Additional Software for a Homemade PVR? 66
MankyD asks: "I'm almost done loading up a new Gentoo installation paired with MythTV and a hardware MPEG2 encoder. I'm looking forward to finishing but before I let it loose upon my television, I was wondering what else I should compile in. Samba File sharing? A webserver (for watching shows on the road)? A CPU/Memory monitor? An additional media player? Not to start a flamewar, but should I do KDE, Gnome, Enlightenment, or some other window manager (especially when viewed on a TV screen)? What bells and whistles can I add to make my system that much more complete?"
Wierd (Score:2)
Window Manager. (Score:1)
--saint
Build Your Own PVR (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Build Your Own PVR (Score:2, Funny)
It's slightly less pathetic than just having an imaginary girlfriend.
MythTV and Window Managers (Score:5, Informative)
But... the application itself works fine, but when it invokes mplayer... focus won't change.
So, we try "twm". Very lightweight. With the appropriate init file, everything is good -- except there are problems focusing WITHIN windows created by qt (that is, the application setup windows).
Gnome is far too heavy, as is KDE. Generally, you really want the GUI to *be* MythTV. I use "mwm". Gets out of the way, and generally stays there.
Ratboy.
Re:MythTV and Window Managers (Score:1)
Re:MythTV and Window Managers (Score:2)
I use "mwm". Gets out of the way, and generally stays there.
My myth box runs evilwm, at least when Myth is running.
Although I hadn't really planned it that way, I've actually found myself using my Myth system as a computer for work, occasionally. So, I have a few user accounts on the system: The "mythtv" account, which is automatically started up when the machine is booted, runs evilwm and Mythtv and nothing else. If you exit MythTV, though, you drop back to KDM and can log in as one of the other ac
Re:MythTV and Window Managers (Score:2)
Not really - I just added MythTV to my general multimedia Gentoo box, and at no point was the system off-line or unusable while I was setting it up (once I added the pchdtv card, of course). I use Debian, Gentoo and Mandrake, and pretty much for any of these distributions it is equally easy to add the necessary software.
Re:MythTV and Window Managers (Score:2)
Re:MythTV and Window Managers (Score:2)
Re:MythTV and Window Managers (Score:1)
Are you using the right distro? (Score:4, Informative)
What capture card(s) did you settle on? What's your box's spec? Are you doing anything to mitigate heat/noise? Don't be a tease, give us the details!
Re:Are you using the right distro? (Score:2)
Linkey [mysettopbox.tv]
Re:Are you using the right distro? (Score:2)
Linkey [wikipedia.org]
Re:Are you using the right distro? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Are you using the right distro? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd just make sure that you got all the codecs you could think of for mplayer (things like the AAC plugins for Xvid, the
The most compelling reason, to me, for having a myth box is the ability to play back absolutely *anything* - so I'd seek to maximise that by going nuts on
Re:Are you using the right distro? (Score:2)
But knoppmyth is a cool solution to getting mythtv running quickly without nearly the dependencies headaches/etc.
But if someone likes and is comfortable with gentoo there's no reason not to use the distro you like/comfortable with (well the only reason NOT to is that there's better mythtv specific documentation for x,y, or Z distro like
Re:Are you using the right distro? (Score:2)
Back on topic, load up MAME (and other emulators), grab some ROMs, buy a couple USB gamepads, and you've got a great console too.
Re:Are you using the right distro? (Score:2, Insightful)
Great, I can go through all that hassle again. What the hell are they thinking.
I'm now building a new box with Gentoo, thank-you-very-much.
Gerald
Re:Are you using the right distro? (Score:2)
I do this kind of thing for a living (systems integration), so to me this is both a Fun Project and a example of Why Linux Isn't Ready Yet. Too much stuff needs individually tweaking or is held together with crazy-glue. I could probably make it work, but I'm not a normal end-user.
And in no sense should an 'upgrade' require a reformatting of the root filesystem. That's just sloppy.
Nope (Score:2)
Steps for setting up mythTV on Fedora Core 4:
* Assemble your computer
* Install Fedora Core
* Setup atrpms repository (preferably by setting up your yum.conf to be the one provided by fedorafaq)
* yum upgrade
* Choose to use KDE
* yum install alsacore alsautils
* alsaconf
* install lircd (if you need it)
* install ivtv (if you need it)
* yum install mythtv-suite (installs frontend, backend, a bunch of plugins)
* disable artsd in KDE options
* Follow the step-by
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Which problem are you refering to? The 'reformat-root for upgrade?' That's an application problem, not OS or distro. The knoppmyth installer scripts have a couple of gotcha bugs in them. Nothing show-stopper to work around, but it's enough breakage to stop someone who's not comfortable with *nix and troubleshooting from using them.
Example: if your HDD isn't the master on the IDE chain knoppmyth's install scripts won't correctly handle partitioning, even though the code, at first blush, supports this.
How about HDTV cards? (Score:1)
BTW, are there any gotchas with an HDTV card like the HD3000 [pchdtv.com] or is there a better HD card out there?
What I would add (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ick! (Score:5, Interesting)
I just re-built my Myth box from scratch. Gentoo stage3, PVR-250 (ivtv), 400G LVM (3 physical drives), etc etc, and the entire install and setup only took about 4 hours. It was extremely painless and I did not encounter any road blocks. Guess I just want others to realize it isn't as bad as some people make it seem.
Note: I have been running Gentoo and MythTV for a few years, so, I know my hardware and installation process pretty well by now.
Re:Ick! (Score:2, Insightful)
I know better too and will take the bait.
Based upon the number/type of windows MCE 2005 questions I see in my forum I wouldn't necessarily hold MCE 2005 as the champion of easy to setup/configure (granted there's no compiling involved, but god help you if you don't load an "approved certified for
Keep it simple and minimal (Score:5, Informative)
I recommend keeping it as lightweight as you can. My MythTV system sports not much more than:
and various dependencies of those. The fewer moving parts you have, the less likely you are to break something in the future.
Oh, and I almost forgot -- once it's working, STOP MESSING WITH IT. ;)
$0.02,ptd
Re:Keep it simple and minimal (Score:2)
You might want to make a backup as well.
Re:Keep it simple and minimal (Score:1)
Get a Mac Mini and Elgato EyeTV (Score:1, Interesting)
"Get a Mac Mini and Elgato EyeTV"
The Mac Mini is small, quiet, uses very little power and the Elgato products are fantastic.
Scrap your Intel box and Gentoo
MythTV (Score:3, Informative)
The only thing I'd add after is ProjectX [slashdot.org] for fixing buggy IVTV captures and DVDStyler [slashdot.org] for authoring discs.
I installed MythStreamTV [sourceforge.net] which was cool but I never use it, so I don't know if it was worth the effort.
Re:MythTV (Score:2)
Use the Preview Button! [sf.net] Check those URLs! [sf.net]
Systm/Revision3 guys did an episode on MythTV (Score:3, Informative)
While you're there, they also have an episode on how to make your own HQ A/V cables: http://revision3.com/systm/avcabling/ [revision3.com]
Enjoy!
i think most people hit upon it (Score:2)
Maybe MAME and other emulators if that's your thing.
e.
Re: (Score:2)
Stuff on my MythTV box... (Score:2)
Other tools you might find useful for a box dedicated to media: mplayer/mencoder, transcode, dvd::rip, etc. If you have an Nvidia video card, the nvtv application is useful for setting up the overscan.
I record all my shows at a high bitrate with my PVR-250 encoder cards, and about once a month I set up a batch transcoding session with mencoder to transcode all of these to lower bitrate MPEG4 for more permanent sto
Freevo (Score:1)
My advice... (Score:4, Informative)
The problem really isn't MythTV. It's Linux driver support. For Hauppauge PVR150 cards (very popular, and great cards), you need the BETA ivtv drivers. After a solid week of tweaking this and that, getting a backend/frontend MythTV system working, I finally sat down and watched a show... Twenty minutes into it, the backend crashed. This is after putting in 40 hours easily into the setup. I got up, pulled the plug, went to bed. The next morning, I woke up, installed Windows 2000, and SageTV. Ever since then its been wonderful.
SageTV has two commercial skip packages, one stolen from MythTV land (comskip) and one ShowAnalyzer made specifically for Windows and all the various PVR applications (BeyondTV etc).
SageTV also has a web-server so you can do all the same things you can do with MythTV.
SageTV has a real show-progress bar where you can actually see how far you are in a show. It even shows the commercial areas on the progress bar.
SageTV even shows the TV video on the background (transparencies) of all the menus.
SageTV has REAL tuner management. In MythTV if you have 2 tuners, each recording a show, and you hit "Watch Live TV", you get the response "Sorry, all the tuners are busy, go away".. You then have to go to the videos list, find the recording show, then select it to watch. Then cancel the show if you want to watch live TV, then go back to the menu and hit Live TV again.
With SageTV, you hit LiveTV and its recording two shows, it will simply show you one of the tuners, if you try to change the channel, it will ask you, which of the two shows you want to cancel in order to change the channel. NICE!
Also, with MythTV, if you come home from work, turn on the TV, see your 4 hour ring buffer full and its in the middle of a movie, you hit RECORD and it wipes out the movie up to where you are now then starts recording, LAME! SageTV will tag the entire beginning of the show/movie to be part of the show/movie recording, so you get it all.
MythTV is limited to a SINGLE recording directory, you can use LVM to span your disks to join together hard disks, but you can't use network disks then. (Im sure theres some hacky way to do it though). With SageTV, I can use the hard disks all over my house in all my computers on the LAN. So I got my two 250gb cards in my server machine, a 160 gig disk on another machine and a 300 gig disk ona linux machine with a Samba server.. SageTV records to ALL of them.
SageTV has great HDTV support for ATI HDTV Wonder, AverMeda A180's ($80!!), and Fusion 5 HDTV cards! I'm doing pure HDTV now with an antenna picking up 36 stations in the bay area.
SageTV because its on Windows, you can use ATI Video cards for TV OUT.. With NVIDIA and ATI you can use Nvidia PureVideo decoders for PixelAdaptive hardware deinterlacing, features of new GeForce6 and ATI cards for kick-ass deinterlacing... With MythTV you get Software-Bob that eats 100% of your 2.6ghz CPU.. blah.
Best of all, its STABLE.
Now, mind you I am not talking about Sage v2, I am talking about Sage v3.0.11-PR11 Beta. http://sagetv.com/beta.html [sagetv.com]
Read the discussion forums, and try it out. I did, and love it. I could go on and on about why SageTV is better than MythTV... SageTV even has a MUCH better expansion API called SVT's, to totally create custom interfaces and features within the clients.
The only real downside is its $79.95 after your two week trial. I put 4 hours into SageTV and got further than 40 hours with MythTV, I have High Definition video, better support, drivers, etc, commercial skip, web interface yadda yadda yadda... 40 hours for $79.95 is $2/hour... my time is worth more th
Re:My advice... (Score:2)
Re:My advice... SageTV (Score:2)
SageTV after all is Java based (not that means it was automagically portable, but probably didn't hurt their cross platform development).
I have no idea how they'll distribute it (there's some debate as to whether SageTV 3.0 will be OEM only or avaiable for consumer purchase directly)
the Video Without Boundries [vwbinc.com] MediaReady 5000 will/does run on SageTV 3.0 on linux (I know some of the first test mod
Re:My advice... (Score:1, Insightful)
If he wasted at least 40 hours of his time setting up MythTV, then that's at least $200 of his time wasted.
And if freedom means being stuck with something that crashes vs. something that "Just Works", then maybe giving up a little freedom is not a bad thing.
On the other hand, maybe he is an idiot.
Re:My advice... (Score:1)
Re:My advice... (Score:2)
I've been running mythtv for almost a year now, and I use it for all my tv-watching and recording. And ivtv is the weakest link. Everything else about the software works fine, but IVTV is always beta and always crashing. I was expecting it to be a lot better since Hauppauge [hauppauge.com] advertises MythTV and Linux support on their page.
Re:My advice... (Score:2)
What decade you living in? (ivtv) (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What decade you living in? (ivtv) (Score:2)
Re:My advice... (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree Knoppmyth or a Gentoo/MythTV installation can be tough, especially concerning driver support. I've been running KnoppMyth on an older Compaq DeskPro that I picked up for about $90, plus a Hauppage PVR-250, 160gb disk and a NVidia with S-Video out, for about two years now. Previously, I'd had hobbyist experience with Linux (read: webservers, mailservers, ipchains fws), and was by no means a guru. The initial installation was pretty easy, but configuring and customizing stuff like: multiple drives
Re:My advice... (Score:1)
Also, even when MythTV was working well, it did not pass the WAF in my house. The tuner management alone was enough to throw it away, let alone hitting record on live tv and throwing away the ringbuffer.
SageTV handles this beautifully.
Re:My advice...(Vista) (Score:2)
Windows is moving away from me and towards RIAA/MPAA and to an environment where I would have to pay every time I watch something (even if I recorded it from TV) and where I have to buy all my content again with each new media format or each time my media wears out.
So time invested in a linux solution now- prevents me from being a prisoner in 2-3
Re:My advice... (Score:1)
Re:My advice... (Score:1)
been there, (Score:2)
- samba, as it is a file server
- mldonkey, for video on demand
- mt-daapd, for itunes sharing (but I don't use it)
- monitoring trough hotsanic (local), snmp+nagios (remote)
Also, do not forget to configure your console to use your serial port, you don't want to move keyboard & monitor each time you want to connect to it.
WinMyth (Score:2, Informative)
WinMyth [sourceforge.net] is a windows frontend to MythTv. It connects to your linux backend and acts just like any other mythfrontend.
Re:WinMyth (Score:2)
Re:what happens next? (Score:2, Interesting)
If you are scared of Linux (Score:1)
http://mediaportal.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net]
Re:If you are scared of Linux (Score:1)
I made a similar system... (Score:1)
Mtyh, if I recall correctly, integrates well with mplayer, so make sure to have MythTV and all of its plugins: MythVideo (which depends on mplayer), MythRadio (or is it MythFM for FM Radio tuning if your card supports it), and MythMusic. XMMS is nice to have as well.
I like to have another video player on hand in case something screws up. It doesn't usually happen, but it will every now and then. I prefer VLC. VLC has a gtk/gnome interface to it. It