By changing the color model to YUVA-8 Bit and after 9 hours of rendering I
got an m2v file that showed video.
Then I used mplex:

mplex -f 3 -b 2000 output.mp3 output.m2v -o output.mpg

It lead to this:

required(DTS)=12542400
++ WARN: [mplex] Audio c0: buf=      0 frame=005795 sector=00003310
++ WARN: [mplex] Video e0: buf=   2025 frame=003477 sector=00117434
**ERROR: [mplex] Too many frame drops -exiting

The result was a file lasting a few minutes.
Something is definitely not all right.


Hi Ed,
To save your sanity, try rendering small clips at a time. Less than 30 seconds should suffice.

I've seen too many frame drops before. This was due to my source video having broken or missing frames. In my case, the video was a screen capture of a Winamp visualization captured at too high a resolution. Because of the resolution was too high, Cinelerra dropped frames.

I've also had frame drops within a video from other sources. In these cases, I had to painstakingly render out portions of the video and then combine the audio with the video in mplex to find the frame drops. As you've seen, mplex will tell you right away if you have frame drops.

Are you working with one source video or have you tried different clips from the same source? I'm sure you've tried this, but just to make sure the problem exists with all clips of this format, load a different clip in.

don't forget rendering in small bites..that will save a crapload of time.
scott

_______________________________________________
Cinelerra mailing list
[email protected]
https://init.linpro.no/mailman/skolelinux.no/listinfo/cinelerra

Reply via email to