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created | layout | layout_old | redirect_to | tags | title | toc | updated | |||
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2008-08-27 00:42:59 +0200 | redirect | default | https://blog.mbirth.de/archives/2008/08/27/rip-dvd-track.html |
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Rip DVD track | false | 2015-06-08 01:02:16 +0200 |
To rip a DVD track to a file, you need the transcode package and the encoders you're going to use.
To rip a single track as ogg, use the command
transcode -i /dev/scd0 -x dvd -T 5,15 -a 0 -y null,ogg -o ~/Nasty.ogg
This would rip audio only (video goes to null) chapter 5, track 15 to the file Nasty.ogg
.
transcode -i /dev/scd0 -x dvd -T 5,15 -a 0 -y null,raw -b 192 -o ~/Nasty.mp3
This one rips to a mp3
file. The codec is raw
because transcode internally works with mp3.
UPDATE: The raw
audio encoder is deprecated and tcaud
should be used instead. Use this:
transcode -i /dev/scd0 -x null,dvd -y null,tcaud -T 1,8 -a 0 --lame_preset extreme -m outputfile.mp3
More information about how to use transcode
is explained here: ubuntuforums.org.
mplayer
Find out the longest DVD track using lsdvd:
lsdvd | grep Longest
Then dump that track with mplayer:
mplayer dvd://02 -v -dumpstream -dumpfile output.vob
Convert with avidemux, avconv or similar, e.g.:
avconv -i output.vob -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -qscale:0 8 -qscale:2 2 -filter:v yadif output.mp4
avconv -i output.vob -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -f avi -c:v mpeg4 -b:v 800k -g 300 -bf 2 -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 128k -async 30 output-en.avi
avconv -ss 00:24:02 -i output.vob -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -qscale:0 8 -qscale:2 2 -filter:v yadif -t 00:05:55 output.mp4