Deprecate --lock-video-orientation in favor of a more general option
--capture-orientation, which supports all possible orientations
(0, 90, 180, 270, flip0, flip90, flip180, flip270), and a "locked" flag
via a '@' prefix.
All the old "locked video orientations" are supported:
- --lock-video-orientation -> --capture-orientation=@
- --lock-video-orientation=0 -> --capture-orientation=@0
- --lock-video-orientation=90 -> --capture-orientation=@90
- --lock-video-orientation=180 -> --capture-orientation=@180
- --lock-video-orientation=270 -> --capture-orientation=@270
In addition, --capture-orientation can rotate/flip the display without
locking, so that it follows the physical device rotation.
For example:
scrcpy --capture-orientation=flip90
always flips and rotates the capture by 90° clockwise.
The arguments are consistent with --orientation (which provides a
separate client-side orientation).