- Removed "jellyfin" prefix from files, as they are already in a
directory named Jellyfin
- Split the former "jellyfinitem.{h,cpp}" into multiple files in the DTO
directory, one for each class. The jellyfinitem files started to
become enormous.
- Use forward declarations in headers instead of including files
wherever possible.
- Updated copyright headers
- PlaybackManager now takes ownership of set items
- PlaybackManager can play items just by their itemId, avoids useless
item creation on the QML side of things.
- Allow calling Jellyfin::registerTypes with a different URI
- Minor code cleanup
* [backend]: Websocket now automatically tries to reconnect if connection was lost, up to 3 times.
* [backend]: Move more playback and resume logic to the backend, to avoid having it in multiple places within the QML. Regression: pausing playback sometimes halts the video player for an unknown reason.
* [playback]: Sailfin will try to play without the server transcoding, if possible.
* [ui]: added a debug page in the settings
The websocket now notifies the ApiClient, on which several models and
items are listening, when the userData for an user has changed. The UI
on the qml side may automatically updates without any extra effort.
This also resolves a bug where videos didn't resume after +/- 3:40 due
to an integer overflow.
I finally got deserializing lists working. Exposing them to QML was not
a trivial task either. Note that I didn't do it the clean way. Nested
lists are not supported. But it works!
Because I got so frustarted at one point trying to implement things the
right way, I restructured the project to seperate the Sailfish code from
the Qt code and created a new, empty desktop project. The Qt code has
been transformed into a happy little library, to which the Sailfish OS
application links.
Note that QMake doesn't seem to strip the library for some reason.