![]() I would guess, based on light research, that playback support would be limited as well, as many devices likely just implement basic Matroska support and this is a more advanced (read: obscure outside of certain anime circles) feature of the container.Īfter that, I tried using ordered chapters in two different editions (which basically creates two "titles"/chapter lists in the same file). There was a branch for ffmpeg to add segment linking support, but I have no clue what the disposition was. ffmpeg seemed to ignore any streams not contained in the first mkv file, though (boo). Update: Just tried a simple segment linking test and the resulting files properly played in sequence using VLC and MPC-HC (yay). I can probably live with going the route of creating multiple complete files, each with a different video track / angle, but figured it is worth checking if there are more efficient, supported ways of going about all this. How well does Emby handle multi-angle MKV's?Īnd have any of you created multi-angle MKV's, and if so, what is your process? It appears to me that MakeMKV let's you pick one angle or the other, but it does not appear to me that it gives an option to combine them into a single file containing just the differing portions of each video track (and the ability, in supporting players, to switch between video tracks). The downside of course is potentially a lot of duplicated space (eg, in the case of a movie with just a few alternate scenes). The upside is that this route should circumvent any compatibility issues there might be with Emby or other players. I realize that one option is to just rip 2 versions of the content, one with one angle/track, and the other with the other. The issue is the "CloseFile" operation, it is not in the drop down menu, and typing "CloseFile" does not help.As I'm slowing converting some of my library to MKV, I'm encountering multi-angle / multi-video-track DVD's, and I'm wondering how folks tend to handle these, as well as what the current (and likely future) support is in Emby (particularly Emby Theater) for being able to recognize and switch between multiple video tracks (or angles) contained in a single MKV file? I thought I came across a post indicating that Emby does not currently provide a way to switch between multiple angles/video-tracks, but I can't seem to find that post so I may have imagined it. The only way was a tutorial on YouTube using ProcessMonitor + PowerDVD + filtering Path only "mpls".This lead to the correct play list. and then I used makmkv to extract that one only. The method I described above (not mine BTW), is the perfect starting point. You want to look at the mpls playlist number rather than the 'title' number (which is arbitrary to MakeMKV and determined by the order that the program selects which titles to show). It saves you a lot of trouble if you have many playlists, because you don't spend time searching for the correct playlist if you followed the OP method. Playlist number 800 is always the English for Disney and then 801, 802, etc. mpls according to M$ Process Monitor does not show entirely in the MakeMKV list. M2ts method a go.and guess what as expected I was able to find the correct playlist. All the responses are great, but don't really apply to this disc. 2) Process correct playlist using Makemkv to extract video and subtitle. MakeMKV and ByteCopy are good for lossless Blu-ray and DVD backup, while DVDfab focuses on Blu-ray trans-coding to portable devices like PS4, Xbox One, etc. However, maybe it is because I am on Win 10 X64, or because my Process Monitor is the latest, the only difference is that instead of " CloseFile", choose " IRP_MJ_CLOSE" from the combo box/drop down menu. There are 2 playlists that are identical in every way according to the info shown by MakeMKV, including all the audio and subtitle tracks underneath it, and there is another set of 2 playlists that are identical to each other, but differ from the first 2 in the segment map, '339,1,336' vs '340,1,338'. and Rogue One will be available to purchase in 4K UHD for the first time. Why you don't search for IRP_MJ_CLEANUP instead? Starting from version 1.9.0 MakeMKV can open a DVD disc in a so-called manual mode. ![]() The bad part about this mode is that its usage requires advanced knowledge about DVD authoring. The good part is that in this mode user has precise control over DVD layout interpretation. Any part of the disc can be assigned to any title in any order. ![]() ![]() Then you only have the same count of segments than MakeMKV has. ![]()
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