DVD Authoring
Try this pretty sweet DVD Authoring tool for Winders.
AUTHORING PC MEDIA TO DVD USING THE LINUX OPERATING SYSTEM
Author: Rick Harris
Location: Adelaide, Australia
Email: rickfharris@yahoo.com.au
This howto is written in the attempt to help those reading to:
1) Accomplish transferring a video media file (.avi, .mpg, .wmv, .mov, etc.) to DVD media in a format that will allow it to be played on a standalone DVD player.
2) Create professional style menus with audio to allow selection of Titles, Chapters & other menus. Tools needed:
Latest mjpegtools 1.6.2 -> http://mjpeg.sourceforge.net/ Latest ffmpeg 0.4.9_pre1 -> http://ffmpeg.sourceforge.net/ Latest transcode 0.6.14 -> http://www.transcoding.org Latest dvd+rw-tools 5.20.4.10.8 -> http://fy.chalmers.se/~appro/linux/DVD+RW/ Mencoder (comes with the mplayer package) -> http://www.mplayerhq.hu The GIMP Image Manipulation Program -> http://www.gimp.org Latest dvdauthor 0.6.10 -> http://sourceforge.net/projects/dvdauthor/
Tools optional:
Xine - to test DVD menus before burning -> http://xine.sourceforge.net/ Normalize - to normalise volume on audio .pcm/.wav files -> http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~cvaill/normalize Toolame -> http://www.planckenergy.com
To make things easier to read, I will be using some real filenames, always keeping them with any created files & saved config files in the same directory.
Note any copyright issues for your location if you intend to use these for anything other than private use. Encoding the movie
$ transcode -i matrix.avi -y ffmpeg --export_prof dvd-ntsc --export_asr 3 -o matrix -D0 \ -s2 -m matrix.ac3 -J modfps --export_fps 29.97
The above will produce 2 files, 'matrix.m2v' and 'matrix.ac3' which have been split from the original into video & audio files. The video(.m2v) has now been re-encoded into a DVD compliant mpeg2 format & the audio(.ac3) has been encoded into an AC3 DVD audio stream. Aspect Ratio
The above transcode lines will convert & encode to an aspect ratio of 16:9. If an aspect ratio of 4:3 is desired then replace '--export_asr 3' with '--export_asr 2' in your transcode line. Dvdauthor will only work correctly on files with aspect ratios of either 4:3 or 16:9 Convert 2-channel stereo audio track to 5.1 surround sound (optional)
Using the above transcode lines will result in a 2-channel stereo audio track.
Depending on the brand of 5.1 surround sound entertainment system, this usually results in the audio only being present on the centre & sub channels.
Find out if the original .avi/.mpg file already contains a 5.1 AC3 audio track:
$ mplayer -vo dummy -identify original.avi 2> /dev/null | grep 5.1
A positive output would look something like:
AC3: 5.1 (3f+2r+lfe) 48000 Hz 384.0 kbit/s
If it does, then extract it using 'tcextract' (part of the transcode package) & use it in your mplex line below instead. In this way, front to rear panning will not be lost on true 5.1 audio tracks, & no added conversion is necessary:
$ tcextract -d2 -i matrix.avi -a0 -x ac3 | tcextract -d2 -x ac3 -t raw > matrix.ac3
If it doesn't, then using the existing 2-channel audio track, it is possible to create a 5.1 surround sound track so that the audio will be present on all 6 channels (front to rear panning is lost).
See here -> http://mightylegends.zapto.org/dvd/dvdauthor_howto_surround.html
Combine the new audio & video files into one DVD mpg.
$ mplex -f8 -o matrix_dvd.mpg matrix.m2v matrix.ac3
Test the files in mplayer or xine. eg. 'mplayer -vo xv matrix_dvd.mpg'
Alternatively, transcode has a preview option available so that the movie can be watched (video only) as it's being encoded with the '-J pv=cache=30' option, like so (note that this will incur a slight performance hit & encoding will be slower as a result):
$ transcode -i matrix.avi -y ffmpeg --export_prof dvd-ntsc --export_asr 3 -o matrix -D0 \ -s2 -m matrix.ac3 -J pv=cache=30,modfps --export_fps 25
To preview whether AV sync is going to be correct, only encode a small amount of the movie by adding '-c 0-00:05:00' to the end of your transcode line. This will encode just the first 5 minutes of the movie, then you will need to merge(mux) the two AV streams as mentioned above using mplex. Preview the resultant .mpg file in mplayer/xine. Creating the menus
It may seem complex & time consuming first time through, but once it's been done a couple of times it becomes very quick & easy.
You can now add the mpg to QDVDAuthor or Klvemkdvd authoring programs and create your DVD or use dvdauthor from the command line as such:
- Notice the -c "00:00:00.000,00:00:38.066" These are chapter markers. 00:00:00.000 is HH:MM:SS.SSS
To get file length in seconds, run this:
$ mplayer -vo dummy -identify matrix.mpg 2> /dev/null | grep ID_LENGTH | \ gawk -F= {'print $2'}
Can use this little perl script I wrote to generate chapter info at 5 minute intervals chapgen.pl and generate your chapter string like this:
$ chapgen.pl `mplayer -vo dummy -identify matrix.mpg 2> /dev/null | \ grep ID_LENGTH | gawk -F= {'print $2'}`
- Create DVD filesystem & Create DVD information (IFO) files:
$ dvdauthor -c "00:00:00.000,00:00:38.066,00:02:40.699,00:08:39.865,00:10:40.465" \ -o newdvd final.mpg; dvdauthor -o newdvd -T
More info on dvdauthor
Burn the Video_TS and Audio_TS created with K3B DVD Video mode.
Happy authoring!
Some nice progress is also currently being made on a complete GUI based DVD authoring tool for Linux.
Two that stand out are:
DVDStyler -> http://dvdstyler.sourceforge.net QDVDAuthor -> http://qdvdauthor.sourceforge.net/
Credits
Scott T. Smith - creator of dvdauthor Thomas Oestrich & Tilmann Bitterberg - creators of transcode The ffmpeg team The mjpeg team Wolfgang Wershofen - for precise & detailed help Ian Pointer - for his article at linuxjournal.com, Issue# 116 James A. Pattie - for his 'DVDs under Linux' presentation James Tappin - for his dvdauthor tutorial Links
Wolfgang Wershofen has done some interesting work on different xml configs & a set of scripts to automate the whole menu making process. They can be found here -> http://www.wershofen.de/downloads/dvdauthor.xml http://www.wershofen.de/downloads/dvdauthor_example.tar.gz http://www.wershofen.de/downloads/dvdwizard.tar.gz http://www.linuxjournal.com - An interesting article on DVD authoring under Linux http://www.pcxperience.org/james/dvd/presentations/ - James Pattie's DVD presentations http://www.tappin.me.uk/Linux/dvd.html - James Tappin's dvdauthor tutorial (recommended reading for those transferring DV to DVD)