Documentation:VLC Modules Loading

From VideoLAN Wiki
Revision as of 17:59, 30 October 2010 by J-b (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

VLC modules loading

How does VLC load modules?

Introduction about Modules

VLC has a core and a lot of modules (between 200 and 400 depending on the build).

VLC cannot do much without modules, since modules are providing most of the functionnalities we expect. See the "Major Capabilites" sections.

A VLC module has 2 major properties:

  • the capability, VLC_MODULE_CAPABILITY, that describes the category of the module
  • the score, VLC_MODULE_SCORE, that holds the priority of the module


How does the loading of modules happens

VLC keeps a list of detected VLC modules (named the plugins cache).

When VLC needs a module, it tries to open a the higher-score capability-matching module that accept the request.

Let's do an example.

When VLC needs a "decoder" ("decoder" is one category/capability), it opens all "decoder" modules, until one matches.

It opens them in decreasing score order (bigger score first, smaller ones at the end), and runs the Open() function of the modules. When one module returns OK, VLC uses this module.

Advanced infos

Score of 0

If a module has a score of 0, it needs to be explicitly requested by the user (like forcing --codec or --vout) to be loaded.

all, none and other special tweaks

  • The "all" mode means all modules will be tested in decreasing order of score.
  • The "none" mode means no modules will be tested.
  • Any module can be requested by using its direct shortname. This is useful for 0-scored modules.


Modules requests can be chained, as the examples show:

--codec avcodec,all
try the avcodec module than all modules as a "decoder"
--demux avformat,none
 try the avformat module and no other module

By default, modules requests are in the "all" mode, and "all" can be omitted.

How to list Modules

  • Using Console
vlc --list
  • Using GUI
Menu -> Tools -> Plugins and extensions

Major Capabilities