vdr/FORMATS
Klaus Schmidinger 66bab90b60 Version 0.96
- Made VDR compile with libdvdread-0.9.1 (thanks to Andreas Schultz).
  Note that you now _need_ version 0.9.1 of libdvdread to compile VDR with
  DVD support!
- Several fixes to the replay mode display (thanks to Stefan Huelswitt):
  no more replay mode display when pressing the "Green" or "Yellow" button
  (Skip +/-60s); fixed timeout when pressing '0' to set an editing mark while
  the progress display is not shown; mode display is shown after progress
  display is closed; pressing "Ok" while the mode display is on brings up
  the progress display; no more unnecessary display of "normal play mode".
- Supplying the new frontend parameter 'Inversion' (currently it is always
  set to INVERSION_AUTO, which should work with all channels on Astra).
- Removing unnecessary double quotes from EPG Subtitle in EPGBugfixLevel >=1.
- EPG info is now updated if the contents changes but the ID remains the same.
- Fixed handling SVDRP commands whith more than one blank between the command
  word and the options.
- The current volume setting is now saved to setup.conf and restored at the
  next program start.
- New command line option '-r' to define a command that gets called before and
  after each recording (see INSTALL for details).
- Implemented a check to see whether the system time is running linearly.
- Writing the current time (as seen by VDR) into the log file when starting
  a timer recording (this may help debugging cases where timers don't start
  at the expected time).
- Made the volume, mute and power keys work when a menu is active, too (thanks
  to Matthias Weingart).
2001-09-23 18:00:00 +02:00

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Video Disk Recorder File Formats
--------------------------------
* channels.conf
This file contains the channel setup.
It consists of two types of lines: "group delimiters" and "channel
definitions".
A "group delimiter" is a line starting with a ':' as the very first
character, followed by arbitrary text.
Example: ":First group"
A "channel definition" is a line with channel data, where the fields
are separated by ':' characters:
Example: "RTL:12188:h:1:27500:163:104:105:0:12003"
The fields in a channel definition have the following meaning (from left
to right):
- Name: the channel's name (if the name originally contains a ':' character
it has to be replaced by '|')
- Frequency in MHz (as an integer)
- Polarization (one of 'h', 'H', 'v', 'V') **
- Diseqc number **
- Symbol rate
- Video PID
- 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 "...:101,102;103,104:..."
- Teletext PID
- Conditional Access (0 = Free To Air, 1 = can be decrypted by the first
DVB card, 2 = can be decrypted by the second DVB card)
- Program Number
Fields marked with ** are only meaningful for DVB-S (satellite) receivers.
DVB-C receivers simply ignore these.
* timers.conf
This file contains the timer setup.
The fields in a timer definition have the following meaning (from left
to right):
- Timer active (0 = inactive, 1 = active)
Values larger than '1' 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 'active' field will be explicitly set to '1'.
- Program number of the channel to record
- Day of recording, either one or more of
M------ = Monday
-T----- = Tuesday
--W---- = Wednesday
---T--- = Thrusday
----F-- = Friday
-----S- = Saturday
------S = Sunday
(any combination is possible, for example MTWTF--, and the days may be
indicated by any characters except '-', so for example ABC---- would set
a timer that records on monday, tuesday and wednesday) or the "day of month"
(1..31)
- Start time (first two digits for the hour, second two digits for the minutes)
- End time (first two digits for the hour, second two digits for the minutes)
- Priority (from 0 to 99, 0 = lowest prioity, 99 = highest priority)
- Guaranteed lifetime of recording (in days); 0 means that this recording may
be automatically deleted by a new recording with higher priority, 99 means
that this recording will never be automatically deleted
- Name of timer (will be used to name the recording); if the name contains
any ':' characters, these have to be replaced with '|'. If the name shall
contain subdirectories, these have to be delimited by '~' (since the '/'
character may be part of a regular programme name).
- Summary (any newline characters in the summary have to be replaced with '|';
the summary may contain ':' characters)
* setup.conf
This file contains the basic configuration options for VDR.
Each line contains one option in the format "Name = Value".
See the MANUAL file for a description of the available options.
* commands.conf
This file contains the definitions of commands that can be executed from
the "Main" menus "Commands" option.
Each line contains one command definition in the following format:
title : command
where 'title' is the string the will be displayed in the "Commands" menu,
and 'command' 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.
In order to avoid error messages to stderr, every command should have
stderr redirected to stdout. Everything the command prints to stdout will
be displayed in a result window, with 'title' as its title.
Examples:
1 Check for new mail: /usr/local/bin/checkmail 2>&1
2 CPU status : /usr/local/bin/cpustatus 2>&1
3 Disk space : df -h | grep '/video' | awk '{ print 100 - $5 "% free"; }'
If the first non-blank character of the 'title' is a digit in the range
1..9, the command can be selected directly by pressing the respective numerical
key on the remote control.
* marks.vdr
This file (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:
hh:mm:ss.ff comment
where 'hh:mm:ss.ff' is a frame position within the recording, given as "hours,
minutes, seconds and (optional) frame number". 'comment' can be any string
and may be used to describe this mark. If present, 'comment' 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.
CURRENT RESTRICTIONS:
- the 'comment' is currently not used by VDR
- 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).
* 001.vdr ... 255.vdr
These 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 "Packetized Elementary Stream" (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.