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wmansir
13th April 2004, 04:45
DVD ReBuilder: Installation, Setup, and Usage

UPDATE: Rockas has put together a fully installable version (http://www.jdobbs.com/Pages/Downloads.htm) of DVD-RB that will get you started right out of the box. There are other tools listed below you may want or need.

PREPARING FOR INSTALLATION:

You will need ALL of these tools (all are free -- and are included in the Installer): DVD Decrypter (http://www.doom9.org/Soft21/Rippers/SetupDVDDecrypter_3.5.4.0.exe) (Version 3.2.1.0 or above) or another ripping program (if backing up encrypted DVDs)
AVISYNTH (http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=57023&package_id=72557) installed (Version 2.5 or above recommended)
DGDecode (http://forum.doom9.org/attachment.php?s=&postid=613629) or MPEG2DEC3 (http://forum.doom9.org/attachment.php?s=&postid=517471) Avisynth Plugin (without lost-frame-bug) DVD-RB is not compatible with MPEG2Dec 1.02 and greater. If you experience problems with your .avs files, be sure and check your version. When in doubt, use the version linked here.
DVD Rebuilder (http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=75452), of course.
Supported Encoders, you need at least ONE of these:
[Note: QuEnc, HC, ReJig are included in the installer] Cinemacraft Encoder (http://www.cinemacraft.com/eng/ccebasic.html) (The Basic version is available for $59) -- Highest quality, Highly recommended.
ReJig (http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=66777) by NIC (Free) -- this is actually a high-quality high-speed transcoder
QuEnc 0.52 or later (http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=80585) by NIC (Free) -- a good quality encoder, the best you'll get for free. DVD-RB v0.57 requires QuEnc v0.52 or later, Earlier versions are compatible with QuEnc v0.51 and earlier.
HC Encoder (http://www.bitburners.com/HC_Encoder/) by Hank315 (Free) -- a very high quality encoder.
ProCoder (http://www.canopus.com/products/ProCoderExpress/index.php) by Canopus (requires ECLPRO) -- a professional level encoder.
AutoQMatEnc (http://www.autoqmatenc.com/) by SAPSTAR (Free) -- a unique implementation of the libavcodec engine that uses QMatOp technology.
(Planned support) TMPGENC
Others -- based upon demand.
Tools you MAY need (also free): ECLCCE (http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=46664) -- You need this if you are using CCE 2.5 or a TRIAL version of CCE 2.66 or greater.
Daemon Tools (http://www.daemon-tools.cc/) or similar Virtual Drive software -- You will need this if you plan to use a mounted ISO as your source.
Decomb Package (http://www.avisynth.org/warpenterprises/) -- You need this if you plan to use the deinterlace function. Make sure you get the package for your version of AviSynth (2.0 or 2.5). They are not interchangeable.

INSTALLATION:
Download and install AVISYNTH. At the time of this writing the most current version was v2.54 which has been tested and is completely compatible with DVD-RB.

Download and install DVD Decrypter. At the time of this writing the current version was 3.2.1.0 and it has been tested and works great with DVD-RB.

Next, you must have a copy of MPEG2DEC3DG.DLL installed on your computer. At the time of this writing it is contained in a ZIP file DECODEFIX100.ZIP, in the AviSynth plugin list, linked above. Extract that file into a directory called "plugins" under the AVISYNTH directory (created in step 1). Usually it is "C:\Program Files\AviSynth 2.5\plugins\".

New Versions of DVD Rebuilder can also use Donald Graft's DGDecode.dll. It comes with the DGMPEGDec package (http://www.neuron2.net/fixd2v/decodefix.html).

Install one of the encoders listed above. CCE is recommended for highest quality. If you are using a trial version of CCE or CCE 2.5 you will need to install and setup ECLCCE. It is easy to setup, just extract the ECLCCE.zip into your CCE directory and run EclCCE.exe. It will ask you to find your CCE executable, do so. CCE should start, close it.

Install DVD-RB. All you need to do is create a directory somewhere (possibly in C:\Program Files\DVD-RIP) and copy Rebuilder.exe into that folder. You may also want to create a shortcut on your desktop.

SETUP:
Run DVD-RB.

Click on "Options" on the menu bar and then "Setup".

Set the path to the encoder(s) you plan on using. If you are using ECLCCE you must select the "EclCCE.exe" executable, NOT the CCExxx.exe executable.

If you placed MPEG2DEC3DG.DLL in your plugin directory you shouldn't have to set it here. However, if you don't want it to auto load for some reason, or are encountering script errors, you can define it here and force DVD-RB to explicitly define it in your scripts.

If you plan on using the deinterlace setting you will need to provide the path to decomb*.dll. Just download the .ZIP file from the link above and extract the .dll anywhere you want. Then set the path here.

You can also set the default for audio streams you like to keep/delete in you processing. CHECKING an language here will REMOVE it by default. You can also have DTS streams removed by default, regardless of language.

Click Done to go back to DVD-RB's main window.

Click on "Mode" on the menu bar and select your encoding method. If you are using CCE, also click "Options" from the menu bar and under CCE->, select the version of CCE you are using.

You may also want to take the opportunity to go through the available menus and familiarize yourself with the program Settings (http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=74356).

USAGE:
The preferred method is to create an ISO image of the DVD and mount this as a Virtual Drive (http://www.doom9.org/mpg/hd-playback.htm#alternate). With this method the VIDEO_TS directory on you Virtual Drive will be your SOURCE PATH.

Alternately, you can use DVD Decrypter, in FILE MODE, to rip the entire DVD, not just the movie, to your hard drive. With this method DVD Decrypter's output directory will be your SOURCE PATH.

When your source is setup, run DVD-RB. Use the browse button to point the SOURCE PATH.

Create a working directory. It can be anywhere -- but make sure there is plenty of room for processing. In ReJig mode, the working directory will need as much as twice the space of the Ripped DVD (up to 18GB). In CCE and QuEnc Mode, it will need around 9 GB. The working directory will be overwritten when processing occurs, so be careful. In DVD-RB, use the browse button to point to the working path.

Make any custom settings (http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=74356) for this project. This includes picking your audio tracks, converting to Half-D1, 4:3 letterbox to 16:9 conversion, or any other special settings you want.

------------------ METHOD A: ONE CLICK ---------------
If you just want to let DVD-RB do it's thing use this method.

Select "One Click" under the "Options Menu" -- by doing so all actions will occur automatically with the push of one "Transcode" button. Push that Button.

As actions are performed you will see status updates in the DVD-RB Status box. This can take several hours depending upon your system, the size of the DVD and conversion settings.

Test and burn.

When DVD-RB is complete the working directory will contain the output in a folder called "VIDEO_TS". You can test this output using programs like WinDVD and PowerDVD by using their "Open DVD file on hard drive" features. Just select the VIDEO_TS folder as your source.

When you are satisfied you can burn the output with the program of your choice. If you don't have a program of choice, follow mrbass's instructions (http://www.mrbass.org/dvdburn/). When you make your DVD image, be sure your working directory only contains the VIDEO_TS and AUDIO_TS folders, other temporary folders can be deleted.
------------------ METHOD B: THREE CLICK ---------------

For those who like to keep control, you can use the "Three Click" method that is the default. It let's you hold the keys to all activities.

Press the "Prepare" button.
Here's what happens (about 4-5 minutes total):
1. All the VTSs in the source directory are scanned and a .D2V files are created
2. AVS files are also created automatically all in \D2VAVS under the "Working Path"
3. All .AVS files represent the VTSs divided into "segments" -- each segment typically represents an individual cell (VOBID/CELLID). It can also represent portions of a cell (e.g. in interleaving)
4. All parameters are optimally calculated (including bitrate) and are stored in an .ECL (CCE Project File)
5. A REBUILDER.INI file is created which contains information on how to put it all back together.
When preparation is complete you can either open the ECL file with CCE and modify as you see fit, or just press the "Encode" button. This can take several hours depending upon your system, the size of the DVD and conversion settings.

After encoding is completed, you get to see where DVD-RB's real magic comes in. Push the "Rebuild" button and the video you've just created is merged and multiplexed with the original audio and subtitle streams. A new VIDEO_TS directory is created in the "Working Path".

Test and burn. See Method A, Step b above.

wmansir
13th April 2004, 04:46
Most of the above post should look very familiar as it is mostly from DVD-RB's readme. I've just formated, linkified and tweaked it for the most part.

If you have any suggestions or corrections post them below. As we all know DVD-RB is evolving quickly but I will try and keep this up-to-date.

EDIT 1: changed format to use Numbered Lists. I think it looks much better. I had to use the "quote" block near the end because it wouldn't let me nest lists.
EDIT 2: added info on disc size requirements. Thanks luphy.
EDIT 3: added link to Settings thread.
EDIT 4: added Mounted ISO as preferred source method.

luphy
13th April 2004, 06:07
Could you explain for total noobs like me when you would need/want to use the deinterlace option?

Thanks.

And could you explain why DVDRB needs up to almost twice the space of the original source during its processing, and under what circumstances? What's it doing that it needs to create up to 16 or 17 gbs!?

jdobbs
13th April 2004, 06:22
@wmansir

Thanks. This really looks nice!

wmansir
13th April 2004, 06:50
Originally posted by luphy
Could you explain for total noobs like me when you would need/want to use the deinterlace option?

Thanks.

And could you explain why DVDRB needs up to almost twice the space of the original source during its processing, and under what circumstances? What's it doing that it needs to create up to 16 or 17 gbs!?

I'm working on a SETTINGS guide which isn't quite finished yet. When it is done I will link to it at a couple of points in this guide.

As for Deinterlace. There are only 2 reasons I can think of:

1. You plan to watch the resulting movie on a progressive display, like your computer, but you don't like your software player's on-the-fly deinterlacing.

2. It is said to improve compression. So if you have a low bitrate it might be worth it.

I probably won't go into this too much in the Settings guide either, but will look for a good webpage to link to.

As for space, it shouldn't need twice the space of the original, unless you count the source directory. The working path ALONE will need AT LEAST 9 GB in CCE mode. I haven't tried the other modes, so I can't say how much room they need. I'll have to look into it.

EDIT: Looks like it is needed for ReJig mode, I will add this info to the guide.

jdobbs
13th April 2004, 11:56
Here's how much space you need:

1. Space enough for a copy of the DVD so you can decode, it up to ~9GB
2. Space enough for the info after the scans, tiny ~70MB
3. If you are using ReJig, space enough to demux the video, up to about ~8GB
4. Another up to ~4GB for the .M2V files created in reencoding.
5. Up to 4.38GB for the output VIDEO_TS directory.

So in a worst case scenario using ReJig you'd need ~25.5GB. If you turn on "minimize disc space" (when it is enabled) you can get that down to 16GB.

The best case (CCE or QuEnc) would be a mounted disc with a deencrypting driver. Then you would need about 8-9GB. Video processing just uses a lot of space! You should see what is needed when converting DV home movie to DVD (with CCE quality).

DDogg
13th April 2004, 15:32
Very nice job, wmansir. Looks sharp and very readable. One of you ought to make it a stickie.

wmansir
13th April 2004, 17:29
I stickied this for now. In order to keep the number of stickies reasonable, once other documents are up I will make One Stickie To Rule Them All! and link to the others.

Edit: to clarify, I meant DVD-RB related stickies. I'll leave mrbass's general stickies of course.

jdobbs
13th April 2004, 18:50
I've hesitated to make stickys etc. myself for DVD-RB because it might give the impression that I'm using my moderator position for self-promotion.

quantum
13th April 2004, 21:21
Wait till I tell everyone you forced my title on me :)

jdobbs
13th April 2004, 23:41
:p

Trahald
14th April 2004, 18:42
Originally posted by wmansir
I stickied this for now. In order to keep the number of stickies reasonable, once other documents are up I will make One Stickie To Rule Them All! and link to the others.

Edit: to clarify, I meant DVD-RB related stickies. I'll leave mrbass's general stickies of course.

my preciousss? ;)

kidding aside, definately neat and readable.. good show

tomaste
28th April 2004, 17:49
I made a snipurl to this page to better evangelize DVD-RB!

Feel free to use it:

http://snipurl.com/dvdrb

mmasw
24th June 2004, 16:58
well, I've tried to test DVD Rebuilder but I haven't had any success.

I've gone through the preliminary steps (several times).....installing AviSynth2.54....installing MPEG2Dec3dg.dll in the Avisynth Plug-ins directory....installing CCE...

and I end up in the same cul-de-sac every time, which is:

I unzip DVD Rebuilder into a folder, and when I click on it I immediately get the error message :

" Run-time error '5'
Invalid Procedure call or argument "

that's as far as I can get....I'm assuming I have some existing program in conflict, Or maybe it's because I still use W98 SE. Or maybe I live at the wrong latitude.

Anyone have a clue?

robert980
24th June 2004, 18:45
Hi there,

I use:
newest version of rebuilder,
CCESP with ECL 2.67
combined with all other (free) files downloaded from the Rebuilder-Homepage

So I read the info about using the mpeg2dec3dg-file which is included in die dvd2avi-package. The Fileversion ist 1010.
Working with that one I always get problems during the Encoding process.
The whole process only takes 1 minute, then it goes to step 3 with the known error 0004.

I looked around in the web and found at an italian board the info to try version 1.0 which is very old (2003) instead of the 1010.
And it works fine.

How could it be, that at the rebuilders page version 1010 ist recommended as to havent got the lost-frame-problem and it doesnt work and a old version does it?
At rebuilders' is also told that versions after 1.02 are known to wont work with rebuilder.
So that 1.00 I use seems to be the last one which does.
Has it got the known lost-frame bug?

Does anyone know why version 1010 doesnt want to work?

Thanx for help.

A big thanks to the author for making such a nice tool :)

Best regards
rob

jdobbs
25th June 2004, 02:10
I'm using version 1.0.1.0 and I'm not seeing any problems. I'd recommend you just stay with 1.0.0.0 -- in one of the upcoming versions it is my plan to support the new DG versions.

robert980
25th June 2004, 02:25
thx for you reply!
and how do you think yout the "lost frame" problem?

wmansir
25th June 2004, 02:28
Version 1.0.1.0 (linked above) has the lost frame bug fixed.

Also, I just sent Doom9 the correction to the website guide, it was erroneously updated to point to the latest version of DGdecode.

robert980
25th June 2004, 02:31
does that mean version 1.0.0.0 hadnt had ever a lost-frame-bug?

wmansir
25th June 2004, 03:01
1.0.0.0 (from the file Decodefix100.zip) doesn't have the frame lose bug.

Before that it gets kind of sketchy because the project was dropped by the original author and then picked up by several different people who patched, improved, and ported it from AVS 2.0x to AVS 2.5x over the last couple of years. I'm glad Donald decided to pick it up and give his new releases a different name because Mpeg2Dec's version history is very convoluted.

Joergen
28th June 2004, 23:24
Seems like avisynth.org removed the decodefix110.zip link above. Please check.

wmansir
29th June 2004, 02:26
Thanks for the heads up.

OK, here's Decodefix110.zip. This is the latest version that DVD-RB supports as of v0.54.

The original zip is slightly larger than the max attachment file size, so I removed the parsed2v, fix2dv, and VFAPI utilities.


EDIT: Updated file, thanks Jdobbs.

jdobbs
29th June 2004, 03:10
It's on its way.

KenNashua
13th August 2004, 15:22
Something that just bit me last night, being new to RB:

In the Guide it talks about batch mode -- I made the incorrect assumption based on the screen shots and "working path" phrase that d:\TEMP\ was a directory for temporary files -- not so!

You might want to be clear in the Guide that when you're using batch mode, each project requires a different destination (jdobbs: "Destination" might be a better term then "working path"). Otherwise, you end up with what I had -- each item of the batch file overwriting the previous item. At least I ended up with one valid VIDEO_TS directory :p

I think just changing the screen shots to show d:\Complete\MI2\ might make things clearer

erdoke
18th August 2004, 15:26
Originally posted by luphy

And could you explain why DVDRB needs up to almost twice the space of the original source during its processing, and under what circumstances? What's it doing that it needs to create up to 16 or 17 gbs!?

When you use an Encoder (vs. transcoder) you have to decode the MPEG2 video stream for it. CCE for example is not able to use m2v as source (it is an MPEG encoder but works not from MPEG). Decoded (partially or fully uncompressed) movie needs a lot of space.
RB has an advantage over DVD2DVDR in this case (too), because does not handle the movie as one segment.

geffroman
18th September 2004, 03:21
Hi guys...

Can you help me understand if I can BATCH process just the PREPARE and/or REBUILD phases...?

I just started playing with RB Farm and love getting RB output done in 75 minutes! But I also enjoy Batch processing. Bottomline is that I have no personal desire to keep revisting my computer just to start phase after phase of PREPARES and REBUILDS on individual movies...

If I could simple Batch process only the PREPARE of several movies... Then run RB Farm in batch mode for the very fast encoding... Then Run RB again in Batch mode for the REBUILDING Stage I would be down to only three hands on sessions to get VERY Fast and Batched processed movies!

RB offers batch mode... So does RB Farm... but they don't quite seem to make the whole process complete just yet...

Any thoughts...?

dannyv
4th January 2005, 00:18
@wmansir

The link for dgdecode seems to be dead.

wmansir
4th January 2005, 00:26
Thanks for point that out. I updated it to Doom9's download of the latest version.

It appears neuron2.net is down completely. I hope it's a temporary site issue.

dannyv
4th January 2005, 00:54
Originally posted by wmansir
Thanks for point that out. I updated it to Doom9's download of the latest version.

It appears neuron2.net is down completely. I hope it's a temporary site issue.

It seems so. Thanks for the quick update.

geffroman
18th January 2005, 17:19
Does DVD-RB fully support CCE SP 2.70 now?

If so, does it require ECLCCE or NO?

Thanks

jdobbs
18th January 2005, 23:23
Yes it supports it. No it doesn't require ECLCCE.

geffroman
19th January 2005, 03:34
Thanks... I figured that out through trial and error...

I have a batch running now with 5 movies running twice, once with SP 2.50 and once with SP 2.70... Can't wait to see the quality differences! :)

mikegun
14th February 2005, 14:21
the link to dgdecode is not working.

regards,

mikegun

wmansir
14th February 2005, 17:17
Thanks for noticing. Updated link to DGDecode 1.1.0.

wmansir
20th February 2005, 04:06
I just want to attach a copy DGDecode.dll that is compatible with DVD-RB to ensure a local copy is available.

lopoz
20th February 2005, 13:47
Originally posted by wmansir
I just want to attach a copy DGDecode.dll that is compatible with DVD-RB to ensure a local copy is available.

so this is v 1.1.0?

wmansir
20th February 2005, 22:13
Yes, it is 1.1.0.

Miras
5th April 2005, 01:29
LoadPlugin("C:\Program Files\AviSynth 2.5\plugins\Convolution3DYV12.dll")
Convolution3d (preset="movieHQ")


I can paste in: Options/AVS Options/Advanced (Expert) Options/Filter Editor
?????????????

sirrick
14th May 2005, 23:43
hi

I am newbie, and follow this guide, but when CCE end, in the three steps metod, the rebuild button still gray then I can't press it

any help to me???

thanks

Rockas
15th May 2005, 22:42
Originally posted by sirrick
hi

I am newbie, and follow this guide, but when CCE end, in the three steps metod, the rebuild button still gray then I can't press it

any help to me???

thanks
Please... check what you have done... what you are saying isn't possible... you must have done something wrong.

lark
15th May 2005, 23:05
are you sure that CCE has encoded all the segments?

regards
t :)

kRuZaDeR
1st October 2005, 06:19
Which is better??? MPEG2DEC3DG.DLL or DGDecode.dll ????


Next, you must have a copy of installed on your computer. At the time of this writing it is contained in a ZIP file DECODEFIX100.ZIP, in the AviSynth plugin list, linked above. Extract that file into a directory called "plugins" under the AVISYNTH directory (created in step 1). Usually it is "C:\Program Files\AviSynth 2.5\plugins\".

New Versions of DVD Rebuilder can also use Donald Graft's DGDecode.dll. It comes with the DGMPEGDec package (http://www.neuron2.net/fixd2v/decodefix.html).

Rockas
1st October 2005, 14:02
Use the Installer and you'll be alright :)
DGDecode is a newer version of MPEG2DEC3DG.

canuckerfan
21st October 2005, 00:51
is avisynth 2.5.6 compatible with dvd-rb?

Rockas
21st October 2005, 13:23
I know some builds of 2.5.6 are working fine with DVD-RB... but I also know that there are some that don't... 2.5.5 is the stable one but you can try the others... at your own risk :)

mnfesq
10th November 2005, 04:18
I looked for a while to see if someone else covered this point and didn't find anything. I hope this is a good thread to bring it up.

My point is this: I am using DVD-RB Pro (glad to pay for it) and have added several tweaks to my rebuilder.ini file that allow me to change the file size of the final .iso based on the runtime of the video and my own judgment as to the amount of motion in the video. When I install new versions of DVD-RB, it asks me if I want to replace the rebuilder.ini file. I select no, so that I don't lose my tweaks.

Am I missing out on any features or fixes by not replacing the rebuilder.ini file with every new version? Can you let us know when there have been revisions to the rebuilder.ini file so that I will know to copy my old .ini file and manually add the tweaks to the new .ini file? Thanks.

Rockas
10th November 2005, 13:22
@mnfesq
No... you are not loosing anything that you can't select on the Menus of DVD Rebuilder :)

The default "Rebuilder.ini" file only contains a basic "default" config for "first time" users.

keep it UP

hallway
7th January 2006, 00:30
I don't mean for this to be critical but I noticed a couple grammar mistakes (most likely due to translation, which I understand). The attached image shows what I mean.

First line correction:

"... and it's needed for DVD Rebuilder's process (or processes)"

Third line correction:

"Click "OK" to have it installed."

Rassilon
20th January 2006, 10:23
Hi,
after I installed the latest Pro version I naturally wanted to run it, I then got the attached error, which I have never experienced before. I tried to reinstall an earlier version to see if it too would have a problem, but it would not install as it stated that it was an old version!

:thanks:

Rockas
20th January 2006, 13:34
Check if you have mswinsck.ocx on yout Rebuilder's installation folder... if you don't... download the "update only" zip file (the link is on the e-mail sent by jdobbs) and extract the ocx file into rebuilder's folder.

jdobbs
20th January 2006, 14:20
My guess is that you did your installation from the "Updates Only" zip file. That file is not meant for installing DVD Rebuilder for the first time. It normally only includes the files that have changed since the last update. Please download the Full Installer version and use that for installation.

@Everyone

Please remember that the "Updates Only" zip file is targeted for those folks who have limited bandwidth on their internet connection. It gives you a way to update to the next version with only a small file down load (about 1.5MB for v1.06). If bandwidth isn't an issue -- please download and use the Full Installer package (about 5.75MB for v1.06) for installations and updates. You will save yourself a lot of possible headaches by doing so.

Rassilon
21st January 2006, 06:24
@Rockas
The file mswinsck.ocx was installed into the directory. The CRC32 of the file that I have is d75759be. I did what you asked anyway but that didn't work. I then did a full install of the update file, still no other result.

@jdobbs
I always download the full installer, but thanks for the input.

Let me know if you need any other info, etc on my system to make things easier to diagnose for you.

jdobbs
21st January 2006, 10:08
Hmmm... you must have an outdated DLL somewhere. Try this (assuming you installed in "C:\Program Files\DVD-RB Pro"):

1. Push START/RUN, and type in "CMD" and push ENTER.
2. A command window will pop up.
3. Type the following (include the quotes):

regsvr32 "C:\Program Files\DVD-RB Pro\mswinsck.ocx"

4. Push ENTER

Then try running DVD-RB again.

[Edit] Fixed the mistyped file name.

Rassilon
29th January 2006, 09:26
I have since downloaded and installed DVD-RB_v1.061Pro and the same error has come up, so I have done what you suggested (I didn't see your reply until after I installed the new version) and I get the attached error, when I looked, the file you specefied is not in the directory.. So I tried the file "MSWINSCK.OCX" instead, which appeared to work, but more importantly, DVD-RB Pro is now up and running once again..

:thanks:

rocko1911
21st May 2006, 13:45
Hi everybody,

maybe this is a stupid question...but I have problems getting my keyfile for dvd-rb (of course I'm a registered user :) ).
The site key.dvd-rb.com which rebuilder contacts when attempting a web download doesn't answer. Jdobbs, is it possible that some server has crashed?

Thank you for your help and of course for this wonderful tool,

Rocko

jdobbs
23rd May 2006, 12:23
The DNS server was down for about 2 hours in the early a.m. on May 20th... other than that it has been up-and-running with no problems.

rocko1911
23rd May 2006, 21:24
Yes, it's running perfectly now. I could register my version.

Thank you,
Rocko

zilexa
14th June 2006, 23:26
I've created DVD-ReBuilder Easy Installer (http://dvd.yardcure.com).
Now even momma can install and copy DVD movies :)

blutach
17th June 2006, 10:13
zilexa - please don't cross post. See rule 8.

http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?t=112394

Regards

gonwk
4th October 2006, 23:21
Hi BluTach,

I see you are all over the places.

Q1: Have you folks tested Zilexa "EasyInstaller" yet? And is it Clean?

Q2: Is there a "Dummy Proof" Set up & installation Guide for DVDRB and the Tools used with it????
I have installed the DVDRB 0.98 and I am having difficulty following the guide from AD Forum or this one to set up my CCE Free version ...

Thanks,
G!

blutach
5th October 2006, 00:02
No, I haven't. Rockas's installer, the one that comes with DVD Rebuilder (http://dvd-rb.dvd2go.org/) is good enough for everyone and is the Official Installer. Why use anything else?

There is no guide needed and I dunno what is published at AD as I don't visit there. You just push next and if you use CCE or Procoder, follow the prompts to set that up.

There is a guide written by cynthia at digital digest, but again, I do not feel it necessary.

Regards

gonwk
5th October 2006, 00:32
Hi Blutach,

Thanks for getting back so soon ...

You are right ... after I re-read the instructions in this sticky coulpe of times, I got thru ... my confusion was with CCE and Ecl files ...

Thanks again,
G!

freewheeling
27th May 2011, 11:04
Update 2: I guess I'm a double idiot because I thought DVD Rebuilder Pro would produce an iso file and it just produces the folders. I can't find a parameter where I can even tell it to produce an iso file, just whether it burns directly to disc without an iso file, and there's a burn iso to disc parameter. I used the Rockas installer to install the thing. Also, it doesn't seem to name the output folder correctly. Instead of using the name from the original folder that contains the VIDEO_TS folder it just names it something like DVD_FILES. With a generic name like that I can't just set an output folder because not only doesn't it produce an iso file, but it would just overwrite a previous rip. Why isn't there a user manual, or at least some decent help files. Very confusing.

Update 3: I should just delete this. I hadn't installed the package correctly after migration to a new computer, which is why it wasn't working the way I expected. I also gather that CCE isn't what it's cracked up to be, and fortunately it was impossible to navigate their site in order to buy something anyway. I'm using QuEnc because it was described as the best "free" decoder, even though it's rating was just "very good." Live and learn.

Original Post: I can't get this to work. I always get a message that "No CCE path has been set" so I must have indicated somewhere that I wanted to use the CCE encoder, but I'm not going to buy it and can't even make sense of their product page. I've set the path for the HC encoder, so why isn't that being used??

Update: OK, I'm an idiot. Too used to using BD Rebuilder and didn't notice that there was an "HC Mode." Sorry.