From 51de1d8436100f725f3576aefa24a2bd2057bc28 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Mon, 15 Apr 2024 22:36:56 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 0.37.0. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- DOCS/man/mpv.rst | 1690 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 1690 insertions(+) create mode 100644 DOCS/man/mpv.rst (limited to 'DOCS/man/mpv.rst') diff --git a/DOCS/man/mpv.rst b/DOCS/man/mpv.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e97422d --- /dev/null +++ b/DOCS/man/mpv.rst @@ -0,0 +1,1690 @@ +mpv +### + +############## +a media player +############## + +:Copyright: GPLv2+ +:Manual section: 1 +:Manual group: multimedia + +.. contents:: Table of Contents + +SYNOPSIS +======== + +| **mpv** [options] [file|URL|PLAYLIST|-] +| **mpv** [options] files + +DESCRIPTION +=========== + +**mpv** 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. + +Usage examples to get you started quickly can be found at the end of this man +page. + + +INTERACTIVE CONTROL +=================== + +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). + +See the ``--input-`` options for ways to customize it. + +The following listings are not necessarily complete. See ``etc/input.conf`` +in the mpv source files for a list of default bindings. User ``input.conf`` +files and Lua scripts can define additional key bindings. + +See `COMMAND INTERFACE`_ and `Key names`_ sections for more details on +configuring keybindings. + +See also ``--input-test`` for interactive binding details by key, and the +`stats`_ built-in script for key bindings list (including print to terminal). + +Keyboard Control +---------------- + +LEFT and RIGHT + Seek backward/forward 5 seconds. Shift+arrow does a 1 second exact seek + (see ``--hr-seek``). + +UP and DOWN + Seek forward/backward 1 minute. Shift+arrow does a 5 second exact seek (see + ``--hr-seek``). + +Ctrl+LEFT and Ctrl+RIGHT + Seek to the previous/next subtitle. Subject to some restrictions and + might not always work; see ``sub-seek`` command. + +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. + +[ and ] + Decrease/increase current playback speed by 10%. + +{ and } + Halve/double current playback speed. + +BACKSPACE + Reset playback speed to normal. + +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 ``revert-seek`` command for details. + +Shift+Ctrl+BACKSPACE + Mark the current position. This will then be used by ``Shift+BACKSPACE`` + 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. + +< and > + Go backward/forward in the playlist. + +ENTER + Go forward in the playlist. + +p and SPACE + Pause (pressing again unpauses). + +\. + Step forward. Pressing once will pause, every consecutive press will + play one frame and then go into pause mode again. + +, + Step backward. Pressing once will pause, every consecutive press will + play one frame in reverse and then go into pause mode again. + +q + Stop playing and quit. + +Q + Like ``q``, but store the current playback position. Playing the same file + later will resume at the old playback position if possible. See + `RESUMING PLAYBACK`_. + +/ and * + Decrease/increase volume. + +9 and 0 + Decrease/increase volume. + +m + Mute sound. + +\_ + Cycle through the available video tracks. + +\# + Cycle through the available audio tracks. + +E + Cycle through the available Editions. + +f + Toggle fullscreen (see also ``--fs``). + +ESC + Exit fullscreen mode. + +T + Toggle stay-on-top (see also ``--ontop``). + +w and W + Decrease/increase pan-and-scan range. The ``e`` key does the same as + ``W`` currently, but use is discouraged. + +o and P + Show progression bar, elapsed time and total duration on the OSD. + +O + Toggle OSD states between normal and playback time/duration. + +v + Toggle subtitle visibility. + +j and J + Cycle through the available subtitles. + +z and Z + Adjust subtitle delay by +/- 0.1 seconds. The ``x`` key does the same as + ``Z`` currently, but use is discouraged. + +l + Set/clear A-B loop points. See ``ab-loop`` command for details. + +L + Toggle infinite looping. + +Ctrl++ and Ctrl+- + Adjust audio delay (A/V sync) by +/- 0.1 seconds. + +Shift+g and Shift+f + Adjust subtitle font size by +/- 10%. + +u + Switch between applying only ``--sub-ass-*`` overrides (default) to SSA/ASS + subtitles, and overriding them almost completely with the normal subtitle + style. See ``--sub-ass-override`` for more info. + +V + Toggle subtitle VSFilter aspect compatibility mode. See + ``--sub-ass-vsfilter-aspect-compat`` for more info. + +r and R + Move subtitles up/down. The ``t`` key does the same as ``R`` currently, but + use is discouraged. + +s + Take a screenshot. + +S + Take a screenshot, without subtitles. (Whether this works depends on VO + driver support.) + +Ctrl+s + Take a screenshot, as the window shows it (with subtitles, OSD, and scaled + video). + +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 + ``--chapter-seek-threshold``. + +Shift+PGUP and Shift+PGDWN + Seek backward or forward by 10 minutes. (This used to be mapped to + PGUP/PGDWN without Shift.) + +d + Activate/deactivate deinterlacer. + +A + Cycle aspect ratio override. + +Ctrl+h + Toggle hardware video decoding on/off. + +Alt+LEFT, Alt+RIGHT, Alt+UP, Alt+DOWN + Move the video rectangle (panning). + +Alt++ and Alt+- + Combining ``Alt`` with the ``+`` or ``-`` keys changes video zoom. + +Alt+BACKSPACE + Reset the pan/zoom settings. + +F8 + Show the playlist and the current position in it (useful only if a UI window + is used, broken on the terminal). + +F9 + Show the list of audio and subtitle streams (useful only if a UI window is + used, broken on the terminal). + +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 + `STATS`_ for more information. + +DEL + Cycle OSC visibility between never / auto (mouse-move) / always + +\` + Show the console. (ESC closes it again. See `CONSOLE`_.) + +(The following keys are valid only when using a video output that supports the +corresponding adjustment.) + +1 and 2 + Adjust contrast. + +3 and 4 + Adjust brightness. + +5 and 6 + Adjust gamma. + +7 and 8 + Adjust saturation. + +Alt+0 (and Command+0 on macOS) + Resize video window to half its original size. + +Alt+1 (and Command+1 on macOS) + Resize video window to its original size. + +Alt+2 (and Command+2 on macOS) + Resize video window to double its original size. + +Command + f (macOS only) + Toggle fullscreen (see also ``--fs``). + +(The following keys are valid if you have a keyboard with multimedia keys.) + +PAUSE + Pause. + +STOP + Stop playing and quit. + +PREVIOUS and NEXT + Seek backward/forward 1 minute. + +ZOOMIN and ZOOMOUT + Changes video zoom. + +If you miss some older key bindings, look at ``etc/restore-old-bindings.conf`` +in the mpv git repository. + +Mouse Control +------------- + +Left double click + Toggle fullscreen on/off. + +Right click + Toggle pause on/off. + +Forward/Back button + Skip to next/previous entry in playlist. + +Wheel up/down + Decrease/increase volume. + +Wheel left/right + Seek forward/backward 10 seconds. + + +USAGE +===== + +Command line arguments starting with ``-`` are interpreted as options, +everything else as filenames or URLs. All options except *flag* options (or +choice options which include ``yes``) require a parameter in the form +``--option=value``. + +One exception is the lone ``-`` (without anything else), which means media data +will be read from stdin. Also, ``--`` (without anything else) will make the +player interpret all following arguments as filenames, even if they start with +``-``. (To play a file named ``-``, you need to use ``./-``.) + +Every *flag* option has a *no-flag* counterpart, e.g. the opposite of the +``--fs`` option is ``--no-fs``. ``--fs=yes`` is same as ``--fs``, ``--fs=no`` +is the same as ``--no-fs``. + +If an option is marked as *(XXX only)*, it will only work in combination with +the *XXX* option or if *XXX* is compiled in. + +Legacy option syntax +-------------------- + +The ``--option=value`` syntax is not strictly enforced, and the alternative +legacy syntax ``-option value`` and ``-option=value`` will also work. This is +mostly for compatibility with MPlayer. Using these should be avoided. Their +semantics can change any time in the future. + +For example, the alternative syntax will consider an argument following the +option a filename. ``mpv -fs no`` will attempt to play a file named ``no``, +because ``--fs`` 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. + +Until mpv 0.31.0, there was no difference whether an option started with ``--`` +or a single ``-``. Newer mpv releases strictly expect that you pass the option +value after a ``=``. For example, before ``mpv --log-file f.txt`` would write +a log to ``f.txt``, but now this command line fails, as ``--log-file`` expects +an option value, and ``f.txt`` is simply considered a normal file to be played +(as in ``mpv f.txt``). + +The future plan is that ``-option value`` will not work anymore, and options +with a single ``-`` behave the same as ``--`` options. + +Escaping spaces and other special characters +-------------------------------------------- + +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: + + ``mpv "filename with spaces.mkv" --title="window title"`` + +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. + +The suboption parser can quote strings with ``"`` and ``[...]``. +Additionally, there is a special form of quoting with ``%n%`` described below. + +For example, assume the hypothetical ``foo`` filter can take multiple options: + + ``mpv test.mkv --vf=foo:option1=value1:option2:option3=value3,bar`` + +This passes ``option1`` and ``option3`` to the ``foo`` filter, with ``option2`` +as flag (implicitly ``option2=yes``), and adds a ``bar`` filter after that. If +an option contains spaces or characters like ``,`` or ``:``, you need to quote +them: + + ``mpv '--vf=foo:option1="option value with spaces",bar'`` + +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 ``"`` +quotes. + +The ``[...]`` form of quotes wraps everything between ``[`` and ``]``. It's +useful with shells that don't interpret these characters in the middle of +an argument (like bash). These quotes are balanced (since mpv 0.9.0): the ``[`` +and ``]`` nest, and the quote terminates on the last ``]`` that has no matching +``[`` within the string. (For example, ``[a[b]c]`` results in ``a[b]c``.) + +The fixed-length quoting syntax is intended for use with external +scripts and programs. + +It is started with ``%`` and has the following format:: + + %n%string_of_length_n + +.. admonition:: Examples + + ``mpv '--vf=foo:option1=%11%quoted text' test.avi`` + + Or in a script: + + ``mpv --vf=foo:option1=%`expr length "$NAME"`%"$NAME" test.avi`` + +Note: where applicable with JSON-IPC, ``%n%`` is the length in UTF-8 bytes, +after decoding the JSON data. + +Suboptions passed to the client API are also subject to escaping. Using +``mpv_set_option_string()`` is exactly like passing ``--name=data`` 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, ``--vf`` supports +``MPV_FORMAT_NODE``, which lets you pass suboptions as a nested data structure +of maps and arrays. + +Paths +----- + +Some care must be taken when passing arbitrary paths and filenames to mpv. For +example, paths starting with ``-`` will be interpreted as options. Likewise, +if a path contains the sequence ``://``, the string before that might be +interpreted as protocol prefix, even though ``://`` 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 ``/``, and prefix relative paths with +``./``. + +Using the ``file://`` pseudo-protocol is discouraged, because it involves +strange URL unescaping rules. + +The name ``-`` itself is interpreted as stdin, and will cause mpv to disable +console controls. (Which makes it suitable for playing data piped to stdin.) + +The special argument ``--`` can be used to stop mpv from interpreting the +following arguments as options. + +When using the client API, you should strictly avoid using ``mpv_command_string`` +for invoking the ``loadfile`` command, and instead prefer e.g. ``mpv_command`` +to avoid the need for filename escaping. + +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. ``%n%string_of_length_n`` +(see above). + +Some mpv options interpret paths starting with ``~``. +Currently, the prefix ``~~home/`` expands to the mpv configuration directory +(usually ``~/.config/mpv/``). +``~/`` expands to the user's home directory. (The trailing ``/`` is always +required.) The following paths are currently recognized: + +================ =============================================================== +Name Meaning +================ =============================================================== +``~~/`` If the subpath exists in any of the mpv's config directories + the path of the existing file/dir is returned. Otherwise this + is equivalent to ``~~home/``. + Note that if --no-config is used ``~~/foobar`` will resolve to + ``foobar`` which can be unexpected. +``~/`` user home directory root (similar to shell, ``$HOME``) +``~~home/`` mpv config dir (for example ``~/.config/mpv/``) +``~~global/`` the global config path, if available (not on win32) +``~~osxbundle/`` the macOS bundle resource path (macOS only) +``~~desktop/`` the path to the desktop (win32, macOS) +``~~exe_dir/`` win32 only: the path to the directory containing the exe (for + config file purposes; ``$MPV_HOME`` overrides it) +``~~cache/`` the path to application cache data (``~/.cache/mpv/``) + On some platforms, this will be the same as ``~~home/``. +``~~state/`` the path to application state data (``~/.local/state/mpv/``) + On some platforms, this will be the same as ``~~home/``. +``~~old_home/`` do not use +================ =============================================================== + + +Per-File Options +---------------- + +When playing multiple files, any option given on the command line usually +affects all files. Example:: + + mpv --a file1.mkv --b file2.mkv --c + +=============== =========================== +File Active options +=============== =========================== +file1.mkv ``--a --b --c`` +file2.mkv ``--a --b --c`` +=============== =========================== + +(This is different from MPlayer and mplayer2.) + +Also, if any option is changed at runtime (via input commands), they are not +reset when a new file is played. + +Sometimes, it is useful to change options per-file. This can be achieved by +adding the special per-file markers ``--{`` and ``--}``. (Note that you must +escape these on some shells.) Example:: + + mpv --a file1.mkv --b --\{ --c file2.mkv --d file3.mkv --e --\} file4.mkv --f + +=============== =========================== +File Active options +=============== =========================== +file1.mkv ``--a --b --f`` +file2.mkv ``--a --b --f --c --d --e`` +file3.mkv ``--a --b --f --c --d --e`` +file4.mkv ``--a --b --f`` +=============== =========================== + +Additionally, any file-local option changed at runtime is reset when the current +file stops playing. If option ``--c`` is changed during playback of +``file2.mkv``, it is reset when advancing to ``file3.mkv``. This only affects +file-local options. The option ``--a`` is never reset here. + + +List Options +------------ + +Some options which store lists of option values can have action suffixes. For +example, the ``--display-tags`` option takes a ``,``-separated list of tags, but +the option also allows you to append a single tag with ``--display-tags-append``, +and the tag name can for example contain a literal ``,`` without the need for +escaping. + +String list and path list options +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +String lists are separated by ``,``. The strings are not parsed or interpreted +by the option system itself. However, most path or file list options use ``:`` +(Unix) or ``;`` (Windows) as separator, instead of ``,``. + +They support the following operations: + +============= =============================================== +Suffix Meaning +============= =============================================== +-set Set a list of items (using the list separator, escaped with backslash) +-append Append single item (does not interpret escapes) +-add Append 1 or more items (same syntax as -set) +-pre Prepend 1 or more items (same syntax as -set) +-clr Clear the option (remove all items) +-remove Delete item if present (does not interpret escapes) +-toggle Append an item, or remove if if it already exists (no escapes) +============= =============================================== + +``-append`` 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). + +Key/value list options +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +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. + +They support the following operations: + +============= =============================================== +Suffix Meaning +============= =============================================== +-set Set a list of items (using ``,`` as separator) +-append Append a single item (escapes for the key, no escapes for the value) +-add Append 1 or more items (same syntax as -set) +-remove Delete item by key if present (does not interpret escapes) +============= =============================================== + +Keys are unique within the list. If an already present key is set, the existing +key is removed before the new value is appended. + +If you want to pass a value without interpreting it for escapes or ``,``, it is +recommended to use the ``-append`` variant. When using libmpv, prefer using +``MPV_FORMAT_NODE_MAP``; when using a scripting backend or the JSON IPC, use an +appropriate structured data type. + +Prior to mpv 0.33, ``:`` was also recognized as separator by ``-set``. + +Filter options +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +This is a very complex option type for the ``--af`` and ``--vf`` options only. +They often require complicated escaping. See `VIDEO FILTERS`_ for details. They +support the following operations: + +============= =============================================== +Suffix Meaning +============= =============================================== +-set Set a list of filters (using ``,`` as separator) +-append Append single filter +-add Append 1 or more filters (same syntax as -set) +-pre Prepend 1 or more filters (same syntax as -set) +-clr Clear the option (remove all filters) +-remove Delete filter if present +-toggle Append a filter, or remove if if it already exists +-help Pseudo operation that prints a help text to the terminal +============= =============================================== + +General +~~~~~~~ + +Without suffix, the operation used is normally ``-set``. + +Although some operations allow specifying multiple items, using this is strongly +discouraged and deprecated, except for ``-set``. There is a chance that +operations like ``-add`` and ``-pre`` will work like ``-append`` and accept a +single, unescaped item only (so the ``,`` separator will not be interpreted and +is passed on as part of the value). + +Some options (like ``--sub-file``, ``--audio-file``, ``--glsl-shader``) are +aliases for the proper option with ``-append`` action. For example, +``--sub-file`` is an alias for ``--sub-files-append``. + +Options of this type can be changed at runtime using the ``change-list`` +command, which takes the suffix (without the ``-``) as separate operation +parameter. + +CONFIGURATION FILES +=================== + +Location and Syntax +------------------- + +You can put all of the options in configuration files which will be read every +time mpv is run. The system-wide configuration file 'mpv.conf' is in your +configuration directory (e.g. ``/etc/mpv`` or ``/usr/local/etc/mpv``), the +user-specific one is ``~/.config/mpv/mpv.conf``. For details and platform +specifics (in particular Windows paths) see the `FILES`_ section. + +User-specific options override system-wide options and options given on the +command line override both. The syntax of the configuration files is +``option=value``. Everything after a *#* is considered a comment. Options that +work without values can be enabled by setting them to *yes* and disabled by +setting them to *no*, and if the value is omitted, *yes* is implied. Even +suboptions can be specified in this way. + +.. admonition:: Example configuration file + + :: + + # Don't allow new windows to be larger than the screen. + autofit-larger=100%x100% + # Enable hardware decoding if available, =yes is implied. + hwdec + # Spaces don't have to be escaped. + osd-playing-msg=File: ${filename} + +Escaping special characters +-------------------------------------- + +This is done like with command line options. A config entry can be quoted with +``"``, ``'``, as well as with the fixed-length syntax (``%n%``) mentioned +before. This is like passing the exact contents of the quoted string as a +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). The shell is not involved here, so option +values only need to be quoted to escape ``#`` and ``\``, ``"``, ``'`` or ``%`` +at the beginning of the value, and leading and trailing whitespace. + +Putting Command Line Options into the Configuration File +-------------------------------------------------------- + +Almost all command line options can be put into the configuration file. Here +is a small guide: + +======================= ======================== +Option Configuration file entry +======================= ======================== +``--flag`` ``flag`` +``-opt val`` ``opt=val`` +``--opt=val`` ``opt=val`` +``-opt "has spaces"`` ``opt=has spaces`` +======================= ======================== + +File-specific Configuration Files +--------------------------------- + +You can also write file-specific configuration files. If you wish to have a +configuration file for a file called 'video.avi', create a file named +'video.avi.conf' with the file-specific options in it and put it in +``~/.config/mpv/``. You can also put the configuration file in the same directory +as the file to be played. Both require you to set the ``--use-filedir-conf`` +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 ``~/.config/mpv``. In addition, the +``--use-filedir-conf`` 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. + + +Profiles +-------- + +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. ``[my-profile]``. All following options will be part of the profile. A +description (shown by ``--profile=help``) can be defined with the +``profile-desc`` option. To end the profile, start another one or use the +profile name ``default`` to continue with normal options. + +You can list profiles with ``--profile=help``, and show the contents of a +profile with ``--show-profile=`` (replace ```` with the profile +name). You can apply profiles on start with the ``--profile=`` option, +or at runtime with the ``apply-profile `` command. + +.. admonition:: Example mpv config file with profiles + + :: + + # 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=high-quality + + [fast] + vo=vdpau + + # using a profile again extends it + [slow] + framedrop=no + # you can also include other profiles + profile=big-cache + +Runtime profiles +---------------- + +Profiles can be set at runtime with ``apply-profile`` command. Since this +operation is "destructive" (every item in a profile is simply set as an +option, overwriting the previous value), you can't just enable and disable +profiles again. + +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 ``apply-profile restore``. + +This can be enabled with the ``profile-restore`` option, which takes one of +the following options: + + ``default`` + Does nothing, and nothing can be restored (default). + + ``copy`` + 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. + + Every profile has its own list of backed up values. If the backup + already exists (e.g. if ``apply-profile name`` was called more than + once in a row), the existing backup is no changed. The restore operation + will remove the backup. + + It's important to know that restoring does not "undo" setting an option, + but simply copies the old option value. Consider for example ``vf-add``, + appends an entry to ``vf``. This mechanism will simply copy the entire + ``vf`` list, and does _not_ execute the inverse of ``vf-add`` (that + would be ``vf-remove``) on restoring. + + Note that if a profile contains recursive profiles (via the ``profile`` + option), the options in these recursive profiles are treated as if they + were part of this profile. The referenced profile's 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). + + ``copy-equal`` + Similar to ``copy``, 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. + +.. admonition:: Example + + :: + + [something] + profile-restore=copy-equal + vf-add=rotate=PI/2 # rotate by 90 degrees + + Then running these commands will result in behavior as commented: + + :: + + set vf vflip + apply-profile something + vf add hflip + apply-profile something + # vf == vflip,rotate=PI/2,hflip,rotate=PI/2 + apply-profile something restore + # vf == vflip + +Conditional auto profiles +------------------------- + +Profiles which have the ``profile-cond`` 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 expression. If the +expression evaluates as truthy, the profile is applied. If the expression +errors or evaluates as falsy, the profile is not applied. This Lua code +execution is not sandboxed. + +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, ``pause`` would return the current pause status. You cannot +reference properties with ``-`` this way since that would denote a subtraction, +but if the variable name contains any ``_`` characters, they are turned into +``-``. For example, ``playback_time`` would return the property +``playback-time``. + +A more robust way to access properties is using ``p.property_name`` or +``get("property-name", default_value)``. The automatic variable to property +magic will break if a new identifier with the same name is introduced (for +example, if a function named ``pause()`` were added, ``pause`` would return a +function value instead of the value of the ``pause`` property). + +Note that if a property is not available, it will return ``nil``, which can +cause errors if used in expressions. These are logged in verbose mode, and the +expression is considered to be false. + +Whenever a property referenced by a profile condition changes, the condition +is re-evaluated. If the return value of the condition changes from falsy or +error to truthy, the profile is applied. + +This mechanism tries to "unapply" profiles once the condition changes from +truthy to falsy or error. If you want to use this, you need to set +``profile-restore`` for the profile. Another possibility it to create another +profile with an inverse condition to undo the other profile. + +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. + +.. admonition:: Example + + Make only HD video look funny: + + :: + + [something] + profile-desc=HD video sucks + profile-cond=width >= 1280 + hue=-50 + + Make only videos containing "youtube" or "youtu.be" in their path brighter: + + :: + + [youtube] + profile-cond=path:find('youtu%.?be') + gamma=20 + + If you want the profile to be reverted if the condition goes to false again, + you can set ``profile-restore``: + + :: + + [something] + profile-desc=Mess up video when entering fullscreen + profile-cond=fullscreen + profile-restore=copy + vf-add=rotate=PI/2 # rotate by 90 degrees + + This appends the ``rotate`` filter to the video filter chain when entering + fullscreen. When leaving fullscreen, the ``vf`` 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: + + :: + + [something] + profile-cond=fullscreen + vf-add=@rot:rotate=PI/2 + + [something-inv] + profile-cond=not fullscreen + vf-remove=@rot + +.. warning:: + + Every time an involved property changes, the condition is evaluated again. + If your condition uses ``p.playback_time`` for example, the condition is + re-evaluated approximately on every video frame. This is probably slow. + +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: + +``(function environment table)`` + Every Lua function has an environment table. This is used for identifier + access. There is no named Lua symbol for it; it is implicit. + + The environment does "magic" accesses to mpv properties. If an identifier + is not already defined in ``_G``, it retrieves the mpv property of the same + name. Any occurrences of ``_`` in the name are replaced with ``-`` before + reading the property. The returned value is as retrieved by + ``mp.get_property_native(name)``. 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. + + If you want to access properties, that actually contain ``_`` in the name, + use ``get()`` (which does not perform transliteration). + + Internally, the environment table has a ``__index`` meta method set, which + performs the access logic. + +``p`` + A "magic" table similar to the environment table. Unlike the latter, this + does not prefer accessing variables defined in ``_G`` - it always accesses + properties. + +``get(name [, def])`` + Read a property and return its value. If the property value is ``nil`` (e.g. + if the property does not exist), ``def`` is returned. + + This is superficially similar to ``mp.get_property_native(name)``. 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. + + The "magic" tables mentioned above use this function as backend. It does not + perform the ``_`` transliteration. + +In addition, the same environment as in a blank mpv Lua script is present. For +example, ``math`` is defined and gives access to the Lua standard math library. + +.. warning:: + + This feature is subject to change indefinitely. You might be forced to + adjust your profiles on mpv updates. + +Legacy auto profiles +-------------------- + +Some profiles are loaded automatically using a legacy mechanism. The following +example demonstrates this: + +.. admonition:: Auto profile loading + + :: + + [extension.mkv] + profile-desc="profile for .mkv files" + vf=vflip + +The profile name follows the schema ``type.name``, where type can be +``protocol`` for the input/output protocol in use (see ``--list-protocols``), +and ``extension`` for the extension of the path of the currently played file +(*not* the file format). + +This feature is very limited, and is considered soft-deprecated. Use conditional +auto profiles. + +Using mpv from other programs or scripts +======================================== + +There are three choices for using mpv from other programs or scripts: + + 1. Calling it as UNIX process. If you do this, *do not parse terminal output*. + 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. + + Your code should work even if you pass ``--no-terminal``. Do not attempt + to simulate user input by sending terminal control codes to mpv's stdin. + If you need interactive control, using ``--input-ipc-server`` is + recommended. This gives you access to the `JSON IPC`_ over unix domain + sockets (or named pipes on Windows). + + Depending on what you do, passing ``--no-config`` or ``--config-dir`` may + be a good idea to avoid conflicts with the normal mpv user configuration + intended for CLI playback. + + Using ``--input-ipc-server`` is also suitable for purposes like remote + control (however, the IPC protocol itself is not "secure" and not + intended to be so). + + 2. 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. + + 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). + + See `EMBEDDING INTO OTHER PROGRAMS (LIBMPV)`_. + + 3. As a user script (`LUA SCRIPTING`_, `JAVASCRIPT`_, `C PLUGINS`_). This is + recommended when the goal is to "enhance" the CLI player. Scripts get + access to the entire client API of mpv. + + This is the standard way to create third-party extensions for the player. + +All these access the client API, which is the sum of the various mechanisms +provided by the player core, as documented here: `OPTIONS`_, +`List of Input Commands`_, `Properties`_, `List of events`_ (also see C API), +`Hooks`_. + +TAKING SCREENSHOTS +================== + +Screenshots of the currently played file can be taken using the 'screenshot' +input mode command, which is by default bound to the ``s`` key. Files named +``mpv-shotNNNN.jpg`` 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 `PSEUDO GUI MODE`_. + +A screenshot will usually contain the unscaled video contents at the end of the +video filter chain and subtitles. By default, ``S`` takes screenshots without +subtitles, while ``s`` includes subtitles. + +Unlike with MPlayer, the ``screenshot`` video filter is not required. This +filter was never required in mpv, and has been removed. + +TERMINAL STATUS LINE +==================== + +During playback, mpv shows the playback status on the terminal. It looks like +something like this: + + ``AV: 00:03:12 / 00:24:25 (13%) A-V: -0.000`` + +The status line can be overridden with the ``--term-status-msg`` option. + +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. + +- ``AV:`` or ``V:`` (video only) or ``A:`` (audio only) +- The current time position in ``HH:MM:SS`` format (``playback-time`` property) +- The total file duration (absent if unknown) (``duration`` property) +- Playback speed, e.g. ``x2.0``. 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). (``speed`` property.) +- Playback percentage, e.g. ``(13%)``. 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. + (``percent-pos`` property.) +- The audio/video sync as ``A-V: 0.000``. This is the difference between + audio and video time. Normally it should be 0 or close to 0. If it's growing, + it might indicate a playback problem. (``avsync`` property.) +- Total A/V sync change, e.g. ``ct: -0.417``. Normally invisible. Can show up + if there is audio "missing", or not enough frames can be dropped. Usually + this will indicate a problem. (``total-avsync-change`` property.) +- Encoding state in ``{...}``, only shown in encoding mode. +- Display sync state. If display sync is active (``display-sync-active`` + property), this shows ``DS: 2.500/13``, 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't round off, or there are + mistimed frames (``vsync-ratio``), and the second number of estimated number + of vsyncs which took too long (``vo-delayed-frame-count`` property). The + latter is a heuristic, as it's generally not possible to determine this with + certainty. +- Dropped frames, e.g. ``Dropped: 4``. 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't be displayed on time. (``frame-drop-count`` property.) + If the decoder drops frames, the number of decoder-dropped frames is appended + to the display as well, e.g.: ``Dropped: 4/34``. This happens only if + decoder frame dropping is enabled with the ``--framedrop`` options. + (``decoder-frame-drop-count`` property.) +- Cache state, e.g. ``Cache: 2s/134KB``. 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. + (``demuxer-cache-duration`` and ``demuxer-cache-state`` properties.) + + +LOW LATENCY PLAYBACK +==================== + +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. + +The builtin ``low-latency`` profile tries to apply some of the options which can +reduce latency. You can use ``--profile=low-latency`` to apply all of them. You +can list the contents with ``--show-profile=low-latency`` (some of the options +are quite obscure, and may change every mpv release). + +Be aware that some of the options can reduce playback quality. + +Most latency is actually caused by inconvenient timing behavior. You can disable +this with ``--untimed``, but it will likely break, unless the stream has no +audio, and the input feeds data to the player at a constant rate. + +Another common problem is with MJPEG streams. These do not signal the correct +framerate. Using ``--untimed`` or ``--no-correct-pts --container-fps-override=60`` +might help. + +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 ``drop-buffers`` command can +be used to discard any buffered data, though it's very disruptive. + +In some cases, manually tuning TCP buffer sizes and such can help to reduce +latency. + +Additional options that can be tried: + +- ``--opengl-glfinish=yes``, can reduce buffering in the graphics driver +- ``--opengl-swapinterval=0``, same +- ``--vo=xv``, same +- without audio ``--framedrop=no --speed=1.01`` may help for live sources + (results can be mixed) + +RESUMING PLAYBACK +================= + +mpv is capable of storing the playback position of the currently playing file +and resume from there the next time that file is played. This is done with the +commands ``quit-watch-later`` (bound to Shift+Q by default) and +``write-watch-later-config``, and with the ``--save-position-on-quit`` option. + +The difference between always quitting with a key bound to ``quit-watch-later`` +and using ``--save-position-on-quit`` is that the latter will save the playback +position even when mpv is closed with a method other than a keybinding, for +example if you shutdown your system without closing mpv beforehand, unless of +course mpv is terminated abruptly and doesn't have the time to save (e.g. with +the KILL Unix signal). + +mpv also stores options other than the playback position when they have been +modified after playback began, for example the volume and selected audio/subtitles, +and restores their values the next time the file is played. Which options are +saved can be configured with the ``--watch-later-options`` option. + +When playing multiple playlist entries, mpv checks if one them has a resume +config file associated, and if it finds one it restarts playback from it. For +example, if you use ``quit-watch-later`` on the 5th episode of a show, and +later play all the episodes, mpv will automatically resume playback from +episode 5. + +More options to configure this functionality are listed in `Watch Later`_. + +PROTOCOLS +========= + +``http://...``, ``https://``, ... + + 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. + + 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. + + ``data:`` is supported in FFmpeg (not in Libav), but needs to be in the + format ``data://``. This is done to avoid ambiguity with filenames. You + can also prefix it with ``lavf://`` or ``ffmpeg://``. + +``ytdl://...`` + + By default, the youtube-dl hook script only looks at http(s) URLs. Prefixing + an URL with ``ytdl://`` 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. + + Keep in mind that you can't pass youtube-dl command line options by this, + and you have to use ``--ytdl-raw-options`` instead. + +``-`` + + Play data from stdin. + +``smb://PATH`` + + Play a path from Samba share. (Requires FFmpeg support.) + +``bd://[title][/device]`` ``--bluray-device=PATH`` + + Play a Blu-ray disc. Since libbluray 1.0.1, you can read from ISO files + by passing them to ``--bluray-device``. + + ``title`` can be: ``longest`` or ``first`` (selects the default + playlist); ``mpls/`` (selects .mpls playlist); + ```` (select playlist with the same index). mpv will list + the available playlists on loading. + + ``bluray://`` is an alias. + +``dvd://[title][/device]`` ``--dvd-device=PATH`` + + Play a DVD. DVD menus are not supported. If no title is given, the longest + title is auto-selected. Without ``--dvd-device``, it will probably try + to open an actual optical drive, if available and implemented for the OS. + + ``dvdnav://`` is an old alias for ``dvd://`` and does exactly the same + thing. + +``dvb://[cardnumber@]channel`` ``--dvbin-...`` + + Digital TV via DVB. (Linux only.) + +``mf://[filemask|@listfile]`` ``--mf-...`` + + Play a series of images as video. + +``cdda://[device]`` ``--cdrom-device=PATH`` ``--cdda-...`` + + Play CD. + +``lavf://...`` + + Access any FFmpeg/Libav libavformat protocol. Basically, this passed the + string after the ``//`` directly to libavformat. + +``av://type:options`` + + This is intended for using libavdevice inputs. ``type`` is the libavdevice + demuxer name, and ``options`` is the (pseudo-)filename passed to the + demuxer. + + .. admonition:: Example + + :: + + mpv av://v4l2:/dev/video0 --profile=low-latency --untimed + + This plays video from the first v4l input with nearly the lowest latency + possible. It's a good replacement for the removed ``tv://`` input. + Using ``--untimed`` 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.) + + ``avdevice://`` is an alias. + +``file://PATH`` + + A local path as URL. Might be useful in some special use-cases. Note that + ``PATH`` itself should start with a third ``/`` to make the path an + absolute path. + +``appending://PATH`` + + Play a local file, but assume it's 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. + + 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's still written. If you're + trying to play the output of some program, consider using a pipe + (``something | mpv -``). If it really has to be a file on disk, use tail to + make it wait forever, e.g. ``tail -f -c +0 file.mkv | mpv -``. + +``fd://123`` + + Read data from the given file descriptor (for example 123). This is similar + to piping data to stdin via ``-``, but can use an arbitrary file descriptor. + mpv may modify some file descriptor properties when the stream layer "opens" + it. + +``fdclose://123`` + + Like ``fd://``, 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. + +``edl://[edl specification as in edl-mpv.rst]`` + + Stitch together parts of multiple files and play them. + +``slice://start[-end]@URL`` + + Read a slice of a stream. + + ``start`` and ``end`` represent a byte range and accept + suffixes such as ``KiB`` and ``MiB``. ``end`` is optional. + + if ``end`` starts with ``+``, it is considered as offset from ``start``. + + Only works with seekable streams. + + Examples:: + + 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. + +``null://`` + + Simulate an empty file. If opened for writing, it will discard all data. + The ``null`` demuxer will specifically pass autoprobing if this protocol + is used (while it's not automatically invoked for empty files). + +``memory://data`` + + Use the ``data`` part as source data. + +``hex://data`` + + Like ``memory://``, but the string is interpreted as hexdump. + +PSEUDO GUI MODE +=============== + +mpv has no official GUI, other than the OSC (`ON SCREEN CONTROLLER`_), 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. + +Currently this happens only in the following cases: + +- if started using the ``mpv.desktop`` file on Linux (e.g. started from menus + or file associations provided by desktop environments) +- if started from explorer.exe on Windows (technically, if it was started on + Windows, and all of the stdout/stderr/stdin handles are unset) +- started out of the bundle on macOS +- if you manually use ``--player-operation-mode=pseudo-gui`` on the command line + +This mode applies options from the builtin profile ``builtin-pseudo-gui``, but +only if these haven't been set in the user's config file or on the command line, +which is the main difference to using ``--profile=builtin-pseudo-gui``. + +The profile is currently defined as follows: + +:: + + [builtin-pseudo-gui] + terminal=no + force-window=yes + idle=once + screenshot-directory=~~desktop/ + +The ``pseudo-gui`` profile exists for compatibility. The options in the +``pseudo-gui`` profile are applied unconditionally. In addition, the profile +makes sure to enable the pseudo-GUI mode, so that ``--profile=pseudo-gui`` +works like in older mpv releases: + +:: + + [pseudo-gui] + player-operation-mode=pseudo-gui + +.. warning:: + + Currently, you can extend the ``pseudo-gui`` 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. + +Linux desktop issues +==================== + +This subsection describes common problems on the Linux desktop. None of these +problems exist on systems like Windows or macOS. + +Disabling Screensaver +--------------------- + +By default, mpv tries to disable the OS screensaver during playback (only if +a VO using the OS GUI API is active). ``--stop-screensaver=no`` disables this. + +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 protocol on Wayland. + +Before mpv 0.33.0, the X11 backend ran ``xdg-screensaver reset`` in 10 second +intervals when not paused in order to support screensaver inhibition in these +environments. This functionality was removed in 0.33.0, but it is possible to +call the ``xdg-screensaver`` command line program from a user script instead. + + +.. include:: options.rst + +.. include:: ao.rst + +.. include:: vo.rst + +.. include:: af.rst + +.. include:: vf.rst + +.. include:: encode.rst + +.. include:: input.rst + +.. include:: osc.rst + +.. include:: stats.rst + +.. include:: console.rst + +.. include:: lua.rst + +.. include:: javascript.rst + +.. include:: ipc.rst + +.. include:: changes.rst + +.. include:: libmpv.rst + +ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES +===================== + +There are a number of environment variables that can be used to control the +behavior of mpv. + +``HOME``, ``XDG_CONFIG_HOME`` + Used to determine mpv config directory. If ``XDG_CONFIG_HOME`` is not set, + ``$HOME/.config/mpv`` is used. + + ``$HOME/.mpv`` is always added to the list of config search paths with a + lower priority. + +``MPV_HOME`` + Directory where mpv looks for user settings. Overrides ``HOME``, and mpv + will try to load the config file as ``$MPV_HOME/mpv.conf``. + +``MPV_VERBOSE`` (see also ``-v`` and ``--msg-level``) + Set the initial verbosity level across all message modules (default: 0). + This is an integer, and the resulting verbosity corresponds to the number + of ``--v`` options passed to the command line. + +``MPV_LEAK_REPORT`` + If set to ``1``, enable internal talloc leak reporting. If set to another + value, disable leak reporting. If unset, use the default, which normally is + ``0``. If mpv was built with ``--enable-ta-leak-report``, the default is + ``1``. If leak reporting was disabled at compile time (``NDEBUG`` in + custom ``CFLAGS``), this environment variable is ignored. + +``LADSPA_PATH`` + Specifies the search path for LADSPA plugins. If it is unset, fully + qualified path names must be used. + +``DISPLAY`` + Standard X11 display name to use. + +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. + + Notable environment variables: + + ``http_proxy`` + URL to proxy for ``http://`` and ``https://`` URLs. + + ``no_proxy`` + List of domain patterns for which no proxy should be used. + List entries are separated by ``,``. Patterns can include ``*``. + +libdvdcss: + ``DVDCSS_CACHE`` + Specify a directory in which to store title key values. This will + speed up descrambling of DVDs which are in the cache. The + ``DVDCSS_CACHE`` directory is created if it does not exist, and a + subdirectory is created named after the DVD's title or manufacturing + date. If ``DVDCSS_CACHE`` is not set or is empty, libdvdcss will use + the default value which is ``${HOME}/.dvdcss/`` under Unix and + the roaming application data directory (``%APPDATA%``) under + Windows. The special value "off" disables caching. + + ``DVDCSS_METHOD`` + Sets the authentication and decryption method that libdvdcss will use + to read scrambled discs. Can be one of ``title``, ``key`` or ``disc``. + + 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. + + 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. + + 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. + + ``DVDCSS_RAW_DEVICE`` + 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). + + ``DVDCSS_VERBOSE`` + Sets the libdvdcss verbosity level. + + :0: Outputs no messages at all. + :1: Outputs error messages to stderr. + :2: Outputs error messages and debug messages to stderr. + + ``DVDREAD_NOKEYS`` + Skip retrieving all keys on startup. Currently disabled. + + ``HOME`` + FIXME: Document this. + + +EXIT CODES +========== + +Normally **mpv** returns 0 as exit code after finishing playback successfully. +If errors happen, the following exit codes can be returned: + + :1: Error initializing mpv. This is also returned if unknown options are + passed to mpv. + :2: The file passed to mpv couldn't 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. + :3: There were some files that could be played, and some files which + couldn't (using the definition of success from above). + :4: Quit due to a signal, Ctrl+c in a VO window (by default), or from the + default quit key bindings in encoding mode. + +Note that quitting the player manually will always lead to exit code 0, +overriding the exit code that would be returned normally. Also, the ``quit`` +input command can take an exit code: in this case, that exit code is returned. + +FILES +===== + +Note that this section assumes Linux/BSD. On other platforms the paths may be different. +For Windows-specifics, see `FILES ON WINDOWS`_ section. + +``/usr/local/etc/mpv/mpv.conf`` + mpv system-wide settings (depends on ``--prefix`` passed to configure - mpv + in default configuration will use ``/usr/local/etc/mpv/`` as config + directory, while most Linux distributions will set it to ``/etc/mpv/``). + +``~/.cache/mpv`` + The standard cache directory. Certain options within mpv may cause it to write + cache files to disk. This can be overridden by environment variables, in + ascending order: + + :1: If ``$XDG_CACHE_HOME`` is set, then the derived cache directory + will be ``$XDG_CACHE_HOME/mpv``. + :2: If ``$MPV_HOME`` is set, then the derived cache directory will be + ``$MPV_HOME``. + + If the directory does not exist, mpv will try to create it automatically. + +``~/.config/mpv`` + The standard configuration directory. This can be overridden by environment + variables, in ascending order: + + :1: If ``$XDG_CONFIG_HOME`` is set, then the derived configuration directory + will be ``$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/mpv``. + :2: If ``$MPV_HOME`` is set, then the derived configuration directory will be + ``$MPV_HOME``. + + If this directory, nor the original configuration directory (see below) do + not exist, mpv tries to create this directory automatically. + +``~/.mpv/`` + The original (pre 0.5.0) configuration directory. It will continue to be + read if present. If this directory is present and the standard configuration + directory is not present, then cache files and watch later config files will + also be written to this directory. + + If both this directory and the standard configuration directory are + present, configuration will be read from both with the standard + configuration directory content taking precedence. However, you should + fully migrate to the standard directory and a warning will be shown in + this situation. + +``~/.config/mpv/mpv.conf`` + mpv user settings (see `CONFIGURATION FILES`_ section) + +``~/.config/mpv/input.conf`` + key bindings (see `INPUT.CONF`_ section) + +``~/.config/mpv/fonts.conf`` + Fontconfig fonts.conf that is customized for mpv. You should include system + fonts.conf in this file or mpv would not know about fonts that you already + have in the system. + + Only available when libass is built with fontconfig. + +``~/.config/mpv/subfont.ttf`` + fallback subtitle font + +``~/.config/mpv/fonts/`` + Default location for ``--sub-fonts-dir`` (see `Subtitles`_) and + ``--osd-fonts-dir`` (see `OSD`_). + +``~/.config/mpv/scripts/`` + All files in this directory are loaded as if they were passed to the + ``--script`` option. They are loaded in alphabetical order. + + The ``--load-scripts=no`` option disables loading these files. + + See `Script location`_ for details. + +``~/.local/state/mpv/watch_later/`` + Contains temporary config files needed for resuming playback of files with + the watch later feature. See for example the ``Q`` key binding, or the + ``quit-watch-later`` input command. + + This can be overridden by environment variables, in ascending order: + + :1: If ``$XDG_STATE_HOME`` is set, then the derived watch later directory + will be ``$XDG_STATE_HOME/mpv/watch_later``. + :2: If ``$MPV_HOME`` is set, then the derived watch later directory will be + ``$MPV_HOME/watch_later``. + + Each file is a small config file which is loaded if the corresponding media + file is loaded. It contains the playback position and some (not necessarily + all) settings that were changed during playback. The filenames are hashed + from the full paths of the media files. It's in general not possible to + extract the media filename from this hash. However, you can set the + ``--write-filename-in-watch-later-config`` option, and the player will + add the media filename to the contents of the resume config file. + +``~/.config/mpv/script-opts/osc.conf`` + This is loaded by the OSC script. See the `ON SCREEN CONTROLLER`_ docs + for details. + + Other files in this directory are specific to the corresponding scripts + as well, and the mpv core doesn't touch them. + +FILES ON WINDOWS +================ + +On win32 (if compiled with MinGW, but not Cygwin), the default config file +locations are different. They are generally located under ``%APPDATA%/mpv/``. +For example, the path to mpv.conf is ``%APPDATA%/mpv/mpv.conf``, which maps to +a system and user-specific path, for example + + ``C:\users\USERNAME\AppData\Roaming\mpv\mpv.conf`` + +You can find the exact path by running ``echo %APPDATA%\mpv\mpv.conf`` in cmd.exe. + +Other config files (such as ``input.conf``) are in the same directory. See the +`FILES`_ section above. + +The cache directory is located at ``%LOCALAPPDATA%/mpv/cache``. + +The watch_later directory is located at ``%LOCALAPPDATA%/mpv/watch_later``. + +The environment variable ``$MPV_HOME`` completely overrides these, like on +UNIX. + +If a directory named ``portable_config`` next to the mpv.exe exists, all +config will be loaded from this directory only. Watch later config files and +cache files are written to this directory as well. (This exists on Windows +only and is redundant with ``$MPV_HOME``. However, since Windows is very +scripting unfriendly, a wrapper script just setting ``$MPV_HOME``, like you +could do it on other systems, won't work. ``portable_config`` is provided for +convenience to get around this restriction.) + +Config files located in the same directory as ``mpv.exe`` are loaded with +lower priority. Some config files are loaded only once, which means that +e.g. of 2 ``input.conf`` files located in two config directories, only the +one from the directory with higher priority will be loaded. + +A third config directory with the lowest priority is the directory named ``mpv`` +in the same directory as ``mpv.exe``. This used to be the directory with the +highest priority, but is now discouraged to use and might be removed in the +future. + +Note that mpv likes to mix ``/`` and ``\`` path separators for simplicity. +kernel32.dll accepts this, but cmd.exe does not. + +FILES ON MACOS +============== + +On macOS the watch later directory is located at ``~/.config/mpv/watch_later/`` +and the cache directory is set to ``~/Library/Caches/io.mpv/``. These directories +can't be overwritten by enviroment variables. +Everything else is the same as `FILES`_. -- cgit v1.2.3