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1037 lines
41 KiB
Groff
1037 lines
41 KiB
Groff
'\" t
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.\" ** The above line should force tbl to be a preprocessor **
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.\" Man page for vdr file formats
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.\"
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.\" Copyright (C) 2021 Klaus Schmidinger
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.\"
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.\" You may distribute under the terms of the GNU General Public
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.\" License as specified in the file COPYING that comes with the
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.\" vdr distribution.
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.\"
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.\" $Id: vdr.5 5.6 2022/01/14 10:46:15 kls Exp $
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.\"
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.TH vdr 5 "27 Dec 2021" "2.6" "Video Disk Recorder Files"
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.SH NAME
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vdr_files \- the Video Disk Recorder Files
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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This page describes the formats of the various files \fBvdr\fR uses to
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store configuration data and recordings.
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.SH SYNTAX
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.SS CHANNELS
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The file \fIchannels.conf\fR contains the channel configuration.
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Each line defines either a \fBgroup delimiter\fR or a \fBchannel\fR.
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A \fBgroup delimiter\fR is a line starting with a ':' as the very first
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character, followed by arbitrary text. Example:
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\fB:First group\fR
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Group delimiters may also be used to specify the number of the next channel.
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To do this, the character '@' and a number must immediately follow the ':',
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as in
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\fB:@201 First group\fR
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The given number must be larger than the number of any previous channel
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(otherwise it is silently ignored).
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A group delimiter can also be used to just set the next channel's number,
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without an explicit delimiter text, as in
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\fB:@201\fR
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Such a delimiter will not appear in the Channels menu.
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A \fBchannel definition\fR is a line with channel data, where the fields
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are separated by ':' characters. Example:
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.TS
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tab (@);
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l.
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\fBRTL Television,RTL;RTL World:12187:hC34M2O0S0:S19.2E:27500:163=2:104=deu;106=deu:105:0:12003:1:1089:0\fR
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.TE
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The line number of a channel definition (not counting group separators,
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and based on a possible previous '@...' parameter)
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defines the channel's number in OSD menus and the \fItimers.conf\fR file.
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The fields in a channel definition have the following meaning (from left
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to right):
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.TP
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.B Name
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The channel's name (if the name originally contains a ':' character
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it has to be replaced by '|').
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Some TV stations provide a way of deriving a "short name" from the
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channel name, which can be used in situations where there is not
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much space for displaying a long name. If a short name is available
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for this channel, it follows the full name and is delimited by a comma,
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as in
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\fBRTL Television,RTL:...\fR
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If the short name itself would contain a comma, it is replaced with a '.'.
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Note that some long channel names may contain a comma, so the delimiting comma
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is always the rightmost one.
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If present, the name of the service provider or "bouquet" is appended
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to the channel name, separated by a semicolon, as in
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\fBRTL Television,RTL;RTL World:...\fR
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.TP
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.B Frequency
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The transponder frequency (as an integer). For DVB-S this value is in MHz. For DVB-C
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and DVB-T it can be given either in MHz, kHz or Hz (the actual value given will be
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multiplied by 1000 until it is larger than 1000000).
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.TP
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.B Parameters
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Various parameters, depending on whether this is a DVB-S, DVB-C or DVB-T channel.
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Each parameter consist of a key character, followed by an integer number that
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represents the actual setting of that parameter. The valid key characters, their
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meaning (and allowed values) are
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.TS
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tab (@);
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l l.
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\fBB\fR@Bandwidth (1712, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10)
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\fBC\fR@Code rate high priority (0, 12, 23, 34, 35, 45, 56, 67, 78, 89, 910, 999)
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\fBD\fR@coDe rate low priority (0, 12, 23, 34, 35, 45, 56, 67, 78, 89, 910, 999)
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\fBG\fR@Guard interval (4, 8, 16, 32, 128, 19128, 19256, 999)
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\fBH\fR@Horizontal polarization
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\fBI\fR@Inversion (0, 1, 999)
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\fBL\fR@Left circular polarization
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\fBM\fR@Modulation (2, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 999)
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\fBN\fR@pilot mode (0, 1, 999)
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\fBO\fR@rollOff (0, 20, 25, 35)
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\fBP\fR@stream id (0-255)
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\fBQ\fR@t2 system id (0-65535)
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\fBR\fR@Right circular polarization
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\fBS\fR@delivery System (0, 1)
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\fBT\fR@Transmission mode (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 999)
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\fBV\fR@Vertical polarization
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\fBX\fR@siso/miso mode (0, 1)
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\fBY\fR@hierarchY (0, 1, 2, 4, 999)
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.TE
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\fBBandwidth:\fR The bandwidth of the channel in MHz (1712 in kHz): (DVB-T/DVB-T2 only).
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\fBCode rate high priority:\fR Forward Error Correction (FEC) of the high priority stream (DVB-T/DVB-T2).
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For DVB-S/DVB-S2 this parameter specifies the inner FEC scheme.
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12 = 1/2, 23 = 2/3, 34 = 3/4, ...
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\fBCode rate low priority:\fR Forward Error Correction (FEC) of the low priority stream (DVB-T/DVB-T2 only).
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If no hierarchy is used, set to 0.
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\fBGuard interval:\fR The guard interval value (DVB-T only): 4 = 1/4, 8 = 1/8, 16 = 1/16, 32 = 1/32, 128 = 1/128, 19128 = 19/128, 19256 = 19/256.
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\fBInversion:\fR Specifies whether the DVB frontend needs spectral inversion (DVB-T and DVB-C only). This is frontend specific, if in doubt, omit.
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\fBModulation:\fR Specifies the modulation/constellation of the channel as follows:
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.TS
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tab (@);
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l l.
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\fB2\fR@QPSK (DVB-S, DVB-S2, DVB-T, DVB-T2, ISDB-T)
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\fB5\fR@8PSK (DVB-S, DVB-S2)
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\fB6\fR@16APSK (DVB-S2)
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\fB7\fR@32APSK (DVB-S2)
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\fB10\fR@VSB8 (ATSC aerial)
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\fB11\fR@VSB16 (ATSC aerial)
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\fB12\fR@DQPSK (ISDB-T)
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\fB16\fR@QAM16 (DVB-T, DVB-T2, ISDB-T)
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\fB32\fR@QAM32
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\fB64\fR@QAM64 (DVB-C, DVB-T, DVB-T2, ISDB-T)
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\fB128\fR@QAM128 (DVB-C)
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\fB256\fR@QAM256 (DVB-C, DVB-T2)
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.TE
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\fBPilot mode:\fR The pilot mode (0 = "off", 1 = "on", 999 = "auto") for DVB-S2 multiplex (DVB-S2 only).
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\fBRolloff:\fR The Nyquist filter rolloff factor for DVB-S (\fB35\fR) and DVB-S2 (\fB35\fR, 25, 20),
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35 = 0.35, 25 = 0.25, 20 = 0.20, DVB-S/DVB-S2 default value is 0.35
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\fBStream id:\fR Input Stream Identifier (ISI) (\fB0\fR-255) for DVB-S2 multiplex or
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Physical Layer Pipe (PLP) id (\fB0\fR-255) for DVB-T2 multiplex (DVB-S2/DVB-T2 only,
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with devices that support "multi streaming").
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\fBT2 System id:\fR Unique identifier (\fB0\fR-65535) of T2 system within the DVB network (DVB-T2).
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\fBTransmission mode:\fR Number of DVB-T OFDM carriers, 32 = 32k, 16 = 16k, 8 = 8k, 4 = 4k, 2 = 2k, 1 = 1k. If in doubt, try 8k.
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\fBSISO/MISO mode:\fR Specifies the Single-Input/Multiple-Input Single-Output mode (\fB0\fR = SISO, 1 = MISO) (DVB-T2).
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\fBHierarchy:\fR If set to 1, this transponder uses two streams, high priority and low priority.
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If in doubt, try 0 (off). (DVB-T/DVB-T2 only).
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\fBDelivery System:\fR The delivery system (0 = "first generation" (DVB-S/DVB-T), 1 = "second generation" (DVB-S2/DVB-T2).
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\fBPolarization:\fR Satellite antenna polarization.
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H = horizontal, V = vertical, R = circular right, L = circular left.
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The polarization parameters have no integer numbers following them. This is for
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compatibility with files from older versions and also to keep the DVB-S entries
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as simple as possible.
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The special value \fB999\fR is used for "automatic", which means the driver
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will automatically determine the proper value (if possible).
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An example of a parameter field for a DVB-T channel might look like this:
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\fBB8C23D12G8M16T8Y0S0\fR
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An example of a parameter field for a DVB-T2 channel might look like this:
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\fBB8C23D12G8M16T8Y0P0S1\fR
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An example of a parameter field for a DVB-C channel might look like this:
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\fBC0M64\fR
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An example of a parameter field for a DVB-S channel might look like this:
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\fBHC56M2O35S0\fR
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An example of a parameter field for a DVB-S2 channel might look like this:
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\fBHC910M2O35S1\fR
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Plugins that implement devices that need their own set of parameters may
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store those in the parameters string in arbitrary format (not necessarily
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the "character/number" format listed above). The only condition is that
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the string may not contain colons (':') or newline characters.
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.TP
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.B Source
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The signal source of this channel, as defined in the file \fIsources.conf\fR.
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.TP
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.B Srate
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The symbol rate of this channel (DVB-S and DVB-C only).
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.TP
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.B VPID
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The video PID (set to '0' for radio channels).
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If this channel uses a separate PCR PID, it follows the VPID, separated by a
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plus sign, as in
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.B ...:164+17:...
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If this channel has a video mode other than 0, the mode
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follows the pids, separated by an '=' sign, as in
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.B ...:164+17=27:...
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.TP
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.B APID
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The audio PID (either one number, or several, separated by commas).
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If this channel also carries Dolby Digital sound, the Dolby PIDs follow
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the audio PIDs, separated by a semicolon, as in
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.B ...:101,102;103,104:...
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If certain audio PIDs broadcast in specific languages, the language
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codes for these can be appended to the individual audio or Dolby PID, separated
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by an '=' sign, as in
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.B ...:101=deu,102=eng;103=deu,104=eng:...
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Some channels broadcast two different languages in the two stereo channels, which
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can be indicated by adding a second language code, delimited by a '+' sign, as in
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.B ...:101=deu,102=eng+spa;103=deu,104=eng:...
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The audio type is appended with a separating '@' character, as in
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.B ...:101=deu@4,102=eng+spa@4,105=@4:...
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Note that if there is no language code, there still is the separating '='
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if there is an audio type.
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.TP
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.B TPID
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The teletext PID.
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If this channel also carries DVB subtitles, the DVB subtitling PIDs follow the
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teletext PID, separated by a semicolon, as in
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.B ...:201;2001,2002:...
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If certain subtitling PIDs broadcast in specific languages, the language
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codes for these can be appended to the individual subtitling PID, separated
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by an '=' sign, as in
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.B ...:201;2001=deu,2002=eng:...
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.TP
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.B Conditional access
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A hexadecimal integer defining how this channel can be accessed:
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.TS
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tab (@);
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l l.
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\fB0000\fR@Free To Air
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\fB0001...000F\fR@explicitly requires the device with the given number
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\fB0010...00FF\fR@reserved for user defined assignments
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\fB0100...FFFF\fR@specific decryption methods as broadcast in the data stream\fR
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.TE
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Values in the range 0001...00FF will not be overwritten, all other values
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will be automatically replaced by the actual CA system identifiers received
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from the data stream. If there is more than one CA system id broadcast, they
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will be separated by commas, as in
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.B ...:1702,1722,1801:...
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The values are in hex because that's the way they are defined in the "ETR 162"
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document. Leading zeros may be omitted.
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.TP
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.B SID
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The Service ID of this channel.
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.TP
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.B NID
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The Network ID of this channel.
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.TP
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.B TID
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The Transport stream ID of this channel.
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.TP
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.B RID
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The Radio ID of this channel (typically 0, may be used to distinguish channels where
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NID, TID and SID are all equal).
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.PP
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A particular channel can be uniquely identified by its \fBchannel\ ID\fR,
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which is a string that looks like this:
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\fBS19.2E\-1\-1089\-12003\-0\fR
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The components of this string are the \fBSource\fR (S19.2E), \fBNID\fR
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(1), \fBTID\fR (1089), \fBSID\fR (12003) and \fBRID\fR (0) as defined above.
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The last part can be omitted if it is \fB0\fR,
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so the above example could also be written as S19.2E\-1\-1089\-12003).
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.br
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The \fBchannel\ ID\fR is used in the \fItimers.conf\fR and \fIepg.data\fR
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files to properly identify the channels.
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If a channel has both \fBNID\fR and \fBTID\fR set to 0, the \fBchannel\ ID\fR
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will use the \fBFrequency\fR instead of the \fBTID\fR. For satellite channels
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an additional offset of 100000, 200000, 300000 or 400000 is added to that
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number, depending on the \fBPolarization\fR (\fBH\fR, \fBV\fR, \fBL\fR or \fBR\fR,
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respectively). This is necessary because on some satellites the same frequency is
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used for two different transponders, with opposite polarization.
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.SS TIMERS
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The file \fItimers.conf\fR contains the timer setup.
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Each line contains one timer definition, with individual fields
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separated by ':' characters. Example:
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\fB1:10:\-T\-\-\-\-\-:2058:2150:50:5:Quarks & Co:\fR
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The fields in a timer definition have the following meaning (from left
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to right):
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.TP
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.B Flags
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The individual bits in this field have the following meaning:
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.TS
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tab (@);
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l l.
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\fB0x0001\fR@the timer is active (and will record if it hits)
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\fB0x0002\fR@this is an instant recording timer
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\fB0x0004\fR@this timer uses VPS
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\fB0x0008\fR@this timer is currently recording (may only be up-to-date with SVDRP)
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\fB0x0010\fR@this timer was spawned from a pattern timer
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\fB0x0020\fR@this timer will store the recording's name in donerecs.data
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.TE
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All other bits are reserved for future use.
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.TP
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.B Channel
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The channel to record from. This is either the channel number as shown in the
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on-screen menus, or a complete channel ID. When reading \fItimers.conf\fR
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any channel numbers will be mapped to the respective channel ids and when
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the file is written again, there will only be channel ids. Channel numbers
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are accepted as input in order to allow easier creation of timers when
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manually editing \fItimers.conf\fR. Also, when timers are listed via SVDRP
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commands, the channels are given as numbers.
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.TP
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.B Day
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The day when this timer shall record.
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If this is a `single-shot' timer, this is the date on which this
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timer shall record, given in ISO notation (\fBYYYY-MM-DD\fR), as in:
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.B 2005-03-19
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For compatibility with earlier versions of VDR this may also be just the day of month
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on which this timer shall record (must be in the range \fB1...31\fR).
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In case of a `repeating' timer this is a string consisting of exactly seven
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characters, where each character position corresponds to one day of the week
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(with Monday being the first day). The character '\-' at a certain position
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means that the timer shall not record on that day. Any other character will
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cause the timer to record on that day. Example:
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.B MTWTF\-\-
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will define a timer that records on Monday through Friday and does not record
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on weekends.
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Note that only letters may be used here, no digits.
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For compatibility with timers created with earlier versions of VDR,
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the same result could be achieved with \fBABCDE\-\-\fR (which was
|
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used to allow setting the days with language specific characters).
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Since version 1.5.3 VDR can use UTF-8 characters to present data to
|
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the user, but the weekday encoding in the \fItimers.conf\fR file
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always uses single byte characters.
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The day definition of a `repeating' timer may be followed by the date when that
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timer shall hit for the first time. The format for this is \fB@YYYY\-MM\-DD\fR,
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so a complete definition could look like this:
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\fBMTWTF\-\-@2002\-02\-18\fR
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which would implement a timer that records Monday through Friday, and will hit
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for the first time on or after February 18, 2002.
|
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This \fBfirst day\fR feature can be used to disable a repeating timer for a couple
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of days, or for instance to define a new Mon...Fri timer on Wednesday, which
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actually starts "Monday next week". The \fBfirst day\fR date given need not be
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that of a day when the timer would actually hit.
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.TP
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.B Start
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A four digit integer defining when this timer shall \fBstart\fR recording.
|
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The format is \fBhhmm\fR, so \fB1430\fR would mean "half past two" in the
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afternoon.
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.TP
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.B Stop
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A four digit integer defining when this timer shall \fBstop\fR recording.
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The format is the same as for the \fBstart\fR time.
|
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.TP
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.B Priority
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An integer in the range \fB0...99\fR, defining the \fBpriority\fR
|
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of this timer and of recordings created by this timer.
|
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\fB0\fR represents the lowest value, \fB99\fR the highest.
|
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The priority is used to decide which timer shall be
|
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started in case there are two or more timers with the exact same
|
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\fBstart\fR time. The first timer in the list with the highest priority
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will be used.
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This value is also stored with the recording and is
|
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later used to decide which recording to remove from disk in order
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to free space for a new recording. If the disk runs full and a new
|
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recording needs more space, an existing recording with the lowest
|
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priority (and which has exceeded its guaranteed \fBlifetime\fR) will be
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removed.
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If all available DVB cards are currently occupied, a
|
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timer with a higher priority will interrupt the timer with the
|
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lowest priority in order to start recording.
|
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.TP
|
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.B Lifetime
|
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The \fBguaranteed lifetime\fR (in days) of a recording created by this timer.
|
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\fB0\fR means that this recording may be automatically deleted at any time
|
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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
|
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new recording, until the given number of days since the \fBstart\fR time of
|
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the recording has passed by.
|
|
.TP
|
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.B File
|
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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.
|
|
|
|
The file name can be prepended with a pattern, enclosed in curly braces, as in
|
|
|
|
{Columbo}Movies~TITLE
|
|
|
|
which makes this a "pattern timer". A pattern timer records every event on the
|
|
given channel where the title contains the pattern (case sensitive).
|
|
The following special characters can be used in a pattern:
|
|
.TS
|
|
tab (;);
|
|
l l.
|
|
\fB^\fR;anchor to the beginning of the event's title
|
|
\fB$\fR;anchor to the end of the event's title
|
|
\fB*\fR;match every event
|
|
\fB@\fR;avoid duplicate recordings
|
|
.TE
|
|
|
|
If \fB@\fR is used, it must be the very first character of the pattern.
|
|
If both \fB@\fR and \fB^\fR are used, \fB@\fR must come first.
|
|
If \fB*\fR is used, it must be the only character in the pattern and may only be
|
|
prepended with \fB@\fR.
|
|
|
|
In addition to TITLE and EPISODE you can use the following macros to compose the file
|
|
name (the curly braces are part of the macros):
|
|
.TS
|
|
tab (@);
|
|
l l.
|
|
{<}@everything before the matching pattern
|
|
{>}@everything after the matching pattern
|
|
{=}@the matching pattern itself (just for completeness)
|
|
.TE
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B Auxiliary data
|
|
An arbitrary string that can be used by external applications to store any
|
|
kind of data related to this timer. The string must not contain any newline
|
|
characters. If this field is not empty, its contents will be written into the
|
|
\fIinfo\fR file of the recording with the '@' tag.
|
|
.SS SOURCES
|
|
The file \fIsources.conf\fR defines the codes to be used in the \fBSource\fR field
|
|
of channels in \fIchannels.conf\fR and assigns descriptive texts to them.
|
|
Example:
|
|
|
|
\fBS19.2E Astra 1\fR
|
|
|
|
Anything after (and including) a '#' character is comment.
|
|
|
|
The first character of the \fBcode\fR must be one of
|
|
.TS
|
|
tab (@);
|
|
l l.
|
|
\fBA\fR@ATSC
|
|
\fBC\fR@Cable
|
|
\fBS\fR@Satellite
|
|
\fBT\fR@Terrestrial
|
|
.TE
|
|
|
|
and is followed by further data pertaining to that particular source. In case of
|
|
\fBS\fRatellite this is the orbital position in degrees, followed by \fBE\fR for
|
|
east or \fBW\fR for west.
|
|
Plugins may define additional sources, using other characters in the range 'A'...'Z'.
|
|
.SS DISEQC
|
|
The file \fIdiseqc.conf\fR defines the \fBDiSEqC\fR control sequences to be sent
|
|
to the DVB-S card in order to access a given satellite position and/or band.
|
|
Example:
|
|
|
|
\fBS19.2E 11700 V 9750 t v W15 [E0 10 38 F0] W15 A W15 t\fR
|
|
|
|
Anything after (and including) a '#' character is comment.
|
|
|
|
The first word in a parameter line must be one of the codes defined in the
|
|
file \fIsources.conf\fR and tells which satellite this line applies to.
|
|
|
|
Following is the "switch frequency" of the LNB (slof), which is the transponder
|
|
frequency up to which this entry shall be used; the first entry with an slof greater
|
|
than the actual transponder frequency will be used. Typically there is only one slof
|
|
per LNB, but the syntax allows any number of frequency ranges to be defined.
|
|
Note that there should be a last entry with the value \fB99999\fR for each satellite,
|
|
which covers the upper frequency range.
|
|
|
|
The third parameter defines the polarization to which this entry applies. It can
|
|
be either \fBH\fR for horizontal, \fBV\fR for vertical, \fBL\fR for circular left
|
|
or \fBR\fR for circular right.
|
|
|
|
The fourth parameter specifies the "local oscillator frequency" (lof) of the LNB
|
|
to use for the given frequency range. This number will be subtracted from the
|
|
actual transponder frequency when tuning to the channel.
|
|
|
|
The rest of the line holds the actual sequence of DiSEqC actions to be taken.
|
|
The code letters used here are
|
|
.TS
|
|
tab (@);
|
|
l l.
|
|
\fBt\fR@22kHz tone off
|
|
\fBT\fR@22kHz tone on
|
|
\fBv\fR@voltage low (13V)
|
|
\fBV\fR@voltage high (18V)
|
|
\fBA\fR@mini A
|
|
\fBB\fR@mini B
|
|
\fBPn\fR@use positioner to move dish to satellite position n (or to the satellite's orbital position, if no position number is given)
|
|
\fBSn\fR@Satellite channel routing code sequence for bank n follows
|
|
\fBWnn\fR@wait nn milliseconds (nn may be any positive integer number)
|
|
\fB[xx ...]\fR@hex code sequence (max. 6)
|
|
.TE
|
|
There can be any number of actions in a line, including none at all - in which case
|
|
the entry would be used only to set the LOF to use for the given frequency range
|
|
and polarization.
|
|
|
|
By default it is assumed that every DVB-S device can receive every satellite.
|
|
If this is not the case in a particular setup, lines of the form
|
|
|
|
\fB1 2 4:\fR
|
|
|
|
may be inserted in the \fIdiseqc.conf\fR file, defining the devices that are able
|
|
to receive the satellites following thereafter. In this case, only the devices
|
|
1, 2 and 4 would be able to receive any satellites following this line and up
|
|
to the next such line, or the end of the file. Devices may be listed more than
|
|
once.
|
|
.SS SATELLITE CHANNEL ROUTING (SCR)
|
|
The file \fIscr.conf\fR contains the channel definitions of the SCR device in use.
|
|
The format is
|
|
|
|
channel frequency [pin]
|
|
|
|
where channel is the SCR device's channel index (0-7), frequency is the user band
|
|
frequency of the given channel, and pin is an optional pin number (0-255). The
|
|
actual values are device specific and can be found in the SCR device's manual.
|
|
|
|
Examples:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
0 1284
|
|
1 1400
|
|
2 1516
|
|
3 1632
|
|
4 1748
|
|
5 1864
|
|
6 1980
|
|
7 2096
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
By default it is assumed that the SCR configurations apply to all devices, and
|
|
each device will pick one. If you have several SCR sat cables connected to one
|
|
VDR machine, or if you want to explicitly assign the SCR channels to your devices,
|
|
lines of the form
|
|
|
|
\fB1 2 4:\fR
|
|
|
|
may be inserted in the \fIscr.conf\fR file, defining the devices that are allowed
|
|
to use the SCR channels thereafter. In this case, only the devices
|
|
1, 2 and 4 would be allowed to use the SCR channels following this line and up
|
|
to the next such line, or the end of the file. If a device is listed more than
|
|
once, only its first appearance counts.
|
|
.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, 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 KEY MACROS
|
|
The file \fIkeymacros.conf\fR contains user defined macros that will be executed
|
|
whenever the given key is pressed. The format is
|
|
|
|
\fBmacrokey [@plugin] key1 key2 key3...\fR
|
|
|
|
where \fBmacrokey\fR is the key that shall initiate execution of this macro
|
|
and can be one of \fIUp\fR, \fIDown\fR, \fIOk\fR, \fIBack\fR, \fILeft\fR,
|
|
\fIRight\fR, \fIRed\fR, \fIGreen\fR, \fIYellow\fR, \fIBlue\fR, \fI0\fR...\fI9\fR
|
|
or \fIUser1\fR...\fIUser9\fR. The rest of the line consists of a set of
|
|
keys, which will be executed just as if they had been pressed in the given
|
|
sequence. The optional \fB@plugin\fR can be used to automatically select
|
|
the given plugin.
|
|
\fBplugin\fR is the name of the plugin, exactly as given in the \-P
|
|
option when starting VDR. There can be only one \fB@plugin\fR per key macro.
|
|
For instance
|
|
|
|
\fBUser1 @abc Down Down Ok\fR
|
|
|
|
would call the main menu function of the "abc" plugin and execute two "Down"
|
|
key presses, followed by "Ok".
|
|
.br
|
|
Note that the color keys will only execute their macro function
|
|
in "normal viewing" mode (i.e. when no other menu or player is active). The
|
|
\fIUser1\fR...\fIUser9\fR keys will always execute their macro function.
|
|
There may be up to 15 keys in such a key sequence.
|
|
.SS FOLDERS
|
|
The file \fIfolders.conf\fR contains the definitions of folders that can be used
|
|
in the "Edit timer" menu. Each line contains one folder definition. Leading whitespace
|
|
and everything after and including a '#' is ignored. A line ending with '{'
|
|
defines a sub folder (i.e. a folder that contains other folders), and a line
|
|
consisting of only '}' ends the definition of a sub folder.
|
|
|
|
Example:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
Daily {
|
|
News
|
|
Soaps
|
|
}
|
|
Archive {
|
|
Movies
|
|
Sports
|
|
Sci-Fi {
|
|
Star Trek
|
|
U.F.O.
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
Comedy
|
|
Science
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
Note that these folder definitions are only used to set the file name under which
|
|
a timer will store its recording. Changing these definitions in any way has no
|
|
effect on existing timers or recordings.
|
|
.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. If \fBtitle\fR ends with the character '?', there will
|
|
be a confirmation prompt before actually executing the command. This can be
|
|
used for commands that might have serious results (like deleting files etc)
|
|
to make sure they are not executed inadvertently.
|
|
|
|
Everything following (and including) a '#' character is considered to be comment.
|
|
|
|
You can have nested layers of command menus by surrounding a sequence of
|
|
commands with '{'...'}' and giving it a title, as in
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
My Commands {
|
|
First list {
|
|
Do something: some command
|
|
Do something else: another command
|
|
}
|
|
Second list {
|
|
Even more: yet another command
|
|
So much more: and yet another one
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
Command lists can be nested to any depth.
|
|
|
|
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:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
Check for new mail?: /usr/local/bin/checkmail 2>&1
|
|
CPU status: /usr/local/bin/cpustatus 2>&1
|
|
Disk space: df \-h | grep '/video' | awk '{ print 100 \- $5 "% free"; }'
|
|
Calendar: date;echo;cal
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
Note that the commands 'checkmail' and 'cpustatus' are only \fBexamples\fR!
|
|
Don't send emails to the author asking where to find these ;\-)
|
|
.br
|
|
The '?' at the end of the "Check for new mail?" entry will prompt the user
|
|
whether this command shall really be executed.
|
|
.SS RECORDING COMMANDS
|
|
The file \fIreccmds.conf\fR can be used to define commands that can be applied
|
|
to the currently highlighted recording in the "Recordings" menu. The syntax is
|
|
exactly the same as described for the file \fIcommands.conf\fR. When executing
|
|
a command, the directory name of the recording will be appended to the command
|
|
string, separated by a blank and enclosed in single quotes.
|
|
.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:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
127.0.0.1 # always accept localhost
|
|
192.168.100.0/24 # any host on the local net
|
|
204.152.189.113 # a specific host
|
|
0.0.0.0/0 # any host on any net (\fBUSE WITH CARE!\fR)
|
|
.EE
|
|
.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 THEMES
|
|
The files \fIthemes/<skin>\-<theme>.theme\fR in the config directory contain the
|
|
color theme definitions for the various skins. In the actual file names \fI<skin>\fR
|
|
will be replaced by the name if the skin this theme belongs to, and \fI<theme>\fR
|
|
will be the name of this theme.
|
|
Each line in a theme file contains one option in the format "Name = Value".
|
|
Anything after (and including) a '#' character is comment.
|
|
|
|
The definitions in a theme file are either \fBcolors\fR or a \fBdescription\fR.
|
|
.br
|
|
\fBColors\fR are in the form
|
|
|
|
\fBclrTitle = FF123456\fR
|
|
|
|
where the name (clrTitle) is one of the names defined in the source code of
|
|
the \fBskin\fR that uses this theme, through the \fBTHEME_CLR()\fR macro.
|
|
The value (FF123456) is an eight digit hex number that consist of four bytes,
|
|
representing alpha (transparency), red, green and blue component of the color.
|
|
An alpha value of 00 means the color will be completely transparent, while FF
|
|
means it will be opaque. An RGB value of 000000 results in black, while FFFFFF
|
|
is white.
|
|
|
|
A \fBdescription\fR can be given as
|
|
|
|
\fBDescription = Shades of blue\fR
|
|
|
|
and will be used in the Setup/OSD menu to select a theme for a given skin.
|
|
The description should give the user an idea what this theme will be like
|
|
(for instance, in the given example it would use various shades of blue),
|
|
and shouldn't be too long to make sure it fits on the Setup screen.
|
|
The default description always should be given in English. If you want,
|
|
you can provide language specific descriptions as
|
|
|
|
\fBDescription.eng = Shades of blue\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
\fBDescription.ger = Blaut\(:one\fR
|
|
|
|
where the language code is added to the keyword
|
|
"Description", separated by a dot. You can enter as many language specific
|
|
descriptions as you like, but only those that have a corresponding locale
|
|
messages file will be actually used.
|
|
If a theme file doesn't contain a Description, the name of the theme (as
|
|
given in the theme's file name) will be used.
|
|
.SS AUDIO/VIDEO DATA
|
|
The files \fI00001.ts\fR...\fI65535.ts\fR are the actual recorded data
|
|
files. In order to keep the size of an individual file below a given limit,
|
|
a recording may be split into several files. The contents of these files is
|
|
\fBTransport Stream\fR (TS) and contains data packets that are each 188 byte
|
|
long and start with 0x47. Data is stored exactly as it is broadcast, with
|
|
a generated PAT/PMT inserted right before every independent frame.
|
|
.SS INDEX
|
|
The file \fIindex\fR (if present in a recording directory) contains
|
|
the (binary) index data into each of the the recording files
|
|
\fI00001.ts\fR...\fI65535.ts\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 INFO
|
|
The file \fIinfo\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). The \fBAux\fR field of the corresponding
|
|
timer (if given) is copied into this file, using the '@' tag.
|
|
This is a plain ASCII file and contains tagged lines like the \fBEPG DATA\fR
|
|
file (see the description of the \fIepg.data\fR file). Note that the lowercase
|
|
tags ('c' and 'e') will not appear in an \fIinfo\fR file.
|
|
Lines tagged with '#' are ignored and can be used by external tools to
|
|
store arbitrary information.
|
|
|
|
In addition to the tags used in the \fIepg.data\fR file, the following tag
|
|
characters are defined:
|
|
.TS
|
|
tab (|);
|
|
l l.
|
|
\fBF\fR|<frame rate>
|
|
\fBL\fR|<lifetime>
|
|
\fBP\fR|<priority>
|
|
\fBO\fR|<errors>
|
|
\fB@\fR|<auxiliary data>
|
|
.TE
|
|
|
|
The 'O' tag contains the number of errors that occurred during recording.
|
|
If it is zero, the recording can be safely considered error free. The higher the value,
|
|
the more damaged the recording is.
|
|
If this is an edited recording, the number of errors is that of the original
|
|
recording.
|
|
.SS RESUME
|
|
The file \fIresume\fR (if present in a recording directory) contains
|
|
the position within the recording where the last replay session left off.
|
|
The file consists of tagged lines that describe the various parameters
|
|
necessary to pick up replay where it left off.
|
|
|
|
The following tag characters are defined:
|
|
.TS
|
|
tab (@);
|
|
l l.
|
|
\fBI\fR@<offset into the file \fIindex\fR>
|
|
.TE
|
|
.SS MARKS
|
|
The file \fImarks\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.
|
|
|
|
If a frame position doesn't point to an I-frame of the corresponding recording,
|
|
it will be shifted towards the next I-frame (either up or down, whichever is
|
|
closer).
|
|
|
|
\fBCURRENT RESTRICTIONS:\fR
|
|
|
|
-\ the comment is currently not used by VDR
|
|
.SS SORT MODE
|
|
The file \fI.sort\fR (if present in a directory) contains an integer number
|
|
defining the mode by which this directory shall be sorted when presented in a menu.
|
|
|
|
The following values are defined:
|
|
.TS
|
|
tab (@);
|
|
l l.
|
|
\fB0\fR@sort by name
|
|
\fB1\fR@sort by time
|
|
.TE
|
|
.SS RECORDING TIMER
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The file \fI.timer\fR (if present in a recording directory) contains
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the full id of the timer that is currently recording into this directory.
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Timer ids are of the form
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\fBid@hostname\fR
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where \fBid\fR is the timer's numerical id on the VDR with the name \fBhostname\fR.
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This file is created when the timer starts recording, and is deleted when it ends.
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.SS EPG DATA
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The file \fIepg.data\fR contains the EPG data in an easily parsable format.
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The first character of each line defines what kind of data this line contains.
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The following tag characters are defined:
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.TS
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tab (|);
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l l.
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\fBC\fR|<channel id> <channel name>
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\fBE\fR|<event id> <start time> <duration> <table id> <version>
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\fBT\fR|<title>
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\fBS\fR|<short text>
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\fBD\fR|<description>
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\fBG\fR|<genre> <genre>...
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\fBR\fR|<parental rating>
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\fBX\fR|<stream> <type> <language> <descr>
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\fBV\fR|<vps time>
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\fB@\fR|<auxiliary data>
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\fBe\fR|
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\fBc\fR|
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.TE
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Lowercase characters mark the end of a sequence that was started by the
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corresponding uppercase character. The outer frame consists of a sequence
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of one or more \fBC\fR...\fBc\fR (Channel) entries. Inside these any number of
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\fBE\fR...\fBe\fR (Event) entries are allowed.
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All other tags are optional (although every event
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should at least have a \fBT\fR entry).
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There may be several \fBX\fR tags, depending on the number of tracks (video, audio etc.)
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the event provides.
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.TS
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tab (@);
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l l.
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<channel id> @is the "channel ID", made up from the parameters defined in 'channels.conf'
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<channel name> @is the "name" as in 'channels.conf' (for information only, may be left out)
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<event id> @is a 32 bit unsigned int, uniquely identifying this event
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<start time> @is the time (as a time_t integer) in UTC when this event starts
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<duration> @is the time (in seconds) that this event will take
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<table id> @is a hex number that indicates the table this event is contained in (if this is left empty it will be set to 0x00; and value less than 0x4E it will be treated as if it were 0x4E)
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<version> @is a hex number that indicates the event's version number inside its table (optional, ignored when reading EPG data)
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<title> @is the title of the event
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<short text> @is the short text of the event (typically the name of the episode etc.)
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<description> @is the description of the event (any '|' characters will be interpreted as newlines)
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<genre> @is a two digit hex code, as defined in ETSI EN 300 468, table 28 (up to 4 genre codes are supported)
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<parental rating>@is the minimum age of the intended audience
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<stream> @is the stream content (1 = MPEG2 video, 2 = MP2 audio, 3 = subtitles, 4 = AC3 audio, 5 = H.264 video, 6 = HEAAC audio, 0x09=H.265 video, 0x19 = AC4 audio)
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<type> @is the stream type according to ETSI EN 300 468
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<language> @is the three letter language code (optionally two codes, separated by '+')
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<descr> @is the description of this stream component
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<vps time> @is the Video Programming Service time of this event
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<auxiliary data>@is an arbitrary string that can be used by external applications to store data; newline characters will be replaced with '|' when writing the \fIepg.data\fR file.
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.TE
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This file will be read at program startup in order to restore the results of
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previous EPG scans.
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Note that the \fBevent id\fR that comes from the DVB data stream is actually
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just 16 bit wide. The internal representation in VDR allows for 32 bit to
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be used, so that external tools can generate EPG data that is guaranteed
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not to collide with the ids of existing data.
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The \fBauxiliary data\fR can be used for plugin specific purposes and has no meaning
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whatsoever to VDR itself. It will \fBnot\fR be written into the \fIinfo\fR file of
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a recording that is made for such an event.
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.SS CAM DATA
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The file \fIcam.data\fR contains information about which CAM in the system can
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decrypt a particular channel.
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Each line in this file contains a channel id, followed by one or more (blank
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separated) numbers, indicating the CAMs that have successfully decrypted this
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channel earlier.
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When tuning to an encrypted channel, this information is used to select the
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proper CAM for decrypting this channel. This channel/CAM relationship is not
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hardcoded, though. If a given channel can't be decrypted with a CAM listed
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in this file, other CAMs will be tried just as well. The main purpose of this
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file is to speed up channel switching in systems with more than one CAM.
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This file will be read at program startup and saved when the program ends.
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If the file is read-only, it will not be overwritten.
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.SS CAM AUTO RESPONSE
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If your CAM keeps popping up annoying messages or you want to make sure VDR
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can record programmes with parental rating without having to enter the PIN
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(in case you can't turn that off in your CAM), you can set up auto responses
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in the file \fIcamresponses.conf\fR.
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Each line in this file specifies one rule to apply to texts received from
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the CAM. If the CAM's menu text matches the text in one of these rules,
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the given action is taken and sent to the CAM as an automatic response,
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without any menu appearing on the screen. The first match wins.
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The format of these rules is:
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nr text action
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where
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.TS
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tab (@);
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l l.
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nr @is the number of the CAM this action applies to (0 = all CAMs)
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text @is the text in the CAM menu to react on (must be quoted with '"' if it contains blanks, escape '"' with '\\')
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action @is the action to take if the given text is encountered
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.TE
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Possible actions are:
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.TS
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tab (@);
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l l.
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DISCARD @simply discard the menu (equivalent to pressing 'Back' on the RC)
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CONFIRM @confirm the menu (equivalent to pressing 'OK' without selecting a particular item)
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SELECT @select the menu item containing the text (equivalent to positioning the cursor on the item and pressing 'OK')
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<number> @the given number is sent to the CAM as if it were tyed in by the user (provided this is an input field).
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.TE
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Note that the text given in a rule must match exactly, including any leading or
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trailing blanks. If in doubt, you can get the exact text from the log file.
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Action keywords are case insensitive.
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Everything following (and including) a '#' character is considered to be comment.
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.SS COMMANDLINE OPTIONS
|
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If started without any options, vdr tries to read any files in the directory
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/etc/vdr/conf.d with names that do not begin with a '.' and that end with '.conf'.
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These files are read in alphabetical order. The format of these files is
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.PP
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.EX
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# comment
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[name]
|
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-a
|
|
-b 123
|
|
--long
|
|
--longarg=123
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.EE
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.PP
|
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Any lines that begin with '#' as the first non-whitespace character are considered
|
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comments and are ignored.
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A command line option file consists of one or more sections, indicated by '[name]',
|
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where 'name' is either the fixed word 'vdr' (if this section contains options for
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the main VDR program) or the name of the plugin this section applies to.
|
|
Each option must be written on a separate line, including the leading '-' (for
|
|
a short option) or '--' (for a long option). If the option has additional arguments,
|
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they have to be written on the same line as the option itself, separated from the
|
|
option with a blank (short option) or equal sign (long option).
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.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
.BR vdr (1)
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.SH AUTHOR
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|
Written by Klaus Schmidinger.
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.SH REPORTING BUGS
|
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Report bugs to <vdr\-bugs@tvdr.de>.
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.SH COPYRIGHT
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Copyright \(co 2021 Klaus Schmidinger.
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This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
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warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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