When audio capture fails on the device, scrcpy continues mirroring the
video stream. This allows to enable audio by default only when
supported.
However, if an audio configuration occurs (for example the user
explicitly selected an unknown audio encoder), this must be treated as
an error and scrcpy must exit.
PR #3757 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/3757>
If no bit-rate is passed, let the server use the default value (8Mbps).
This avoids to define a default value on both sides, and to pass the
default bit-rate as an argument when starting the server.
PR #3757 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/3757>
By default, audio is enabled (--no-audio must be explicitly passed to
disable it).
However, some devices may not support audio capture (typically devices
below Android 11, or Android 11 when the shell application is not
foreground on start).
In that case, make the server notify the client to dynamically disable
audio forwarding so that it does not wait indefinitely for an audio
stream.
Also disable audio on unknown codec or missing decoder on the
client-side, for the same reasons.
PR #3757 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/3757>
For video streams (at least H.264 and H.265), the config packet
containing SPS/PPS must be prepended to the next packet (the following
keyframe).
For audio streams (at least OPUS), they must not be merged.
PR #3757 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/3757>
The client does not use the audio stream if there is no display and no
recording (i.e. only V4L2), so disable audio so that the device does not
attempt to capture it.
PR #3757 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/3757>
When audio is enabled, open a new socket to send the audio stream from
the device to the client.
PR #3757 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/3757>
Co-authored-by: Romain Vimont <rom@rom1v.com>
Signed-off-by: Romain Vimont <rom@rom1v.com>
Audio will be enabled by default (when supported). Add an option to
disable it.
PR #3757 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/3757>
Co-authored-by: Romain Vimont <rom@rom1v.com>
Signed-off-by: Romain Vimont <rom@rom1v.com>
The recorder opened the target file from the packet sink open()
callback, called by the demuxer. Only then the recorder thread was
started.
One golden rule for the recorder is to never block the demuxer for I/O,
because it would impact mirroring. This rule is respected on recording
packets, but not for the initial recorder opening.
Therefore, start the recorder thread from sc_recorder_init(), open the
file immediately from the recorder thread, then make it wait for the
stream to start (on packet sink open()).
Now that the recorder can report errors directly (rather than making the
demuxer call fail), it is possible to report file opening error even
before the packet sink is open.
The recorder has two initialization phases: one to initialize the
concrete recorder object, and one to open its packet_sink trait.
Initialize mutex and condvar as part of the object initialization.
If there were several packet_sink traits (spoiler: one for video, one
for audio), then the mutex and condvar would still be initialized only
once.
Stop scrcpy on recorder errors.
It was previously indirectly stopped by the demuxer, which failed to
push packets to a recorder in error. Report it directly instead:
- it avoids to wait for the next demuxer call;
- it will allow to open the target file from a separate thread and stop
immediately on any I/O error.
On the scrcpy-deps repo, I built FFmpeg 5.1.2 binaries for Windows with
only the features used by scrcpy.
For comparison, here are the sizes of the dll for FFmpeg 5.1.2:
- before: 89M
- after: 4.7M
It also allows to upgrade the old FFmpeg version (4.3.1) used for win32.
Refs <https://github.com/rom1v/scrcpy-deps>
Refs <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/issues/1753>