Date | Commit message (Collapse) |
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We may expand them, so ensure they're properly escaped, first
for use in shell snippets.
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This feature is intended to allow users to "zoom-in" on a
particular portion of a track to tweak parameters (either
with dtas-sourceedit(1) or via playback of splitfx YAML files).
This may be combined with looping the tracklist
(via "tl repeat").
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The documentation part is managed by the new
Documentation/update-copyright script. For the future, the rest may
be managed by the update-copyright tool in gnulib
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This makes debugging, grepping, and following code confusing
at times and also unexpected breaks usage of the global "spawn"
method.
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I'm still normal, and still trolling, but 80x24.org will be epic :)
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Some containers (e.g. large VOBs) are not easily probed and require
additional options for avprobe/ffprobe to find audio streams. We do
this by looping and increasing the duration/size of the probe to
find new audio streams.
This seems to work reasonably well for some DVD rips I have until
seeking is required. This breaks if the seek point (including seeks
for source effects) exceeds the avprobe/ffprobe -analyzeduration.
Anyways, I recommend extracting the audio stream (without
transcoding) out of the VOB container as the best way to go.
Something like:
avconv -analyzeduration 2G -probesize 2G \
-i input.vob -vn -sn -c:a copy -map 0:$STREAM_NR output.ext
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This is reproducible on a video file with a mono audio stream
when attempting playback in stereo.
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We don't need it since IO#read(bytes, buf) will convert to
ASCII-8BIT anyways. Everywhere else, we ensure path names are
already binary. We do this mainly at the client layer before using
Shellwords to escape the paths.
We also must be careful about parsing output from soxi/avprobe
which can show us metadata in whatever encoding is in the file.
We must still handle data from parsing command output as binary,
as the encoding of file metadata tends to vary.
This also should buy us Syck compatibility for Ruby 1.9.3 users
on Debian systems where Ruby 1.9.3 still uses Syck.
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All files we distribute in the tarball need to have a
copyright/license specified for Savannah.
We don't need the example state file anymore.
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It's possible to get zero samples when playing streams of
unknown length (e.g. over Icecast over HTTP)
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We expose no public API, so avoid cluttering users disk space with
useless ri/rdoc and avoid cluttering the web with HTML nobody will
read.
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Since ffmpeg/ffprobe are wrappers around their libav-variants,
I haven't had the chance to actually test with "real" ffmpeg,
but the usage is probably similar enough to not matter.
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