Peter Colton
2007-May-24 19:20 UTC
[theora] video quality problem, encodeing with ffmpeg2theora -p pro
Hello all and thanks, I have encoded several .vob with " ffmpeg2theoar -p preveiw " with no problems at all. The quality is exellent. These .vob were ripped with vobcopy. The problem I am having is when I encode a .vob with " ffmpeg2theora -p pro ". The resulting .ogg will not play correctly with vlc or kaffeine. The vedio is jerky and the sound go out of sycro just after the start of the video. The video veiwer takes up all the cpu resourses for the .ogg when encoded with " ffmpeg2theora -p pro ". If I play the .ogg file thats been encode with " ffmpeg2theoar -p preveiw " the cpu useage is only 20% ? All seems OK there. I have looked on the debian bugs report for this package and I can see no mention any problem simular to what I am having with encoding with " ffmpeg2theoar -p pro ". There was a site I found with test .ogg files for the veiwer. These where encoded as -p pro and -p preveiw. All the test files ran OK with the video veiwers and I have veiwed other viedos encoded as " -p pro " with no problems at all. Its just the encodeding I do with " ffmpeg2theora -p pro " that goes wrong. OS : Debian etch ffmpeg2theora 0.16-2+b1 libtheora0 0.0.0.alpha7.dfsg-1.1 Cpu 2 x : Pentium III (Coppermine) cpu MHz : 665.218 MemTotal: 256928 kB So any idears what is be going wrong ? Regards Peter Colton
Conrad Parker
2007-May-24 20:29 UTC
[theora] video quality problem, encodeing with ffmpeg2theora -p pro
On 25/05/07, Peter Colton <theora@bissybox.com> wrote:> The problem I am having is when I encode a .vob with " ffmpeg2theora -p pro ". > The resulting .ogg will not play correctly with vlc or kaffeine. The vedio > is jerky and the sound go out of sycro just after the start of the video. > The video veiwer takes up all the cpu resourses for the .ogg when encoded > with " ffmpeg2theora -p pro ".Hi, any chance you could post say the first few MB of such a file somewhere? I've got a hunch it has something to do with the way the audio and video tracks are interleaved and timestamped (forcing the players to buffer much more than necessary), but I'm not sure ... cheers, Conrad.