diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'FORMATS')
-rw-r--r-- | FORMATS | 22 |
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 4 deletions
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ Video Disk Recorder File Formats A "channel definition" is a line with channel data, where the fields are separated by ':' characters: - Example: "RTL:12188:h:1:27500:163:104:0:0:12003" + Example: "RTL:12188:h:1:27500:163:104:105:0:12003" The fields in a channel definition have the following meaning (from left to right): @@ -25,7 +25,9 @@ Video Disk Recorder File Formats - Diseqc number ** - Symbol rate - Video PID - - Audio PID + - Audio PID (either one number, or two, separated by a comma) + If this channel also carries Dolby Digital sound, the Dolby PIDs follow + the audio PIDs, separated by a semicolon, as in "...:101,102;103,104:..." - Teletext PID - Conditional Access (0 = Free To Air, 1 = can be decrypted by the first DVB card, 2 = can be decrypted by the second DVB card) @@ -60,8 +62,10 @@ Video Disk Recorder File Formats (1..31) - Start time (first two digits for the hour, second two digits for the minutes) - End time (first two digits for the hour, second two digits for the minutes) - - Priority (from 00 to 99, 00 = lowest prioity, 99 = highest priority) - - Guaranteed lifetime of recording (in days) + - Priority (from 0 to 99, 0 = lowest prioity, 99 = highest priority) + - Guaranteed lifetime of recording (in days); 0 means that this recording may + be automatically deleted by a new recording with higher priority, 99 means + that this recording will never be automatically deleted - Name of timer (will be used to name the recording); if the name contains any ':' characters, these have to be replaced with '|' - Summary (any newline characters in the summary have to be replaced with '|'; @@ -126,3 +130,13 @@ Video Disk Recorder File Formats - marks must have a frame number, and that frame MUST be an I-frame (this means that only marks generated by VDR itself can be used, since they will always be guaranteed to mark I-frames). + +* 001.vdr ... 255.vdr + + These are the actual recorded MPEG data files. In order to keep the size of + an individual file below a given limit, a recording is split into several + files. The contents of these files is "Packetized Elementary Stream" (PES) + and contains ES packets with ids 0xE0 for video, 0xC0 for audio 1 and 0xC1 + for audio 2 (if available). Dolby Digital data is stored in packets with + ids 0xBD. + |