And the timestamps problem is an ffmpeg-mt bug (aka ffmpeg-mt's problem) or a VLC-specific problem?Patches for VLC and FFmpeg-mt already exist, but it is NOT bug-free. It has many timestamps problem.
If it is VLC's problem, why isn't there a bug for that defect in trac?
One moe question: Which of the one is true: a) that the regression also appears in other players, like Mplayer? or b) the regression appears only in VLC? If it's the first, then kudos for the videolan team for keeping it safe.ffmpeg-mt regression compared to ffmpeg.
Agreed, a handy guide on how to compile VLC with ffmpeg-mt would be nice for people like me that don't bother risking.Could anyone tell me how to enable ffmpeg-multithread-decoding in VLC?
Is it enough to build vlc against ffmpeg-mt or do I have to hack something (if so, what?)
I'd love to test this to keep track of ffmpeg-mt's progress.
thanks!
Are there any instructions on how to accomplish this?You have to patch both.
From j-b's sayings, I suppose you can't just click on a checkbox or add a flag to the compiler and magically make VLC compile with ffmpeg-mt instead of ffmpeg. You may need to do some actual programing to make VLC and ffmpeg-mt bond together. Is that correct?Are there any instructions on how to accomplish this?You have to patch both.
Yes. Between 5% and 20% faster depending on the sample.PS: Does the 1.0.5 version add any speed to H.264 playback? People say it's faster than 1.0.3 (how much faster?)
Use VLC 1.1 and DxVA2
I've just installed VLC 1.0.5 on a brand new Laptop and am trying to improve the H.264 playback but arn't able to work out how to
- Open the preferences
- Tick advanced in the lower right corner
- Go to "Input/Codec"
- Go to "other codecs" subcategory
- Go to "FFmpeg"
- Put the "skip-filter for H264" to all
- Restart VLC
1.1.0 has faster h264.I've just installed VLC 1.0.5 on a brand new Laptop and am trying to improve the H.264 playback but arn't able to work out how to
- Open the preferences
- Tick advanced in the lower right corner
- Go to "Input/Codec"
- Go to "other codecs" subcategory
- Go to "FFmpeg"
- Put the "skip-filter for H264" to all
- Restart VLC
Has the setting changed in 1.0.5?
- Put the "skip-filter for H264" to all
EDIT: Could it be the "Skip the loop filter for H.264 decoding"?
I have tried setting this to 'All' but it doesn't seem to change anything.
Thank you very much for this trick. Now my 1080p videos go very well!Put the "skip-filter for H264" to all
Hi,Hello,
I am trying to transcode one HD MPEG4 1080i video in SD MPEG2 video.
But transcoded video has motion blur effect on faster movements.
Because this video is football game, there are a lot of faster movements, so video is bad.
I am tray to play original video (HD MPEG) and I see motions blur effect too. So a suppose problem is decoding.
I tried with differences OS (Linux Centos, Windows HP, Windows 7 64 bit )
I used differences versions of VLC (1.1.2, 1.1.4).
Processor is I7 930, 8 MB RAM, processor does not exceed 30%
I’m attach part of a video(100MB):
http://rapidshare.com/files/418977511/arena1_hd.ts
Have anyone idea where problem can be???
A spend a lot of time to find problem, but a can’t find it
Return to “General VLC media player Troubleshooting”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 23 guests