The rendering code here was one of the older code bases, which was riddled with bugs and leaks. The new code doesn't look pretty, but it works for the time being until a better solution is found or made. It should be able to handle HDR inputs now, but it may not be completely correct yet. This also fixes the double-free bug.
As an additional improvement, I've moved the allocation of the effect to a shared class which should reduce the memory usage slightly when multiple effects are in play. And now selecting nothing selects the filter target itself without infinitely adding references to the filter. Good enough in my eyes.
Fixes#819
While this had no actual effect due to the immediate ID3D11DeviceContext being tied to the ID3D11Device itself, it shouldn't have occured at all. With this there should now only be a single Release() call for every AddRef() call.
While the previous approach of a static thread pool worked, it was sub-optimal in its resource usage. Many of the threads would never see a single task, and simply permanently sleep. This seems like a good idea, except that sleeping threads still end up in the scheduler, and thus waste a tiny amount of resources.
It is better to instead dynamically spawn threads when needed and only keeping the bare minimum around all the time. These dynamically spawned threads are also explicitly set to background priority which further reduces scheduling overhead. Finally optimizing the memory layout to prevent unwanted false sharing should also keep sporadic wake ups at a minimum.
This new model should be able to handle many more tasks than ever before, but is still not as optimal as it could be.
It seems to be possible to encode with a different framerate than what libOBS is configured for. While technically any framerate appears to be possible, it is currently limited to integer fractions only in order to make the implementation much easier. Integer fractions only require skipping N frames and multiplying the denominator by N, where N is the configured integer. For sanity reasons, the limit of N is currently 10.
This allows power users to split their streaming and recording framerates with relative ease, and opt for things such as:
- 30 FPS (1/4) streaming with 120 FPS (1/1) recording.
- 30 FPS (1/10) streaming with 300 FPS (1/1) recording.
- 30 FPS (1/10) streaming with 100 FPS (1/3) recording.
- and so on.
While some of these combinations are just stupid, they are now available to power users.
While this may break some unusual encoders that require additional frames for extra data or sei data to be present, it fixes the problem where encoders would never record at all. May need to look into a different solution in the future.
Fixes#911
The compiler will choose the optimal way automatically, and forcing std::move here actually results in two objects existing side by side, before being "moved" into one.
- Use auto in places where code clarity is improved or identical.
- Replace trivial constructors and destructors with default.
- Use true random for random generation.
- Use std::string_view where it is valid to do so.
- Apply const where it is valid to do so.
- Use references where it is valid to do so.
- Manually optimize memory usage with std::move and std::copy.
- Opt for memory efficient containers where the size is known ahead of time.
Signed-off-by: lainon <GermanAizek@yandex.ru>
For unknown reasons this results in an error only when the project is built within git-bash and with cmake. It does not occur with cmake-gui or VS itself.
To ensure better stability of future releases, we need to adopt multiple stages in the release cycle. As we already label Alpha, Beta, Candidate and Stable differently, simply adopting this classification system already does everything for us. This also allows us to maintain compatibility with the existing system, while offering something new entirely.
As the recursion checking code is somewhat broken in libOBS, we need something to prevent accidental recursion from occurring. While the alternative fix is to simply make all of libOBS support recursion, unfortunately that endeavor would be too large for a single person to take on.