Why does "zerolatency" turn my videos "green"?

About encoding, codec settings, muxers and filter usage
Timothy Grove
Blank Cone
Blank Cone
Posts: 33
Joined: 07 Sep 2011 13:17

Why does "zerolatency" turn my videos "green"?

Postby Timothy Grove » 05 May 2017 14:18

Seemed like a good subject line to discuss over coffee!

I've added "--sout-x264-tune=zerolatency" to my transcoding chain and while my resultant videos play fine in VLC, in other players I've tried they are mostly just green (or black) with a narrow strip of discernable video along the top. Any ideas about why this would happen or how to address this issue?

Rémi Denis-Courmont
Developer
Developer
Posts: 15266
Joined: 07 Jun 2004 16:01
VLC version: master
Operating System: Linux
Contact:

Re: Why does "zerolatency" turn my videos "green"?

Postby Rémi Denis-Courmont » 05 May 2017 19:25

Maybe the other player does not support whatever the profile properly?

This forum is probably not the best place to get expertise about competing players, TBH.
Rémi Denis-Courmont
https://www.remlab.net/
Private messages soliciting support will be systematically discarded

Timothy Grove
Blank Cone
Blank Cone
Posts: 33
Joined: 07 Sep 2011 13:17

Re: Why does "zerolatency" turn my videos "green"?

Postby Timothy Grove » 06 May 2017 10:59

I'm not to worried about the other players, but I was curious about the green result I was seeing in them. My problem was that I couldn't transcode very small videos without including the "zerolatency" option. I've since found that another solution is to use very small framecounts for frametype lookahead (sout-x264-lookahead=5) or to disable mb-tree ratecontrol altogether. I don't get green videos with these fixes.

Jean-Baptiste Kempf
Site Administrator
Site Administrator
Posts: 37523
Joined: 22 Jul 2005 15:29
VLC version: 4.0.0-git
Operating System: Linux, Windows, Mac
Location: Cone, France
Contact:

Re: Why does "zerolatency" turn my videos "green"?

Postby Jean-Baptiste Kempf » 11 Jun 2017 15:46

zerolatency is an option that modifies quite a bit the stream type. That's probably why.
Jean-Baptiste Kempf
http://www.jbkempf.com/ - http://www.jbkempf.com/blog/category/Videolan
VLC media player developer, VideoLAN President and Sites administrator
If you want an answer to your question, just be specific and precise. Don't use Private Messages.


Return to “VLC stream-output (sout)”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests