View Full Version : BD Rebuilder Beta - Bug Reports Only
jdobbs
31st December 2010, 14:59
And a Happy New Year to you and all the other folks here on Doom9!
:thanks:
torque2k
31st December 2010, 15:37
Will try that tonight; sounds VERY plausible. I'm using MSE (not the latest 2.0 version yet).
OK, jdobbs, you were right on the money! Microsoft Security Essentials 1.X had to be the culprit. I just installed the new 2.0 version (and if anyone HASN'T done this upgrade, they really should, as it adds heuristic detection to an already decent free product), and after the reboot BD-Rebuilder called MPC with a preview, no hiccups whatsoever.
Brilliant! Thank you so much for helping with this annoying issue.
One last thing: will there ever be the fine level of control over "blanking" sections of a Blu Ray like there is in DVD-Rebuilder? Right now I'm making myself learn multiAVCHD in order to keep SOME of the extras on my disc, but blank out the previews... unless someone has a better way of doing this. I can see the option to "Blank this item", but it's grayed out in Full Movie mode, and if I switch to Movie Only mode not everything is available in order to blank things. DVD-RB's Segment Viewer/Editor is by far my favorite feature of that program...
laserfan
31st December 2010, 20:30
Regarding STES API:Done. I set it so that both display and system are needed as each encode begins. It is reset to CONTINUOUS at the end of the encode (restarting the SLEEP timer). This should keep the system from sleeping (until BD-RB is complete) no matter how you have your power options set.
Wow I thought you might have ignored this given you run the heck out of your PCs. I will give it a try when it's up.
Thanks and HAPPY NEW YEAR jdobbs!
jdobbs
31st December 2010, 21:47
OK, jdobbs, you were right on the money! Microsoft Security Essentials 1.X had to be the culprit. I just installed the new 2.0 version (and if anyone HASN'T done this upgrade, they really should, as it adds heuristic detection to an already decent free product), and after the reboot BD-Rebuilder called MPC with a preview, no hiccups whatsoever.
Brilliant! Thank you so much for helping with this annoying issue.
One last thing: will there ever be the fine level of control over "blanking" sections of a Blu Ray like there is in DVD-Rebuilder? Right now I'm making myself learn multiAVCHD in order to keep SOME of the extras on my disc, but blank out the previews... unless someone has a better way of doing this. I can see the option to "Blank this item", but it's grayed out in Full Movie mode, and if I switch to Movie Only mode not everything is available in order to blank things. DVD-RB's Segment Viewer/Editor is by far my favorite feature of that program... It'll be available soon. Probably not in the next version (unless I get really motivated), but maybe the one after that.
jdobbs
31st December 2010, 21:49
Regarding STES API:
Wow I thought you might have ignored this given you run the heck out of your PCs. I will give it a try when it's up.
Thanks and HAPPY NEW YEAR jdobbs! I may not always be clear in how I do it or say it, but I honestly do try to give folks what they want. Happy New Year to you too.
Taroth
31st December 2010, 23:08
Happy new year!
I know this is the wrong thread but I've been following this thread for a while and used your software a few times to backup a BD so it's time to donate to keep this going.
Hope you have a good new year and keep up the good work.
Roger Heald
torque2k
31st December 2010, 23:46
It'll be available soon. Probably not in the next version (unless I get really motivated), but maybe the one after that.
You're awesome. Donated tonight, just a bit, but I'll keep "renewing"... :)
jdobbs
1st January 2011, 00:24
Thanks much, guys. It is very much appreciated.
:thanks:
The_Unknown
1st January 2011, 01:40
Happy New Year! :)
I'm having trouble while reducing the size of a BD50 with in-movie-experience. That means, a DTS-Express-audio-part is in there. Will there be any way in future versions to have that cool feature also in the backup? Or is there already one and I have ben blind :)?
drmih
1st January 2011, 03:09
Here's any interesting disc problem. I'm just backing up a BBC disc of a UK series called 'Being Human' - Series 2 (I'm just doing the first disc to bd-9 Full). Everything went well with no warnings. When I play back the bd-9 (on all devices and pcs) I get the menu but no overlay, which prevents me from playing the disc - both the original disc and the iso on the HDD play fine with the overlay. The M2TS file with the menu is 152. If I read the original into TsMuxer, it reports an unsupported stream type and ignores it - on the bd-9 it doesn't, but shows the three streams that the original showed after the warning - a video, audio and subtitle track (although in BD-RB the subtitle track shows as being empty). If I read the original stream into TsRemux, it shows a fourth stream called 'Interactive Graphics Stream #0'. I'm guessing that if I replace the new 60 Mb m2ts file with the original 250 Mb one that it will probably work, but any idea why it fooled bd-rb?
Capsbackup
1st January 2011, 03:48
BD-RB, with tsMuxeR, does not support IGS menu and DTS Express secondary audio.
If you replace the reencoded menu's with the original ones, the buttons may show as expected, but if the bitrate of the original is above the AVCHD limit, you may get stuttering video and audio for the menu playback! ( happened to me anyway).
This will be corrected once jdobbs implements his own remux alternative. :cool:
jdobbs
1st January 2011, 04:05
Support for both IGS and DTS Express should be available for testing within the next couple of versions. Frankly it should have been done long ago.
HWK
1st January 2011, 09:56
Jdobbs , I need clarification regarding option “PASS_TWO_STATS_UPDATE=n” When this option is enabled does it do three pass or two pass only. I ask because in gui you only see max of 2 pass even if this option is selected, where in hidden option it says if set to "1", BD-RB uses "--pass 3" for second pass . Kind of confused here.
Also there is hidden option which allow user to set output quality to be Ultra High by setting option “ENCODE_QUALITY=4” which assign preset to be slower in “lastcmd” file. I was curious x.264 also allow preset of very slow and placebo. Do you think it be beneficial have them.
Ps: Happy new year.
BZeeme
1st January 2011, 10:43
Happy new year!
I know this is the wrong thread but I've been following this thread for a while and used your software a few times to backup a BD so it's time to donate to keep this going.
Hope you have a good new year and keep up the good work.
Roger Heald
I agree and donated again yesterday.
RGR
drmih
1st January 2011, 11:21
Support for both IGS and DTS Express should be available for testing within the next couple of versions. Frankly it should have been done long ago.
Thanks - it did work fine by simply replacing the files. Fortunately on BBC titles there's always a setup HD movie sequence to jettison to make the extra space.
In the meantime is there a way to show a disc which have this problematic stream?
Hobojobo
1st January 2011, 12:33
Is it possible to run multiple instances of BD RB with different with different working paths?
jdobbs
1st January 2011, 13:55
Thanks - it did work fine by simply replacing the files. Fortunately on BBC titles there's always a setup HD movie sequence to jettison to make the extra space.
In the meantime is there a way to show a disc which have this problematic stream? I'll add a condition that copies a stream intact if it has IGS.
jdobbs
1st January 2011, 14:06
Jdobbs , I need clarification regarding option “PASS_TWO_STATS_UPDATE=n” When this option is enabled does it do three pass or two pass only. I ask because in gui you only see max of 2 pass even if this option is selected, where in hidden option it says if set to "1", BD-RB uses "--pass 3" for second pass . Kind of confused here.
Also there is hidden option which allow user to set output quality to be Ultra High by setting option “ENCODE_QUALITY=4” which assign preset to be slower in “lastcmd” file. I was curious x.264 also allow preset of very slow and placebo. Do you think it be beneficial have them.
Ps: Happy new year. You probably want to read the X264 documentation, as it describes "--pass 3". Essentially it works exactly like "--pass 2", except it updates the stats file with the results the nth pass (2 through n). That makes it possible to do additional "--pass 3" passes that also each update the stats file (as many as you want). I wouldn't recommend it, though, as (IMHO) the results don't justify the additional time. When you do the proper analysis in a two pass encode (as X264 does), additional passes are pretty much does very little (if anything).
No, I don't think it would of benefit to add the additional presets. They are massive overkill and give little benefit in this application at the expense of huge time costs. All they would do is give folks the impression I think they are needed -- and they are not. In truth I think the existing "Highest" mode is rarely if ever needed, in fact I can't remember the last time I used it.
Just as a little tip... there is also a hidden "ENCODE_QUALITY=5" setting. I put it there for testing. It uses the fastest X264 settings available, but on most encodes you'll probably not want to do a permanent backkup with it, as you lose quality in order to gain speed.
jdobbs
1st January 2011, 14:15
Is it possible to run multiple instances of BD RB with different with different working paths? Only if you also install it in multiple different folders also (the installation path). Running two instances from the same folder will cause conflicts in the use of the INI file.
Honestly, though, there is little benefit from running two or more instances unless you are finding that there is a lot of unused CPU time. I would guess that to be rare except possibly with huge processor counts. X264 uses almost all (if not all) of the available processor time (I've seen ~100% usage reported on pass two with systems having 8 processors) -- and two concurrent instances will probably run slower than two sequential batch jobs.
Capsbackup
1st January 2011, 17:07
I'll add a condition that copies a stream intact if it has IGS.
Would this condition work if the desired output is BD5/9? :confused:
My experience was, I believe anyway, that the bitrate was too high for the BD5/9, and the backup had audio stuttering when keeping the original IGS menu. However, the BD-25 backup worked perfectly keeping the original menu.( using the MIN_M2TS=xxx)
jdobbs
1st January 2011, 18:12
Would this condition work if the desired output is BD5/9? :confused:
My experience was, I believe anyway, that the bitrate was too high for the BD5/9, and the backup had audio stuttering when keeping the original IGS menu. However, the BD-25 backup worked perfectly keeping the original menu.( using the MIN_M2TS=xxx) It would only work on a BD-25. Maybe I'll just wait until it is done.
drmih
1st January 2011, 19:56
It was only really a flag or notification that such a stream existed so that you can either decide not to do the disc at this time, or try a manual work around. At the moment there doesn't seem an easy way to identify these discs.
HWK
1st January 2011, 20:03
You probably want to read the X264 documentation, as it describes "--pass 3". Essentially it works exactly like "--pass 2", except it updates the stats file with the results the nth pass (2 through n). That makes it possible to do additional "--pass 3" passes that also each update the stats file (as many as you want). I wouldn't recommend it, though, as (IMHO) the results don't justify the additional time. When you do the proper analysis in a two pass encode (as X264 does), additional passes are pretty much does very little (if anything).
No, I don't think it would of benefit to add the additional presets. They are massive overkill and give little benefit in this application at the expense of huge time costs. All they would do is give folks the impression I think they are needed -- and they are not. In truth I think the existing "Highest" mode is rarely if ever needed, in fact I can't remember the last time I used it.
Just as a little tip... there is also a hidden "ENCODE_QUALITY=5" setting. I put it there for testing. It uses the fastest X264 settings available, but on most encodes you'll probably not want to do a permanent backkup with it, as you lose quality in order to gain speed.
Thanks Jdobbs, I started to read documentation but never finish it. I would look through it.
As for another point I think you are quite right.
chrispk
2nd January 2011, 00:22
Hi there :) I'm new to BD backup since we just now got a BD player and HD setup for Christmas but I made sure we got a BD drive to backup our BDs (we have 4 kids :) ). I have tried to backup the Gladiator movie I got for Christmas with BDRB but every time I burn it, it still has a loop in the movie. The first time I burned it, one of my settings was wrong on the BDRB and the loop was quite long, about 20 mins into the movie it threw us back to the beginning scenes. SO I downloaded the inspect.exe and ran it, changed the setting that was wrong, ran it again and then ran BDRB on it again. The second time through there was still a loop, only slightly smaller. The next time around I figured it was the type of media I was using so I bought some Verbatim LTH 25GB BDs to use. The loop was slightly smaller this time as well, it threw us about half a minute back in the movie. I don't want to keep burning discs, and a helpful guy from the Videohelp forum suggested using a software player like PowerDVD. I tried to get my PowerDVD 9 to play it but can't figure that out yet. Can someone help me figure out how to get rid of the loop and teach me how to play it with my software before wasting anymore BDs?
:thanks:
Priapismic
2nd January 2011, 01:30
Great program
jdobbs
2nd January 2011, 02:45
Hi there :) I'm new to BD backup since we just now got a BD player and HD setup for Christmas but I made sure we got a BD drive to backup our BDs (we have 4 kids :) ). I have tried to backup the Gladiator movie I got for Christmas with BDRB but every time I burn it, it still has a loop in the movie. The first time I burned it, one of my settings was wrong on the BDRB and the loop was quite long, about 20 mins into the movie it threw us back to the beginning scenes. SO I downloaded the inspect.exe and ran it, changed the setting that was wrong, ran it again and then ran BDRB on it again. The second time through there was still a loop, only slightly smaller. The next time around I figured it was the type of media I was using so I bought some Verbatim LTH 25GB BDs to use. The loop was slightly smaller this time as well, it threw us about half a minute back in the movie. I don't want to keep burning discs, and a helpful guy from the Videohelp forum suggested using a software player like PowerDVD. I tried to get my PowerDVD 9 to play it but can't figure that out yet. Can someone help me figure out how to get rid of the loop and teach me how to play it with my software before wasting anymore BDs?
:thanks: Not sure how the "loop" can happen. It would seem you'd almost have to purposefully cause that during encode... so I'm not sure what I can do. I would highly suggest you buy a BD-RE disc (you only need one) so you can test without wasting discs. You can get one at Target for about $15. Can you describe the "loop" a little? I can't imagine how that could happen unless the disc is skipping?
As for using PowerDVD -- my recommendation is always to use a standalone player. Software players (all of them) are just too buggy, and you never know where the blame lies when you have issues.
Just as an aside, I've done "Gladiator" and didn't have any problems.
gregbm
2nd January 2011, 02:52
Thank you jdobbs for your excellent programm.
I'v a new laptop with a core I7, I see that Bd rebuilder use only 40% of the cpu to converting blyray. With my core2duo cpu is always at 100%.
Do you think it's normal or can I set it to use 100% of CPU to convert faster?
(Sorry for my poor english)
jdobbs
2nd January 2011, 02:55
Thank you jdobbs for your excellent programm.
I'v a new laptop with a core I7, I see that Bd rebuilder use only 40% of the cpu to converting blyray. With my core2duo cpu is always at 100%.
Do you think it's normal or can I set it to use 100% of CPU to convert faster?
(Sorry for my poor english) Make sure you are watching it in Pass 2. Pass one rarely uses all the CPU (at least on my system), but 40% seems low. Maybe the hard drive can't keep up? I7's are pretty fast and laptops often have slow hard drives. How many fps is it showing while encoding? Also, have you tried it without antivirus running? They often put themselves between you and your disc drive, causing everything to be slow and annoying.
chrispk
2nd January 2011, 03:06
Not sure how the "loop" can happen. It would seem you'd almost have to purposefully cause that during encode... so I'm not sure what I can do. I would highly suggest you buy a BD-RE disc (you only need one) so you can test without wasting discs. You can get one at Target for about $15. Can you describe the "loop" a little? I can't imagine how that could happen unless the disc is skipping?
As for using PowerDVD -- my recommendation is always to use a standalone player. Software players (all of them) are just too buggy, and you never know where the blame lies when you have issues.
Just as an aside, I've done "Gladiator" and didn't have any problems.
Thanks for the response JDobbs. I posted it to another thread because of the earlier response. Sorry if I put this in the wrong spot.
I actually did buy a BD-RE disc to burn to so I will try that. As for the loop, what happens is that we watch the movie and all of a sudden it will throw us back to an earlier scene, like the disc is skipping backwards like a record player with a scratched record. The first burn, the loop was large it took us almost all the way back to the beginning of the movie. The second time, it looped at the same spot but only took us halfway back. The last time, it looped again at the same spot and only took us about a 10 seconds back. So with each burn it seemed to get better. I don't know anything about how I could cause that during encode as I haven't changed any settings at all (I don't know enough about any of this to do that as I'm sure I would screw it up :p ).
gregbm
2nd January 2011, 03:09
Thanks for reply.
In pass 2 -> 23FPS (0.8x) -> cpu:33%. My hard drives is only 5200rpm maybe it's a problem.
I'll try to stop avant antivirus
k-c-ksum
2nd January 2011, 14:23
Thanks for reply.
In pass 2 -> 23FPS (0.8x) -> cpu:33%. My hard drives is only 5200rpm maybe it's a problem.
I'll try to stop avant antivirus
thats quick if its a quality 2nd pass
carland
2nd January 2011, 16:27
No idea. But it's very probably something on your end, either in the player, the media, or something in your processing -- if it were within BD Rebuilder it would be happening everywhere. On the other hand, with no view into your settings, etc, anything I'd say would be a wild guess.
I've done Avatar and A-Team with no issues.
The problem breaks keeping, so I decided to test dvfab and 7 per film breaks no longer exist.
I would like to help solve it. Because i like rebuilder.
The films I made were the avatar and the A team with the rebuilder i have breaks and with dvfab i have not.
my player is lgbd390 bd-r and sony.
thanks
:thanks:
IVaN_000
2nd January 2011, 21:03
Thanks for reply.
In pass 2 -> 23FPS (0.8x) -> cpu:33%. My hard drives is only 5200rpm maybe it's a problem.
I'll try to stop avant antivirus
If you're on Windows 7 you can watch hard disk usage with Resource Monitor. Just press Start button and type "Resource monitor".
waynezo
2nd January 2011, 22:33
To end the wavi.exe errors:
Open ffdshow Video Decoder Configuration,
Then, under DirectShow Control click the "edit" button next to "use ffdshow only in", and type in wavi.exe.
This fix didn't work for me. If I disable the LPCM track I don't get the error. I have the uncompressed setting in ffdshow set to all supported.
I have K-lite codecs on my PC. Do they need to be tweaked also?
I'm rebuilding concert Blu-Rays to BD-25. I need the m2ts files to have ac3 so they will play on WMC7.
I have been disabling LPCM as a workaround.
Is there anything else I should try?
Is LPCM relevant to the ac3 encoding?
I love BDRB, just haven't been able to get it to encode the LPCM track.
Any advice will be greatly appreciated.
jdobbs
2nd January 2011, 22:41
The problem breaks keeping, so I decided to test dvfab and 7 per film breaks no longer exist.
I would like to help solve it. Because i like rebuilder.
The films I made were the avatar and the A team with the rebuilder i have breaks and with dvfab i have not.
my player is lgbd390 bd-r and sony.
thanks
:thanks:You know, I'd love to help you. But where is your LOG? Where is your INF file? Where is your settings (INI file)? With just a "I have an issue" report and no supporting details I have to resort to throwing down chicken bones and trying to read their pattern to find the error. You'll note that I've done the discs you reported with no issues, and so have a whole lot of other people. So if I try them without any changes in settings or specifics related to the way you did the encode -- they'll just work perfectly again.
You'll find by going back through this thread that the problems that get fixed are the ones that include the information needed to fix them.
Also -- frankly I don't care what DVDFab does. If you want to use DVDFab, then more power to you. I'm not in competition with them or anybody else -- I aim at a different audience who is looking for higher-quality backups from a freeware package. DVDFab has nothing to do with this thread or BD Rebuilder and doesn't help in the slightest in bug reporting or beta testing this program.
jdobbs
2nd January 2011, 22:50
This fix didn't work for me. If I disable the LPCM track I don't get the error. I have the uncompressed setting in ffdshow set to all supported.
I have K-lite codecs on my PC. Do they need to be tweaked also? I'm rebuilding concert Blu-Rays to BD-25. I need the m2ts files to have ac3 so they will play on WMC7.
I have been disabling LPCM as a workaround.
Is there anything else I should try?
Is LPCM relevant to the ac3 encoding?
I love BDRB, just haven't been able to get it to encode the LPCM track.
Any advice will be greatly appreciated. Not tweaked... removed -- at least if you want to have any luck with BD-RB. FFDSHOW has every CODEC anyone needs, codec packs are superfluous and just cause problems.
I've found an issue with 7.1 LPCM sources when trying to reencode them. I assume this is the problem you're having. I'm surprised it hasn't been reported more -- I guess it just underscores just how rare 7.1 LPCM sources really are (or how few are kept/reencoded, at least). I've fixed it for the next release.
carland
2nd January 2011, 23:03
You know, I'd love to help you. But where is your LOG? Where is your INF file? Where is your settings (INI file)? With just a "I have an issue" report and no supporting details I have to resort to throwing down chicken bones and trying to read their pattern to find the error. You'll note that I've done the discs you reported with no issues, and so have a whole lot of other people. So if I try them without any changes in settings or specifics related to the way you did the encode -- they'll just work perfectly again.
You'll find by going back through this thread that the problems that get fixed are the ones that include information.
Also -- frankly I don't care what DVDFab does. If you want to use DVDFab, then more power to you. But it has nothing to do with this thread or BD Rebuilder and doesn't help in the slightest in bug reporting or beta testing this program.
Hello again, thanks for reply,
This is my ini
Options]
VERSION=0.36.0.9
MODE=0
ENCODE_QUALITY=0
ONEPASS_ENCODING=0
AUTO_QUALITY=1
TARGET_SIZE=23500
AUDIO_TO_KEEP=eng;por;
SUBS_TO_KEEP=por;
SD_CONVERT=0
OPEN_GOP=0
RESIZE_1080=0
DEINTERLACE=0
SD_TO_1080=0
CONVERT_WIDE=0
DTS_REENCODE=1
AC3_REENCODE=1
AC3_640=1
AC3_192=0
KEEP_HD_AUDIO=0
AVCHD=0
REMOVE_WORKFILES=1
MOVIE_ONLY_LOOP=1
REMOVE_OUTPUT=0
USE_FILTERS=0
BDMV_CERT_ONLY=0
USE_LAVF=0
IVTC_PULLDOWN=1
ASSUME_DVD_PAL=0
AUDIO_TRACK_LIMIT=1
SUBTITLE_TRACK_LIMIT=1
CUSTOM_TARGET_SIZE=23450
STATUS_LOG=1
[Paths]
WORKING_PATH=C:\PROGRAMAS INSTALADOS\WORKING REBUILDER\
SOURCE_PATH=E:\107- THE A TEAM\THE.A-TEAM.EXTENDED.CUT.2IN1.2010.BLURAY.1080P.AVC.DTS-HD.MA5.1\
I refer the dvfab because with rebuilder i have pauses and need to know if the problem is the player or media or rebuilder.
I want to help:thanks:
gregbm
2nd January 2011, 23:03
If you're on Windows 7 you can watch hard disk usage with Resource Monitor. Just press Start button and type "Resource monitor".
Yes I think it's the hard drive the problem:
http://img12.imageshack.us/img12/3199/96936751.png (http://img12.imageshack.us/i/96936751.png/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (http://imageshack.us)
jdobbs
2nd January 2011, 23:06
Hello again, thanks for reply,
This is my ini
I refer the dvfab because with rebuilder i have pauses and need to know if the problem is the player or media or rebuilder.
I want to help:thanks: Do you still have the LOG or INF file? The settings tells be about how BD Rebuilder is configured, but nothing about the actual encode/rebuild itself.
Capsbackup
2nd January 2011, 23:10
@carland;
What did you use to rip the original Blu-ray? :rolleyes:
BD-RB was not designed to use with anything other than properly ripped original source Blu-rays, or at least for this this bug report thread. :(
waynezo
2nd January 2011, 23:11
Not tweaked... removed -- at least if you want to have any luck with BD-RB. FFDSHOW has every CODEC anyone needs, codec packs are superfluous and just cause problems.
I've found an issue with 7.1 LPCM sources when trying to reencode them. I assume this is the problem you're having. I'm surprised it hasn't been reported more -- I guess it just underscores just how rare 7.1 LPCM sources really are (or how few are kept/reencoded, at least). I've fixed it for the next release.
Thanks jdobbs. I removed K-lite and no more errors. I was getting them on any LPCM source.
I originally installed K-lite to get thumbnail support. Does ffdshow provide thumbnail support?
Thanks again for a great program and Happy New Year!
jdobbs
2nd January 2011, 23:20
Thanks jdobbs. I removed K-lite and no more errors. I was getting them on any LPCM source.
I originally installed K-lite to get thumbnail support. Does ffdshow provide thumbnail support?
Thanks again for a great program and Happy New Year! It does on my computers (Windows 7).
carland
2nd January 2011, 23:38
Do you still have the LOG or INF file? The settings tells be about how BD Rebuilder is configured, but nothing about the actual encode/rebuild itself.
13:38:00] BD Rebuilder v0.36.09 (beta)
- Source: AVATAR.EXTENDED.COLLECTORS.EDITION.DISC1.2010.1080P.BLURAY.AVC.DTS-HD.MA.5.1_A.T.OMIX_
- Input BD size: 46,31 GB
- Approximate total content: [03:37:23.988]
- Target BD size: 22,90 GB
- Windows Version: 6.1 [7600]
- Auto Quality: Good (Very Fast), ABR
- Audio Settings: AC3=1 DTS=1 HD=0 Kbs=640
[13:38:00] PHASE ONE, Encoding
- [13:38:00] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00056]
- [13:38:00] Reencoding: VID_00056 (1 of 53)
- [13:38:00] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 24 frames
- [13:38:00] Reencoding: VID_00056, Pass 1 of 1
- [13:38:08] Video Encode complete
- [13:38:08] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [13:38:08] Multiplexing M2TS
- [13:38:08] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00055]
- [13:38:09] Reencoding: VID_00055 (2 of 53)
- [13:38:09] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 72 frames
- [13:38:09] Reencoding: VID_00055, Pass 1 of 1
- [13:38:10] Video Encode complete
- [13:38:10] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [13:38:11] Multiplexing M2TS
- [13:38:11] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00009]
- [13:38:12] Reencoding: VID_00009 (3 of 53)
- [13:38:12] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 156 frames
- Bitrate: 12.014 Kbs
- [13:38:13] Reencoding: VID_00009, Pass 1 of 1
- [13:38:21] Video Encode complete
- [13:38:21] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [13:38:21] Multiplexing M2TS
- [13:38:22] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00017]
- [13:38:24] Reencoding: VID_00017 (4 of 53)
- [13:38:24] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 171 frames
- Bitrate: 12.999 Kbs
- [13:38:24] Reencoding: VID_00017, Pass 1 of 1
- [13:38:33] Video Encode complete
- [13:38:33] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [13:38:33] Multiplexing M2TS
- [13:38:34] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00029]
- [13:38:37] Reencoding: VID_00029 (5 of 53)
- [13:38:37] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 207 frames
- Bitrate: 18.125 Kbs
- [13:38:37] Reencoding: VID_00029, Pass 1 of 1
- [13:38:49] Video Encode complete
- [13:38:49] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [13:38:50] Multiplexing M2TS
- [13:38:51] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00011]
- [13:38:54] Reencoding: VID_00011 (6 of 53)
- [13:38:54] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 557 frames
- Bitrate: 9.712 Kbs
- [13:38:54] Reencoding: VID_00011, Pass 1 of 1
- [13:39:17] Video Encode complete
- [13:39:17] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [13:39:18] Multiplexing M2TS
- [13:39:19] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00013]
- [13:39:23] Reencoding: VID_00013 (7 of 53)
- [13:39:23] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 371 frames
- Bitrate: 15.345 Kbs
- [13:39:23] Reencoding: VID_00013, Pass 1 of 1
- [13:39:42] Video Encode complete
- [13:39:42] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [13:39:43] Multiplexing M2TS
- [13:39:45] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00046]
- [13:39:48] Reencoding: VID_00046 (8 of 53)
- [13:39:48] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 380 frames
- Bitrate: 17.939 Kbs
- [14:19:21] Reencoding: VID_00035, Pass 1 of 1
- [14:22:00] Video Encode complete
- [14:22:00] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [14:22:06] Multiplexing M2TS
- [14:22:10] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00041]
- [14:22:33] Reencoding: VID_00041 (36 of 53)
- [14:22:33] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 3.014 frames
- Bitrate: 17.641 Kbs
- [14:22:33] Reencoding: VID_00041, Pass 1 of 1
- [14:25:28] Video Encode complete
- [14:25:28] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [14:25:34] Multiplexing M2TS
- [14:25:41] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00047]
- [14:26:05] Reencoding: VID_00047 (37 of 53)
- [14:26:05] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 3.806 frames
- Bitrate: 14.737 Kbs
- [14:26:05] Reencoding: VID_00047, Pass 1 of 1
- [14:29:23] Video Encode complete
- [14:29:24] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [14:29:30] Multiplexing M2TS
- [14:29:36] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00010]
- [14:30:02] Reencoding: VID_00010 (38 of 53)
- [14:30:02] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 5.135 frames
- Bitrate: 11.558 Kbs
- [14:30:02] Reencoding: VID_00010, Pass 1 of 1
- [14:33:45] Video Encode complete
- [14:33:46] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [14:33:54] Multiplexing M2TS
- [14:34:01] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00032]
- [14:34:30] Reencoding: VID_00032 (39 of 53)
- [14:34:31] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 5.610 frames
- Bitrate: 12.205 Kbs
- [14:34:31] Reencoding: VID_00032, Pass 1 of 1
- [14:38:43] Video Encode complete
- [14:38:43] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [14:38:53] Multiplexing M2TS
- [14:39:05] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00012]
- [14:39:45] Reencoding: VID_00012 (40 of 53)
- [14:39:45] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 6.760 frames
- Bitrate: 13.315 Kbs
- [14:39:45] Reencoding: VID_00012, Pass 1 of 1
- [14:45:10] Video Encode complete
- [14:45:10] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [14:45:21] Multiplexing M2TS
- [14:45:30] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00008]
- [14:46:12] Reencoding: VID_00008 (41 of 53)
- [14:46:12] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 7.831 frames
- Bitrate: 11.745 Kbs
- [14:46:12] Reencoding: VID_00008, Pass 1 of 1
- [14:52:14] Video Encode complete
- [14:52:14] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [14:52:26] Multiplexing M2TS
- [14:52:35] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00051]
- [14:53:17] Reencoding: VID_00051 (42 of 53)
- [14:53:17] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 8.548 frames
- Bitrate: 11.445 Kbs
- [14:53:17] Reencoding: VID_00051, Pass 1 of 1
- [14:59:33] Video Encode complete
- [14:59:33] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [14:59:48] Multiplexing M2TS
- [14:59:57] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00014]
- [15:00:49] Reencoding: VID_00014 (43 of 53)
- [15:00:49] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 8.633 frames
- Bitrate: 14.203 Kbs
- [15:00:49] Reencoding: VID_00014, Pass 1 of 1
- [15:08:11] Video Encode complete
- [15:08:11] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [15:08:29] Multiplexing M2TS
- [15:08:43] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00001]
- [15:09:37] Reencoding: VID_00001 (44 of 53)
- [15:09:37] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 9.354 frames
- Bitrate: 13.734 Kbs
- [15:09:37] Reencoding: VID_00001, Pass 1 of 1
- [15:18:07] Video Encode complete
- [15:18:07] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [15:18:27] Multiplexing M2TS
- [15:18:40] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00028]
- [15:19:35] Reencoding: VID_00028 (45 of 53)
- [15:19:35] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 7.431 frames
- Bitrate: 17.666 Kbs
- [15:19:35] Reencoding: VID_00028, Pass 1 of 1
- [15:27:44] Video Encode complete
- [15:27:44] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [15:28:00] Multiplexing M2TS
- [15:28:11] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00030]
- [15:29:06] Reencoding: VID_00030 (46 of 53)
- [15:29:06] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 7.929 frames
- Bitrate: 16.715 Kbs
- [15:29:06] Reencoding: VID_00030, Pass 1 of 1
- [15:37:29] Video Encode complete
- [15:37:29] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [15:37:45] Multiplexing M2TS
- [15:37:56] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00020]
- [15:38:55] Reencoding: VID_00020 (47 of 53)
- [15:38:55] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 11.158 frames
- Bitrate: 12.668 Kbs
- [15:38:55] Reencoding: VID_00020, Pass 1 of 1
- [15:48:47] Video Encode complete
- [15:48:47] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [15:49:05] Multiplexing M2TS
- [15:49:18] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00018]
- [15:50:29] Reencoding: VID_00018 (48 of 53)
- [15:50:29] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 11.310 frames
- Bitrate: 13.752 Kbs
- [15:50:29] Reencoding: VID_00018, Pass 1 of 1
- [15:59:45] Video Encode complete
- [15:59:45] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [16:00:04] Multiplexing M2TS
- [16:00:18] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00022]
- [16:01:33] Reencoding: VID_00022 (49 of 53)
- [16:01:33] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 13.448 frames
- Bitrate: 13.305 Kbs
- [16:01:33] Reencoding: VID_00022, Pass 1 of 1
- [16:12:39] Video Encode complete
- [16:12:39] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [16:13:06] Multiplexing M2TS
- [16:13:20] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00049]
- [16:14:51] Reencoding: VID_00049 (50 of 53)
- [16:14:51] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 14.972 frames
- Bitrate: 13.824 Kbs
- [16:14:52] Reencoding: VID_00049, Pass 1 of 1
- [16:26:58] Video Encode complete
- [16:26:58] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [16:27:22] Multiplexing M2TS
- [16:27:39] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00002]
- [16:29:53] Reencoding: VID_00002 (51 of 53)
- [16:29:54] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 25.559 frames
- Bitrate: 12.146 Kbs
- [16:29:54] Reencoding: VID_00002, Pass 1 of 1
- [16:49:58] Video Encode complete
- [16:49:58] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [16:50:44] Multiplexing M2TS
- [16:51:31] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00006]
- [16:53:51] Reencoding: VID_00006 (52 of 53)
- [16:53:51] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 21.792 frames
- Bitrate: 15.119 Kbs
- [16:53:51] Reencoding: VID_00006, Pass 1 of 1
- [17:13:18] Video Encode complete
- [17:13:19] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [17:13:54] Multiplexing M2TS
- [17:14:51] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00024]
- [17:21:10] Reencoding: VID_00024 (53 of 53)
- [17:21:10] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 23,976fps, 62.869 frames
- Bitrate: 14.775 Kbs
- [17:21:10] Reencoding: VID_00024, Pass 1 of 1
- [18:16:33] Video Encode complete
- [18:16:35] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [18:18:44] Multiplexing M2TS
[18:21:54]PHASE ONE complete
[18:21:54]PHASE TWO - Rebuild Started
- [18:21:54] Rebuilding BD file Structure
[18:23:22] - Encode and Rebuild complete
- WORKFILES folder removed.
[18:23:38]JOB: AVATAR.EXTENDED.COLLECTORS.EDITION.DISC1.2010.1080P.BLURAY.AVC.DTS-HD.MA.5.1_A.T.OMIX_ finished.
Capsbackup
2nd January 2011, 23:45
@carland;
The first log was for The A Team, this one is for Avatar.
Both appear to be downloaded content, not original. :rolleyes:
jdobbs
2nd January 2011, 23:58
@carland
Capsbackup is right. Your source has been preprocessed -- and the odds are 1000:1 that the source of the problem is there before BD Rebuilder even starts scanning. There are lots of things that could cause it, and one package might be tripped by the glitch while another wouldn't. I have no idea how this source was ripped, or even if it is complete (I'm pretty sure it isn't). To reiterate the first post of this thread -- BD Rebuilder is meant for backup of original discs that you own. Please try it with an original commercially-authored disc -- and you'll find it will work on both of the titles you've reported. Sorry.
jdobbs
3rd January 2011, 00:04
Thanks jdobbs. I removed K-lite and no more errors. I was getting them on any LPCM source.
I originally installed K-lite to get thumbnail support. Does ffdshow provide thumbnail support?
Thanks again for a great program and Happy New Year! One of the problems with CODEC Packs is that they sometimes overrule, intervene, or interfere with FFDSHOW processing -- and it doesn't often show up when I look at the registry settings configuration.
Glad to hear you've gotten past the problem.
carland
3rd January 2011, 00:20
@carland
Capsbackup is right. Your source has been preprocessed -- and the odds are 1000:1 that the source of the problem is there before BD Rebuilder even starts scanning. There are lots of things that could cause it, and one package might be tripped by the glitch while another wouldn't. I have no idea how this source was ripped, or even if it is complete (I'm pretty sure it isn't). To reiterate the first post of this thread -- BD Rebuilder is meant for backup of original discs that you own. Please try it with an original commercially-authored disc -- and you'll find it will work on both of the titles you've reported. Sorry.
ok I will tried, thanks for help.
IVaN_000
3rd January 2011, 02:34
Yes I think it's the hard drive the problem:
http://img12.imageshack.us/img12/3199/96936751.png (http://img12.imageshack.us/i/96936751.png/)
Uploaded with ImageShack.us (http://imageshack.us)
In Resource Monitor, take a look in the "Disk" tab ("Disque" in your Windows, "Disco" in mine :) ). You'll see 3 sections in there: the 1st one with the list of processes accesing the hard drives, the 2nd one the files open, and the 3rd the activity time of the drives (0% being idle, and 100% total hardcore thrashing :devil: ).
I find this tool extremely useful, just as Process Explorer.
colinhunt
3rd January 2011, 13:19
A problem occurred when doing a full backup of "Peeping Tom". A dialogue window with the following message appeared:
BD Rebuilder experienced an error 1801 [01:46:47] ReencodeAudio()
00075 1801
Log:
[01:45:35] BD Rebuilder v0.36.09 (beta)
- Source: PEEPING_TOM
- Input BD size: 31,83 GB
- Approximate total content: [02:47:52.066]
- Target BD size: 23,54 GB
- Windows Version: 6.1 [7600]
- Quality: Highest (Very Slow), Two Pass
- X264 Tweak(s) enabled
- Audio Settings: AC3=0 DTS=0 HD=1 Kbs=640
[01:45:37] PHASE ONE, Encoding
- [01:45:37] Extracting A/V streams [VID_00003]
- [01:45:41] Reencoding: VID_00003 (1 of 8)
- [01:45:41] Collecting video information
- Source Video: MPEG-4 (AVC), 1920x1080
- Rate/Length: 24,000fps, 1*465 frames
- Bitrate: 14*602 Kbs
- [01:45:41] Reencoding: VID_00003, Pass 1 of 2
- [01:46:08] Reencoding: VID_00003, Pass 2 of 2
- [01:46:46] Video Encode complete
- [01:46:46] Reencoding audio tracks (if req'd)
- [01:46:47] ReencodeAudio() 00075 1801
[14:18:00] - Failed to reencode audio, aborted
Here's what MediaInfo says of audio in 00003.m2ts:
Audio #1
ID : 4352 (0x1100)
Menu ID : 1 (0x1)
Format : PCM
Format settings, Endianness : Big
Format settings, Sign : Signed
Muxing mode : Blu-ray
Duration : 1mn 1s
Bit rate mode : Constant
Bit rate : 0
Channel(s) : channel0
Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz
Bit depth : 24 bits
Audio #2
ID : 4353 (0x1101)
Menu ID : 1 (0x1)
Format : PCM
Format settings, Endianness : Big
Format settings, Sign : Signed
Muxing mode : Blu-ray
Duration : 1mn 1s
Bit rate mode : Constant
Bit rate : 0
Channel(s) : channel0
Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz
Bit depth : 24 bits
When I play the file with VLC, both tracks contain audio but it's accompanied by a strange distortion. MPC-HC plays both audio tracks fine and reports their bitrate as 1152 kbps.
I had set BD-RB to re-encode PCM tracks to AC3 but to keep other HD tracks as-is.
jdobbs
3rd January 2011, 15:27
@colinhunt
Are those PCM audio tracks 7.1ch?
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