly recent OpenGL feature, and will
-probably also perform horribly on some drivers, so enable at your own risk.
-The special value \fBauto\fP (default) will enable HDR peak computation
-automatically if compute shaders and SSBOs are supported.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hdr\-peak\-decay\-rate=<1.0..1000.0>\fP
-The decay rate used for the HDR peak detection algorithm (default: 100.0).
-This is only relevant when \fB\-\-hdr\-compute\-peak\fP is enabled. Higher values
-make the peak decay more slowly, leading to more stable values at the cost
-of more "eye adaptation"\-like effects (although this is mitigated somewhat
-by \fB\-\-hdr\-scene\-threshold\fP). A value of 1.0 (the lowest possible) disables
-all averaging, meaning each frame\(aqs value is used directly as measured,
-but doing this is not recommended for "noisy" sources since it may lead
-to excessive flicker. (In signal theory terms, this controls the time
-constant "tau" of an IIR low pass filter)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-hdr\-scene\-threshold\-low=<0.0..100.0>\fP, \fB\-\-hdr\-scene\-threshold\-high=<0.0..100.0>\fP
-The lower and upper thresholds (in dB) for a brightness difference
-to be considered a scene change (default: 5.5 low, 10.0 high). This is only
-relevant when \fB\-\-hdr\-compute\-peak\fP is enabled. Normally, small
-fluctuations in the frame brightness are compensated for by the peak
-averaging mechanism, but for large jumps in the brightness this can result
-in the frame remaining too bright or too dark for up to several seconds,
-depending on the value of \fB\-\-hdr\-peak\-decay\-rate\fP\&. To counteract this,
-when the brightness between the running average and the current frame
-exceeds the low threshold, mpv will make the averaging filter more
-aggressive, up to the limit of the high threshold (at which point the
-filter becomes instant).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tone\-mapping\-desaturate=<0.0..1.0>\fP
-Apply desaturation for highlights (default: 0.75). The parameter controls
-the strength of the desaturation curve. A value of 0.0 completely disables
-it, while a value of 1.0 means that overly bright colors will tend towards
-white. (This is not always the case, especially not for highlights that are
-near primary colors)
-.sp
-Values in between apply progressively more/less aggressive desaturation.
-This setting helps prevent unnaturally oversaturated colors for
-super\-highlights, by (smoothly) turning them into less saturated (per
-channel tone mapped) colors instead. This makes images feel more natural,
-at the cost of chromatic distortions for out\-of\-range colors. The default
-value of 0.75 provides a good balance. Setting this to 0.0 preserves the
-chromatic accuracy of the tone mapping process.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-tone\-mapping\-desaturate\-exponent=<0.0..20.0>\fP
-This setting controls the exponent of the desaturation curve, which
-controls how bright a color needs to be in order to start being
-desaturated. The default of 1.5 provides a reasonable balance. Decreasing
-this exponent makes the curve more aggressive.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gamut\-warning\fP
-If enabled, mpv will mark all clipped/out\-of\-gamut pixels that exceed a
-given threshold (currently hard\-coded to 101%). The affected pixels will be
-inverted to make them stand out. Note: This option applies after the
-effects of all of mpv\(aqs color space transformation / tone mapping options,
-so it\(aqs a good idea to combine this with \fB\-\-tone\-mapping=clip\fP and use
-\fB\-\-target\-prim\fP to set the gamut to simulate. For example,
-\fB\-\-target\-prim=bt.709\fP would make mpv highlight all pixels that exceed the
-gamut of a standard gamut (sRGB) display. This option also does not work
-well with ICC profiles, since the 3DLUTs are always generated against the
-source color space and have chromatically\-accurate clipping built in.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gamut\-clipping\fP
-If enabled (default: yes), mpv will colorimetrically clip out\-of\-gamut
-colors by desaturating them (preserving luma), rather than hard\-clipping
-each component individually. This should make playback of wide gamut
-content on typical (standard gamut) monitors look much more aesthetically
-pleasing and less blown\-out.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-use\-embedded\-icc\-profile\fP
-Load the embedded ICC profile contained in media files such as PNG images.
-(Default: yes). Note that this option only works when also using a display
-ICC profile (\fB\-\-icc\-profile\fP or \fB\-\-icc\-profile\-auto\fP), and also
-requires LittleCMS 2 support.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-icc\-profile=<file>\fP
-Load an ICC profile and use it to transform video RGB to screen output.
-Needs LittleCMS 2 support compiled in. This option overrides the
-\fB\-\-target\-prim\fP, \fB\-\-target\-trc\fP and \fB\-\-icc\-profile\-auto\fP options.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-icc\-profile\-auto\fP
-Automatically select the ICC display profile currently specified by the
-display settings of the operating system.
-.sp
-NOTE: On Windows, the default profile must be an ICC profile. WCS profiles
-are not supported.
-.sp
-Applications using libmpv with the render API need to provide the ICC
-profile via \fBMPV_RENDER_PARAM_ICC_PROFILE\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-icc\-cache\-dir=<dirname>\fP
-Store and load the 3D LUTs created from the ICC profile in this directory.
-This can be used to speed up loading, since LittleCMS 2 can take a while to
-create a 3D LUT. Note that these files contain uncompressed LUTs. Their
-size depends on the \fB\-\-icc\-3dlut\-size\fP, and can be very big.
-.sp
-NOTE: This is not cleaned automatically, so old, unused cache files may
-stick around indefinitely.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-icc\-intent=<value>\fP
-Specifies the ICC intent used for the color transformation (when using
-\fB\-\-icc\-profile\fP).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 0
-perceptual
-.TP
-.B 1
-relative colorimetric (default)
-.TP
-.B 2
-saturation
-.TP
-.B 3
-absolute colorimetric
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-icc\-3dlut\-size=<r>x<g>x<b>\fP
-Size of the 3D LUT generated from the ICC profile in each dimension.
-Default is 64x64x64. Sizes may range from 2 to 512.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-icc\-force\-contrast=<no|0\-1000000|inf>\fP
-Override the target device\(aqs detected contrast ratio by a specific value.
-This is detected automatically from the profile if possible, but for some
-profiles it might be missing, causing the contrast to be assumed as
-infinite. As a result, video may appear darker than intended. If this is
-the case, setting this option might help. This only affects BT.1886
-content. The default of \fBno\fP means to use the profile values. The special
-value \fBinf\fP causes the BT.1886 curve to be treated as a pure power gamma
-2.4 function.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-blend\-subtitles=<yes|video|no>\fP
-Blend subtitles directly onto upscaled video frames, before interpolation
-and/or color management (default: no). Enabling this causes subtitles to be
-affected by \fB\-\-icc\-profile\fP, \fB\-\-target\-prim\fP, \fB\-\-target\-trc\fP,
-\fB\-\-interpolation\fP, \fB\-\-gamma\-factor\fP and \fB\-\-glsl\-shaders\fP\&. It also
-increases subtitle performance when using \fB\-\-interpolation\fP\&.
-.sp
-The downside of enabling this is that it restricts subtitles to the visible
-portion of the video, so you can\(aqt have subtitles exist in the black
-margins below a video (for example).
-.sp
-If \fBvideo\fP is selected, the behavior is similar to \fByes\fP, but subs are
-drawn at the video\(aqs native resolution, and scaled along with the video.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This changes the way subtitle colors are handled. Normally,
-subtitle colors are assumed to be in sRGB and color managed as
-such. Enabling this makes them treated as being in the video\(aqs
-color space instead. This is good if you want things like
-softsubbed ASS signs to match the video colors, but may cause
-SRT subtitles or similar to look slightly off.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-alpha=<blend\-tiles|blend|yes|no>\fP
-Decides what to do if the input has an alpha component.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B blend\-tiles
-Blend the frame against a 16x16 gray/white tiles background (default).
-.TP
-.B blend
-Blend the frame against the background color (\fB\-\-background\fP, normally
-black).
-.TP
-.B yes
-Try to create a framebuffer with alpha component. This only makes sense
-if the video contains alpha information (which is extremely rare) or if
-you make the background color transparent. May not be supported on all
-platforms. If alpha framebuffers are unavailable, it silently falls
-back on a normal framebuffer. Note that if you set the \fB\-\-fbo\-format\fP
-option to a non\-default value, a format with alpha must be specified,
-or this won\(aqt work. Whether this really works depends on the windowing
-system and desktop environment.
-.TP
-.B no
-Ignore alpha component.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-opengl\-rectangle\-textures\fP
-Force use of rectangle textures (default: no). Normally this shouldn\(aqt have
-any advantages over normal textures. Note that hardware decoding overrides
-this flag. Could be removed any time.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-background=<color>\fP
-Color used to draw parts of the mpv window not covered by video. See the
-\fB\-\-sub\-color\fP option for how colors are defined.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gpu\-tex\-pad\-x\fP, \fB\-\-gpu\-tex\-pad\-y\fP
-Enlarge the video source textures by this many pixels. For debugging only
-(normally textures are sized exactly, but due to hardware decoding interop
-we may have to deal with additional padding, which can be tested with these
-options). Could be removed any time.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-opengl\-early\-flush=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-Call \fBglFlush()\fP after rendering a frame and before attempting to display
-it (default: auto). Can fix stuttering in some cases, in other cases
-probably causes it. The \fBauto\fP mode will call \fBglFlush()\fP only if
-the renderer is going to wait for a while after rendering, instead of
-flipping GL front and backbuffers immediately (i.e. it doesn\(aqt call it
-in display\-sync mode).
-.sp
-On macOS this is always deactivated because it only causes performance
-problems and other regressions.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gpu\-dumb\-mode=<yes|no|auto>\fP
-This mode is extremely restricted, and will disable most extended
-features. That includes high quality scalers and custom shaders!
-.sp
-It is intended for hardware that does not support FBOs (including GLES,
-which supports it insufficiently), or to get some more performance out of
-bad or old hardware.
-.sp
-This mode is forced automatically if needed, and this option is mostly
-useful for debugging. The default of \fBauto\fP will enable it automatically
-if nothing uses features which require FBOs.
-.sp
-This option might be silently removed in the future.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-gpu\-shader\-cache\-dir=<dirname>\fP
-Store and load compiled GLSL shaders in this directory. Normally, shader
-compilation is very fast, so this is usually not needed. It mostly matters
-for GPU APIs that require internally recompiling shaders to other languages,
-for example anything based on ANGLE or Vulkan. Enabling this can improve
-startup performance on these platforms.
-.sp
-NOTE: This is not cleaned automatically, so old, unused cache files may
-stick around indefinitely.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Miscellaneous
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-display\-tags=tag1,tags2,...\fP
-Set the list of tags that should be displayed on the terminal. Tags that
-are in the list, but are not present in the played file, will not be shown.
-If a value ends with \fB*\fP, all tags are matched by prefix (though there
-is no general globbing). Just passing \fB*\fP essentially filtering.
-.sp
-The default includes a common list of tags, call mpv with \fB\-\-list\-options\fP
-to see it.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-mc=<seconds/frame>\fP
-Maximum A\-V sync correction per frame (in seconds)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-autosync=<factor>\fP
-Gradually adjusts the A/V sync based on audio delay measurements.
-Specifying \fB\-\-autosync=0\fP, the default, will cause frame timing to be
-based entirely on audio delay measurements. Specifying \fB\-\-autosync=1\fP
-will do the same, but will subtly change the A/V correction algorithm. An
-uneven video framerate in a video which plays fine with \fB\-\-no\-audio\fP can
-often be helped by setting this to an integer value greater than 1. The
-higher the value, the closer the timing will be to \fB\-\-no\-audio\fP\&. Try
-\fB\-\-autosync=30\fP to smooth out problems with sound drivers which do not
-implement a perfect audio delay measurement. With this value, if large A/V
-sync offsets occur, they will only take about 1 or 2 seconds to settle
-out. This delay in reaction time to sudden A/V offsets should be the only
-side effect of turning this option on, for all sound drivers.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-timing\-offset=<seconds>\fP
-Control how long before video display target time the frame should be
-rendered (default: 0.050). If a video frame should be displayed at a
-certain time, the VO will start rendering the frame earlier, and then will
-perform a blocking wait until the display time, and only then "swap" the
-frame to display. The rendering cannot start before the previous frame is
-displayed, so this value is implicitly limited by the video framerate. With
-normal video frame rates, the default value will ensure that rendering is
-always immediately started after the previous frame was displayed. On the
-other hand, setting a too high value can reduce responsiveness with low
-FPS value.
-.sp
-For client API users using the render API (or the deprecated \fBopengl\-cb\fP
-API), this option is interesting, because you can stop the render API
-from limiting your FPS (see \fBmpv_render_context_render()\fP documentation).
-.sp
-This applies only to audio timing modes (e.g. \fB\-\-video\-sync=audio\fP). In
-other modes (\fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-...\fP), video timing relies on vsync
-blocking, and this option is not used.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-sync=<audio|...>\fP
-How the player synchronizes audio and video.
-.sp
-If you use this option, you usually want to set it to \fBdisplay\-resample\fP
-to enable a timing mode that tries to not skip or repeat frames when for
-example playing 24fps video on a 24Hz screen.
-.sp
-The modes starting with \fBdisplay\-\fP try to output video frames completely
-synchronously to the display, using the detected display vertical refresh
-rate as a hint how fast frames will be displayed on average. These modes
-change video speed slightly to match the display. See \fB\-\-video\-sync\-...\fP
-options for fine tuning. The robustness of this mode is further reduced by
-making a some idealized assumptions, which may not always apply in reality.
-Behavior can depend on the VO and the system\(aqs video and audio drivers.
-Media files must use constant framerate. Section\-wise VFR might work as well
-with some container formats (but not e.g. mkv).
-.sp
-Under some circumstances, the player automatically reverts to \fBaudio\fP mode
-for some time or permanently. This can happen on very low framerate video,
-or if the framerate cannot be detected.
-.sp
-Also in display\-sync modes it can happen that interruptions to video
-playback (such as toggling fullscreen mode, or simply resizing the window)
-will skip the video frames that should have been displayed, while \fBaudio\fP
-mode will display them after the renderer has resumed (typically resulting
-in a short A/V desync and the video "catching up").
-.sp
-Before mpv 0.30.0, there was a fallback to \fBaudio\fP mode on severe A/V
-desync. This was changed for the sake of not sporadically stopping. Now,
-\fBdisplay\-desync\fP does what it promises and may desync with audio by an
-arbitrary amount, until it is manually fixed with a seek.
-.sp
-These modes also require a vsync blocked presentation mode. For OpenGL, this
-translates to \fB\-\-opengl\-swapinterval=1\fP\&. For Vulkan, it translates to
-\fB\-\-vulkan\-swap\-mode=fifo\fP (or \fBfifo\-relaxed\fP).
-.sp
-The modes with \fBdesync\fP in their names do not attempt to keep audio/video
-in sync. They will slowly (or quickly) desync, until e.g. the next seek
-happens. These modes are meant for testing, not serious use.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B audio
-Time video frames to audio. This is the most robust
-mode, because the player doesn\(aqt have to assume anything
-about how the display behaves. The disadvantage is that
-it can lead to occasional frame drops or repeats. If
-audio is disabled, this uses the system clock. This is
-the default mode.
-.TP
-.B display\-resample
-Resample audio to match the video. This mode will also
-try to adjust audio speed to compensate for other drift.
-(This means it will play the audio at a different speed
-every once in a while to reduce the A/V difference.)
-.TP
-.B display\-resample\-vdrop
-Resample audio to match the video. Drop video
-frames to compensate for drift.
-.TP
-.B display\-resample\-desync
-Like the previous mode, but no A/V compensation.
-.TP
-.B display\-vdrop
-Drop or repeat video frames to compensate desyncing
-video. (Although it should have the same effects as
-\fBaudio\fP, the implementation is very different.)
-.TP
-.B display\-adrop
-Drop or repeat audio data to compensate desyncing
-video. This mode will cause severe audio artifacts if
-the real monitor refresh rate is too different from
-the reported or forced rate. Since mpv 0.33.0, this
-acts on entire audio frames, instead of single samples.
-.TP
-.B display\-desync
-Sync video to display, and let audio play on its own.
-.TP
-.B desync
-Sync video according to system clock, and let audio play
-on its own.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-sync\-max\-factor=<value>\fP
-Maximum multiple for which to try to fit the video\(aqs FPS to the display\(aqs
-FPS (default: 5).
-.sp
-For example, if this is set to 1, the video FPS is forced to an integer
-multiple of the display FPS, as long as the speed change does not exceed
-the value set by \fB\-\-video\-sync\-max\-video\-change\fP\&.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-interpolation\-threshold\fP for how this option affects
-interpolation.
-.sp
-This is mostly for testing, and the option may be randomly changed in the
-future without notice.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-sync\-max\-video\-change=<value>\fP
-Maximum speed difference in percent that is applied to video with
-\fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-...\fP (default: 1). Display sync mode will be
-disabled if the monitor and video refresh way do not match within the
-given range. It tries multiples as well: playing 30 fps video on a 60 Hz
-screen will duplicate every second frame. Playing 24 fps video on a 60 Hz
-screen will play video in a 2\-3\-2\-3\-... pattern.
-.sp
-The default settings are not loose enough to speed up 23.976 fps video to
-25 fps. We consider the pitch change too extreme to allow this behavior
-by default. Set this option to a value of \fB5\fP to enable it.
-.sp
-Note that in the \fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-resample\fP mode, audio speed will
-additionally be changed by a small amount if necessary for A/V sync. See
-\fB\-\-video\-sync\-max\-audio\-change\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-video\-sync\-max\-audio\-change=<value>\fP
-Maximum \fIadditional\fP speed difference in percent that is applied to audio
-with \fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-...\fP (default: 0.125). Normally, the player
-plays the audio at the speed of the video. But if the difference between
-audio and video position is too high, e.g. due to drift or other timing
-errors, it will attempt to speed up or slow down audio by this additional
-factor. Too low values could lead to video frame dropping or repeating if
-the A/V desync cannot be compensated, too high values could lead to chaotic
-frame dropping due to the audio "overshooting" and skipping multiple video
-frames before the sync logic can react.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-mf\-fps=<value>\fP
-Framerate used when decoding from multiple PNG or JPEG files with \fBmf://\fP
-(default: 1).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-mf\-type=<value>\fP
-Input file type for \fBmf://\fP (available: jpeg, png, tga, sgi). By default,
-this is guessed from the file extension.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-stream\-dump=<destination\-filename>\fP
-Instead of playing a file, read its byte stream and write it to the given
-destination file. The destination is overwritten. Can be useful to test
-network\-related behavior.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-stream\-lavf\-o=opt1=value1,opt2=value2,...\fP
-Set AVOptions on streams opened with libavformat. Unknown or misspelled
-options are silently ignored. (They are mentioned in the terminal output
-in verbose mode, i.e. \fB\-\-v\fP\&. In general we can\(aqt print errors, because
-other options such as e.g. user agent are not available with all protocols,
-and printing errors for unknown options would end up being too noisy.)
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-mmcss\-profile=<name>\fP
-(Windows only.)
-Set the MMCSS profile for the video renderer thread (default: \fBPlayback\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-priority=<prio>\fP
-(Windows only.)
-Set process priority for mpv according to the predefined priorities
-available under Windows.
-.sp
-Possible values of \fB<prio>\fP:
-idle|belownormal|normal|abovenormal|high|realtime
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Using realtime priority can cause system lockup.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-force\-media\-title=<string>\fP
-Force the contents of the \fBmedia\-title\fP property to this value. Useful
-for scripts which want to set a title, without overriding the user\(aqs
-setting in \fB\-\-title\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-external\-files=<file\-list>\fP
-Load a file and add all of its tracks. This is useful to play different
-files together (for example audio from one file, video from another), or
-for advanced \fB\-\-lavfi\-complex\fP used (like playing two video files at
-the same time).
-.sp
-Unlike \fB\-\-sub\-files\fP and \fB\-\-audio\-files\fP, this includes all tracks, and
-does not cause default stream selection over the "proper" file. This makes
-it slightly less intrusive. (In mpv 0.28.0 and before, this was not quite
-strictly enforced.)
-.sp
-This is a path list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-external\-file=<file>\fP
-CLI/config file only alias for \fB\-\-external\-files\-append\fP\&. Each use of this
-option will add a new external file.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cover\-art\-files=<file\-list>\fP
-Use an external file as cover art while playing audio. This makes it appear
-on the track list and subject to automatic track selection. Options like
-\fB\-\-audio\-display\fP control whether such tracks are supposed to be selected.
-.sp
-(The difference to loading a file with \fB\-\-external\-files\fP is that video
-tracks will be marked as being pictures, which affects the auto\-selection
-method. If the passed file is a video, only the first frame will be decoded
-and displayed. Enabling the cover art track during playback may show a
-random frame if the source file is a video. Normally you\(aqre not supposed to
-pass videos to this option, so this paragraph describes the behavior
-coincidentally resulting from implementation details.)
-.sp
-This is a path list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cover\-art\-file=<file>\fP
-CLI/config file only alias for \fB\-\-cover\-art\-files\-append\fP\&. Each use of this
-option will add a new external file.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-cover\-art\-auto=<no|exact|fuzzy|all>\fP
-Whether to load _external_ cover art automatically. Similar to
-\fB\-\-sub\-auto\fP and \fB\-\-audio\-file\-auto\fP\&. If a video already has tracks
-(which are not marked as cover art), external cover art will not be loaded.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Don\(aqt automatically load cover art.
-.TP
-.B exact
-Load the media filename with an image file extension.
-.TP
-.B fuzzy
-Load all cover art containing the media filename and filenames
-in an internal whitelist, such as \fBcover.jpg\fP (default).
-.TP
-.B all
-Load all images in the current directory.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-cover\-art\-files\fP for details about what constitutes cover art.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-audio\-display\fP how to control display of cover art (this can be
-used to disable cover art that is part of the file).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-autoload\-files=<yes|no>\fP
-Automatically load/select external files (default: yes).
-.sp
-If set to \fBno\fP, then do not automatically load external files as specified
-by \fB\-\-sub\-auto\fP, \fB\-\-audio\-file\-auto\fP and \fB\-\-cover\-art\-auto\fP\&. If
-external files are forcibly added (like with \fB\-\-sub\-files\fP), they will
-not be auto\-selected.
-.sp
-This does not affect playlist expansion, redirection, or other loading of
-referenced files like with ordered chapters.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-record\-file=<file>\fP
-Deprecated, use \fB\-\-stream\-record\fP, or the \fBdump\-cache\fP command.
-.sp
-Record the current stream to the given target file. The target file will
-always be overwritten without asking.
-.sp
-This was deprecated because it isn\(aqt very nice to use. For one, seeking
-while this is enabled will be directly reflected in the output, which was
-not useful and annoying.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-stream\-record=<file>\fP
-Write received/read data from the demuxer to the given output file. The
-output file will always be overwritten without asking. The output format
-is determined by the extension of the output file.
-.sp
-Switching streams or seeking during recording might result in recording
-being stopped and/or broken files. Use with care.
-.sp
-Seeking outside of the demuxer cache will result in "skips" in the output
-file, but seeking within the demuxer cache should not affect recording. One
-exception is when you seek back far enough to exceed the forward buffering
-size, in which case the cache stops actively reading. This will return in
-dropped data if it\(aqs a live stream.
-.sp
-If this is set at runtime, the old file is closed, and the new file is
-opened. Note that this will write only data that is appended at the end of
-the cache, and the already cached data cannot be written. You can try the
-\fBdump\-cache\fP command as an alternative.
-.sp
-External files (\fB\-\-audio\-file\fP etc.) are ignored by this, it works on the
-"main" file only. Using this with files using ordered chapters or EDL files
-will also not work correctly in general.
-.sp
-There are some glitches with this because it uses FFmpeg\(aqs libavformat for
-writing the output file. For example, it\(aqs typical that it will only work if
-the output format is the same as the input format. This is the case even if
-it works with the \fBffmpeg\fP tool. One reason for this is that \fBffmpeg\fP
-and its libraries contain certain hacks and workarounds for these issues,
-that are unavailable to outside users.
-.sp
-This replaces \fB\-\-record\-file\fP\&. It is similar to the ancient/removed
-\fB\-\-stream\-capture\fP/\fB\-capture\fP options, and provides better behavior in
-most cases (i.e. actually works).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-lavfi\-complex=<string>\fP
-Set a "complex" libavfilter filter, which means a single filter graph can
-take input from multiple source audio and video tracks. The graph can result
-in a single audio or video output (or both).
-.sp
-Currently, the filter graph labels are used to select the participating
-input tracks and audio/video output. The following rules apply:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-A label of the form \fBaidN\fP selects audio track N as input (e.g.
-\fBaid1\fP).
-.IP \(bu 2
-A label of the form \fBvidN\fP selects video track N as input.
-.IP \(bu 2
-A label named \fBao\fP will be connected to the audio output.
-.IP \(bu 2
-A label named \fBvo\fP will be connected to the video output.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Each label can be used only once. If you want to use e.g. an audio stream
-for multiple filters, you need to use the \fBasplit\fP filter. Multiple
-video or audio outputs are not possible, but you can use filters to merge
-them into one.
-.sp
-It\(aqs not possible to change the tracks connected to the filter at runtime,
-unless you explicitly change the \fBlavfi\-complex\fP property and set new
-track assignments. When the graph is changed, the track selection is changed
-according to the used labels as well.
-.sp
-Other tracks, as long as they\(aqre not connected to the filter, and the
-corresponding output is not connected to the filter, can still be freely
-changed with the normal methods.
-.sp
-Note that the normal filter chains (\fB\-\-af\fP, \fB\-\-vf\fP) are applied between
-the complex graphs (e.g. \fBao\fP label) and the actual output.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-lavfi\-complex=\(aq[aid1] [aid2] amix [ao]\(aq\fP
-Play audio track 1 and 2 at the same time.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-lavfi\-complex=\(aq[vid1] [vid2] vstack [vo]\(aq\fP
-Stack video track 1 and 2 and play them at the same time. Note that
-both tracks need to have the same width, or filter initialization
-will fail (you can add \fBscale\fP filters before the \fBvstack\fP filter
-to fix the size).
-To load a video track from another file, you can use
-\fB\-\-external\-file=other.mkv\fP\&.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-lavfi\-complex=\(aq[aid1] asplit [t1] [ao] ; [t1] showvolume [t2] ; [vid1] [t2] overlay [vo]\(aq\fP
-Play audio track 1, and overlay the measured volume for each speaker
-over video track 1.
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBnull:// \-\-lavfi\-complex=\(aqlife [vo]\(aq\fP
-A libavfilter source\-only filter (Conways\(aq Life Game).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See the FFmpeg libavfilter documentation for details on the available
-filters.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-metadata\-codepage=<codepage>\fP
-Codepage for various input metadata (default: \fButf\-8\fP). This affects how
-file tags, chapter titles, etc. are interpreted. You can for example set
-this to \fBauto\fP to enable autodetection of the codepage. (This is not the
-default because non\-UTF\-8 codepages are an obscure fringe use\-case.)
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-sub\-codepage\fP option on how codepages are specified and further
-details regarding autodetection and codepage conversion. (The underlying
-code is the same.)
-.sp
-Conversion is not applied to metadata that is updated at runtime.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Debugging
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-unittest=<name>\fP
-Run an internal unit test. There are multiple, and the name specifies which.
-.sp
-The special value \fBall\-simple\fP runs all tests which do not need further
-setup (other arguments and such). Some tests may need additional arguments
-to do anything useful.
-.sp
-On success, the player binary exits with exit status 0, otherwise it returns
-with an undefined non\-0 exit status (it may crash or abort itself on test
-failures).
-.sp
-This is only enabled if built with \fB\-\-enable\-tests\fP, and should normally
-be enabled and used by developers only.
-.UNINDENT
-.SH AUDIO OUTPUT DRIVERS
-.sp
-Audio output drivers are interfaces to different audio output facilities. The
-syntax is:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao=<driver1,driver2,...[,]>\fP
-Specify a priority list of audio output drivers to be used.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If the list has a trailing \(aq,\(aq, mpv will fall back on drivers not contained
-in the list.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-See \fB\-\-ao=help\fP for a list of compiled\-in audio output drivers. The
-driver \fB\-\-ao=alsa\fP is preferred. \fB\-\-ao=pulse\fP is preferred on systems
-where PulseAudio is used. On BSD systems, \fB\-\-ao=oss\fP is preferred.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Available audio output drivers are:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBalsa\fP (Linux only)
-ALSA audio output driver
-.sp
-See \fI\%ALSA audio output options\fP for options specific to this AO.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-To get multichannel/surround audio, use \fB\-\-audio\-channels=auto\fP\&. The
-default for this option is \fBauto\-safe\fP, which makes this audio output
-explicitly reject multichannel output, as there is no way to detect
-whether a certain channel layout is actually supported.
-.sp
-You can also try \fI\%using the upmix plugin\fP\&.
-This setup enables multichannel audio on the \fBdefault\fP device
-with automatic upmixing with shared access, so playing stereo
-and multichannel audio at the same time will work as expected.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBoss\fP
-OSS audio output driver
-.TP
-.B \fBjack\fP
-JACK (Jack Audio Connection Kit) audio output driver.
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this audio output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-jack\-port=<name>\fP
-Connects to the ports with the given name (default: physical ports).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-jack\-name=<client>\fP
-Client name that is passed to JACK (default: \fBmpv\fP). Useful
-if you want to have certain connections established automatically.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-jack\-autostart=<yes|no>\fP
-Automatically start jackd if necessary (default: disabled). Note that
-this tends to be unreliable and will flood stdout with server messages.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-jack\-connect=<yes|no>\fP
-Automatically create connections to output ports (default: enabled).
-When enabled, the maximum number of output channels will be limited to
-the number of available output ports.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-jack\-std\-channel\-layout=<waveext|any>\fP
-Select the standard channel layout (default: waveext). JACK itself has no
-notion of channel layouts (i.e. assigning which speaker a given
-channel is supposed to map to) \- it just takes whatever the application
-outputs, and reroutes it to whatever the user defines. This means the
-user and the application are in charge of dealing with the channel
-layout. \fBwaveext\fP uses WAVE_FORMAT_EXTENSIBLE order, which, even
-though it was defined by Microsoft, is the standard on many systems.
-The value \fBany\fP makes JACK accept whatever comes from the audio
-filter chain, regardless of channel layout and without reordering. This
-mode is probably not very useful, other than for debugging or when used
-with fixed setups.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBcoreaudio\fP (macOS only)
-Native macOS audio output driver using AudioUnits and the CoreAudio
-sound server.
-.sp
-Automatically redirects to \fBcoreaudio_exclusive\fP when playing compressed
-formats.
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this audio output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-coreaudio\-change\-physical\-format=<yes|no>\fP
-Change the physical format to one similar to the requested audio format
-(default: no). This has the advantage that multichannel audio output
-will actually work. The disadvantage is that it will change the
-system\-wide audio settings. This is equivalent to changing the \fBFormat\fP
-setting in the \fBAudio Devices\fP dialog in the \fBAudio MIDI Setup\fP
-utility. Note that this does not affect the selected speaker setup.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-coreaudio\-spdif\-hack=<yes|no>\fP
-Try to pass through AC3/DTS data as PCM. This is useful for drivers
-which do not report AC3 support. It converts the AC3 data to float,
-and assumes the driver will do the inverse conversion, which means
-a typical A/V receiver will pick it up as compressed IEC framed AC3
-stream, ignoring that it\(aqs marked as PCM. This disables normal AC3
-passthrough (even if the device reports it as supported). Use with
-extreme care.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBcoreaudio_exclusive\fP (macOS only)
-Native macOS audio output driver using direct device access and
-exclusive mode (bypasses the sound server).
-.TP
-.B \fBopenal\fP
-OpenAL audio output driver. This is broken and does not work.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-openal\-num\-buffers=<2\-128>\fP
-Specify the number of audio buffers to use. Lower values are better for
-lower CPU usage. Default: 4.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-openal\-num\-samples=<256\-32768>\fP
-Specify the number of complete samples to use for each buffer. Higher
-values are better for lower CPU usage. Default: 8192.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-openal\-direct\-channels=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable OpenAL Soft\(aqs direct channel extension when available to avoid
-tinting the sound with ambisonics or HRTF.
-Channels are dropped when when they are not available as downmixing
-will be disabled. Default: no.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBpulse\fP
-PulseAudio audio output driver
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this audio output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-pulse\-host=<host>\fP
-Specify the host to use. An empty <host> string uses a local connection,
-"localhost" uses network transfer (most likely not what you want).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-pulse\-buffer=<1\-2000|native>\fP
-Set the audio buffer size in milliseconds. A higher value buffers
-more data, and has a lower probability of buffer underruns. A smaller
-value makes the audio stream react faster, e.g. to playback speed
-changes.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-pulse\-latency\-hacks=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable hacks to workaround PulseAudio timing bugs (default: no). If
-enabled, mpv will do elaborate latency calculations on its own. If
-disabled, it will use PulseAudio automatically updated timing
-information. Disabling this might help with e.g. networked audio or
-some plugins, while enabling it might help in some unknown situations
-(it used to be required to get good behavior on old PulseAudio versions).
-.sp
-If you have stuttering video when using pulse, try to enable this
-option. (Or try to update PulseAudio.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-pulse\-allow\-suspended=<yes|no>\fP
-Allow mpv to use PulseAudio even if the sink is suspended (default: no).
-Can be useful if PulseAudio is running as a bridge to jack and mpv has its sink\-input set to the one jack is using.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBsdl\fP
-SDL 1.2+ audio output driver. Should work on any platform supported by SDL
-1.2, but may require the \fBSDL_AUDIODRIVER\fP environment variable to be set
-appropriately for your system.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This driver is for compatibility with extremely foreign
-environments, such as systems where none of the other drivers
-are available.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this audio output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sdl\-buflen=<length>\fP
-Sets the audio buffer length in seconds. Is used only as a hint by the
-sound system. Playing a file with \fB\-v\fP will show the requested and
-obtained exact buffer size. A value of 0 selects the sound system
-default.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBnull\fP
-Produces no audio output but maintains video playback speed. You can use
-\fB\-\-ao=null \-\-ao\-null\-untimed\fP for benchmarking.
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this audio output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-untimed\fP
-Do not simulate timing of a perfect audio device. This means audio
-decoding will go as fast as possible, instead of timing it to the
-system clock.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-buffer\fP
-Simulated buffer length in seconds.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-outburst\fP
-Simulated chunk size in samples.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-speed\fP
-Simulated audio playback speed as a multiplier. Usually, a real audio
-device will not go exactly as fast as the system clock. It will deviate
-just a little, and this option helps to simulate this.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-latency\fP
-Simulated device latency. This is additional to EOF.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-broken\-eof\fP
-Simulate broken audio drivers, which always add the fixed device
-latency to the reported audio playback position.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-broken\-delay\fP
-Simulate broken audio drivers, which don\(aqt report latency correctly.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-channel\-layouts\fP
-If not empty, this is a \fB,\fP separated list of channel layouts the
-AO allows. This can be used to test channel layout selection.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-null\-format\fP
-Force the audio output format the AO will accept. If unset accepts any.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBpcm\fP
-Raw PCM/WAVE file writer audio output
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this audio output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-pcm\-waveheader=<yes|no>\fP
-Include or do not include the WAVE header (default: included). When
-not included, raw PCM will be generated.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-pcm\-file=<filename>\fP
-Write the sound to \fB<filename>\fP instead of the default
-\fBaudiodump.wav\fP\&. If \fBno\-waveheader\fP is specified, the default is
-\fBaudiodump.pcm\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ao\-pcm\-append=<yes|no>\fP
-Append to the file, instead of overwriting it. Always use this with the
-\fBno\-waveheader\fP option \- with \fBwaveheader\fP it\(aqs broken, because
-it will write a WAVE header every time the file is opened.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBwasapi\fP
-Audio output to the Windows Audio Session API.
-.UNINDENT
-.SH VIDEO OUTPUT DRIVERS
-.sp
-Video output drivers are interfaces to different video output facilities. The
-syntax is:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo=<driver1,driver2,...[,]>\fP
-Specify a priority list of video output drivers to be used.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If the list has a trailing \fB,\fP, mpv will fall back on drivers not contained
-in the list.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-See \fB\-\-vo=help\fP for a list of compiled\-in video output drivers.
-.sp
-The recommended output driver is \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP, which is the default. All
-other drivers are for compatibility or special purposes. If the default
-does not work, it will fallback to other drivers (in the same order as
-listed by \fB\-\-vo=help\fP).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Available video output drivers are:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBxv\fP (X11 only)
-Uses the XVideo extension to enable hardware\-accelerated display. This is
-the most compatible VO on X, but may be low\-quality, and has issues with
-OSD and subtitle display.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This driver is for compatibility with old systems.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-xv\-adaptor=<number>\fP
-Select a specific XVideo adapter (check xvinfo results).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-xv\-port=<number>\fP
-Select a specific XVideo port.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-xv\-ck=<cur|use|set>\fP
-Select the source from which the color key is taken (default: cur).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B cur
-The default takes the color key currently set in Xv.
-.TP
-.B use
-Use but do not set the color key from mpv (use the \fB\-\-colorkey\fP
-option to change it).
-.TP
-.B set
-Same as use but also sets the supplied color key.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-xv\-ck\-method=<none|man|bg|auto>\fP
-Sets the color key drawing method (default: man).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B none
-Disables color\-keying.
-.TP
-.B man
-Draw the color key manually (reduces flicker in some cases).
-.TP
-.B bg
-Set the color key as window background.
-.TP
-.B auto
-Let Xv draw the color key.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-xv\-colorkey=<number>\fP
-Changes the color key to an RGB value of your choice. \fB0x000000\fP is
-black and \fB0xffffff\fP is white.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-xv\-buffers=<number>\fP
-Number of image buffers to use for the internal ringbuffer (default: 2).
-Increasing this will use more memory, but might help with the X server
-not responding quickly enough if video FPS is close to or higher than
-the display refresh rate.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBx11\fP (X11 only)
-Shared memory video output driver without hardware acceleration that works
-whenever X11 is present.
-.sp
-Since mpv 0.30.0, you may need to use \fB\-\-profile=sw\-fast\fP to get decent
-performance.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is a fallback only, and should not be normally used.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBvdpau\fP (X11 only)
-Uses the VDPAU interface to display and optionally also decode video.
-Hardware decoding is used with \fB\-\-hwdec=vdpau\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Earlier versions of mpv (and MPlayer, mplayer2) provided sub\-options
-to tune vdpau post\-processing, like \fBdeint\fP, \fBsharpen\fP, \fBdenoise\fP,
-\fBchroma\-deint\fP, \fBpullup\fP, \fBhqscaling\fP\&. These sub\-options are
-deprecated, and you should use the \fBvdpaupp\fP video filter instead.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-sharpen=<\-1\-1>\fP
-(Deprecated. See note about \fBvdpaupp\fP\&.)
-.sp
-For positive values, apply a sharpening algorithm to the video, for
-negative values a blurring algorithm (default: 0).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-denoise=<0\-1>\fP
-(Deprecated. See note about \fBvdpaupp\fP\&.)
-.sp
-Apply a noise reduction algorithm to the video (default: 0; no noise
-reduction).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-chroma\-deint\fP
-(Deprecated. See note about \fBvdpaupp\fP\&.)
-.sp
-Makes temporal deinterlacers operate both on luma and chroma (default).
-Use no\-chroma\-deint to solely use luma and speed up advanced
-deinterlacing. Useful with slow video memory.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-pullup\fP
-(Deprecated. See note about \fBvdpaupp\fP\&.)
-.sp
-Try to apply inverse telecine, needs motion adaptive temporal
-deinterlacing.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-hqscaling=<0\-9>\fP
-(Deprecated. See note about \fBvdpaupp\fP\&.)
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 0
-Use default VDPAU scaling (default).
-.TP
-.B 1\-9
-Apply high quality VDPAU scaling (needs capable hardware).
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-fps=<number>\fP
-Override autodetected display refresh rate value (the value is needed
-for framedrop to allow video playback rates higher than display
-refresh rate, and for vsync\-aware frame timing adjustments). Default 0
-means use autodetected value. A positive value is interpreted as a
-refresh rate in Hz and overrides the autodetected value. A negative
-value disables all timing adjustment and framedrop logic.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-composite\-detect\fP
-NVIDIA\(aqs current VDPAU implementation behaves somewhat differently
-under a compositing window manager and does not give accurate frame
-timing information. With this option enabled, the player tries to
-detect whether a compositing window manager is active. If one is
-detected, the player disables timing adjustments as if the user had
-specified \fBfps=\-1\fP (as they would be based on incorrect input). This
-means timing is somewhat less accurate than without compositing, but
-with the composited mode behavior of the NVIDIA driver, there is no
-hard playback speed limit even without the disabled logic. Enabled by
-default, use \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-composite\-detect=no\fP to disable.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-queuetime\-windowed=<number>\fP and \fBqueuetime\-fs=<number>\fP
-Use VDPAU\(aqs presentation queue functionality to queue future video
-frame changes at most this many milliseconds in advance (default: 50).
-See below for additional information.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-output\-surfaces=<2\-15>\fP
-Allocate this many output surfaces to display video frames (default:
-3). See below for additional information.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-colorkey=<#RRGGBB|#AARRGGBB>\fP
-Set the VDPAU presentation queue background color, which in practice
-is the colorkey used if VDPAU operates in overlay mode (default:
-\fB#020507\fP, some shade of black). If the alpha component of this value
-is 0, the default VDPAU colorkey will be used instead (which is usually
-green).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vdpau\-force\-yuv\fP
-Never accept RGBA input. This means mpv will insert a filter to convert
-to a YUV format before the VO. Sometimes useful to force availability
-of certain YUV\-only features, like video equalizer or deinterlacing.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Using the VDPAU frame queuing functionality controlled by the queuetime
-options makes mpv\(aqs frame flip timing less sensitive to system CPU load and
-allows mpv to start decoding the next frame(s) slightly earlier, which can
-reduce jitter caused by individual slow\-to\-decode frames. However, the
-NVIDIA graphics drivers can make other window behavior such as window moves
-choppy if VDPAU is using the blit queue (mainly happens if you have the
-composite extension enabled) and this feature is active. If this happens on
-your system and it bothers you then you can set the queuetime value to 0 to
-disable this feature. The settings to use in windowed and fullscreen mode
-are separate because there should be no reason to disable this for
-fullscreen mode (as the driver issue should not affect the video itself).
-.sp
-You can queue more frames ahead by increasing the queuetime values and the
-\fBoutput_surfaces\fP count (to ensure enough surfaces to buffer video for a
-certain time ahead you need at least as many surfaces as the video has
-frames during that time, plus two). This could help make video smoother in
-some cases. The main downsides are increased video RAM requirements for
-the surfaces and laggier display response to user commands (display
-changes only become visible some time after they\(aqre queued). The graphics
-driver implementation may also have limits on the length of maximum
-queuing time or number of queued surfaces that work well or at all.
-.TP
-.B \fBdirect3d\fP (Windows only)
-Video output driver that uses the Direct3D interface.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This driver is for compatibility with systems that don\(aqt provide
-proper OpenGL drivers, and where ANGLE does not perform well.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-direct3d\-disable\-texture\-align\fP
-Normally texture sizes are always aligned to 16. With this option
-enabled, the video texture will always have exactly the same size as
-the video itself.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Debug options. These might be incorrect, might be removed in the future,
-might crash, might cause slow downs, etc. Contact the developers if you
-actually need any of these for performance or proper operation.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-direct3d\-force\-power\-of\-2\fP
-Always force textures to power of 2, even if the device reports
-non\-power\-of\-2 texture sizes as supported.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-direct3d\-texture\-memory=<mode>\fP
-Only affects operation with shaders/texturing enabled, and (E)OSD.
-Possible values:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBdefault\fP (default)
-Use \fBD3DPOOL_DEFAULT\fP, with a \fBD3DPOOL_SYSTEMMEM\fP texture for
-locking. If the driver supports \fBD3DDEVCAPS_TEXTURESYSTEMMEMORY\fP,
-\fBD3DPOOL_SYSTEMMEM\fP is used directly.
-.TP
-.B \fBdefault\-pool\fP
-Use \fBD3DPOOL_DEFAULT\fP\&. (Like \fBdefault\fP, but never use a
-shadow\-texture.)
-.TP
-.B \fBdefault\-pool\-shadow\fP
-Use \fBD3DPOOL_DEFAULT\fP, with a \fBD3DPOOL_SYSTEMMEM\fP texture for
-locking. (Like \fBdefault\fP, but always force the shadow\-texture.)
-.TP
-.B \fBmanaged\fP
-Use \fBD3DPOOL_MANAGED\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBscratch\fP
-Use \fBD3DPOOL_SCRATCH\fP, with a \fBD3DPOOL_SYSTEMMEM\fP texture for
-locking.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-direct3d\-swap\-discard\fP
-Use \fBD3DSWAPEFFECT_DISCARD\fP, which might be faster.
-Might be slower too, as it must(?) clear every frame.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-direct3d\-exact\-backbuffer\fP
-Always resize the backbuffer to window size.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBgpu\fP
-General purpose, customizable, GPU\-accelerated video output driver. It
-supports extended scaling methods, dithering, color management, custom
-shaders, HDR, and more.
-.sp
-See \fI\%GPU renderer options\fP for options specific to this VO.
-.sp
-By default, it tries to use fast and fail\-safe settings. Use the
-\fBgpu\-hq\fP profile to use this driver with defaults set to high quality
-rendering. The profile can be applied with \fB\-\-profile=gpu\-hq\fP and its
-contents can be viewed with \fB\-\-show\-profile=gpu\-hq\fP\&.
-.sp
-This VO abstracts over several possible graphics APIs and windowing
-contexts, which can be influenced using the \fB\-\-gpu\-api\fP and
-\fB\-\-gpu\-context\fP options.
-.sp
-Hardware decoding over OpenGL\-interop is supported to some degree. Note
-that in this mode, some corner case might not be gracefully handled, and
-color space conversion and chroma upsampling is generally in the hand of
-the hardware decoder APIs.
-.sp
-\fBgpu\fP makes use of FBOs by default. Sometimes you can achieve better
-quality or performance by changing the \fB\-\-fbo\-format\fP option to
-\fBrgb16f\fP, \fBrgb32f\fP or \fBrgb\fP\&. Known problems include Mesa/Intel not
-accepting \fBrgb16\fP, Mesa sometimes not being compiled with float texture
-support, and some macOS setups being very slow with \fBrgb16\fP but fast
-with \fBrgb32f\fP\&. If you have problems, you can also try enabling the
-\fB\-\-gpu\-dumb\-mode=yes\fP option.
-.TP
-.B \fBsdl\fP
-SDL 2.0+ Render video output driver, depending on system with or without
-hardware acceleration. Should work on all platforms supported by SDL 2.0.
-For tuning, refer to your copy of the file \fBSDL_hints.h\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This driver is for compatibility with systems that don\(aqt provide
-proper graphics drivers.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sdl\-sw\fP
-Continue even if a software renderer is detected.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-sdl\-switch\-mode\fP
-Instruct SDL to switch the monitor video mode when going fullscreen.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBvaapi\fP
-Intel VA API video output driver with support for hardware decoding. Note
-that there is absolutely no reason to use this, other than compatibility.
-This is low quality, and has issues with OSD.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This driver is for compatibility with crappy systems. You can
-use vaapi hardware decoding with \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP too.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vaapi\-scaling=<algorithm>\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B default
-Driver default (mpv default as well).
-.TP
-.B fast
-Fast, but low quality.
-.TP
-.B hq
-Unspecified driver dependent high\-quality scaling, slow.
-.TP
-.B nla
-\fBnon\-linear anamorphic scaling\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vaapi\-deint\-mode=<mode>\fP
-Select deinterlacing algorithm. Note that by default deinterlacing is
-initially always off, and needs to be enabled with the \fBd\fP key
-(default key binding for \fBcycle deinterlace\fP).
-.sp
-This option doesn\(aqt apply if libva supports video post processing (vpp).
-In this case, the default for \fBdeint\-mode\fP is \fBno\fP, and enabling
-deinterlacing via user interaction using the methods mentioned above
-actually inserts the \fBvavpp\fP video filter. If vpp is not actually
-supported with the libva backend in use, you can use this option to
-forcibly enable VO based deinterlacing.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Don\(aqt allow deinterlacing (default for newer libva).
-.TP
-.B first\-field
-Show only first field.
-.TP
-.B bob
-bob deinterlacing (default for older libva).
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-vaapi\-scaled\-osd=<yes|no>\fP
-If enabled, then the OSD is rendered at video resolution and scaled to
-display resolution. By default, this is disabled, and the OSD is
-rendered at display resolution if the driver supports it.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBnull\fP
-Produces no video output. Useful for benchmarking.
-.sp
-Usually, it\(aqs better to disable video with \fB\-\-no\-video\fP instead.
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-null\-fps=<value>\fP
-Simulate display FPS. This artificially limits how many frames the
-VO accepts per second.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBcaca\fP
-Color ASCII art video output driver that works on a text console.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This driver is a joke.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBtct\fP
-Color Unicode art video output driver that works on a text console.
-By default depends on support of true color by modern terminals to display
-the images at full color range, but 256\-colors output is also supported (see
-below). On Windows it requires an ansi terminal such as mintty.
-.sp
-Since mpv 0.30.0, you may need to use \fB\-\-profile=sw\-fast\fP to get decent
-performance.
-.sp
-Note: the TCT image output is not synchronized with other terminal output
-from mpv, which can lead to broken images. The options \fB\-\-no\-terminal\fP or
-\fB\-\-really\-quiet\fP can help with that.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-tct\-algo=<algo>\fP
-Select how to write the pixels to the terminal.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B half\-blocks
-Uses unicode LOWER HALF BLOCK character to achieve higher vertical
-resolution. (Default.)
-.TP
-.B plain
-Uses spaces. Causes vertical resolution to drop twofolds, but in
-theory works in more places.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-tct\-width=<width>\fP \fB\-\-vo\-tct\-height=<height>\fP
-Assume the terminal has the specified character width and/or height.
-These default to 80x25 if the terminal size cannot be determined.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-tct\-256=<yes|no>\fP (default: no)
-Use 256 colors \- for terminals which don\(aqt support true color.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBsixel\fP
-Graphical output for the terminal, using sixels. Tested with \fBmlterm\fP and
-\fBxterm\fP\&.
-.sp
-Note: the Sixel image output is not synchronized with other terminal output
-from mpv, which can lead to broken images. The option \fB\-\-really\-quiet\fP
-can help with that, and is recommended.
-.sp
-You may need to use \fB\-\-profile=sw\-fast\fP to get decent performance.
-.sp
-Note: at the time of writing, \fBxterm\fP does not enable sixel by default \-
-launching it as \fBxterm \-ti 340\fP is one way to enable it. Also, \fBxterm\fP
-does not display images bigger than 1000x1000 pixels by default.
-.sp
-To render and align sixel images correctly, mpv needs to know the terminal
-size both in cells and in pixels. By default it tries to use values which
-the terminal reports, however, due to differences between terminals this is
-an error\-prone process which cannot be automated with certainty \- some
-terminals report the size in pixels including the padding \- e.g. \fBxterm\fP,
-while others report the actual usable number of pixels \- like \fBmlterm\fP\&.
-Additionally, they may behave differently when maximized or in fullscreen,
-and mpv cannot detect this state using standard methods.
-.sp
-Sixel size and alignment options:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-cols=<columns>\fP, \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-rows=<rows>\fP (default: 0)
-Specify the terminal size in character cells, otherwise (0) read it
-from the terminal, or fall back to 80x25. Note that mpv doesn\(aqt use the
-the last row with sixel because this seems to result in scrolling.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-width=<width>\fP, \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-height=<height>\fP (default: 0)
-Specify the available size in pixels, otherwise (0) read it from the
-terminal, or fall back to 320x240. Other than excluding the last line,
-the height is also further rounded down to a multiple of 6 (sixel unit
-height) to avoid overflowing below the designated size.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-left=<col>\fP, \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-top=<row>\fP (default: 0)
-Specify the position in character cells where the image starts (1 is
-the first column or row). If 0 (default) then try to automatically
-determine it according to the other values and the image aspect ratio
-and zoom.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-pad\-x=<pad_x>\fP, \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-pad\-y=<pad_y>\fP (default: \-1)
-Used only when mpv reads the size in pixels from the terminal.
-Specify the number of padding pixels (on one side) which are included
-at the size which the terminal reports. If \-1 (default) then the number
-of pixels is rounded down to a multiple of number of cells (per axis),
-to take into account padding at the report \- this only works correctly
-when the overall padding per axis is smaller than the number of cells.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-exit\-clear=<yes|no>\fP (default: yes)
-Whether or not to clear the terminal on quit. When set to no \- the last
-sixel image stays on screen after quit, with the cursor following it.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Sixel image quality options:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-dither=<algo>\fP
-Selects the dither algorithm which libsixel should apply.
-Can be one of the below list as per libsixel\(aqs documentation.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto (Default)
-Let libsixel choose the dithering method.
-.TP
-.B none
-Don\(aqt diffuse
-.TP
-.B atkinson
-Diffuse with Bill Atkinson\(aqs method.
-.TP
-.B fs
-Diffuse with Floyd\-Steinberg method
-.TP
-.B jajuni
-Diffuse with Jarvis, Judice & Ninke method
-.TP
-.B stucki
-Diffuse with Stucki\(aqs method
-.TP
-.B burkes
-Diffuse with Burkes\(aq method
-.TP
-.B arithmetic
-Positionally stable arithmetic dither
-.TP
-.B xor
-Positionally stable arithmetic xor based dither
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-fixedpalette=<yes|no>\fP (default: yes)
-Use libsixel\(aqs built\-in static palette using the XTERM256 profile
-for dither. Fixed palette uses 256 colors for dithering. Note that
-using \fBno\fP (at the time of writing) will slow down \fBxterm\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-reqcolors=<colors>\fP (default: 256)
-Has no effect with fixed palette. Set up libsixel to use required
-number of colors for dynamic palette. This value depends on the
-terminal emulator as well. Xterm supports 256 colors. Can set this to
-a lower value for faster performance.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-sixel\-threshold=<threshold>\fP (default: \-1)
-Has no effect with fixed palette. Defines the threshold to change the
-palette \- as percentage of the number of colors, e.g. 20 will change
-the palette when the number of colors changed by 20%. It\(aqs a simple
-measure to reduce the number of palette changes, because it can be slow
-in some terminals (\fBxterm\fP). The default (\-1) will choose a palette
-on every frame and will have better quality.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBimage\fP
-Output each frame into an image file in the current directory. Each file
-takes the frame number padded with leading zeros as name.
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-format=<format>\fP
-Select the image file format.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B jpg
-JPEG files, extension .jpg. (Default.)
-.TP
-.B jpeg
-JPEG files, extension .jpeg.
-.TP
-.B png
-PNG files.
-.TP
-.B webp
-WebP files.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-png\-compression=<0\-9>\fP
-PNG compression factor (speed vs. file size tradeoff) (default: 7)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-png\-filter=<0\-5>\fP
-Filter applied prior to PNG compression (0 = none; 1 = sub; 2 = up;
-3 = average; 4 = Paeth; 5 = mixed) (default: 5)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-jpeg\-quality=<0\-100>\fP
-JPEG quality factor (default: 90)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-jpeg\-optimize=<0\-100>\fP
-JPEG optimization factor (default: 100)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-webp\-lossless=<yes|no>\fP
-Enable writing lossless WebP files (default: no)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-webp\-quality=<0\-100>\fP
-WebP quality (default: 75)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-webp\-compression=<0\-6>\fP
-WebP compression factor (default: 4)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vo\-image\-outdir=<dirname>\fP
-Specify the directory to save the image files to (default: \fB\&./\fP).
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBlibmpv\fP
-For use with libmpv direct embedding. As a special case, on macOS it
-is used like a normal VO within mpv (cocoa\-cb). Otherwise useless in any
-other contexts.
-(See \fB<mpv/render.h>\fP\&.)
-.sp
-This also supports many of the options the \fBgpu\fP VO has, depending on the
-backend.
-.TP
-.B \fBrpi\fP (Raspberry Pi)
-Native video output on the Raspberry Pi using the MMAL API.
-.sp
-This is deprecated. Use \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP instead, which is the default and
-provides the same functionality. The \fBrpi\fP VO will be removed in
-mpv 0.23.0. Its functionality was folded into \-\-vo=gpu, which now uses
-RPI hardware decoding by treating it as a hardware overlay (without applying
-GL filtering). Also to be changed in 0.23.0: the \-\-fs flag will be reset to
-"no" by default (like on the other platforms).
-.sp
-The following deprecated global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-rpi\-display=<number>\fP
-Select the display number on which the video overlay should be shown
-(default: 0).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-rpi\-layer=<number>\fP
-Select the dispmanx layer on which the video overlay should be shown
-(default: \-10). Note that mpv will also use the 2 layers above the
-selected layer, to handle the window background and OSD. Actual video
-rendering will happen on the layer above the selected layer.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-rpi\-background=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether to render a black background behind the video (default: no).
-Normally it\(aqs better to kill the console framebuffer instead, which
-gives better performance.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-rpi\-osd=<yes|no>\fP
-Enabled by default. If disabled with \fBno\fP, no OSD layer is created.
-This also means there will be no subtitles rendered.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBdrm\fP (Direct Rendering Manager)
-Video output driver using Kernel Mode Setting / Direct Rendering Manager.
-Should be used when one doesn\(aqt want to install full\-blown graphical
-environment (e.g. no X). Does not support hardware acceleration (if you
-need this, check the \fBdrm\fP backend for \fBgpu\fP VO).
-.sp
-Since mpv 0.30.0, you may need to use \fB\-\-profile=sw\-fast\fP to get decent
-performance.
-.sp
-The following global options are supported by this video output:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-drm\-connector=[<gpu_number>.]<name>\fP
-Select the connector to use (usually this is a monitor.) If \fB<name>\fP
-is empty or \fBauto\fP, mpv renders the output on the first available
-connector. Use \fB\-\-drm\-connector=help\fP to get a list of available
-connectors. The \fB<gpu_number>\fP argument can be used to disambiguate
-multiple graphic cards, but is deprecated in favor of \fB\-\-drm\-device\fP\&.
-(default: empty)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-drm\-device=<path>\fP
-Select the DRM device file to use. If specified this overrides automatic
-card selection and any card number specified \fB\-\-drm\-connector\fP\&.
-(default: empty)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-drm\-mode=<preferred|highest|N|WxH[@R]>\fP
-Mode to use (resolution and frame rate).
-Possible values:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B preferred
-Use the preferred mode for the screen on the selected
-connector. (default)
-.TP
-.B highest
-Use the mode with the highest resolution available on the
-selected connector.
-.TP
-.B N
-Select mode by index.
-.TP
-.B WxH[@R]
-Specify mode by width, height, and optionally refresh rate.
-In case several modes match, selects the mode that comes
-first in the EDID list of modes.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Use \fB\-\-drm\-mode=help\fP to get a list of available modes for all active
-connectors.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-drm\-atomic=<no|auto>\fP
-Toggle use of atomic modesetting. Mostly useful for debugging.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Use legacy modesetting.
-.TP
-.B auto
-Use atomic modesetting, falling back to legacy modesetting if
-not available. (default)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note: Only affects \fBgpu\-context=drm\fP\&. \fBvo=drm\fP supports legacy
-modesetting only.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-drm\-draw\-plane=<primary|overlay|N>\fP
-Select the DRM plane to which video and OSD is drawn to, under normal
-circumstances. The plane can be specified as \fBprimary\fP, which will
-pick the first applicable primary plane; \fBoverlay\fP, which will pick
-the first applicable overlay plane; or by index. The index is zero
-based, and related to the CRTC.
-(default: primary)
-.sp
-When using this option with the drmprime\-drm hwdec interop, only the OSD
-is rendered to this plane.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-drm\-drmprime\-video\-plane=<primary|overlay|N>\fP
-Select the DRM plane to use for video with the drmprime\-drm hwdec
-interop (used by e.g. the rkmpp hwdec on RockChip SoCs, and v4l2 hwdec:s
-on various other SoC:s). The plane is unused otherwise. This option
-accepts the same values as \fB\-\-drm\-draw\-plane\fP\&. (default: overlay)
-.sp
-To be able to successfully play 4K video on various SoCs you might need
-to set \fB\-\-drm\-draw\-plane=overlay \-\-drm\-drmprime\-video\-plane=primary\fP
-and setting \fB\-\-drm\-draw\-surface\-size=1920x1080\fP, to render the OSD at a
-lower resolution (the video when handled by the hwdec will be on the
-drmprime\-video plane and at full 4K resolution)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-drm\-format=<xrgb8888|xrgb2101010>\fP
-Select the DRM format to use (default: xrgb8888). This allows you to
-choose the bit depth of the DRM mode. xrgb8888 is your usual 24 bit per
-pixel/8 bits per channel packed RGB format with 8 bits of padding.
-xrgb2101010 is a packed 30 bits per pixel/10 bits per channel packed RGB
-format with 2 bits of padding.
-.sp
-There are cases when xrgb2101010 will work with the \fBdrm\fP VO, but not
-with the \fBdrm\fP backend for the \fBgpu\fP VO. This is because with the
-\fBgpu\fP VO, in addition to requiring support in your DRM driver,
-requires support for xrgb2101010 in your EGL driver
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-drm\-draw\-surface\-size=<[WxH]>\fP
-Sets the size of the surface used on the draw plane. The surface will
-then be upscaled to the current screen resolution. This option can be
-useful when used together with the drmprime\-drm hwdec interop at high
-resolutions, as it allows scaling the draw plane (which in this case
-only handles the OSD) down to a size the GPU can handle.
-.sp
-When used without the drmprime\-drm hwdec interop this option will just
-cause the video to get rendered at a different resolution and then
-scaled to screen size.
-.sp
-Note: this option is only available with DRM atomic support.
-(default: display resolution)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBmediacodec_embed\fP (Android)
-Renders \fBIMGFMT_MEDIACODEC\fP frames directly to an \fBandroid.view.Surface\fP\&.
-Requires \fB\-\-hwdec=mediacodec\fP for hardware decoding, along with
-\fB\-\-vo=mediacodec_embed\fP and \fB\-\-wid=(intptr_t)(*android.view.Surface)\fP\&.
-.sp
-Since this video output driver uses native decoding and rendering routines,
-many of mpv\(aqs features (subtitle rendering, OSD/OSC, video filters, etc)
-are not available with this driver.
-.sp
-To use hardware decoding with \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP instead, use
-\fB\-\-hwdec=mediacodec\-copy\fP along with \fB\-\-gpu\-context=android\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBwlshm\fP (Wayland only)
-Shared memory video output driver without hardware acceleration that works
-whenever Wayland is present.
-.sp
-Since mpv 0.30.0, you may need to use \fB\-\-profile=sw\-fast\fP to get decent
-performance.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is a fallback only, and should not be normally used.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH AUDIO FILTERS
-.sp
-Audio filters allow you to modify the audio stream and its properties. The
-syntax is:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-af=...\fP
-Setup a chain of audio filters. See \fB\-\-vf\fP (\fI\%VIDEO FILTERS\fP) for the
-full syntax.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-To get a full list of available audio filters, see \fB\-\-af=help\fP\&.
-.sp
-Also, keep in mind that most actual filters are available via the \fBlavfi\fP
-wrapper, which gives you access to most of libavfilter\(aqs filters. This
-includes all filters that have been ported from MPlayer to libavfilter.
-.sp
-The \fB\-\-vf\fP description describes how libavfilter can be used and how to
-workaround deprecated mpv filters.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-vf\fP group of options for info on how \fB\-\-af\-defaults\fP, \fB\-\-af\-add\fP,
-\fB\-\-af\-pre\fP, \fB\-\-af\-del\fP, \fB\-\-af\-clr\fP, and possibly others work.
-.sp
-Available filters are:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBlavcac3enc[=options]\fP
-Encode multi\-channel audio to AC\-3 at runtime using libavcodec. Supports
-16\-bit native\-endian input format, maximum 6 channels. The output is
-big\-endian when outputting a raw AC\-3 stream, native\-endian when
-outputting to S/PDIF. If the input sample rate is not 48 kHz, 44.1 kHz or
-32 kHz, it will be resampled to 48 kHz.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBtospdif=<yes|no>\fP
-Output raw AC\-3 stream if \fBno\fP, output to S/PDIF for
-pass\-through if \fByes\fP (default).
-.TP
-.B \fBbitrate=<rate>\fP
-The bitrate use for the AC\-3 stream. Set it to 384 to get 384 kbps.
-.sp
-The default is 640. Some receivers might not be able to handle this.
-.sp
-Valid values: 32, 40, 48, 56, 64, 80, 96, 112, 128,
-160, 192, 224, 256, 320, 384, 448, 512, 576, 640.
-.sp
-The special value \fBauto\fP selects a default bitrate based on the
-input channel number:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 1ch
-96
-.TP
-.B 2ch
-192
-.TP
-.B 3ch
-224
-.TP
-.B 4ch
-384
-.TP
-.B 5ch
-448
-.TP
-.B 6ch
-448
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBminch=<n>\fP
-If the input channel number is less than \fB<minch>\fP, the filter will
-detach itself (default: 3).
-.TP
-.B \fBencoder=<name>\fP
-Select the libavcodec encoder used. Currently, this should be an AC\-3
-encoder, and using another codec will fail horribly.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBformat=format:srate:channels:out\-srate:out\-channels\fP
-Does not do any format conversion itself. Rather, it may cause the
-filter system to insert necessary conversion filters before or after this
-filter if needed. It is primarily useful for controlling the audio format
-going into other filters. To specify the format for audio output, see
-\fB\-\-audio\-format\fP, \fB\-\-audio\-samplerate\fP, and \fB\-\-audio\-channels\fP\&. This
-filter is able to force a particular format, whereas \fB\-\-audio\-*\fP
-may be overridden by the ao based on output compatibility.
-.sp
-All parameters are optional. The first 3 parameters restrict what the filter
-accepts as input. They will therefore cause conversion filters to be
-inserted before this one. The \fBout\-\fP parameters tell the filters or audio
-outputs following this filter how to interpret the data without actually
-doing a conversion. Setting these will probably just break things unless you
-really know you want this for some reason, such as testing or dealing with
-broken media.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB<format>\fP
-Force conversion to this format. Use \fB\-\-af=format=format=help\fP to get
-a list of valid formats.
-.TP
-.B \fB<srate>\fP
-Force conversion to a specific sample rate. The rate is an integer,
-48000 for example.
-.TP
-.B \fB<channels>\fP
-Force mixing to a specific channel layout. See \fB\-\-audio\-channels\fP option
-for possible values.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fB<out\-srate>\fP
-.sp
-\fB<out\-channels>\fP
-.sp
-\fINOTE\fP: this filter used to be named \fBforce\fP\&. The old \fBformat\fP filter
-used to do conversion itself, unlike this one which lets the filter system
-handle the conversion.
-.TP
-.B \fBscaletempo[=option1:option2:...]\fP
-Scales audio tempo without altering pitch, optionally synced to playback
-speed (default).
-.sp
-This works by playing \(aqstride\(aq ms of audio at normal speed then consuming
-\(aqstride*scale\(aq ms of input audio. It pieces the strides together by
-blending \(aqoverlap\(aq% of stride with audio following the previous stride. It
-optionally performs a short statistical analysis on the next \(aqsearch\(aq ms
-of audio to determine the best overlap position.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBscale=<amount>\fP
-Nominal amount to scale tempo. Scales this amount in addition to
-speed. (default: 1.0)
-.TP
-.B \fBstride=<amount>\fP
-Length in milliseconds to output each stride. Too high of a value will
-cause noticeable skips at high scale amounts and an echo at low scale
-amounts. Very low values will alter pitch. Increasing improves
-performance. (default: 60)
-.TP
-.B \fBoverlap=<percent>\fP
-Percentage of stride to overlap. Decreasing improves performance.
-(default: .20)
-.TP
-.B \fBsearch=<amount>\fP
-Length in milliseconds to search for best overlap position. Decreasing
-improves performance greatly. On slow systems, you will probably want
-to set this very low. (default: 14)
-.TP
-.B \fBspeed=<tempo|pitch|both|none>\fP
-Set response to speed change.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B tempo
-Scale tempo in sync with speed (default).
-.TP
-.B pitch
-Reverses effect of filter. Scales pitch without altering tempo.
-Add this to your \fBinput.conf\fP to step by musical semi\-tones:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-[ multiply speed 0.9438743126816935
-] multiply speed 1.059463094352953
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Loses sync with video.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B both
-Scale both tempo and pitch.
-.TP
-.B none
-Ignore speed changes.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv \-\-af=scaletempo \-\-speed=1.2 media.ogg\fP
-Would play media at 1.2x normal speed, with audio at normal
-pitch. Changing playback speed would change audio tempo to match.
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv \-\-af=scaletempo=scale=1.2:speed=none \-\-speed=1.2 media.ogg\fP
-Would play media at 1.2x normal speed, with audio at normal
-pitch, but changing playback speed would have no effect on audio
-tempo.
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv \-\-af=scaletempo=stride=30:overlap=.50:search=10 media.ogg\fP
-Would tweak the quality and performance parameters.
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv \-\-af=scaletempo=scale=1.2:speed=pitch audio.ogg\fP
-Would play media at 1.2x normal speed, with audio at normal pitch.
-Changing playback speed would change pitch, leaving audio tempo at
-1.2x.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBscaletempo2[=option1:option2:...]\fP
-Scales audio tempo without altering pitch.
-The algorithm is ported from chromium and uses the
-Waveform Similarity Overlap\-and\-add (WSOLA) method.
-It seems to achieve a higher audio quality than scaletempo and rubberband.
-.sp
-By default, the \fBsearch\-interval\fP and \fBwindow\-size\fP parameters
-have the same values as in chromium.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmin\-speed=<speed>\fP
-Mute audio if the playback speed is below \fB<speed>\fP\&. (default: 0.25)
-.TP
-.B \fBmax\-speed=<speed>\fP
-Mute audio if the playback speed is above \fB<speed>\fP
-and \fB<speed> != 0\fP\&. (default: 4.0)
-.TP
-.B \fBsearch\-interval=<amount>\fP
-Length in milliseconds to search for best overlap position. (default: 30)
-.TP
-.B \fBwindow\-size=<amount>\fP
-Length in milliseconds of the overlap\-and\-add window. (default: 20)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBrubberband\fP
-High quality pitch correction with librubberband. This can be used in place
-of \fBscaletempo\fP, and will be used to adjust audio pitch when playing
-at speed different from normal. It can also be used to adjust audio pitch
-without changing playback speed.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB<pitch\-scale>\fP
-Sets the pitch scaling factor. Frequencies are multiplied by this value.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This filter has a number of additional sub\-options. You can list them with
-\fBmpv \-\-af=rubberband=help\fP\&. This will also show the default values
-for each option. The options are not documented here, because they are
-merely passed to librubberband. Look at the librubberband documentation
-to learn what each option does:
-\fI\%https://breakfastquay.com/rubberband/code\-doc/classRubberBand_1_1RubberBandStretcher.html\fP
-(The mapping of the mpv rubberband filter sub\-option names and values to
-those of librubberband follows a simple pattern: \fB"Option" + Name + Value\fP\&.)
-.sp
-This filter supports the following \fBaf\-command\fP commands:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBset\-pitch\fP
-Set the \fB<pitch\-scale>\fP argument dynamically. This can be used to
-change the playback pitch at runtime. Note that speed is controlled
-using the standard \fBspeed\fP property, not \fBaf\-command\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBmultiply\-pitch <factor>\fP
-Multiply the current value of \fB<pitch\-scale>\fP dynamically. For
-example: 0.5 to go down by an octave, 1.5 to go up by a perfect fifth.
-If you want to go up or down by semi\-tones, use 1.059463094352953 and
-0.9438743126816935
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBlavfi=graph\fP
-Filter audio using FFmpeg\(aqs libavfilter.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB<graph>\fP
-Libavfilter graph. See \fBlavfi\fP video filter for details \- the graph
-syntax is the same.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Don\(aqt forget to quote libavfilter graphs as described in the lavfi
-video filter section.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBo=<string>\fP
-AVOptions.
-.TP
-.B \fBfix\-pts=<yes|no>\fP
-Determine PTS based on sample count (default: no). If this is enabled,
-the player won\(aqt rely on libavfilter passing through PTS accurately.
-Instead, it pass a sample count as PTS to libavfilter, and compute the
-PTS used by mpv based on that and the input PTS. This helps with filters
-which output a recomputed PTS instead of the original PTS (including
-filters which require the PTS to start at 0). mpv normally expects
-filters to not touch the PTS (or only to the extent of changing frame
-boundaries), so this is not the default, but it will be needed to use
-broken filters. In practice, these broken filters will either cause slow
-A/V desync over time (with some files), or break playback completely if
-you seek or start playback from the middle of a file.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBdrop\fP
-This filter drops or repeats audio frames to adapt to playback speed. It
-always operates on full audio frames, because it was made to handle SPDIF
-(compressed audio passthrough). This is used automatically if the
-\fB\-\-video\-sync=display\-adrop\fP option is used. Do not use this filter (or
-the given option); they are extremely low quality.
-.UNINDENT
-.SH VIDEO FILTERS
-.sp
-Video filters allow you to modify the video stream and its properties. All of
-the information described in this section applies to audio filters as well
-(generally using the prefix \fB\-\-af\fP instead of \fB\-\-vf\fP).
-.sp
-The exact syntax is:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf=<filter1[=parameter1:parameter2:...],filter2,...>\fP
-Setup a chain of video filters. This consists on the filter name, and an
-option list of parameters after \fB=\fP\&. The parameters are separated by
-\fB:\fP (not \fB,\fP, as that starts a new filter entry).
-.sp
-Before the filter name, a label can be specified with \fB@name:\fP, where
-name is an arbitrary user\-given name, which identifies the filter. This
-is only needed if you want to toggle the filter at runtime.
-.sp
-A \fB!\fP before the filter name means the filter is disabled by default. It
-will be skipped on filter creation. This is also useful for runtime filter
-toggling.
-.sp
-See the \fBvf\fP command (and \fBtoggle\fP sub\-command) for further explanations
-and examples.
-.sp
-The general filter entry syntax is:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB["@"<label\-name>":"] ["!"] <filter\-name> [ "=" <filter\-parameter\-list> ]\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-or for the special "toggle" syntax (see \fBvf\fP command):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB"@"<label\-name>\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-and the \fBfilter\-parameter\-list\fP:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB<filter\-parameter> | <filter\-parameter> "," <filter\-parameter\-list>\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-and \fBfilter\-parameter\fP:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fB( <param\-name> "=" <param\-value> ) | <param\-value>\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBparam\-value\fP can further be quoted in \fB[\fP / \fB]\fP in case the value
-contains characters like \fB,\fP or \fB=\fP\&. This is used in particular with
-the \fBlavfi\fP filter, which uses a very similar syntax as mpv (MPlayer
-historically) to specify filters and their parameters.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Filters can be manipulated at run time. You can use \fB@\fP labels as described
-above in combination with the \fBvf\fP command (see \fI\%COMMAND INTERFACE\fP) to get
-more control over this. Initially disabled filters with \fB!\fP are useful for
-this as well.
-.sp
-You can also set defaults for each filter. The defaults are applied before the
-normal filter parameters. This is deprecated and never worked for the
-libavfilter bridge.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf\-defaults=<filter1[=parameter1:parameter2:...],filter2,...>\fP
-Set defaults for each filter. (Deprecated. \fB\-\-af\-defaults\fP is deprecated
-as well.)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-To get a full list of available video filters, see \fB\-\-vf=help\fP and
-\fI\%https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg\-filters.html\fP .
-.sp
-Also, keep in mind that most actual filters are available via the \fBlavfi\fP
-wrapper, which gives you access to most of libavfilter\(aqs filters. This
-includes all filters that have been ported from MPlayer to libavfilter.
-.sp
-Most builtin filters are deprecated in some ways, unless they\(aqre only available
-in mpv (such as filters which deal with mpv specifics, or which are
-implemented in mpv only).
-.sp
-If a filter is not builtin, the \fBlavfi\-bridge\fP will be automatically
-tried. This bridge does not support help output, and does not verify
-parameters before the filter is actually used. Although the mpv syntax
-is rather similar to libavfilter\(aqs, it\(aqs not the same. (Which means not
-everything accepted by vf_lavfi\(aqs \fBgraph\fP option will be accepted by
-\fB\-\-vf\fP\&.)
-.sp
-You can also prefix the filter name with \fBlavfi\-\fP to force the wrapper.
-This is helpful if the filter name collides with a deprecated mpv builtin
-filter. For example \fB\-\-vf=lavfi\-scale=args\fP would use libavfilter\(aqs
-\fBscale\fP filter over mpv\(aqs deprecated builtin one.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Video filters are managed in lists. There are a few commands to manage the
-filter list.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf\-append=filter\fP
-Appends the filter given as arguments to the filter list.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf\-add=filter\fP
-Appends the filter given as arguments to the filter list. (Passing multiple
-filters is currently still possible, but deprecated.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf\-pre=filter\fP
-Prepends the filters given as arguments to the filter list. (Passing
-multiple filters is currently still possible, but deprecated.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf\-remove=filter\fP
-Deletes the filter from the list. The filter can be either given the way it
-was added (filter name and its full argument list), or by label (prefixed
-with \fB@\fP). Matching of filters works as follows: if either of the compared
-filters has a label set, only the labels are compared. If none of the
-filters have a label, the filter name, arguments, and argument order are
-compared. (Passing multiple filters is currently still possible, but
-deprecated.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-vf\-toggle=filter\fP
-Add the given filter to the list if it was not present yet, or remove it
-from the list if it was present. Matching of filters works as described in
-\fB\-\-vf\-remove\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf\-del=filter\fP
-Sort of like \fB\-\-vf\-remove\fP, but also accepts an index number. Index
-numbers start at 0, negative numbers address the end of the list (\-1 is the
-last). Deprecated.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf\-clr\fP
-Completely empties the filter list.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-With filters that support it, you can access parameters by their name.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf=<filter>=help\fP
-Prints the parameter names and parameter value ranges for a particular
-filter.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Available mpv\-only filters are:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBformat=fmt=<value>:colormatrix=<value>:...\fP
-Applies video parameter overrides, with optional conversion. By default,
-this overrides the video\(aqs parameters without conversion (except for the
-\fBfmt\fP parameter), but can be made to perform an appropriate conversion
-with \fBconvert=yes\fP for parameters for which conversion is supported.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB<fmt>\fP
-Image format name, e.g. rgb15, bgr24, 420p, etc. (default: don\(aqt change).
-.sp
-This filter always performs conversion to the given format.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-For a list of available formats, use \fB\-\-vf=format=fmt=help\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<convert=yes|no>\fP
-Force conversion of color parameters (default: no).
-.sp
-If this is disabled (the default), the only conversion that is possibly
-performed is format conversion if \fB<fmt>\fP is set. All other parameters
-(like \fB<colormatrix>\fP) are forced without conversion. This mode is
-typically useful when files have been incorrectly tagged.
-.sp
-If this is enabled, libswscale or zimg is used if any of the parameters
-mismatch. zimg is used of the input/output image formats are supported
-by mpv\(aqs zimg wrapper, and if \fB\-\-sws\-allow\-zimg=yes\fP is used. Both
-libraries may not support all kinds of conversions. This typically
-results in silent incorrect conversion. zimg has in many cases a better
-chance of performing the conversion correctly.
-.sp
-In both cases, the color parameters are set on the output stage of the
-image format conversion (if \fBfmt\fP was set). The difference is that
-with \fBconvert=no\fP, the color parameters are not passed on to the
-converter.
-.sp
-If input and output video parameters are the same, conversion is always
-skipped.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv test.mkv \-\-vf=format:colormatrix=ycgco\fP
-Results in incorrect colors (if test.mkv was tagged correctly).
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv test.mkv \-\-vf=format:colormatrix=ycgco:convert=yes \-\-sws\-allow\-zimg\fP
-Results in true conversion to \fBycgco\fP, assuming the renderer
-supports it (\fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP normally does). You can add \fB\-\-vo=xv\fP
-to force a VO which definitely does not support it, which should
-show incorrect colors as confirmation.
-.sp
-Using \fB\-\-sws\-allow\-zimg=no\fP (or disabling zimg at build time)
-will use libswscale, which cannot perform this conversion as
-of this writing.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<colormatrix>\fP
-Controls the YUV to RGB color space conversion when playing video. There
-are various standards. Normally, BT.601 should be used for SD video, and
-BT.709 for HD video. (This is done by default.) Using incorrect color space
-results in slightly under or over saturated and shifted colors.
-.sp
-These options are not always supported. Different video outputs provide
-varying degrees of support. The \fBgpu\fP and \fBvdpau\fP video output
-drivers usually offer full support. The \fBxv\fP output can set the color
-space if the system video driver supports it, but not input and output
-levels. The \fBscale\fP video filter can configure color space and input
-levels, but only if the output format is RGB (if the video output driver
-supports RGB output, you can force this with \fB\-vf scale,format=rgba\fP).
-.sp
-If this option is set to \fBauto\fP (which is the default), the video\(aqs
-color space flag will be used. If that flag is unset, the color space
-will be selected automatically. This is done using a simple heuristic that
-attempts to distinguish SD and HD video. If the video is larger than
-1279x576 pixels, BT.709 (HD) will be used; otherwise BT.601 (SD) is
-selected.
-.sp
-Available color spaces are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-automatic selection (default)
-.TP
-.B bt.601
-ITU\-R BT.601 (SD)
-.TP
-.B bt.709
-ITU\-R BT.709 (HD)
-.TP
-.B bt.2020\-ncl
-ITU\-R BT.2020 non\-constant luminance system
-.TP
-.B bt.2020\-cl
-ITU\-R BT.2020 constant luminance system
-.TP
-.B smpte\-240m
-SMPTE\-240M
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<colorlevels>\fP
-YUV color levels used with YUV to RGB conversion. This option is only
-necessary when playing broken files which do not follow standard color
-levels or which are flagged wrong. If the video does not specify its
-color range, it is assumed to be limited range.
-.sp
-The same limitations as with \fB<colormatrix>\fP apply.
-.sp
-Available color ranges are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-automatic selection (normally limited range) (default)
-.TP
-.B limited
-limited range (16\-235 for luma, 16\-240 for chroma)
-.TP
-.B full
-full range (0\-255 for both luma and chroma)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<primaries>\fP
-RGB primaries the source file was encoded with. Normally this should be set
-in the file header, but when playing broken or mistagged files this can be
-used to override the setting.
-.sp
-This option only affects video output drivers that perform color
-management, for example \fBgpu\fP with the \fBtarget\-prim\fP or
-\fBicc\-profile\fP suboptions set.
-.sp
-If this option is set to \fBauto\fP (which is the default), the video\(aqs
-primaries flag will be used. If that flag is unset, the color space will
-be selected automatically, using the following heuristics: If the
-\fB<colormatrix>\fP is set or determined as BT.2020 or BT.709, the
-corresponding primaries are used. Otherwise, if the video height is
-exactly 576 (PAL), BT.601\-625 is used. If it\(aqs exactly 480 or 486 (NTSC),
-BT.601\-525 is used. If the video resolution is anything else, BT.709 is
-used.
-.sp
-Available primaries are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-automatic selection (default)
-.TP
-.B bt.601\-525
-ITU\-R BT.601 (SD) 525\-line systems (NTSC, SMPTE\-C)
-.TP
-.B bt.601\-625
-ITU\-R BT.601 (SD) 625\-line systems (PAL, SECAM)
-.TP
-.B bt.709
-ITU\-R BT.709 (HD) (same primaries as sRGB)
-.TP
-.B bt.2020
-ITU\-R BT.2020 (UHD)
-.TP
-.B apple
-Apple RGB
-.TP
-.B adobe
-Adobe RGB (1998)
-.TP
-.B prophoto
-ProPhoto RGB (ROMM)
-.TP
-.B cie1931
-CIE 1931 RGB
-.TP
-.B dci\-p3
-DCI\-P3 (Digital Cinema)
-.TP
-.B v\-gamut
-Panasonic V\-Gamut primaries
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<gamma>\fP
-Gamma function the source file was encoded with. Normally this should be set
-in the file header, but when playing broken or mistagged files this can be
-used to override the setting.
-.sp
-This option only affects video output drivers that perform color management.
-.sp
-If this option is set to \fBauto\fP (which is the default), the gamma will
-be set to BT.1886 for YCbCr content, sRGB for RGB content and Linear for
-XYZ content.
-.sp
-Available gamma functions are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-automatic selection (default)
-.TP
-.B bt.1886
-ITU\-R BT.1886 (EOTF corresponding to BT.601/BT.709/BT.2020)
-.TP
-.B srgb
-IEC 61966\-2\-4 (sRGB)
-.TP
-.B linear
-Linear light
-.TP
-.B gamma1.8
-Pure power curve (gamma 1.8)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.0
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.0)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.2
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.2)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.4
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.4)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.6
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.6)
-.TP
-.B gamma2.8
-Pure power curve (gamma 2.8)
-.TP
-.B prophoto
-ProPhoto RGB (ROMM) curve
-.TP
-.B pq
-ITU\-R BT.2100 PQ (Perceptual quantizer) curve
-.TP
-.B hlg
-ITU\-R BT.2100 HLG (Hybrid Log\-gamma) curve
-.TP
-.B v\-log
-Panasonic V\-Log transfer curve
-.TP
-.B s\-log1
-Sony S\-Log1 transfer curve
-.TP
-.B s\-log2
-Sony S\-Log2 transfer curve
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<sig\-peak>\fP
-Reference peak illumination for the video file, relative to the
-signal\(aqs reference white level. This is mostly interesting for HDR, but
-it can also be used tone map SDR content to simulate a different
-exposure. Normally inferred from tags such as MaxCLL or mastering
-metadata.
-.sp
-The default of 0.0 will default to the source\(aqs nominal peak luminance.
-.TP
-.B \fB<light>\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Light type of the scene. This is mostly correctly inferred based on the
-gamma function, but it can be useful to override this when viewing raw
-camera footage (e.g. V\-Log), which is normally scene\-referred instead
-of display\-referred.
-.sp
-Available light types are:
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B auto
-Automatic selection (default)
-.TP
-.B display
-Display\-referred light (most content)
-.TP
-.B hlg
-Scene\-referred using the HLG OOTF (e.g. HLG content)
-.TP
-.B 709\-1886
-Scene\-referred using the BT709+BT1886 interaction
-.TP
-.B gamma1.2
-Scene\-referred using a pure power OOTF (gamma=1.2)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<stereo\-in>\fP
-Set the stereo mode the video is assumed to be encoded in. Use
-\fB\-\-vf=format:stereo\-in=help\fP to list all available modes. Check with
-the \fBstereo3d\fP filter documentation to see what the names mean.
-.TP
-.B \fB<stereo\-out>\fP
-Set the stereo mode the video should be displayed as. Takes the
-same values as the \fBstereo\-in\fP option.
-.TP
-.B \fB<rotate>\fP
-Set the rotation the video is assumed to be encoded with in degrees.
-The special value \fB\-1\fP uses the input format.
-.TP
-.B \fB<w>\fP, \fB<h>\fP
-If not 0, perform conversion to the given size. Ignored if
-\fBconvert=yes\fP is not set.
-.TP
-.B \fB<dw>\fP, \fB<dh>\fP
-Set the display size. Note that setting the display size such that
-the video is scaled in both directions instead of just changing the
-aspect ratio is an implementation detail, and might change later.
-.TP
-.B \fB<dar>\fP
-Set the display aspect ratio of the video frame. This is a float,
-but values such as \fB[16:9]\fP can be passed too (\fB[...]\fP for quoting
-to prevent the option parser from interpreting the \fB:\fP character).
-.TP
-.B \fB<force\-scaler=auto|zimg|sws>\fP
-Force a specific scaler backend, if applicable. This is a debug option
-and could go away any time.
-.TP
-.B \fB<alpha=auto|straight|premul>\fP
-Set the kind of alpha the video uses. Undefined effect if the image
-format has no alpha channel (could be ignored or cause an error,
-depending on how mpv internals evolve). Setting this may or may not
-cause downstream image processing to treat alpha differently, depending
-on support. With \fBconvert\fP and zimg used, this will convert the alpha.
-libswscale and other FFmpeg components completely ignore this.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBlavfi=graph[:sws\-flags[:o=opts]]\fP
-Filter video using FFmpeg\(aqs libavfilter.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB<graph>\fP
-The libavfilter graph string. The filter must have a single video input
-pad and a single video output pad.
-.sp
-See \fI\%https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg\-filters.html\fP for syntax and available
-filters.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-If you want to use the full filter syntax with this option, you have
-to quote the filter graph in order to prevent mpv\(aqs syntax and the
-filter graph syntax from clashing. To prevent a quoting and escaping
-mess, consider using \fB\-\-lavfi\-complex\fP if you know which video
-track you want to use from the input file. (There is only one video
-track for nearly all video files anyway.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf=lavfi=[gradfun=20:30,vflip]\fP
-\fBgradfun\fP filter with nonsense parameters, followed by a
-\fBvflip\fP filter. (This demonstrates how libavfilter takes a
-graph and not just a single filter.) The filter graph string is
-quoted with \fB[\fP and \fB]\fP\&. This requires no additional quoting
-or escaping with some shells (like bash), while others (like
-zsh) require additional \fB"\fP quotes around the option string.
-.TP
-.B \fB\(aq\-\-vf=lavfi="gradfun=20:30,vflip"\(aq\fP
-Same as before, but uses quoting that should be safe with all
-shells. The outer \fB\(aq\fP quotes make sure that the shell does not
-remove the \fB"\fP quotes needed by mpv.
-.TP
-.B \fB\(aq\-\-vf=lavfi=graph="gradfun=radius=30:strength=20,vflip"\(aq\fP
-Same as before, but uses named parameters for everything.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<sws\-flags>\fP
-If libavfilter inserts filters for pixel format conversion, this
-option gives the flags which should be passed to libswscale. This
-option is numeric and takes a bit\-wise combination of \fBSWS_\fP flags.
-.sp
-See \fBhttps://git.videolan.org/?p=ffmpeg.git;a=blob;f=libswscale/swscale.h\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB<o>\fP
-Set AVFilterGraph options. These should be documented by FFmpeg.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\(aq\-\-vf=lavfi=yadif:o="threads=2,thread_type=slice"\(aq\fP
-forces a specific threading configuration.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBsub=[=bottom\-margin:top\-margin]\fP
-Moves subtitle rendering to an arbitrary point in the filter chain, or force
-subtitle rendering in the video filter as opposed to using video output OSD
-support.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB<bottom\-margin>\fP
-Adds a black band at the bottom of the frame. The SSA/ASS renderer can
-place subtitles there (with \fB\-\-sub\-use\-margins\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB<top\-margin>\fP
-Black band on the top for toptitles (with \fB\-\-sub\-use\-margins\fP).
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-vf=sub,eq\fP
-Moves sub rendering before the eq filter. This will put both
-subtitle colors and video under the influence of the video equalizer
-settings.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBvapoursynth=file:buffered\-frames:concurrent\-frames\fP
-Loads a VapourSynth filter script. This is intended for streamed
-processing: mpv actually provides a source filter, instead of using a
-native VapourSynth video source. The mpv source will answer frame
-requests only within a small window of frames (the size of this window
-is controlled with the \fBbuffered\-frames\fP parameter), and requests outside
-of that will return errors. As such, you can\(aqt use the full power of
-VapourSynth, but you can use certain filters.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Do not use this filter, unless you have expert knowledge in VapourSynth,
-and know how to fix bugs in the mpv VapourSynth wrapper code.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If you just want to play video generated by VapourSynth (i.e. using
-a native VapourSynth video source), it\(aqs better to use \fBvspipe\fP and a
-pipe or FIFO to feed the video to mpv. The same applies if the filter script
-requires random frame access (see \fBbuffered\-frames\fP parameter).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBfile\fP
-Filename of the script source. Currently, this is always a python
-script (\fB\&.vpy\fP in VapourSynth convention).
-.sp
-The variable \fBvideo_in\fP is set to the mpv video source, and it is
-expected that the script reads video from it. (Otherwise, mpv will
-decode no video, and the video packet queue will overflow, eventually
-leading to only audio playing, or worse.)
-.sp
-The filter graph created by the script is also expected to pass through
-timestamps using the \fB_DurationNum\fP and \fB_DurationDen\fP frame
-properties.
-.sp
-See the end of the option list for a full list of script variables
-defined by mpv.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example:"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-import vapoursynth as vs
-core = vs.get_core()
-core.std.AddBorders(video_in, 10, 10, 20, 20).set_output()
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-The script will be reloaded on every seek. This is done to reset
-the filter properly on discontinuities.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBbuffered\-frames\fP
-Maximum number of decoded video frames that should be buffered before
-the filter (default: 4). This specifies the maximum number of frames
-the script can request in backward direction.
-.sp
-E.g. if \fBbuffered\-frames=5\fP, and the script just requested frame 15,
-it can still request frame 10, but frame 9 is not available anymore.
-If it requests frame 30, mpv will decode 15 more frames, and keep only
-frames 25\-30.
-.sp
-The only reason why this buffer exists is to serve the random access
-requests the VapourSynth filter can make.
-.sp
-The VapourSynth API has a \fBgetFrameAsync\fP function, which takes an
-absolute frame number. Source filters must respond to all requests. For
-example, a source filter can request frame 2432, and then frame 3.
-Source filters typically implement this by pre\-indexing the entire
-file.
-.sp
-mpv on the other hand is stream oriented, and does not allow filters to
-seek. (And it would not make sense to allow it, because it would ruin
-performance.) Filters get frames sequentially in playback direction, and
-cannot request them out of order.
-.sp
-To compensate for this mismatch, mpv allows the filter to access frames
-within a certain window. \fBbuffered\-frames\fP controls the size of this
-window. Most VapourSynth filters happen to work with this, because mpv
-requests frames sequentially increasing from it, and most filters only
-require frames "close" to the requested frame.
-.sp
-If the filter requests a frame that has a higher frame number than the
-highest buffered frame, new frames will be decoded until the requested
-frame number is reached. Excessive frames will be flushed out in a FIFO
-manner (there are only at most \fBbuffered\-frames\fP in this buffer).
-.sp
-If the filter requests a frame that has a lower frame number than the
-lowest buffered frame, the request cannot be satisfied, and an error
-is returned to the filter. This kind of error is not supposed to happen
-in a "proper" VapourSynth environment. What exactly happens depends on
-the filters involved.
-.sp
-Increasing this buffer will not improve performance. Rather, it will
-waste memory, and slow down seeks (when enough frames to fill the buffer
-need to be decoded at once). It is only needed to prevent the error
-described in the previous paragraph.
-.sp
-How many frames a filter requires depends on filter implementation
-details, and mpv has no way of knowing. A scale filter might need only
-1 frame, an interpolation filter may require a small number of frames,
-and the \fBReverse\fP filter will require an infinite number of frames.
-.sp
-If you want reliable operation to the full extend VapourSynth is
-capable, use \fBvspipe\fP\&.
-.sp
-The actual number of buffered frames also depends on the value of the
-\fBconcurrent\-frames\fP option. Currently, both option values are
-multiplied to get the final buffer size.
-.TP
-.B \fBconcurrent\-frames\fP
-Number of frames that should be requested in parallel. The
-level of concurrency depends on the filter and how quickly mpv can
-decode video to feed the filter. This value should probably be
-proportional to the number of cores on your machine. Most time,
-making it higher than the number of cores can actually make it
-slower.
-.sp
-Technically, mpv will call the VapourSynth \fBgetFrameAsync\fP function
-in a loop, until there are \fBconcurrent\-frames\fP frames that have not
-been returned by the filter yet. This also assumes that the rest of the
-mpv filter chain reads the output of the \fBvapoursynth\fP filter quickly
-enough. (For example, if you pause the player, filtering will stop very
-soon, because the filtered frames are waiting in a queue.)
-.sp
-Actual concurrency depends on many other factors.
-.sp
-By default, this uses the special value \fBauto\fP, which sets the option
-to the number of detected logical CPU cores.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The following \fB\&.vpy\fP script variables are defined by mpv:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo_in\fP
-The mpv video source as vapoursynth clip. Note that this has an
-incorrect (very high) length set, which confuses many filters. This is
-necessary, because the true number of frames is unknown. You can use the
-\fBTrim\fP filter on the clip to reduce the length.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo_in_dw\fP, \fBvideo_in_dh\fP
-Display size of the video. Can be different from video size if the
-video does not use square pixels (e.g. DVD).
-.TP
-.B \fBcontainer_fps\fP
-FPS value as reported by file headers. This value can be wrong or
-completely broken (e.g. 0 or NaN). Even if the value is correct,
-if another filter changes the real FPS (by dropping or inserting
-frames), the value of this variable will not be useful. Note that
-the \fB\-\-fps\fP command line option overrides this value.
-.sp
-Useful for some filters which insist on having a FPS.
-.TP
-.B \fBdisplay_fps\fP
-Refresh rate of the current display. Note that this value can be 0.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBvavpp\fP
-VA\-API video post processing. Requires the system to support VA\-API,
-i.e. Linux/BSD only. Works with \fB\-\-vo=vaapi\fP and \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP only.
-Currently deinterlaces. This filter is automatically inserted if
-deinterlacing is requested (either using the \fBd\fP key, by default mapped to
-the command \fBcycle deinterlace\fP, or the \fB\-\-deinterlace\fP option).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBdeint=<method>\fP
-Select the deinterlacing algorithm.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Don\(aqt perform deinterlacing.
-.TP
-.B auto
-Select the best quality deinterlacing algorithm (default). This
-goes by the order of the options as documented, with
-\fBmotion\-compensated\fP being considered best quality.
-.TP
-.B first\-field
-Show only first field.
-.TP
-.B bob
-bob deinterlacing.
-.TP
-.B weave, motion\-adaptive, motion\-compensated
-Advanced deinterlacing algorithms. Whether these actually work
-depends on the GPU hardware, the GPU drivers, driver bugs, and
-mpv bugs.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB<interlaced\-only>\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Deinterlace all frames (default).
-.TP
-.B yes
-Only deinterlace frames marked as interlaced.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBreversal\-bug=<yes|no>\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B no
-Use the API as it was interpreted by older Mesa drivers. While
-this interpretation was more obvious and intuitive, it was
-apparently wrong, and not shared by Intel driver developers.
-.TP
-.B yes
-Use Intel interpretation of surface forward and backwards
-references (default). This is what Intel drivers and newer Mesa
-drivers expect. Matters only for the advanced deinterlacing
-algorithms.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBvdpaupp\fP
-VDPAU video post processing. Works with \fB\-\-vo=vdpau\fP and \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP
-only. This filter is automatically inserted if deinterlacing is requested
-(either using the \fBd\fP key, by default mapped to the command
-\fBcycle deinterlace\fP, or the \fB\-\-deinterlace\fP option). When enabling
-deinterlacing, it is always preferred over software deinterlacer filters
-if the \fBvdpau\fP VO is used, and also if \fBgpu\fP is used and hardware
-decoding was activated at least once (i.e. vdpau was loaded).
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBsharpen=<\-1\-1>\fP
-For positive values, apply a sharpening algorithm to the video, for
-negative values a blurring algorithm (default: 0).
-.TP
-.B \fBdenoise=<0\-1>\fP
-Apply a noise reduction algorithm to the video (default: 0; no noise
-reduction).
-.TP
-.B \fBdeint=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether deinterlacing is enabled (default: no). If enabled, it will use
-the mode selected with \fBdeint\-mode\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBdeint\-mode=<first\-field|bob|temporal|temporal\-spatial>\fP
-Select deinterlacing mode (default: temporal).
-.sp
-Note that there\(aqs currently a mechanism that allows the \fBvdpau\fP VO to
-change the \fBdeint\-mode\fP of auto\-inserted \fBvdpaupp\fP filters. To avoid
-confusion, it\(aqs recommended not to use the \fB\-\-vo=vdpau\fP suboptions
-related to filtering.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B first\-field
-Show only first field.
-.TP
-.B bob
-Bob deinterlacing.
-.TP
-.B temporal
-Motion\-adaptive temporal deinterlacing. May lead to A/V desync
-with slow video hardware and/or high resolution.
-.TP
-.B temporal\-spatial
-Motion\-adaptive temporal deinterlacing with edge\-guided spatial
-interpolation. Needs fast video hardware.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBchroma\-deint\fP
-Makes temporal deinterlacers operate both on luma and chroma (default).
-Use no\-chroma\-deint to solely use luma and speed up advanced
-deinterlacing. Useful with slow video memory.
-.TP
-.B \fBpullup\fP
-Try to apply inverse telecine, needs motion adaptive temporal
-deinterlacing.
-.TP
-.B \fBinterlaced\-only=<yes|no>\fP
-If \fByes\fP, only deinterlace frames marked as interlaced (default: no).
-.TP
-.B \fBhqscaling=<0\-9>\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 0
-Use default VDPAU scaling (default).
-.TP
-.B 1\-9
-Apply high quality VDPAU scaling (needs capable hardware).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBd3d11vpp\fP
-Direct3D 11 video post processing. Currently requires D3D11 hardware
-decoding for use.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBdeint=<yes|no>\fP
-Whether deinterlacing is enabled (default: no).
-.TP
-.B \fBinterlaced\-only=<yes|no>\fP
-If \fByes\fP, only deinterlace frames marked as interlaced (default: no).
-.TP
-.B \fBmode=<blend|bob|adaptive|mocomp|ivctc|none>\fP
-Tries to select a video processor with the given processing capability.
-If a video processor supports multiple capabilities, it is not clear
-which algorithm is actually selected. \fBnone\fP always falls back. On
-most if not all hardware, this option will probably do nothing, because
-a video processor usually supports all modes or none.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBfingerprint=...\fP
-Compute video frame fingerprints and provide them as metadata. Actually, it
-currently barely deserved to be called \fBfingerprint\fP, because it does not
-compute "proper" fingerprints, only tiny downscaled images (but which can be
-used to compute image hashes or for similarity matching).
-.sp
-The main purpose of this filter is to support the \fBskip\-logo.lua\fP script.
-If this script is dropped, or mpv ever gains a way to load user\-defined
-filters (other than VapourSynth), this filter will be removed. Due to the
-"special" nature of this filter, it will be removed without warning.
-.sp
-The intended way to read from the filter is using \fBvf\-metadata\fP (also
-see \fBclear\-on\-query\fP filter parameter). The property will return a list
-of key/value pairs as follows:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-fp0.pts = 1.2345
-fp0.hex = 1234abcdef...bcde
-fp1.pts = 1.4567
-fp1.hex = abcdef1234...6789
-\&...
-fpN.pts = ...
-fpN.hex = ...
-type = gray\-hex\-16x16
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Each \fBfp<N>\fP entry is for a frame. The \fBpts\fP entry specifies the
-timestamp of the frame (within the filter chain; in simple cases this is
-the same as the display timestamp). The \fBhex\fP field is the hex encoded
-fingerprint, whose size and meaning depend on the \fBtype\fP filter option.
-The \fBtype\fP field has the same value as the option the filter was created
-with.
-.sp
-This returns the frames that were filtered since the last query of the
-property. If \fBclear\-on\-query=no\fP was set, a query doesn\(aqt reset the list
-of frames. In both cases, a maximum of 10 frames is returned. If there are
-more frames, the oldest frames are discarded. Frames are returned in filter
-order.
-.sp
-(This doesn\(aqt return a structured list for the per\-frame details because the
-internals of the \fBvf\-metadata\fP mechanism suck. The returned format may
-change in the future.)
-.sp
-This filter uses zimg for speed and profit. However, it will fallback to
-libswscale in a number of situations: lesser pixel formats, unaligned data
-pointers or strides, or if zimg fails to initialize for unknown reasons. In
-these cases, the filter will use more CPU. Also, it will output different
-fingerprints, because libswscale cannot perform the full range expansion we
-normally request from zimg. As a consequence, the filter may be slower and
-not work correctly in random situations.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBtype=...\fP
-What fingerprint to compute. Available types are:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B gray\-hex\-8x8
-grayscale, 8 bit, 8x8 size
-.TP
-.B gray\-hex\-16x16
-grayscale, 8 bit, 16x16 size (default)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Both types simply remove all colors, downscale the image, concatenate
-all pixel values to a byte array, and convert the array to a hex string.
-.TP
-.B \fBclear\-on\-query=yes|no\fP
-Clear the list of frame fingerprints if the \fBvf\-metadata\fP property for
-this filter is queried (default: yes). This requires some care by the
-user. Some types of accesses might query the filter multiple times,
-which leads to lost frames.
-.TP
-.B \fBprint=yes|no\fP
-Print computed fingerprints to the terminal (default: no). This is
-mostly for testing and such. Scripts should use \fBvf\-metadata\fP to
-read information from this filter instead.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBgpu=...\fP
-Convert video to RGB using the OpenGL renderer normally used with
-\fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP\&. This requires that the EGL implementation supports off\-screen
-rendering on the default display. (This is the case with Mesa.)
-.sp
-Sub\-options:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBw=<pixels>\fP, \fBh=<pixels>\fP
-Size of the output in pixels (default: 0). If not positive, this will
-use the size of the first filtered input frame.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is highly experimental. Performance is bad, and it will not work
-everywhere in the first place. Some features are not supported.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This does not do OSD rendering. If you see OSD, then it has been
-rendered by the VO backend. (Subtitles are rendered by the \fBgpu\fP
-filter, if possible.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-If you use this with encoding mode, keep in mind that encoding mode will
-convert the RGB filter\(aqs output back to yuv420p in software, using the
-configured software scaler. Using \fBzimg\fP might improve this, but in
-any case it might go against your goals when using this filter.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Do not use this with \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP\&. It will apply filtering twice, since
-most \fB\-\-vo=gpu\fP options are unconditionally applied to the \fBgpu\fP
-filter. There is no mechanism in mpv to prevent this.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH ENCODING
-.sp
-You can encode files from one format/codec to another using this facility.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-o=<filename>\fP
-Enables encoding mode and specifies the output file name.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-of=<format>\fP
-Specifies the output format (overrides autodetection by the file name
-extension of the file specified by \fB\-o\fP). See \fB\-\-of=help\fP for a full
-list of supported formats.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ofopts=<options>\fP
-Specifies the output format options for libavformat.
-See \fB\-\-ofopts=help\fP for a full list of supported options.
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ofopts\-add=<option>\fP
-Appends the option given as an argument to the options list. (Passing
-multiple options is currently still possible, but deprecated.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ofopts=""\fP
-Completely empties the options list.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-oac=<codec>\fP
-Specifies the output audio codec. See \fB\-\-oac=help\fP for a full list of
-supported codecs.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-oaoffset=<value>\fP
-Shifts audio data by the given time (in seconds) by adding/removing
-samples at the start. Deprecated.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-oacopts=<options>\fP
-Specifies the output audio codec options for libavcodec.
-See \fB\-\-oacopts=help\fP for a full list of supported options.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B "\fB\-\-oac=libmp3lame \-\-oacopts=b=128000\fP"
-selects 128 kbps MP3 encoding.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-oacopts\-add=<option>\fP
-Appends the option given as an argument to the options list. (Passing
-multiple options is currently still possible, but deprecated.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-oacopts=""\fP
-Completely empties the options list.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-oafirst\fP
-Force the audio stream to become the first stream in the output.
-By default, the order is unspecified. Deprecated.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ovc=<codec>\fP
-Specifies the output video codec. See \fB\-\-ovc=help\fP for a full list of
-supported codecs.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ovoffset=<value>\fP
-Shifts video data by the given time (in seconds) by shifting the pts
-values. Deprecated.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ovcopts=<options>\fP
-Specifies the output video codec options for libavcodec.
-See \-\-ovcopts=help for a full list of supported options.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB"\-\-ovc=mpeg4 \-\-ovcopts=qscale=5"\fP
-selects constant quantizer scale 5 for MPEG\-4 encoding.
-.TP
-.B \fB"\-\-ovc=libx264 \-\-ovcopts=crf=23"\fP
-selects VBR quality factor 23 for H.264 encoding.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ovcopts\-add=<option>\fP
-Appends the option given as an argument to the options list. (Passing
-multiple options is currently still possible, but deprecated.)
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ovcopts=""\fP
-Completely empties the options list.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-ovfirst\fP
-Force the video stream to become the first stream in the output.
-By default, the order is unspecified. Deprecated.
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-orawts\fP
-Copies input pts to the output video (not supported by some output
-container formats, e.g. AVI). In this mode, discontinuities are not fixed
-and all pts are passed through as\-is. Never seek backwards or use multiple
-input files in this mode!
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-no\-ocopy\-metadata\fP
-Turns off copying of metadata from input files to output files when
-encoding (which is enabled by default).
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-oset\-metadata=<metadata\-tag[,metadata\-tag,...]>\fP
-Specifies metadata to include in the output file.
-Supported keys vary between output formats. For example, Matroska (MKV) and
-FLAC allow almost arbitrary keys, while support in MP4 and MP3 is more
-limited.
-.sp
-This is a key/value list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B "\fB\-\-oset\-metadata=title="Output title",comment="Another tag"\fP"
-adds a title and a comment to the output file.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fB\-\-oremove\-metadata=<metadata\-tag[,metadata\-tag,...]>\fP
-Specifies metadata to exclude from the output file when copying from the
-input file.
-.sp
-This is a string list option. See \fI\%List Options\fP for details.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B "\fB\-\-oremove\-metadata=comment,genre\fP"
-excludes copying of the the comment and genre tags to the output
-file.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH COMMAND INTERFACE
-.sp
-The mpv core can be controlled with commands and properties. A number of ways
-to interact with the player use them: key bindings (\fBinput.conf\fP), OSD
-(showing information with properties), JSON IPC, the client API (\fBlibmpv\fP),
-and the classic slave mode.
-.SS input.conf
-.sp
-The input.conf file consists of a list of key bindings, for example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-s screenshot # take a screenshot with the s key
-LEFT seek 15 # map the left\-arrow key to seeking forward by 15 seconds
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Each line maps a key to an input command. Keys are specified with their literal
-value (upper case if combined with \fBShift\fP), or a name for special keys. For
-example, \fBa\fP maps to the \fBa\fP key without shift, and \fBA\fP maps to \fBa\fP
-with shift.
-.sp
-The file is located in the mpv configuration directory (normally at
-\fB~/.config/mpv/input.conf\fP depending on platform). The default bindings are
-defined here:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-https://github.com/mpv\-player/mpv/blob/master/etc/input.conf
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-A list of special keys can be obtained with
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBmpv \-\-input\-keylist\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-In general, keys can be combined with \fBShift\fP, \fBCtrl\fP and \fBAlt\fP:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-ctrl+q quit
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBmpv\fP can be started in input test mode, which displays key bindings and the
-commands they\(aqre bound to on the OSD, instead of executing the commands:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv \-\-input\-test \-\-force\-window \-\-idle
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-(Only closing the window will make \fBmpv\fP exit, pressing normal keys will
-merely display the binding, even if mapped to quit.)
-.sp
-Also see \fI\%Key names\fP\&.
-.SS input.conf syntax
-.sp
-\fB[Shift+][Ctrl+][Alt+][Meta+]<key> [{<section>}] <command> ( ; <command> )*\fP
-.sp
-Note that by default, the right Alt key can be used to create special
-characters, and thus does not register as a modifier. The option
-\fB\-\-no\-input\-right\-alt\-gr\fP changes this behavior.
-.sp
-Newlines always start a new binding. \fB#\fP starts a comment (outside of quoted
-string arguments). To bind commands to the \fB#\fP key, \fBSHARP\fP can be used.
-.sp
-\fB<key>\fP is either the literal character the key produces (ASCII or Unicode
-character), or a symbolic name (as printed by \fB\-\-input\-keylist\fP).
-.sp
-\fB<section>\fP (braced with \fB{\fP and \fB}\fP) is the input section for this
-command.
-.sp
-\fB<command>\fP is the command itself. It consists of the command name and
-multiple (or none) arguments, all separated by whitespace. String arguments
-should be quoted, typically with \fB"\fP\&. See \fBFlat command syntax\fP\&.
-.sp
-You can bind multiple commands to one key. For example:
-.nf
-a show\-text "command 1" ; show\-text "command 2"
-.fi
-.sp
-.sp
-It\(aqs also possible to bind a command to a sequence of keys:
-.nf
-a\-b\-c show\-text "command run after a, b, c have been pressed"
-.fi
-.sp
-.sp
-(This is not shown in the general command syntax.)
-.sp
-If \fBa\fP or \fBa\-b\fP or \fBb\fP are already bound, this will run the first command
-that matches, and the multi\-key command will never be called. Intermediate keys
-can be remapped to \fBignore\fP in order to avoid this issue. The maximum number
-of (non\-modifier) keys for combinations is currently 4.
-.SS Key names
-.sp
-All mouse and keyboard input is to converted to mpv\-specific key names. Key
-names are either special symbolic identifiers representing a physical key, or a
-text key names, which are unicode code points encoded as UTF\-8. These are what
-keyboard input would normally produce, for example \fBa\fP for the A key. As a
-consequence, mpv uses input translated by the current OS keyboard layout, rather
-than physical scan codes.
-.sp
-Currently there is the hardcoded assumption that every text key can be
-represented as a single unicode code point (in NFKC form).
-.sp
-All key names can be combined with the modifiers \fBShift\fP, \fBCtrl\fP, \fBAlt\fP,
-\fBMeta\fP\&. They must be prefixed to the actual key name, where each modifier
-is followed by a \fB+\fP (for example \fBctrl+q\fP).
-.sp
-The \fBShift\fP modifier requires some attention. For instance \fBShift+2\fP should
-usually be specified as key\-name \fB@\fP at \fBinput.conf\fP, and similarly the
-combination \fBAlt+Shift+2\fP is usually \fBAlt+@\fP, etc. Special key names like
-\fBShift+LEFT\fP work as expected. If in doubt \- use \fB\-\-input\-test\fP to check
-how a key/combination is seen by mpv.
-.sp
-Symbolic key names and modifier names are case\-insensitive. Unicode key names
-are case\-sensitive because input bindings typically respect the shift key.
-.sp
-Another type of key names are hexadecimal key names, that serve as fallback
-for special keys that are neither unicode, nor have a special mpv defined name.
-They will break as soon as mpv adds proper names for them, but can enable you
-to use a key at all if that does not happen.
-.sp
-All symbolic names are listed by \fB\-\-input\-keylist\fP\&. \fB\-\-input\-test\fP is a
-special mode that prints all input on the OSD.
-.sp
-Comments on some symbolic names:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBKP*\fP
-Keypad names. Behavior varies by backend (whether they implement this, and
-on how they treat numlock), but typically, mpv tries to map keys on the
-keypad to separate names, even if they produce the same text as normal keys.
-.TP
-.B \fBMOUSE_BTN*\fP, \fBMBTN*\fP
-Various mouse buttons.
-.sp
-Depending on backend, the mouse wheel might also be represented as a button.
-In addition, \fBMOUSE_BTN3\fP to \fBMOUSE_BTN6\fP are deprecated aliases for
-\fBWHEEL_UP\fP, \fBWHEEL_DOWN\fP, \fBWHEEL_LEFT\fP, \fBWHEEL_RIGHT\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBMBTN*\fP are aliases for \fBMOUSE_BTN*\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBWHEEL_*\fP
-Mouse wheels (typically).
-.TP
-.B \fBAXIS_*\fP
-Deprecated aliases for \fBWHEEL_*\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB*_DBL\fP
-Mouse button double clicks.
-.TP
-.B \fBMOUSE_MOVE\fP, \fBMOUSE_ENTER\fP, \fBMOUSE_LEAVE\fP
-Emitted by mouse move events. Enter/leave happens when the mouse enters or
-leave the mpv window (or the current mouse region, using the deprecated
-mouse region input section mechanism).
-.TP
-.B \fBCLOSE_WIN\fP
-Pseudo key emitted when closing the mpv window using the OS window manager
-(for example, by clicking the close button in the window title bar).
-.TP
-.B \fBGAMEPAD_*\fP
-Keys emitted by the SDL gamepad backend.
-.TP
-.B \fBUNMAPPED\fP
-Pseudo\-key that matches any unmapped key. (You should probably avoid this
-if possible, because it might change behavior or get removed in the future.)
-.TP
-.B \fBANY_UNICODE\fP
-Pseudo\-key that matches any key that produces text. (You should probably
-avoid this if possible, because it might change behavior or get removed in
-the future.)
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Flat command syntax
-.sp
-This is the syntax used in input.conf, and referred to "input.conf syntax" in
-a number of other places.
-.nf
-
-\fB<command> ::= [<prefixes>] <command_name> (<argument>)*\fP
-\fB<argument> ::= (<unquoted> | " <double_quoted> " | \(aq <single_quoted> \(aq | \(gaX <custom_quoted> X\(ga)\fP
-.fi
-.sp
-.sp
-\fBcommand_name\fP is an unquoted string with the command name itself. See
-\fI\%List of Input Commands\fP for a list.
-.sp
-Arguments are separated by whitespaces even if the command expects only one
-argument. Arguments with whitespaces or other special characters must be quoted,
-or the command cannot be parsed correctly.
-.sp
-Double quotes interpret JSON/C\-style escaping, like \fB\et\fP or \fB\e"\fP or \fB\e\e\fP\&.
-JSON escapes according to RFC 8259, minus surrogate pair escapes. This is the
-only form which allows newlines at the value \- as \fB\en\fP\&.
-.sp
-Single quotes take the content literally, and cannot include the single\-quote
-character at the value.
-.sp
-Custom quotes also take the content literally, but are more flexible than single
-quotes. They start with \fB\(ga\fP (back\-quote) followed by any ASCII character,
-and end at the first occurance of the same pair in reverse order, e.g.
-\fB\(ga\-foo\-\(ga\fP or \fB\(ga\(gabar\(ga\(ga\fP\&. The final pair sequence is not allowed at the
-value \- in these examples \fB\-\(ga\fP and \fB\(ga\(ga\fP respectively. In the second
-example the last character of the value also can\(aqt be a back\-quote.
-.sp
-Mixed quoting at the same argument, like \fB\(aqfoo\(aq"bar"\fP, is not supported.
-.sp
-Note that argument parsing and property expansion happen at different stages.
-First, arguments are determined as described above, and then, where applicable,
-properties are expanded \- regardless of argument quoting. However, expansion
-can still be prevented with the \fBraw\fP prefix or \fB$>\fP\&. See \fI\%Input Command
-Prefixes\fP and \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.SS Commands specified as arrays
-.sp
-This applies to certain APIs, such as \fBmp.commandv()\fP or
-\fBmp.command_native()\fP (with array parameters) in Lua scripting, or
-\fBmpv_command()\fP or \fBmpv_command_node()\fP (with MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY) in the
-C libmpv client API.
-.sp
-The command as well as all arguments are passed as a single array. Similar to
-the \fI\%Flat command syntax\fP, you can first pass prefixes as strings (each as
-separate array item), then the command name as string, and then each argument
-as string or a native value.
-.sp
-Since these APIs pass arguments as separate strings or native values, they do
-not expect quotes, and do support escaping. Technically, there is the input.conf
-parser, which first splits the command string into arguments, and then invokes
-argument parsers for each argument. The input.conf parser normally handles
-quotes and escaping. The array command APIs mentioned above pass strings
-directly to the argument parsers, or can sidestep them by the ability to pass
-non\-string values.
-.sp
-Property expansion is disabled by default for these APIs. This can be changed
-with the \fBexpand\-properties\fP prefix. See \fI\%Input Command Prefixes\fP\&.
-.sp
-Sometimes commands have string arguments, that in turn are actually parsed by
-other components (e.g. filter strings with \fBvf add\fP) \- in these cases, you
-you would have to double\-escape in input.conf, but not with the array APIs.
-.sp
-For complex commands, consider using \fI\%Named arguments\fP instead, which should
-give slightly more compatibility. Some commands do not support named arguments
-and inherently take an array, though.
-.SS Named arguments
-.sp
-This applies to certain APIs, such as \fBmp.command_native()\fP (with tables that
-have string keys) in Lua scripting, or \fBmpv_command_node()\fP (with
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP) in the C libmpv client API.
-.sp
-The name of the command is provided with a \fBname\fP string field. The name of
-each command is defined in each command description in the
-\fI\%List of Input Commands\fP\&. \fB\-\-input\-cmdlist\fP also lists them. See the
-\fBsubprocess\fP command for an example.
-.sp
-Some commands do not support named arguments (e.g. \fBrun\fP command). You need
-to use APIs that pass arguments as arrays.
-.sp
-Named arguments are not supported in the "flat" input.conf syntax, which means
-you cannot use them for key bindings in input.conf at all.
-.sp
-Property expansion is disabled by default for these APIs. This can be changed
-with the \fBexpand\-properties\fP prefix. See \fI\%Input Command Prefixes\fP\&.
-.SS List of Input Commands
-.sp
-Commands with parameters have the parameter name enclosed in \fB<\fP / \fB>\fP\&.
-Don\(aqt add those to the actual command. Optional arguments are enclosed in
-\fB[\fP / \fB]\fP\&. If you don\(aqt pass them, they will be set to a default value.
-.sp
-Remember to quote string arguments in input.conf (see \fI\%Flat command syntax\fP).
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBignore\fP
-Use this to "block" keys that should be unbound, and do nothing. Useful for
-disabling default bindings, without disabling all bindings with
-\fB\-\-no\-input\-default\-bindings\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBseek <target> [<flags>]\fP
-Change the playback position. By default, seeks by a relative amount of
-seconds.
-.sp
-The second argument consists of flags controlling the seek mode:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B relative (default)
-Seek relative to current position (a negative value seeks backwards).
-.TP
-.B absolute
-Seek to a given time (a negative value starts from the end of the file).
-.TP
-.B absolute\-percent
-Seek to a given percent position.
-.TP
-.B relative\-percent
-Seek relative to current position in percent.
-.TP
-.B keyframes
-Always restart playback at keyframe boundaries (fast).
-.TP
-.B exact
-Always do exact/hr/precise seeks (slow).
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Multiple flags can be combined, e.g.: \fBabsolute+keyframes\fP\&.
-.sp
-By default, \fBkeyframes\fP is used for \fBrelative\fP, \fBrelative\-percent\fP,
-and \fBabsolute\-percent\fP seeks, while \fBexact\fP is used for \fBabsolute\fP
-seeks.
-.sp
-Before mpv 0.9, the \fBkeyframes\fP and \fBexact\fP flags had to be passed as
-3rd parameter (essentially using a space instead of \fB+\fP). The 3rd
-parameter is still parsed, but is considered deprecated.
-.TP
-.B \fBrevert\-seek [<flags>]\fP
-Undoes the \fBseek\fP command, and some other commands that seek (but not
-necessarily all of them). Calling this command once will jump to the
-playback position before the seek. Calling it a second time undoes the
-\fBrevert\-seek\fP command itself. This only works within a single file.
-.sp
-The first argument is optional, and can change the behavior:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B mark
-Mark the current time position. The next normal \fBrevert\-seek\fP command
-will seek back to this point, no matter how many seeks happened since
-last time.
-.TP
-.B mark\-permanent
-If set, mark the current position, and do not change the mark position
-before the next \fBrevert\-seek\fP command that has \fBmark\fP or
-\fBmark\-permanent\fP set (or playback of the current file ends). Until
-this happens, \fBrevert\-seek\fP will always seek to the marked point. This
-flag cannot be combined with \fBmark\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Using it without any arguments gives you the default behavior.
-.TP
-.B \fBframe\-step\fP
-Play one frame, then pause. Does nothing with audio\-only playback.
-.TP
-.B \fBframe\-back\-step\fP
-Go back by one frame, then pause. Note that this can be very slow (it tries
-to be precise, not fast), and sometimes fails to behave as expected. How
-well this works depends on whether precise seeking works correctly (e.g.
-see the \fB\-\-hr\-seek\-demuxer\-offset\fP option). Video filters or other video
-post\-processing that modifies timing of frames (e.g. deinterlacing) should
-usually work, but might make backstepping silently behave incorrectly in
-corner cases. Using \fB\-\-hr\-seek\-framedrop=no\fP should help, although it
-might make precise seeking slower.
-.sp
-This does not work with audio\-only playback.
-.TP
-.B \fBset <name> <value>\fP
-Set the given property or option to the given value.
-.TP
-.B \fBadd <name> [<value>]\fP
-Add the given value to the property or option. On overflow or underflow,
-clamp the property to the maximum. If \fB<value>\fP is omitted, assume \fB1\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBcycle <name> [<value>]\fP
-Cycle the given property or option. The second argument can be \fBup\fP or
-\fBdown\fP to set the cycle direction. On overflow, set the property back to
-the minimum, on underflow set it to the maximum. If \fBup\fP or \fBdown\fP is
-omitted, assume \fBup\fP\&.
-.sp
-Whether or not key\-repeat is enabled by default depends on the property.
-Currently properties with continuous values are repeatable by default (like
-\fBvolume\fP), while discrete values are not (like \fBosd\-level\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBmultiply <name> <value>\fP
-Similar to \fBadd\fP, but multiplies the property or option with the numeric
-value.
-.TP
-.B \fBscreenshot <flags>\fP
-Take a screenshot.
-.sp
-Multiple flags are available (some can be combined with \fB+\fP):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <subtitles> (default)
-Save the video image, in its original resolution, and with subtitles.
-Some video outputs may still include the OSD in the output under certain
-circumstances.
-.TP
-.B <video>
-Like \fBsubtitles\fP, but typically without OSD or subtitles. The exact
-behavior depends on the selected video output.
-.TP
-.B <window>
-Save the contents of the mpv window. Typically scaled, with OSD and
-subtitles. The exact behavior depends on the selected video output, and
-if no support is available, this will act like \fBvideo\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B <each\-frame>
-Take a screenshot each frame. Issue this command again to stop taking
-screenshots. Note that you should disable frame\-dropping when using
-this mode \- or you might receive duplicate images in cases when a
-frame was dropped. This flag can be combined with the other flags,
-e.g. \fBvideo+each\-frame\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Older mpv versions required passing \fBsingle\fP and \fBeach\-frame\fP as
-second argument (and did not have flags). This syntax is still understood,
-but deprecated and might be removed in the future.
-.sp
-If you combine this command with another one using \fB;\fP, you can use the
-\fBasync\fP flag to make encoding/writing the image file asynchronous. For
-normal standalone commands, this is always asynchronous, and the flag has
-no effect. (This behavior changed with mpv 0.29.0.)
-.TP
-.B \fBscreenshot\-to\-file <filename> <flags>\fP
-Take a screenshot and save it to a given file. The format of the file will
-be guessed by the extension (and \fB\-\-screenshot\-format\fP is ignored \- the
-behavior when the extension is missing or unknown is arbitrary).
-.sp
-The second argument is like the first argument to \fBscreenshot\fP and
-supports \fBsubtitles\fP, \fBvideo\fP, \fBwindow\fP\&.
-.sp
-If the file already exists, it\(aqs overwritten.
-.sp
-Like all input command parameters, the filename is subject to property
-expansion as described in \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-next <flags>\fP
-Go to the next entry on the playlist.
-.sp
-First argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B weak (default)
-If the last file on the playlist is currently played, do nothing.
-.TP
-.B force
-Terminate playback if there are no more files on the playlist.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-prev <flags>\fP
-Go to the previous entry on the playlist.
-.sp
-First argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B weak (default)
-If the first file on the playlist is currently played, do nothing.
-.TP
-.B force
-Terminate playback if the first file is being played.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-play\-index <integer|current|none>\fP
-Start (or restart) playback of the given playlist index. In addition to the
-0\-based playlist entry index, it supports the following values:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <current>
-The current playlist entry (as in \fBplaylist\-current\-pos\fP) will be
-played again (unload and reload). If none is set, playback is stopped.
-(In corner cases, \fBplaylist\-current\-pos\fP can point to a playlist entry
-even if playback is currently inactive,
-.TP
-.B <none>
-Playback is stopped. If idle mode (\fB\-\-idle\fP) is enabled, the player
-will enter idle mode, otherwise it will exit.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This comm and is similar to \fBloadfile\fP in that it only manipulates the
-state of what to play next, without waiting until the current file is
-unloaded, and the next one is loaded.
-.sp
-Setting \fBplaylist\-pos\fP or similar properties can have a similar effect to
-this command. However, it\(aqs more explicit, and guarantees that playback is
-restarted if for example the new playlist entry is the same as the previous
-one.
-.TP
-.B \fBloadfile <url> [<flags> [<options>]]\fP
-Load the given file or URL and play it. Technically, this is just a playlist
-manipulation command (which either replaces the playlist or appends an entry
-to it). Actual file loading happens independently. For example, a
-\fBloadfile\fP command that replaces the current file with a new one returns
-before the current file is stopped, and the new file even begins loading.
-.sp
-Second argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <replace> (default)
-Stop playback of the current file, and play the new file immediately.
-.TP
-.B <append>
-Append the file to the playlist.
-.TP
-.B <append\-play>
-Append the file, and if nothing is currently playing, start playback.
-(Always starts with the added file, even if the playlist was not empty
-before running this command.)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The third argument is a list of options and values which should be set
-while the file is playing. It is of the form \fBopt1=value1,opt2=value2,..\fP\&.
-When using the client API, this can be a \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP\fP (or a Lua
-table), however the values themselves must be strings currently. These
-options are set during playback, and restored to the previous value at end
-of playback (see \fI\%Per\-File Options\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBloadlist <url> [<flags>]\fP
-Load the given playlist file or URL (like \fB\-\-playlist\fP).
-.sp
-Second argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <replace> (default)
-Stop playback and replace the internal playlist with the new one.
-.TP
-.B <append>
-Append the new playlist at the end of the current internal playlist.
-.TP
-.B <append\-play>
-Append the new playlist, and if nothing is currently playing, start
-playback. (Always starts with the new playlist, even if the internal
-playlist was not empty before running this command.)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-clear\fP
-Clear the playlist, except the currently played file.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-remove <index>\fP
-Remove the playlist entry at the given index. Index values start counting
-with 0. The special value \fBcurrent\fP removes the current entry. Note that
-removing the current entry also stops playback and starts playing the next
-entry.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-move <index1> <index2>\fP
-Move the playlist entry at index1, so that it takes the place of the
-entry index2. (Paradoxically, the moved playlist entry will not have
-the index value index2 after moving if index1 was lower than index2,
-because index2 refers to the target entry, not the index the entry
-will have after moving.)
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-shuffle\fP
-Shuffle the playlist. This is similar to what is done on start if the
-\fB\-\-shuffle\fP option is used.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-unshuffle\fP
-Attempt to revert the previous \fBplaylist\-shuffle\fP command. This works
-only once (multiple successive \fBplaylist\-unshuffle\fP commands do nothing).
-May not work correctly if new recursive playlists have been opened since
-a \fBplaylist\-shuffle\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fBrun <command> [<arg1> [<arg2> [...]]]\fP
-Run the given command. Unlike in MPlayer/mplayer2 and earlier versions of
-mpv (0.2.x and older), this doesn\(aqt call the shell. Instead, the command
-is run directly, with each argument passed separately. Each argument is
-expanded like in \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-.sp
-This command has a variable number of arguments, and cannot be used with
-named arguments.
-.sp
-The program is run in a detached way. mpv doesn\(aqt wait until the command
-is completed, but continues playback right after spawning it.
-.sp
-To get the old behavior, use \fB/bin/sh\fP and \fB\-c\fP as the first two
-arguments.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fBrun "/bin/sh" "\-c" "echo ${title} > /tmp/playing"\fP
-.sp
-This is not a particularly good example, because it doesn\(aqt handle
-escaping, and a specially prepared file might allow an attacker to
-execute arbitrary shell commands. It is recommended to write a small
-shell script, and call that with \fBrun\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBsubprocess\fP
-Similar to \fBrun\fP, but gives more control about process execution to the
-caller, and does does not detach the process.
-.sp
-You can avoid blocking until the process terminates by running this command
-asynchronously. (For example \fBmp.command_native_async()\fP in Lua scripting.)
-.sp
-This has the following named arguments. The order of them is not guaranteed,
-so you should always call them with named arguments, see \fI\%Named arguments\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBargs\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY[MPV_FORMAT_STRING]\fP)
-Array of strings with the command as first argument, and subsequent
-command line arguments following. This is just like the \fBrun\fP command
-argument list.
-.sp
-The first array entry is either an absolute path to the executable, or
-a filename with no path components, in which case the executable is
-searched in the directories in the \fBPATH\fP environment variable. On
-Unix, this is equivalent to \fBposix_spawnp\fP and \fBexecvp\fP behavior.
-.TP
-.B \fBplayback_only\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_FLAG\fP)
-Boolean indicating whether the process should be killed when playback
-terminates (optional, default: true). If enabled, stopping playback
-will automatically kill the process, and you can\(aqt start it outside of
-playback.
-.TP
-.B \fBcapture_size\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_INT64\fP)
-Integer setting the maximum number of stdout plus stderr bytes that can
-be captured (optional, default: 64MB). If the number of bytes exceeds
-this, capturing is stopped. The limit is per captured stream.
-.TP
-.B \fBcapture_stdout\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_FLAG\fP)
-Capture all data the process outputs to stdout and return it once the
-process ends (optional, default: no).
-.TP
-.B \fBcapture_stderr\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_FLAG\fP)
-Same as \fBcapture_stdout\fP, but for stderr.
-.TP
-.B \fBdetach\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_FLAG\fP)
-Whether to run the process in detached mode (optional, default: no). In
-this mode, the process is run in a new process session, and the command
-does not wait for the process to terminate. If neither
-\fBcapture_stdout\fP nor \fBcapture_stderr\fP have been set to true,
-the command returns immediately after the new process has been started,
-otherwise the command will read as long as the pipes are open.
-.TP
-.B \fBenv\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY[MPV_FORMAT_STRING]\fP)
-Set a list of environment variables for the new process (default: empty).
-If an empty list is passed, the environment of the mpv process is used
-instead. (Unlike the underlying OS mechanisms, the mpv command cannot
-start a process with empty environment. Fortunately, that is completely
-useless.) The format of the list is as in the \fBexecle()\fP syscall. Each
-string item defines an environment variable as in \fBNANME=VALUE\fP\&.
-.sp
-On Lua, you may use \fButils.get_env_list()\fP to retrieve the current
-environment if you e.g. simply want to add a new variable.
-.TP
-.B \fBstdin_data\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_STRING\fP)
-Feed the given string to the new process\(aq stdin. Since this is a string,
-you cannot pass arbitrary binary data. If the process terminates or
-closes the pipe before all data is written, the remaining data is
-silently discarded. Probably does not work on win32.
-.TP
-.B \fBpassthrough_stdin\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_FLAG\fP)
-If enabled, wire the new process\(aq stdin to mpv\(aqs stdin (default: no).
-Before mpv 0.33.0, this argument did not exist, but the behavior was as
-if this was set to true.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The command returns the following result (as \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP\fP):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBstatus\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_INT64\fP)
-The raw exit status of the process. It will be negative on error. The
-meaning of negative values is undefined, other than meaning error (and
-does not correspond to OS low level exit status values).
-.sp
-On Windows, it can happen that a negative return value is returned
-even if the process exits gracefully, because the win32 \fBUINT\fP exit
-code is assigned to an \fBint\fP variable before being set as \fBint64_t\fP
-field in the result map. This might be fixed later.
-.TP
-.B \fBstdout\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_BYTE_ARRAY\fP)
-Captured stdout stream, limited to \fBcapture_size\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBstderr\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_BYTE_ARRAY\fP)
-Same as \fBstdout\fP, but for stderr.
-.TP
-.B \fBerror_string\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_STRING\fP)
-Empty string if the process exited gracefully. The string \fBkilled\fP if
-the process was terminated in an unusual way. The string \fBinit\fP if the
-process could not be started.
-.sp
-On Windows, \fBkilled\fP is only returned when the process has been
-killed by mpv as a result of \fBplayback_only\fP being set to true.
-.TP
-.B \fBkilled_by_us\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_FLAG\fP)
-Whether the process has been killed by mpv, for example as a result of
-\fBplayback_only\fP being set to true, aborting the command (e.g. by
-\fBmp.abort_async_command()\fP), or if the player is about to exit.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note that the command itself will always return success as long as the
-parameters are correct. Whether the process could be spawned or whether
-it was somehow killed or returned an error status has to be queried from
-the result value.
-.sp
-This command can be asynchronously aborted via API.
-.sp
-In all cases, the subprocess will be terminated on player exit. Also see
-\fI\%Asynchronous command details\fP\&. Only the \fBrun\fP command can start
-processes in a truly detached way.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Warning"
-.sp
-Don\(aqt forget to set the \fBplayback_only\fP field if you want the command
-run while the player is in idle mode, or if you don\(aqt want that end of
-playback kills the command.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-local r = mp.command_native({
- name = "subprocess",
- playback_only = false,
- capture_stdout = true,
- args = {"cat", "/proc/cpuinfo"},
-})
-if r.status == 0 then
- print("result: " .. r.stdout)
-end
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This is a fairly useless Lua example, which demonstrates how to run
-a process in a blocking manner, and retrieving its stdout output.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBquit [<code>]\fP
-Exit the player. If an argument is given, it\(aqs used as process exit code.
-.TP
-.B \fBquit\-watch\-later [<code>]\fP
-Exit player, and store current playback position. Playing that file later
-will seek to the previous position on start. The (optional) argument is
-exactly as in the \fBquit\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-add <url> [<flags> [<title> [<lang>]]]\fP
-Load the given subtitle file or stream. By default, it is selected as
-current subtitle after loading.
-.sp
-The \fBflags\fP argument is one of the following values:
-.sp
-<select>
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Select the subtitle immediately (default).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-<auto>
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Don\(aqt select the subtitle. (Or in some special situations, let the
-default stream selection mechanism decide.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-<cached>
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Select the subtitle. If a subtitle with the same filename was already
-added, that one is selected, instead of loading a duplicate entry.
-(In this case, title/language are ignored, and if the was changed since
-it was loaded, these changes won\(aqt be reflected.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The \fBtitle\fP argument sets the track title in the UI.
-.sp
-The \fBlang\fP argument sets the track language, and can also influence
-stream selection with \fBflags\fP set to \fBauto\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-remove [<id>]\fP
-Remove the given subtitle track. If the \fBid\fP argument is missing, remove
-the current track. (Works on external subtitle files only.)
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-reload [<id>]\fP
-Reload the given subtitle tracks. If the \fBid\fP argument is missing, reload
-the current track. (Works on external subtitle files only.)
-.sp
-This works by unloading and re\-adding the subtitle track.
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-step <skip> <flags>\fP
-Change subtitle timing such, that the subtitle event after the next
-\fB<skip>\fP subtitle events is displayed. \fB<skip>\fP can be negative to step
-backwards.
-.sp
-Secondary argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B primary (default)
-Steps through the primary subtitles.
-.TP
-.B secondary
-Steps through the secondary subtitles.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-seek <skip> <flags>\fP
-Seek to the next (skip set to 1) or the previous (skip set to \-1) subtitle.
-This is similar to \fBsub\-step\fP, except that it seeks video and audio
-instead of adjusting the subtitle delay.
-.sp
-Secondary argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B primary (default)
-Seeks through the primary subtitles.
-.TP
-.B secondary
-Seeks through the secondary subtitles.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-For embedded subtitles (like with Matroska), this works only with subtitle
-events that have already been displayed, or are within a short prefetch
-range.
-.TP
-.B \fBprint\-text <text>\fP
-Print text to stdout. The string can contain properties (see
-\fI\%Property Expansion\fP). Take care to put the argument in quotes.
-.TP
-.B \fBshow\-text <text> [<duration>|\-1 [<level>]]\fP
-Show text on the OSD. The string can contain properties, which are expanded
-as described in \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&. This can be used to show playback
-time, filename, and so on.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <duration>
-The time in ms to show the message for. By default, it uses the same
-value as \fB\-\-osd\-duration\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B <level>
-The minimum OSD level to show the text at (see \fB\-\-osd\-level\fP).
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBexpand\-text <string>\fP
-Property\-expand the argument and return the expanded string. This can be
-used only through the client API or from a script using
-\fBmp.command_native\fP\&. (see \fI\%Property Expansion\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBexpand\-path "<string>"\fP
-Expand a path\(aqs double\-tilde placeholders into a platform\-specific path.
-As \fBexpand\-text\fP, this can only be used through the client API or from
-a script using \fBmp.command_native\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fBmp.osd_message(mp.command_native({"expand\-path", "~~home/"}))\fP
-.sp
-This line of Lua would show the location of the user\(aqs mpv
-configuration directory on the OSD.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBshow\-progress\fP
-Show the progress bar, the elapsed time and the total duration of the file
-on the OSD.
-.TP
-.B \fBwrite\-watch\-later\-config\fP
-Write the resume config file that the \fBquit\-watch\-later\fP command writes,
-but continue playback normally.
-.TP
-.B \fBdelete\-watch\-later\-config [<filename>]\fP
-Delete any existing resume config file that was written by
-\fBquit\-watch\-later\fP or \fBwrite\-watch\-later\-config\fP\&. If a filename is
-specified, then the deleted config is for that file; otherwise, it is the
-same one as would be written by \fBquit\-watch\-later\fP or
-\fBwrite\-watch\-later\-config\fP in the current circumstance.
-.TP
-.B \fBstop [<flags>]\fP
-Stop playback and clear playlist. With default settings, this is
-essentially like \fBquit\fP\&. Useful for the client API: playback can be
-stopped without terminating the player.
-.sp
-The first argument is optional, and supports the following flags:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B keep\-playlist
-Do not clear the playlist.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBmouse <x> <y> [<button> [<mode>]]\fP
-Send a mouse event with given coordinate (\fB<x>\fP, \fB<y>\fP).
-.sp
-Second argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <button>
-The button number of clicked mouse button. This should be one of 0\-19.
-If \fB<button>\fP is omitted, only the position will be updated.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Third argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <single> (default)
-The mouse event represents regular single click.
-.TP
-.B <double>
-The mouse event represents double\-click.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBkeypress <name>\fP
-Send a key event through mpv\(aqs input handler, triggering whatever
-behavior is configured to that key. \fBname\fP uses the \fBinput.conf\fP
-naming scheme for keys and modifiers. Useful for the client API: key events
-can be sent to libmpv to handle internally.
-.TP
-.B \fBkeydown <name>\fP
-Similar to \fBkeypress\fP, but sets the \fBKEYDOWN\fP flag so that if the key is
-bound to a repeatable command, it will be run repeatedly with mpv\(aqs key
-repeat timing until the \fBkeyup\fP command is called.
-.TP
-.B \fBkeyup [<name>]\fP
-Set the \fBKEYUP\fP flag, stopping any repeated behavior that had been
-triggered. \fBname\fP is optional. If \fBname\fP is not given or is an
-empty string, \fBKEYUP\fP will be set on all keys. Otherwise, \fBKEYUP\fP will
-only be set on the key specified by \fBname\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBkeybind <name> <command>\fP
-Binds a key to an input command. \fBcommand\fP must be a complete command
-containing all the desired arguments and flags. Both \fBname\fP and
-\fBcommand\fP use the \fBinput.conf\fP naming scheme. This is primarily
-useful for the client API.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-add <url> [<flags> [<title> [<lang>]]]\fP
-Load the given audio file. See \fBsub\-add\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-remove [<id>]\fP
-Remove the given audio track. See \fBsub\-remove\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-reload [<id>]\fP
-Reload the given audio tracks. See \fBsub\-reload\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-add <url> [<flags> [<title> [<lang> [<albumart>]]]]\fP
-Load the given video file. See \fBsub\-add\fP command for common options.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBalbumart\fP (\fBMPV_FORMAT_FLAG\fP)
-If enabled, mpv will load the given video as album art.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-remove [<id>]\fP
-Remove the given video track. See \fBsub\-remove\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-reload [<id>]\fP
-Reload the given video tracks. See \fBsub\-reload\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fBrescan\-external\-files [<mode>]\fP
-Rescan external files according to the current \fB\-\-sub\-auto\fP,
-\fB\-\-audio\-file\-auto\fP and \fB\-\-cover\-art\-auto\fP settings. This can be used
-to auto\-load external files \fIafter\fP the file was loaded.
-.sp
-The \fBmode\fP argument is one of the following:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <reselect> (default)
-Select the default audio and subtitle streams, which typically selects
-external files with the highest preference. (The implementation is not
-perfect, and could be improved on request.)
-.TP
-.B <keep\-selection>
-Do not change current track selections.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Input Commands that are Possibly Subject to Change
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBaf <operation> <value>\fP
-Change audio filter chain. See \fBvf\fP command.
-.TP
-.B \fBvf <operation> <value>\fP
-Change video filter chain.
-.sp
-The semantics are exactly the same as with option parsing (see
-\fI\%VIDEO FILTERS\fP). As such the text below is a redundant and incomplete
-summary.
-.sp
-The first argument decides what happens:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <set>
-Overwrite the previous filter chain with the new one.
-.TP
-.B <add>
-Append the new filter chain to the previous one.
-.TP
-.B <toggle>
-Check if the given filter (with the exact parameters) is already in the
-video chain. If it is, remove the filter. If it isn\(aqt, add the filter.
-(If several filters are passed to the command, this is done for
-each filter.)
-.sp
-A special variant is combining this with labels, and using \fB@name\fP
-without filter name and parameters as filter entry. This toggles the
-enable/disable flag.
-.TP
-.B <remove>
-Like \fBtoggle\fP, but always remove the given filter from the chain.
-.TP
-.B <del>
-Remove the given filters from the video chain. Unlike in the other
-cases, the second parameter is a comma separated list of filter names
-or integer indexes. \fB0\fP would denote the first filter. Negative
-indexes start from the last filter, and \fB\-1\fP denotes the last
-filter. Deprecated, use \fBremove\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B <clr>
-Remove all filters. Note that like the other sub\-commands, this does
-not control automatically inserted filters.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The argument is always needed. E.g. in case of \fBclr\fP use \fBvf clr ""\fP\&.
-.sp
-You can assign labels to filter by prefixing them with \fB@name:\fP (where
-\fBname\fP is a user\-chosen arbitrary identifier). Labels can be used to
-refer to filters by name in all of the filter chain modification commands.
-For \fBadd\fP, using an already used label will replace the existing filter.
-.sp
-The \fBvf\fP command shows the list of requested filters on the OSD after
-changing the filter chain. This is roughly equivalent to
-\fBshow\-text ${vf}\fP\&. Note that auto\-inserted filters for format conversion
-are not shown on the list, only what was requested by the user.
-.sp
-Normally, the commands will check whether the video chain is recreated
-successfully, and will undo the operation on failure. If the command is run
-before video is configured (can happen if the command is run immediately
-after opening a file and before a video frame is decoded), this check can\(aqt
-be run. Then it can happen that creating the video chain fails.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example for input.conf"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBa vf set vflip\fP turn the video upside\-down on the \fBa\fP key
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBb vf set ""\fP remove all video filters on \fBb\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBc vf toggle gradfun\fP toggle debanding on \fBc\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example how to toggle disabled filters at runtime"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-Add something like \fBvf\-add=@deband:!gradfun\fP to \fBmpv.conf\fP\&.
-The \fB@deband:\fP is the label, an arbitrary, user\-given name for this
-filter entry. The \fB!\fP before the filter name disables the filter by
-default. Everything after this is the normal filter name and possibly
-filter parameters, like in the normal \fB\-\-vf\fP syntax.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Add \fBa vf toggle @deband\fP to \fBinput.conf\fP\&. This toggles the
-"disabled" flag for the filter with the label \fBdeband\fP when the
-\fBa\fP key is hit.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBcycle\-values [<"!reverse">] <property> <value1> [<value2> [...]]\fP
-Cycle through a list of values. Each invocation of the command will set the
-given property to the next value in the list. The command will use the
-current value of the property/option, and use it to determine the current
-position in the list of values. Once it has found it, it will set the
-next value in the list (wrapping around to the first item if needed).
-.sp
-This command has a variable number of arguments, and cannot be used with
-named arguments.
-.sp
-The special argument \fB!reverse\fP can be used to cycle the value list in
-reverse. The only advantage is that you don\(aqt need to reverse the value
-list yourself when adding a second key binding for cycling backwards.
-.TP
-.B \fBenable\-section <name> [<flags>]\fP
-This command is deprecated, except for mpv\-internal uses.
-.sp
-Enable all key bindings in the named input section.
-.sp
-The enabled input sections form a stack. Bindings in sections on the top of
-the stack are preferred to lower sections. This command puts the section
-on top of the stack. If the section was already on the stack, it is
-implicitly removed beforehand. (A section cannot be on the stack more than
-once.)
-.sp
-The \fBflags\fP parameter can be a combination (separated by \fB+\fP) of the
-following flags:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <exclusive>
-All sections enabled before the newly enabled section are disabled.
-They will be re\-enabled as soon as all exclusive sections above them
-are removed. In other words, the new section shadows all previous
-sections.
-.TP
-.B <allow\-hide\-cursor>
-This feature can\(aqt be used through the public API.
-.TP
-.B <allow\-vo\-dragging>
-Same.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBdisable\-section <name>\fP
-This command is deprecated, except for mpv\-internal uses.
-.sp
-Disable the named input section. Undoes \fBenable\-section\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBdefine\-section <name> <contents> [<flags>]\fP
-This command is deprecated, except for mpv\-internal uses.
-.sp
-Create a named input section, or replace the contents of an already existing
-input section. The \fBcontents\fP parameter uses the same syntax as the
-\fBinput.conf\fP file (except that using the section syntax in it is not
-allowed), including the need to separate bindings with a newline character.
-.sp
-If the \fBcontents\fP parameter is an empty string, the section is removed.
-.sp
-The section with the name \fBdefault\fP is the normal input section.
-.sp
-In general, input sections have to be enabled with the \fBenable\-section\fP
-command, or they are ignored.
-.sp
-The last parameter has the following meaning:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B <default> (also used if parameter omitted)
-Use a key binding defined by this section only if the user hasn\(aqt
-already bound this key to a command.
-.TP
-.B <force>
-Always bind a key. (The input section that was made active most recently
-wins if there are ambiguities.)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This command can be used to dispatch arbitrary keys to a script or a client
-API user. If the input section defines \fBscript\-binding\fP commands, it is
-also possible to get separate events on key up/down, and relatively detailed
-information about the key state. The special key name \fBunmapped\fP can be
-used to match any unmapped key.
-.TP
-.B \fBoverlay\-add <id> <x> <y> <file> <offset> <fmt> <w> <h> <stride>\fP
-Add an OSD overlay sourced from raw data. This might be useful for scripts
-and applications controlling mpv, and which want to display things on top
-of the video window.
-.sp
-Overlays are usually displayed in screen resolution, but with some VOs,
-the resolution is reduced to that of the video\(aqs. You can read the
-\fBosd\-width\fP and \fBosd\-height\fP properties. At least with \fB\-\-vo\-xv\fP and
-anamorphic video (such as DVD), \fBosd\-par\fP should be read as well, and the
-overlay should be aspect\-compensated.
-.sp
-This has the following named arguments. The order of them is not guaranteed,
-so you should always call them with named arguments, see \fI\%Named arguments\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBid\fP is an integer between 0 and 63 identifying the overlay element. The
-ID can be used to add multiple overlay parts, update a part by using this
-command with an already existing ID, or to remove a part with
-\fBoverlay\-remove\fP\&. Using a previously unused ID will add a new overlay,
-while reusing an ID will update it.
-.sp
-\fBx\fP and \fBy\fP specify the position where the OSD should be displayed.
-.sp
-\fBfile\fP specifies the file the raw image data is read from. It can be
-either a numeric UNIX file descriptor prefixed with \fB@\fP (e.g. \fB@4\fP),
-or a filename. The file will be mapped into memory with \fBmmap()\fP,
-copied, and unmapped before the command returns (changed in mpv 0.18.1).
-.sp
-It is also possible to pass a raw memory address for use as bitmap memory
-by passing a memory address as integer prefixed with an \fB&\fP character.
-Passing the wrong thing here will crash the player. This mode might be
-useful for use with libmpv. The \fBoffset\fP parameter is simply added to the
-memory address (since mpv 0.8.0, ignored before).
-.sp
-\fBoffset\fP is the byte offset of the first pixel in the source file.
-(The current implementation always mmap\(aqs the whole file from position 0 to
-the end of the image, so large offsets should be avoided. Before mpv 0.8.0,
-the offset was actually passed directly to \fBmmap\fP, but it was changed to
-make using it easier.)
-.sp
-\fBfmt\fP is a string identifying the image format. Currently, only \fBbgra\fP
-is defined. This format has 4 bytes per pixels, with 8 bits per component.
-The least significant 8 bits are blue, and the most significant 8 bits
-are alpha (in little endian, the components are B\-G\-R\-A, with B as first
-byte). This uses premultiplied alpha: every color component is already
-multiplied with the alpha component. This means the numeric value of each
-component is equal to or smaller than the alpha component. (Violating this
-rule will lead to different results with different VOs: numeric overflows
-resulting from blending broken alpha values is considered something that
-shouldn\(aqt happen, and consequently implementations don\(aqt ensure that you
-get predictable behavior in this case.)
-.sp
-\fBw\fP, \fBh\fP, and \fBstride\fP specify the size of the overlay. \fBw\fP is the
-visible width of the overlay, while \fBstride\fP gives the width in bytes in
-memory. In the simple case, and with the \fBbgra\fP format, \fBstride==4*w\fP\&.
-In general, the total amount of memory accessed is \fBstride * h\fP\&.
-(Technically, the minimum size would be \fBstride * (h \- 1) + w * 4\fP, but
-for simplicity, the player will access all \fBstride * h\fP bytes.)
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Before mpv 0.18.1, you had to do manual "double buffering" when updating
-an overlay by replacing it with a different memory buffer. Since mpv
-0.18.1, the memory is simply copied and doesn\(aqt reference any of the
-memory indicated by the command\(aqs arguments after the commend returns.
-If you want to use this command before mpv 0.18.1, reads the old docs
-to see how to handle this correctly.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBoverlay\-remove <id>\fP
-Remove an overlay added with \fBoverlay\-add\fP and the same ID. Does nothing
-if no overlay with this ID exists.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-overlay\fP
-Add/update/remove an OSD overlay.
-.sp
-(Although this sounds similar to \fBoverlay\-add\fP, \fBosd\-overlay\fP is for
-text overlays, while \fBoverlay\-add\fP is for bitmaps. Maybe \fBoverlay\-add\fP
-will be merged into \fBosd\-overlay\fP to remove this oddity.)
-.sp
-You can use this to add text overlays in ASS format. ASS has advanced
-positioning and rendering tags, which can be used to render almost any kind
-of vector graphics.
-.sp
-This command accepts the following parameters:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBid\fP
-Arbitrary integer that identifies the overlay. Multiple overlays can be
-added by calling this command with different \fBid\fP parameters. Calling
-this command with the same \fBid\fP replaces the previously set overlay.
-.sp
-There is a separate namespace for each libmpv client (i.e. IPC
-connection, script), so IDs can be made up and assigned by the API user
-without conflicting with other API users.
-.sp
-If the libmpv client is destroyed, all overlays associated with it are
-also deleted. In particular, connecting via \fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server\fP,
-adding an overlay, and disconnecting will remove the overlay immediately
-again.
-.TP
-.B \fBformat\fP
-String that gives the type of the overlay. Accepts the following values
-(HTML rendering of this is broken, view the generated manpage instead,
-or the raw RST source):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBass\-events\fP
-The \fBdata\fP parameter is a string. The string is split on the
-newline character. Every line is turned into the \fBText\fP part of
-a \fBDialogue\fP ASS event. Timing is unused (but behavior of timing
-dependent ASS tags may change in future mpv versions).
-.sp
-Note that it\(aqs better to put multiple lines into \fBdata\fP, instead
-of adding multiple OSD overlays.
-.sp
-This provides 2 ASS \fBStyles\fP\&. \fBOSD\fP contains the text style as
-defined by the current \fB\-\-osd\-...\fP options. \fBDefault\fP is
-similar, and contains style that \fBOSD\fP would have if all options
-were set to the default.
-.sp
-In addition, the \fBres_x\fP and \fBres_y\fP options specify the value
-of the ASS \fBPlayResX\fP and \fBPlayResY\fP header fields. If \fBres_y\fP
-is set to 0, \fBPlayResY\fP is initialized to an arbitrary default
-value (but note that the default for this command is 720, not 0).
-If \fBres_x\fP is set to 0, \fBPlayResX\fP is set based on \fBres_y\fP
-such that a virtual ASS pixel has a square pixel aspect ratio.
-.TP
-.B \fBnone\fP
-Special value that causes the overlay to be removed. Most parameters
-other than \fBid\fP and \fBformat\fP are mostly ignored.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBdata\fP
-String defining the overlay contents according to the \fBformat\fP
-parameter.
-.TP
-.B \fBres_x\fP, \fBres_y\fP
-Used if \fBformat\fP is set to \fBass\-events\fP (see description there).
-Optional, defaults to 0/720.
-.TP
-.B \fBz\fP
-The Z order of the overlay. Optional, defaults to 0.
-.sp
-Note that Z order between different overlays of different formats is
-static, and cannot be changed (currently, this means that bitmap
-overlays added by \fBoverlay\-add\fP are always on top of the ASS overlays
-added by \fBosd\-overlay\fP). In addition, the builtin OSD components are
-always below any of the custom OSD. (This includes subtitles of any kind
-as well as text rendered by \fBshow\-text\fP\&.)
-.sp
-It\(aqs possible that future mpv versions will randomly change how Z order
-between different OSD formats and builtin OSD is handled.
-.TP
-.B \fBhidden\fP
-If set to true, do not display this (default: false).
-.TP
-.B \fBcompute_bounds\fP
-If set to true, attempt to determine bounds and write them to the
-command\(aqs result value as \fBx0\fP, \fBx1\fP, \fBy0\fP, \fBy1\fP rectangle
-(default: false). If the rectangle is empty, not known, or somehow
-degenerate, it is not set. \fBx1\fP/\fBy1\fP is the coordinate of the
-bottom exclusive corner of the rectangle.
-.sp
-The result value may depend on the VO window size, and is based on the
-last known window size at the time of the call. This means the results
-may be different from what is actually rendered.
-.sp
-For \fBass\-events\fP, the result rectangle is recomputed to \fBPlayRes\fP
-coordinates (\fBres_x\fP/\fBres_y\fP). If window size is not known, a
-fallback is chosen.
-.sp
-You should be aware that this mechanism is very inefficient, as it
-renders the full result, and then uses the bounding box of the rendered
-bitmap list (even if \fBhidden\fP is set). It will flush various caches.
-Its results also depend on the used libass version.
-.sp
-This feature is experimental, and may change in some way again.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Always use named arguments (\fBmpv_command_node()\fP). Lua scripts should
-use the \fBmp.create_osd_overlay()\fP helper instead of invoking this
-command directly.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBscript\-message [<arg1> [<arg2> [...]]]\fP
-Send a message to all clients, and pass it the following list of arguments.
-What this message means, how many arguments it takes, and what the arguments
-mean is fully up to the receiver and the sender. Every client receives the
-message, so be careful about name clashes (or use \fBscript\-message\-to\fP).
-.sp
-This command has a variable number of arguments, and cannot be used with
-named arguments.
-.TP
-.B \fBscript\-message\-to <target> [<arg1> [<arg2> [...]]]\fP
-Same as \fBscript\-message\fP, but send it only to the client named
-\fB<target>\fP\&. Each client (scripts etc.) has a unique name. For example,
-Lua scripts can get their name via \fBmp.get_script_name()\fP\&. Note that
-client names only consist of alphanumeric characters and \fB_\fP\&.
-.sp
-This command has a variable number of arguments, and cannot be used with
-named arguments.
-.TP
-.B \fBscript\-binding <name>\fP
-Invoke a script\-provided key binding. This can be used to remap key
-bindings provided by external Lua scripts.
-.sp
-The argument is the name of the binding.
-.sp
-It can optionally be prefixed with the name of the script, using \fB/\fP as
-separator, e.g. \fBscript\-binding scriptname/bindingname\fP\&. Note that script
-names only consist of alphanumeric characters and \fB_\fP\&.
-.sp
-For completeness, here is how this command works internally. The details
-could change any time. On any matching key event, \fBscript\-message\-to\fP
-or \fBscript\-message\fP is called (depending on whether the script name is
-included), with the following arguments:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP 1. 3
-The string \fBkey\-binding\fP\&.
-.IP 2. 3
-The name of the binding (as established above).
-.IP 3. 3
-The key state as string (see below).
-.IP 4. 3
-The key name (since mpv 0.15.0).
-.IP 5. 3
-The text the key would produce, or empty string if not applicable.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The 5th argument is only set if no modifiers are present (using the shift
-key with a letter is normally not emitted as having a modifier, and results
-in upper case text instead, but some backends may mess up).
-.sp
-The key state consists of 2 characters:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP 1. 3
-One of \fBd\fP (key was pressed down), \fBu\fP (was released), \fBr\fP (key
-is still down, and was repeated; only if key repeat is enabled for this
-binding), \fBp\fP (key was pressed; happens if up/down can\(aqt be tracked).
-.IP 2. 3
-Whether the event originates from the mouse, either \fBm\fP (mouse button)
-or \fB\-\fP (something else).
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Future versions can add more arguments and more key state characters to
-support more input peculiarities.
-.TP
-.B \fBab\-loop\fP
-Cycle through A\-B loop states. The first command will set the \fBA\fP point
-(the \fBab\-loop\-a\fP property); the second the \fBB\fP point, and the third
-will clear both points.
-.TP
-.B \fBdrop\-buffers\fP
-Drop audio/video/demuxer buffers, and restart from fresh. Might help with
-unseekable streams that are going out of sync.
-This command might be changed or removed in the future.
-.TP
-.B \fBscreenshot\-raw [<flags>]\fP
-Return a screenshot in memory. This can be used only through the client
-API. The MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP returned by this command has the \fBw\fP, \fBh\fP,
-\fBstride\fP fields set to obvious contents. The \fBformat\fP field is set to
-\fBbgr0\fP by default. This format is organized as \fBB8G8R8X8\fP (where \fBB\fP
-is the LSB). The contents of the padding \fBX\fP are undefined. The \fBdata\fP
-field is of type MPV_FORMAT_BYTE_ARRAY with the actual image data. The image
-is freed as soon as the result mpv_node is freed. As usual with client API
-semantics, you are not allowed to write to the image data.
-.sp
-The \fBstride\fP is the number of bytes from a pixel at \fB(x0, y0)\fP to the
-pixel at \fB(x0, y0 + 1)\fP\&. This can be larger than \fBw * 4\fP if the image
-was cropped, or if there is padding. This number can be negative as well.
-You access a pixel with \fBbyte_index = y * stride + x * 4\fP (assuming the
-\fBbgr0\fP format).
-.sp
-The \fBflags\fP argument is like the first argument to \fBscreenshot\fP and
-supports \fBsubtitles\fP, \fBvideo\fP, \fBwindow\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBvf\-command <label> <command> <argument>\fP
-Send a command to the filter with the given \fB<label>\fP\&. Use \fBall\fP to send
-it to all filters at once. The command and argument string is filter
-specific. Currently, this only works with the \fBlavfi\fP filter \- see
-the libavfilter documentation for which commands a filter supports.
-.sp
-Note that the \fB<label>\fP is a mpv filter label, not a libavfilter filter
-name.
-.TP
-.B \fBaf\-command <label> <command> <argument>\fP
-Same as \fBvf\-command\fP, but for audio filters.
-.TP
-.B \fBapply\-profile <name> [<mode>]\fP
-Apply the contents of a named profile. This is like using \fBprofile=name\fP
-in a config file, except you can map it to a key binding to change it at
-runtime.
-.sp
-The mode argument:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBdefault\fP
-Apply the profile. Default if the argument is omitted.
-.TP
-.B \fBrestore\fP
-Restore options set by a previous \fBapply\-profile\fP command for this
-profile. Only works if the profile has \fBprofile\-restore\fP set to a
-relevant mode. Prints a warning if nothing could be done. See
-\fI\%Runtime profiles\fP for details.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBload\-script <filename>\fP
-Load a script, similar to the \fB\-\-script\fP option. Whether this waits for
-the script to finish initialization or not changed multiple times, and the
-future behavior is left undefined.
-.sp
-On success, returns a \fBmpv_node\fP with a \fBclient_id\fP field set to the
-return value of the \fBmpv_client_id()\fP API call of the newly created script
-handle.
-.TP
-.B \fBchange\-list <name> <operation> <value>\fP
-This command changes list options as described in \fI\%List Options\fP\&. The
-\fB<name>\fP parameter is the normal option name, while \fB<operation>\fP is
-the suffix or action used on the option.
-.sp
-Some operations take no value, but the command still requires the value
-parameter. In these cases, the value must be an empty string.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-\fBchange\-list glsl\-shaders append file.glsl\fP
-.sp
-Add a filename to the \fBglsl\-shaders\fP list. The command line
-equivalent is \fB\-\-glsl\-shaders\-append=file.glsl\fP or alternatively
-\fB\-\-glsl\-shader=file.glsl\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBdump\-cache <start> <end> <filename>\fP
-Dump the current cache to the given filename. The \fB<filename>\fP file is
-overwritten if it already exists. \fB<start>\fP and \fB<end>\fP give the
-time range of what to dump. If no data is cached at the given time range,
-nothing may be dumped (creating a file with no packets).
-.sp
-Dumping a larger part of the cache will freeze the player. No effort was
-made to fix this, as this feature was meant mostly for creating small
-excerpts.
-.sp
-See \fB\-\-stream\-record\fP for various caveats that mostly apply to this
-command too, as both use the same underlying code for writing the output
-file.
-.sp
-If \fB<filename>\fP is an empty string, an ongoing \fBdump\-cache\fP is stopped.
-.sp
-If \fB<end>\fP is \fBno\fP, then continuous dumping is enabled. Then, after
-dumping the existing parts of the cache, anything read from network is
-appended to the cache as well. This behaves similar to \fB\-\-stream\-record\fP
-(although it does not conflict with that option, and they can be both active
-at the same time).
-.sp
-If the \fB<end>\fP time is after the cache, the command will _not_ wait and
-write newly received data to it.
-.sp
-The end of the resulting file may be slightly damaged or incomplete at the
-end. (Not enough effort was made to ensure that the end lines up properly.)
-.sp
-Note that this command will finish only once dumping ends. That means it
-works similar to the \fBscreenshot\fP command, just that it can block much
-longer. If continuous dumping is used, the command will not finish until
-playback is stopped, an error happens, another \fBdump\-cache\fP command is
-run, or an API like \fBmp.abort_async_command\fP was called to explicitly stop
-the command. See \fI\%Synchronous vs. Asynchronous\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This was mostly created for network streams. For local files, there may
-be much better methods to create excerpts and such. There are tons of
-much more user\-friendly Lua scripts, that will reencode parts of a file
-by spawning a separate instance of \fBffmpeg\fP\&. With network streams,
-this is not that easily possible, as the stream would have to be
-downloaded again. Even if \fB\-\-stream\-record\fP is used to record the
-stream to the local filesystem, there may be problems, because the
-recorded file is still written to.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This command is experimental, and all details about it may change in the
-future.
-.TP
-.B \fBab\-loop\-dump\-cache <filename>\fP
-Essentially calls \fBdump\-cache\fP with the current AB\-loop points as
-arguments. Like \fBdump\-cache\fP, this will overwrite the file at
-\fB<filename>\fP\&. Likewise, if the B point is set to \fBno\fP, it will enter
-continuous dumping after the existing cache was dumped.
-.sp
-The author reserves the right to remove this command if enough motivation
-is found to move this functionality to a trivial Lua script.
-.TP
-.B \fBab\-loop\-align\-cache\fP
-Re\-adjust the A/B loop points to the start and end within the cache the
-\fBab\-loop\-dump\-cache\fP command will (probably) dump. Basically, it aligns
-the times on keyframes. The guess might be off especially at the end (due to
-granularity issues due to remuxing). If the cache shrinks in the meantime,
-the points set by the command will not be the effective parameters either.
-.sp
-This command has an even more uncertain future than \fBab\-loop\-dump\-cache\fP
-and might disappear without replacement if the author decides it\(aqs useless.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Undocumented commands: \fBao\-reload\fP (experimental/internal).
-.SS List of events
-.sp
-This is a partial list of events. This section describes what
-\fBmpv_event_to_node()\fP returns, and which is what scripting APIs and the JSON
-IPC sees. Note that the C API has separate C\-level declarations with
-\fBmpv_event\fP, which may be slightly different.
-.sp
-Note that events are asynchronous: the player core continues running while
-events are delivered to scripts and other clients. In some cases, you can hooks
-to enforce synchronous execution.
-.sp
-All events can have the following fields:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBevent\fP
-Name as the event (as returned by \fBmpv_event_name()\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBid\fP
-The \fBreply_userdata\fP field (opaque user value). If \fBreply_userdata\fP is 0,
-the field is not added.
-.TP
-.B \fBerror\fP
-Set to an error string (as returned by \fBmpv_error_string()\fP). This field
-is missing if no error happened, or the event type does not report error.
-Most events leave this unset.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This list uses the event name field value, and the C API symbol in brackets:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBstart\-file\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_START_FILE\fP)
-Happens right before a new file is loaded. When you receive this, the
-player is loading the file (or possibly already done with it).
-.sp
-This has the following fields:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist_entry_id\fP
-Playlist entry ID of the file being loaded now.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBend\-file\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_END_FILE\fP)
-Happens after a file was unloaded. Typically, the player will load the
-next file right away, or quit if this was the last file.
-.sp
-The event has the following fields:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBreason\fP
-Has one of these values:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBeof\fP
-The file has ended. This can (but doesn\(aqt have to) include
-incomplete files or broken network connections under
-circumstances.
-.TP
-.B \fBstop\fP
-Playback was ended by a command.
-.TP
-.B \fBquit\fP
-Playback was ended by sending the quit command.
-.TP
-.B \fBerror\fP
-An error happened. In this case, an \fBerror\fP field is present with
-the error string.
-.TP
-.B \fBredirect\fP
-Happens with playlists and similar. Details see
-\fBMPV_END_FILE_REASON_REDIRECT\fP in the C API.
-.TP
-.B \fBunknown\fP
-Unknown. Normally doesn\(aqt happen, unless the Lua API is out of sync
-with the C API. (Likewise, it could happen that your script gets
-reason strings that did not exist yet at the time your script was
-written.)
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist_entry_id\fP
-Playlist entry ID of the file that was being played or attempted to be
-played. This has the same value as the \fBplaylist_entry_id\fP field in the
-corresponding \fBstart\-file\fP event.
-.TP
-.B \fBfile_error\fP
-Set to mpv error string describing the approximate reason why playback
-failed. Unset if no error known. (In Lua scripting, this value was set
-on the \fBerror\fP field directly. This is deprecated since mpv 0.33.0.
-In the future, this \fBerror\fP field will be unset for this specific
-event.)
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist_insert_id\fP
-If loading ended, because the playlist entry to be played was for example
-a playlist, and the current playlist entry is replaced with a number of
-other entries. This may happen at least with MPV_END_FILE_REASON_REDIRECT
-(other event types may use this for similar but different purposes in the
-future). In this case, playlist_insert_id will be set to the playlist
-entry ID of the first inserted entry, and playlist_insert_num_entries to
-the total number of inserted playlist entries. Note this in this specific
-case, the ID of the last inserted entry is playlist_insert_id+num\-1.
-Beware that depending on circumstances, you may observe the new playlist
-entries before seeing the event (e.g. reading the "playlist" property or
-getting a property change notification before receiving the event).
-If this is 0 in the C API, this field isn\(aqt added.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist_insert_num_entries\fP
-See playlist_insert_id. Only present if playlist_insert_id is present.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBfile\-loaded\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_FILE_LOADED\fP)
-Happens after a file was loaded and begins playback.
-.TP
-.B \fBseek\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_SEEK\fP)
-Happens on seeking. (This might include cases when the player seeks
-internally, even without user interaction. This includes e.g. segment
-changes when playing ordered chapters Matroska files.)
-.TP
-.B \fBplayback\-restart\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_PLAYBACK_RESTART\fP)
-Start of playback after seek or after file was loaded.
-.TP
-.B \fBshutdown\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_SHUTDOWN\fP)
-Sent when the player quits, and the script should terminate. Normally
-handled automatically. See \fI\%Details on the script initialization and lifecycle\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBlog\-message\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_LOG_MESSAGE\fP)
-Receives messages enabled with \fBmpv_request_log_messages()\fP (Lua:
-\fBmp.enable_messages\fP).
-.sp
-This contains, in addition to the default event fields, the following
-fields:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBprefix\fP
-The module prefix, identifies the sender of the message. This is what
-the terminal player puts in front of the message text when using the
-\fB\-\-v\fP option, and is also what is used for \fB\-\-msg\-level\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBlevel\fP
-The log level as string. See \fBmsg.log\fP for possible log level names.
-Note that later versions of mpv might add new levels or remove
-(undocumented) existing ones.
-.TP
-.B \fBtext\fP
-The log message. The text will end with a newline character. Sometimes
-it can contain multiple lines.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Keep in mind that these messages are meant to be hints for humans. You
-should not parse them, and prefix/level/text of messages might change
-any time.
-.TP
-.B \fBhook\fP
-The event has the following fields:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBhook_id\fP
-ID to pass to \fBmpv_hook_continue()\fP\&. The Lua scripting wrapper
-provides a better API around this with \fBmp.add_hook()\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBget\-property\-reply\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_GET_PROPERTY_REPLY\fP)
-See C API.
-.TP
-.B \fBset\-property\-reply\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_SET_PROPERTY_REPLY\fP)
-See C API.
-.TP
-.B \fBcommand\-reply\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_COMMAND_REPLY\fP)
-This is one of the commands for which the \fB\(gaerror\fP field is meaningful.
-.sp
-JSON IPC and Lua and possibly other backends treat this specially and may
-not pass the actual event to the user. See C API.
-.sp
-The event has the following fields:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBresult\fP
-The result (on success) of any \fBmpv_node\fP type, if any.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBclient\-message\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_CLIENT_MESSAGE\fP)
-Lua and possibly other backends treat this specially and may not pass the
-actual event to the user.
-.sp
-The event has the following fields:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBargs\fP
-Array of strings with the message data.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-reconfig\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_VIDEO_RECONFIG\fP)
-Happens on video output or filter reconfig.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-reconfig\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_AUDIO_RECONFIG\fP)
-Happens on audio output or filter reconfig.
-.TP
-.B \fBproperty\-change\fP (\fBMPV_EVENT_PROPERTY_CHANGE\fP)
-Happens when a property that is being observed changes value.
-.sp
-The event has the following fields:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBname\fP
-The name of the property.
-.TP
-.B \fBdata\fP
-The new value of the property.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The following events also happen, but are deprecated: \fBtracks\-changed\fP,
-\fBtrack\-switched\fP, \fBpause\fP, \fBunpause\fP, \fBmetadata\-update\fP, \fBidle\fP,
-\fBtick\fP, \fBchapter\-change\fP\&. Use \fBmpv_observe_property()\fP
-(Lua: \fBmp.observe_property()\fP) instead.
-.SS Hooks
-.sp
-Hooks are synchronous events between player core and a script or similar. This
-applies to client API (including the Lua scripting interface). Normally,
-events are supposed to be asynchronous, and the hook API provides an awkward
-and obscure way to handle events that require stricter coordination. There are
-no API stability guarantees made. Not following the protocol exactly can make
-the player freeze randomly. Basically, nobody should use this API.
-.sp
-The C API is described in the header files. The Lua API is described in the
-Lua section.
-.sp
-Before a hook is actually invoked on an API clients, it will attempt to return
-new values for all observed properties that were changed before the hook. This
-may make it easier for an application to set defined "barriers" between property
-change notifications by registering hooks. (That means these hooks will have an
-effect, even if you do nothing and make them continue immediately.)
-.sp
-The following hooks are currently defined:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBon_load\fP
-Called when a file is to be opened, before anything is actually done.
-For example, you could read and write the \fBstream\-open\-filename\fP
-property to redirect an URL to something else (consider support for
-streaming sites which rarely give the user a direct media URL), or
-you could set per\-file options with by setting the property
-\fBfile\-local\-options/<option name>\fP\&. The player will wait until all
-hooks are run.
-.sp
-Ordered after \fBstart\-file\fP and before \fBplayback\-restart\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBon_load_fail\fP
-Called after after a file has been opened, but failed to. This can be
-used to provide a fallback in case native demuxers failed to recognize
-the file, instead of always running before the native demuxers like
-\fBon_load\fP\&. Demux will only be retried if \fBstream\-open\-filename\fP
-was changed. If it fails again, this hook is _not_ called again, and
-loading definitely fails.
-.sp
-Ordered after \fBon_load\fP, and before \fBplayback\-restart\fP and \fBend\-file\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBon_preloaded\fP
-Called after a file has been opened, and before tracks are selected and
-decoders are created. This has some usefulness if an API users wants
-to select tracks manually, based on the set of available tracks. It\(aqs
-also useful to initialize \fB\-\-lavfi\-complex\fP in a specific way by API,
-without having to "probe" the available streams at first.
-.sp
-Note that this does not yet apply default track selection. Which operations
-exactly can be done and not be done, and what information is available and
-what is not yet available yet, is all subject to change.
-.sp
-Ordered after \fBon_load_fail\fP etc. and before \fBplayback\-restart\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBon_unload\fP
-Run before closing a file, and before actually uninitializing
-everything. It\(aqs not possible to resume playback in this state.
-.sp
-Ordered before \fBend\-file\fP\&. Will also happen in the error case (then after
-\fBon_load_fail\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBon_before_start_file\fP
-Run before a \fBstart\-file\fP event is sent. (If any client changes the
-current playlist entry, or sends a quit command to the player, the
-corresponding event will not actually happen after the hook returns.)
-Useful to drain property changes before a new file is loaded.
-.TP
-.B \fBon_after_end_file\fP
-Run after an \fBend\-file\fP event. Useful to drain property changes after a
-file has finished.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Input Command Prefixes
-.sp
-These prefixes are placed between key name and the actual command. Multiple
-prefixes can be specified. They are separated by whitespace.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-auto\fP
-Use the default behavior for this command. This is the default for
-\fBinput.conf\fP commands. Some libmpv/scripting/IPC APIs do not use this as
-default, but use \fBno\-osd\fP instead.
-.TP
-.B \fBno\-osd\fP
-Do not use any OSD for this command.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-bar\fP
-If possible, show a bar with this command. Seek commands will show the
-progress bar, property changing commands may show the newly set value.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-msg\fP
-If possible, show an OSD message with this command. Seek command show
-the current playback time, property changing commands show the newly set
-value as text.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-msg\-bar\fP
-Combine osd\-bar and osd\-msg.
-.TP
-.B \fBraw\fP
-Do not expand properties in string arguments. (Like \fB"${property\-name}"\fP\&.)
-This is the default for some libmpv/scripting/IPC APIs.
-.TP
-.B \fBexpand\-properties\fP
-All string arguments are expanded as described in \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.
-This is the default for \fBinput.conf\fP commands.
-.TP
-.B \fBrepeatable\fP
-For some commands, keeping a key pressed doesn\(aqt run the command repeatedly.
-This prefix forces enabling key repeat in any case. For a list of commands:
-the first command determines the repeatability of the whole list (up to and
-including version 0.33 \- a list was always repeatable).
-.TP
-.B \fBasync\fP
-Allow asynchronous execution (if possible). Note that only a few commands
-will support this (usually this is explicitly documented). Some commands
-are asynchronous by default (or rather, their effects might manifest
-after completion of the command). The semantics of this flag might change
-in the future. Set it only if you don\(aqt rely on the effects of this command
-being fully realized when it returns. See \fI\%Synchronous vs. Asynchronous\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBsync\fP
-Allow synchronous execution (if possible). Normally, all commands are
-synchronous by default, but some are asynchronous by default for
-compatibility with older behavior.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-All of the osd prefixes are still overridden by the global \fB\-\-osd\-level\fP
-settings.
-.SS Synchronous vs. Asynchronous
-.sp
-The \fBasync\fP and \fBsync\fP prefix matter only for how the issuer of the command
-waits on the completion of the command. Normally it does not affect how the
-command behaves by itself. There are the following cases:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-Normal input.conf commands are always run asynchronously. Slow running
-commands are queued up or run in parallel.
-.IP \(bu 2
-"Multi" input.conf commands (1 key binding, concatenated with \fB;\fP) will be
-executed in order, except for commands that are async (either prefixed with
-\fBasync\fP, or async by default for some commands). The async commands are
-run in a detached manner, possibly in parallel to the remaining sync commands
-in the list.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Normal Lua and libmpv commands (e.g. \fBmpv_command()\fP) are run in a blocking
-manner, unless the \fBasync\fP prefix is used, or the command is async by
-default. This means in the sync case the caller will block, even if the core
-continues playback. Async mode runs the command in a detached manner.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Async libmpv command API (e.g. \fBmpv_command_async()\fP) never blocks the
-caller, and always notify their completion with a message. The \fBsync\fP and
-\fBasync\fP prefixes make no difference.
-.IP \(bu 2
-Lua also provides APIs for running async commands, which behave similar to the
-C counterparts.
-.IP \(bu 2
-In all cases, async mode can still run commands in a synchronous manner, even
-in detached mode. This can for example happen in cases when a command does not
-have an asynchronous implementation. The async libmpv API still never blocks
-the caller in these cases.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Before mpv 0.29.0, the \fBasync\fP prefix was only used by screenshot commands,
-and made them run the file saving code in a detached manner. This is the
-default now, and \fBasync\fP changes behavior only in the ways mentioned above.
-.sp
-Currently the following commands have different waiting characteristics with
-sync vs. async: sub\-add, audio\-add, sub\-reload, audio\-reload,
-rescan\-external\-files, screenshot, screenshot\-to\-file, dump\-cache,
-ab\-loop\-dump\-cache.
-.SS Asynchronous command details
-.sp
-On the API level, every asynchronous command is bound to the context which
-started it. For example, an asynchronous command started by \fBmpv_command_async\fP
-is bound to the \fBmpv_handle\fP passed to the function. Only this \fBmpv_handle\fP
-receives the completion notification (\fBMPV_EVENT_COMMAND_REPLY\fP), and only
-this handle can abort a still running command directly. If the \fBmpv_handle\fP is
-destroyed, any still running async. commands started by it are terminated.
-.sp
-The scripting APIs and JSON IPC give each script/connection its own implicit
-\fBmpv_handle\fP\&.
-.sp
-If the player is closed, the core may abort all pending async. commands on its
-own (like a forced \fBmpv_abort_async_command()\fP call for each pending command
-on behalf of the API user). This happens at the same time \fBMPV_EVENT_SHUTDOWN\fP
-is sent, and there is no way to prevent this.
-.SS Input Sections
-.sp
-Input sections group a set of bindings, and enable or disable them at once.
-In \fBinput.conf\fP, each key binding is assigned to an input section, rather
-than actually having explicit text sections.
-.sp
-See also: \fBenable\-section\fP and \fBdisable\-section\fP commands.
-.sp
-Predefined bindings:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBdefault\fP
-Bindings without input section are implicitly assigned to this section. It
-is enabled by default during normal playback.
-.TP
-.B \fBencode\fP
-Section which is active in encoding mode. It is enabled exclusively, so
-that bindings in the \fBdefault\fP sections are ignored.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Properties
-.sp
-Properties are used to set mpv options during runtime, or to query arbitrary
-information. They can be manipulated with the \fBset\fP/\fBadd\fP/\fBcycle\fP
-commands, and retrieved with \fBshow\-text\fP, or anything else that uses property
-expansion. (See \fI\%Property Expansion\fP\&.)
-.sp
-The property name is annotated with RW to indicate whether the property is
-generally writable.
-.sp
-If an option is referenced, the property will normally take/return exactly the
-same values as the option. In these cases, properties are merely a way to change
-an option at runtime.
-.SS Property list
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-Most options can be set as runtime via properties as well. Just remove the
-leading \fB\-\-\fP from the option name. These are not documented below, see
-\fI\%OPTIONS\fP instead. Only properties which do not exist as option with the
-same name, or which have very different behavior from the options are
-documented below.
-.sp
-Properties marked as (RW) are writeable, while those that aren\(aqt are
-read\-only.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-speed\-correction\fP, \fBvideo\-speed\-correction\fP
-Factor multiplied with \fBspeed\fP at which the player attempts to play the
-file. Usually it\(aqs exactly 1. (Display sync mode will make this useful.)
-.sp
-OSD formatting will display it in the form of \fB+1.23456%\fP, with the number
-being \fB(raw \- 1) * 100\fP for the given raw property value.
-.TP
-.B \fBdisplay\-sync\-active\fP
-Whether \fB\-\-video\-sync=display\fP is actually active.
-.TP
-.B \fBfilename\fP
-Currently played file, with path stripped. If this is an URL, try to undo
-percent encoding as well. (The result is not necessarily correct, but
-looks better for display purposes. Use the \fBpath\fP property to get an
-unmodified filename.)
-.sp
-This has a sub\-property:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBfilename/no\-ext\fP
-Like the \fBfilename\fP property, but if the text contains a \fB\&.\fP, strip
-all text after the last \fB\&.\fP\&. Usually this removes the file extension.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBfile\-size\fP
-Length in bytes of the source file/stream. (This is the same as
-\fB${stream\-end}\fP\&. For segmented/multi\-part files, this will return the
-size of the main or manifest file, whatever it is.)
-.TP
-.B \fBestimated\-frame\-count\fP
-Total number of frames in current file.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is only an estimate. (It\(aqs computed from two unreliable
-quantities: fps and stream length.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBestimated\-frame\-number\fP
-Number of current frame in current stream.
-.sp
-\fBNOTE:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is only an estimate. (It\(aqs computed from two unreliable
-quantities: fps and possibly rounded timestamps.)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBpid\fP
-Process\-id of mpv.
-.TP
-.B \fBpath\fP
-Full path of the currently played file. Usually this is exactly the same
-string you pass on the mpv command line or the \fBloadfile\fP command, even
-if it\(aqs a relative path. If you expect an absolute path, you will have to
-determine it yourself, for example by using the \fBworking\-directory\fP
-property.
-.TP
-.B \fBstream\-open\-filename\fP
-The full path to the currently played media. This is different from
-\fBpath\fP only in special cases. In particular, if \fB\-\-ytdl=yes\fP is used,
-and the URL is detected by \fByoutube\-dl\fP, then the script will set this
-property to the actual media URL. This property should be set only during
-the \fBon_load\fP or \fBon_load_fail\fP hooks, otherwise it will have no effect
-(or may do something implementation defined in the future). The property is
-reset if playback of the current media ends.
-.TP
-.B \fBmedia\-title\fP
-If the currently played file has a \fBtitle\fP tag, use that.
-.sp
-Otherwise, return the \fBfilename\fP property.
-.TP
-.B \fBfile\-format\fP
-Symbolic name of the file format. In some cases, this is a comma\-separated
-list of format names, e.g. mp4 is \fBmov,mp4,m4a,3gp,3g2,mj2\fP (the list
-may grow in the future for any format).
-.TP
-.B \fBcurrent\-demuxer\fP
-Name of the current demuxer. (This is useless.)
-.sp
-(Renamed from \fBdemuxer\fP\&.)
-.TP
-.B \fBstream\-path\fP
-Filename (full path) of the stream layer filename. (This is probably
-useless and is almost never different from \fBpath\fP\&.)
-.TP
-.B \fBstream\-pos\fP
-Raw byte position in source stream. Technically, this returns the position
-of the most recent packet passed to a decoder.
-.TP
-.B \fBstream\-end\fP
-Raw end position in bytes in source stream.
-.TP
-.B \fBduration\fP
-Duration of the current file in seconds. If the duration is unknown, the
-property is unavailable. Note that the file duration is not always exactly
-known, so this is an estimate.
-.sp
-This replaces the \fBlength\fP property, which was deprecated after the
-mpv 0.9 release. (The semantics are the same.)
-.TP
-.B \fBavsync\fP
-Last A/V synchronization difference. Unavailable if audio or video is
-disabled.
-.TP
-.B \fBtotal\-avsync\-change\fP
-Total A\-V sync correction done. Unavailable if audio or video is
-disabled.
-.TP
-.B \fBdecoder\-frame\-drop\-count\fP
-Video frames dropped by decoder, because video is too far behind audio (when
-using \fB\-\-framedrop=decoder\fP). Sometimes, this may be incremented in other
-situations, e.g. when video packets are damaged, or the decoder doesn\(aqt
-follow the usual rules. Unavailable if video is disabled.
-.sp
-\fBdrop\-frame\-count\fP is a deprecated alias.
-.TP
-.B \fBframe\-drop\-count\fP
-Frames dropped by VO (when using \fB\-\-framedrop=vo\fP).
-.sp
-\fBvo\-drop\-frame\-count\fP is a deprecated alias.
-.TP
-.B \fBmistimed\-frame\-count\fP
-Number of video frames that were not timed correctly in display\-sync mode
-for the sake of keeping A/V sync. This does not include external
-circumstances, such as video rendering being too slow or the graphics
-driver somehow skipping a vsync. It does not include rounding errors either
-(which can happen especially with bad source timestamps). For example,
-using the \fBdisplay\-desync\fP mode should never change this value from 0.
-.TP
-.B \fBvsync\-ratio\fP
-For how many vsyncs a frame is displayed on average. This is available if
-display\-sync is active only. For 30 FPS video on a 60 Hz screen, this will
-be 2. This is the moving average of what actually has been scheduled, so
-24 FPS on 60 Hz will never remain exactly on 2.5, but jitter depending on
-the last frame displayed.
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-delayed\-frame\-count\fP
-Estimated number of frames delayed due to external circumstances in
-display\-sync mode. Note that in general, mpv has to guess that this is
-happening, and the guess can be inaccurate.
-.TP
-.B \fBpercent\-pos\fP (RW)
-Position in current file (0\-100). The advantage over using this instead of
-calculating it out of other properties is that it properly falls back to
-estimating the playback position from the byte position, if the file
-duration is not known.
-.TP
-.B \fBtime\-pos\fP (RW)
-Position in current file in seconds.
-.TP
-.B \fBtime\-start\fP
-Deprecated. Always returns 0. Before mpv 0.14, this used to return the start
-time of the file (could affect e.g. transport streams). See
-\fB\-\-rebase\-start\-time\fP option.
-.TP
-.B \fBtime\-remaining\fP
-Remaining length of the file in seconds. Note that the file duration is not
-always exactly known, so this is an estimate.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-pts\fP
-Current audio playback position in current file in seconds. Unlike time\-pos,
-this updates more often than once per frame. For audio\-only files, it is
-mostly equivalent to time\-pos, while for video\-only files this property is
-not available.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaytime\-remaining\fP
-\fBtime\-remaining\fP scaled by the current \fBspeed\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBplayback\-time\fP (RW)
-Position in current file in seconds. Unlike \fBtime\-pos\fP, the time is
-clamped to the range of the file. (Inaccurate file durations etc. could
-make it go out of range. Useful on attempts to seek outside of the file,
-as the seek target time is considered the current position during seeking.)
-.TP
-.B \fBchapter\fP (RW)
-Current chapter number. The number of the first chapter is 0.
-.TP
-.B \fBedition\fP (RW)
-Current MKV edition number. Setting this property to a different value will
-restart playback. The number of the first edition is 0.
-.sp
-Before mpv 0.31.0, this showed the actual edition selected at runtime, if
-you didn\(aqt set the option or property manually. With mpv 0.31.0 and later,
-this strictly returns the user\-set option or property value, and the
-\fBcurrent\-edition\fP property was added to return the runtime selected
-edition (this matters with \fB\-\-edition=auto\fP, the default).
-.TP
-.B \fBcurrent\-edition\fP
-Currently selected edition. This property is unavailable if no file is
-loaded, or the file has no editions. (Matroska files make a difference
-between having no editions and a single edition, which will be reflected by
-the property, although in practice it does not matter.)
-.TP
-.B \fBchapters\fP
-Number of chapters.
-.TP
-.B \fBeditions\fP
-Number of MKV editions.
-.TP
-.B \fBedition\-list\fP
-List of editions, current entry marked. Currently, the raw property value
-is useless.
-.sp
-This has a number of sub\-properties. Replace \fBN\fP with the 0\-based edition
-index.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBedition\-list/count\fP
-Number of editions. If there are no editions, this can be 0 or 1 (1
-if there\(aqs a useless dummy edition).
-.TP
-.B \fBedition\-list/N/id\fP (RW)
-Edition ID as integer. Use this to set the \fBedition\fP property.
-Currently, this is the same as the edition index.
-.TP
-.B \fBedition\-list/N/default\fP
-Whether this is the default edition.
-.TP
-.B \fBedition\-list/N/title\fP
-Edition title as stored in the file. Not always available.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP (for each edition)
- "id" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "title" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "default" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBmetadata\fP
-Metadata key/value pairs.
-.sp
-If the property is accessed with Lua\(aqs \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this
-returns a table with metadata keys mapping to metadata values. If it is
-accessed with the client API, this returns a \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP\fP,
-with tag keys mapping to tag values.
-.sp
-For OSD, it returns a formatted list. Trying to retrieve this property as
-a raw string doesn\(aqt work.
-.sp
-This has a number of sub\-properties:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmetadata/by\-key/<key>\fP
-Value of metadata entry \fB<key>\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBmetadata/list/count\fP
-Number of metadata entries.
-.TP
-.B \fBmetadata/list/N/key\fP
-Key name of the Nth metadata entry. (The first entry is \fB0\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBmetadata/list/N/value\fP
-Value of the Nth metadata entry.
-.TP
-.B \fBmetadata/<key>\fP
-Old version of \fBmetadata/by\-key/<key>\fP\&. Use is discouraged, because
-the metadata key string could conflict with other sub\-properties.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The layout of this property might be subject to change. Suggestions are
-welcome how exactly this property should work.
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP
- (key and string value for each metadata entry)
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBfiltered\-metadata\fP
-Like \fBmetadata\fP, but includes only fields listed in the \fB\-\-display\-tags\fP
-option. This is the same set of tags that is printed to the terminal.
-.TP
-.B \fBchapter\-metadata\fP
-Metadata of current chapter. Works similar to \fBmetadata\fP property. It
-also allows the same access methods (using sub\-properties).
-.sp
-Per\-chapter metadata is very rare. Usually, only the chapter name
-(\fBtitle\fP) is set.
-.sp
-For accessing other information, like chapter start, see the
-\fBchapter\-list\fP property.
-.TP
-.B \fBvf\-metadata/<filter\-label>\fP
-Metadata added by video filters. Accessed by the filter label,
-which, if not explicitly specified using the \fB@filter\-label:\fP syntax,
-will be \fB<filter\-name>NN\fP\&.
-.sp
-Works similar to \fBmetadata\fP property. It allows the same access
-methods (using sub\-properties).
-.sp
-An example of this kind of metadata are the cropping parameters
-added by \fB\-\-vf=lavfi=cropdetect\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBaf\-metadata/<filter\-label>\fP
-Equivalent to \fBvf\-metadata/<filter\-label>\fP, but for audio filters.
-.TP
-.B \fBidle\-active\fP
-Returns \fByes\fP/true if no file is loaded, but the player is staying around
-because of the \fB\-\-idle\fP option.
-.sp
-(Renamed from \fBidle\fP\&.)
-.TP
-.B \fBcore\-idle\fP
-Whether the playback core is paused. This can differ from \fBpause\fP in
-special situations, such as when the player pauses itself due to low
-network cache.
-.sp
-This also returns \fByes\fP/true if playback is restarting or if nothing is
-playing at all. In other words, it\(aqs only \fBno\fP/false if there\(aqs actually
-video playing. (Behavior since mpv 0.7.0.)
-.TP
-.B \fBcache\-speed\fP
-Current I/O read speed between the cache and the lower layer (like network).
-This gives the number bytes per seconds over a 1 second window (using
-the type \fBMPV_FORMAT_INT64\fP for the client API).
-.sp
-This is the same as \fBdemuxer\-cache\-state/raw\-input\-rate\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBdemuxer\-cache\-duration\fP
-Approximate duration of video buffered in the demuxer, in seconds. The
-guess is very unreliable, and often the property will not be available
-at all, even if data is buffered.
-.TP
-.B \fBdemuxer\-cache\-time\fP
-Approximate time of video buffered in the demuxer, in seconds. Same as
-\fBdemuxer\-cache\-duration\fP but returns the last timestamp of buffered
-data in demuxer.
-.TP
-.B \fBdemuxer\-cache\-idle\fP
-Whether the demuxer is idle, which means that the demuxer cache is filled
-to the requested amount, and is currently not reading more data.
-.TP
-.B \fBdemuxer\-cache\-state\fP
-Each entry in \fBseekable\-ranges\fP represents a region in the demuxer cache
-that can be seeked to, with a \fBstart\fP and \fBend\fP fields containing the
-respective timestamps. If there are multiple demuxers active, this only
-returns information about the "main" demuxer, but might be changed in
-future to return unified information about all demuxers. The ranges are in
-arbitrary order. Often, ranges will overlap for a bit, before being joined.
-In broken corner cases, ranges may overlap all over the place.
-.sp
-The end of a seek range is usually smaller than the value returned by the
-\fBdemuxer\-cache\-time\fP property, because that property returns the guessed
-buffering amount, while the seek ranges represent the buffered data that
-can actually be used for cached seeking.
-.sp
-\fBbof\-cached\fP indicates whether the seek range with the lowest timestamp
-points to the beginning of the stream (BOF). This implies you cannot seek
-before this position at all. \fBeof\-cached\fP indicates whether the seek range
-with the highest timestamp points to the end of the stream (EOF). If both
-\fBbof\-cached\fP and \fBeof\-cached\fP are true, and there\(aqs only 1 cache range,
-the entire stream is cached.
-.sp
-\fBfw\-bytes\fP is the number of bytes of packets buffered in the range
-starting from the current decoding position. This is a rough estimate
-(may not account correctly for various overhead), and stops at the
-demuxer position (it ignores seek ranges after it).
-.sp
-\fBfile\-cache\-bytes\fP is the number of bytes stored in the file cache. This
-includes all overhead, and possibly unused data (like pruned data). This
-member is missing if the file cache wasn\(aqt enabled with
-\fB\-\-cache\-on\-disk=yes\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBcache\-end\fP is \fBdemuxer\-cache\-time\fP\&. Missing if unavailable.
-.sp
-\fBreader\-pts\fP is the approximate timestamp of the start of the buffered
-range. Missing if unavailable.
-.sp
-\fBcache\-duration\fP is \fBdemuxer\-cache\-duration\fP\&. Missing if unavailable.
-.sp
-\fBraw\-input\-rate\fP is the estimated input rate of the network layer (or any
-other byte\-oriented input layer) in bytes per second. May be inaccurate or
-missing.
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP
- "seekable\-ranges" MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP
- "start" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "end" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "bof\-cached" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
- "eof\-cached" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
- "fw\-bytes" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "file\-cache\-bytes" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "cache\-end" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "reader\-pts" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "cache\-duration" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "raw\-input\-rate" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Other fields (might be changed or removed in the future):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBeof\fP
-Whether the reader thread has hit the end of the file.
-.TP
-.B \fBunderrun\fP
-Whether the reader thread could not satisfy a decoder\(aqs request for a
-new packet.
-.TP
-.B \fBidle\fP
-Whether the thread is currently not reading.
-.TP
-.B \fBtotal\-bytes\fP
-Sum of packet bytes (plus some overhead estimation) of the entire packet
-queue, including cached seekable ranges.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBdemuxer\-via\-network\fP
-Whether the stream demuxed via the main demuxer is most likely played via
-network. What constitutes "network" is not always clear, might be used for
-other types of untrusted streams, could be wrong in certain cases, and its
-definition might be changing. Also, external files (like separate audio
-files or streams) do not influence the value of this property (currently).
-.TP
-.B \fBdemuxer\-start\-time\fP
-The start time reported by the demuxer in fractional seconds.
-.TP
-.B \fBpaused\-for\-cache\fP
-Whether playback is paused because of waiting for the cache.
-.TP
-.B \fBcache\-buffering\-state\fP
-The percentage (0\-100) of the cache fill status until the player will
-unpause (related to \fBpaused\-for\-cache\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBeof\-reached\fP
-Whether the end of playback was reached. Note that this is usually
-interesting only if \fB\-\-keep\-open\fP is enabled, since otherwise the player
-will immediately play the next file (or exit or enter idle mode), and in
-these cases the \fBeof\-reached\fP property will logically be cleared
-immediately after it\(aqs set.
-.TP
-.B \fBseeking\fP
-Whether the player is currently seeking, or otherwise trying to restart
-playback. (It\(aqs possible that it returns \fByes\fP/true while a file is
-loaded. This is because the same underlying code is used for seeking and
-resyncing.)
-.TP
-.B \fBmixer\-active\fP
-Whether the audio mixer is active.
-.sp
-This option is relatively useless. Before mpv 0.18.1, it could be used to
-infer behavior of the \fBvolume\fP property.
-.TP
-.B \fBao\-volume\fP (RW)
-System volume. This property is available only if mpv audio output is
-currently active, and only if the underlying implementation supports volume
-control. What this option does depends on the API. For example, on ALSA
-this usually changes system\-wide audio, while with PulseAudio this controls
-per\-application volume.
-.TP
-.B \fBao\-mute\fP (RW)
-Similar to \fBao\-volume\fP, but controls the mute state. May be unimplemented
-even if \fBao\-volume\fP works.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-codec\fP
-Audio codec selected for decoding.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-codec\-name\fP
-Audio codec.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-params\fP
-Audio format as output by the audio decoder.
-This has a number of sub\-properties:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-params/format\fP
-The sample format as string. This uses the same names as used in other
-places of mpv.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-params/samplerate\fP
-Samplerate.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-params/channels\fP
-The channel layout as a string. This is similar to what the
-\fB\-\-audio\-channels\fP accepts.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-params/hr\-channels\fP
-As \fBchannels\fP, but instead of the possibly cryptic actual layout
-sent to the audio device, return a hopefully more human readable form.
-(Usually only \fBaudio\-out\-params/hr\-channels\fP makes sense.)
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-params/channel\-count\fP
-Number of audio channels. This is redundant to the \fBchannels\fP field
-described above.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP
- "format" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "samplerate" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "channels" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "channel\-count" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "hr\-channels" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-out\-params\fP
-Same as \fBaudio\-params\fP, but the format of the data written to the audio
-API.
-.TP
-.B \fBcolormatrix\fP
-Redirects to \fBvideo\-params/colormatrix\fP\&. This parameter (as well as
-similar ones) can be overridden with the \fBformat\fP video filter.
-.TP
-.B \fBcolormatrix\-input\-range\fP
-See \fBcolormatrix\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBcolormatrix\-primaries\fP
-See \fBcolormatrix\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBhwdec\fP (RW)
-Reflects the \fB\-\-hwdec\fP option.
-.sp
-Writing to it may change the currently used hardware decoder, if possible.
-(Internally, the player may reinitialize the decoder, and will perform a
-seek to refresh the video properly.) You can watch the other hwdec
-properties to see whether this was successful.
-.sp
-Unlike in mpv 0.9.x and before, this does not return the currently active
-hardware decoder. Since mpv 0.18.0, \fBhwdec\-current\fP is available for
-this purpose.
-.TP
-.B \fBhwdec\-current\fP
-The current hardware decoding in use. If decoding is active, return one of
-the values used by the \fBhwdec\fP option/property. \fBno\fP/false indicates
-software decoding. If no decoder is loaded, the property is unavailable.
-.TP
-.B \fBhwdec\-interop\fP
-This returns the currently loaded hardware decoding/output interop driver.
-This is known only once the VO has opened (and possibly later). With some
-VOs (like \fBgpu\fP), this might be never known in advance, but only when
-the decoder attempted to create the hw decoder successfully. (Using
-\fB\-\-gpu\-hwdec\-interop\fP can load it eagerly.) If there are multiple
-drivers loaded, they will be separated by \fB,\fP\&.
-.sp
-If no VO is active or no interop driver is known, this property is
-unavailable.
-.sp
-This does not necessarily use the same values as \fBhwdec\fP\&. There can be
-multiple interop drivers for the same hardware decoder, depending on
-platform and VO.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-format\fP
-Video format as string.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-codec\fP
-Video codec selected for decoding.
-.TP
-.B \fBwidth\fP, \fBheight\fP
-Video size. This uses the size of the video as decoded, or if no video
-frame has been decoded yet, the (possibly incorrect) container indicated
-size.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params\fP
-Video parameters, as output by the decoder (with overrides like aspect
-etc. applied). This has a number of sub\-properties:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/pixelformat\fP
-The pixel format as string. This uses the same names as used in other
-places of mpv.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/hw\-pixelformat\fP
-The underlying pixel format as string. This is relevant for some cases
-of hardware decoding and unavailable otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/average\-bpp\fP
-Average bits\-per\-pixel as integer. Subsampled planar formats use a
-different resolution, which is the reason this value can sometimes be
-odd or confusing. Can be unavailable with some formats.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/w\fP, \fBvideo\-params/h\fP
-Video size as integers, with no aspect correction applied.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/dw\fP, \fBvideo\-params/dh\fP
-Video size as integers, scaled for correct aspect ratio.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/aspect\fP
-Display aspect ratio as float.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/par\fP
-Pixel aspect ratio.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/colormatrix\fP
-The colormatrix in use as string. (Exact values subject to change.)
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/colorlevels\fP
-The colorlevels as string. (Exact values subject to change.)
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/primaries\fP
-The primaries in use as string. (Exact values subject to change.)
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/gamma\fP
-The gamma function in use as string. (Exact values subject to change.)
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/sig\-peak\fP
-The video file\(aqs tagged signal peak as float.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/light\fP
-The light type in use as a string. (Exact values subject to change.)
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/chroma\-location\fP
-Chroma location as string. (Exact values subject to change.)
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/rotate\fP
-Intended display rotation in degrees (clockwise).
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/stereo\-in\fP
-Source file stereo 3D mode. (See the \fBformat\fP video filter\(aqs
-\fBstereo\-in\fP option.)
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-params/alpha\fP
-Alpha type. If the format has no alpha channel, this will be unavailable
-(but in future releases, it could change to \fBno\fP). If alpha is
-present, this is set to \fBstraight\fP or \fBpremul\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP
- "pixelformat" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "hw\-pixelformat" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "w" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "h" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "dw" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "dh" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "aspect" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "par" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "colormatrix" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "colorlevels" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "primaries" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "gamma" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "sig\-peak" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "light" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "chroma\-location" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "rotate" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "stereo\-in" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "average\-bpp" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "alpha" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBdwidth\fP, \fBdheight\fP
-Video display size. This is the video size after filters and aspect scaling
-have been applied. The actual video window size can still be different
-from this, e.g. if the user resized the video window manually.
-.sp
-These have the same values as \fBvideo\-out\-params/dw\fP and
-\fBvideo\-out\-params/dh\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-dec\-params\fP
-Exactly like \fBvideo\-params\fP, but no overrides applied.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-out\-params\fP
-Same as \fBvideo\-params\fP, but after video filters have been applied. If
-there are no video filters in use, this will contain the same values as
-\fBvideo\-params\fP\&. Note that this is still not necessarily what the video
-window uses, since the user can change the window size, and all real VOs
-do their own scaling independently from the filter chain.
-.sp
-Has the same sub\-properties as \fBvideo\-params\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-frame\-info\fP
-Approximate information of the current frame. Note that if any of these
-are used on OSD, the information might be off by a few frames due to OSD
-redrawing and frame display being somewhat disconnected, and you might
-have to pause and force a redraw.
-.sp
-This has a number of sub\-properties:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-frame\-info/picture\-type\fP
-The type of the picture. It can be "I" (intra), "P" (predicted), "B"
-(bi\-dir predicted) or unavailable.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-frame\-info/interlaced\fP
-Whether the content of the frame is interlaced.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-frame\-info/tff\fP
-If the content is interlaced, whether the top field is displayed first.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-frame\-info/repeat\fP
-Whether the frame must be delayed when decoding.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBcontainer\-fps\fP
-Container FPS. This can easily contain bogus values. For videos that use
-modern container formats or video codecs, this will often be incorrect.
-.sp
-(Renamed from \fBfps\fP\&.)
-.TP
-.B \fBestimated\-vf\-fps\fP
-Estimated/measured FPS of the video filter chain output. (If no filters
-are used, this corresponds to decoder output.) This uses the average of
-the 10 past frame durations to calculate the FPS. It will be inaccurate
-if frame\-dropping is involved (such as when framedrop is explicitly
-enabled, or after precise seeking). Files with imprecise timestamps (such
-as Matroska) might lead to unstable results.
-.TP
-.B \fBwindow\-scale\fP (RW)
-Window size multiplier. Setting this will resize the video window to the
-values contained in \fBdwidth\fP and \fBdheight\fP multiplied with the value
-set with this property. Setting \fB1\fP will resize to original video size
-(or to be exact, the size the video filters output). \fB2\fP will set the
-double size, \fB0.5\fP halves the size.
-.sp
-Note that setting a value identical to its previous value will not resize
-the window. That\(aqs because this property mirrors the \fBwindow\-scale\fP
-option, and setting an option to its previous value is ignored. If this
-value is set while the window is in a fullscreen, the multiplier is not
-applied until the window is taken out of that state. Writing this property
-to a maximized window can unmaximize the window depending on the OS and
-window manager. If the window does not unmaximize, the multiplier will be
-applied if the user unmaximizes the window later.
-.sp
-See \fBcurrent\-window\-scale\fP for the value derived from the actual window
-size.
-.sp
-Since mpv 0.31.0, this always returns the previously set value (or the
-default value), instead of the value implied by the actual window size.
-Before mpv 0.31.0, this returned what \fBcurrent\-window\-scale\fP returns now,
-after the window was created.
-.TP
-.B \fBcurrent\-window\-scale\fP (RW)
-The \fBwindow\-scale\fP value calculated from the current window size. This
-has the same value as \fBwindow\-scale\fP if the window size was not changed
-since setting the option, and the window size was not restricted in other
-ways. If the window is fullscreened, this will return the scale value
-calculated from the last non\-fullscreen size of the window. The property
-is unavailable if no video is active.
-.sp
-When setting this property in the fullscreen or maximized state, the behavior
-is the same as window\-scale. In all ther cases, setting the value of this
-property will always resize the window. This does not affect the value of
-\fBwindow\-scale\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBfocused\fP
-Whether the window has focus. Might not be supported by all VOs.
-.TP
-.B \fBdisplay\-names\fP
-Names of the displays that the mpv window covers. On X11, these
-are the xrandr names (LVDS1, HDMI1, DP1, VGA1, etc.). On Windows, these
-are the GDI names (\e.DISPLAY1, \e.DISPLAY2, etc.) and the first display
-in the list will be the one that Windows considers associated with the
-window (as determined by the MonitorFromWindow API.) On macOS these are the
-Display Product Names as used in the System Information and only one display
-name is returned since a window can only be on one screen.
-.TP
-.B \fBdisplay\-fps\fP
-The refresh rate of the current display. Currently, this is the lowest FPS
-of any display covered by the video, as retrieved by the underlying system
-APIs (e.g. xrandr on X11). It is not the measured FPS. It\(aqs not necessarily
-available on all platforms. Note that any of the listed facts may change
-any time without a warning.
-.sp
-Writing to this property is deprecated. It has the same effect as writing to
-\fBoverride\-display\-fps\fP\&. Since mpv 0.31.0, this property is unavailable
-if no display FPS was reported (e.g. if no video is active), while in older
-versions, it returned the \fB\-\-display\-fps\fP option value.
-.TP
-.B \fBestimated\-display\-fps\fP
-The actual rate at which display refreshes seem to occur, measured by
-system time. Only available if display\-sync mode (as selected by
-\fB\-\-video\-sync\fP) is active.
-.TP
-.B \fBvsync\-jitter\fP
-Estimated deviation factor of the vsync duration.
-.TP
-.B \fBdisplay\-width\fP, \fBdisplay\-height\fP
-The current display\(aqs horizontal and vertical resolution in pixels. Whether
-or not these values update as the mpv window changes displays depends on
-the windowing backend. It may not be available on all platforms.
-.TP
-.B \fBdisplay\-hidpi\-scale\fP
-The HiDPI scale factor as reported by the windowing backend. If no VO is
-active, or if the VO does not report a value, this property is unavailable.
-It may be saner to report an absolute DPI, however, this is the way HiDPI
-support is implemented on most OS APIs. See also \fB\-\-hidpi\-window\-scale\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-aspect\fP (RW)
-Deprecated. This is tied to \fB\-\-video\-aspect\-override\fP, but always
-reports the current video aspect if video is active.
-.sp
-The read and write components of this option can be split up into
-\fBvideo\-params/aspect\fP and \fBvideo\-aspect\-override\fP respectively.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-width\fP, \fBosd\-height\fP
-Last known OSD width (can be 0). This is needed if you want to use the
-\fBoverlay\-add\fP command. It gives you the actual OSD/window size (not
-including decorations drawn by the OS window manager).
-.sp
-Alias to \fBosd\-dimensions/w\fP and \fBosd\-dimensions/h\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-par\fP
-Last known OSD display pixel aspect (can be 0).
-.sp
-Alias to \fBosd\-dimensions/osd\-par\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-dimensions\fP
-Last known OSD dimensions.
-.sp
-Has the following sub\-properties (which can be read as \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP
-or Lua table with \fBmp.get_property_native\fP):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-dimensions/w\fP
-Size of the VO window in OSD render units (usually pixels, but may be
-scaled pixels with VOs like \fBxv\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-dimensions/h\fP
-Size of the VO window in OSD render units,
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-dimensions/par\fP
-Pixel aspect ratio of the OSD (usually 1).
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-dimensions/aspect\fP
-Display aspect ratio of the VO window. (Computing from the properties
-above.)
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-dimensions/mt\fP, \fBosd\-dimensions/mb\fP, \fBosd\-dimensions/ml\fP, \fBosd\-dimensions/mr\fP
-OSD to video margins (top, bottom, left, right). This describes the
-area into which the video is rendered.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Any of these properties may be unavailable or set to dummy values if the
-VO window is not created or visible.
-.TP
-.B \fBmouse\-pos\fP
-Read\-only \- last known mouse position, normalizd to OSD dimensions.
-.sp
-Has the following sub\-properties (which can be read as \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP
-or Lua table with \fBmp.get_property_native\fP):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmouse\-pos/x\fP, \fBmouse\-pos/y\fP
-Last known coordinates of the mouse pointer.
-.TP
-.B \fBmouse\-pos/hover\fP
-Boolean \- whether the mouse pointer hovers the video window. The
-coordinates should be ignored when this value is false, because the
-video backends update them only when the pointer hovers the window.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-text\fP
-The current subtitle text regardless of sub visibility. Formatting is
-stripped. If the subtitle is not text\-based (i.e. DVD/BD subtitles), an
-empty string is returned.
-.sp
-This property is experimental and might be removed in the future.
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-text\-ass\fP
-Like \fBsub\-text\fP, but return the text in ASS format. Text subtitles in
-other formats are converted. For native ASS subtitles, events that do
-not contain any text (but vector drawings etc.) are not filtered out. If
-multiple events match with the current playback time, they are concatenated
-with line breaks. Contains only the "Text" part of the events.
-.sp
-This property is not enough to render ASS subtitles correctly, because ASS
-header and per\-event metadata are not returned. You likely need to do
-further filtering on the returned string to make it useful.
-.sp
-This property is experimental and might be removed in the future.
-.TP
-.B \fBsecondary\-sub\-text\fP
-Same as \fBsub\-text\fP, but for the secondary subtitles.
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-start\fP
-The current subtitle start time (in seconds). If there\(aqs multiple current
-subtitles, returns the first start time. If no current subtitle is present
-null is returned instead.
-.TP
-.B \fBsecondary\-sub\-start\fP
-Same as \fBsub\-start\fP, but for the secondary subtitles.
-.TP
-.B \fBsub\-end\fP
-The current subtitle end time (in seconds). If there\(aqs multiple current
-subtitles, return the last end time. If no current subtitle is present, or
-if it\(aqs present but has unknown or incorrect duration, null is returned
-instead.
-.TP
-.B \fBsecondary\-sub\-end\fP
-Same as \fBsub\-end\fP, but for the secondary subtitles.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-pos\fP (RW)
-Current position on playlist. The first entry is on position 0. Writing to
-this property may start playback at the new position.
-.sp
-In some cases, this is not necessarily the currently playing file. See
-explanation of \fBcurrent\fP and \fBplaying\fP flags in \fBplaylist\fP\&.
-.sp
-If there the playlist is empty, or if it\(aqs non\-empty, but no entry is
-"current", this property returns \-1. Likewise, writing \-1 will put the
-player into idle mode (or exit playback if idle mode is not enabled). If an
-out of range index is written to the property, this behaves as if writing \-1.
-(Before mpv 0.33.0, instead of returning \-1, this property was unavailable
-if no playlist entry was current.)
-.sp
-Writing the current value back to the property is subject to change.
-Currently, it will restart playback of the playlist entry. But in the
-future, writing the current value will be ignored. Use the
-\fBplaylist\-play\-index\fP command to get guaranteed behavior.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-pos\-1\fP (RW)
-Same as \fBplaylist\-pos\fP, but 1\-based.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-current\-pos\fP (RW)
-Index of the "current" item on playlist. This usually, but not necessarily,
-the currently playing item (see \fBplaylist\-playing\-pos\fP). Depending on the
-exact internal state of the player, it may refer to the playlist item to
-play next, or the playlist item used to determine what to play next.
-.sp
-For reading, this is exactly the same as \fBplaylist\-pos\fP\&.
-.sp
-For writing, this \fIonly\fP sets the position of the "current" item, without
-stopping playback of the current file (or starting playback, if this is done
-in idle mode). Use \-1 to remove the current flag.
-.sp
-This property is only vaguely useful. If set during playback, it will
-typically cause the playlist entry \fIafter\fP it to be played next. Another
-possibly odd observable state is that if \fBplaylist\-next\fP is run during
-playback, this property is set to the playlist entry to play next (unlike
-the previous case). There is an internal flag that decides whether the
-current playlist entry or the next one should be played, and this flag is
-currently inaccessible for API users. (Whether this behavior will kept is
-possibly subject to change.)
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-playing\-pos\fP
-Index of the "playing" item on playlist. A playlist item is "playing" if
-it\(aqs being loaded, actually playing, or being unloaded. This property is set
-during the \fBMPV_EVENT_START_FILE\fP (\fBstart\-file\fP) and the
-\fBMPV_EVENT_START_END\fP (\fBend\-file\fP) events. Outside of that, it returns
-\-1. If the playlist entry was somehow removed during playback, but playback
-hasn\(aqt stopped yet, or is in progress of being stopped, it also returns \-1.
-(This can happen at least during state transitions.)
-.sp
-In the "playing" state, this is usually the same as \fBplaylist\-pos\fP, except
-during state changes, or if \fBplaylist\-current\-pos\fP was written explicitly.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\-count\fP
-Number of total playlist entries.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\fP
-Playlist, current entry marked. Currently, the raw property value is
-useless.
-.sp
-This has a number of sub\-properties. Replace \fBN\fP with the 0\-based playlist
-entry index.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist/count\fP
-Number of playlist entries (same as \fBplaylist\-count\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist/N/filename\fP
-Filename of the Nth entry.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist/N/playing\fP
-\fByes\fP/true if the \fBplaylist\-playing\-pos\fP property points to this
-entry, \fBno\fP/false or unavailable otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist/N/current\fP
-\fByes\fP/true if the \fBplaylist\-current\-pos\fP property points to this
-entry, \fBno\fP/false or unavailable otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist/N/title\fP
-Name of the Nth entry. Only available if the playlist file contains
-such fields, and only if mpv\(aqs parser supports it for the given
-playlist format.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist/N/id\fP
-Unique ID for this entry. This is an automatically assigned integer ID
-that is unique for the entire life time of the current mpv core
-instance. Other commands, events, etc. use this as \fBplaylist_entry_id\fP
-fields.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP (for each playlist entry)
- "filename" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "current" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG (might be missing; since mpv 0.7.0)
- "playing" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG (same)
- "title" MPV_FORMAT_STRING (optional)
- "id" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list\fP
-List of audio/video/sub tracks, current entry marked. Currently, the raw
-property value is useless.
-.sp
-This has a number of sub\-properties. Replace \fBN\fP with the 0\-based track
-index.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/count\fP
-Total number of tracks.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/id\fP
-The ID as it\(aqs used for \fB\-sid\fP/\fB\-\-aid\fP/\fB\-\-vid\fP\&. This is unique
-within tracks of the same type (sub/audio/video), but otherwise not.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/type\fP
-String describing the media type. One of \fBaudio\fP, \fBvideo\fP, \fBsub\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/src\-id\fP
-Track ID as used in the source file. Not always available. (It is
-missing if the format has no native ID, if the track is a pseudo\-track
-that does not exist in this way in the actual file, or if the format
-is handled by libavformat, and the format was not whitelisted as having
-track IDs.)
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/title\fP
-Track title as it is stored in the file. Not always available.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/lang\fP
-Track language as identified by the file. Not always available.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/image\fP
-\fByes\fP/true if this is a video track that consists of a single
-picture, \fBno\fP/false or unavailable otherwise. The heuristic used to
-determine if a stream is an image doesn\(aqt attempt to detect images in
-codecs normally used for videos. Otherwise, it is reliable.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/albumart\fP
-\fByes\fP/true if this is an image embedded in an audio file or external
-cover art, \fBno\fP/false or unavailable otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/default\fP
-\fByes\fP/true if the track has the default flag set in the file,
-\fBno\fP/false or unavailable otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/forced\fP
-\fByes\fP/true if the track has the forced flag set in the file,
-\fBno\fP/false or unavailable otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/codec\fP
-The codec name used by this track, for example \fBh264\fP\&. Unavailable
-in some rare cases.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/external\fP
-\fByes\fP/true if the track is an external file, \fBno\fP/false or
-unavailable otherwise. This is set for separate subtitle files.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/external\-filename\fP
-The filename if the track is from an external file, unavailable
-otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/selected\fP
-\fByes\fP/true if the track is currently decoded, \fBno\fP/false or
-unavailable otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/main\-selection\fP
-It indicates the selection order of tracks for the same type.
-If a track is not selected, or is selected by the \fB\-\-lavfi\-complex\fP,
-it is not available. For subtitle tracks, \fB0\fP represents the \fBsid\fP,
-and \fB1\fP represents the \fBsecondary\-sid\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/ff\-index\fP
-The stream index as usually used by the FFmpeg utilities. Note that
-this can be potentially wrong if a demuxer other than libavformat
-(\fB\-\-demuxer=lavf\fP) is used. For mkv files, the index will usually
-match even if the default (builtin) demuxer is used, but there is
-no hard guarantee.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/decoder\-desc\fP
-If this track is being decoded, the human\-readable decoder name,
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-w\fP, \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-h\fP
-Video size hint as indicated by the container. (Not always accurate.)
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-channel\-count\fP
-Number of audio channels as indicated by the container. (Not always
-accurate \- in particular, the track could be decoded as a different
-number of channels.)
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-channels\fP
-Channel layout as indicated by the container. (Not always accurate.)
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-samplerate\fP
-Audio sample rate as indicated by the container. (Not always accurate.)
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-fps\fP
-Video FPS as indicated by the container. (Not always accurate.)
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-bitrate\fP
-Audio average bitrate, in bits per second. (Not always accurate.)
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-rotation\fP
-Video clockwise rotation metadata, in degrees.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-par\fP
-Pixel aspect ratio.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/audio\-channels\fP (deprecated)
-Deprecated alias for \fBtrack\-list/N/demux\-channel\-count\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/replaygain\-track\-peak\fP, \fBtrack\-list/N/replaygain\-track\-gain\fP
-Per\-track replaygain values. Only available for audio tracks with
-corresponding information stored in the source file.
-.TP
-.B \fBtrack\-list/N/replaygain\-album\-peak\fP, \fBtrack\-list/N/replaygain\-album\-gain\fP
-Per\-album replaygain values. If the file has per\-track but no per\-album
-information, the per\-album values will be copied from the per\-track
-values currently. It\(aqs possible that future mpv versions will make
-these properties unavailable instead in this case.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP (for each track)
- "id" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "type" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "src\-id" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "title" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "lang" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "image" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
- "albumart" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
- "default" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
- "forced" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
- "selected" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
- "main\-selection" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "external" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG
- "external\-filename" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "codec" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "ff\-index" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "decoder\-desc" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "demux\-w" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "demux\-h" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "demux\-channel\-count" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "demux\-channels" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "demux\-samplerate" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "demux\-fps" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "demux\-bitrate" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "demux\-rotation" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "demux\-par" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "audio\-channels" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "replaygain\-track\-peak" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "replaygain\-track\-gain" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "replaygain\-album\-peak" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
- "replaygain\-album\-gain" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBcurrent\-tracks/...\fP
-This gives access to currently selected tracks. It redirects to the correct
-entry in \fBtrack\-list\fP\&.
-.sp
-The following sub\-entries are defined: \fBvideo\fP, \fBaudio\fP, \fBsub\fP,
-\fBsub2\fP
-.sp
-For example, \fBcurrent\-tracks/audio/lang\fP returns the current audio track\(aqs
-language field (the same value as \fBtrack\-list/N/lang\fP).
-.sp
-If tracks of the requested type are selected via \fB\-\-lavfi\-complex\fP, the
-first one is returned.
-.TP
-.B \fBchapter\-list\fP
-List of chapters, current entry marked. Currently, the raw property value
-is useless.
-.sp
-This has a number of sub\-properties. Replace \fBN\fP with the 0\-based chapter
-index.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBchapter\-list/count\fP
-Number of chapters.
-.TP
-.B \fBchapter\-list/N/title\fP
-Chapter title as stored in the file. Not always available.
-.TP
-.B \fBchapter\-list/N/time\fP
-Chapter start time in seconds as float.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP (for each chapter)
- "title" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "time" MPV_FORMAT_DOUBLE
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBaf\fP, \fBvf\fP (RW)
-See \fB\-\-vf\fP/\fB\-\-af\fP and the \fBvf\fP/\fBaf\fP command.
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP (for each filter entry)
- "name" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "label" MPV_FORMAT_STRING [optional]
- "enabled" MPV_FORMAT_FLAG [optional]
- "params" MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP [optional]
- "key" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "value" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-It\(aqs also possible to write the property using this format.
-.TP
-.B \fBseekable\fP
-Whether it\(aqs generally possible to seek in the current file.
-.TP
-.B \fBpartially\-seekable\fP
-Whether the current file is considered seekable, but only because the cache
-is active. This means small relative seeks may be fine, but larger seeks
-may fail anyway. Whether a seek will succeed or not is generally not known
-in advance.
-.sp
-If this property returns \fByes\fP/true, so will \fBseekable\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBplayback\-abort\fP
-Whether playback is stopped or is to be stopped. (Useful in obscure
-situations like during \fBon_load\fP hook processing, when the user can stop
-playback, but the script has to explicitly end processing.)
-.TP
-.B \fBcursor\-autohide\fP (RW)
-See \fB\-\-cursor\-autohide\fP\&. Setting this to a new value will always update
-the cursor, and reset the internal timer.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-sym\-cc\fP
-Inserts the current OSD symbol as opaque OSD control code (cc). This makes
-sense only with the \fBshow\-text\fP command or options which set OSD messages.
-The control code is implementation specific and is useless for anything else.
-.TP
-.B \fBosd\-ass\-cc\fP
-\fB${osd\-ass\-cc/0}\fP disables escaping ASS sequences of text in OSD,
-\fB${osd\-ass\-cc/1}\fP enables it again. By default, ASS sequences are
-escaped to avoid accidental formatting, and this property can disable
-this behavior. Note that the properties return an opaque OSD control
-code, which only makes sense for the \fBshow\-text\fP command or options
-which set OSD messages.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\-\-osd\-msg3=\(aqThis is ${osd\-ass\-cc/0}{\e\eb1}bold text\(aq\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fBshow\-text "This is ${osd\-ass\-cc/0}{\e\eb1}bold text"\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Any ASS override tags as understood by libass can be used.
-.sp
-Note that you need to escape the \fB\e\fP character, because the string is
-processed for C escape sequences before passing it to the OSD code. See
-\fI\%Flat command syntax\fP for details.
-.sp
-A list of tags can be found here: \fI\%http://docs.aegisub.org/latest/ASS_Tags/\fP
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-configured\fP
-Whether the VO is configured right now. Usually this corresponds to whether
-the video window is visible. If the \fB\-\-force\-window\fP option is used, this
-usually always returns \fByes\fP/true.
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-passes\fP
-Contains introspection about the VO\(aqs active render passes and their
-execution times. Not implemented by all VOs.
-.sp
-This is further subdivided into two frame types, \fBvo\-passes/fresh\fP for
-fresh frames (which have to be uploaded, scaled, etc.) and
-\fBvo\-passes/redraw\fP for redrawn frames (which only have to be re\-painted).
-The number of passes for any given subtype can change from frame to frame,
-and should not be relied upon.
-.sp
-Each frame type has a number of further sub\-properties. Replace \fBTYPE\fP
-with the frame type, \fBN\fP with the 0\-based pass index, and \fBM\fP with the
-0\-based sample index.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-passes/TYPE/count\fP
-Number of passes.
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-passes/TYPE/N/desc\fP
-Human\-friendy description of the pass.
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-passes/TYPE/N/last\fP
-Last measured execution time, in nanoseconds.
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-passes/TYPE/N/avg\fP
-Average execution time of this pass, in nanoseconds. The exact
-timeframe varies, but it should generally be a handful of seconds.
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-passes/TYPE/N/peak\fP
-The peak execution time (highest value) within this averaging range, in
-nanoseconds.
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-passes/TYPE/N/count\fP
-The number of samples for this pass.
-.TP
-.B \fBvo\-passes/TYPE/N/samples/M\fP
-The raw execution time of a specific sample for this pass, in
-nanoseconds.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP
-"TYPE" MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP
- "desc" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "last" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "avg" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "peak" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "count" MPV_FORMAT_INT64
- "samples" MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MP_FORMAT_INT64
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note that directly accessing this structure via subkeys is not supported,
-the only access is through aforementioned \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBperf\-info\fP
-Further performance data. Querying this property triggers internal
-collection of some data, and may slow down the player. Each query will reset
-some internal state. Property change notification doesn\(aqt and won\(aqt work.
-All of this may change in the future, so don\(aqt use this. The builtin
-\fBstats\fP script is supposed to be the only user; since it\(aqs bundled and
-built with the source code, it can use knowledge of mpv internal to render
-the information properly. See \fBstats\fP script description for some details.
-.TP
-.B \fBvideo\-bitrate\fP, \fBaudio\-bitrate\fP, \fBsub\-bitrate\fP
-Bitrate values calculated on the packet level. This works by dividing the
-bit size of all packets between two keyframes by their presentation
-timestamp distance. (This uses the timestamps are stored in the file, so
-e.g. playback speed does not influence the returned values.) In particular,
-the video bitrate will update only per keyframe, and show the "past"
-bitrate. To make the property more UI friendly, updates to these properties
-are throttled in a certain way.
-.sp
-The unit is bits per second. OSD formatting turns these values in kilobits
-(or megabits, if appropriate), which can be prevented by using the
-raw property value, e.g. with \fB${=video\-bitrate}\fP\&.
-.sp
-Note that the accuracy of these properties is influenced by a few factors.
-If the underlying demuxer rewrites the packets on demuxing (done for some
-file formats), the bitrate might be slightly off. If timestamps are bad
-or jittery (like in Matroska), even constant bitrate streams might show
-fluctuating bitrate.
-.sp
-How exactly these values are calculated might change in the future.
-.sp
-In earlier versions of mpv, these properties returned a static (but bad)
-guess using a completely different method.
-.TP
-.B \fBpacket\-video\-bitrate\fP, \fBpacket\-audio\-bitrate\fP, \fBpacket\-sub\-bitrate\fP
-Old and deprecated properties for \fBvideo\-bitrate\fP, \fBaudio\-bitrate\fP,
-\fBsub\-bitrate\fP\&. They behave exactly the same, but return a value in
-kilobits. Also, they don\(aqt have any OSD formatting, though the same can be
-achieved with e.g. \fB${=video\-bitrate}\fP\&.
-.sp
-These properties shouldn\(aqt be used anymore.
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-device\-list\fP
-The list of discovered audio devices. This is mostly for use with the
-client API, and reflects what \fB\-\-audio\-device=help\fP with the command line
-player returns.
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP (for each device entry)
- "name" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "description" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The \fBname\fP is what is to be passed to the \fB\-\-audio\-device\fP option (and
-often a rather cryptic audio API\-specific ID), while \fBdescription\fP is
-human readable free form text. The description is set to the device name
-(minus mpv\-specific \fB<driver>/\fP prefix) if no description is available
-or the description would have been an empty string.
-.sp
-The special entry with the name set to \fBauto\fP selects the default audio
-output driver and the default device.
-.sp
-The property can be watched with the property observation mechanism in
-the client API and in Lua scripts. (Technically, change notification is
-enabled the first time this property is read.)
-.TP
-.B \fBaudio\-device\fP (RW)
-Set the audio device. This directly reads/writes the \fB\-\-audio\-device\fP
-option, but on write accesses, the audio output will be scheduled for
-reloading.
-.sp
-Writing this property while no audio output is active will not automatically
-enable audio. (This is also true in the case when audio was disabled due to
-reinitialization failure after a previous write access to \fBaudio\-device\fP\&.)
-.sp
-This property also doesn\(aqt tell you which audio device is actually in use.
-.sp
-How these details are handled may change in the future.
-.TP
-.B \fBcurrent\-vo\fP
-Current video output driver (name as used with \fB\-\-vo\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBcurrent\-ao\fP
-Current audio output driver (name as used with \fB\-\-ao\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBshared\-script\-properties\fP (RW)
-This is a key/value map of arbitrary strings shared between scripts for
-general use. The player itself does not use any data in it (although some
-builtin scripts may). The property is not preserved across player restarts.
-.sp
-This is very primitive, inefficient, and annoying to use. It\(aqs a makeshift
-solution which could go away any time (for example, when a better solution
-becomes available). This is also why this property has an annoying name. You
-should avoid using it, unless you absolutely have to.
-.sp
-Lua scripting has helpers starting with \fButils.shared_script_property_\fP\&.
-They are undocumented because you should not use this property. If you still
-think you must, you should use the helpers instead of the property directly.
-.sp
-You are supposed to use the \fBchange\-list\fP command to modify the contents.
-Reading, modifying, and writing the property manually could data loss if two
-scripts update different keys at the same time due to lack of
-synchronization. The Lua helpers take care of this.
-.sp
-(There is no way to ensure synchronization if two scripts try to update the
-same key at the same time.)
-.TP
-.B \fBworking\-directory\fP
-The working directory of the mpv process. Can be useful for JSON IPC users,
-because the command line player usually works with relative paths.
-.TP
-.B \fBprotocol\-list\fP
-List of protocol prefixes potentially recognized by the player. They are
-returned without trailing \fB://\fP suffix (which is still always required).
-In some cases, the protocol will not actually be supported (consider
-\fBhttps\fP if ffmpeg is not compiled with TLS support).
-.TP
-.B \fBdecoder\-list\fP
-List of decoders supported. This lists decoders which can be passed to
-\fB\-\-vd\fP and \fB\-\-ad\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBcodec\fP
-Canonical codec name, which identifies the format the decoder can
-handle.
-.TP
-.B \fBdriver\fP
-The name of the decoder itself. Often, this is the same as \fBcodec\fP\&.
-Sometimes it can be different. It is used to distinguish multiple
-decoders for the same codec.
-.TP
-.B \fBdescription\fP
-Human readable description of the decoder and codec.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-When querying the property with the client API using \fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE\fP,
-or with Lua \fBmp.get_property_native\fP, this will return a mpv_node with
-the following contents:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-MPV_FORMAT_NODE_ARRAY
- MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP (for each decoder entry)
- "codec" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "driver" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
- "description" MPV_FORMAT_STRING
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBencoder\-list\fP
-List of libavcodec encoders. This has the same format as \fBdecoder\-list\fP\&.
-The encoder names (\fBdriver\fP entries) can be passed to \fB\-\-ovc\fP and
-\fB\-\-oac\fP (without the \fBlavc:\fP prefix required by \fB\-\-vd\fP and \fB\-\-ad\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBdemuxer\-lavf\-list\fP
-List of available libavformat demuxers\(aq names. This can be used to check
-for support for a specific format or use with \fB\-\-demuxer\-lavf\-format\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBinput\-key\-list\fP
-List of \fI\%Key names\fP, same as output by \fB\-\-input\-keylist\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv\-version\fP
-The mpv version/copyright string. Depending on how the binary was built, it
-might contain either a release version, or just a git hash.
-.TP
-.B \fBmpv\-configuration\fP
-The configuration arguments which were passed to the build system
-(typically the way \fB\&./waf configure ...\fP was invoked).
-.TP
-.B \fBffmpeg\-version\fP
-The contents of the \fBav_version_info()\fP API call. This is a string which
-identifies the build in some way, either through a release version number,
-or a git hash. This applies to Libav as well (the property is still named
-the same.) This property is unavailable if mpv is linked against older
-FFmpeg and Libav versions.
-.TP
-.B \fBlibass\-version\fP
-The value of \fBass_library_version()\fP\&. This is an integer, encoded in a
-somewhat weird form (apparently "hex BCD"), indicating the release version
-of the libass library linked to mpv.
-.TP
-.B \fBoptions/<name>\fP (RW)
-The value of option \fB\-\-<name>\fP\&. Most options can be changed at runtime by
-writing to this property. Note that many options require reloading the file
-for changes to take effect. If there is an equivalent property, prefer
-setting the property instead.
-.sp
-There shouldn\(aqt be any reason to access \fBoptions/<name>\fP instead of
-\fB<name>\fP, except in situations in which the properties have different
-behavior or conflicting semantics.
-.TP
-.B \fBfile\-local\-options/<name>\fP (RW)
-Similar to \fBoptions/<name>\fP, but when setting an option through this
-property, the option is reset to its old value once the current file has
-stopped playing. Trying to write an option while no file is playing (or
-is being loaded) results in an error.
-.sp
-(Note that if an option is marked as file\-local, even \fBoptions/\fP will
-access the local value, and the \fBold\fP value, which will be restored on
-end of playback, cannot be read or written until end of playback.)
-.TP
-.B \fBoption\-info/<name>\fP
-Additional per\-option information.
-.sp
-This has a number of sub\-properties. Replace \fB<name>\fP with the name of
-a top\-level option. No guarantee of stability is given to any of these
-sub\-properties \- they may change radically in the feature.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBoption\-info/<name>/name\fP
-The name of the option.
-.TP
-.B \fBoption\-info/<name>/type\fP
-The name of the option type, like \fBString\fP or \fBInteger\fP\&. For many
-complex types, this isn\(aqt very accurate.
-.TP
-.B \fBoption\-info/<name>/set\-from\-commandline\fP
-Whether the option was set from the mpv command line. What this is set
-to if the option is e.g. changed at runtime is left undefined (meaning
-it could change in the future).
-.TP
-.B \fBoption\-info/<name>/set\-locally\fP
-Whether the option was set per\-file. This is the case with
-automatically loaded profiles, file\-dir configs, and other cases. It
-means the option value will be restored to the value before playback
-start when playback ends.
-.TP
-.B \fBoption\-info/<name>/default\-value\fP
-The default value of the option. May not always be available.
-.TP
-.B \fBoption\-info/<name>/min\fP, \fBoption\-info/<name>/max\fP
-Integer minimum and maximum values allowed for the option. Only
-available if the options are numeric, and the minimum/maximum has been
-set internally. It\(aqs also possible that only one of these is set.
-.TP
-.B \fBoption\-info/<name>/choices\fP
-If the option is a choice option, the possible choices. Choices that
-are integers may or may not be included (they can be implied by \fBmin\fP
-and \fBmax\fP). Note that options which behave like choice options, but
-are not actual choice options internally, may not have this info
-available.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBproperty\-list\fP
-The list of top\-level properties.
-.TP
-.B \fBprofile\-list\fP
-The list of profiles and their contents. This is highly
-implementation\-specific, and may change any time. Currently, it returns an
-array of options for each profile. Each option has a name and a value, with
-the value currently always being a string. Note that the options array is
-not a map, as order matters and duplicate entries are possible. Recursive
-profiles are not expanded, and show up as special \fBprofile\fP options.
-.TP
-.B \fBcommand\-list\fP
-The list of input commands. This returns an array of maps, where each map
-node represents a command. This map currently only has a single entry:
-\fBname\fP for the name of the command. (This property is supposed to be a
-replacement for \fB\-\-input\-cmdlist\fP\&. The option dumps some more
-information, but it\(aqs a valid feature request to extend this property if
-needed.)
-.TP
-.B \fBinput\-bindings\fP
-The list of current input key bindings. This returns an array of maps,
-where each map node represents a binding for a single key/command. This map
-has the following entries:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBkey\fP
-The key name. This is normalized and may look slightly different from
-how it was specified in the source (e.g. in input.conf).
-.TP
-.B \fBcmd\fP
-The command mapped to the key. (Currently, this is exactly the same
-string as specified in the source, other than stripping whitespace and
-comments. It\(aqs possible that it will be normalized in the future.)
-.TP
-.B \fBis_weak\fP
-If set to true, any existing and active user bindings will take priority.
-.TP
-.B \fBowner\fP
-If this entry exists, the name of the script (or similar) which added
-this binding.
-.TP
-.B \fBsection\fP
-Name of the section this binding is part of. This is a rarely used
-mechanism. This entry may be removed or change meaning in the future.
-.TP
-.B \fBpriority\fP
-A number. Bindings with a higher value are preferred over bindings
-with a lower value. If the value is negative, this binding is inactive
-and will not be triggered by input. Note that mpv does not use this
-value internally, and matching of bindings may work slightly differently
-in some cases. In addition, this value is dynamic and can change around
-at runtime.
-.TP
-.B \fBcomment\fP
-If available, the comment following the command on the same line. (For
-example, the input.conf entry \fBf cycle bla # toggle bla\fP would
-result in an entry with \fBcomment = "toggle bla", cmd = "cycle bla"\fP\&.)
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This property is read\-only, and change notification is not supported.
-Currently, there is no mechanism to change key bindings at runtime, other
-than scripts adding or removing their own bindings.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Inconsistencies between options and properties
-.sp
-You can access (almost) all options as properties, though there are some
-caveats with some properties (due to historical reasons):
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBvid\fP, \fBaid\fP, \fBsid\fP
-While playback is active, these return the actually active tracks. For
-example, if you set \fBaid=5\fP, and the currently played file contains no
-audio track with ID 5, the \fBaid\fP property will return \fBno\fP\&.
-.sp
-Before mpv 0.31.0, you could set existing tracks at runtime only.
-.TP
-.B \fBdisplay\-fps\fP
-This inconsistent behavior is deprecated. Post\-deprecation, the reported
-value and the option value are cleanly separated (\fBoverride\-display\-fps\fP
-for the option value).
-.TP
-.B \fBvf\fP, \fBaf\fP
-If you set the properties during playback, and the filter chain fails to
-reinitialize, the option will be set, but the runtime filter chain does not
-change. On the other hand, the next video to be played will fail, because
-the initial filter chain cannot be created.
-.sp
-This behavior changed in mpv 0.31.0. Before this, the new value was rejected
-\fIiff\fP a video (for \fBvf\fP) or an audio (for \fBaf\fP) track was active. If
-playback was not active, the behavior was the same as the current one.
-.TP
-.B \fBplaylist\fP
-The property is read\-only and returns the current internal playlist. The
-option is for loading playlist during command line parsing. For client API
-uses, you should use the \fBloadlist\fP command instead.
-.TP
-.B \fBprofile\fP, \fBinclude\fP
-These are write\-only, and will perform actions as they are written to,
-exactly as if they were used on the mpv CLI commandline. Their only use is
-when using libmpv before \fBmpv_initialize()\fP, which in turn is probably
-only useful in encoding mode. Normal libmpv users should use other
-mechanisms, such as the \fBapply\-profile\fP command, and the
-\fBmpv_load_config_file\fP API function. Avoid these properties.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Property Expansion
-.sp
-All string arguments to input commands as well as certain options (like
-\fB\-\-term\-playing\-msg\fP) are subject to property expansion. Note that property
-expansion does not work in places where e.g. numeric parameters are expected.
-(For example, the \fBadd\fP command does not do property expansion. The \fBset\fP
-command is an exception and not a general rule.)
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example for input.conf"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBi show\-text "Filename: ${filename}"\fP
-shows the filename of the current file when pressing the \fBi\fP key
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Whether property expansion is enabled by default depends on which API is used
-(see \fI\%Flat command syntax\fP, \fI\%Commands specified as arrays\fP and \fI\%Named
-arguments\fP), but it can always be enabled with the \fBexpand\-properties\fP
-prefix or disabled with the \fBraw\fP prefix, as described in \fI\%Input Command
-Prefixes\fP\&.
-.sp
-The following expansions are supported:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB${NAME}\fP
-Expands to the value of the property \fBNAME\fP\&. If retrieving the property
-fails, expand to an error string. (Use \fB${NAME:}\fP with a trailing
-\fB:\fP to expand to an empty string instead.)
-If \fBNAME\fP is prefixed with \fB=\fP, expand to the raw value of the property
-(see section below).
-.TP
-.B \fB${NAME:STR}\fP
-Expands to the value of the property \fBNAME\fP, or \fBSTR\fP if the
-property cannot be retrieved. \fBSTR\fP is expanded recursively.
-.TP
-.B \fB${?NAME:STR}\fP
-Expands to \fBSTR\fP (recursively) if the property \fBNAME\fP is available.
-.TP
-.B \fB${!NAME:STR}\fP
-Expands to \fBSTR\fP (recursively) if the property \fBNAME\fP cannot be
-retrieved.
-.TP
-.B \fB${?NAME==VALUE:STR}\fP
-Expands to \fBSTR\fP (recursively) if the property \fBNAME\fP expands to a
-string equal to \fBVALUE\fP\&. You can prefix \fBNAME\fP with \fB=\fP in order to
-compare the raw value of a property (see section below). If the property
-is unavailable, or other errors happen when retrieving it, the value is
-never considered equal.
-Note that \fBVALUE\fP can\(aqt contain any of the characters \fB:\fP or \fB}\fP\&.
-Also, it is possible that escaping with \fB"\fP or \fB%\fP might be added in
-the future, should the need arise.
-.TP
-.B \fB${!NAME==VALUE:STR}\fP
-Same as with the \fB?\fP variant, but \fBSTR\fP is expanded if the value is
-not equal. (Using the same semantics as with \fB?\fP\&.)
-.TP
-.B \fB$$\fP
-Expands to \fB$\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fB$}\fP
-Expands to \fB}\fP\&. (To produce this character inside recursive
-expansion.)
-.TP
-.B \fB$>\fP
-Disable property expansion and special handling of \fB$\fP for the rest
-of the string.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-In places where property expansion is allowed, C\-style escapes are often
-accepted as well. Example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\en\fP becomes a newline character
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB\e\e\fP expands to \fB\e\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Raw and Formatted Properties
-.sp
-Normally, properties are formatted as human\-readable text, meant to be
-displayed on OSD or on the terminal. It is possible to retrieve an unformatted
-(raw) value from a property by prefixing its name with \fB=\fP\&. These raw values
-can be parsed by other programs and follow the same conventions as the options
-associated with the properties.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Examples"
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB${time\-pos}\fP expands to \fB00:14:23\fP (if playback position is at 14
-minutes 23 seconds)
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fB${=time\-pos}\fP expands to \fB863.4\fP (same time, plus 400 milliseconds \-
-milliseconds are normally not shown in the formatted case)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Sometimes, the difference in amount of information carried by raw and formatted
-property values can be rather big. In some cases, raw values have more
-information, like higher precision than seconds with \fBtime\-pos\fP\&. Sometimes
-it is the other way around, e.g. \fBaid\fP shows track title and language in the
-formatted case, but only the track number if it is raw.
-.SH ON SCREEN CONTROLLER
-.sp
-The On Screen Controller (short: OSC) is a minimal GUI integrated with mpv to
-offer basic mouse\-controllability. It is intended to make interaction easier
-for new users and to enable precise and direct seeking.
-.sp
-The OSC is enabled by default if mpv was compiled with Lua support. It can be
-disabled entirely using the \fB\-\-osc=no\fP option.
-.SS Using the OSC
-.sp
-By default, the OSC will show up whenever the mouse is moved inside the
-player window and will hide if the mouse is not moved outside the OSC for
-0.5 seconds or if the mouse leaves the window.
-.SS The Interface
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+
-| pl prev | pl next | title | cache |
-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-+\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-+
-| play | skip | skip | time | seekbar | time | audio | sub | vol | fs |
-| | back | frwd | elapsed | | left | | | | |
-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-\-+\-\-\-\-+
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B pl prev
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-play previous file in playlist
-T}
-_
-T{
-right\-click
-T} T{
-show playlist
-T}
-_
-T{
-shift+L\-click
-T} T{
-show playlist
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B pl next
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-play next file in playlist
-T}
-_
-T{
-right\-click
-T} T{
-show playlist
-T}
-_
-T{
-shift+L\-click
-T} T{
-show playlist
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B title
-.nf
-Displays current media\-title, filename, custom title, or target chapter
-name while hovering the seekbar.
-.fi
-.sp
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-show playlist position and length and full title
-T}
-_
-T{
-right\-click
-T} T{
-show filename
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B cache
-.nf
-Shows current cache fill status
-.fi
-.sp
-.TP
-.B play
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-toggle play/pause
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B skip back
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-go to beginning of chapter / previous chapter
-T}
-_
-T{
-right\-click
-T} T{
-show chapters
-T}
-_
-T{
-shift+L\-click
-T} T{
-show chapters
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B skip frwd
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-go to next chapter
-T}
-_
-T{
-right\-click
-T} T{
-show chapters
-T}
-_
-T{
-shift+L\-click
-T} T{
-show chapters
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B time elapsed
-.nf
-Shows current playback position timestamp
-.fi
-.sp
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-toggle displaying timecodes with milliseconds
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B seekbar
-.nf
-Indicates current playback position and position of chapters
-.fi
-.sp
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-seek to position
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B time left
-.nf
-Shows remaining playback time timestamp
-.fi
-.sp
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-toggle between total and remaining time
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B audio and sub
-.nf
-Displays selected track and amount of available tracks
-.fi
-.sp
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-cycle audio/sub tracks forward
-T}
-_
-T{
-right\-click
-T} T{
-cycle audio/sub tracks backwards
-T}
-_
-T{
-shift+L\-click
-T} T{
-show available audio/sub tracks
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B vol
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-toggle mute
-T}
-_
-T{
-mouse wheel
-T} T{
-volume up/down
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.TP
-.B fs
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-left\-click
-T} T{
-toggle fullscreen
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Key Bindings
-.sp
-These key bindings are active by default if nothing else is already bound to
-these keys. In case of collision, the function needs to be bound to a
-different key. See the \fI\%Script Commands\fP section.
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-del
-T} T{
-Cycles visibility between never / auto (mouse\-move) / always
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.SS Configuration
-.sp
-The OSC offers limited configuration through a config file
-\fBscript\-opts/osc.conf\fP placed in mpv\(aqs user dir and through the
-\fB\-\-script\-opts\fP command\-line option. Options provided through the command\-line
-will override those from the config file.
-.SS Config Syntax
-.sp
-The config file must exactly follow the following syntax:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-# this is a comment
-optionA=value1
-optionB=value2
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fB#\fP can only be used at the beginning of a line and there may be no
-spaces around the \fB=\fP or anywhere else.
-.SS Command\-line Syntax
-.sp
-To avoid collisions with other scripts, all options need to be prefixed with
-\fBosc\-\fP\&.
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-\-\-script\-opts=osc\-optionA=value1,osc\-optionB=value2
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Configurable Options
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBlayout\fP
-Default: bottombar
-.sp
-The layout for the OSC. Currently available are: box, slimbox,
-bottombar and topbar. Default pre\-0.21.0 was \(aqbox\(aq.
-.TP
-.B \fBseekbarstyle\fP
-Default: bar
-.sp
-Sets the style of the playback position marker and overall shape
-of the seekbar: \fBbar\fP, \fBdiamond\fP or \fBknob\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBseekbarhandlesize\fP
-Default: 0.6
-.sp
-Size ratio of the seek handle if \fBseekbarstyle\fP is set to \fBdimaond\fP
-or \fBknob\fP\&. This is relative to the full height of the seekbar.
-.TP
-.B \fBseekbarkeyframes\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Controls the mode used to seek when dragging the seekbar. If set to \fByes\fP,
-default seeking mode is used (usually keyframes, but player defaults and
-heuristics can change it to exact). If set to \fBno\fP, exact seeking on
-mouse drags will be used instead. Keyframes are preferred, but exact seeks
-may be useful in cases where keyframes cannot be found. Note that using
-exact seeks can potentially make mouse dragging much slower.
-.TP
-.B \fBseekrangestyle\fP
-Default: inverted
-.sp
-Display seekable ranges on the seekbar. \fBbar\fP shows them on the full
-height of the bar, \fBline\fP as a thick line and \fBinverted\fP as a thin
-line that is inverted over playback position markers. \fBnone\fP will hide
-them. Additionally, \fBslider\fP will show a permanent handle inside the seekbar
-with cached ranges marked inside. Note that these will look differently
-based on the seekbarstyle option. Also, \fBslider\fP does not work with
-\fBseekbarstyle\fP set to \fBbar\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBseekrangeseparate\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Controls whether to show line\-style seekable ranges on top of the
-seekbar or separately if \fBseekbarstyle\fP is set to \fBbar\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBseekrangealpha\fP
-Default: 200
-.sp
-Alpha of the seekable ranges, 0 (opaque) to 255 (fully transparent).
-.TP
-.B \fBdeadzonesize\fP
-Default: 0.5
-.sp
-Size of the deadzone. The deadzone is an area that makes the mouse act
-like leaving the window. Movement there won\(aqt make the OSC show up and
-it will hide immediately if the mouse enters it. The deadzone starts
-at the window border opposite to the OSC and the size controls how much
-of the window it will span. Values between 0.0 and 1.0, where 0 means the
-OSC will always popup with mouse movement in the window, and 1 means the
-OSC will only show up when the mouse hovers it. Default pre\-0.21.0 was 0.
-.TP
-.B \fBminmousemove\fP
-Default: 0
-.sp
-Minimum amount of pixels the mouse has to move between ticks to make
-the OSC show up. Default pre\-0.21.0 was 3.
-.TP
-.B \fBshowwindowed\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Enable the OSC when windowed
-.TP
-.B \fBshowfullscreen\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Enable the OSC when fullscreen
-.TP
-.B \fBscalewindowed\fP
-Default: 1.0
-.sp
-Scale factor of the OSC when windowed.
-.TP
-.B \fBscalefullscreen\fP
-Default: 1.0
-.sp
-Scale factor of the OSC when fullscreen
-.TP
-.B \fBscaleforcedwindow\fP
-Default: 2.0
-.sp
-Scale factor of the OSC when rendered on a forced (dummy) window
-.TP
-.B \fBvidscale\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Scale the OSC with the video
-\fBno\fP tries to keep the OSC size constant as much as the window size allows
-.TP
-.B \fBvalign\fP
-Default: 0.8
-.sp
-Vertical alignment, \-1 (top) to 1 (bottom)
-.TP
-.B \fBhalign\fP
-Default: 0.0
-.sp
-Horizontal alignment, \-1 (left) to 1 (right)
-.TP
-.B \fBbarmargin\fP
-Default: 0
-.sp
-Margin from bottom (bottombar) or top (topbar), in pixels
-.TP
-.B \fBboxalpha\fP
-Default: 80
-.sp
-Alpha of the background box, 0 (opaque) to 255 (fully transparent)
-.TP
-.B \fBhidetimeout\fP
-Default: 500
-.sp
-Duration in ms until the OSC hides if no mouse movement, must not be
-negative
-.TP
-.B \fBfadeduration\fP
-Default: 200
-.sp
-Duration of fade out in ms, 0 = no fade
-.TP
-.B \fBtitle\fP
-Default: ${media\-title}
-.sp
-String that supports property expansion that will be displayed as
-OSC title.
-ASS tags are escaped, and newlines and trailing slashes are stripped.
-.TP
-.B \fBtooltipborder\fP
-Default: 1
-.sp
-Size of the tooltip outline when using bottombar or topbar layouts
-.TP
-.B \fBtimetotal\fP
-Default: no
-.sp
-Show total time instead of time remaining
-.TP
-.B \fBtimems\fP
-Default: no
-.sp
-Display timecodes with milliseconds
-.TP
-.B \fBvisibility\fP
-Default: auto (auto hide/show on mouse move)
-.sp
-Also supports \fBnever\fP and \fBalways\fP
-.TP
-.B \fBboxmaxchars\fP
-Default: 80
-.sp
-Max chars for the osc title at the box layout. mpv does not measure the
-text width on screen and so it needs to limit it by number of chars. The
-default is conservative to allow wide fonts to be used without overflow.
-However, with many common fonts a bigger number can be used. YMMV.
-.TP
-.B \fBboxvideo\fP
-Default: no
-.sp
-Whether to overlay the osc over the video (\fBno\fP), or to box the video
-within the areas not covered by the osc (\fByes\fP). If this option is set,
-the osc may overwrite the \fB\-\-video\-margin\-ratio\-*\fP options, even if the
-user has set them. (It will not overwrite them if all of them are set to
-default values.) Additionally, \fBvisibility\fP must be set to \fBalways\fP\&.
-Otherwise, this option does nothing.
-.sp
-Currently, this is supported for the \fBbottombar\fP and \fBtopbar\fP layout
-only. The other layouts do not change if this option is set. Separately,
-if window controls are present (see below), they will be affected
-regardless of which osc layout is in use.
-.sp
-The border is static and appears even if the OSC is configured to appear
-only on mouse interaction. If the OSC is invisible, the border is simply
-filled with the background color (black by default).
-.sp
-This currently still makes the OSC overlap with subtitles (if the
-\fB\-\-sub\-use\-margins\fP option is set to \fByes\fP, the default). This may be
-fixed later.
-.sp
-This does not work correctly with video outputs like \fB\-\-vo=xv\fP, which
-render OSD into the unscaled video.
-.TP
-.B \fBwindowcontrols\fP
-Default: auto (Show window controls if there is no window border)
-.sp
-Whether to show window management controls over the video, and if so,
-which side of the window to place them. This may be desirable when the
-window has no decorations, either because they have been explicitly
-disabled (\fBborder=no\fP) or because the current platform doesn\(aqt support
-them (eg: gnome\-shell with wayland).
-.sp
-The set of window controls is fixed, offering \fBminimize\fP, \fBmaximize\fP,
-and \fBquit\fP\&. Not all platforms implement \fBminimize\fP and \fBmaximize\fP,
-but \fBquit\fP will always work.
-.TP
-.B \fBwindowcontrols_alignment\fP
-Default: right
-.sp
-If window controls are shown, indicates which side should they be aligned
-to.
-.sp
-Supports \fBleft\fP and \fBright\fP which will place the controls on those
-respective sides.
-.TP
-.B \fBgreenandgrumpy\fP
-Default: no
-.sp
-Set to \fByes\fP to reduce festivity (i.e. disable santa hat in December.)
-.TP
-.B \fBlivemarkers\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Update chapter markers positions on duration changes, e.g. live streams.
-The updates are unoptimized \- consider disabling it on very low\-end systems.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Script Commands
-.sp
-The OSC script listens to certain script commands. These commands can bound
-in \fBinput.conf\fP, or sent by other scripts.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBosc\-message\fP
-Show a message on screen using the OSC. First argument is the message,
-second the duration in seconds.
-.TP
-.B \fBosc\-visibility\fP
-Controls visibility mode \fBnever\fP / \fBauto\fP (on mouse move) / \fBalways\fP
-and also \fBcycle\fP to cycle between the modes
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Example
-.sp
-You could put this into \fBinput.conf\fP to hide the OSC with the \fBa\fP key and
-to set auto mode (the default) with \fBb\fP:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-a script\-message osc\-visibility never
-b script\-message osc\-visibility auto
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBosc\-playlist\fP, \fBosc\-chapterlist\fP, \fBosc\-tracklist\fP
-Shows a limited view of the respective type of list using the OSC. First
-argument is duration in seconds.
-.UNINDENT
-.SH STATS
-.sp
-This builtin script displays information and statistics for the currently
-played file. It is enabled by default if mpv was compiled with Lua support.
-It can be disabled entirely using the \fB\-\-load\-stats\-overlay=no\fP option.
-.SS Usage
-.sp
-The following key bindings are active by default unless something else is
-already bound to them:
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-i
-T} T{
-Show stats for a fixed duration
-T}
-_
-T{
-I
-T} T{
-Toggle stats (shown until toggled again)
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.sp
-While the stats are visible on screen the following key bindings are active,
-regardless of existing bindings. They allow you to switch between \fIpages\fP of
-stats:
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-1
-T} T{
-Show usual stats
-T}
-_
-T{
-2
-T} T{
-Show frame timings (scroll)
-T}
-_
-T{
-3
-T} T{
-Input cache stats
-T}
-_
-T{
-4
-T} T{
-Active key bindings (scroll)
-T}
-_
-T{
-0
-T} T{
-Internal stuff (scroll)
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.sp
-On pages which support scroll, these key bindings are also active:
-.TS
-center;
-|l|l|.
-_
-T{
-UP
-T} T{
-Scroll one line up
-T}
-_
-T{
-DOWN
-T} T{
-Scroll one line down
-T}
-_
-.TE
-.SS Font
-.sp
-For optimal visual experience, a font with support for many font weights and
-monospaced digits is recommended. By default, the open source font
-\fI\%Source Sans Pro\fP is used.
-.SS Configuration
-.sp
-This script can be customized through a config file \fBscript\-opts/stats.conf\fP
-placed in mpv\(aqs user directory and through the \fB\-\-script\-opts\fP command\-line
-option. The configuration syntax is described in \fI\%ON SCREEN CONTROLLER\fP\&.
-.SS Configurable Options
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_page_1\fP
-Default: 1
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_page_2\fP
-Default: 2
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_page_3\fP
-Default: 3
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_page_4\fP
-Default: 4
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_page_0\fP
-Default: 0
-.sp
-Key bindings for page switching while stats are displayed.
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_scroll_up\fP
-Default: UP
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_scroll_down\fP
-Default: DOWN
-.TP
-.B \fBscroll_lines\fP
-Default: 1
-.sp
-Scroll key bindings and number of lines to scroll on pages which support it.
-.TP
-.B \fBduration\fP
-Default: 4
-.sp
-How long the stats are shown in seconds (oneshot).
-.TP
-.B \fBredraw_delay\fP
-Default: 1
-.sp
-How long it takes to refresh the displayed stats in seconds (toggling).
-.TP
-.B \fBpersistent_overlay\fP
-Default: no
-.sp
-When \fIno\fP, other scripts printing text to the screen can overwrite the
-displayed stats. When \fIyes\fP, displayed stats are persistently shown for the
-respective duration. This can result in overlapping text when multiple
-scripts decide to print text at the same time.
-.TP
-.B \fBplot_perfdata\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Show graphs for performance data (page 2).
-.TP
-.B \fBplot_vsync_ratio\fP
-Default: yes
-.TP
-.B \fBplot_vsync_jitter\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Show graphs for vsync and jitter values (page 1). Only when toggled.
-.TP
-.B \fBflush_graph_data\fP
-Default: yes
-.sp
-Clear data buffers used for drawing graphs when toggling.
-.TP
-.B \fBfont\fP
-Default: Source Sans Pro
-.sp
-Font name. Should support as many font weights as possible for optimal
-visual experience.
-.TP
-.B \fBfont_mono\fP
-Default: Source Sans Pro
-.sp
-Font name for parts where monospaced characters are necessary to align
-text. Currently, monospaced digits are sufficient.
-.TP
-.B \fBfont_size\fP
-Default: 8
-.sp
-Font size used to render text.
-.TP
-.B \fBfont_color\fP
-Default: FFFFFF
-.sp
-Font color.
-.TP
-.B \fBborder_size\fP
-Default: 0.8
-.sp
-Size of border drawn around the font.
-.TP
-.B \fBborder_color\fP
-Default: 262626
-.sp
-Color of drawn border.
-.TP
-.B \fBalpha\fP
-Default: 11
-.sp
-Transparency for drawn text.
-.TP
-.B \fBplot_bg_border_color\fP
-Default: 0000FF
-.sp
-Border color used for drawing graphs.
-.TP
-.B \fBplot_bg_color\fP
-Default: 262626
-.sp
-Background color used for drawing graphs.
-.TP
-.B \fBplot_color\fP
-Default: FFFFFF
-.sp
-Color used for drawing graphs.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note: colors are given as hexadecimal values and use ASS tag order: BBGGRR
-(blue green red).
-.SS Different key bindings
-.sp
-Additional keys can be configured in \fBinput.conf\fP to display the stats:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-e script\-binding stats/display\-stats
-E script\-binding stats/display\-stats\-toggle
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-And to display a certain page directly:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-i script\-binding stats/display\-page\-1
-e script\-binding stats/display\-page\-2
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Active key bindings page
-.sp
-Lists the active key bindings and the commands they\(aqre bound to, excluding the
-interactive keys of the stats script itself. See also \fB\-\-input\-test\fP for more
-detailed view of each binding.
-.sp
-The keys are grouped automatically using a simple analysis of the command
-string, and one should not expect documentation\-level grouping accuracy,
-however, it should still be reasonably useful.
-.sp
-Using \fB\-\-idle \-\-script\-opts=stats\-bindlist=yes\fP will print the list to the
-terminal and quit immediately. By default long lines are shortened to 79 chars,
-and terminal escape sequences are enabled. A different length limit can be
-set by changing \fByes\fP to a number (at least 40), and escape sequences can be
-disabled by adding \fB\-\fP before the value, e.g. \fB\&...=\-yes\fP or \fB\&...=\-120\fP\&.
-.sp
-Like with \fB\-\-input\-test\fP, the list includes bindings from \fBinput.conf\fP and
-from user scripts. Use \fB\-\-no\-config\fP to list only built\-in bindings.
-.SS Internal stuff page
-.sp
-Most entries shown on this page have rather vague meaning. Likely none of this
-is useful for you. Don\(aqt attempt to use it. Forget its existence.
-.sp
-Selecting this for the first time will start collecting some internal
-performance data. That means performance will be slightly lower than normal for
-the rest of the time the player is running (even if the stats page is closed).
-Note that the stats page itself uses a lot of CPU and even GPU resources, and
-may have a heavy impact on performance.
-.sp
-The displayed information is accumulated over the redraw delay (shown as
-\fBpoll\-time\fP field).
-.sp
-This adds entries for each Lua script. If there are too many scripts running,
-parts of the list will simply be out of the screen, but it can be scrolled.
-.sp
-If the underlying platform does not support pthread per thread times, the
-displayed times will be 0 or something random (I suspect that at time of this
-writing, only Linux provides the correct via pthread APIs for per thread times).
-.sp
-Most entries are added lazily and only during data collection, which is why
-entries may pop up randomly after some time. It\(aqs also why the memory usage
-entries for scripts that have been inactive since the start of data collection
-are missing.
-.sp
-Memory usage is approximate and does not reflect internal fragmentation.
-.sp
-JS scripts memory reporting is disabled by default because collecting the data
-at the JS side has an overhead. It can be enabled by exporting the env var
-\fBMPV_LEAK_REPORT=1\fP before starting mpv, and will increase JS memory usage.
-.sp
-If entries have \fB/time\fP and \fB/cpu\fP variants, the former gives the real time
-(monotonic clock), while the latter the thread CPU time (only if the
-corresponding pthread API works and is supported).
-.SH CONSOLE
-.sp
-The console is a REPL for mpv input commands. It is displayed on the video
-window. It also shows log messages. It can be disabled entirely using the
-\fB\-\-load\-osd\-console=no\fP option.
-.SS Keybindings
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \(ga
-Show the console.
-.TP
-.B ESC
-Hide the console.
-.TP
-.B ENTER, Ctrl+J and Ctrl+M
-Run the typed command.
-.TP
-.B Shift+ENTER
-Type a literal newline character.
-.TP
-.B LEFT and Ctrl+B
-Move the cursor to the previous character.
-.TP
-.B RIGHT and Ctrl+F
-Move the cursor to the next character.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+LEFT and Alt+B
-Move the cursor to the beginning of the current word, or if between words,
-to the beginning of the previous word.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+RIGHT and Alt+F
-Move the cursor to the end of the current word, or if between words, to the
-end of the next word.
-.TP
-.B HOME and Ctrl+A
-Move the cursor to the start of the current line.
-.TP
-.B END and Ctrl+E
-Move the cursor to the end of the current line.
-.TP
-.B BACKSPACE and Ctrl+H
-Delete the previous character.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+D
-Hide the console if the current line is empty, otherwise delete the next
-character.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+BACKSPACE and Ctrl+W
-Delete text from the cursor to the beginning of the current word, or if
-between words, to the beginning of the previous word.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+DEL and Alt+D
-Delete text from the cursor to the end of the current word, or if between
-words, to the end of the next word.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+U
-Delete text from the cursor to the beginning of the current line.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+K
-Delete text from the cursor to the end of the current line.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+C
-Clear the current line.
-.TP
-.B UP and Ctrl+P
-Move back in the command history.
-.TP
-.B DOWN and Ctrl+N
-Move forward in the command history.
-.TP
-.B PGUP
-Go to the first command in the history.
-.TP
-.B PGDN
-Stop navigating the command history.
-.TP
-.B INSERT
-Toggle insert mode.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+V
-Paste text (uses the clipboard on X11 and Wayland).
-.TP
-.B Shift+INSERT
-Paste text (uses the primary selection on X11 and Wayland).
-.TP
-.B TAB and Ctrl+I
-Complete the command or property name at the cursor.
-.TP
-.B Ctrl+L
-Clear all log messages from the console.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Commands
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBscript\-message\-to console type <text> [<cursor_pos>]\fP
-Show the console and pre\-fill it with the provided text, optionally
-specifying the initial cursor position as a positive integer starting from
-1.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example for input.conf"
-.sp
-\fB% script\-message\-to console type "seek absolute\-percent" 6\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Known issues
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-Pasting text is slow on Windows
-.IP \(bu 2
-Non\-ASCII keyboard input has restrictions
-.IP \(bu 2
-The cursor keys move between Unicode code\-points, not grapheme clusters
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Configuration
-.sp
-This script can be customized through a config file \fBscript\-opts/console.conf\fP
-placed in mpv\(aqs user directory and through the \fB\-\-script\-opts\fP command\-line
-option. The configuration syntax is described in \fI\%ON SCREEN CONTROLLER\fP\&.
-.sp
-Key bindings can be changed in a standard way, see for example stats.lua
-documentation.
-.SS Configurable Options
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBscale\fP
-Default: 1
-.sp
-All drawing is scaled by this value, including the text borders and the
-cursor.
-.sp
-If the VO backend in use has HiDPI scale reporting implemented, the option
-value is scaled with the reported HiDPI scale.
-.TP
-.B \fBfont\fP
-Default: unset (picks a hardcoded font depending on detected platform)
-.sp
-Set the font used for the REPL and the console. This probably doesn\(aqt
-have to be a monospaced font.
-.TP
-.B \fBfont_size\fP
-Default: 16
-.sp
-Set the font size used for the REPL and the console. This will be
-multiplied by "scale."
-.UNINDENT
-.SH LUA SCRIPTING
-.sp
-mpv can load Lua scripts. (See \fI\%Script location\fP\&.)
-.sp
-mpv provides the built\-in module \fBmp\fP, which contains functions to send
-commands to the mpv core and to retrieve information about playback state, user
-settings, file information, and so on.
-.sp
-These scripts can be used to control mpv in a similar way to slave mode.
-Technically, the Lua code uses the client API internally.
-.SS Example
-.sp
-A script which leaves fullscreen mode when the player is paused:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-function on_pause_change(name, value)
- if value == true then
- mp.set_property("fullscreen", "no")
- end
-end
-mp.observe_property("pause", "bool", on_pause_change)
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Script location
-.sp
-Scripts can be passed to the \fB\-\-script\fP option, and are automatically loaded
-from the \fBscripts\fP subdirectory of the mpv configuration directory (usually
-\fB~/.config/mpv/scripts/\fP).
-.sp
-A script can be a single file. The file extension is used to select the
-scripting backend to use for it. For Lua, it is \fB\&.lua\fP\&. If the extension is
-not recognized, an error is printed. (If an error happens, the extension is
-either mistyped, or the backend was not compiled into your mpv binary.)
-.sp
-mpv internally loads the script\(aqs name by stripping the \fB\&.lua\fP extension and
-replacing all nonalphanumeric characters with \fB_\fP\&. E.g., \fBmy\-tools.lua\fP
-becomes \fBmy_tools\fP\&. If there are several scripts with the same name, it is
-made unique by appending a number. This is the name returned by
-\fBmp.get_script_name()\fP\&.
-.sp
-Entries with \fB\&.disable\fP extension are always ignored.
-.sp
-If a script is a directory (either if a directory is passed to \fB\-\-script\fP,
-or any sub\-directories in the script directory, such as for example
-\fB~/.config/mpv/scripts/something/\fP), then the directory represents a single
-script. The player will try to load a file named \fBmain.x\fP, where \fBx\fP is
-replaced with the file extension. For example, if \fBmain.lua\fP exists, it is
-loaded with the Lua scripting backend.
-.sp
-You must not put any other files or directories that start with \fBmain.\fP into
-the script\(aqs top level directory. If the script directory contains for example
-both \fBmain.lua\fP and \fBmain.js\fP, only one of them will be loaded (and which
-one depends on mpv internals that may change any time). Likewise, if there is
-for example \fBmain.foo\fP, your script will break as soon as mpv adds a backend
-that uses the \fB\&.foo\fP file extension.
-.sp
-mpv also appends the top level directory of the script to the start of Lua\(aqs
-package path so you can import scripts from there too. Be aware that this will
-shadow Lua libraries that use the same package path. (Single file scripts do not
-include mpv specific directory the Lua package path. This was silently changed
-in mpv 0.32.0.)
-.sp
-Using a script directory is the recommended way to package a script that
-consists of multiple source files, or requires other files (you can use
-\fBmp.get_script_directory()\fP to get the location and e.g. load data files).
-.sp
-Making a script a git repository, basically a repository which contains a
-\fBmain.lua\(ga\fP file in the root directory, makes scripts easily updateable
-(without the dangers of auto\-updates). Another suggestion is to use git
-submodules to share common files or libraries.
-.SS Details on the script initialization and lifecycle
-.sp
-Your script will be loaded by the player at program start from the \fBscripts\fP
-configuration subdirectory, or from a path specified with the \fB\-\-script\fP
-option. Some scripts are loaded internally (like \fB\-\-osc\fP). Each script runs in
-its own thread. Your script is first run "as is", and once that is done, the event loop
-is entered. This event loop will dispatch events received by mpv and call your
-own event handlers which you have registered with \fBmp.register_event\fP, or
-timers added with \fBmp.add_timeout\fP or similar. Note that since the
-script starts execution concurrently with player initialization, some properties
-may not be populated with meaningful values until the relevant subsystems have
-initialized.
-.sp
-When the player quits, all scripts will be asked to terminate. This happens via
-a \fBshutdown\fP event, which by default will make the event loop return. If your
-script got into an endless loop, mpv will probably behave fine during playback,
-but it won\(aqt terminate when quitting, because it\(aqs waiting on your script.
-.sp
-Internally, the C code will call the Lua function \fBmp_event_loop\fP after
-loading a Lua script. This function is normally defined by the default prelude
-loaded before your script (see \fBplayer/lua/defaults.lua\fP in the mpv sources).
-The event loop will wait for events and dispatch events registered with
-\fBmp.register_event\fP\&. It will also handle timers added with \fBmp.add_timeout\fP
-and similar (by waiting with a timeout).
-.sp
-Since mpv 0.6.0, the player will wait until the script is fully loaded before
-continuing normal operation. The player considers a script as fully loaded as
-soon as it starts waiting for mpv events (or it exits). In practice this means
-the player will more or less hang until the script returns from the main chunk
-(and \fBmp_event_loop\fP is called), or the script calls \fBmp_event_loop\fP or
-\fBmp.dispatch_events\fP directly. This is done to make it possible for a script
-to fully setup event handlers etc. before playback actually starts. In older
-mpv versions, this happened asynchronously. With mpv 0.29.0, this changes
-slightly, and it merely waits for scripts to be loaded in this manner before
-starting playback as part of the player initialization phase. Scripts run though
-initialization in parallel. This might change again.
-.SS mp functions
-.sp
-The \fBmp\fP module is preloaded, although it can be loaded manually with
-\fBrequire \(aqmp\(aq\fP\&. It provides the core client API.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.command(string)\fP
-Run the given command. This is similar to the commands used in input.conf.
-See \fI\%List of Input Commands\fP\&.
-.sp
-By default, this will show something on the OSD (depending on the command),
-as if it was used in \fBinput.conf\fP\&. See \fI\%Input Command Prefixes\fP how
-to influence OSD usage per command.
-.sp
-Returns \fBtrue\fP on success, or \fBnil, error\fP on error.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.commandv(arg1, arg2, ...)\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.command\fP, but pass each command argument as separate
-parameter. This has the advantage that you don\(aqt have to care about
-quoting and escaping in some cases.
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mp.command("loadfile " .. filename .. " append")
-mp.commandv("loadfile", filename, "append")
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-These two commands are equivalent, except that the first version breaks
-if the filename contains spaces or certain special characters.
-.sp
-Note that properties are \fInot\fP expanded. You can use either \fBmp.command\fP,
-the \fBexpand\-properties\fP prefix, or the \fBmp.get_property\fP family of
-functions.
-.sp
-Unlike \fBmp.command\fP, this will not use OSD by default either (except
-for some OSD\-specific commands).
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.command_native(table [,def])\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.commandv\fP, but pass the argument list as table. This has
-the advantage that in at least some cases, arguments can be passed as
-native types. It also allows you to use named argument.
-.sp
-If the table is an array, each array item is like an argument in
-\fBmp.commandv()\fP (but can be a native type instead of a string).
-.sp
-If the table contains string keys, it\(aqs interpreted as command with named
-arguments. This requires at least an entry with the key \fBname\fP to be
-present, which must be a string, and contains the command name. The special
-entry \fB_flags\fP is optional, and if present, must be an array of
-\fI\%Input Command Prefixes\fP to apply. All other entries are interpreted as
-arguments.
-.sp
-Returns a result table on success (usually empty), or \fBdef, error\fP on
-error. \fBdef\fP is the second parameter provided to the function, and is
-nil if it\(aqs missing.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.command_native_async(table [,fn])\fP
-Like \fBmp.command_native()\fP, but the command is ran asynchronously (as far
-as possible), and upon completion, fn is called. fn has three arguments:
-\fBfn(success, result, error)\fP:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBsuccess\fP
-Always a Boolean and is true if the command was successful,
-otherwise false.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBresult\fP
-The result value (can be nil) in case of success, nil otherwise (as
-returned by \fBmp.command_native()\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBerror\fP
-The error string in case of an error, nil otherwise.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Returns a table with undefined contents, which can be used as argument for
-\fBmp.abort_async_command\fP\&.
-.sp
-If starting the command failed for some reason, \fBnil, error\fP is returned,
-and \fBfn\fP is called indicating failure, using the same error value.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.abort_async_command(t)\fP
-Abort a \fBmp.command_native_async\fP call. The argument is the return value
-of that command (which starts asynchronous execution of the command).
-Whether this works and how long it takes depends on the command and the
-situation. The abort call itself is asynchronous. Does not return anything.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_property(name [,def])\fP
-Return the value of the given property as string. These are the same
-properties as used in input.conf. See \fI\%Properties\fP for a list of
-properties. The returned string is formatted similar to \fB${=name}\fP
-(see \fI\%Property Expansion\fP).
-.sp
-Returns the string on success, or \fBdef, error\fP on error. \fBdef\fP is the
-second parameter provided to the function, and is nil if it\(aqs missing.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_property_osd(name [,def])\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.get_property\fP, but return the property value formatted for
-OSD. This is the same string as printed with \fB${name}\fP when used in
-input.conf.
-.sp
-Returns the string on success, or \fBdef, error\fP on error. \fBdef\fP is the
-second parameter provided to the function, and is an empty string if it\(aqs
-missing. Unlike \fBget_property()\fP, assigning the return value to a variable
-will always result in a string.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_property_bool(name [,def])\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.get_property\fP, but return the property value as Boolean.
-.sp
-Returns a Boolean on success, or \fBdef, error\fP on error.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_property_number(name [,def])\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.get_property\fP, but return the property value as number.
-.sp
-Note that while Lua does not distinguish between integers and floats,
-mpv internals do. This function simply request a double float from mpv,
-and mpv will usually convert integer property values to float.
-.sp
-Returns a number on success, or \fBdef, error\fP on error.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_property_native(name [,def])\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.get_property\fP, but return the property value using the best
-Lua type for the property. Most time, this will return a string, Boolean,
-or number. Some properties (for example \fBchapter\-list\fP) are returned as
-tables.
-.sp
-Returns a value on success, or \fBdef, error\fP on error. Note that \fBnil\fP
-might be a possible, valid value too in some corner cases.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.set_property(name, value)\fP
-Set the given property to the given string value. See \fBmp.get_property\fP
-and \fI\%Properties\fP for more information about properties.
-.sp
-Returns true on success, or \fBnil, error\fP on error.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.set_property_bool(name, value)\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.set_property\fP, but set the given property to the given
-Boolean value.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.set_property_number(name, value)\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.set_property\fP, but set the given property to the given
-numeric value.
-.sp
-Note that while Lua does not distinguish between integers and floats,
-mpv internals do. This function will test whether the number can be
-represented as integer, and if so, it will pass an integer value to mpv,
-otherwise a double float.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.set_property_native(name, value)\fP
-Similar to \fBmp.set_property\fP, but set the given property using its native
-type.
-.sp
-Since there are several data types which cannot represented natively in
-Lua, this might not always work as expected. For example, while the Lua
-wrapper can do some guesswork to decide whether a Lua table is an array
-or a map, this would fail with empty tables. Also, there are not many
-properties for which it makes sense to use this, instead of
-\fBset_property\fP, \fBset_property_bool\fP, \fBset_property_number\fP\&.
-For these reasons, this function should probably be avoided for now, except
-for properties that use tables natively.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_time()\fP
-Return the current mpv internal time in seconds as a number. This is
-basically the system time, with an arbitrary offset.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.add_key_binding(key, name|fn [,fn [,flags]])\fP
-Register callback to be run on a key binding. The binding will be mapped to
-the given \fBkey\fP, which is a string describing the physical key. This uses
-the same key names as in input.conf, and also allows combinations
-(e.g. \fBctrl+a\fP). If the key is empty or \fBnil\fP, no physical key is
-registered, but the user still can create own bindings (see below).
-.sp
-After calling this function, key presses will cause the function \fBfn\fP to
-be called (unless the user remapped the key with another binding).
-.sp
-The \fBname\fP argument should be a short symbolic string. It allows the user
-to remap the key binding via input.conf using the \fBscript\-message\fP
-command, and the name of the key binding (see below for
-an example). The name should be unique across other bindings in the same
-script \- if not, the previous binding with the same name will be
-overwritten. You can omit the name, in which case a random name is generated
-internally. (Omitting works as follows: either pass \fBnil\fP for \fBname\fP,
-or pass the \fBfn\fP argument in place of the name. The latter is not
-recommended and is handled for compatibility only.)
-.sp
-The last argument is used for optional flags. This is a table, which can
-have the following entries:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBrepeatable\fP
-If set to \fBtrue\fP, enables key repeat for this specific binding.
-.TP
-.B \fBcomplex\fP
-If set to \fBtrue\fP, then \fBfn\fP is called on both key up and down
-events (as well as key repeat, if enabled), with the first
-argument being a table. This table has the following entries (and
-may contain undocumented ones):
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBevent\fP
-Set to one of the strings \fBdown\fP, \fBrepeat\fP, \fBup\fP or
-\fBpress\fP (the latter if key up/down can\(aqt be tracked).
-.TP
-.B \fBis_mouse\fP
-Boolean Whether the event was caused by a mouse button.
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_name\fP
-The name of they key that triggered this, or \fBnil\fP if
-invoked artificially. If the key name is unknown, it\(aqs an
-empty string.
-.TP
-.B \fBkey_text\fP
-Text if triggered by a text key, otherwise \fBnil\fP\&. See
-description of \fBscript\-binding\fP command for details (this
-field is equivalent to the 5th argument).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Internally, key bindings are dispatched via the \fBscript\-message\-to\fP or
-\fBscript\-binding\fP input commands and \fBmp.register_script_message\fP\&.
-.sp
-Trying to map multiple commands to a key will essentially prefer a random
-binding, while the other bindings are not called. It is guaranteed that
-user defined bindings in the central input.conf are preferred over bindings
-added with this function (but see \fBmp.add_forced_key_binding\fP).
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-function something_handler()
- print("the key was pressed")
-end
-mp.add_key_binding("x", "something", something_handler)
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This will print the message \fBthe key was pressed\fP when \fBx\fP was pressed.
-.sp
-The user can remap these key bindings. Then the user has to put the
-following into their input.conf to remap the command to the \fBy\fP key:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-y script\-binding something
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-This will print the message when the key \fBy\fP is pressed. (\fBx\fP will
-still work, unless the user remaps it.)
-.sp
-You can also explicitly send a message to a named script only. Assume the
-above script was using the filename \fBfooscript.lua\fP:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-y script\-binding fooscript/something
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.add_forced_key_binding(...)\fP
-This works almost the same as \fBmp.add_key_binding\fP, but registers the
-key binding in a way that will overwrite the user\(aqs custom bindings in their
-input.conf. (\fBmp.add_key_binding\fP overwrites default key bindings only,
-but not those by the user\(aqs input.conf.)
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.remove_key_binding(name)\fP
-Remove a key binding added with \fBmp.add_key_binding\fP or
-\fBmp.add_forced_key_binding\fP\&. Use the same name as you used when adding
-the bindings. It\(aqs not possible to remove bindings for which you omitted
-the name.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.register_event(name, fn)\fP
-Call a specific function when an event happens. The event name is a string,
-and the function fn is a Lua function value.
-.sp
-Some events have associated data. This is put into a Lua table and passed
-as argument to fn. The Lua table by default contains a \fBname\fP field,
-which is a string containing the event name. If the event has an error
-associated, the \fBerror\fP field is set to a string describing the error,
-on success it\(aqs not set.
-.sp
-If multiple functions are registered for the same event, they are run in
-registration order, which the first registered function running before all
-the other ones.
-.sp
-Returns true if such an event exists, false otherwise.
-.sp
-See \fI\%Events\fP and \fI\%List of events\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.unregister_event(fn)\fP
-Undo \fBmp.register_event(..., fn)\fP\&. This removes all event handlers that
-are equal to the \fBfn\fP parameter. This uses normal Lua \fB==\fP comparison,
-so be careful when dealing with closures.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.observe_property(name, type, fn)\fP
-Watch a property for changes. If the property \fBname\fP is changed, then
-the function \fBfn(name)\fP will be called. \fBtype\fP can be \fBnil\fP, or be
-set to one of \fBnone\fP, \fBnative\fP, \fBbool\fP, \fBstring\fP, or \fBnumber\fP\&.
-\fBnone\fP is the same as \fBnil\fP\&. For all other values, the new value of
-the property will be passed as second argument to \fBfn\fP, using
-\fBmp.get_property_<type>\fP to retrieve it. This means if \fBtype\fP is for
-example \fBstring\fP, \fBfn\fP is roughly called as in
-\fBfn(name, mp.get_property_string(name))\fP\&.
-.sp
-If possible, change events are coalesced. If a property is changed a bunch
-of times in a row, only the last change triggers the change function. (The
-exact behavior depends on timing and other things.)
-.sp
-If a property is unavailable, or on error, the value argument to \fBfn\fP is
-\fBnil\fP\&. (The \fBobserve_property()\fP call always succeeds, even if a
-property does not exist.)
-.sp
-In some cases the function is not called even if the property changes.
-This depends on the property, and it\(aqs a valid feature request to ask for
-better update handling of a specific property.
-.sp
-If the \fBtype\fP is \fBnone\fP or \fBnil\fP, sporadic property change events are
-possible. This means the change function \fBfn\fP can be called even if the
-property doesn\(aqt actually change.
-.sp
-You always get an initial change notification. This is meant to initialize
-the user\(aqs state to the current value of the property.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.unobserve_property(fn)\fP
-Undo \fBmp.observe_property(..., fn)\fP\&. This removes all property handlers
-that are equal to the \fBfn\fP parameter. This uses normal Lua \fB==\fP
-comparison, so be careful when dealing with closures.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.add_timeout(seconds, fn)\fP
-Call the given function fn when the given number of seconds has elapsed.
-Note that the number of seconds can be fractional. For now, the timer\(aqs
-resolution may be as low as 50 ms, although this will be improved in the
-future.
-.sp
-This is a one\-shot timer: it will be removed when it\(aqs fired.
-.sp
-Returns a timer object. See \fBmp.add_periodic_timer\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.add_periodic_timer(seconds, fn)\fP
-Call the given function periodically. This is like \fBmp.add_timeout\fP, but
-the timer is re\-added after the function fn is run.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B Returns a timer object. The timer object provides the following methods:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBstop()\fP
-Disable the timer. Does nothing if the timer is already disabled.
-This will remember the current elapsed time when stopping, so that
-\fBresume()\fP essentially unpauses the timer.
-.TP
-.B \fBkill()\fP
-Disable the timer. Resets the elapsed time. \fBresume()\fP will
-restart the timer.
-.TP
-.B \fBresume()\fP
-Restart the timer. If the timer was disabled with \fBstop()\fP, this
-will resume at the time it was stopped. If the timer was disabled
-with \fBkill()\fP, or if it\(aqs a previously fired one\-shot timer (added
-with \fBadd_timeout()\fP), this starts the timer from the beginning,
-using the initially configured timeout.
-.TP
-.B \fBis_enabled()\fP
-Whether the timer is currently enabled or was previously disabled
-(e.g. by \fBstop()\fP or \fBkill()\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fBtimeout\fP (RW)
-This field contains the current timeout period. This value is not
-updated as time progresses. It\(aqs only used to calculate when the
-timer should fire next when the timer expires.
-.sp
-If you write this, you can call \fBt:kill() ; t:resume()\fP to reset
-the current timeout to the new one. (\fBt:stop()\fP won\(aqt use the
-new timeout.)
-.TP
-.B \fBoneshot\fP (RW)
-Whether the timer is periodic (\fBfalse\fP) or fires just once
-(\fBtrue\fP). This value is used when the timer expires (but before
-the timer callback function fn is run).
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note that these are methods, and you have to call them using \fB:\fP instead
-of \fB\&.\fP (Refer to \fI\%https://www.lua.org/manual/5.2/manual.html#3.4.9\fP .)
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-seconds = 0
-timer = mp.add_periodic_timer(1, function()
- print("called every second")
- # stop it after 10 seconds
- seconds = seconds + 1
- if seconds >= 10 then
- timer:kill()
- end
-end)
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_opt(key)\fP
-Return a setting from the \fB\-\-script\-opts\fP option. It\(aqs up to the user and
-the script how this mechanism is used. Currently, all scripts can access
-this equally, so you should be careful about collisions.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_script_name()\fP
-Return the name of the current script. The name is usually made of the
-filename of the script, with directory and file extension removed. If
-there are several scripts which would have the same name, it\(aqs made unique
-by appending a number. Any nonalphanumeric characters are replaced with \fB_\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.IP "Example"
-.sp
-The script \fB/path/to/foo\-script.lua\fP becomes \fBfoo_script\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_script_directory()\fP
-Return the directory if this is a script packaged as directory (see
-\fI\%Script location\fP for a description). Return nothing if this is a single
-file script.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.osd_message(text [,duration])\fP
-Show an OSD message on the screen. \fBduration\fP is in seconds, and is
-optional (uses \fB\-\-osd\-duration\fP by default).
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Advanced mp functions
-.sp
-These also live in the \fBmp\fP module, but are documented separately as they
-are useful only in special situations.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.suspend()\fP
-This function has been deprecated in mpv 0.21.0 and does nothing starting
-with mpv 0.23.0 (no replacement).
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.resume()\fP
-This function has been deprecated in mpv 0.21.0 and does nothing starting
-with mpv 0.23.0 (no replacement).
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.resume_all()\fP
-This function has been deprecated in mpv 0.21.0 and does nothing starting
-with mpv 0.23.0 (no replacement).
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_wakeup_pipe()\fP
-Calls \fBmpv_get_wakeup_pipe()\fP and returns the read end of the wakeup
-pipe. This is deprecated, but still works. (See \fBclient.h\fP for details.)
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_next_timeout()\fP
-Return the relative time in seconds when the next timer (\fBmp.add_timeout\fP
-and similar) expires. If there is no timer, return \fBnil\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.dispatch_events([allow_wait])\fP
-This can be used to run custom event loops. If you want to have direct
-control what the Lua script does (instead of being called by the default
-event loop), you can set the global variable \fBmp_event_loop\fP to your
-own function running the event loop. From your event loop, you should call
-\fBmp.dispatch_events()\fP to dequeue and dispatch mpv events.
-.sp
-If the \fBallow_wait\fP parameter is set to \fBtrue\fP, the function will block
-until the next event is received or the next timer expires. Otherwise (and
-this is the default behavior), it returns as soon as the event loop is
-emptied. It\(aqs strongly recommended to use \fBmp.get_next_timeout()\fP and
-\fBmp.get_wakeup_pipe()\fP if you\(aqre interested in properly working
-notification of new events and working timers.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.register_idle(fn)\fP
-Register an event loop idle handler. Idle handlers are called before the
-script goes to sleep after handling all new events. This can be used for
-example to delay processing of property change events: if you\(aqre observing
-multiple properties at once, you might not want to act on each property
-change, but only when all change notifications have been received.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.unregister_idle(fn)\fP
-Undo \fBmp.register_idle(fn)\fP\&. This removes all idle handlers that
-are equal to the \fBfn\fP parameter. This uses normal Lua \fB==\fP comparison,
-so be careful when dealing with closures.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.enable_messages(level)\fP
-Set the minimum log level of which mpv message output to receive. These
-messages are normally printed to the terminal. By calling this function,
-you can set the minimum log level of messages which should be received with
-the \fBlog\-message\fP event. See the description of this event for details.
-The level is a string, see \fBmsg.log\fP for allowed log levels.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.register_script_message(name, fn)\fP
-This is a helper to dispatch \fBscript\-message\fP or \fBscript\-message\-to\fP
-invocations to Lua functions. \fBfn\fP is called if \fBscript\-message\fP or
-\fBscript\-message\-to\fP (with this script as destination) is run
-with \fBname\fP as first parameter. The other parameters are passed to \fBfn\fP\&.
-If a message with the given name is already registered, it\(aqs overwritten.
-.sp
-Used by \fBmp.add_key_binding\fP, so be careful about name collisions.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.unregister_script_message(name)\fP
-Undo a previous registration with \fBmp.register_script_message\fP\&. Does
-nothing if the \fBname\fP wasn\(aqt registered.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.create_osd_overlay(format)\fP
-Create an OSD overlay. This is a very thin wrapper around the \fBosd\-overlay\fP
-command. The function returns a table, which mostly contains fields that
-will be passed to \fBosd\-overlay\fP\&. The \fBformat\fP parameter is used to
-initialize the \fBformat\fP field. The \fBdata\fP field contains the text to
-be used as overlay. For details, see the \fBosd\-overlay\fP command.
-.sp
-In addition, it provides the following methods:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBupdate()\fP
-Commit the OSD overlay to the screen, or in other words, run the
-\fBosd\-overlay\fP command with the current fields of the overlay table.
-Returns the result of the \fBosd\-overlay\fP command itself.
-.TP
-.B \fBremove()\fP
-Remove the overlay from the screen. A \fBupdate()\fP call will add it
-again.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-ov = mp.create_osd_overlay("ass\-events")
-ov.data = "{\e\ean5}{\e\eb1}hello world!"
-ov:update()
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The advantage of using this wrapper (as opposed to running \fBosd\-overlay\fP
-directly) is that the \fBid\fP field is allocated automatically.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_osd_size()\fP
-Returns a tuple of \fBosd_width, osd_height, osd_par\fP\&. The first two give
-the size of the OSD in pixels (for video outputs like \fB\-\-vo=xv\fP, this may
-be "scaled" pixels). The third is the display pixel aspect ratio.
-.sp
-May return invalid/nonsense values if OSD is not initialized yet.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS mp.msg functions
-.sp
-This module allows outputting messages to the terminal, and can be loaded
-with \fBrequire \(aqmp.msg\(aq\fP\&.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmsg.log(level, ...)\fP
-The level parameter is the message priority. It\(aqs a string and one of
-\fBfatal\fP, \fBerror\fP, \fBwarn\fP, \fBinfo\fP, \fBv\fP, \fBdebug\fP, \fBtrace\fP\&. The
-user\(aqs settings will determine which of these messages will be
-visible. Normally, all messages are visible, except \fBv\fP, \fBdebug\fP and
-\fBtrace\fP\&.
-.sp
-The parameters after that are all converted to strings. Spaces are inserted
-to separate multiple parameters.
-.sp
-You don\(aqt need to add newlines.
-.TP
-.B \fBmsg.fatal(...)\fP, \fBmsg.error(...)\fP, \fBmsg.warn(...)\fP, \fBmsg.info(...)\fP, \fBmsg.verbose(...)\fP, \fBmsg.debug(...)\fP, \fBmsg.trace(...)\fP
-All of these are shortcuts and equivalent to the corresponding
-\fBmsg.log(level, ...)\fP call.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS mp.options functions
-.sp
-mpv comes with a built\-in module to manage options from config\-files and the
-command\-line. All you have to do is to supply a table with default options to
-the read_options function. The function will overwrite the default values
-with values found in the config\-file and the command\-line (in that order).
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBoptions.read_options(table [, identifier [, on_update]])\fP
-A \fBtable\fP with key\-value pairs. The type of the default values is
-important for converting the values read from the config file or
-command\-line back. Do not use \fBnil\fP as a default value!
-.sp
-The \fBidentifier\fP is used to identify the config\-file and the command\-line
-options. These needs to unique to avoid collisions with other scripts.
-Defaults to \fBmp.get_script_name()\fP if the parameter is \fBnil\fP or missing.
-.sp
-The \fBon_update\fP parameter enables run\-time updates of all matching option
-values via the \fBscript\-opts\fP option/property. If any of the matching
-options changes, the values in the \fBtable\fP (which was originally passed to
-the function) are changed, and \fBon_update(list)\fP is called. \fBlist\fP is
-a table where each updated option has a \fBlist[option_name] = true\fP entry.
-There is no initial \fBon_update()\fP call. This never re\-reads the config file.
-\fBscript\-opts\fP is always applied on the original config file, ignoring
-previous \fBscript\-opts\fP values (for example, if an option is removed from
-\fBscript\-opts\fP at runtime, the option will have the value in the config
-file). \fBtable\fP entries are only written for option values whose values
-effectively change (this is important if the script changes \fBtable\fP
-entries independently).
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Example implementation:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-require \(aqmp.options\(aq
-local options = {
- optionA = "defaultvalueA",
- optionB = \-0.5,
- optionC = true,
-}
-read_options(options, "myscript")
-print(options.optionA)
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The config file will be stored in \fBscript\-opts/identifier.conf\fP in mpv\(aqs user
-folder. Comment lines can be started with # and stray spaces are not removed.
-Boolean values will be represented with yes/no.
-.sp
-Example config:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-# comment
-optionA=Hello World
-optionB=9999
-optionC=no
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Command\-line options are read from the \fB\-\-script\-opts\fP parameter. To avoid
-collisions, all keys have to be prefixed with \fBidentifier\-\fP\&.
-.sp
-Example command\-line:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-\-\-script\-opts=myscript\-optionA=TEST,myscript\-optionB=0,myscript\-optionC=yes
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS mp.utils functions
-.sp
-This built\-in module provides generic helper functions for Lua, and have
-strictly speaking nothing to do with mpv or video/audio playback. They are
-provided for convenience. Most compensate for Lua\(aqs scarce standard library.
-.sp
-Be warned that any of these functions might disappear any time. They are not
-strictly part of the guaranteed API.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fButils.getcwd()\fP
-Returns the directory that mpv was launched from. On error, \fBnil, error\fP
-is returned.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.readdir(path [, filter])\fP
-Enumerate all entries at the given path on the filesystem, and return them
-as array. Each entry is a directory entry (without the path).
-The list is unsorted (in whatever order the operating system returns it).
-.sp
-If the \fBfilter\fP argument is given, it must be one of the following
-strings:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBfiles\fP
-List regular files only. This excludes directories, special files
-(like UNIX device files or FIFOs), and dead symlinks. It includes
-UNIX symlinks to regular files.
-.TP
-.B \fBdirs\fP
-List directories only, or symlinks to directories. \fB\&.\fP and \fB\&..\fP
-are not included.
-.TP
-.B \fBnormal\fP
-Include the results of both \fBfiles\fP and \fBdirs\fP\&. (This is the
-default.)
-.TP
-.B \fBall\fP
-List all entries, even device files, dead symlinks, FIFOs, and the
-\fB\&.\fP and \fB\&..\fP entries.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-On error, \fBnil, error\fP is returned.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.file_info(path)\fP
-Stats the given path for information and returns a table with the
-following entries:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmode\fP
-protection bits (on Windows, always 755 (octal) for directories
-and 644 (octal) for files)
-.TP
-.B \fBsize\fP
-size in bytes
-.TP
-.B \fBatime\fP
-time of last access
-.TP
-.B \fBmtime\fP
-time of last modification
-.TP
-.B \fBctime\fP
-time of last metadata change
-.TP
-.B \fBis_file\fP
-Whether \fBpath\fP is a regular file (boolean)
-.TP
-.B \fBis_dir\fP
-Whether \fBpath\fP is a directory (boolean)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBmode\fP and \fBsize\fP are integers.
-Timestamps (\fBatime\fP, \fBmtime\fP and \fBctime\fP) are integer seconds since
-the Unix epoch (Unix time).
-The booleans \fBis_file\fP and \fBis_dir\fP are provided as a convenience;
-they can be and are derived from \fBmode\fP\&.
-.sp
-On error (e.g. path does not exist), \fBnil, error\fP is returned.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.split_path(path)\fP
-Split a path into directory component and filename component, and return
-them. The first return value is always the directory. The second return
-value is the trailing part of the path, the directory entry.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.join_path(p1, p2)\fP
-Return the concatenation of the 2 paths. Tries to be clever. For example,
-if \fBp2\fP is an absolute path, \fBp2\fP is returned without change.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.subprocess(t)\fP
-Runs an external process and waits until it exits. Returns process status
-and the captured output. This is a legacy wrapper around calling the
-\fBsubprocess\fP command with \fBmp.command_native\fP\&. It does the following
-things:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-copy the table \fBt\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-rename \fBcancellable\fP field to \fBplayback_only\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-rename \fBmax_size\fP to \fBcapture_size\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-set \fBcapture_stdout\fP field to \fBtrue\fP if unset
-.IP \(bu 2
-set \fBname\fP field to \fBsubprocess\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-call \fBmp.command_native(copied_t)\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-if the command failed, create a dummy result table
-.IP \(bu 2
-copy \fBerror_string\fP to \fBerror\fP field if the string is non\-empty
-.IP \(bu 2
-return the result table
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-It is recommended to use \fBmp.command_native\fP or \fBmp.command_native_async\fP
-directly, instead of calling this legacy wrapper. It is for compatibility
-only.
-.sp
-See the \fBsubprocess\fP documentation for semantics and further parameters.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.subprocess_detached(t)\fP
-Runs an external process and detaches it from mpv\(aqs control.
-.sp
-The parameter \fBt\fP is a table. The function reads the following entries:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBargs\fP
-Array of strings of the same semantics as the \fBargs\fP used in the
-\fBsubprocess\fP function.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The function returns \fBnil\fP\&.
-.sp
-This is a legacy wrapper around calling the \fBrun\fP command with
-\fBmp.commandv\fP and other functions.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.getpid()\fP
-Returns the process ID of the running mpv process. This can be used to identify
-the calling mpv when launching (detached) subprocesses.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.get_env_list()\fP
-Returns the C environment as a list of strings. (Do not confuse this with
-the Lua "environment", which is an unrelated concept.)
-.TP
-.B \fButils.parse_json(str [, trail])\fP
-Parses the given string argument as JSON, and returns it as a Lua table. On
-error, returns \fBnil, error\fP\&. (Currently, \fBerror\fP is just a string
-reading \fBerror\fP, because there is no fine\-grained error reporting of any
-kind.)
-.sp
-The returned value uses similar conventions as \fBmp.get_property_native()\fP
-to distinguish empty objects and arrays.
-.sp
-If the \fBtrail\fP parameter is \fBtrue\fP (or any value equal to \fBtrue\fP),
-then trailing non\-whitespace text is tolerated by the function, and the
-trailing text is returned as 3rd return value. (The 3rd return value is
-always there, but with \fBtrail\fP set, no error is raised.)
-.TP
-.B \fButils.format_json(v)\fP
-Format the given Lua table (or value) as a JSON string and return it. On
-error, returns \fBnil, error\fP\&. (Errors usually only happen on value types
-incompatible with JSON.)
-.sp
-The argument value uses similar conventions as \fBmp.set_property_native()\fP
-to distinguish empty objects and arrays.
-.TP
-.B \fButils.to_string(v)\fP
-Turn the given value into a string. Formats tables and their contents. This
-doesn\(aqt do anything special; it is only needed because Lua is terrible.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Events
-.sp
-Events are notifications from player core to scripts. You can register an
-event handler with \fBmp.register_event\fP\&.
-.sp
-Note that all scripts (and other parts of the player) receive events equally,
-and there\(aqs no such thing as blocking other scripts from receiving events.
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-function my_fn(event)
- print("start of playback!")
-end
-
-mp.register_event("file\-loaded", my_fn)
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-For the existing event types, see \fI\%List of events\fP\&.
-.SS Extras
-.sp
-This documents experimental features, or features that are "too special" to
-guarantee a stable interface.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.add_hook(type, priority, fn)\fP
-Add a hook callback for \fBtype\fP (a string identifying a certain kind of
-hook). These hooks allow the player to call script functions and wait for
-their result (normally, the Lua scripting interface is asynchronous from
-the point of view of the player core). \fBpriority\fP is an arbitrary integer
-that allows ordering among hooks of the same kind. Using the value 50 is
-recommended as neutral default value.
-.sp
-\fBfn(hook)\fP is the function that will be called during execution of the
-hook. The parameter passed to it (\fBhook\fP) is a Lua object that can control
-further aspects about the currently invoked hook. It provides the following
-methods:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBdefer()\fP
-Returning from the hook function should not automatically continue
-the hook. Instead, the API user wants to call \fBhook:cont()\fP on its
-own at a later point in time (before or after the function has
-returned).
-.TP
-.B \fBcont()\fP
-Continue the hook. Doesn\(aqt need to be called unless \fBdefer()\fP was
-called.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-See \fI\%Hooks\fP for currently existing hooks and what they do \- only the hook
-list is interesting; handling hook execution is done by the Lua script
-function automatically.
-.UNINDENT
-.SH JAVASCRIPT
-.sp
-JavaScript support in mpv is near identical to its Lua support. Use this section
-as reference on differences and availability of APIs, but otherwise you should
-refer to the Lua documentation for API details and general scripting in mpv.
-.SS Example
-.sp
-JavaScript code which leaves fullscreen mode when the player is paused:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-function on_pause_change(name, value) {
- if (value == true)
- mp.set_property("fullscreen", "no");
-}
-mp.observe_property("pause", "bool", on_pause_change);
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Similarities with Lua
-.sp
-mpv tries to load a script file as JavaScript if it has a \fB\&.js\fP extension, but
-otherwise, the documented Lua options, script directories, loading, etc apply to
-JavaScript files too.
-.sp
-Script initialization and lifecycle is the same as with Lua, and most of the Lua
-functions at the modules \fBmp\fP, \fBmp.utils\fP, \fBmp.msg\fP and \fBmp.options\fP are
-available to JavaScript with identical APIs \- including running commands,
-getting/setting properties, registering events/key\-bindings/hooks, etc.
-.SS Differences from Lua
-.sp
-No need to load modules. \fBmp\fP, \fBmp.utils\fP, \fBmp.msg\fP and \fBmp.options\fP
-are preloaded, and you can use e.g. \fBvar cwd = mp.utils.getcwd();\fP without
-prior setup.
-.sp
-Errors are slightly different. Where the Lua APIs return \fBnil\fP for error,
-the JavaScript ones return \fBundefined\fP\&. Where Lua returns \fBsomething, error\fP
-JavaScript returns only \fBsomething\fP \- and makes \fBerror\fP available via
-\fBmp.last_error()\fP\&. Note that only some of the functions have this additional
-\fBerror\fP value \- typically the same ones which have it in Lua.
-.sp
-Standard APIs are preferred. For instance \fBsetTimeout\fP and \fBJSON.stringify\fP
-are available, but \fBmp.add_timeout\fP and \fBmp.utils.format_json\fP are not.
-.sp
-No standard library. This means that interaction with anything outside of mpv is
-limited to the available APIs, typically via \fBmp.utils\fP\&. However, some file
-functions were added, and CommonJS \fBrequire\fP is available too \- where the
-loaded modules have the same privileges as normal scripts.
-.SS Language features \- ECMAScript 5
-.sp
-The scripting backend which mpv currently uses is MuJS \- a compatible minimal
-ES5 interpreter. As such, \fBString.substring\fP is implemented for instance,
-while the common but non\-standard \fBString.substr\fP is not. Please consult the
-MuJS pages on language features and platform support \- \fI\%https://mujs.com\fP .
-.SS Unsupported Lua APIs and their JS alternatives
-.sp
-\fBmp.add_timeout(seconds, fn)\fP JS: \fBid = setTimeout(fn, ms)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.add_periodic_timer(seconds, fn)\fP JS: \fBid = setInterval(fn, ms)\fP
-.sp
-\fButils.parse_json(str [, trail])\fP JS: \fBJSON.parse(str)\fP
-.sp
-\fButils.format_json(v)\fP JS: \fBJSON.stringify(v)\fP
-.sp
-\fButils.to_string(v)\fP see \fBdump\fP below.
-.sp
-\fBmp.suspend()\fP JS: none (deprecated).
-.sp
-\fBmp.resume()\fP JS: none (deprecated).
-.sp
-\fBmp.resume_all()\fP JS: none (deprecated).
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_next_timeout()\fP see event loop below.
-.sp
-\fBmp.dispatch_events([allow_wait])\fP see event loop below.
-.SS Scripting APIs \- identical to Lua
-.sp
-(LE) \- Last\-Error, indicates that \fBmp.last_error()\fP can be used after the
-call to test for success (empty string) or failure (non empty reason string).
-Where the Lua APIs use \fBnil\fP to indicate error, JS APIs use \fBundefined\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBmp.command(string)\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.commandv(arg1, arg2, ...)\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.command_native(table [,def])\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBid = mp.command_native_async(table [,fn])\fP (LE) Notes: \fBid\fP is true\-thy on
-success, \fBfn\fP is called always a\-sync, \fBerror\fP is empty string on success.
-.sp
-\fBmp.abort_async_command(id)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_property(name [,def])\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_property_osd(name [,def])\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_property_bool(name [,def])\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_property_number(name [,def])\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_property_native(name [,def])\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.set_property(name, value)\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.set_property_bool(name, value)\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.set_property_number(name, value)\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.set_property_native(name, value)\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_time()\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.add_key_binding(key, name|fn [,fn [,flags]])\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.add_forced_key_binding(...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.remove_key_binding(name)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.register_event(name, fn)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.unregister_event(fn)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.observe_property(name, type, fn)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.unobserve_property(fn)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_opt(key)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_script_name()\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_script_directory()\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.osd_message(text [,duration])\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_wakeup_pipe()\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.register_idle(fn)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.unregister_idle(fn)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.enable_messages(level)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.register_script_message(name, fn)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.unregister_script_message(name)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.create_osd_overlay(format)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.get_osd_size()\fP (returned object has properties: width, height, aspect)
-.sp
-\fBmp.msg.log(level, ...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.msg.fatal(...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.msg.error(...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.msg.warn(...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.msg.info(...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.msg.verbose(...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.msg.debug(...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.msg.trace(...)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.getcwd()\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.readdir(path [, filter])\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.file_info(path)\fP (LE) Note: like lua \- this does NOT expand
-meta\-paths like \fB~~/foo\fP (other JS file functions do expand meta paths).
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.split_path(path)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.join_path(p1, p2)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.subprocess(t)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.subprocess_detached(t)\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.get_env_list()\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.utils.getpid()\fP (LE)
-.sp
-\fBmp.add_hook(type, priority, fn(hook))\fP
-.sp
-\fBmp.options.read_options(obj [, identifier [, on_update]])\fP (types:
-string/boolean/number)
-.SS Additional utilities
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.last_error()\fP
-If used after an API call which updates last error, returns an empty string
-if the API call succeeded, or a non\-empty error reason string otherwise.
-.TP
-.B \fBError.stack\fP (string)
-When using \fBtry { ... } catch(e) { ... }\fP, then \fBe.stack\fP is the stack
-trace of the error \- if it was created using the \fBError(...)\fP constructor.
-.TP
-.B \fBprint\fP (global)
-A convenient alias to \fBmp.msg.info\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBdump\fP (global)
-Like \fBprint\fP but also expands objects and arrays recursively.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.utils.getenv(name)\fP
-Returns the value of the host environment variable \fBname\fP, or
-\fBundefined\fP if the variable is not defined.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.utils.get_user_path(path)\fP
-Expands (mpv) meta paths like \fB~/x\fP, \fB~~/y\fP, \fB~~desktop/z\fP etc.
-\fBread_file\fP, \fBwrite_file\fP, \fBappend_file\fP and \fBrequire\fP already use
-this internally.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.utils.read_file(fname [,max])\fP
-Returns the content of file \fBfname\fP as string. If \fBmax\fP is provided and
-not negative, limit the read to \fBmax\fP bytes.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.utils.write_file(fname, str)\fP
-(Over)write file \fBfname\fP with text content \fBstr\fP\&. \fBfname\fP must be
-prefixed with \fBfile://\fP as simple protection against accidental arguments
-switch, e.g. \fBmp.utils.write_file("file://~/abc.txt", "hello world")\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.utils.append_file(fname, str)\fP
-Same as \fBmp.utils.write_file\fP if the file \fBfname\fP does not exist. If it
-does exist then append instead of overwrite.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note: \fBread_file\fP, \fBwrite_file\fP and \fBappend_file\fP throw on errors, allow
-text content only.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_time_ms()\fP
-Same as \fBmp.get_time()\fP but in ms instead of seconds.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.get_script_file()\fP
-Returns the file name of the current script.
-.TP
-.B \fBexit()\fP (global)
-Make the script exit at the end of the current event loop iteration.
-Note: please remove added key bindings before calling \fBexit()\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.utils.compile_js(fname, content_str)\fP
-Compiles the JS code \fBcontent_str\fP as file name \fBfname\fP (without loading
-anything from the filesystem), and returns it as a function. Very similar
-to a \fBFunction\fP constructor, but shows at stack traces as \fBfname\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBmp.module_paths\fP
-Global modules search paths array for the \fBrequire\fP function (see below).
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Timers (global)
-.sp
-The standard HTML/node.js timers are available:
-.sp
-\fBid = setTimeout(fn [,duration [,arg1 [,arg2...]]])\fP
-.sp
-\fBid = setTimeout(code_string [,duration])\fP
-.sp
-\fBclearTimeout(id)\fP
-.sp
-\fBid = setInterval(fn [,duration [,arg1 [,arg2...]]])\fP
-.sp
-\fBid = setInterval(code_string [,duration])\fP
-.sp
-\fBclearInterval(id)\fP
-.sp
-\fBsetTimeout\fP and \fBsetInterval\fP return id, and later call \fBfn\fP (or execute
-\fBcode_string\fP) after \fBduration\fP ms. Interval also repeat every \fBduration\fP\&.
-.sp
-\fBduration\fP has a minimum and default value of 0, \fBcode_string\fP is
-a plain string which is evaluated as JS code, and \fB[,arg1 [,arg2..]]\fP are used
-as arguments (if provided) when calling back \fBfn\fP\&.
-.sp
-The \fBclear...(id)\fP functions cancel timer \fBid\fP, and are irreversible.
-.sp
-Note: timers always call back asynchronously, e.g. \fBsetTimeout(fn)\fP will never
-call \fBfn\fP before returning. \fBfn\fP will be called either at the end of this
-event loop iteration or at a later event loop iteration. This is true also for
-intervals \- which also never call back twice at the same event loop iteration.
-.sp
-Additionally, timers are processed after the event queue is empty, so it\(aqs valid
-to use \fBsetTimeout(fn)\fP as a one\-time idle observer.
-.SS CommonJS modules and \fBrequire(id)\fP
-.sp
-CommonJS Modules are a standard system where scripts can export common functions
-for use by other scripts. Specifically, a module is a script which adds
-properties (functions, etc) to its pre\-existing \fBexports\fP object, which
-another script can access with \fBrequire(module\-id)\fP\&. This runs the module and
-returns its \fBexports\fP object. Further calls to \fBrequire\fP for the same module
-will return its cached \fBexports\fP object without running the module again.
-.sp
-Modules and \fBrequire\fP are supported, standard compliant, and generally similar
-to node.js. However, most node.js modules won\(aqt run due to missing modules such
-as \fBfs\fP, \fBprocess\fP, etc, but some node.js modules with minimal dependencies
-do work. In general, this is for mpv modules and not a node.js replacement.
-.sp
-A \fB\&.js\fP file extension is always added to \fBid\fP, e.g. \fBrequire("./foo")\fP
-will load the file \fB\&./foo.js\fP and return its \fBexports\fP object.
-.sp
-An id which starts with \fB\&./\fP or \fB\&../\fP is relative to the script or module
-which \fBrequire\fP it. Otherwise it\(aqs considered a top\-level id (CommonJS term).
-.sp
-Top\-level id is evaluated as absolute filesystem path if possible, e.g. \fB/x/y\fP
-or \fB~/x\fP\&. Otherwise it\(aqs considered a global module id and searched according
-to \fBmp.module_paths\fP in normal array order, e.g. \fBrequire("x")\fP tries to
-load \fBx.js\fP at one of the array paths, and id \fBfoo/x\fP tries to load \fBx.js\fP
-inside dir \fBfoo\fP at one of the paths.
-.sp
-The \fBmp.module_paths\fP array is empty by default except for scripts which are
-loaded as a directory where it contains one item \- \fB<directory>/modules/\fP .
-The array may be updated from a script (or using custom init \- see below) which
-will affect future calls to \fBrequire\fP for global module id\(aqs which are not
-already loaded/cached.
-.sp
-No \fBglobal\fP variable, but a module\(aqs \fBthis\fP at its top lexical scope is the
-global object \- also in strict mode. If you have a module which needs \fBglobal\fP
-as the global object, you could do \fBthis.global = this;\fP before \fBrequire\fP\&.
-.sp
-Functions and variables declared at a module don\(aqt pollute the global object.
-.SS Custom initialization
-.sp
-After mpv initializes the JavaScript environment for a script but before it
-loads the script \- it tries to run the file \fBinit.js\fP at the root of the mpv
-configuration directory. Code at this file can update the environment further
-for all scripts. E.g. if it contains \fBmp.module_paths.push("/foo")\fP then
-\fBrequire\fP at all scripts will search global module id\(aqs also at \fB/foo\fP
-(do NOT do \fBmp.module_paths = ["/foo"];\fP because this will remove existing
-paths \- like \fB<script\-dir>/modules\fP for scripts which load from a directory).
-.sp
-The custom\-init file is ignored if mpv is invoked with \fB\-\-no\-config\fP\&.
-.sp
-Before mpv 0.34, the file name was \fB\&.init.js\fP (with dot) at the same dir.
-.SS The event loop
-.sp
-The event loop poll/dispatch mpv events as long as the queue is not empty, then
-processes the timers, then waits for the next event, and repeats this forever.
-.sp
-You could put this code at your script to replace the built\-in event loop, and
-also print every event which mpv sends to your script:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-function mp_event_loop() {
- var wait = 0;
- do {
- var e = mp.wait_event(wait);
- dump(e); // there could be a lot of prints...
- if (e.event != "none") {
- mp.dispatch_event(e);
- wait = 0;
- } else {
- wait = mp.process_timers() / 1000;
- if (wait != 0) {
- mp.notify_idle_observers();
- wait = mp.peek_timers_wait() / 1000;
- }
- }
- } while (mp.keep_running);
-}
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBmp_event_loop\fP is a name which mpv tries to call after the script loads.
-The internal implementation is similar to this (without \fBdump\fP though..).
-.sp
-\fBe = mp.wait_event(wait)\fP returns when the next mpv event arrives, or after
-\fBwait\fP seconds if positive and no mpv events arrived. \fBwait\fP value of 0
-returns immediately (with \fBe.event == "none"\fP if the queue is empty).
-.sp
-\fBmp.dispatch_event(e)\fP calls back the handlers registered for \fBe.event\fP,
-if there are such (event handlers, property observers, script messages, etc).
-.sp
-\fBmp.process_timers()\fP calls back the already\-added, non\-canceled due timers,
-and returns the duration in ms till the next due timer (possibly 0), or \-1 if
-there are no pending timers. Must not be called recursively.
-.sp
-\fBmp.notify_idle_observers()\fP calls back the idle observers, which we do when
-we\(aqre about to sleep (wait != 0), but the observers may add timers or take
-non\-negligible duration to complete, so we re\-calculate \fBwait\fP afterwards.
-.sp
-\fBmp.peek_timers_wait()\fP returns the same values as \fBmp.process_timers()\fP
-but without doing anything. Invalid result if called from a timer callback.
-.sp
-Note: \fBexit()\fP is also registered for the \fBshutdown\fP event, and its
-implementation is a simple \fBmp.keep_running = false\fP\&.
-.SH JSON IPC
-.sp
-mpv can be controlled by external programs using the JSON\-based IPC protocol.
-It can be enabled by specifying the path to a unix socket or a named pipe using
-the option \fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server\fP\&. Clients can connect to this socket and send
-commands to the player or receive events from it.
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-This is not intended to be a secure network protocol. It is explicitly
-insecure: there is no authentication, no encryption, and the commands
-themselves are insecure too. For example, the \fBrun\fP command is exposed,
-which can run arbitrary system commands. The use\-case is controlling the
-player locally. This is not different from the MPlayer slave protocol.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Socat example
-.sp
-You can use the \fBsocat\fP tool to send commands (and receive replies) from the
-shell. Assuming mpv was started with:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv file.mkv \-\-input\-ipc\-server=/tmp/mpvsocket
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Then you can control it using socat:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-> echo \(aq{ "command": ["get_property", "playback\-time"] }\(aq | socat \- /tmp/mpvsocket
-{"data":190.482000,"error":"success"}
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-In this case, socat copies data between stdin/stdout and the mpv socket
-connection.
-.sp
-See the \fB\-\-idle\fP option how to make mpv start without exiting immediately or
-playing a file.
-.sp
-It\(aqs also possible to send input.conf style text\-only commands:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-> echo \(aqshow\-text ${playback\-time}\(aq | socat \- /tmp/mpvsocket
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-But you won\(aqt get a reply over the socket. (This particular command shows the
-playback time on the player\(aqs OSD.)
-.SS Command Prompt example
-.sp
-Unfortunately, it\(aqs not as easy to test the IPC protocol on Windows, since
-Windows ports of socat (in Cygwin and MSYS2) don\(aqt understand named pipes. In
-the absence of a simple tool to send and receive from bidirectional pipes, the
-\fBecho\fP command can be used to send commands, but not receive replies from the
-command prompt.
-.sp
-Assuming mpv was started with:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-mpv file.mkv \-\-input\-ipc\-server=\e\e.\epipe\empvsocket
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-You can send commands from a command prompt:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-echo show\-text ${playback\-time} >\e\e.\epipe\empvsocket
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-To be able to simultaneously read and write from the IPC pipe, like on Linux,
-it\(aqs necessary to write an external program that uses overlapped file I/O (or
-some wrapper like .NET\(aqs NamedPipeClientStream.)
-.sp
-You can open the pipe in PuTTY as "serial" device. This is not very
-comfortable, but gives a way to test interactively without having to write code.
-.SS Protocol
-.sp
-The protocol uses UTF\-8\-only JSON as defined by RFC\-8259. Unlike standard JSON,
-"u" escape sequences are not allowed to construct surrogate pairs. To avoid
-getting conflicts, encode all text characters including and above codepoint
-U+0020 as UTF\-8. mpv might output broken UTF\-8 in corner cases (see "UTF\-8"
-section below).
-.sp
-Clients can execute commands on the player by sending JSON messages of the
-following form:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["command_name", "param1", "param2", ...] }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-where \fBcommand_name\fP is the name of the command to be executed, followed by a
-list of parameters. Parameters must be formatted as native JSON values
-(integers, strings, booleans, ...). Every message \fBmust\fP be terminated with
-\fB\en\fP\&. Additionally, \fB\en\fP must not appear anywhere inside the message. In
-practice this means that messages should be minified before being sent to mpv.
-.sp
-mpv will then send back a reply indicating whether the command was run
-correctly, and an additional field holding the command\-specific return data (it
-can also be null).
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "error": "success", "data": null }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-mpv will also send events to clients with JSON messages of the following form:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "event": "event_name" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-where \fBevent_name\fP is the name of the event. Additional event\-specific fields
-can also be present. See \fI\%List of events\fP for a list of all supported events.
-.sp
-Because events can occur at any time, it may be difficult at times to determine
-which response goes with which command. Commands may optionally include a
-\fBrequest_id\fP which, if provided in the command request, will be copied
-verbatim into the response. mpv does not interpret the \fBrequest_id\fP in any
-way; it is solely for the use of the requester. The only requirement is that
-the \fBrequest_id\fP field must be an integer (a number without fractional parts
-in the range \fB\-2^63..2^63\-1\fP). Using other types is deprecated and will
-currently show a warning. In the future, this will raise an error.
-.sp
-For example, this request:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["get_property", "time\-pos"], "request_id": 100 }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Would generate this response:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "error": "success", "data": 1.468135, "request_id": 100 }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If you don\(aqt specify a \fBrequest_id\fP, command replies will set it to 0.
-.sp
-All commands, replies, and events are separated from each other with a line
-break character (\fB\en\fP).
-.sp
-If the first character (after skipping whitespace) is not \fB{\fP, the command
-will be interpreted as non\-JSON text command, as they are used in input.conf
-(or \fBmpv_command_string()\fP in the client API). Additionally, lines starting
-with \fB#\fP and empty lines are ignored.
-.sp
-Currently, embedded 0 bytes terminate the current line, but you should not
-rely on this.
-.SS Data flow
-.sp
-Currently, the mpv\-side IPC implementation does not service the socket while a
-command is executed and the reply is written. It is for example not possible
-that other events, that happened during the execution of the command, are
-written to the socket before the reply is written.
-.sp
-This might change in the future. The only guarantee is that replies to IPC
-messages are sent in sequence.
-.sp
-Also, since socket I/O is inherently asynchronous, it is possible that you read
-unrelated event messages from the socket, before you read the reply to the
-previous command you sent. In this case, these events were queued by the mpv
-side before it read and started processing your command message.
-.sp
-If the mpv\-side IPC implementation switches away from blocking writes and
-blocking command execution, it may attempt to send events at any time.
-.sp
-You can also use asynchronous commands, which can return in any order, and
-which do not block IPC protocol interaction at all while the command is
-executed in the background.
-.SS Asynchronous commands
-.sp
-Command can be run asynchronously. This behaves exactly as with normal command
-execution, except that execution is not blocking. Other commands can be sent
-while it\(aqs executing, and command completion can be arbitrarily reordered.
-.sp
-The \fBasync\fP field controls this. If present, it must be a boolean. If missing,
-\fBfalse\fP is assumed.
-.sp
-For example, this initiates an asynchronous command:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["screenshot"], "request_id": 123, "async": true }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-And this is the completion:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{"request_id":123,"error":"success","data":null}
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-By design, you will not get a confirmation that the command was started. If a
-command is long running, sending the message will lead to any reply until much
-later when the command finishes.
-.sp
-Some commands execute synchronously, but these will behave like asynchronous
-commands that finished execution immediately.
-.sp
-Cancellation of asynchronous commands is available in the libmpv API, but has
-not yet been implemented in the IPC protocol.
-.SS Commands with named arguments
-.sp
-If the \fBcommand\fP field is a JSON object, named arguments are expected. This
-is described in the C API \fBmpv_command_node()\fP documentation (the
-\fBMPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP\fP case). In some cases, this may make commands more
-readable, while some obscure commands basically require using named arguments.
-.sp
-Currently, only "proper" commands (as listed by \fI\%List of Input Commands\fP)
-support named arguments.
-.SS Commands
-.sp
-In addition to the commands described in \fI\%List of Input Commands\fP, a few
-extra commands can also be used as part of the protocol:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBclient_name\fP
-Return the name of the client as string. This is the string \fBipc\-N\fP with
-N being an integer number.
-.TP
-.B \fBget_time_us\fP
-Return the current mpv internal time in microseconds as a number. This is
-basically the system time, with an arbitrary offset.
-.TP
-.B \fBget_property\fP
-Return the value of the given property. The value will be sent in the data
-field of the replay message.
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["get_property", "volume"] }
-{ "data": 50.0, "error": "success" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBget_property_string\fP
-Like \fBget_property\fP, but the resulting data will always be a string.
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["get_property_string", "volume"] }
-{ "data": "50.000000", "error": "success" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBset_property\fP
-Set the given property to the given value. See \fI\%Properties\fP for more
-information about properties.
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["set_property", "pause", true] }
-{ "error": "success" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBset_property_string\fP
-Alias for \fBset_property\fP\&. Both commands accept native values and strings.
-.TP
-.B \fBobserve_property\fP
-Watch a property for changes. If the given property is changed, then an
-event of type \fBproperty\-change\fP will be generated
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["observe_property", 1, "volume"] }
-{ "error": "success" }
-{ "event": "property\-change", "id": 1, "data": 52.0, "name": "volume" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-\fBWARNING:\fP
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-If the connection is closed, the IPC client is destroyed internally,
-and the observed properties are unregistered. This happens for example
-when sending commands to a socket with separate \fBsocat\fP invocations.
-This can make it seem like property observation does not work. You must
-keep the IPC connection open to make it work.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBobserve_property_string\fP
-Like \fBobserve_property\fP, but the resulting data will always be a string.
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["observe_property_string", 1, "volume"] }
-{ "error": "success" }
-{ "event": "property\-change", "id": 1, "data": "52.000000", "name": "volume" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBunobserve_property\fP
-Undo \fBobserve_property\fP or \fBobserve_property_string\fP\&. This requires the
-numeric id passed to the observed command as argument.
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "command": ["unobserve_property", 1] }
-{ "error": "success" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBrequest_log_messages\fP
-Enable output of mpv log messages. They will be received as events. The
-parameter to this command is the log\-level (see \fBmpv_request_log_messages\fP
-C API function).
-.sp
-Log message output is meant for humans only (mostly for debugging).
-Attempting to retrieve information by parsing these messages will just
-lead to breakages with future mpv releases. Instead, make a feature request,
-and ask for a proper event that returns the information you need.
-.TP
-.B \fBenable_event\fP, \fBdisable_event\fP
-Enables or disables the named event. Mirrors the \fBmpv_request_event\fP C
-API function. If the string \fBall\fP is used instead of an event name, all
-events are enabled or disabled.
-.sp
-By default, most events are enabled, and there is not much use for this
-command.
-.TP
-.B \fBget_version\fP
-Returns the client API version the C API of the remote mpv instance
-provides.
-.sp
-See also: \fBDOCS/client\-api\-changes.rst\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.SS UTF\-8
-.sp
-Normally, all strings are in UTF\-8. Sometimes it can happen that strings are
-in some broken encoding (often happens with file tags and such, and filenames
-on many Unixes are not required to be in UTF\-8 either). This means that mpv
-sometimes sends invalid JSON. If that is a problem for the client application\(aqs
-parser, it should filter the raw data for invalid UTF\-8 sequences and perform
-the desired replacement, before feeding the data to its JSON parser.
-.sp
-mpv will not attempt to construct invalid UTF\-8 with broken "u" escape
-sequences. This includes surrogate pairs.
-.SS JSON extensions
-.sp
-The following non\-standard extensions are supported:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-a list or object item can have a trailing ","
-.IP \(bu 2
-object syntax accepts "=" in addition of ":"
-.IP \(bu 2
-object keys can be unquoted, if they start with a character in "A\-Za\-z_"
-and contain only characters in "A\-Za\-z0\-9_"
-.IP \(bu 2
-byte escapes with "xAB" are allowed (with AB being a 2 digit hex number)
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Example:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ objkey = "value\ex0A" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Is equivalent to:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-{ "objkey": "value\en" }
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SS Alternative ways of starting clients
-.sp
-You can create an anonymous IPC connection without having to set
-\fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server\fP\&. This is achieved through a mpv pseudo scripting backend
-that starts processes.
-.sp
-You can put \fB\&.run\fP file extension in the mpv scripts directory in its config
-directory (see the \fI\%FILES\fP section for details), or load them through other
-means (see \fI\%Script location\fP). These scripts are simply executed with the OS
-native mechanism (as if you ran them in the shell). They must have a proper
-shebang and have the executable bit set.
-.sp
-When executed, a socket (the IPC connection) is passed to them through file
-descriptor inheritance. The file descriptor is indicated as the special command
-line argument \fB\-\-mpv\-ipc\-fd=N\fP, where \fBN\fP is the numeric file descriptor.
-.sp
-The rest is the same as with a normal \fB\-\-input\-ipc\-server\fP IPC connection. mpv
-does not attempt to observe or other interact with the started script process.
-.sp
-This does not work in Windows yet.
-.SH CHANGELOG
-.sp
-There is no real changelog, but you can look at the following things:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-The release changelog, which should contain most user\-visible changes,
-including new features and bug fixes:
-.sp
-\fI\%https://github.com/mpv\-player/mpv/releases\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-The git log, which is the "real" changelog
-.IP \(bu 2
-The file \fI\%https://github.com/mpv\-player/mpv/blob/master/DOCS/interface\-changes.rst\fP
-documents changes to the command and user interface, such as options and
-properties. (It usually documents breaking changes only, additions and
-enhancements are often not listed.)
-.IP \(bu 2
-C API changes are listed in
-\fI\%https://github.com/mpv\-player/mpv/blob/master/DOCS/client\-api\-changes.rst\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-The file \fBmplayer\-changes.rst\fP in the \fBDOCS\fP sub directory on the git
-repository, which used to be in place of this section. It documents some
-changes that happened since mplayer2 forked off MPlayer. (Not updated
-anymore.)
-.UNINDENT
-.SH EMBEDDING INTO OTHER PROGRAMS (LIBMPV)
-.sp
-mpv can be embedded into other programs as video/audio playback backend. The
-recommended way to do so is using libmpv. See \fBlibmpv/client.h\fP in the mpv
-source code repository. This provides a C API. Bindings for other languages
-might be available (see wiki).
-.sp
-Since libmpv merely allows access to underlying mechanisms that can control
-mpv, further documentation is spread over a few places:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fI\%https://github.com/mpv\-player/mpv/blob/master/libmpv/client.h\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fI\%https://mpv.io/manual/master/#options\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fI\%https://mpv.io/manual/master/#list\-of\-input\-commands\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fI\%https://mpv.io/manual/master/#properties\fP
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fI\%https://github.com/mpv\-player/mpv\-examples/tree/master/libmpv\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.SH C PLUGINS
-.sp
-You can write C plugins for mpv. These use the libmpv API, although they do not
-use the libmpv library itself.
-.sp
-They are available on Linux/BSD platforms only and enabled by default if the
-compiler supports linking with the \fB\-rdynamic\fP flag.
-.SS C plugins location
-.sp
-C plugins are put into the mpv scripts directory in its config directory
-(see the \fI\%FILES\fP section for details). They must have a \fB\&.so\fP file extension.
-They can also be explicitly loaded with the \fB\-\-script\fP option.
-.SS API
-.sp
-A C plugin must export the following function:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.sp
-.nf
-.ft C
-int mpv_open_cplugin(mpv_handle *handle)
-.ft P
-.fi
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-The plugin function will be called on loading time. This function does not
-return as long as your plugin is loaded (it runs in its own thread). The
-\fBhandle\fP will be deallocated as soon as the plugin function returns.
-.sp
-The return value is interpreted as error status. A value of \fB0\fP is
-interpreted as success, while \fB\-1\fP signals an error. In the latter case,
-the player prints an uninformative error message that loading failed.
-.sp
-Return values other than \fB0\fP and \fB\-1\fP are reserved, and trigger undefined
-behavior.
-.sp
-Within the plugin function, you can call libmpv API functions. The \fBhandle\fP
-is created by \fBmpv_create_client()\fP (or actually an internal equivalent),
-and belongs to you. You can call \fBmpv_wait_event()\fP to wait for things
-happening, and so on.
-.sp
-Note that the player might block until your plugin calls \fBmpv_wait_event()\fP
-for the first time. This gives you a chance to install initial hooks etc.
-before playback begins.
-.sp
-The details are quite similar to Lua scripts.
-.SS Linkage to libmpv
-.sp
-The current implementation requires that your plugins are \fBnot\fP linked against
-libmpv. What your plugins uses are not symbols from a libmpv binary, but
-symbols from the mpv host binary.
-.SS Examples
-.sp
-See:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.IP \(bu 2
-\fI\%https://github.com/mpv\-player/mpv\-examples/tree/master/cplugins\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.SH ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
-.sp
-There are a number of environment variables that can be used to control the
-behavior of mpv.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fBHOME\fP, \fBXDG_CONFIG_HOME\fP
-Used to determine mpv config directory. If \fBXDG_CONFIG_HOME\fP is not set,
-\fB$HOME/.config/mpv\fP is used.
-.sp
-\fB$HOME/.mpv\fP is always added to the list of config search paths with a
-lower priority.
-.TP
-.B \fBMPV_HOME\fP
-Directory where mpv looks for user settings. Overrides \fBHOME\fP, and mpv
-will try to load the config file as \fB$MPV_HOME/mpv.conf\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B \fBMPV_VERBOSE\fP (see also \fB\-v\fP and \fB\-\-msg\-level\fP)
-Set the initial verbosity level across all message modules (default: 0).
-This is an integer, and the resulting verbosity corresponds to the number
-of \fB\-\-v\fP options passed to the command line.
-.TP
-.B \fBMPV_LEAK_REPORT\fP
-If set to \fB1\fP, enable internal talloc leak reporting. If set to another
-value, disable leak reporting. If unset, use the default, which normally is
-\fB0\fP\&. If mpv was built with \fB\-\-enable\-ta\-leak\-report\fP, the default is
-\fB1\fP\&. If leak reporting was disabled at compile time (\fBNDEBUG\fP in
-custom \fBCFLAGS\fP), this environment variable is ignored.
-.TP
-.B \fBLADSPA_PATH\fP
-Specifies the search path for LADSPA plugins. If it is unset, fully
-qualified path names must be used.
-.TP
-.B \fBDISPLAY\fP
-Standard X11 display name to use.
-.TP
-.B FFmpeg/Libav:
-This library accesses various environment variables. However, they are not
-centrally documented, and documenting them is not our job. Therefore, this
-list is incomplete.
-.sp
-Notable environment variables:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBhttp_proxy\fP
-URL to proxy for \fBhttp://\fP and \fBhttps://\fP URLs.
-.TP
-.B \fBno_proxy\fP
-List of domain patterns for which no proxy should be used.
-List entries are separated by \fB,\fP\&. Patterns can include \fB*\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B libdvdcss:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B \fBDVDCSS_CACHE\fP
-Specify a directory in which to store title key values. This will
-speed up descrambling of DVDs which are in the cache. The
-\fBDVDCSS_CACHE\fP directory is created if it does not exist, and a
-subdirectory is created named after the DVD\(aqs title or manufacturing
-date. If \fBDVDCSS_CACHE\fP is not set or is empty, libdvdcss will use
-the default value which is \fB${HOME}/.dvdcss/\fP under Unix and
-the roaming application data directory (\fB%APPDATA%\fP) under
-Windows. The special value "off" disables caching.
-.TP
-.B \fBDVDCSS_METHOD\fP
-Sets the authentication and decryption method that libdvdcss will use
-to read scrambled discs. Can be one of \fBtitle\fP, \fBkey\fP or \fBdisc\fP\&.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B key
-is the default method. libdvdcss will use a set of calculated
-player keys to try to get the disc key. This can fail if the drive
-does not recognize any of the player keys.
-.TP
-.B disc
-is a fallback method when key has failed. Instead of using player
-keys, libdvdcss will crack the disc key using a brute force
-algorithm. This process is CPU intensive and requires 64 MB of
-memory to store temporary data.
-.TP
-.B title
-is the fallback when all other methods have failed. It does not
-rely on a key exchange with the DVD drive, but rather uses a crypto
-attack to guess the title key. On rare cases this may fail because
-there is not enough encrypted data on the disc to perform a
-statistical attack, but on the other hand it is the only way to
-decrypt a DVD stored on a hard disc, or a DVD with the wrong region
-on an RPC2 drive.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBDVDCSS_RAW_DEVICE\fP
-Specify the raw device to use. Exact usage will depend on your
-operating system, the Linux utility to set up raw devices is raw(8)
-for instance. Please note that on most operating systems, using a raw
-device requires highly aligned buffers: Linux requires a 2048 bytes
-alignment (which is the size of a DVD sector).
-.TP
-.B \fBDVDCSS_VERBOSE\fP
-Sets the libdvdcss verbosity level.
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 0
-Outputs no messages at all.
-.TP
-.B 1
-Outputs error messages to stderr.
-.TP
-.B 2
-Outputs error messages and debug messages to stderr.
-.UNINDENT
-.TP
-.B \fBDVDREAD_NOKEYS\fP
-Skip retrieving all keys on startup. Currently disabled.
-.TP
-.B \fBHOME\fP
-FIXME: Document this.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.SH EXIT CODES
-.sp
-Normally \fBmpv\fP returns 0 as exit code after finishing playback successfully.
-If errors happen, the following exit codes can be returned:
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B 1
-Error initializing mpv. This is also returned if unknown options are
-passed to mpv.
-.TP
-.B 2
-The file passed to mpv couldn\(aqt be played. This is somewhat fuzzy:
-currently, playback of a file is considered to be successful if
-initialization was mostly successful, even if playback fails
-immediately after initialization.
-.TP
-.B 3
-There were some files that could be played, and some files which
-couldn\(aqt (using the definition of success from above).
-.TP
-.B 4
-Quit due to a signal, Ctrl+c in a VO window (by default), or from the
-default quit key bindings in encoding mode.
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-Note that quitting the player manually will always lead to exit code 0,
-overriding the exit code that would be returned normally. Also, the \fBquit\fP
-input command can take an exit code: in this case, that exit code is returned.
-.SH FILES
-.sp
-For Windows\-specifics, see \fI\%FILES ON WINDOWS\fP section.
-.INDENT 0.0
-.TP
-.B \fB/usr/local/etc/mpv/mpv.conf\fP
-mpv system\-wide settings (depends on \fB\-\-prefix\fP passed to configure \- mpv
-in default configuration will use \fB/usr/local/etc/mpv/\fP as config
-directory, while most Linux distributions will set it to \fB/etc/mpv/\fP).
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv\fP
-The standard configuration directory. This can be overridden by environment
-variables, in ascending order:
-.INDENT 7.0
-.TP
-.B 1
-If \fB$XDG_CONFIG_HOME\fP is set, then the derived configuration directory
-will be \fB$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mpv\fP\&.
-.TP
-.B 2
-If \fB$MPV_HOME\fP is set, then the derived configuration directory will be
-\fB$MPV_HOME\fP\&.
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-If this directory, nor the original configuration directory (see below) do
-not exist, mpv tries to create this directory automatically.
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.mpv/\fP
-The original (pre 0.5.0) configuration directory. It will continue to be
-read if present.
-.sp
-If both this directory and the standard configuration directory are
-present, configuration will be read from both with the standard
-configuration directory content taking precedence. However, you should
-fully migrate to the standard directory and a warning will be shown in
-this situation.
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv/mpv.conf\fP
-mpv user settings (see \fI\%CONFIGURATION FILES\fP section)
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv/input.conf\fP
-key bindings (see \fI\%INPUT.CONF\fP section)
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv/fonts.conf\fP
-Fontconfig fonts.conf that is customized for mpv. You should include system
-fonts.conf in this file or mpv would not know about fonts that you already
-have in the system.
-.sp
-Only available when libass is built with fontconfig.
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv/subfont.ttf\fP
-fallback subtitle font
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv/fonts/\fP
-Font files in this directory are used by mpv/libass for subtitles. Useful
-if you do not want to install fonts to your system. Note that files in this
-directory are loaded into memory before being used by mpv. If you have a
-lot of fonts, consider using fonts.conf (see above) to include additional
-fonts, which is more memory\-efficient.
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv/scripts/\fP
-All files in this directory are loaded as if they were passed to the
-\fB\-\-script\fP option. They are loaded in alphabetical order.
-.sp
-The \fB\-\-load\-scripts=no\fP option disables loading these files.
-.sp
-See \fI\%Script location\fP for details.
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv/watch_later/\fP
-Contains temporary config files needed for resuming playback of files with
-the watch later feature. See for example the \fBQ\fP key binding, or the
-\fBquit\-watch\-later\fP input command.
-.sp
-Each file is a small config file which is loaded if the corresponding media
-file is loaded. It contains the playback position and some (not necessarily
-all) settings that were changed during playback. The filenames are hashed
-from the full paths of the media files. It\(aqs in general not possible to
-extract the media filename from this hash. However, you can set the
-\fB\-\-write\-filename\-in\-watch\-later\-config\fP option, and the player will
-add the media filename to the contents of the resume config file.
-.TP
-.B \fB~/.config/mpv/script\-opts/osc.conf\fP
-This is loaded by the OSC script. See the \fI\%ON SCREEN CONTROLLER\fP docs
-for details.
-.sp
-Other files in this directory are specific to the corresponding scripts
-as well, and the mpv core doesn\(aqt touch them.
-.UNINDENT
-.SH FILES ON WINDOWS
-.sp
-On win32 (if compiled with MinGW, but not Cygwin), the default config file
-locations are different. They are generally located under \fB%APPDATA%/mpv/\fP\&.
-For example, the path to mpv.conf is \fB%APPDATA%/mpv/mpv.conf\fP, which maps to
-a system and user\-specific path, for example
-.INDENT 0.0
-.INDENT 3.5
-\fBC:\eusers\eUSERNAME\eAppData\eRoaming\empv\empv.conf\fP
-.UNINDENT
-.UNINDENT
-.sp
-You can find the exact path by running \fBecho %APPDATA%\empv\empv.conf\fP in cmd.exe.
-.sp
-Other config files (such as \fBinput.conf\fP) are in the same directory. See the
-\fI\%FILES\fP section above.
-.sp
-The environment variable \fB$MPV_HOME\fP completely overrides these, like on
-UNIX.
-.sp
-If a directory named \fBportable_config\fP next to the mpv.exe exists, all
-config will be loaded from this directory only. Watch later config files are
-written to this directory as well. (This exists on Windows only and is redundant
-with \fB$MPV_HOME\fP\&. However, since Windows is very scripting unfriendly, a
-wrapper script just setting \fB$MPV_HOME\fP, like you could do it on other
-systems, won\(aqt work. \fBportable_config\fP is provided for convenience to get
-around this restriction.)
-.sp
-Config files located in the same directory as \fBmpv.exe\fP are loaded with
-lower priority. Some config files are loaded only once, which means that
-e.g. of 2 \fBinput.conf\fP files located in two config directories, only the
-one from the directory with higher priority will be loaded.
-.sp
-A third config directory with the lowest priority is the directory named \fBmpv\fP
-in the same directory as \fBmpv.exe\fP\&. This used to be the directory with the
-highest priority, but is now discouraged to use and might be removed in the
-future.
-.sp
-Note that mpv likes to mix \fB/\fP and \fB\e\fP path separators for simplicity.
-kernel32.dll accepts this, but cmd.exe does not.
-.SH COPYRIGHT
-GPLv2+
-.\" Generated by docutils manpage writer.
-.
1
0
commit c8e3d9ddf29c40d6bf575b69a440d589342aeadb
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:10:42 2022 +0000
ntfs-3g: 2022.5.17 -> 2022.10.3
diff --git a/ntfs-3g/.signature b/ntfs-3g/.signature
index 21236d5d0..169774127 100644
--- a/ntfs-3g/.signature
+++ b/ntfs-3g/.signature
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF33bLgTt4po9l6lxElhMXXyxTe/2yXbPPdcUlRnXHqc1q3q1v+JieV2/p1iLMjHn/alIRH9NzSt+6HNvMapVhUgc=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 17536b99c5206e4c6167a47ec9be8e6dd0078fb4f373dfa48ff31b77bd6b3f2a
+RWSagIOpLGJF3zeXM4Ehi56y5ovXcmTBWVpL0rekHf6ewu+MXm40HkkCoqvN2D/40M2ILp2TJWhqSr+9k9bbJL4Tz+CJpe17mQc=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = a508d0fb8db3f6c4b81ed0337aa972566badf6ad700b071944a099388018af1b
SHA256 (.footprint) = 92867ed56e7f25d0ea6b69ad87e7c1a28f9152a40c1079918680819641c04bf1
-SHA256 (ntfs-3g_ntfsprogs-2022.5.17.tgz) = 0489fbb6972581e1b417ab578d543f6ae522e7fa648c3c9b49c789510fd5eb93
+SHA256 (ntfs-3g_ntfsprogs-2022.10.3.tgz) = f20e36ee68074b845e3629e6bced4706ad053804cbaf062fbae60738f854170c
diff --git a/ntfs-3g/Pkgfile b/ntfs-3g/Pkgfile
index b55f08dde..0258f7152 100644
--- a/ntfs-3g/Pkgfile
+++ b/ntfs-3g/Pkgfile
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
# Depends on: fuse gnutls libgcrypt
name=ntfs-3g
-version=2022.5.17
+version=2022.10.3
release=1
source=(https://tuxera.com/opensource/ntfs-3g_ntfsprogs-$version.tgz)
1
0
commit 1b4c003c458d555540a12f1d9e79591fced43ff0
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:10:38 2022 +0000
obs-studio: 28.0.3 -> 28.1.0
diff --git a/obs-studio/.signature b/obs-studio/.signature
index 4d4adbf59..c064f7e6b 100644
--- a/obs-studio/.signature
+++ b/obs-studio/.signature
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF38objlF6n7K+7FxL+5XLjQHnUQ3Ouneeh3bkOsNHuNWzkr80M6siZDV5wyFmkKX7NakihrZAuHWpGmMUcbYLvQA=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = ae477cf55aa1773b9304830dbfb1e29e5b0b4eac160efe71cbaef84c130fda84
+RWSagIOpLGJF3/iESyXcroNvWfTNIQ+3oV0jvVPBdxslkvLFWi4iqtACsXyAbOlkOirq1Kw3K+ymtc1a67f7gMcXXsaQlRTQCwI=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 4d6a10489e2dfc53967bcc4a5b7dd362dea3b4cd9c24c649f123c6cb6abb8a69
SHA256 (.footprint) = 45c1eab7553db587bc76d01fd29b748a88d2a9bfeb88ab1f903b15e5e1018f76
-SHA256 (obs-studio-28.0.3.tar.gz) = 7ee15aec4749778eb60031513ad3720f35cd9c7735416f654e61b45f850b6f1b
+SHA256 (obs-studio-28.1.0.tar.gz) = 64a5c25a240a45983bbc6f1dabf4bb30cb33f1ade3453b9fd72699f4d13ab70f
SHA256 (7531.patch) = 7b5f60c01db7006c4b02223afbd257df55d05073680d7f9979d9852eb6d2dc14
SHA256 (disable-some-plugins.patch) = fee180ca12a1831e1e8c09f90db25776abb77daa9befebf7c3f153cc43f99b91
diff --git a/obs-studio/Pkgfile b/obs-studio/Pkgfile
index 66b0470d1..3f38ee378 100644
--- a/obs-studio/Pkgfile
+++ b/obs-studio/Pkgfile
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
# Optional: ffnvcodec-headers jack-audio-connection-kit libva luajit pipewire pulseaudio speexdsp v4l-utils vlc vlc wayland-protocols x265
name=obs-studio
-version=28.0.3
+version=28.1.0
release=1
source=(https://github.com/obsproject/$name/archive/$version/$name-$version…
7531.patch
1
0
commit d570a12d5ce34a5e96a5bb16d78dc6d23ef22980
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:10:33 2022 +0000
python3-babel: 2.10.3 -> 2.11.0
diff --git a/python3-babel/.footprint b/python3-babel/.footprint
index f3a523750..4d5e10079 100644
--- a/python3-babel/.footprint
+++ b/python3-babel/.footprint
@@ -4,14 +4,14 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/bin/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.10.3-py3.10.egg-info/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.10.3-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.10.3-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.10.3-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.10.3-py3.10.egg-info/entry_points.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.10.3-py3.10.egg-info/not-zip-safe
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.10.3-py3.10.egg-info/requires.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.10.3-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
+drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.11.0-py3.10.egg-info/
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.11.0-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.11.0-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.11.0-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.11.0-py3.10.egg-info/entry_points.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.11.0-py3.10.egg-info/not-zip-safe
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.11.0-py3.10.egg-info/requires.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Babel-2.11.0-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/babel/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/babel/__init__.py
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/babel/__pycache__/
diff --git a/python3-babel/.signature b/python3-babel/.signature
index 2a66f463c..da7d56098 100644
--- a/python3-babel/.signature
+++ b/python3-babel/.signature
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF3zgwsCc3Omv2bfaV9RzQ1UAF9Ic9UIWXmLgxcEBssda3QQTXfpIMlzUf5T/w/l2mnH+4OBGevlq913wdLDit2QM=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 86b5d5e628369fedb0caceaf9c3d05cf45a8c5d989aabf6e818518330db6d24b
-SHA256 (.footprint) = e180ad740b4f672b1b473f8ac5ff15d04f81c4b9adff208181bdbd1649443e0e
-SHA256 (python3-babel-2.10.3.tar.gz) = 960d7a36861836081929735afe5a98aa2fb0d3720e3abc44e2d0950092e0a573
+RWSagIOpLGJF33LO9rA7N6ybUKhK1PuDMC5rg1oVs+Pnl2tTE7UvSFzS0jtiR8tUXFbmAjQy5iV4jl403p0YoXQ0ig4N7RjTbwo=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 4240bdc301ce9d0f34ac01d6aaf9c25b80b70b49765e620faf354d590541b689
+SHA256 (.footprint) = 6f3943d51ec8157cb7f35f59a2e31081c69dc9673305c4a087b2dbf658511e08
+SHA256 (python3-babel-2.11.0.tar.gz) = ae1eef5784c3399df3df9ceb62f1236d0347b0d1f6ac15d22234ff75eccbe470
SHA256 (cldr-common-41.0.zip) = 823c6170c41e2de2c229574e8a436332d25f1c9723409867fe721e00bc92d853
diff --git a/python3-babel/Pkgfile b/python3-babel/Pkgfile
index 3300f135c..a173ebeee 100644
--- a/python3-babel/Pkgfile
+++ b/python3-babel/Pkgfile
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
# Depends on: python3-pytz python3-setuptools
name=python3-babel
-version=2.10.3
+version=2.11.0
release=1
cldrver=41.0 # $SRC/babel-$version/scripts/download_import_cldr.py
1
0
commit 341fa02176190b60c3a003098e9d68ff43535726
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:10:28 2022 +0000
python3-gevent: 22.10.1 -> 22.10.2
diff --git a/python3-gevent/.footprint b/python3-gevent/.footprint
index 114b1b306..e291ab211 100644
--- a/python3-gevent/.footprint
+++ b/python3-gevent/.footprint
@@ -2,14 +2,14 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.1-py3.10.egg-info/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.1-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.1-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.1-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.1-py3.10.egg-info/entry_points.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.1-py3.10.egg-info/not-zip-safe
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.1-py3.10.egg-info/requires.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.1-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
+drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.2-py3.10.egg-info/
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.2-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.2-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.2-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.2-py3.10.egg-info/entry_points.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.2-py3.10.egg-info/not-zip-safe
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.2-py3.10.egg-info/requires.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent-22.10.2-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent/__init__.py
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/gevent/__pycache__/
diff --git a/python3-gevent/.signature b/python3-gevent/.signature
index 7d574a0cf..850aefd42 100644
--- a/python3-gevent/.signature
+++ b/python3-gevent/.signature
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF38qgAl1KtmlT50dEmGbfPCpRqToxNeRL9WffxPVtMgK8O3qedBgojdWNY8uuDwBWvTm7FpeAL/h90nw9vLLSbgE=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 0393ef6ba7e8736dbf97a212b3569bf4642d6b7e61d43bff06732da551ad6624
-SHA256 (.footprint) = ec30d4c55682629c01c418289c2a6bfff569ce27298f6dbe381a99408816412e
-SHA256 (python3-gevent-22.10.1.tar.gz) = 2a7ef503d3f2623013f0685861d571ad129bca9f1550bd60eead0b67eac30a78
+RWSagIOpLGJF3ycA2HHZK8MbrNkZAfG5Dksme0m9uTYdraHG/OmG60SXQzqRyG9vYm6gBe7gANmhUJH1vE1P3QDwhCjaxMvt7gc=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 86155df8294425244c8a1b85cedc14a91505a74d069c922d6009af0061567e42
+SHA256 (.footprint) = 1c42d337f5f8da39b7d75eeb429ab9cd9632759cd7b748a5d65f4748de5328a9
+SHA256 (python3-gevent-22.10.2.tar.gz) = 01ea78981520c9cdbe3722e1760a8ed0165a0b576cb5209f67881595561509da
diff --git a/python3-gevent/Pkgfile b/python3-gevent/Pkgfile
index d3224f64f..b9540bd48 100644
--- a/python3-gevent/Pkgfile
+++ b/python3-gevent/Pkgfile
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
# Depends on: c-ares libev python3-greenlet python3-zope-event python3-zope-interface python3-cython
name=python3-gevent
-version=22.10.1
+version=22.10.2
release=1
source=(https://github.com/gevent/gevent/archive/$version/$name-$version.ta…
1
0
commit 2cce9961717214d15553bf3dfb04c34d5e7659bf
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:10:22 2022 +0000
python3-greenlet: 1.1.3.post0 -> 2.0.0
diff --git a/python3-greenlet/.footprint b/python3-greenlet/.footprint
index e3372612c..2857fc387 100644
--- a/python3-greenlet/.footprint
+++ b/python3-greenlet/.footprint
@@ -6,21 +6,32 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/include/python3.10/greenlet/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-1.1.3.post0-py3.10.egg-info/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-1.1.3.post0-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-1.1.3.post0-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-1.1.3.post0-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-1.1.3.post0-py3.10.egg-info/not-zip-safe
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-1.1.3.post0-py3.10.egg-info/requires.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-1.1.3.post0-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
+drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-2.0.0-py3.10.egg-info/
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-2.0.0-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-2.0.0-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-2.0.0-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-2.0.0-py3.10.egg-info/not-zip-safe
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-2.0.0-py3.10.egg-info/requires.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet-2.0.0-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/__init__.py
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/__pycache__/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.pyc
-rwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/_greenlet.cpython-310-x86_64-linux-gnu.so
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet.c
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet.cpp
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet.h
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_allocator.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_compiler_compat.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_cpython_compat.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_exceptions.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_greenlet.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_internal.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_refs.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_slp_switch.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_thread_state.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_thread_state_dict_cleanup.hpp
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/greenlet_thread_support.hpp
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/__init__.py (EMPTY)
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/__pycache__/
@@ -32,6 +43,9 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/__pycach
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_amd64_unix.h
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_arm32_gcc.h
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_arm32_ios.h
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_arm64_masm.asm
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_arm64_masm.obj
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_arm64_msvc.h
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_csky_gcc.h
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_m68k_gcc.h
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_mips_unix.h
@@ -52,10 +66,12 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/__pycach
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/platform/switch_x86_unix.h
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/slp_platformselect.h
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__init__.py (EMPTY)
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__init__.py
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/__init__.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/leakcheck.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/leakcheck.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_contextvars.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_contextvars.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_cpp.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -70,6 +86,8 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_generator_nested.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_greenlet.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_greenlet.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_greenlet_trash.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_greenlet_trash.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_leaks.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_leaks.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__/test_stack_saved.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -86,6 +104,7 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__
-rwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/_test_extension.cpython-310-x86_64-linux-gnu.so
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/_test_extension_cpp.cpp
-rwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/_test_extension_cpp.cpython-310-x86_64-linux-gnu.so
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/leakcheck.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_contextvars.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_cpp.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_extension_interface.py
@@ -93,6 +112,7 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/__pycache__
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_generator.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_generator_nested.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_greenlet.py
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_greenlet_trash.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_leaks.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_stack_saved.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/greenlet/tests/test_throw.py
diff --git a/python3-greenlet/.signature b/python3-greenlet/.signature
index b2f45a9e0..1682106be 100644
--- a/python3-greenlet/.signature
+++ b/python3-greenlet/.signature
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF36Rq9fNOo56Qfi5tH0b8J5+yOybxuwme9R56Bsjg3NvXS/iMkstcOQgkNJ4XXf6c/F49RlY07OYfLq5kARckJgo=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = e6f5007ab77d5e0b45a4c160bf2864b2e8a629fccd6466865351bef243b1ab14
-SHA256 (.footprint) = aff2822f9d082e728ad688fc23f7f8147c288f5ef6846e9df927e555193384aa
-SHA256 (greenlet-1.1.3.post0.tar.gz) = f5e09dc5c6e1796969fd4b775ea1417d70e49a5df29aaa8e5d10675d9e11872c
+RWSagIOpLGJF3+qYgTq66g/gllpNio1EI6pBt1uFn5n5pstQM3GuLlclBtUHa94EJZqthHLWqvvaLo2KyjMnqJOZelHdRhh2sQ0=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 2709b31794703329c86a268671ea93a45715ee14d73bc2e1e054d4dc6e330914
+SHA256 (.footprint) = 4fbf1f70d1488830dae63f7ed07bc313bf104624fa500d9a113f3d58575c522f
+SHA256 (greenlet-2.0.0.tar.gz) = 6c66f0da8049ee3c126b762768179820d4c0ae0ca46ae489039e4da2fae39a52
diff --git a/python3-greenlet/Pkgfile b/python3-greenlet/Pkgfile
index 512bcfc61..71f853aa3 100644
--- a/python3-greenlet/Pkgfile
+++ b/python3-greenlet/Pkgfile
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
# Depends on: python3-setuptools
name=python3-greenlet
-version=1.1.3.post0
+version=2.0.0
release=1
source=(https://pypi.io/packages/source/g/greenlet/greenlet-$version.tar.gz)
1
0
commit 549557ea6ef00b901a2e4a34289aa85864df9016
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:10:17 2022 +0000
python3-pytz: 2022.5 -> 2022.6
diff --git a/python3-pytz/.footprint b/python3-pytz/.footprint
index 0a7a61391..637ae0a6f 100644
--- a/python3-pytz/.footprint
+++ b/python3-pytz/.footprint
@@ -2,12 +2,12 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.5-py3.10.egg-info/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.5-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.5-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.5-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.5-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.5-py3.10.egg-info/zip-safe
+drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.6-py3.10.egg-info/
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.6-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.6-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.6-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.6-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz-2022.6-py3.10.egg-info/zip-safe
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz/__init__.py
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytz/__pycache__/
diff --git a/python3-pytz/.signature b/python3-pytz/.signature
index 3e819ee05..fbd79edf1 100644
--- a/python3-pytz/.signature
+++ b/python3-pytz/.signature
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF3xohhVXb096mXhU3/4xgmYnG5C8KANNmwRpzbPawfidIuIr/n8+aBc9HFTICDHa6nMSKfuZ70zAvwuT9aORiCAk=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 69fa0e19f6ea6a19a854e04f08bc99b1723c5582af79138258e9971171a304dd
-SHA256 (.footprint) = 7367e6c2406e163b841641489cfa967fc7e2655db1470d5496caa17685f80f86
-SHA256 (pytz-2022.5.tar.gz) = c4d88f472f54d615e9cd582a5004d1e5f624854a6a27a6211591c251f22a6914
+RWSagIOpLGJF3w97Wj1wd3cB0U3dRfG3/DF40lPgbGklpBCdPATdrOegTFcnzNbYkvaKVHdVT7+drtNqd00pMJQ3a5c1ykeYdA8=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 46dda65e56adb4a34c07bd6e92cbf7077b59d5042a6880d2f0198a7bfd34e8ef
+SHA256 (.footprint) = d5a081edd6f33d6b9dd41e0f57937e12844e5c91771f5f759a6d7a5bcc17c8a4
+SHA256 (pytz-2022.6.tar.gz) = e89512406b793ca39f5971bc999cc538ce125c0e51c27941bef4568b460095e2
diff --git a/python3-pytz/Pkgfile b/python3-pytz/Pkgfile
index 14ed1f9e2..c78eeba27 100644
--- a/python3-pytz/Pkgfile
+++ b/python3-pytz/Pkgfile
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
# Depends on: python3-setuptools
name=python3-pytz
-version=2022.5
+version=2022.6
release=1
source=(https://pypi.io/packages/source/p/pytz/pytz-$version.tar.gz)
1
0
commit f2e9f7184ec8da0c8e8a1a5dd40a66febcf07617
Author: Tim Biermann <tbier(a)posteo.de>
Date: Tue Nov 1 14:10:11 2022 +0000
python3-twisted: 22.8.0 -> 22.10.0
diff --git a/python3-twisted/.footprint b/python3-twisted/.footprint
index 7d49f5e22..24961ab8c 100644
--- a/python3-twisted/.footprint
+++ b/python3-twisted/.footprint
@@ -12,14 +12,14 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/bin/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/
-drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.8.0-py3.10.egg-info/
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.8.0-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.8.0-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.8.0-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.8.0-py3.10.egg-info/entry_points.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.8.0-py3.10.egg-info/not-zip-safe
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.8.0-py3.10.egg-info/requires.txt
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.8.0-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
+drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.10.0-py3.10.egg-info/
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.10.0-py3.10.egg-info/PKG-INFO
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.10.0-py3.10.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.10.0-py3.10.egg-info/dependency_links.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.10.0-py3.10.egg-info/entry_points.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.10.0-py3.10.egg-info/not-zip-safe
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.10.0-py3.10.egg-info/requires.txt
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/Twisted-22.10.0-py3.10.egg-info/top_level.txt
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/__init__.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/__main__.py
@@ -1329,8 +1329,6 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycach
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/amp.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/basic.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/basic.cpython-310.pyc
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/dict.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/dict.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/finger.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/finger.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/ftp.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -1365,7 +1363,6 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycach
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/__pycache__/wire.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/amp.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/basic.py
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/dict.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/finger.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/ftp.py
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/protocols/haproxy/
@@ -1576,6 +1573,8 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pyca
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pycache__/modules_helpers.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pycache__/pullpipe.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pycache__/pullpipe.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pycache__/strategies.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pycache__/strategies.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pycache__/test_appdirs.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pycache__/test_appdirs.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pycache__/test_components.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -1623,6 +1622,7 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/__pyca
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/deprecatedattributes.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/modules_helpers.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/pullpipe.py
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/strategies.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/test_appdirs.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/test_components.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/python/test/test_constants.py
@@ -1865,8 +1865,6 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/test_defer.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/test_defgen.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/test_defgen.cpython-310.pyc
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/test_dict.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/test_dict.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/test_dirdbm.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/test_dirdbm.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/test_error.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -2028,7 +2026,6 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/__pycache__/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/test_cooperator.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/test_defer.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/test_defgen.py
--rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/test_dict.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/test_dirdbm.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/test_error.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/test/test_factories.py
@@ -2128,6 +2125,8 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pyca
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pycache__/managercommands.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pycache__/options.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pycache__/options.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pycache__/stream.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pycache__/stream.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pycache__/worker.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pycache__/worker.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pycache__/workercommands.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -2141,6 +2140,7 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/__pyca
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/functional.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/managercommands.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/options.py
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/stream.py
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__init__.py
drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/
@@ -2152,8 +2152,12 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/_
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_distreporter.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_disttrial.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_disttrial.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_matchers.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_matchers.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_options.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_options.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_stream.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_stream.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_worker.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_worker.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/__pycache__/test_workerreporter.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -2163,7 +2167,9 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/_
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/matchers.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/test_distreporter.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/test_disttrial.py
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/test_matchers.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/test_options.py
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/test_stream.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/test_worker.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/test_workerreporter.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/_dist/test/test_workertrial.py
@@ -2228,6 +2234,8 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycac
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycache__/test_loader.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycache__/test_log.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycache__/test_log.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycache__/test_matchers.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycache__/test_matchers.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycache__/test_output.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycache__/test_output.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycache__/test_plugins.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -2278,6 +2286,7 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/__pycac
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/test_keyboard.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/test_loader.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/test_log.py
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/test_matchers.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/test_output.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/test_plugins.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/trial/test/test_pyunitcompat.py
@@ -2334,6 +2343,8 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/iweb.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/microdom.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/microdom.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/pages.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/pages.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/proxy.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/proxy.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/__pycache__/resource.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -2396,6 +2407,7 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/_auth/__pycach
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/http_headers.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/iweb.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/microdom.py
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/pages.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/proxy.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/resource.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/rewrite.py
@@ -2443,6 +2455,8 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache__/test_httpauth.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache__/test_newclient.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache__/test_newclient.cpython-310.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache__/test_pages.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache__/test_pages.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache__/test_proxy.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache__/test_proxy.cpython-310.pyc
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache__/test_resource.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
@@ -2491,6 +2505,7 @@ drwxr-xr-x root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/__pycache
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/test_http_headers.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/test_httpauth.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/test_newclient.py
+-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/test_pages.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/test_proxy.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/test_resource.py
-rw-r--r-- root/root usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/twisted/web/test/test_script.py
diff --git a/python3-twisted/.signature b/python3-twisted/.signature
index bd2870e56..a164e62fa 100644
--- a/python3-twisted/.signature
+++ b/python3-twisted/.signature
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
untrusted comment: verify with /etc/ports/contrib.pub
-RWSagIOpLGJF3wfxj0dOxJXVsAksAQTjOpQzhPiRJ2VZfrHUte7SmXXSlD3kMVXIYJlJuecdm8sJ6bHu2Y75Q3gzmJUvOaWluww=
-SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 2fab0f9e719655d596f8a5edb721bc322e7bd7b6f8b22d6c26ac8a3d3ed284d2
-SHA256 (.footprint) = f77c22c4909ec8ad83e68606fdd0b0055e025307d4dfd1063c2b3c407e930c27
-SHA256 (twisted-22.8.0.tar.gz) = 3d17049da4b7c66b11359ff29eeea103ef8356f2aec2e4fc3d78c1920fc622a1
+RWSagIOpLGJF395UNDoTGC4llg0GJJeQfyJeOhSKuFxbn9Bm/moNh0pV5EuyA/3uHtlgvg0ldhpQ6kZZwhoJ4zviiVxIImPwAQQ=
+SHA256 (Pkgfile) = 895398ee13b87d824460d1d28ae164f7dc5e772425fe7d9233961285f50483b8
+SHA256 (.footprint) = 4eb9397620b57296b05e664e83ca40b061d8a6bbf6d51db3013920ed299af2ce
+SHA256 (twisted-22.10.0.tar.gz) = 2a310f83278b54d8e8e2b9d804baf839835f80ab5b42e141a370cdc170dd7ddb
diff --git a/python3-twisted/Pkgfile b/python3-twisted/Pkgfile
index aaf2187f4..569933912 100644
--- a/python3-twisted/Pkgfile
+++ b/python3-twisted/Pkgfile
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
# Depends on: python3-automat python3-constantly python3-hyperlink python3-incremental python3-zope-interface
name=python3-twisted
-version=22.8.0
+version=22.10.0
release=1
source=(https://github.com/twisted/twisted/archive/twisted-$version.tar.gz)
1
0