Sorry to deliver the bad news... The BDA wants some money from you for this information:Great program!
Did you (or anyone) find the CLPI specification somewhere?
Or did you figure it out by trial and error?
I'm in need of making a program to generate very simple BD menus for a collection of videos. HDMV should be more than sufficient and there's no need for fancy BD-J stuff in my case. But information on these file formats sure aren't posted on the wall of my grocery store here... And neither anywhere google too easily can reach it. Any chance you're willing to share what you've discovered about the internals of CLPI files?
Thanks!
Ingvar
# Note: the official list of language code values (ISO 639-2/T) can be found at
# http://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/php/code_list.php
# Be careful to use the terminology code not the bibliographic code.
# e.g. For Chinese use "zho" not "chi", for French use "fra" not "fre", for Dutch use "nld" not "dut"
Hi Satish, did you find a solution to your problem? I too am not able to make CPI files good enough to import my MTS files. The problem is that if my mts time is longer than de cpi file I get the length of the cpi file in iMovie (Mac), but when my mts time is shorter than the time defined in cpi file It doesn't import anything.Hi Mike,
Thank you so much for this fantastic application. I just have a small doubt maybe you can solve. Any help in this issue will be greatly appreciated!!
I am a film student and I am totally new to the AVHCD domain. I just bought a Panasonic HDC-TM300 for a documentary project and I recorded my first 3 hour long footage on Saturday. It is in 29 smaller MTS files.
I copied the MTS files on my external hard drive and formatted the Card for next recording. My fault? I did not copy the CPI's!!!
Now I needed to convert them to P2 format for editing in AVID using Mainconcept AVHCD Transcoder for Panasonic Cameras. The software would not recognize the MTS files without the CPI's.
So I went back to my camera and recorded 29 two second clips. That generated 29 CPI files. I transferred my original MTS files in this new folder hierarchy and then used your CLIPINF editor to fix the headers.
What it ended up doing was that it told the transcoder that all my files are two second long. Some of my files are 4 GB and still render to P2 as two second long files. But if I play the MTS file in Windows media player, it plays for 25 minutes.
Now your application has the "stream information" section that addresses the "number of packets" variable. Does that value decide the length of the file that the transcoder will see?
Is there a way to give a custom length to that variable so that the transcoder sees the file for the length that it is?
It also has a hex value. how are the number of packets calculated?
I am terribly sorry for this trouble but I really don't want to lose the footage that I have just because of this first time mistake. Is there anyway you can help?
Thank you very much!
Regards
Satish More
Link updated
Sent from my GT-I9505 using Tapatalk