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vamps(1) [debian man page]

VAMPS(1)							       Vamps								  VAMPS(1)

NAME
vamps - Tool to recompress and modify the structure of a DVD SYNOPSIS
vamps [--evaporate|-e factor] [--ps-evaporate|-E factor] [--audio|-a a-streama-stream...] [--subpictures|-s s-stream,s-stream,...] [--ver- bose|-v] [--inject|-i injections-file] [--preserve|-p] [--ps-size|-S input-bytes] <input>output ... DESCRIPTION
Vamps was written to make cheap backups of DVDs under Linux. Vamps builds a wrapper around the requantizer to extract the elementary MPEG2 video stream from the DVD's program stream, feed it through the requantizer and finally re-pack it into the program stream again. Besides this, Vamps allows to select audio and subtitle streams that should be copied into the output stream. This gives another small gain of disk space, since unwanted streams may be discarded. Vamps is only a very basic, but nevertheless essential tool to transcode DVD videos to a smaller size. Vamps does not need to write tempo- rary data files, which is a major advantage. Vamps is very fast. The downside is, that Vamps is not capable of making DVD backups on its own. OPTIONS
For options that require an argument, each duplication will override the previous argument value. --evaporate, -e factor factor by which the embedded elementary video stream will approximately be shrunk (>=1.0) --ps-evaporate, -E factor factor by which the whole program stream will approximately be shrunk (>=1.0) -e and -E are mutually exclusive. --audio, -a a-streama-stream... select audio streams to keep. First stream is 1. --subpictures, -s s-streams-stream... select subtitle streams to keep. First stream is 1. --verbose, -v Increase verbosity level by one. --inject, -i injections-file Load internal variable settings from file to seamlessly continue previous run. Write internal variables to file at program termina- tion. If file does not exist, it is created. Useful to shrink several parts (chapters, titles) to a single target DVD. --preserve, -p Preserve numbering of audio and subtitle streams. If called without this option, Vamps renumbers the streams to ascending numbers starting with 1. This option disables renumbering so the original stream numbers are kept. --ps-size, -S input-bytes If the input for Vamps does not come from a file (e.g. a pipe), the size of the full input program stream *MUST* be supplied in the command line. Size is in bytes. AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Claudio Moratti <maxer@knio.it> for the Debian system (but may be used by others). It was slightly modi- fied by Rogerio Brito <rbrito@ime.usp.br>. This document is released under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2 and later. 0.99 2009-05-16 VAMPS(1)

Check Out this Related Man Page

tcextract(1)						      General Commands Manual						      tcextract(1)

NAME
tcextract - read multimedia file from medium, extract or demultiplex requested stream and print to standard output SYNOPSIS
tcextract -i name [ -x codec ] [ -t magic ] [ -a track ] [ -C s-e ] [ -d verbosity ] [ -v ] COPYRIGHT
tcextract is Copyright (C) by Thomas Oestreich. DESCRIPTION
tcextract is part of and usually called by transcode. However, it can also be used independently. tcextract reads source (from stdin if not explicitely defined) and prints on the standard output. OPTIONS
-i name Specify input source. If ommited, stdin is assumed. tcextract reads streams from file or from stdin. -C s-e extract and print out only this frame interval (video) or bytes (audio) [all]. This option is only supported if the source contains proper information to perform a selective extraction. -t magic source file magic. This option is used to identify the source file format if reading is performed from stdin or tcextract fails to identify the source file format. Supported formats are labeled with magic: avi RIFF AVI-file vob MPEG program streams m2v MPEG elementary video stream vdr MPEG digital video recording raw raw bitstream wav RIFF WAVE audio yuv4mpeg mjpeg-tools stream header format -x codec source pdeudo-codec, if not detected when reading from stdin. Currently, supported parameter for codec are mp3 MPEG audio ac3 AC3 audio a52 A52 audio dv Digital Video DV mpeg2 MPEG video yv12 Y'CbCr YUV rgb RGB 24-bit ps1 MPEG private stream (subtitles) pcm raw audio stream -a track extract selected audio or video track from source. -d level With this option you can specify a bitmask to enable different levels of verbosity (if supported). You can combine several levels by adding the corresponding values: QUIET 0 INFO 1 DEBUG 2 STATS 4 WATCH 8 FLIST 16 VIDCORE 32 SYNC 64 COUNTER 128 PRIVATE 256 -v Print version information and exit. NOTES
tcextract is a front end for extracting various raw or encoded audio/video tracks from a source and is used in transcode's import pipeline. EXAMPLES
The command tcextract -i foo.avi -x mp3 -a 3 extracts MPEG audio track 3 from the AVI-file foo.avi and prints the bitstream to stdout. AUTHORS
tcextract was written by Thomas Oestreich <ostreich@theorie.physik.uni-goettingen.de> with contributions from many others. See AUTHORS for details. SEE ALSO
avifix(1), avisync(1), avimerge(1), avisplit(1), tcprobe(1), tcscan(1), tccat(1), tcdemux(1), tcextract(1), tcdecode(1), transcode(1) tcextract(1) 26th November 2002 tcextract(1)
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