Thanks for the tips. I tried mpeg2desc which gave this output on a 39
minutes show (half an hour + 5 mins padding fromt and back):
......
528ec80e: pes audio 0; length=2028; hdr=12; pts 2385.876 sec
528ed000: mpeg2 pack hdr, 2385.842 sec
528ed00e: pes video 0; length=2028; hdr=8; pts 2386.280 sec
.....
so that is correct
mplayer concurs
I tried xine on FC5 and it also gives the wrong result So it looks to
be isolated to xine.
I guess I have to get the latest snapshot of xine to see if that solves
it...
Paul
Duncan Webb wrote:
Paul Sijben wrote:
I have noticed two possibly related weirdnesses with xine in my freevo
1.6/ Ubuntu 6.10/VIA EPIA/TV-out PAL setup.
1) pressing fast forward on the remote is often not really responded to
very quickly
2) the program playing time is off a program of 84 minutes is displayed
as 69 minutes , 40 minutes displayed as 32) etc.
For point 2) this fraction is remarkably similar to 60/50. So my guess
is that xine tries to play out at 60 hz while the recording was at 50.
Possibly this makes it very distracted and unable to react quickly to my
inputs???? addressing problem 1)
Looking at xine's output and config files I see no reason why this
should happen. It does not complain other than that it can not talk to
gnome's d-bus.
My xine entries in local_conf.py are:
XINE_VO_DEV = 'xxmc'
XINE_COMMAND = '%s --install --hide-gui -pq -g -B --geometry %sx%s+0+0
--no-spl
ash' % \
(CONF.xine, CONF.width, CONF.height)
# XINE_ARGS_DEF = '--no-lirc --post=pp:quality=10,expand'
# XINE_AO_DEV = 'oss' # alsa or oss
XINE_AO_DEV = 'alsa'
Does anyone have any idea what might cause this?
Your using an ivtv card, so I would first check that the SCRs (system
clock reference) are correct in the mpeg file.
Included with dvdauthor http://dvdauthor.sourceforge.net/ is a program
called mpeg2desc which can be used to print out the SCRs it says
something like pack hdr and then a time.
You can run it with
cat /path/to/mpegfile | mpeg2desc | tail -100
If the file is big it will take a while.
Other tools for analysing mpeg files are mpegcat from gopchop and I have
written another one called mpegcheck which you can get from
svn co http://svn.linuxowl.com/vbitools
mpegcat -V /path/to/mpegfile | head -20
tells you the frame rate.
When you're seen that everything is okay try using mplayer to see if the
file has the correct time, use the osd to see the times.
Duncan
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Amersfoort, NL http://www.sijben.net
tel:+31 334557522 fax:+31 33 4557523
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Using Tomcat but need to do more? Need to support web services, security?
Get stuff done quickly with pre-integrated technology to make your job easier
Download IBM WebSphere Application Server v.1.0.1 based on Apache Geronimo
http://sel.as-us.falkag.net/sel?cmd=lnk&kid=120709&bid=263057&dat=121642
_______________________________________________
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