'\" t .\" ** The above line should force tbl to be a preprocessor ** .\" Man page for vdr file formats .\" .\" Copyright (C) 2002 Klaus Schmidinger .\" .\" You may distribute under the terms of the GNU General Public .\" License as specified in the file COPYING that comes with the .\" vdr distribution. .\" .\" $Id: vdr.5 1.5 2002/09/29 13:06:40 kls Exp $ .\" .TH vdr 5 "7 Sep 2002" "1.2.0" "Video Disk Recorder Files" .SH NAME vdr file formats - the Video Disk Recorder Files .SH DESCRIPTION This page describes the formats of the various files \fBvdr\fR uses to store configuration data and recordings. .SH SYNTAX .SS CHANNELS The file \fIchannels.conf\fR contains the channel configuration. Each line defines either a \fBgroup delimiter\fR or a \fBchannel\fR. A \fBgroup delimiter\fR is a line starting with a ':' as the very first character, followed by arbitrary text. Example: \fB:First group\fR A \fBchannel definition\fR is a line with channel data, where the fields are separated by ':' characters. Example: \fBRTL:12188:h:1:27500:163:104:105:0:12003\fR The line number of a channel definition (not counting group separators!) defines the channel's number in OSD menus and the \fItimers.conf\fR file. The fields in a channel definition have the following meaning (from left to right): .TP .B Name The channel's name (if the name originally contains a ':' character it has to be replaced by '|'). .TP .B Frequency The transponder frequency in MHz for DVB-S and DVB-C, kHz for DVB-T (as an integer). .TP .B Polarization The polarization of the satellite signal. 'h' or 'H' for horizontal, 'v' or 'V' for vertical (DVB-S only). .TP .B DiSEqC The DiSEqC code to use for this channel (integer, DVB-S only). .TP .B Srate The symbol rate of this channel (DVB-S and DVB-C only). .TP .B VPID The video PID (set to '0' for radio channels, '1' for encrypted radio channels). .TP .B APID The audio PID (either one number, or two, separated by a comma). If this channel also carries Dolby Digital sound, the Dolby PIDs follow the audio PIDs, separated by a semicolon, as in .B ...:101,102;103,104:... .TP .B TPID The teletext PID. .TP .B Conditional access An integer defining how this channel can be accessed: .TS tab (@); l l. \fB0\fR@Free To Air \fB1...4\fR@explicitly requires the DVB card with the given number \fB>=100\fR@requires a specific decryption method defined in \fIca.conf\fR .TE .TP .B PNR The program number (aka service ID) of this channel. .SS TIMERS The file \fItimers.conf\fR contains the timer setup. Each line contains one timer definition, with individual fields separated by ':' characters. Example: \fB1:10:-T-----:2058:2150:50:5:Quarks & Co:\fR The fields in a timer definition have the following meaning (from left to right): .TP .B Status Defines whether this timer is \fBinactive\fR (0) or \fBactive\fR (1). The value 3 is used for instant recordings. Values other than these can be used by external programs to mark active timers and recognize if the user has modified them. When a user modifes an active timer the \fBstatus\fR field will be explicitly set to '1' (or '0', respectively, if the user deactivates the timer). Note: in order to allow future extensibility, external programs using the \fBstatus\fR parameter should only use the upper 16 bit of this 32 bit parameter and leave the lower 16 bit untouched. .TP .B Channel The number of the channel to record. .TP .B Day The day when this timer shall record. If this is a `single-shot' timer, this is the day of month on which this timer shall record. This must be in the range \fB1...31\fR. In case of a `repeating' timer this is a string consisting of exactly seven characters, where each character position corresponds to one day of the week (with Monday being the first day). The character '-' at a certain position means that the timer shall not record on that day. Any other character will cause the timer to record on that day. Example: .B MTWTF-- will define a timer that records on Monday thru Friday and does not record on weekends. The same result could be achieved with \fBABCDE--\fR (this is used to allow setting the days with language specific characters). The day definition of a `repeating' timer may be followed by the date when that timer shall hit for the first time. The format for this is \fB@YYYY-MM-DD\fR, so a complete definition could look like this: \fBMTWTF--@2002-02-18\fR which would implement a timer that records Moday thru Friday, and will hit for the first time on or after February 18, 2002. This \fBfirst day\fR feature can be used to disable a repeating timer for a couple of days, or for instance to define a new Mon...Fri timer on wednesday, which actually starts "monday next week". The \fBfirst day\fR date given need not be that of a day when the timer would actually hit. .TP .B Start A four digit integer defining when this timer shall \fBstart\fR recording. The format is \fBhhmm\fR, so \fB1430\fR would mean "half past two" in the afternoon. .TP .B Stop A four digit integer defining when this timer shall \fBstop\fR recording. The format is the same as for the \fBstart\fR time. .TP .B Priority An integer in the range \fB0...99\fR, defining the \fBpriority\fR of this timer and of recordings created by this timer. \fB0\fR represents the lowest value, \fB99\fR the highest. The priority is used to decide which timer shall be started in case there are two or more timers with the exact same \fBstart\fR time. The first timer in the list with the highest priority will be used. This value is also stored with the recording and is later used to decide which recording to remove from disk in order to free space for a new recording. If the disk runs full and a new recording needs more space, an existing recording with the lowest priority (and which has exceeded its guaranteed \fBlifetime\fR) will be removed. If all available DVB cards are currently occupied, a timer with a higher priority will interrupt the timer with the lowest priority in order to start recording. .TP .B Lifetime The \fBguaranteed lifetime\fR (in days) of a recording created by this timer. \fB0\fR means that this recording may be automatically deleted at any time by a new recording with higher priority. \fB99\fR means that this recording will never be automatically deleted. Any number in the range \fB1...98\fR means that this recording may not be automatically deleted in favour of a new recording, until the given number of days since the \fBstart\fR time of the recording has passed by. .TP .B File The \fBfile name\fR this timer will give to a recording. If the name contains any ':' characters, these have to be replaced by '|'. If the name shall contain subdirectories, these have to be delimited by '~' (since the '/' character may be part of a regular programme name). The special keywords \fBTITLE\fR and \fBEPISODE\fR, if present, will be replaced by the title and episode information from the EPG data at the time of recording (if that data is available). If at the time of recording either of these cannot be determined, \fBTITLE\fR will default to the channel name, and \fBEPISODE\fR will default to a blank. .TP .B Summary Arbitrary text that describes the recording made by this timer. Any newline characters in the summary have to be replaced by '|', and the summary may contain ':' characters. If this field is not empty, its contents will be written into the \fIsummary.vdr\fR file of the recording. .SS CONDITIONAL ACCESS The file \fIca.conf\fR defines the numbers to be used in the \fBConditional access\fR field of channels in \fIchannels.conf\fR and assigns descriptive texts to them. Example: \fB101 Premiere World\fR Anything after (and including) a '#' character is comment. Value lines consist of an integer number, followed by a text describing this decryption method (typically the name of the pay tv service using this decryption method). The special value \fB0\fR means \fBFree To Air\fR, which can be used for channels that don't require additional decryption hardware. The values \fB1...4\fR can be used for channels that for some reason explicitly need a given DVB card (for backward compatibility). .SS REMOTE CONTROL KEYS The file \fIremote.conf\fR contains the key assignments for all remote control units. Each line consists of one key assignment in the following format: \fBname.key code\fR where \fBname\fR is the name of the remote control (for instance KBD for the PC keyboard, RCU for the home-built "Remote Control Unit", or LIRC for the "Linux Infrared Remote Control"), \fBkey\fR is the name of the key that is defined (like Up, Down, Menu etc.), and \fBcode\fR is a character string that this remote control delivers when the given key is pressed. .SS COMMANDS The file \fIcommands.conf\fR contains the definitions of commands that can be executed from the \fBvdr\fR main menu's "Commands" option. Each line contains one command definition in the following format: \fBtitle : command\fR where \fBtitle\fR is the string that will be displayed in the "Commands" menu, and \fBcommand\fR is the actual command string that will be executed when this option is selected. The delimiting ':' may be surrounded by any number of white space characters. By default the menu entries in the "Commands" menu will be numbered '1'...'9' to make them selectable by pressing the corresponding number key. If you want to use your own numbering scheme (maybe to skip certain numbers), just precede the \fBtitle\fRs with the numbers of your choice. \fBvdr\fR will suppress its automatic numbering if the first entry in \fIcommands.conf\fR starts with a digit in the range '1'...'9', followed by a blank. In order to avoid error messages to the console, every command should have \fIstderr\fR redirected to \fIstdout\fR. Everything the command prints to \fIstdout\fR will be displayed in a result window, with \fBtitle\fR as its title. Examples: Check for new mail: /usr/local/bin/checkmail 2>&1 .br CPU status : /usr/local/bin/cpustatus 2>&1 .br Disk space : df -h | grep '/video' | awk '{ print 100 - $5 "% free"; }' .br Calendar : date;echo;cal Note that the commands 'checkmail' and 'cpustatus' are only \fBexamples\fR! Don't send emails to the author asking where to find these ;-) .SS SVDRP HOSTS The file \fIsvdrphosts.conf\fR contains the IP numbers of all hosts that are allowed to access the SVDRP port. Each line contains one IP number in the format \fBIP-Address[/Netmask]\fR where \fBIP-Address\fR is the address of a host or a network in the usual dot separated notation (as in 192.168.100.1). If the optional \fBNetmask\fR is given only the given number of bits of \fBIP-Address\fR are taken into account. This allows you to grant SVDRP access to all hosts of an entire network. \fBNetmask\fR can be any integer from 1 to 32. The special value of 0 is only accepted if the \fBIP-Address\fR is 0.0.0.0, because this will give access to any host (\fBUSE THIS WITH CARE!\fR). Everything following (and including) a '#' character is considered to be comment. Examples: 127.0.0.1 # always accept localhost .br 192.168.100.0/24 # any host on the local net .br 204.152.189.113 # a specific host .br 0.0.0.0/0 # any host on any net (\fBUSE WITH CARE!\fR) .SS SETUP The file \fIsetup.conf\fR contains the basic configuration options for \fBvdr\fR. Each line contains one option in the format "Name = Value". See the MANUAL file for a description of the available options. .SS AUDIO/VIDEO DATA The files \fI001.vdr\fR...\fI255.vdr\fR are the actual recorded MPEG data files. In order to keep the size of an individual file below a given limit, a recording is split into several files. The contents of these files is \fBPacketized Elementary Stream\fR (PES) and contains ES packets with ids 0xE0 for video, 0xC0 for audio 1 and 0xC1 for audio 2 (if available). Dolby Digital data is stored in packets with ids 0xBD. .SS INDEX The file \fIindex.vdr\fR (if present in a recording directory) contains the (binary) index data into each of the the recording files \fI001.vdr\fR...\fI255.vdr\fR. It is used during replay to determine the current position within the recording, and to implement skipping and fast forward/back functions. See the definition of the \fBcIndexFile\fR class for details about the actual contents of this file. .SS SUMMARY The file \fIsummary.vdr\fR (if present in a recording directory) contains a description of the recording, derived from the EPG data at recording time (if such data was available) or the \fBSummary\fR field of the corresponding timer. This is a plain ASCII file and can contain arbitrary text. .SS RESUME The file \fIresume.vdr\fR (if present in a recording directory) contains the position within the recording where the last replay session left off. The data is a four byte (binary) integer value and defines an offset into the file \fIindex.vdr\fR. .SS MARKS The file \fImarks.vdr\fR (if present in a recording directory) contains the editing marks defined for this recording. Each line contains the definition of one mark in the following format: \fBhh:mm:ss.ff comment\fR where \fBhh:mm:ss.ff\fR is a frame position within the recording, given as "hours, minutes, seconds and (optional) frame number". \fBcomment\fR can be any string and may be used to describe this mark. If present, \fBcomment\fR must be separated from the frame position by at least one blank. The lines in this file need not necessarily appear in the correct temporal sequence, they will be automatically sorted by time index. \fBCURRENT RESTRICTIONS:\fR -\ the comment is currently not used by VDR .br -\ marks must have a frame number, and that frame MUST be an I-frame (this means that only marks generated by VDR itself can be used, since they will always be guaranteed to mark I-frames). .SS EPG DATA The file \fIepg.data\fR contains the EPG data in an easily parsable format. The first character of each line defines what kind of data this line contains. The following tag characters are defined: .TS tab (@); l l. \fBC\fR@ \fBE\fR@ \fBT\fR@ \fBS\fR@<subtitle> \fBD\fR@<description> \fBe\fR@ \fBc\fR@ .TE Lowercase characters mark the end of a sequence that was started by the corresponding uppercase character. The outer frame consists of a sequence of one or more \fBC\fR...\fBc\fR (Channel) entries. Inside these any number of \fBE\fR...\fBe\fR (Event) entries are allowed. The \fBT\fR, \fBS\fR and \fBD\fR entries are optional (although every event should at least have a \fBT\fR entry). .TS tab (@); l l. <service id> @is the "program number" as defined in 'channels.conf' <channel name> @is the "name" as in 'channels.conf' (for information only) <start time> @is the time (as a time_t integer) in UTC when this event starts <duration> @is the time (in seconds) that this event will take <table id> @is a hex number that indicates the table this event is contained\ in (if this is left empty or 0 this event will not be overwritten\ or modified by data that comes from the DVB stream) <title> @is the title of the event <subtitle> @is the subtitle (typically the name of the episode etc.) <description> @is the description of the event .TE This file will be read at program startup in order to restore the results of previous EPG scans. .SH SEE ALSO .BR vdr (1) .SH AUTHOR Written by Klaus Schmidinger. .SH REPORTING BUGS Report bugs to <vdr-bugs@cadsoft.de>. .SH COPYRIGHT Copyright \(co 2002 Klaus Schmidinger. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.