The new libOBS API allows us to directly access the underlying API instead of having to mess around in memory. By using it we can avoid crashing in case the compiler for it is different, or in case the actual back end structure changes.
Additionally the mostly unimplemented and unused options have also been removed, which streamlines the use of this class even further and reduces both shader and code complexity.
Finally by optimizing the use of the internal render target we can achieve a speed up of up to 3000% over the old way, allowing for many more mipmapped filters.
* Fixed 'Pixelator's color transition point being off-center and uncontrollable.
* Fixed 'Drunk' filter not working at all.
* Added an inverted mode to 'Luma Burn'.
* Added exponential Luma to 'Luma Burn'.
* Fixed odd color behavior in the 'Color Shift' transition by switching out HSL with HSV.
* Added a new 'Sliding Bars' transition shader, for an example of it see this clip: https://clips.twitch.tv/RacyEndearingHorseradishAMPTropPunch .
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
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.
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.
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.
Adds support for specifying Minimum Bitrate directly in the UI instead of requiring custom settings to do so. Additionally Adaptive I/B-Frames are now only shown if Look-Ahead is a value greater than 0 frames.
Quality Minimum can also now be left at a default value of -1, the Quality group is no longer toggleable and Quality Target moved into the group. Settings options on the context is now searching children too (if there are any).
Finally, some C++17 formatting was done.
Fixes#101
This drastically improves stability and prevents all exceptions from leaking into libobs C code, which prevents crashes and unexpected freezes from exception handlers further down the stack.
Additionally minor work was done to further improve the quality and user experience for the filter.