I was looking for information on MPLS files because of playlist obfuscation. I found discussions about a disc.inf file. Where can I find this file? Can I still find the correct MPLS in this file? Is there a better place to look for it? Also, I am trying to read MPLS file lengths to help me determine which ones might include bonus features like shorts and deleted scenes. Does anyone know of a tool to browse through MPLS files on a BluRay?
I think I found the disc.info file. I found it in the same drive as the Disc that AnyDVD had just cracked. I am not sure how that is possible since it is read only but I am willing to just take it as is. The problem is, the disc.info file found does not contain the MPLS info I was hoping for. Here is what I found. [disc] type=BD-ROM version=AnyDVD HD 8.0.6.0 (BDPHash.bin 16-10-28) totalsectors=24259040 label=DARLINGS_AC_RETAIL speedmenu=0 region=-1 3D=0 fps=23
disc.inf gets automatically created by AnyDVD in the discs's root. As to no mpls = Same reason as always. No logfile = no playlist
Logfile : https://forum.redfox.bz/threads/please-read-this-before-you-post.70757/ Playlist info: u don't. Until the disc has been added to the OPD. THEN it will be in the inf file
there no such thing. The OPD stands for the "Online Protection Database (where anydvd gets its playlist info), and the logfiles are used to add that info to the OPD
Maybe James at RedFox can add a "Upload Logfile to RedFox...", right under the "Create Logfile..." When you right click on the RedFox taskbar icon.
The sysinfo.txt file looks like it contains enough info to tie it to a specific machine. Am I wrong about this?
You are. The logfile only contains basic system info as to what drivers are loaded that perhaps could be a problem for AnyDVD and stuff like that. It contains no personal info at all. Sent from my Nexus 6P with Tapatalk.
I found a utility called BDInfo. It works well enough for browsing playlists and the lengths of those playlists.
I know an even better utility, offered on this forum: CloneBD. It works well enough for browsing playlists and the lengths of the playlists, playing back the playlists, checking for presence of Cinavia, displaying information on the tracks, recoding, ..........etc.. And - wow - it's free for most of these things.
you don't. You check the packaging or use CloneBD's title preview player to do that, as pete suggested.
I think that's what they were asking. How to use CloneBD to detect Cinavia. The answer is to use the title preview player built in and it will show if the track has Cinavia or not.