* Updated translations from CrowdIn.
* Fixed FFmpeg Encoder not using the Color Format option.
* Fixed ProRes not overriding the Color Format with the correct one.
* Fixed CMake adding a lib prefix to Linux builds.
* Fixed some sources not tagging the settings object with the plugin version, resulting in impossible to migrate settings.
* Massively improved GCC and Clang support, fixing almost all warnings and errors.
Previously sources had to manually implement migration code, which resulted in unresolvable regression issues due to the lack of version and commit tagging. With the new migration code, all sources automatically have this version and commit tagging at all times, and as such can now have a temporary regression fixed without the user needing to change any values manually.
As OBS Studio locks some mutexes in a different order depending on what actions are being done, using modified_properties for GPU work causes things to freeze in place. Instead have users manually click the refresh button when they changed files in order to prevent this freeze from happening.
Fixes: #118
* Updated libOBS to 25.0.3.
* Improved support for Ubuntu 16.04 and 18.04, for both GCC 8 and GCC 9.
* Fixed#116: Regression from 0.7.1 to 0.8.0.
* Fixed transitions not showing up.
* Added Shader Transitions, Shader Sources and Shader Filters.
* Added new example files for the new Shaders integration.
* Added Nvidia Face Tracking filter (requires compatible Nvidia RTX GPU and Nvidia AR SDK Runtime).
With this, GCC 8 and above should now be able to compile the project both in obs-studio and as a standalone install. Some features are currently still not fully supported and require extra work, but the majority of things are supported and work out of the box. Exact feature parity can be looked up here on the wiki: https://github.com/Xaymar/obs-StreamFX/wiki/Platform-Feature-Parity
Related: #119#98#30
This header includes all common data between headers used in the plugin. This should improve cross-platform compiling support whenever possible, as all platform-dependent common includes and defines can be done here.
Ever wished you had a professional camera operator to highlight and follow the action, ensuring the audience never misses a beat? Thanks to NVIDIA, you can now do this at home for free! The new NVIDIA AR SDK unlocks augmented reality features, including motion tracking for faces.
This allows me to provide you with an automated zoom and cropping solution for your video camera to transform your streams into a slick, polished broadcast, where you’ll always be the star of the show. Don’t forget - everything is customizable so the possibilities are endless. You can even recreate that Futurama squinting meme if you wanted to (with some scripting)!
The filter requires compatible Nvidia RTX hardware and the Nvidia AR SDK Runtime to be installed ahead of time. This filter is considered "stable" and shouldn't change much from version to version.
Due to the 'nvcuda' library being part of the driver, it falls in a clause of the GPL which allows us to load and interface with system drivers. Since we can't rely on Nvidias headers here (incompatible license), most of this was pulled from FFmpeg and other things were found out via testing.
CRT Curvature: Emulate an old CRT TVs curvature ...
CRT Scanlines: ... and emulate an old CRT TVs scanlines, rollbar and bleeding!
Hexagonize: Turn things into hexagons. You know, like the thing you see in my streams.
'Time.x' gets inaccurate if OBS Studio is running for more than two hours, therefore we have to do something to fix it. By allowing the shader code to control when things loop using 'Time.y' (0..1) and 'Time.z' (the number of times 'Time.y' wrapped back to 0), a much more stable animation can be achieved.
Color Shift: Uses HSL and some math to smoothly shift Hue Saturation and Lightness between A and B.
Luma Burn: "Burns" away the Luminosity of A to reveal the B side.
Pixelator: Classic/Retro pixelation effect often seen in older games to transition between settings.
These allow you to apply any kind of filtering to a any source, using just standard HLSL. Just like transitions, one extra parameter is set called 'InputA'.
Fixes#95
With this, the first proper shader effect is now possible. By using the four new automated shader parameters 'InputA', 'InputB', 'TransitionTime' and 'TransitionSize' you can write your own transition in HLSL.
Fixes#96
Due to render logic required for transitions, some of the render logic is split into an additional function called 'prepare_render'. Additionally the storage for some temporary objects has been removed as it these objects usually do not outlive their rendering time anyway.
Related: #96#95#94#5