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Ozdemon
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Posted: Tue Apr 10, 2012 2:28 pm |
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Joined: Wed Jun 10, 2009 8:39 pm
Posts: 118
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One of the MythTV devs, JYavenard, said this on another forum a few hours ago: Quote: Although we may not be known for using a witty naming scheme, and the version number only increments itself by a single "hundredth" every major release, we're extremely proud to announce the immediate release of what we loving refer to as – "0.25"! It's been 516 days (that's 1 year, 4 months, 30 days) since our last major release, so it goes without saying that a significant amount of work has made its way in to this current release with over 5200 commits making up 0.25.
MythTV version 0.25 includes several significant new features. A few key items to point out – new video acceleration capabilities such as VAAPI and DirectX Video Acceleration 2; expanded and improved audio capabilities including E-AC3, TrueHD, and DTS-HD support; Control your TV and other AV components via CEC (Consumer Electronics Control); enhanced and integrated metadata management capabilities for recordings and videos, and a fully functional API for third-party apps to build upon that can interact with both the frontend and backend – including a HTTP Live Streaming capabilities for delivering video content, in real-time, via the API.
Also noteworthy – MythMusic has been completely re-written and MythVideo is now directly integrated rather than being distributed as a separate plugin. Additionally, MythThemes is no longer maintained as a separate repository – all themes, including third party themes, can now be downloaded directly from the frontend theme chooser.
_________________ * Asus M3N78-EM, AMD 5050e, Nvidia 8300 IGP, QNAP TS-439 Pro II, Linhes 7.4
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christ
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Posted: Wed Apr 11, 2012 8:18 pm |
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Joined: Mon Dec 24, 2007 9:47 am
Posts: 535
Location:
Ottawa, Canada
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I'm excited by 0.25's content but I'm also cautious. I'm not convinced it is stable enough for GA and I will wait for it to bed in a bit.
For the more adventurous out there, I'm sure many of us would be curious about your own experiences. Perhaps my concerns are unwarranted.
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jlp_engineer
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Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 6:18 am |
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Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2012 1:23 am
Posts: 26
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South Dakota, USA
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I am somewhat cautious...
I have had too many issues as of late. I was running Mythbuntu 8.10 more than a few years ago on a P4 system with 3 PVR150's, and all was well. Then a flood threatened my community, and I had to move all my computer equipment to higher ground. a few months ago, I decided to fire everything backup and I decided while I was going to all the trouble to re-install the servers and clients, I would upgrade to the latest edition. I then started to have trouble with LiveTV and my PVR150's...what I believed to be the most stable of all tuner cards. Apparently, not too many developers are really worried about the old analog tuners like the PVR150. Everything is going digital, so no one should really need analog anymore - right? Wrong!!! My local cable provider transmits all the basic channels using analog frequencies, and they have told me that they have no immediate plans to change that.
The trouble I ran into was that the analog channels would produce artifacts and digital rendering distortion. I would also get errors saying that the buffer was being starved...I forget the exact error message. I then tried other distributions, and stumbled on LinHES. Although I had initial problems (could not boot LinHES unless the Hyperthreading was disabled on my P4), the picture produced by my PVR150's was the best I had ever seen and it was stable.
Well, with the newer version of MythTV now running reliably, I found a few things I didn't like...none of which are the fault of LinHES, but rather decisions made by the MythTV developers. Chief among them is Storage Groups. I don't really understand the need for them. Storage is really basic, although I am personally still struggling with the permissions and access with Arch. I used DVD ISO's and Mythtranscode a lot. With storage groups, these items are less useful and less convenient. I have to convert my DVD's to ISO's using DVDFab or DVD95 on other systems, and not on my LinHES loaded backends. In addition, I cannot load any encrypted ISO's from a storage group...another pain, although I believe that all the DVD to ISO utilities are also rendering the ISO's unencrypted, but there is really no way I can tell that for sure, so maybe loading them from SG's is not really the limitation I think it is.
I am hoping for some clarity with respect to MythTV 0.25 and Storage Groups, as it pertains to DVD ISO's, although the additional features 0.25 brings may compensate for lack of Mythtranscode and the issues surrounding DVD ISO's.
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marc.aronson
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Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 10:04 am |
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Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 2:07 am
Posts: 1532
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California
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The major advantage of storage groups is the ability to have your recording storage span multiple disk drives without having to use LVM. LVM generally ran the risk that if one drive died, you lost all your recordings. This is not an issue with storage groups. Also, with storage groups you can spread your recordings out across a combination of local and networked storage.
_________________ Marc
The views expressed are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer.
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jlp_engineer
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Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 10:44 am |
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Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2012 1:23 am
Posts: 26
Location:
South Dakota, USA
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Can you control which files are placed on network storage within storage groups? Network storage is always going to be slower and you will always want certain files local as opposed to on the network.
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kmkittre
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Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 2:07 pm |
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Joined: Tue Jul 12, 2005 8:01 am
Posts: 670
Location:
Salem, MA
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Wow, It has experimental Airplay support? That's pretty awesome...
_________________ LinHES 8.3, 1 BE, 3 FE
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marc.aronson
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Posted: Fri Apr 13, 2012 9:59 am |
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Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 2:07 am
Posts: 1532
Location:
California
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jlp_engineer wrote: Can you control which files are placed on network storage within storage groups? Network storage is always going to be slower and you will always want certain files local as opposed to on the network. Last I read they have an algorithm that attempts to automatically decide where to put recordings based on several factors include utilization, access speed, number of recordings expected to be going on at that time, etc. I believe there is a way you can tweak the weightings, but my recollection is that what they did seems reasonable. I believe the explanation is somewhere in the mythtv wiki -- don't recall where as I read the writeup some time ago...
_________________ Marc
The views expressed are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer.
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marc.aronson
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Posted: Fri Apr 13, 2012 7:24 pm |
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Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 2:07 am
Posts: 1532
Location:
California
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Here is the wiki article that explains storage groups. Here is a key quote Quote: MythTV will balance concurrent recordings across the available directories in a Storage Group in order to spread out the file I/O load. MythTV will prefer filesystems that are local to the backend over filesystems that are remote until the local filesystem has 2 concurrent recordings active or other equivalent I/O, then the next recording will go to the remote filesystem. The balancing method is based purely on I/O, MythTV does not try to balance out disk space unless a filesystem is too low on free disk space in which case it will not be used except as a last resort. There are actually 3 different balancing algorithms that are explained in this section of this wiki article.
_________________ Marc
The views expressed are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer.
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christ
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Posted: Fri Apr 13, 2012 9:00 pm |
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Joined: Mon Dec 24, 2007 9:47 am
Posts: 535
Location:
Ottawa, Canada
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jlp_engineer wrote: I am hoping for some clarity with respect to MythTV 0.25 and Storage Groups, as it pertains to DVD ISO's, although the additional features 0.25 brings may compensate for lack of Mythtranscode and the issues surrounding DVD ISO's. From what I recall you can play unencrypted ISO files from storage groups in 0.24. I have not yet tried it myself. The only reason I haven't gone to storage groups myself is that I still need mplayer from time to time and my cifs mounts are already in place. Eventually they will force us off of network mounts and into storage groups.
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Mikesha311
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Posted: Sat Apr 14, 2012 10:44 am |
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Joined: Tue Apr 21, 2009 8:26 am
Posts: 5
Location:
Dallas,TX
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So far .25 box has been running pretty well. I have an HDPVR attached. I hand roll my systems from scratch including Qt and have not seen most of the issues on the mailing lists. Apparently there was a lot of IVTV bugs before release that I didn't see. I have a Ceton card that I'm struggling to get working right but I think its due to the DRM copy once and not myth itself was my main motivation for .25.
_________________ MBE/FE: Source 24.2, AMD 64 X2 4400+ 2gb 1.5 Tb Dual PVR 500 + Motorola STB MBE: R6, AMD 64 X2 4400+ 3gb 2 Tb HDPVR + Motorola STB FE: Custom AMD FX 55 2 Gb Dev: Custom 0.25 from source MBE/FE
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nbdwt73
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Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2012 6:46 am |
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Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2004 12:14 pm
Posts: 434
Location:
Charlotte, NC
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I continue to try storage groups for ISO files with every release and I continue to return to NFS. I find a significant reduction in performance whenever I try to play any ISO file. Storage groups in Myth .25, although better, are still not acceptable to me - it does work well for all other file types (at least the basic ones that many people use). Most of my library is ISO and I am not willing to change...
Just my 2₵...
_________________ nbdwt73
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