On Tue, 29 May 2007 03:37:55 +0200, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sun, 22 Apr 2007, Scott C. Frase wrote:
Thanks for taking the time to investigate this. It will be a big help
to get it resolved.
Okay, after doing more careful tests, I think I've determined that for a
change, it's all the *other* software that's broken, not Cinelerra.
A word of caution: You have analysed a sample data from a single source,
and observed how different pieces of software handle those data. All the
softwares seem to be handling the data wrong, and we may not know for
sure whether Cinelerra was the most clever, or just the luckiest.
Then again, DVD streams are intended for feeble, cheap players which
follow the spec. Mplayer could be too clever and a half, assuming a
broken stream where Cinelerra naively follows the spec.
Bottom line: More analysis is called for. :-)
By the way, what tools are you using to investigate the toc? (Maybe I
can learn something new)?
What I did was look at the files with less and try to figure out the
format from that. It seems pretty clear that there's a header and then a
bunch of 8-byte numbers that increment from zero. Then to look for
duplicates I wrote a Perl one-liner.
You may find more powerful tools in the packages mpegdemux and
mpeg3-utils.
--
Herman Robak
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