Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Benoit Bolsee
e6a2ab319f VideoTexture: AVFormatContext::pb is not a pointer for avformat library older than 52 (linux uses 51) 2008-11-01 17:15:17 +00:00
Martin Poirier
58d0dc21aa Getting video texture closer to compiling under linux 2008-11-01 17:06:36 +00:00
Benoit Bolsee
bd81d96b78 Video Texture: missing newlines at the end of several files. 2008-11-01 15:58:49 +00:00
Benoit Bolsee
54401d36aa BGE Video Texture: fix constant initializer problem with Exception description. Uniformized the line ending. 2008-11-01 12:48:46 +00:00
Benoit Bolsee
48fb0edc78 Fix Cmake for MSVC 32bit 2008-11-01 11:15:13 +00:00
Benoit Bolsee
a8c4eef326 VideoTexture module.
The only compilation system that works for sure is the MSVC project files. I've tried my best to
update the other compilation system but I count on the community to check and fix them.
 
This is Zdeno Miklas video texture plugin ported to trunk. 
The original plugin API is maintained (can be found here http://home.scarlet.be/~tsi46445/blender/blendVideoTex.html)
EXCEPT for the following:

The module name is changed to VideoTexture (instead of blendVideoTex).

A new (and only) video source is now available: VideoFFmpeg()
You must pass 1 to 4 arguments when you create it (you can use named arguments):

VideoFFmpeg(file) : play a video file
VideoFFmpeg(file, capture, rate, width, height) : start a live video capture

file:
In the first form, file is a video file name, relative to startup directory.
It can also be a URL, FFmpeg will happily stream a video from a network source.
In the second form, file is empty or is a hint for the format of the video capture.
In Windows, file is ignored and should be empty or not specified.
In Linux, ffmpeg supports two types of device: VideoForLinux and DV1394. 
The user specifies the type of device with the file parameter:
   [<device_type>][:<standard>]
   <device_type> : 'v4l' for VideoForLinux, 'dv1394' for DV1394; default to 'v4l'
   <standard>    : 'pal', 'secam' or 'ntsc', default to 'ntsc'
The driver name is constructed automatically from the device types:
   v4l   : /dev/video<capture>
   dv1394: /dev/dv1394/<capture>
If you have different driver name, you can specify the driver name explicitely 
instead of device type. Examples of valid file parameter:
   /dev/v4l/video0:pal
   /dev/ieee1394/1:ntsc
   dv1394:ntsc
   v4l:pal
   :secam

capture: 
Defines the index number of the capture source, starting from 0. The first capture device is always 0.
The VideoTexutre modules knows that you want to start a live video capture when you set this parameter to a number >= 0. Setting this parameter < 0 indicates a video file playback. Default value is -1.

rate: 
the capture frame rate, by default 25 frames/sec

width: 
height: 
Width and height of the video capture in pixel, default value 0.
In Windows you must specify these values and they must fit with the capture device capability. 
For example, if you have a webcam that can capture at 160x120, 320x240 or 640x480, 
you must specify one of these couple of values or the opening of the video source will fail.
In Linux, default values are provided by the VideoForLinux driver if you don't specify width and height.

Simple example
**************
1. Texture definition script:

import VideoTexture

contr = GameLogic.getCurrentController()
obj = contr.getOwner()
if not hasattr(GameLogic, 'video'):
	matID = VideoTexture.materialID(obj, 'MAVideoMat')
	GameLogic.video = VideoTexture.Texture(obj, matID)
	GameLogic.vidSrc = VideoTexture.VideoFFmpeg('trailer_400p.ogg')
	# Streaming is also possible:
	#GameLogic.vidSrc = VideoTexture.VideoFFmpeg('http://10.32.1.10/trailer_400p.ogg')
	GameLogic.vidSrc.repeat = -1
	# If the video dimensions are not a power of 2, scaling must be done before
	# sending the texture to the GPU. This is done by default with gluScaleImage()
	# but you can also use a faster, but less precise, scaling by setting scale
	# to True. Best approach is to convert the video offline and set the dimensions right.
	GameLogic.vidSrc.scale = True
	# FFmpeg always delivers the video image upside down, so flipping is enabled automatically
	#GameLogic.vidSrc.flip = True

if contr.getSensors()[0].isPositive():
	GameLogic.video.source = GameLogic.vidSrc
	GameLogic.vidSrc.play()


2. Texture refresh script:

obj = GameLogic.getCurrentController().getOwner()
if hasattr(GameLogic, 'video') != 0:
  GameLogic.video.refresh(True)

You can download this demo here: 
http://home.scarlet.be/~tsi46445/blender/VideoTextureDemo.blend
http://home.scarlet.be/~tsi46445/blender/trailer_400p.ogg
2008-10-31 22:35:52 +00:00