![]() ![]() "There may have been improvements and fixes since, but even v1.2.1 plays test.m3u8. But what about the NO security issue when using (g)mplayer -playlist ~/Music/test.m3u8? Why isn't' that also blocked? Perhaps there was a fix in 1.3.0? Is it just a confusing idiosyncrasy of the the two OR is this a bug that shouldn't block in the when you say Which is a good security measure, but one that should show the warning in the minicontrol window so users know they can't play a URL based playlist. So I guess my issue is that the security feature blocking standard playlists with embedded URL referencing. If I load a valid local mp3 or aa it will play the file. Ignoring File." But if I then try to load any URL embedded playlist it won't play and it doesn't flash any new warning. ![]() When I do that I see in bash the "Playlist parsing disabled for security reasons. I've decided to try only starting gmplayer from user's bash to see any logging output, then loading the test.m3u8 as described above. Thank and thank you for continuing to help troubleshoot. If this bug is a duplicate then please refer to that bug so I can correct my standard playlist to conform to what mplayer expects. Please leave this bug request open until it is properly resolved. Also using the eject button on the minicontrols to pull-up playlists doesn't follow expected results, because every "physical" audio or cd player eject button simply causes the player to stop playing and eject the current CD/DVD. That results in mplayer lockup and nothing played. I"ve tried to use the eject button to pull up. If a playlist bug was addressed in 1.3.0 then please show me the release note showing it was addressed. This is not a user instruction issue, this is a bug in mplayer reading and using standard playlists. I use Slackware 14.2 whose current distribution is MPlayer 1.2.1, which was released in January 2016, 1.3.0 was released one month later and no newer release has been made since. Or at least acknowledge that mplayer doens't support standard playlists. ![]() If it doesn't play, then please realize this is a bug with mplayer not supporting playlist standards. If it plays for you then great, then I have a local problem. Please try to make the playlist that I've posted earlier and try opening it with the minicontroller or mplayer. Owned by the non-profit organization VideoLAN.This bug report is that a standard playlist can not be read and played by gmplayer, not how the minicontrol functions. VLC is a free and open source cross-platform multimedia player and framework. Try: mplayer -playlist help OR mplayer -playlist It's not supported in certain versions, so you may need to get the latest (or even CVS) version to have it work. up and thrown in the playlist, MplayerX is able to reproduce them in right order. It also would appear that after reading a few messages from the mailing list archives that the -playlist would be the command to use. VLC Media Player Free Open Source Mac Windows Linux Android iPhone Chrome OS Windows S Android Tablet BSD Windows Phone iPad Apple Watch Apple TV Kindle Fire Haiku Xbox When comparing MplayerX vs MPV, the Slant community recommends MPV for. Just input the URL of the webpage in which you may find in the address bar of the web browser, MPlayerX will play it for you seamlessly. ![]() support: MPlayerX could stream youtube audio and video. Forget where you stopped playing last time? MPlayerX won't. Enjoy the whole afternoon, with just one click. Watch your favorites in sofa, more comfortable. Wanna work while watching your collection? just drag and F. Intelligently detecting the encoding of the subtitles. Play almost any format of file or stream. All of this helps users to focus on the contents, rather than software itself. Additionally, MPlayerX is inspired by QuickTime Player, with a black interface and in-frame minimal controls. MPlayerX is armed by FFmpeg and MPlayer, which means it could handle any media format in the world without extra plug-ins or codec packages. MPlayerX is an open source project which aims to be the most powerful, beautiful, easy to use multimedia player on Mac OS X. ![]()
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