Sorry, maybe it was not clear: both machines, windows and unix,are not transcoding, are launched by exact parameters 1:1 (same job, same stream, same interfaces) but unix takes 5 times more RAM
I have a Centos server with 1Gb RAM, VLC is not specially compilled (maybe I should disable some modules), but VLC memory usage is huge - one idle instance with telnet interface takes about 100Mb, On unix simple streaming without transcoding takes about 230Mb of RAM On windows the exact proccess wit...
Is there any new help or documentation for this? I'm really confused right now, because looking at the documentation, I'm not sure is it suitable for new version (1.1.x) or not... I remember there was a page about x264 settings, but now I just cannot find it on videolan.org, using Google, in my book...
2. But there are some other tools that can use GPU acceleration during encoding also. Could you please explain what do you mean by saying "other tools". Is it other software? I've made quite a lot research, but still does not succeeded to anything better than VLC for LIVE content transcod...
Has anyone really smooth video with any VGA card?
1. I would like to buy new VGA card, just still I'm not sure which and which series exactly is better: ATI or Nvidia?
Or maybe from 1.1.3 where are no issues with these cards?
2. Does GPU accelaration helps transcoding videos?
I've tried transcoding live content with VLC 1.1.3 and it has extremely high CPU usage (45-60% CPU) compared to VLC 1.0.5 (15-20% CPU) Both VLC are running with default preferences, vlc is started with telnet interface enabled: vlc.exe -I dummy --intf="http" --http-host="127.0.0.1:860...
@VLC_help Dear VLC_help, have you seen mine message in this list? I've tried to subscribe and have posted twice about asking to fix this, also offering money (50 - 100 $ - is this enough?) , but seems like message even didn't apear in this message list. Maybe you can post it? I can send you message ...
I don't think this is a deinterlace problem: you can set a aspect ratio in client (Video > Aspect ratio > ) and video will be shown correctly. I guess the aspect ratio is given wrong in transcoded stream.
This is a bug of VLC. It just not able to keep correct aspect ratio transcoding using ts muxer and x264 codec (usualy from h264 source). The same we will get with :sout=#transcode{venc=x264{keyint=20},vcodec=x264,vb=700,width=320,height=240}:duplicate{dst=std{access=http,mux=ts,dst=:1234}} This is a...
I'm trying to stream from DVB-T If I try to stream the default output aspect ratio is 21:9, but I need the same as the source - 4:3. The sout options are: :sout=#transcode{venc=x264{keyint=20},vcodec=x264,vb=700,scale=0.5,width=320}:duplicate{dst=std{access=http,mux=ts,dst=:1234}} In debug I see: ma...
I've tried to stream from DVB but screen is stretched - aspect ratio is about 21:9, but it should be 4:3 VLC sout options are: :sout=#transcode{vcodec=h264,venc=x264{vbv-maxrate=128,vbv-minrate=128,qcomp=0,ratetol=0.1,keyint=20}vb=128,width=320,height=240,acodec=mp3,ab=64,scodec=none,me=umh,scale=1}...
Hello sasha_vienna, Yeah, All you need to do is setup a publishing point in your Windows Media Services, Set the source of that publishing point to your vlc server (mms://VLC-Server:8080)... Your PP will connect to the VLC stream, and anyone connecting to your PP will see the stream that is being r...
I'm trying to stream to linux server from Windows PC. I''ve tested Windows PC stream and it works well. It has these options: PC -> SERVER: :sout=#transcode{vcodec=mp2v,vb=250,scale=1}:duplicate{dst=std{access=http,mux=ts,dst=my_ip:5555}} (if it's a better way I will use it) After that I'm trying to...