2018-01-20 17:46 GMT+01:00 Frédéric <[email protected]>: > Le samedi 20 janvier 2018, Carl a écrit : > >> (Did you already ask this and I missed it?) > > No, I didn't, because I was not planning to do that. My > initial goal was only to see if there were some obvious > known differences between ffmpeg decoding and AV > receiver chips decoding.
Given the decoder is approximately a decade old and was used intensively since we of course hope there are no audible bugs. >> Download a current static Linux binary from >> https://www.johnvansickle.com/ffmpeg/ > > There is already a ffmpeg binary. I guess it is better to > use it first, as this is the one I run with Kodi. This makes no sense as the version number you posted does not exist in the FFmpeg repository. (Except if you expect a Kodi issue.) >> You have to find out how to output audio: You most >> likely have an alsa output, the following works fine >> here, other devices may exist: >> $ ffmpeg -i yourfile -map 0:a -f alsa hw:0 >> If this fails, provide the complete, uncut console output. >> >> This is the command for another alsa device on my >> system (so you get the possible syntax): >> $ ffmpeg -i yourfile -map 0:a -f alsa hw:1,7 > > They use pulseaudio, not alsa :o/ I wouldn't rule out that this is the issue (you should definitely also test if alsa behaves differently) but FFmpeg supports pulse output as well: $ ffmpeg -i yourfile -map 0:a -f pulse default Carl Eugen _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-user mailing list [email protected] http://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-user To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email [email protected] with subject "unsubscribe".
