diff options
author | wm4 <wm4@nowhere> | 2013-02-03 15:32:21 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | wm4 <wm4@nowhere> | 2013-02-03 16:53:49 +0100 |
commit | 19ed132c8aea24fb3ba1e54bb606f2c13fa3581d (patch) | |
tree | a91f8efdcdb1c2a16a257c123c7e19f2260864e6 /DOCS/OUTDATED-tech/win32-codec-howto.txt | |
parent | df0312b694ea6374fbc4510367ae5f14f67fdbb9 (diff) | |
download | mpv-19ed132c8aea24fb3ba1e54bb606f2c13fa3581d.tar.bz2 mpv-19ed132c8aea24fb3ba1e54bb606f2c13fa3581d.tar.xz |
DOCS: remove files documenting removed/rewritten functionality
Most of these are a waste of time. Some (like slave.txt) have been
rewritten in rst.
The remaining files aren't that useful, but probably do no harm.
Diffstat (limited to 'DOCS/OUTDATED-tech/win32-codec-howto.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | DOCS/OUTDATED-tech/win32-codec-howto.txt | 118 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 118 deletions
diff --git a/DOCS/OUTDATED-tech/win32-codec-howto.txt b/DOCS/OUTDATED-tech/win32-codec-howto.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 458a9191b3..0000000000 --- a/DOCS/OUTDATED-tech/win32-codec-howto.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,118 +0,0 @@ -============================ -Win32 codecs importing HOWTO -============================ - -This document describes how to extract the information necessary to hook -up Win32 binary codecs in MPlayer from a Windows system. Different methods -exist depending on which video API your codec uses and which Windows -version you have. - -If you have gathered all the necessary information (fourcc, GUID, codec file, -sample file) as described below, notify the mplayer-dev-eng mailing list. -If you want to add a codec yourself, read DOCS/tech/codecs.conf.txt. - - - -VfW codecs -~~~~~~~~~~ - -VfW (Video for Windows) is the old video API for Windows. Its codecs have -the '.dll' or (rarely) '.drv' extension. If MPlayer fails at playing your -AVI with this kind of message: - -VIDEO: [HFYU] 352x288 24bpp 25.000 fps 4321.0 kbps (527.5 kbyte/s) -Cannot find codec matching selected -vo and video format 0x55594648. - -It means your AVI is encoded with a codec which has the HFYU fourcc (HFYU = -HuffYUV codec, DIV3 = DivX Low Motion, etc.). Now that you know this, you -have to find out which DLL Windows loads in order to play this file. -You can find the VfW codec by searching the internet for e.g. VIDC.HFYU. - -In our case, the 'system.ini' also contains this information in a line that reads: - -VIDC.HFYU=huffyuv.dll - -So you need the 'huffyuv.dll' file. - - - -ACM Codecs: -~~~~~~~~~~~~ -MPlayer may fail at playing the audio in your file with this message: - -Cannot find codec for audio format 0x55. -Audio: no sound - -MPlayer calls this the TwoCC format identifier. From the TwoCC list we find: - -0x0055 MPEG-1 Layer 3 (MP3) - -If you are lucky, you can then just search the internet for "codec acm" -e.g. "mp3 acm". Or if the codec is already installed on Windows, -it will show up in the system.ini as: - -msacm.l3acm=L3codeca.acm - -Note that the audio codecs are specified by the MSACM prefix: - - - -DirectShow codecs: -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -DirectShow is the newer video API, which is even worse than its predecessor. -Things are harder with DirectShow, since 'system.ini' does not contain the -needed information, instead it is stored in the registry and we need the -GUID of the codec. - - -New Method: ------------ - -Using Microsoft GraphEdit (fast) - -- Get GraphEdit from the Microsoft SDK, DirectX SDK or doom9. -- Start 'graphedit.exe'. -- From the menu select "Graph -> Insert Filters". -- Expand item "DirectShow Filters". -- Select the right codec name and expand item. -- In the entry "DisplayName" look at the text in winged brackets after the - backslash and write it down (five dash-delimited blocks, the GUID). -- The codec binary is the file specified in the "Filename" entry. - -If there is no "Filename" and "DisplayName" contains something like -'device:dmo', then it is a DMO-Codec. - - -Old Method: ------------ - -Take a deep breath and start searching the registry... - -- Start 'regedit'. -- Press "Ctrl-F", disable the first two checkboxes, and enable the third. - Type in the fourcc of the codec (e.g. "TM20"). -- You should see a field which contains the path and the filename (e.g. - "C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\TM20DEC.AX"). -- Now that you have the file, we need the GUID. Try searching again, but - now search for the codec's name, not the fourcc. Its name can be acquired - when Media Player is playing the file, by checking - "File -> Properties -> Advanced". - If not, you are out of luck. Try guessing (e.g. search for TrueMotion). -- If the GUID is found you should see a "FriendlyName" and a "CLSID" field. - Write down the 16 byte CLSID, this is the GUID we need. - -If searching fails, try enabling all the checkboxes. You may have -false hits, but you may get lucky... - - - -Tips: -~~~~~~~ -If you get an error loading a new codec, it may need some more files to work. -Start the filemon utility before loading MPlayer to find out which DLLs are -trying to be loaded. - -Your codec may load some external DLL libraries. If the codec is already -installed in Windows, run listdlls wmplayer.exe while Windows Media -Player is playing your file to find out which. |