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4th March 2005, 13:07 | #1 | Link |
PgcEdit daemon
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PgcEdit 0.5
PgcEdit v7.0 has been released. See this thread.
PgcEdit 0.5.0
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r0lZ PgcEdit homepage (hosted by VideoHelp) BD3D2MK3D A tool to convert 3D blu-rays to SBS, T&B or FS MKV Last edited by r0lZ; 22nd April 2006 at 10:34. |
4th March 2005, 17:11 | #2 | Link | |
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4th March 2005, 17:33 | #3 | Link |
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No. The empty VOB files are only 0 byte files. These files are obviously useless, and Nero doesn't like them. Sometime, these files are referenced in the IFOs.
If you answer yes when the dialog ask if you want to delete them, the empty VOBs are deleted, and the references in the IFOs are cleared. It's only a clean way to get rid of them.
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r0lZ PgcEdit homepage (hosted by VideoHelp) BD3D2MK3D A tool to convert 3D blu-rays to SBS, T&B or FS MKV |
4th March 2005, 23:05 | #5 | Link |
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@wheelie
Experiment and just play around a bit. When you're finished just restore backup. Can not fail. What's in the program will simply astound you. @rolz - another masterpiece! Regards
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Les Only use genuine Verbatim or Taiyo Yuden media. |
5th March 2005, 00:19 | #7 | Link |
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Thanks to you, and to everybody, for your kind words.
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r0lZ PgcEdit homepage (hosted by VideoHelp) BD3D2MK3D A tool to convert 3D blu-rays to SBS, T&B or FS MKV |
5th March 2005, 11:04 | #8 | Link | |
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Basically the problem is that I don't know what the BOV thing is for. Button Over Video... Are BOVs another word for menu button commands? I understand that they're values or setting stored in the vobs, either in menu vobs or title vobs. Is it correct that PgcEdit so far only handles BOVs in title vobs? Why not menu vobs - buttons usually occur in the menus of the disc, and that's what I'd want to edit most of the time then? I assume the BOV scanning feature is similar to the scanning done by MenuEdit when loading a vob? But with MenuEdit I can edit the buttons in menus? How exactly is the new BOV thing in PgcEdit connected to the Menu preview function which has been there for some time now? If the menu preview thing would allow me to view the buttons and display the button commands, why is neccessary with the new BOV scanning? Is it correct that if I want to use PgcEdit for the stuff I used to use it for up to version 0.4.x, i.e. add PGC pre/cell/post commands, kill PGC playback, blank out whole VTST og VTSM etc., I can simply skip the scan startup window every time? The BOV scan is only needed for some new menu editing function in the new 0.5.0? What exactly can PgcEdit do now that it couldn't do before? How do I take advantage of the new features? |
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5th March 2005, 11:54 | #9 | Link | |||||
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Also, the trace function is now complete. It is now possible to follow the flow of operations of the DVD in all cases. Before 0.5, if a menu was authored in a title domain (BOV), the trace was broken. And, as I said before, when the menu editor will be complete, you will be able to edit all VM commands of the DVD, even in the menu buttons and BOVs. You may skip the BOV parsing if you are sure there are no BOVs in your DVD. Also, you may skip it even if there are buttons but only if you don't want to use the trace, and you are just interested to kill playback on some FBI warnings or to edit some commands (for example to change a SetSTN to enable your preferred language by default.) What I do usually: The first time I load a DVD, I parse the buttons with the slider to the maximum. It's verry fast. If there are no BOVs in the DVD, I switch off the option to automatically parse the BOVs when the DVD is opened. If some BOVs are found, I try to lower the slider (usually to value 5), and parse again the VTSs with BOVs. If the number of BOVs after this second parsing is the same, I set the slider back to 30, so that the next time the DVD is opened, the parsing will be as fast as possible. I hope you understand better the interest of the BOV scanning.
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r0lZ PgcEdit homepage (hosted by VideoHelp) BD3D2MK3D A tool to convert 3D blu-rays to SBS, T&B or FS MKV Last edited by r0lZ; 5th March 2005 at 11:58. |
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6th March 2005, 18:46 | #10 | Link |
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I, too, want to thank you for PgcEdit. In order to eliminate FBI warnings, I had been using various combinations of Vobrator, IFOedit, VobBlanker, etc. Nothing worked very good, and nothing could reliably show me the video clips so I could pick out the ones I wanted to delete.
And I was using DVDShrink to get rid of the fullscreen movie on a DVD with both FS and WS. But this was slow, because I had to load in each movie, plus it still left the movie with "this has been deleted" stills. PGCedit does all this for me reliably and easily. Trace mode is great, but it's also easy to just eyeball the short segments to pick out the Warning clips. And -- now that I found the guide--it's real easy to completely strip out the FS version and the FS/WS menu. The worst thing about PGCEdit is the lack of any kind of user guide. Anyway..... GREAT PROGRAM!!! Thank you!!! |
7th March 2005, 23:51 | #11 | Link | |
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@ r0lZ
Problem with a still show, at a disc. I can play the files in every software player. The preview alone for this PGC, works. If I, however, try it in PgcEdit in the trace mode, the trace mode stops. Quote:
With other versions of PgcEdit, I receive the same result. |
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8th March 2005, 00:11 | #12 | Link | |
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If that doesn't work, please send me the IFOs and the VMGM VOB.
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r0lZ PgcEdit homepage (hosted by VideoHelp) BD3D2MK3D A tool to convert 3D blu-rays to SBS, T&B or FS MKV |
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8th March 2005, 10:19 | #14 | Link |
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Thanks, Tobi.
I've found the problem. It's a new bug I introduced in 0.5. In the new method of parsing the menu buttons, I assume there are no buttons (or BOVs) in a domain if the domain has no subpictures defined. This is a good way to speedup things when loading the DVD, because there is no need to parse the VOB. The bug is that some variables needed in the trace mode were not initialized in those circumstances. Unfortunately, I cannot release a bugfix version right now, because I am currently integrating the menu editor in the main program. If you want to be able to trace your DVD, try this method: 1. Select any PGC in the the menu domain that caused the problem. (In your case, you may select the first PGC of the VMGM.) Open the PGC Editor, and set the first subpic status to "0 0 0 0", to enable it. 2. Use the new macro "Fix number of streams in VMGM/VTSI_Mat tables" to increase the number of streams in the VMGM. 3. Save and reload the DVD. You should now be able to trace your DVD correctly. When you will not need to trace the DVD anymore, you may want to remove the new stream, but it's not required. NOTE: When the bug occured, there was no error message because you have probably launched the trace mode with the toolbar icon. When an error occur, for an unknown reason, the code launched by the toolbar doesn't trigger the error routine. So, when you suspect a bug in a function launched with the toolbar, you should try to launch the same function via another method, for example with the menu, to be able to see the error message.
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r0lZ PgcEdit homepage (hosted by VideoHelp) BD3D2MK3D A tool to convert 3D blu-rays to SBS, T&B or FS MKV Last edited by r0lZ; 8th March 2005 at 10:30. |
8th March 2005, 17:42 | #15 | Link | ||
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As well...thanks for her fast help, r0lZ.
Have carried everything out according to her instruction and it is working now in the Trace mode. Quote:
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12th March 2005, 08:42 | #16 | Link |
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I've experiencing something with the bmp capture function in the preview function, which may be an error. When I preview a (VTST) PGC the picture is displayed fine. But when I capture a still pic of the video using the bmp capture function, and view the saved picture with a picture viewer program (or load it into a sup subtitle creation program), it's vertically stretched as if something is wrong with the aspect ratio...
I've tried a number of PAL and NTSC discs, and I'm getting this every time I try in both PgcEdit 0.4.9 and 0.5.0. I know for sure that the aspect ratio of the captured still pic from PgcEdit was correct in earlier versions of PgcEdit, though I'm not sure how far back (at least up till version 0.4.5-7, I think) |
12th March 2005, 11:30 | #17 | Link |
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I tried the BMP capture again, and everything seems fine.
The preview is always stretched to be displayed in the correct aspect ratio. The stretching takes into account the pixel format (PAL or NTSC), the original resolution, and the 16:9 or 4:3 display aspect ratio. The target monitor is assumed to be a PC monitor with square pixels. In the other hand, the saved image is not resized at all. The BMP should be in the same resolution as the original video. This is required if you want to edit, re-encode and replace the frame. Also, you may use any image editing program to stretch it to another format, with whatever resize quality your program is able to do. Please verify the format of the video with the Domain Streams Attributes function. If the format of the BMP doesn't match the video resolution, then there is a problem. Keep me informed. Thanks.
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r0lZ PgcEdit homepage (hosted by VideoHelp) BD3D2MK3D A tool to convert 3D blu-rays to SBS, T&B or FS MKV |
12th March 2005, 12:47 | #18 | Link |
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@CoNS
This is undoubtedly the result, as r0lZ implies, of an anamorphic transformation. If you want to see it, how it is actually displayed, stretch the BMP horizontally by 33%. Regards
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13th March 2005, 20:33 | #19 | Link |
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Ah, ok, both of you thx for explaining.
I've checked the resolution. Both the video (checked in PgcEdit domain attributes window) and the exported bmp (checked in PSP8) were 720x576, which they should be, according to you explanation. Then the problem must be that the subtitle program I use (Subtitle Creator by Paddington) doesn't display the imported background pics correctly (allow stretching if needed). The weird thing is that I haven't experienced the stretching issue until recently, which led me to the conclusion that something must had been changed, probably in PgcEdit preview... Here's an old screenshot where I'm using an older version of Subtitle Creator with a letterboxed picture captured in PgcEdit preview (NTSC format). And in this case it's shown correctly: http://home25.inet.tele.dk/dvdkat/sc-image6.jpg |
13th March 2005, 21:05 | #20 | Link |
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The Save BMP function has not changed. But I have changed the way the picture is displayed in the preview window and in the menu buttons viewer. The image is now always displayed in the correct aspect ratio on a PC monitor.
Maybe there is a switch somewhere in Subtitle Creator? Or does it retrieve the DAR info from the IFO or the VOB? Note that this info is stored in both the IFOs and VOBs. PgcEdit uses only the one from the IFOs (It has precedence). If the DAR in the VOB is not the same, Subtitle Creator may use the wrong display aspect ratio.
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r0lZ PgcEdit homepage (hosted by VideoHelp) BD3D2MK3D A tool to convert 3D blu-rays to SBS, T&B or FS MKV |
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