![]() ![]() Instead, simply select (A to B) the bits you don't want and delete them, then save what's left as a single file. However, it's easier than you suggest, as you don't have to save the sections and merge them. Re: avidemux - my (grudging) tool of choice for cutting as well. SRT or similar, re-mux them with the original streams in something like mkv and then cut? Would that give better timings? I wonder if you could extract, convert to. Re: ProjectX - that's good to know, maybe I'll grab a copy just in case. Just trimming with head and tail is much faster any way. projectx didn't have that issue, but it can't do h.264 which is most things these days. Trying to cut the stream using any video editing software generally results in the audio becoming out of sync. It's in the repos.īecause there is no error correction in the IP data stream dumps a lot of the files I get will have minor errors in the stream at places. If you don't recognize pv that is the pipe viewer app. ![]() Once I find that point I feed the MB number into clipfile. It's just kind of trial and error until you find the point. ![]() Tailsize is what I use to find the point in MB where I want to split the file. ![]() Doesn't alter the TS in any way just trims raw bytes off the file. You could swap out head with tail to cut stuff from the beggining of the file as well I expect. I wrote some scripts that use head -c to cut off the extra data at the end and mplayer to find the point in MB where you want to cut the file. The files all have extra non mpeg data written to them at the end that messes up seek in most players. I dump a lot of tv shows, movies etc out of an IP data stream on satellite. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |