Kirk Bocek wrote: >Michael T. Dean wrote: > > >>Steve Adeff wrote: >> >>>I like DVD menus, so I'd like to use xine, but I'm noticing a lot of video >>>issues in high movement scenes, I don't quite know how to describe it, its >>>as >>>though the video can't keep up so part of the image is updating faster than >>>the rest. it plays back fine in mplayer and the Internal player, so I know >>>its got to be some setting in Xine, I just have no idea what it would be >>>since I never use xine.... >>> >>>anyone have any thing for me to try? >>> >>You using Xv in xine? If not (or, to verify), run: >> >>xine -V xv --no-splash --auto-play=fhq --auto-scan dvd >> >>at least once to change (and store the changes). A different video >>driver would definitely cause differences in playback. >> >> >I've had this issue with xine as well. I would describe the problem as if xine >could >not update the screen fast enough -- pans and other high motion scenes will >leave >transient artifacts, lines and other breaks, on the screen. > >I am currently using ivtv 0.4.0 compiled from source for output on my PVR-350. >My >playback config is: > > xine -pfhq -V xshm --no-splash dvd:// > > Yep. With X shared memory, you'll probably see this problem...
>I have tried '-V xv' but xine won't start. Does this mean I need the xv driver >installed? Will the xv driver help with these artifacts? > > I'm guessing you're using a PVR-350 (otherwise, I can't imagine using X shared memory--unless you're doing it to "fix" the blue line, which, BTW, isn't a fix for it). Therefore, you need to install a video driver that supports Xv (there is no "xv driver", per se). For a PVR-350, this means you need to use John Harvey's ivtv X driver. Search the lists for details on how to install/configure it. Mike _______________________________________________ mythtv-users mailing list [email protected] http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users
