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Big boy stan
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Posted: Sat Jan 23, 2010 2:17 pm |
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Joined: Wed Jan 04, 2006 10:20 am
Posts: 387
Location:
South New Jersey, USA
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Thanks for the XvMC info tjc. After making those changes and setting up my own playback profile I am playing back the 1080p video smoothly with the CPU peaking at ~70%. My profile for greater then 720 res is set to:
Decoder: Standard XvMC
Video Renderer:xvmn-blit
OSD Renderer:chroma
Primary Deinterlacer: None
Fallback deinterlacer: None
The test file I am using is a 3 minute video from NASA of a shuttle launch. I think it is a 1080p (thus no deinterlacer) and a bitrate of 20Mbps. The video is 3minutes and 13 seconds and file size is 396Mb.
So with this success, I would love to try a file from a real myth recording. Anyone interested in sending me a 3 or 4 minute high action video clip recorded from a HD Homerun?
_________________ LINHES 8.6.1 BE/FE - MSI K9N6SGM-V with AMD A64 X2 4600+, 4GB Ram. 1.5TB WD. HDHR Prime. Nvidia GT210. MCE remote. FrontEnd - Dell Vostro 400 3.0GHz Core2Duo NVidia GeForce210. MCE Remote
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tjc
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Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2010 8:37 am |
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Joined: Thu Mar 25, 2004 11:00 am
Posts: 9551
Location:
Arlington, MA
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That NASA one of the shuttle take-off is a pretty good test.
OBTW - With XvMC beware of the "CBS problem", apparently they're using some funky options in their MPEG-2 streams that can send XvMC into orbit. So far that's the only source that has given me trouble.
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Big boy stan
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Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2010 8:51 am |
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Joined: Wed Jan 04, 2006 10:20 am
Posts: 387
Location:
South New Jersey, USA
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I thought the shuttle video would be a good test also but since it didnt require deinterlacing, I thought that maybe a 1080i file might present some different issues. Still would like to try one if someone could email me a file.
tjc, I saw your post on the CBS problem. Does this happen all the time when recording from CBS?
_________________ LINHES 8.6.1 BE/FE - MSI K9N6SGM-V with AMD A64 X2 4600+, 4GB Ram. 1.5TB WD. HDHR Prime. Nvidia GT210. MCE remote. FrontEnd - Dell Vostro 400 3.0GHz Core2Duo NVidia GeForce210. MCE Remote
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tjc
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Posted: Sun Jan 24, 2010 9:02 am |
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Joined: Thu Mar 25, 2004 11:00 am
Posts: 9551
Location:
Arlington, MA
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Pretty much. In at least a couple cases people with integrated nvidia chipsets have dodged or reduced the problem by increasing the memory allocated it in the BIOS, but I'm using an AGP card that already has 256Mb on board and the memory window for the card in BIOS is maxed out.
Fortunately, the machine generally has enough CPU bandwidth to playback most stuff without it.
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marc.aronson
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Posted: Mon Feb 01, 2010 1:17 am |
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Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 2:07 am
Posts: 1532
Location:
California
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I have an ACER Revo R1600 (Single core ATOM, ION LE chipset) and I am having trouble getting XVMC to work on R6. I get playback but I do not see any reduction in CPU utilization. I've added the following to my xorg.conf file
Code: > Option "RenderAccel" "true" Option "NvAGP" "1" Option "XvmcUsesTextures" "false" Option "UseEvents" "true"
Section "Extensions" Option "Composite" "Disabled" EndSection
I've also added the folllowing ot .nvidia-settings-rc Code: 0/XVideoTextureSyncToVBlank=0 0/XVideoBlitterSyncToVBlank=0
Any suggestions on how to resolve wold be greatly appreciated!
_________________ Marc
The views expressed are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer.
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Big boy stan
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Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2010 9:53 am |
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Joined: Wed Jan 04, 2006 10:20 am
Posts: 387
Location:
South New Jersey, USA
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I did get my HDPVR working and now have 720P recordings on my TV. They show well on the BE/FE but despite my earlier testing, the Dell notebook struggles. CPU spikes and the video has a studder every 1 to 2 seconds.
Any suggestions would be apprecitated but I am really interested in why the FE handles the other test videos with no problem but cant play back the HDPVR files. The files are 720P and I have tried playing with the bit rates but they seems to make no difference.
According to mediainfo, the shuttle test file is MPEG-4, 1080P, 29.97 frames per sec and 20 Mbit while the HDPVR files are Mpeg-ts, 720P, 59fps, and 13Mbit.
What makes the HDPVR so difficult to decode and is there anything I can do about it (other then buy a new FE).
_________________ LINHES 8.6.1 BE/FE - MSI K9N6SGM-V with AMD A64 X2 4600+, 4GB Ram. 1.5TB WD. HDHR Prime. Nvidia GT210. MCE remote. FrontEnd - Dell Vostro 400 3.0GHz Core2Duo NVidia GeForce210. MCE Remote
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mattbatt
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Posted: Tue Nov 30, 2010 12:18 am |
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Joined: Tue Aug 15, 2006 11:14 am
Posts: 1343
Location:
Orlando FL
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I had to kill background Transcoding and I try not to watch anything HD while the System is recording. That said Fox gives me a hard time with it's 720 shows and the 1080 stuff is OK.
_________________ My System
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mihanson
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Posted: Tue Nov 30, 2010 12:45 am |
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Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2005 3:50 pm
Posts: 1013
Location:
Los Angeles
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Big Boy Stan: The h.264 encoded files (inside an mpeg container) that the HD-PVR produces are MUCH more complex, therefore more demanding on resources than OTA MPEG-2. Take a look at the HD-PVR wiki page on mythtv.org. I'm pretty sure that it's covered there.
_________________ Mike
My Hardware Profile
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