Hacker Guide/Interfaces
Contents
VLC Interface
A typical VLC run course
This section describes what happens when you launch the vlc program. After the ELF dynamic loader blah blah blah, the main thread becomes the interface thread. It passes through the following steps :
- CPU detection : which CPU are we running on, what are its capabilities (MMX, MMXEXT, 3DNow, AltiVec...) ?
- Message interface initialization ;
- Command line options parsing ;
- Playlist creation ;
- Module bank initialization ;
- Interface opening ;
- Signal handler installation : SIGHUP, SIGINT and SIGQUIT are caught to manage a clean quit (please note that the SDL library also catches SIGSEGV) ;
- Audio output thread spawning ;
- Video output thread spawning ;
- Main loop : events management ;
Following sections describe each of these steps in particular, and many more.
The message interface
It is a know fact that printf() functions are not necessarily thread-safe. As a result, one thread interrupted in a printf() call, followed by another calls to it, will leave the program in an undetermined state. So an API must be set up to print messages without crashing.
This API is implemented in two ways. If INTF_MSG_QUEUE is defined in config.h , every printf-like (see below) call will queue the message into a chained list. This list will be printed and flushed by the interface thread once upon an event loop. If INTF_MSG_QUEUE is undefined, the calling thread will acquire the print lock (which prevents two print operations to occur at the same time) and print the message directly (default behaviour).
Functions available to print messages are :
- msg_Info ( p_this, ... ) : Print a message to stdout , plain and stupid (for instance "it works!").
- msg_Err( p_this, ... ) : Print an error message to stderr .
- msg_Warn( p_this, ... ) : Print a message to stderr if the warning level (determined by -v, -vv and -vvv) is low enough. Please note that the lower the level, the less important the message is.
- msg_Dbg( p_this, ... ) : This function is designed for optional checkpoint messages, such as "we are now entering function dvd_foo_thingy". It does
nothing in non-trace mode. If the VLC is compiled with --enable-trace, the message is either written to the file vlc-trace.log (if TRACE_LOG is defined in config.h), or printed to stderr (otherwise).
- msg_Flush(p_this) : Flush the message queue, if it is in use.
Command line options
VLC uses GNU getopt to parse command line options. getopt structures are defined in src/extras/getopt.c and command line parsing is done in src/config/cmdline.c