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<!doctype linuxdoc system>
<article>
<title>Installing and using MythTV
<author>Robert Kulagowski, <url url="mailto:rkulagow@rocketmail.com"
name="mailto:rkulagow@rocketmail.com">
<date>2008-06-04, v0.21.02
<abstract>
Initially, installation of MythTV seems like a huge task. There are lots
of dependencies, and various distributions seem to do the same thing
different ways. This document will attempt to give general installation
instructions, as well as including distribution-specific instructions where
necessary.
</abstract>
<toc>
<sect>First things first.
<p><figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Please note that I, Robert Kulagowski, am <em>NOT</em> the
author/programmer of the MythTV application! I can not give you
personalized installation support. If you are having issues installing
MythTV you should examine the archives, or post your question to the
MythTV-users mailing list. If you send me "Does MythTV work with 'X'"?
messages - I will simply instruct you to ask your question on the
mythtv-users mailing list.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect1>What is MythTV?
<p>MythTV is a GPL licensed suite of programs that allow you to build the
mythical home media convergence box on your own using Open Source software
and operating systems. MythTV is known to work on Linux and Mac OS X
(PowerPC and Intel). It does not run on Windows.
MythTV has a number of capabilities. The television portion allows you to
do the following:
<itemize>
<item>You may pause, fast-forward and rewind live Television.
<item>You may install multiple video capture cards to record more than one
program at a time.
<item>You can have multiple servers (called "backends"), each with multiple
capture cards in them. All scheduling is performed by the Master backend,
which arbitrates which recording will be performed by each device. All
recording requests are managed by the Master backend, so you can schedule a
recording from any client.
<item>You can have multiple clients (called "frontends" in MythTV parlance),
each with a common view of all available programs. Any client can watch any
program that was recorded by any of the servers, assuming that they have the
hardware capabilities to view the content; a low-powered frontend will not
be able to watch HDTV, for example. Clients can be diskless and controlled
entirely by a remote control.
<item>You may use any combination of standard analog capture card, MPEG-2,
MJPEG, DVB, HDTV, USB and firewire capture devices. With appropriate
hardware, MythTV can control set top boxes, often found in digital cable and
satellite TV systems.
<item>Program Guide Data in North America is downloaded from
schedulesdirect.org, a non-profit organization which has licensed data from
Tribune Media Services. This service provides almost two weeks of
scheduling information. Program Guide Data in other countries is obtained
using XMLTV. MythTV uses this information to create a schedule that
maximizes the number of programs that can be recorded if you don't have
enough tuners.
<item>MythTV implements a UPNP server, so a UPNP client should automatically
see content from your MythTV system.
</itemize>
Other modules in MythTV include:
<itemize>
<item>MythArchive, a tool to create DVDs
<item>MythBrowser, a web browser
<item>MythControls, an application to configure your remote control
<item>MythFlix, a Netflix module
<item>MythGallery, a picture-viewing application
<item>MythGame
<item>MythMusic, a music playing / ripping application which supports MP3
and FLAC
<item>MythNews, a RSS news grabber
<item>MythPhone, phone and videophone using SIP.
<item>MythVideo, DVD ripper and a media-viewer for content not created within MythTV
<item>MythWeather
<item>MythWeb, which allows you to control your MythTV system using a web
browser. With MythWeb, you can schedule and delete recordings, change
keybindings and more. With proper security, you may even schedule a program
over the Internet and have it immediately acted on by the Master backend.
</itemize>
<sect1>QuickStart
<p>Custom mini-distributions are available to make it easier to install
MythTV. A mini-distribution removes many of the "general purpose"
workstation / server software packages that may be installed by default if
you use one of the big-name OS packages.
See <url url="http://mysettopbox.tv" name="http://mysettopbox.tv"> if you'd
like to install a custom version of Knoppix optimized for MythTV.
See <url url="http://www.minimyth.org" name="http://www.minimyth.org"> if you'd like
to install MythTV onto a diskless system.
See <url url="http://bit.blkbk.com" name="http://bit.blkbk.com"> if you'd
like to install MythTV on a Xbox.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Site appears unmaintained.
See <url url="http://wilsonet.com/mythtv/"
name="http://wilsonet.com/mythtv/"> for instructions tailored to RedHat's
Fedora Core distribution.
See <url url="http://www.mythbuntu.org" name="http://www.mythbuntu.org"> if
you'd like to install a customized version of Ubuntu optimized for MythTV.
There is a MythTV wiki at <url url="http://wiki.mythtv.org"
name="http://wiki.mythtv.org">.
If you are installing this version for Schedules Direct support, please see
the <ref id="migratingtoSD" name="Migrating from DataDirect Labs to
Schedules Direct"> section for additional information.
<sect1>Upgrading from previous versions
<p>The upgrade from previous versions should be transparent. Any changes to
the database structure should be applied automatically.
It is <em>strongly</em> recommended that you back up your database before
installing a new version of MythTV.
See <ref id="backupdb" name="Saving or Restoring the database"> for instructions.
<sect1>How to obtain this document / PDF versions of this document <label id="how_to_obtain">
<p>This HOWTO document is maintained at the primary MythTV website: <url
url="http://www.mythtv.org" name="http://www.mythtv.org"> by Robert
Kulagowski <url url="mailto:rkulagow@rocketmail.com">.
This document is available as a single-page HTML document at <url
url="http://www.mythtv.org/docs/mythtv-HOWTO-singlehtml.html"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/docs/mythtv-HOWTO-singlehtml.html"> or as a PDF
at <url url="http://www.mythtv.org/docs/mythtv-HOWTO.pdf"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/docs/mythtv-HOWTO.pdf">.
This HOWTO is for MythTV v0.21
Release notes for this version may be found in the MythTV Wiki at <url
url="http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/index.php/Release_Notes_-_0.21"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/index.php/Release_Notes_-_0.21">
<sect1>Books about MythTV
<p>If you would like to purchase a book specifically about MythTV:
<itemize>
<item>Hacking MythTV, ISBN 978-0470037874 by Wilson, Tittel, Wright and Korelc
<item>Practical MythTV: Building a PVR and Media Center PC, ISBN 978-1590597798 by Smith and Still
</itemize>
<sect1>Document conventions
<p>The following conventions are used throughout this document.<newline>
<bf>boldface</bf> - used for program names.<newline>
<tt>typewriter</tt> - used for program paths.<newline>
<em>emphasis</em> - Pay attention here.<newline>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption>
Pay more attention.
</caption>
</figure>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
Ignore at your own peril.
</caption>
</figure>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="add.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="add.png">
<caption>
Feature that has been added to SVN (subversion, a revision control system)
but is not available in the current release.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect1>Mailing lists / getting help
<p>It's recommended that you join the user list at <url
url="http://www.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users">. The developer
list is at <url url="http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-dev"
name="http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-dev">. Please keep
the developer list strictly for development-related issues.
Searchable archives for the lists are available at <url
url="http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/"
name="http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/">.
<sect1>IRC
<p>There are two IRC channels dedicated to MythTV which can be found on
irc.freenode.net
<itemize>
<item>mythtv
<item>mythtv-users
</itemize>
The <tt>mythtv</tt> channel is where the developers discuss code. It is
<em>not</em> a user-support channel. Please don't ask non-development
related questions there.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
Really. Even if there's no one in the mythtv-users IRC group or everyone
seems to be ignoring you.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect1>Bug database
<p>If you feel you need to contribute to a bug database, use the MythTV bug
ticketing system at <url url="http://svn.mythtv.org/trac"
name="http://svn.mythtv.org/trac">.
Good entries will contain the following:
<enum>
<item>Qt version
<item>Linux distribution
<item>gcc version
<item>the last entry in config.log to detail how you compiled
<item>MythTV version numbers (<em>e.g.</em>from mythfrontend --version)
<item>Hardware
<item>How you are able to reproduce the bug
</enum>
See the instructions on how to debug in <ref id="debugging" name="Section 22">.
The bug database is not a chat room, so restrict your entries to what is
relevant. It's also not a repository of feature requests; a feature request
without an accompanying patch file to implement that feature will be quickly
closed. There is a feature wishlist on the wiki at <url
url="http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/index.php/Feature_Wishlist"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/index.php/Feature_Wishlist">. There is no
guarantee that anything on the wishlist will ever get code written to
implement it.
If a developer closes out your bug, it's likely you didn't provide enough
information. Don't re-open a bug without providing additional information.
<sect1>Contributing to this document
<p>Contributions to the HOWTO are welcome, especially if you find a
grammatical or spelling error, or if the wording of something is just plain
confusing.
If you'd like to make a new contribution, create a ticket at <url
url="http://svn.mythtv.org/trac" name="http://svn.mythtv.org/trac"> and
click "New Ticket". The type should be set to "patch" and the owner set to
"rkulagow" to ensure that I see your contribution.
Please send it as either SGML or as plain text. <em>NO HTML</em>. The
source used to create the HOWTO is in SGML / Linuxdoc. Do not be afraid of
SGML! A quick look at the source of this HOWTO will show that it is not
difficult, because there aren't that many tags to worry about, so at least
<em>try</em> to submit as SGML. See the Linuxdoc HOWTO at <url
url="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Howtos-with-LinuxDoc.html"
name="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Howtos-with-LinuxDoc.html"> for information
on the linuxdoc format itself, or look at the <tt>mythtv-HOWTO.sgml</tt>
file as an example.
To create the actual patch, run <bf>diff -u origfilename newfile >
doc.patch</bf> and attach your contribution to the trac ticket.
<sect>Introduction.
<p>This HOWTO document will focus on manually building MythTV in a North
American environment. If you have installation instructions for a different
region or Linux distribution, please send them to the author so that it can
be included in other versions of this document.
<sect>Checking prerequisites.
<p>You must ensure that any firewalls (either hardware, or a software
firewall installed by your distribution) will not block access to the ports
that will be used by the MythTV clients and servers on the "inside" LAN.
The ports for MySQL (TCP port 3306) and mythbackend (TCP ports 6543 and
6544) must be open. It is <em>strongly</em> recommended that you do
<em>not</em> expose the MythTV and MySQL ports to the Internet or your
"Outside" LAN.
<sect1>Hardware
<p>Hardware selection is a complex topic, one this HOWTO will only discuss
briefly and in general terms. The following subsections offer some general
guidance but stop short of offering specific recommendations.
For a good MythTV experience, you must understand that MythTV exercises your
hardware more than a typical desktop. Encoder cards generate DMA across the
PCI bus. The CPU is busy encoding / decoding video. Hard drives are
constantly reading and writing data. Building a MythTV system on older /
"spare" hardware may be an exercise in frustration and can waste many hours
of valuable time.
For more detail about actual configurations that others have used, Mark
Cooper has setup a hardware database at <url
url="http://pvrhw.goldfish.org/" name="http://pvrhw.goldfish.org/">. The
website will let you browse what other users have reported as their hardware
configuration, and how happy they are with the results.
If you have specific questions about the suitability of specific hardware
choices, you can consult the archives of the mythtv-users mailing list at
<url url="http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/"
name="http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/"> or
post a question to the list.
<sect2>CPU Type and Speed
<p>Selection of CPU type and speed is one of the trickiest elements of
hardware selection, mainly because there are so many tradeoffs which can be
made. For example, if you have plenty of CPU, you can use higher bitrates
or capture sizes, etc.
MythTV has two modes of operation. First, it can function as a software
video encoder, which means that it uses a fairly generic "dumb" video
capture card to get frames of video, encodes them using the CPU on your
motherboard and writes them to disk. High-end video capture cards and
devices like the TiVo and ReplayTV have dedicated encoder chips which use
specialized hardware to convert the video stream to the MPEG-2 format
without using the motherboard CPU. The main CPU has the responsibility of
running the Operating System and reading and writing the encoded frames to
the disk. These tasks have fairly low CPU requirements compared to encoding
video, which is why a device like a Series 1 TiVo can run with only 16MB of
RAM and a 54MHz CPU.
There are many variables that go into the question: "How fast a CPU do I
need to run MythTV"? Obviously, the faster your CPU, the better your
experience will be with MythTV. If you are using the software MPEG-4
encoder and performing the "Watch TV" function, where the CPU is both
encoding and decoding video simultaneously to allow Pause, Fast Forward and
Rewind functions for live TV requires more CPU then just encoding or
decoding. MythTV also supports multiple encoder cards in a single PC,
thereby increasing the CPU requirements if you plan on simultaneously
encoding multiple programs. As a general guideline, plan on 1GHz per
encoder if you are doing software-based encoding, less if you are using a
hardware-based encoder.
Here are a few data points:
<itemize>
<item>A PIII/733MHz system can encode one video stream using the MPEG-4
codec using 480x480 capture resolution. This does not allow for live TV
watching, but does allow for encoding video and then watching it later.
<item>A developer states that his AMD1800+ system can <bf>almost</bf>
encode two MPEG-4 video streams and watch one program simultaneously.
<item>A PIII/800MHz system with 512MB RAM can encode one video
stream using the RTjpeg codec with 480x480 capture resolution and play it back
simultaneously, thereby allowing live TV watching.
<item>A dual Celeron/450MHz is able to view a 480x480 MPEG-4/3300kbps file
created on a different system with 30% CPU usage.
<item>A P4 2.4GHz machine can encode two 3300Kbps 480x480 MPEG-4 files and
simultaneously serve content to a remote frontend.
</itemize>
The second mode of operation is where MythTV is paired with a hardware-based
video encoder, such as a Matrox G200 or a Hauppauge
WinTV-PVR-150/250/350/500. In this mode, because the video encoding is
being done by a dedicated video processor, the host CPU requirements are
quite low. See the <ref id="video_capture_device" name="Video Capture
Device"> section for details.
The price differential between a frame grabber and a card that implements
hardware MPEG-2 encoding, such as the Hauppauge PVR-x50 series, is now less
than $30 US. Primary development in MythTV has transitioned to supporting
MPEG-2 capture devices and HDTV, so if given the option, go with the
hardware MPEG-2 encoder.
If you have a Via M10000 series or a Hauppauge PVR-350, MythTV can use the
hardware-based video decoder for playback, which further reduces CPU
requirements.
<sect2>Memory
<p>A MythTV host that is both a backend and a frontend and using software
encoding with a single capture card should run adequately in 256MB of RAM.
Additional RAM above 256MB will not necessarily increase performance, but
may be useful if you are running multiple encoders.
<sect2>Hard Disk(s)
<p>Encoded video takes up a lot of hard disk space. The exact amount depends
on the encoding scheme, the size of the raw images and the frames per
second, but typical values for MythTV range from 700 megabytes/hour for
MPEG-4, 2 GB/hour for MPEG-2 and RTjpeg and 7 GB/hour for ATSC HDTV.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: You <em>must</em> use DMA for hard drive access to prevent
choppy or jittery video. Not all distributions enable DMA at boot time.
See the Troubleshooting Section for <ref id="Setting_DMA"
name="instructions"> on how to do this.</caption>
</figure>
Writing video to disk is sensitive to timing issues; RTjpeg requires less
CPU with the tradeoff being larger files and needing to write to the disk
faster. MPEG-4 requires more CPU, but the files are smaller. At the
default resolution, MPEG-2 creates the largest files of all with almost no
CPU impact.
See the Troubleshooting <ref id="Setting_DMA" name="section"> for more
information.
<sect2>Filesystems
<p>MythTV creates large files, many in excess of 4GB. You <em>must</em>
use a 64 or 128 bit filesystem. These will allow you to create large files.
Filesystems known to have problems with large files are FAT (all versions),
and ReiserFS (versions 3 and 4).
Because MythTV creates very large files, a filesystem that does well at
deleting large files is important. Numerous benchmarks show that XFS and
JFS do very well at this task. You are <em>strongly</em> encouraged to
consider one of these for your MythTV filesystem. JFS is the absolute best
at deletion, so you may want to try it if XFS gives you problems. MythTV
.21 incorporates a "slow delete" feature, which progressively shrinks
the file rather than attempting to delete it all at once, so if you're more
comfortable with a filesystem such as ext3 (whose delete performance for
large files isn't that good) you may use it rather than one of the
known-good high-performance file systems. There are other ramifications to
using XFS and JFS - neither offer the opportunity to shrink a filesystem;
they may only be expanded.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: You <em>must not</em> use ReiserFS v3 for
your recordings. You will get corrupted recordings if you do.
</caption>
</figure>
Because of the size of the MythTV files, it may be useful to plan for future
expansion right from the beginning. If your case and power supply have the
capacity for additional hard drives, read through the <ref id="LVM"
name="LVM"> and <ref id="advancedpartitionformatting" name="Advanced
Partition Formatting"> sections for some pointers.
<label id="video_capture_device">
<sect2>Video Capture Device
<p>In order to capture video, MythTV will need one or more video capture
devices with Linux drivers. There are a number of classes of hardware
available for capturing video.
<sect3>Frame Grabbers.
<p>This class of card is the simplest and is usually the cheapest. There is no
on-board encoding of the analog video; hardware known as a Digital-Analog
Converter (DAC) takes the video and presents it to the computer in an
essentially raw digital form.
For a list of video capture cards known to work with Linux, please see
<tt>/usr/src/linux/Documentation/video4linux/bttv</tt> for a partial
listing; even if your specific card is not listed, it may be that the vendor
is actually using a standard reference design and placing their own name on
it. See the video4linux mailing list (<url
url="https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/video4linux-list"
name="https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/video4linux-list">) for
more information and for specific hardware questions.
The most common inexpensive cards available use the Bt848, Bt878 or CX2388x
series of video capture chips; examples are the "Hauppauge WinTV Go" card and
the "AverTV Desktop PVR" card, both of which use the bttv kernel module.
<code>
NOTE: The ATI TV Wonder series and the ATI All-in-Wonder series of cards
are not the same. The All-in-Wonder cards will not work with MythTV.
</code>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="4cm">
<img src="stop.png">
</figure>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="4cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: The ATI All-in-Wonder cards (which are not the same
as the ATI TV Wonder, TV Wonder VE or TV Wonder Pro) <em>will not</em> work
as a MythTV capture device because the GATOS <url
url="http://gatos.sourceforge.net" name="http://gatos.sourceforge.net">
drivers that are available provide only a limited subset of the V4L API.
The TV Wonder series of cards are supported by the Bt8x8 Video4Linux driver.
</caption>
</figure>
After you have installed a suitable capture device, you can check that
the kernel sees it with <tt>lspci</tt>. Look for an entry labeled "Multimedia
video controller". To get more detailed information about the card, use
<tt>lspci -v</tt> or <tt>lspci -vv</tt>. Ensure that your system is loading
the bttv modules by typing:
<tscreen><verb>
# lsmod |grep bttv
</verb></tscreen>
You want to see the <tt>bttv</tt> module listed.
<sect3>Hardware MPEG-2 encoders.
<p>While inexpensive video-capture cards simply capture raw frames, leaving
encoding to software, some higher-end cards incorporate hardware-based
encoding. Using either a G200 MJPEG encoder card, or a MPEG-2 encoder card
supported by the IvyTV project <url url="http://ivtvdriver.org/"
name="http://ivtvdriver.org"> such as the Hauppauge
PVR-150/250/350/500, Avermedia M179, Hauppauge "Freestyle" or Yuan M600
cards will allow you to use dedicated hardware encoders rather than your
CPU. (The PVR-350 can simultaneously be used as an output device.) Using the
on-board MPEG-2 encoder greatly reduces the CPU requirements for
encoding.
The ivtv driver was incorporated into the Linux kernel starting at v2.6.22.
There is a Beta driver for the HVR-1600 card at <url
url="http://www.ivtvdriver.org/index.php/Cx18"
name="http://www.ivtvdriver.org/index.php/Cx18">
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Motherboards with the Via chipset are notoriously bad with
DMA and have caused numerous issues with ivtv, including hard locks. See
the ivtv website <url url="http://ivtvdriver.org" name="http://ivtvdriver.org">
for the latest information on what works and what doesn't.
Here are some data points for encoding:
<itemize>
<item>A Celeron 450 uses 2% CPU for encoding a 480x480 16Mbps MPEG-2 stream.
</itemize>
Here are some data points for decoding:
<itemize>
<item>An Athlon 1800XP can decode a 720x480 8Mbps MPEG-2 file using 10% CPU
<item>An Athlon 1GHz can decode a 720x480 16Mbps MPEG-2 file using 30-50%
CPU, can decode a 480x480 16Mbps MPEG-2 using 30% CPU and approximately 30%
for Live TV at 416x480.
<item>A P3-550 can decode a 480x480 16Mbps MPEG-2 file with 55% CPU.
<item>A Celeron 450 (no SSE) can decode a 480x480 16Mbps MPEG-2 file with
80% CPU.
</itemize>
<sect3>DVB capture cards.
<p>DVB is a video standard primarily found in Europe (where it comes in
DVB-C, DVB-T and DVB-S varieties for Cable, Terrestrial and Satellite) and
is also used as the programming interface for HDTV capture cards in Linux.
To see if your DVB card is supported, see the list of cards in the
"Supported Hardware" section of the DVB Wiki at <url
url="http://www.linuxtv.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page"
name="http://www.linuxtv.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page"> for more
information.
In the United States, you may use a card such as the TwinHan to obtain
unencrypted Free-To-Air satellite channels. See <url
url="http://www.lyngsat.com/" name="http://www.lyngsat.com/"> for the types
of content which is available.
<sect3>HDTV.
<p>There are a number of HDTV cards with Linux drivers which are known to
operate in the United States; a complete list of cards with DVB drivers can
be found at <url url="http://www.linuxtv.org/wiki/index.php/ATSC_Devices"
name="http://www.linuxtv.org/wiki/index.php/ATSC_Devices"> Some cards
support capture of unencrypted digital cable TV (utilizing QAM256), others
will only work with Over The Air (aka "OTA") signals captured with an
antenna (with 8VSB).
Cards that have been reported to work include:
<itemize>
<item>pcHDTV HD-2000, Air2PC PCI rev 1-3 (8VSB only)
<item>SiliconDust HDHomeRun (8VSB, QAM256)
<item>pcHDTV HD-3000/5500 (8VSB, QAM256)
<item>Air2PC HD-5000 (8VSB, QAM256)
<item>DViCO Fusion HDTV Lite/Gold 5 (8VSB, QAM256)
</itemize>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: There are no known consumer-level capture devices which will
allow you to capture the HDTV output (DVI, HDMI, VGA, YPbPr / Component)
from a set-top box commonly found with digital cable systems or satellite
systems. <em>None</em> of the capture devices listed above
perform any encoding; they merely allow your computer to save a copy of a
HDTV stream which has already been converted to MPEG-2 at the broadcast
facility.
<bf>NOTE:</bf>: All of the cards listed above (except for the HD-2000 and
HDHomeRun) should be configured as DVB cards. The HD-2000 can be configured
as a pcHDTV card if you use the V4L drivers from <url
url="http://www.pchdtv.com" name="http://www.pchdtv.com"> and use Linux
kernel 2.6.9 or earlier. With kernel 2.6.10 and higher it must be
configured as a DVB card, but you lose access to the second antenna input in
ATSC mode. The HDHomeRun should be configured as two HDHomeRun cards, one
for each tuner.
To playback HDTV content, plan on a powerful CPU. "How powerful?" depends
on a number of factors, such as the capture resolution, whether the video is
progressive or interlaced, and whether your display card has hardware-assist
support for Linux.
The Simple Answer: Once you are in the 3.2 Ghz P4-class of CPU you should have
no issues with viewing HDTV.
The Complicated Answer:
For 720p content (1280x720), a 2.4GHz P4 should be sufficient.
For 1920x1080i->1920x1080p with the better deinterlacing methods
done in real time a 2.4GHz CPU is taxed, but should work if you use "Bob and
Weave" deinterlacing, or if you have an NVIDIA card with MPEG-2 hardware
acceleration. If you enable the hardware acceleration, you may be able to
use a 1.8GHz processor.
<sect3>Firewire.
<p>You may use the Firewire output of the Motorola DCT6200 or the SA3250.
If your provider uses 5C encryption on a particular channel, you won't be
able to get any content.
<sect3>DBoxII or other devices running Neutrino
<p>You may use the Ethernet port of an DBoxII or a similar device to capture
MPEG2. Your set top box has to be running the Neutrino GUI.
<sect3>USB Capture Devices.
<p>The Plextor ConvertX PVR devices are supported through Linux drivers
available from <url
url="http://www.plextor.com/english/support/LinuxSDK.htm"
name="http://www.plextor.com/english/support/LinuxSDK.htm">. MythTV uses the
Plextor to capture hardware encoded MPEG-4, so the host CPU requirements are low.
Hauppauge WinTV-PVR-USB2 (driver available at <url
url="http://www.isely.net/pvrusb2/" name="http://www.isely.net/pvrusb2/">)
emulates a PVR-x50 card.
<sect3>IP Recorder (RTSP, RTS, UDP)
<p>MPEG-2, MPEG-4 and H.264 internet TS stream recording is supported using
the IPTV recorder in MythTV. This recorder expects the channels to be supplied
as a m3u playlist. If your DSL/Fiber provider supplies television service,
but does not provide a m3u playlist for the channels, you can construct one
for your own use. You do not need to download it from the same server as the
streams themselves, and can also read it from a file if this is more convenient.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Some DSL providers only allow you to use one recorder at a
time, so you may need to limit yourself to one recorder in MythTV and turn
off any set top box the cable provider sold or rented to you with your
service. This limitation is independent of the bandwidth you have purchased.
<sect2>Hardware known NOT to work and other issues
<p>
<itemize>
<item>Hauppauge WinTV-D or -HD (no driver)
<item>Hauppauge WinTV-USB series
<item>Hauppauge WinTV-PVR-usb (model 602), or WinTV-PVR-PCI (model 880) cards (no driver - this is not the PVR-250/350
series of cards supported by the IvyTV driver)
<item>ATI All-in-Wonder series
</itemize>
<sect2>Sound card
<p>The system needs a sound card or an on-board equivalent on the motherboard
to play back and in most cases, to record sound. Any sound card that can be
operated by the ALSA (Advanced Linux Sound Architecture) kernel modules will
work with MythTV. However, some cards and drivers will provide better
quality or compatibility than others. In particular, many audio
devices included on motherboards can be problematic.
The usual practice for capturing the audio associated with the video is to
run a cable from an audio output on the video capture card to the Line input
on a sound card. However, some video capture cards provide on-board audio
capabilities that work with the kernel <tt>btaudio</tt> module instead,
thereby eliminating the need for a cable. This is useful if you will be
using multiple capture cards in a single chassis, since each capture card
will not need its own sound card. Note that a separate sound card is still
required for playback when using <tt>btaudio</tt>, and that often the audio
recorded in this way will be mono only. See the <ref id="btaudio"
name="btaudio"> section for more information.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Analog video capture cards are the only ones which
require a soundcard for capturing audio. DVB, HDTV, and other hardware
encoder cards all provide a combined audio / video stream.
</caption>
</figure>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Plugging a Line-level device into the Mic input is
not recommended. Line-level devices have higher voltages and can damage the
sound card. In addition, even if it doesn't break your card, you will be
getting Mono sound. See the Linux MP3 HOWTO at <url
url="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/MP3-HOWTO.html"
name="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/MP3-HOWTO.html"> for additional information.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect2>Video Display Card
<p>MythTV will work with just about any video card. However, it is highly
recommended that you use a card which supports XVideo (XV) extensions. If
your card does not support XV, color conversion and scaling will be
performed by your CPU rather than the video card. This is very CPU
and memory intensive and will often result in dropped frames and a
corresponding degradation of quality. Check the X documentation
for details if you are uncertain about your preferred card. You may
also run <tt>xvinfo</tt>; look for your video card to be listed as one
of the adapters.
<!-- Updated information from "Ray Olszewski" <ray@comarre.com> -->
If you want to use MythTV with a standard television, you will need a
physical connection from your video card to your TV set, which can either be
a TV-out port on the card itself or an external adapter that converts the
VGA signal to an appropriate video signal. "Appropriate" depends on a number
of factors, such as video standard (NTSC vs. PAL), the type of input
connection (Composite vs. SVideo), etc.
Note that with some video cards and X drivers, XVideo extensions are
only supported on the VGA output, and not on the TV output.
<sect2>Cards with TV-out
<p>The next section deals with a number of cards that are known to have
TV-out ports. The list is unlikely to be complete, so if you know of
others, please post a message to the mythtv-users mailing list so the
information can be included in future versions of the HOWTO. The list is
organized by manufacturer.
Reports here are based on what users of the cards have posted on the
mythtv-users mailing list, so if you need configuration details, please
search the archives at <url
url="http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/"
name="http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/"> using
the card name in your search string.
<sect3>ATI
<p>ATI makes many cards with TV-out capability, but only offers Linux
drivers for Radeon 8500 and above cards. See the Drivers and Software
section of <url url="http://www.ati.com/" name="http://www.ati.com"> for the
driver and additional information.
The enhanced ati.2 X driver created by the GATOS <url
url="http://gatos.sourceforge.net" name="http://gatos.sourceforge.net">
project offers some support for TV-out on other ATI cards, but only in its
"experimental" version, available through CVS. There have been reports from
people who say they have made this driver work with one or another ATI card.
For example, Bruce Markey <url url="mailto:bjm@lvcm.com"> writes (on the
mythtv-users mailing list): "I got this to work. You can quote me on that.
I've used TV-out on several models of ATI cards both All-In-Wonder and
regular cards with TV-out." See the "Adventurous Setup" section of <url
url="http://gatos.sourceforge.net/watching_tv.php"
name="http://gatos.sourceforge.net/watching_tv.php"> for details. Also see
<url url="http://www.retinalburn.net/linux/tvout.html"
name="http://www.retinalburn.net/linux/tvout.html"> for more information.
<sect3>NVIDIA
<p>Some NVIDIA cards with TV-out can be run using the standard nv driver in
X, combined with the userspace application <bf>nvtv</bf> to control the TV-out
port. See <url url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/nv-tv-out/"
name="http://sourceforge.net/projects/nv-tv-out/"> for details. Recent
versions of the NVIDIA driver have better support for overscan and other
features useful with TV-Out, so the <bf>nvtv</bf> application may not be
required.
Some NVIDIA cards can be run with a proprietary NVIDIA X driver made
available by NVIDIA. See <url url="http://www.nvidia.com/object/unix.html"
name="http://www.nvidia.com/object/unix.html"> for more information.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: It's strongly recommended that you use the proprietary
NVIDIA drivers; they have excellent support for XvMC and ship with a good
configuration utility. XvMC provides MPEG-2 hardware acceleration, which is
important if you want to display HDTV.
<sect3>Hauppauge PVR-350 <label id="PVR-350">
<p>MythTV supports the TV-out and MPEG-2 decoder functions in the IvyTV
driver.
The PVR-350 is unique amongst the Hauppauge PVR-x50 cards in that it also
supports audio output, but you need to connect that audio output to
something. There are two courses of action you may take:
<enum>
<item>Take the audio output from the PVR-350 and plug it into an input on a
sound card on your machine. You may then use MythTV's internal audio
controls.
<item>Take the audio output from the PVR-350 and connect it directly to your
television / audio system. You must indicate that you are using external
audio control on the PVR-350 setup page.
</enum>
<sect3>Other Options
<p>Some devices with on-board TV-out capability, such as Xboxes converted to
Linux and some laptops can be used as MythTV frontends to display on a
television screen. Please consult the mythtv-users mailing list for messages
that report the details of these special arrangements.
<sect2>External Adapters
<p>External adapters convert standard VGA output to a form suitable for
display on a television. The output format varies by region, since
different countries have different TV standards. People on the mythtv-users
list have mentioned these adapters:
<itemize>
<item>AITech Web Cable Plus, powered by external transformer or takes power
from PS/2 keyboard connector, support resolutions up to 1024x768, outputs
composite and SVideo, provides position adjustment.
<item>Averkey lite, powered by a USB port, has Composite, SVideo, YPbPr
outputs; pan, brightness, overscan/underscan controls; supports up to
1024x768 outputs; and supports PAL and NTSC.
<item>ADS TV Elite XGA
<item>AverKey iMicro (comments are generally favorable)
<item>AITech Web Cable (comments are generally unfavorable, different than
the "Plus" version above)
<item>TVIEW Gold (mentioned once, favorably)
</itemize>
<sect1>Software
<p>There are a few ways of installing programs on Linux systems; you can
either use a pre-compiled package, or install from a tarball after
satisfying any prerequisites.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: you must have the MySQL database software installed on a
system to store the master database. This does not necessarily mean that
MySQL must run on one of the MythTV boxes. The minimum MySQL version is 5.0.
</caption></figure>
<sect2>Pre-compiled packages <label id="precompiled">
<p>A number of people have created pre-compiled packages for MythTV that may
make your installation easier.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
<bf>BIG FAT WARNING</bf>: This HOWTO assumes that you have <em>not</em>
installed MythTV from a package. All example command lines and file
locations are based on the MythTV tarball defaults. Some packagers have
modified the filenames, binaries and file locations to match what is
commonly found in that distribution. Any issues with MythTV installed via a
pre-compiled package <bf>MUST</bf> be raised with the packager.
</caption>
</figure>
If you use any of the pre-compiled packages you may not need to perform any
additional configuration steps in this HOWTO. The next logical step is
<ref id="mysql" name="configuring MySQL">, which you may or may not have to
perform. See your package documentation.
<sect3>Red Hat Linux / Fedora Core
<label id="atrpms">
<p>The definitive documentation on installing MythTV on Red Hat Linux /
Fedora Core can be found in Jarod Wilson's (<url
url="mailto:jcw@wilsonet.com" name="mailto:jcw@wilsonet.com">) HOWTO at <url
url="http://wilsonet.com/mythtv/" name="http://wilsonet.com/mythtv/"> Just
like 3rd-party packages, any 3rd-party documentation problems should be
brought up with the 3rd-parties (maintainer, lists, bugzillas etc.). The
installation instructions which follow should be used as a guide only; refer
to Jarod's guide.
Red Hat Linux and Fedora Core packages for MythTV and all of its add-on
modules and some themes have been packaged by <url
url="mailto:Axel.Thimm@ATrpms.net" name="mailto:Axel.Thimm@ATrpms.net"> and
are available at <url url="http://ATrpms.net/topic/multimedia/"
name="http://ATrpms.net/topic/multimedia/">. All of the prerequisites for
MythTV (such as XMLTV) are available as RPM packages. If you have problems
with the RPMs, please contact the ATrpms lists at <url
url="http://lists.ATrpms.net/" name="http://lists.ATrpms.net/"> or file a
bug against <url url="http://bugzilla.ATrpms.net/"
name="http://bugzilla.ATrpms.net/">.
Given the large number of dependent RPMs you are advised to use tools like
apt or yum for automatic retrieval and installation of the required RPMs.
(<url url="http://ATrpms.net/install.html"
name="http://ATrpms.net/install.html">) In this case a
special meta-package called mythtv-suite will allow you to install all of
MythTV and its add-ons, plus all dependencies.
If you don't have <bf>apt</bf> or <bf>yum</bf> on your machine, download and
install the atrpms-kickstart package from <url
url="http://ATrpms.net/name/atrpms-kickstart/"
name="http://ATrpms.net/name/atrpms-kickstart/">.
Install the package with:
<tscreen><verb>
# rpm -Uvh atrpms-kickstart*
</verb></tscreen>
Then run:
<tscreen><verb>
# apt-get update
# apt-get dist-upgrade
# apt-get update
</verb></tscreen>
And finally:
<tscreen><verb>
# apt-get install mythtv-suite
</verb></tscreen>
These steps however, do NOT perform the installation of any drivers required
for <bf>ALSA</bf>, capture cards, <bf>lirc kernel modules</bf>, etc., nor do
they set up your MythTV database. Check <url
url="http://ATrpms.net/topic/multimedia/" name="http://ATrpms.net/topic/multimedia/"> for the drivers you
need.
<sect3>Mandriva
<p>Thac has created RPMs for MythTV for Mandriva which may
be obtained from <url url="http://rpm.nyvalls.se/"
name="http://rpm.nyvalls.se/"> If you have problems with the RPMs, please
send him email directly at <url url="thac@nyvalls.se" name="thac@nyvalls.se">.
<sect3>Debian
<p>Debian packages for MythTV and most of its add-on modules are maintained
by Christian Marillat <url url="mailto:marillat@free.fr"
name="mailto:marillat@free.fr"> and are available at <url
url="http://www.debian-multimedia.org/"
name="http://www.debian-multimedia.org/">.
Installation instructions can be found on those pages as well. All of the
prerequisites for MythTV are available as Debian packages, most of them from
the official Debian archive.
If you have followed the instructions on the above page you should have added
<tscreen><verb>
deb-src http://www.debian-multimedia.org sid main
</verb></tscreen>
to your <tt>/etc/apt/sources.list</tt> file. Running <bf>apt-get update</bf> and then
executing <bf>apt-get build-dep mythtv</bf> should install all the
pre-requisites required to compile MythTV.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Due to the requirement for Qt 3.3+, there are no packages for
Debian woody/stable.
</caption></figure>
<p>The Debian packages are configured such that MythTV programs should be
run as the <tt>mythtv</tt> user, which is automatically created during
installation. This user has access to write new recordings to disk in the
default directory, read and write the database, access the audio and video
devices, and everything else that MythTV needs to do.
<p>See <tt>/usr/share/doc/<it>packagename</it>/README.Debian</tt> for more
information, including copies of the MythTV documentation. The
<tt>mythtv-doc</tt> package contains a copy of this HOWTO in
<tt>/usr/share/doc/mythtv-doc</tt>.
<sect2>Manual installation
<p>You may use the graphical tools that come with your distribution, or you
can use command-line utilities. Either system will get the job done, and it
all depends on your comfort level with Linux.
In order to compile MythTV, we need to make sure that the software it needs
is installed. This list includes <bf>mysql</bf>, <bf>gcc</bf>,
<bf>freetype2-devel</bf>, <bf>xorg-xserver-devel</bf>, <bf>qt-devel</bf> and
<bf>lame</bf>. If you're going to use a remote control with MythTV, you're
going to need the <bf>cdialog</bf> package in order to compile
<bf>lircd</bf> if your distribution doesn't have a pre-packaged
<bf>lirc</bf>. If you are using <bf>XMLTV</bf> as a grabber, you will need
<bf>perl</bf>.
<code>
NOTE: Qt v3.3 or higher is required.
NOTE: MythTV DOES NOT WORK with Qt4.
NOTE: If you are going to be using RPMs to install various
components, you should be aware that not all packages include the necessary
headers for compiling. If you're having trouble compiling, ensure
that you've installed the -devel version of a prerequisite.
</code>
<sect2>Command-line installation <label id="CLIinstalltools_">
<p> This section details the various methods for installing prerequisites
from the command line.
<sect3>Mandriva
<p><bf>NOTE</bf>: The following instructions should be considered out of
date as of 2006-09-10. If updated instructions are not submitted by the
release of v0.21 of MythTV they will be removed.
<bf>urpmi</bf> is the simplest tool for installation of packages from the
command line, but properly configuring it can be difficult. The
following website <url url="http://easyurpmi.zarb.org/"
name="http://easyurpmi.zarb.org/"> will allow you to choose
a mirror site and then present the command-line configuration text for that
mirror. You will most likely need to add a "Contrib" mirror to your setup.
If you add a site from the "Penguin Liberation Front", you will be able to
load the <tt>lame</tt> library without compiling from source.
Open a shell, and execute the following. You may get
asked a number of questions regarding dependencies. It's best to answer
"YES".
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# urpmi mysql gcc gcc-c++ freetype2-devel cdialog alsa-utils
# urpmi XFree86-devel perl
# urpmi libqt3-devel libMesaGLU1-devel
</verb></tscreen>
<code>
NOTE for Mandriva 9.1+ users: execute the following command.
# urpmi libqt3-mysql
</code>
However, you might get this when you execute the commands above:
<tscreen><verb>
everything already installed
</verb></tscreen>
In that case, you're ready to move to the next <ref id="Setting_up_paths"
name="section">. Once you have completed installing the pre-requisites,
exit out of the shell and start a new one to ensure that any environment
variables setup by the installation have a chance to take effect.
<sect3>Gentoo.
<p><bf>NOTE</bf>: MythTV does <em>not</em> run on Qt4.
If Qt has not been installed on your system: Edit
<tt>/etc/make.conf</tt> and locate the "USE" variable. If the line is
commented out, remove the comment. The line should have at least:
<tscreen><verb>
USE="mysql alsa"
</verb></tscreen>
Next you need to build Qt. If you don't plan on using the ebuilds as
described in the Gentoo section then you also need to install lame.
<tscreen><verb>
# emerge lame mysql qt
</verb></tscreen>
If you have already installed Qt: you will need to rebuild because the
default installation doesn't include MySQL support, a requirement for MythTV.
To enable SQL support, add "mysql" to your USE variable in
<tt>/etc/make.conf</tt> and rebuild Qt by running
<tscreen><verb>
# emerge qt
</verb></tscreen>
All the necessary files will be downloaded and built. Even on a fast machine
this may take a lot of time if you need to do a full Qt build.
<sect3>Debian.
<p>Build-dependencies for MythTV can be satisfied by adding the following to
your <tt>/etc/apt/sources.list</tt>
<tscreen><verb>
# Christian Marillat's packages (mplayer, lame)
deb http://www.debian-multimedia.org sid main
deb-src http://www.debian-multimedia.org sid main
</verb></tscreen>
and executing:
<tscreen><verb>
# apt-get build-dep mythtv
# apt-get source mythtv --compile
</verb></tscreen>
<sect>System Configuration Requirements for Compiling MythTV. <label
id="Setting_up_paths">
<p>Before you compile MythTV from the current source tarball or from
<bf>subversion</bf>, you may need to modify your system configuration in a
few ways.
In general, if you install MythTV from pre-packaged binaries for your Linux
distribution/version, you don't need to be too concerned about the issues in
this section of the HOWTO - the install script for the packages should take
care of them. However, this section is still recommended reading which may
help if the packager skipped a step in their packaging.
<sect1>Software requirements for compiling MythTV
<sect2>General requirements
<p>MythTV is written in C++ and requires a fairly complete, but standard,
compilation environment, including a recent g++ compiler, <tt>make</tt>, and
appropriate header files for shared libraries. Any standard Linux
distribution should be able to install a suitable compilation environment
from its packaging system. Section 3.2 of this HOWTO provides some details
of how to install the required environment for many distributions.
Subsequent sections of this chapter address the few oddities that you may
have to adjust by hand before you compile MythTV.
The reference compilation system for MythTV is Ubuntu.
<sect1>Shared-Library requirements for MythTV
<sect2>Modifying /etc/ld.so.conf <label id="modifying_ld.so.conf">
<p>The runtime manager for shared libraries, <bf>/lib/ld.so</bf>, gets
information about the locations and contents of shared libraries from
<tt>/etc/ld.so.cache</tt>, a file created by <bf>ldconfig</bf> from
information in <tt>/etc/ld.so.conf</tt>. Because MythTV installs some
shared libraries in <tt>/usr/local/lib</tt>, that directory needs to be
added to the list of directories for <bf>ld.so</bf> to search when doing
runtime linking of programs, if it is not already there.
You do this, as root, by editing <tt>/etc/ld.so.conf</tt>, then
running <bf>ldconfig</bf>. There are many ways to do this; one that
works is to enter this series of commands:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su -
# echo /usr/local/lib >> /etc/ld.so.conf
# /sbin/ldconfig
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Environment variable requirements for MythTV
<sect2>General requirements
<sect3>QT libraries and binaries
<p>The compiler needs to be able to locate QT binaries and libraries in
order to compile MythTV. QTDIR needs to be set and the directory holding the
QT binaries needs to be added to your PATH. Your distribution may already
be making these changes as a part of the installation of the software
prerequisites detailed earlier.
One way to do this is as follows: <label id="Checking_that_it_worked">
Open a shell and execute the following:
<tscreen><verb>
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin:/usr/games:/usr/lib/qt3/bin:/home/mythtv/bin:/usr/lib/qt3/bin
$ echo $QTDIR
/usr/lib/qt3
$ which qmake
/usr/lib/qt3/bin/qmake
</verb></tscreen>
For Mandriva, you should see a value like <tt>/usr/lib/qt3</tt> for
<tt>QTDIR</tt> and <tt>/usr/lib/qt3/bin</tt> should be in $PATH.
For Gentoo, you should see a value like <tt>/usr/qt/3</tt> for <tt>QTDIR</tt>
and <tt>/usr/qt/3/bin</tt> should be in $PATH.
If you don't, do not proceed past this step until you have resolved this
error. You may need to manually specify the QTDIR and PATH at the shell
prompt before compiling.
Also, check that there has been a link created in
<tt>/usr/lib/qt3/mkspecs</tt> (<tt>/usr/share/qt3/mkspecs</tt> for Debian)
called <tt>default</tt>. If not, you'll get errors during the compile. See
the Troubleshooting Section for more information.
<sect2>Distribution-Specific Notes
<sect3>Mandriva
<p>The following instructions work for Mandriva using
<bf>bash</bf> as the shell, and may be applicable for a distribution which
uses <tt>/etc/profile.d</tt>.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Mandriva 10 installs a <tt>/etc/profile.d/qtdir3.sh</tt>
file, but it doesn't include the addition of the PATH variable. If you're
running Mandriva 10, don't create a <tt>mythtv.sh</tt> file as detailed
below; edit the <tt>qtdir3.sh</tt> file and add the PATH statement within
the if / fi block.
</caption>
</figure>
As root, create the following file in <tt>/etc/profile.d</tt> The example
filename is "mythtv.sh". Use what you feel is appropriate.
Open a shell, and switch to superuser mode.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: ^D means press CTRL and d at the same time.
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# cd /etc/profile.d
cat > mythtv.sh
export QTDIR=/usr/lib/qt3
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/lib/qt3/bin
^D
# chmod a+x mythtv.sh
# exit
$ exit
</verb></tscreen>
The last two commands are to exit out of the shell. This way, when you next
open a shell your new commands
will take effect.
<sect2>Device Permissions <label id="devperms">
<p>MythTV will need access to the video4linux devices on your system. By
default, your distribution may restrict access to these devices to the
logged-in user, so if you will be automatically starting
<bf>mythbackend</bf> from a script rather than an interactive terminal
session you will need to make some adjustments.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: The following instructions are accurate for Mandriva.
Check for a file called <tt>/etc/security/console.perms</tt>. Open the file
in your favorite text editor and look for a line that has:
<tscreen><verb>
<console> 0600 <v4l> 0600 root.video
</verb></tscreen>
and replace it with
<tscreen><verb>
<console> 0666 <v4l> 0666 root.video
</verb></tscreen>
What we're doing is allowing read and write access to the files in the
video4linux directory.
<sect>Downloading and compiling. <label id="DownloadAndCompile">
<p>Get MythTV from the <url url="http://www.mythtv.org"
name="http://www.mythtv.org"> web site. There are two installation methods
you may choose from. The first is to download the latest release in tarball
format and compile. The tarball release of MythTV should work on a wide
variety of systems and should be the preferred method for new users. If you
wish to use the <bf>subversion</bf> copy of MythTV you may obtain it from
<url url="http://svn.mythtv.org" name="http://svn.mythtv.org">
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: If you are going to use <bf>subversion</bf> to
compile MythTV rather than using the distribution tarball, you <em>must</em>
join the <url url="http://www.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-commits/"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-commits/"> and <url
url="http://www.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-dev/"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-dev/"> mailing lists to
keep up to date with the current status of the code. Code obtained from
subversion has no guarantees regarding stability, etc.
</caption>
</figure>
If you are in North America you will use the Schedules Direct grabber which is
built-in to MythTV. You <em>do not</em> need to install XMLTV (so you may
skip XMLTV-related instructions), but you need <bf>wget</bf> version 1.9.1
or higher.
Get XMLTV from <url url="http://xmltv.sourceforge.net"
name="http://xmltv.sourceforge.net">. Download the latest version (0.5.51).
<code>
NOTE for Mandriva users: If you have added a "PLF" mirror, you may skip the
next step and type:
# urpmi libmp3lame0 libmp3lame0-devel
After downloading, be sure to install both:
# rpm -Uvh lame*
</code>
Get lame from <url url="http://lame.sourceforge.net/"
name="http://lame.sourceforge.net/">. Download the source code to v3.96.1
by following the links from "Using" through "Download...".
<sect1>Building LAME
<p>Open a shell and switch to the directory where you saved lame.
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xzf lame-3.96.1.tar.gz
$ cd lame-3.96.1
$ ./configure
$ make
$ make test
$ su
# make install
</verb></tscreen>
Check that it worked:
<tscreen><verb>
# ls -l /usr/local/lib
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 381706 Nov 4 14:22 libmp3lame.a
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 674 Nov 4 14:22 libmp3lame.la*
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 19 Nov 4 14:22 libmp3lame.so ->
libmp3lame.so.0.0.0*
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 19 Nov 4 14:22 libmp3lame.so.0 ->
libmp3lame.so.0.0.0*
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 360197 Nov 4 14:22
libmp3lame.so.0.0.0*
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>XMLTV
<sect2>Red Hat Linux and Fedora Core:
<p>RPMs for <bf>XMLTV</bf> and all of its dependencies can be obtained from
<url url="http://ATrpms.net/name/xmltv/"
name="http://ATrpms.net/name/xmltv/">. The web page has a
list of all the dependent packages you must download and install.
<tscreen><verb>
# rpm -Uvh xmltv* perl*
</verb></tscreen>
If you install from this location you may skip to <ref id="manually_building_mythtv"
name="Manually building MythTV">.
<sect2>Mandriva
<p>RPMs for <bf>XMLTV</bf> and all of its dependencies are located in
Mandriva's "contrib". If you have added a contrib mirror, try installing
<bf>XMLTV</bf>:
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi xmltv xmltv-grabbers
</verb></tscreen>
If this does not work, it is possible that contrib for your Mandriva version
does not have <bf>XMLTV</bf>, so you may install the XMLTV prerequisites by typing:
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi perl-xml-twig perl-xml-writer perl-datemanip perl-libwww-perl
</verb></tscreen>
and skip straight to the XMLTV compilation step.
<sect2>Manual installation
<p>
<label id="untarring_xmltv">Untar the xmltv file:
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xjf xmltv-0.5.51.tar.bz2
</verb></tscreen>
Install the xmltv prerequisites. The following prerequisites are the
minimum required; when you actually start running the xmltv setup program it
may alert you to other modules that are required.:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# perl -MCPAN -e shell
cpan> install XML::Twig
cpan> install Date::Manip
Date::Manip is up to date.
cpan> install LWP
cpan> install XML::Writer
cpan> exit
</verb></tscreen>
Change to the XMLTV directory and compile it:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd xmltv-0.5.51
$ perl Makefile.PL
</verb></tscreen>
You can answer "N" to the tv_check, tv_pick_cgi questions. Say "yes" to
the grabber required for your location.
You may get errors about modules not being installed. You will need to
resolve any missing dependencies at this point, or your grabber may not work
correctly.
<tscreen><verb>
$ make
$ make test
$ su
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Configuring the Schedules Direct service <label id="ConfigureSD">
<p>As of 2007-09-01, Tribune Media Services will no longer offer free guide
data. Schedules Direct is a non-profit organization which has licensed the
data to make it available to users of Freeware and Open Source applications.
If you wish to use Schedules Direct, you'll need to establish a user
account. Go to <url url="http://www.schedulesdirect.org"
name="http://www.schedulesdirect.org"> and click on the "Membership" link.
Once you've read and agreed to the Subscriber Agreement, Terms of Use and
Privacy Policy proceed to the lineup choices and configure your account for
your particular location and the channels that you have. This configuration
will be imported into MythTV when you first run the <bf>mythtv-setup</bf>
program.
<label id="manually_building_mythtv">
<sect1>Manually building MythTV
<p>If you are going to use <bf>subversion</bf>, execute the following
instructions to obtain the latest version of MythTV:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mkdir mythtv
$ svn co http://svn.mythtv.org/svn/trunk/ mythtv
$ cd mythtv
</verb></tscreen>
To use a release version, you can execute:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mkdir mythtv-release-0.21
$ svn co http://svn.mythtv.org/svn/branches/release-0-21-fixes/ mythtv-release-0.21
$ cd mythtv-release-0.21
</verb></tscreen>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Using a svn version of the code allows you to stay
up-to-date with changes. So, if there's an update to the 0.21 release and
you originally obtained it using svn, you could enter the
mythtv-release-0.21 directory and type "svn up", which will update your copy
with the fixed version from the website. You would then recompile and
install the updated 0.21 code.
If you are using the tarball, then unpack it:
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xjf mythtv-0.21.tar.bz2
$ cd mythtv-0.21
$ ./configure
</verb></tscreen>
If you wish to change options, run <bf>./configure --help</bf> to
see what is available and to override and automatically detected options.
See the <tt>config.log</tt> file after running <bf>configure</bf> to see
previous runs.
To compile:
<tscreen><verb>
$ make -j 2
</verb></tscreen>
The MythTV compile can take advantage of multiple CPUs, SMP and
Hyperthreading. If you want to build MythTV on a multi-CPU machine (or with
<bf>distcc</bf>), specify "-j numjobs", where "numjobs" is greater than 2.
In the above example, we had two concurrent jobs executing, which is
recommended for a single CPU system. Do not set the number of jobs too
high, or your compile will actually take longer to complete than it would if
you did a "normal" build.
If you are using <bf>distcc</bf>, and you had two other host machines (red, blue)
participating, you would do something like:
<tscreen><verb>
$ export DISTCC_HOSTS='localhost red blue'
$ make -j 6 CXX=distcc
</verb></tscreen>
The actual speed-up, if any, is dependant on a number of factors, such as
number of CPUs / hosts, etc. The <bf>distcc</bf> documentation recommends
using a <tt>-j</tt> value of twice the number of CPUs available to keep all
of them busy.
Some timing information. The following should only be used for
illustration; your actual results may vary. The test involves a complete
<tt>make distclean</tt> to the final binary.
<itemize>
<item>P4 3.2Ghz HT: "standard" make: 12m 49s
<item>P4 3.2Ghz HT: make -j 2: 11m 24s
</itemize>
In the above example, we see that with a single CPU, a multi-stage
<bf>make</bf> does not significantly decrease compile time.
Once the compile is done, switch to superuser:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: subsequent configuration steps assume that you are within
the MythTV directory that you <tt>cd</tt>'d to above.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect2>Enabling real-time scheduling of the display thread.
<p>MythTV supports real-time scheduling of the video output thread. There
are three ways to go about enabling this: You can use rlimits, you can use
the realtime security module, or on older systems you can SUID the
executable. Enabling real-time scheduling is optional, but can make the
video display smoother, especially if you are decoding HDTV.
<sect3>rlimits
<p>The rlimits method is the preferred method and is included in Linux
2.6.12 and above. Unfortunately, you need PAM version 0.79 or above, which
may not be supported by your distribution yet. Assuming anyone running
<bf>mythfrontend</bf> is in the audio group and rlimits are supported, all
you need to do is place this in your <tt>/etc/security/limits.conf</tt>
<tscreen><verb>
* - rtprio 0
* - nice 0
@audio - rtprio 50
@audio - nice 0
</verb></tscreen>
<sect3>realtime module
<p>The second option is to use the Linux realtime kernel module.
This is will be phased out over time, but is currently supported
by many distributions that do not yet support rlimits. If you are
not using the distribution kernel you must configure your kernel
with:
<tscreen><verb>
Security options : [*] Enable different security models
Security options : [M] Default Linux Capabilties
</verb></tscreen>
You may also need to install the realtime module, using your distribution's
realtime package. Assuming the users who will be running
<bf>mythfrontend</bf> will be in the audio group you can get the GUID of a named
group like so:
<tscreen><verb>
$ grep audio /etc/group
</verb></tscreen>
If the number printed out from the grep was 18, you can now load
this module as root before starting <bf>mythfrontend</bf>:
<tscreen><verb>
# modprobe realtime gid=18
</verb></tscreen>
<sect3>run as root option (not safe)
<p>The final and least preferred option is to set the sticky bit
on the <bf>mythfrontend</bf> executable. This <bf>opens a security hole</bf>,
but is the only option on systems that do not support either
rlimits or the realtime module. This does not work on modern
distributions either, and is <bf><em>not recommended</em></bf>
on any system connected to the Internet. This may also make it
impossible to debug MythTV without running <bf>gdb</bf> as root. If you
would still like to do this, you just need to run this as root:
<tscreen><verb>
# chmod a+s /usr/local/bin/mythfrontend /usr/local/bin/mythtv
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>Frontend-only configuration <label id="frontend-only">
<p>Since MythTV uses a client/server architecture, multiple frontend
computers can simultaneously access content on a Myth system. Live TV,
watching and scheduling recordings, etc. are all possible from multiple
frontends.
To get a better picture of what is needed to run a frontend, note the
following:
<list>
<item>You do NOT need the MySQL server installed on your remote frontend
<item>You do NOT need XMLTV installed on your remote frontend
<item>You do NOT need to run the mythtv-setup program on
your frontend machine
</list>
Other than the exclusion of the MySQL server and XMLTV, the MythTV
compilation procedure is the same as when you're setting up both a backend
and a frontend. However, you <em>will</em> need to install the database
access libraries.
Once MythTV is compiled and installed:
<list>
<item>
Run the mythtv-setup program on your Master backend. Under the "General"
menu, change the IP address of the current machine (by default, "127.0.0.1")
to the real external IP address - 127.0.0.1 is the loopback address and no
external machine can access it. Change the Master Server IP setting to the
same IP address as well.
<item>
Run the mythfrontend program on your frontend machine,
and a "Database Configuration" screen should appear.
Set the "Host name" field to point to your Master backend's IP address.
</list>
<sect1>Gentoo <label id="Gentoo_build">
<p>Installation of MythTV on Gentoo consists of simply emerging the desired
ebuild because all of the packages are now part of the official Portage tree.
<tscreen><verb>
$ su -
# emerge --sync # make sure portage is up to date.
# vi /etc/make.conf
</verb></tscreen>
Add mysql to your USE variable. i.e. <tt>USE="mysql ...."</tt>
<tscreen><verb>
# emerge mythtv
</verb></tscreen>
<sect>MySQL.<label id="mysql">
<p>When you install MySQL 5.x you will also want to comment
out "log-bin" in your <tt>my.cnf</tt> configuration file. This option will
quickly fill your "/var" disk partition with many gigabytes of data,
unless you are doing database replication and deleting these files regularly.
<sect1>Distribution-specific information
<sect2>Mandriva
<p>If this is the system maintaining the database, make sure that MySQL is
running and started at boot. Click on Mandriva Control
Center->System->Services, find MySQL and click the "On Boot" button and the
"Start" button if the MySQL status shows that it isn't running yet.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: There have been reports that MySQL isn't starting at boot.
If this is happening to you, try running the following commands.
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# chkconfig --level 35 mysql on
# /etc/rc.d/init.d/mysql start
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>Red Hat Linux and Fedora Core
<p>If this is the system maintaining the database, make sure that MySQL is
running and started at boot. Click on Redhat menu>Server Settings>Services
and enter the root password when asked. Check "mysqld" and then click Start.
Click Save, then close the window.
This can be done from the command line by typing:
<tscreen><verb>
# /sbin/chkconfig mysqld on
# /sbin/service mysqld start
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>Gentoo
<p>After installing MySQL you need to initialize the database by running
<bf>mysql_install_db</bf> as root.
<sect1>Setting up the initial database
<p>This step is only required on the system maintaining the database, which
may or may not be one of your MythTV boxes. If the database is on a
non-MythTV machine you'll need to copy the <tt>database/mc.sql</tt> file to it.
To setup the initial MySQL databases:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd database
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>Mandriva and Red Hat Linux/Fedora Core
<p><tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root < mc.sql
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>Debian 3.0
<p><tscreen><verb>
$ mysql < mc.sql
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>Gentoo
<p><tscreen><verb>
$ su
# mysql < /usr/share/mythtv/database/mc.sql
</verb></tscreen>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: It is good practice to set a root password for MySQL.
Instructions for doing so can be found on MySQL's web site at <url
url="http://www.mysql.com/doc/en/Security.html"
name="http://www.mysql.com/doc/en/Security.html">.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect2>Modifying access to the MySQL database for multiple systems <label
id="modify_perm_mysql">
<p>If you're going to have multiple systems accessing a master database,
you must grant access to the database from remote systems. By default, the
<tt>mc.sql</tt> script is only granting access to the local host.
To allow other hosts access to your master database, you can either set it
up for no security at all, or with more granularity. Note that the "%" is
the wildcard character in MySQL.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: The "no security" option is <em>very</em> dangerous unless
you're in a controlled environment.
</caption>
</figure>
This example has no security at all, and allows access from any host.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root mythconverg
mysql> grant all on mythconverg.* to mythtv@"%" identified by "mythtv";
mysql> flush privileges;
</verb></tscreen>
For a more secure setup, you can restrict which machines or subnets have
access. If you have a complete DNS system operational, you could do the
following:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root mythconverg
mysql> grant all on mythconverg.* to mythtv@"%.mydomain.com" identified by "mythtv";
mysql> flush privileges;
</verb></tscreen>
Finally, if you just want to restrict by IP subnet (in this example, the
192.168.1. network):
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root mythconverg
mysql> grant all on mythconverg.* to mythtv@"192.168.1.%" identified by "mythtv";
mysql> flush privileges;
</verb></tscreen>
You'll also need to check that the "networking" feature of MySQL is turned
on. Check that <tt>/etc/mysql/my.cnf</tt> <em>does not</em> contain
<tt>skip-networking</tt>. If it does, remove it. Also verify that
<tt>bind-address</tt> is set to your IP address instead of
<tt>127.0.0.1</tt>. If you change either of these items, restart
<bf>MySQL</bf>.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Your distribution may have a customized MySQL configuration
file; in Mandriva, check <tt>/etc/sysconfig/mysqld</tt> for additional
configuration.
<sect>Configuring Sound.
<p>If your video doesn't appear to be in-sync with your audio and you're
using an analog video capture card and a soundcard to capture audio, it
could be because you are listening to the real-time audio from your video
card rather than after it's been processed and synchronized to the video by
MythTV. Because MythTV is a personal video recorder, "Live TV" isn't really
live - to let you pause live TV, MythTV is actually encoding the video,
saving to disk, and then playing it back. This procedure puts your MythTV
"live" TV about 2 seconds behind real-time, so it's important that you're
not listening to the live audio. However, if you're having an issue where
the audio and video aren't synchronized by small but varying amount, it's
most likely because the sound driver that you're using doesn't have the
DSP_CAP_REALTIME capability. This was the case with ALSA (0.5), but not
with newer versions. See the <ref id="Troubleshooting_Audio"
name="Troubleshooting Audio"> section for more information if you're having
issues with sound. Also, ensure that no other programs are grabbing the
audio output, like <bf>arts</bf> or <bf>esd</bf>.
What you need to do is to mute the "line-in" of your sound card and also
set it as the recording source.
There are two ways to do this. Graphically, and from the command line.
<sect1>Graphically setting up the mixer
<sect2>Mandriva and Red Hat Linux/Fedora Core
<p>Open Kmix by clicking K->Multimedia->Sound->Kmix for Mandriva, or
<verb>RedHat Menu>Sound & Video>Volume Control</verb> on Red Hat/Fedora.
Click on Settings->Configure Make sure that "Tick Marks" and "Show
labels" have "X"'s in them. This will make it easier to find the correct
audio source. Click OK.
On the mixer page, look for Line-In on your sound card. You should see
two LED's - a green one at the top, and a red one at the bottom. The green
one at the top is for muting; you want to make sure that the green LED is a
dark green, meaning that it's "off". You also want to click on the red LED
so that it turns bright red, indicating that it's "ON"; this insures that
the Line-in is used as the source. Click OK, and make sure that you save
the settings so that this is your default.
<sect3>Using ALSA.
<p>To use ALSA, you'll need to correctly setup your
<tt>asoundrc</tt> file. Configuring this file is beyond the scope of this
HOWTO. Once ALSA is working correctly, change the output sound device in
mythfrontend->setup->Audio from <tt>/dev/dsp</tt> to <tt>ALSA:default</tt>.
This field may be edited to suit your ALSA requirements.
<sect1>Setting the mixer from the command line
<p>If you have installed the alsa-utils package, then the <bf>amixer</bf>
program can be used to setup the mixer. The "Master" volume setting is only
required on a frontend machine to ensure that the sound channels are unmuted
and configured for outputting sound. The "Line" and "Capture" controls are
required for your sound card to actually capture audio from the external
Line-in if it's connected to an analog frame grabber. Not all sound cards
have a "Capture" control, but if yours does and you don't set it then MythTV
will not capture audio.
<code>
Note the spelling in the following commands.
</code>
<tscreen><verb>
$ amixer set Master,0 100%,100% unmute
$ amixer set PCM,0 100%,100% unmute
$ amixer set Line,0 75%,75% mute captur
$ amixer set Capture,0 100%,100% captur
$ su
# alsactl store
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
If you have multiple sound cards, then use the <tt>-c</tt> parameter to
specify which card to adjust. Note that the first card will be "0", the
second will be "1", etc.
That takes care of setting the volume correctly, and the ALSA startup script
will restore the volume after a reboot. If you find that your sound is
distorted, it's possible that the levels in the above examples are too high
for your particular hardware combination. Try reducing the percentages by
5-10% and checking again. Once you're satisfied, re-run the <tt>alsactl
store</tt> command.
You may also use the <bf>alsamixer</bf> program to set the volume. If you
are using an ALSA version after 1.0.6, use <bf>alsamixer -V all</bf> First,
start <bf>alsamixer</bf> from the command line. You should start out on the
"Master" volume control slider. Use the up and down cursor to set the
master volume to around 75%. Next, use the left and right cursor keys to
move around on the screen until you find the "Line" slider. Press SPACE to
set it as the capture source, set the level to around 50-75% and press "M"
to mute it. You can now press ESC to exit out of the <bf>alsamixer</bf>
program. You can also have MythTV manage all volume and mute settings, but
this will only affect the "Master" or PCM volume, not the capture volume. See
the mythfrontend setup page for options.
Finally, if you've performed all of the above steps, and you still don't seem to have any sound, it's possible that your video capture device is muting the audio output.
<tscreen><verb>
$ v4lctl -c /dev/video0 setattr mute off
</verb></tscreen>
<sect>Setting up a remote control.
<p>MythTV does not have native remote control receiver and decoder software
built-in. Instead, remote control functions are implemented by cooperating
with <bf>lirc</bf>, the Linux Infrared Remote Control program. <bf>lirc</bf>
handles the IR hardware and passes keystrokes to MythTV, which then acts as
if the user had pressed the keys on the keyboard. The file
<tt>keys.txt</tt> describes the keys used to control MythTV.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: If you are running Mandriva, you may install
<bf>lirc</bf> by executing: <tt># urpmi lirc lirc-remotes</tt> and bypass
the manual compilation steps described below by jumping to the <ref
id="completing_lirc_install" name="Completing the lirc install"> section.
See the contrib/mandrake91.etc.sysconfig.lircd file for an example of how to
configure lircd.
</caption>
</figure>
Some IR devices require a kernel recompile, and some don't. However, all at
least require having the kernel source available as a resource for the lirc
build process.
<sect1>Gentoo
<p>To install lirc on Gentoo, all you need to do is:
<tscreen><verb>
# emerge lirc
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Obtaining and compiling lirc
<p>You're going to need to download and compile <bf>lircd</bf>. Go to <url
url="http://www.lirc.org" name="http://www.lirc.org"> and download lirc; as
of 2006-01-21, the version available is 0.8.0. Grab the remotes.tar.bz2 file as
well.
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xjf lirc-0.8.0.tar.bz2
$ cd lirc-0.8.0
$ ./setup.sh
</verb></tscreen>
You're going to need to know what sort of receiver you have and where it's
connected. In the case of the Pinnacle Studio TV card, with the IR receiver
connected to COM1 (/dev/ttys0), once the configuration menu comes up,
perform the configuration by going to Driver Configuration->Other Serial
Port Devices->Pinnacle Systems Receiver->OK and on the next page select
COM1->OK.
Each remote is different; some remote receivers connect directly to your
capture card and not to a serial port, so make sure that you've got the
correct one.
You then click "Save Configuration and run configure" to continue.
Make sure you read the last text generated by the configure step. It will
tell you if you require a kernel recompile, and what the name of your kernel
module will be (if necessary). For instance a home-built receiver may
require a kernel recompile, so you would be notified that you will have to
load the lirc_serial module. If you did not get any such messages skip the
kernel recompile steps below and go directly to making and installing the
lirc driver.
Once the configuration step is complete:
<tscreen><verb>
$ make
$ su
# make install
# chmod 666 /dev/lircd
</verb></tscreen>
At this point, if you're using a serial receiver, check that there's a
<tt>lirc</tt> device in <tt>/dev</tt>:
<tscreen><verb>
$ ls -l /dev/li*
lr-xr-xr-x 1 root root 5 Jan 27 09:00 /dev/lirc -> ttyS0
srw-rw-rw- 1 root root 0 Jan 27 15:01 /dev/lircd=
prw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jan 27 09:00 /dev/lircm|
</verb></tscreen>
As you can see, there's a link from /dev/lirc to ttyS0, a.k.a. "COM1", which is
appropriate for the Pinnacle Systems PCTV Pro. However, you may notice
something like this:
<tscreen><verb>
crw------- 1 root root 61, 0 Dec 31 1969 lirc
</verb></tscreen>
Some IR receivers (including some homebrew units) use a character device as
their data interface as opposed to a link to a serial port. If the <tt>make
install</tt> step has created a character device for you, don't replace it
with a link to a COM port.
So, if the link or character device was not created (but should have been),
ensure that you ran the <tt>make install</tt> step as root. If it still
doesn't work, then there are three options. The first option is to re-read
the <bf>lirc</bf> documentation to determine whether your IR receiver is a
character device or should be a link to a serial port and to create the
link/character device manually. In this example, the IR device is connected
to ttyS0. If it were connected to "COM2", then use ttyS1, etc.
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# cd /dev
# ln -sf ttyS0 lirc
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: The above example assumes that your receiver uses the
standard serial driver. Some receivers do not, including receivers that
plug into a TV capture card. Check the lirc documentation, but it may be
necessary to replace the link created above with a character pipe:
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
# mknod /dev/lirc c 61 0
</verb></tscreen>
See the lirc documentation for additional information. The lirc
installation <em>should</em> create this for you, so manually creating it
indicates that your lirc installation may have other issues.
The second option is to post your issue to the <em>lirc</em> list, not the
mythtv-users list. The lirc programmers will be the ones that can assist
you best.
The third option is to dispense with lirc altogether by purchasing an IR
keyboard (various options exist, although Chicony appears to work for some
people) and a learning remote control. The IR keyboard receiver plugs into
the PS/2 keyboard port on your PC and you would train your learning remote
to emulate the various keystrokes from <tt>keys.txt</tt> of your IR
keyboard. Using this method removes lirc entirely from the picture - your
remote will be sending keypresses that your PC "sees" on the keyboard port.
<sect1>Completing the lirc install <label id="completing_lirc_install">
<p><figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE to Mandriva 9.1 users</bf>: skip to the manual start paragraph
below.
</caption>
</figure>
<p>If the lirc configure program / compile did not mention anything about a
kernel module, then you are finished. If it did mention a kernel module, you
must edit the <tt>/etc/modules.conf</tt> file. Add this line as the first
thing in the file. It must come first, or it may not work.
<tscreen><verb>
alias char-major-61 XXX
</verb></tscreen>
replace XXX with the name which you determined earlier, which in this
example was "lirc_serial"
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# modprobe lirc_serial
# /sbin/ldconfig
</verb></tscreen>
Next, we're going to manually start lircd the first time. Mandriva 9.1
users, type: <tt># /etc/rc.d/init.d/lircd start</tt> instead of:
<tscreen><verb>
# /usr/local/sbin/lircd
</verb></tscreen>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Read this next section if you're not familiar with how lirc works!
There are two separate files used by lirc, and both are required for your
remote control to do anything useful. First is the <tt>lircd.conf</tt> file.
<tt>lircd.conf</tt> tells the lirc daemon how to interpret the IR pulses
that it receives from a remote control and what name to assign to each
sequence of pulses. Without getting too involved, a particular series of
pulses may correlate to "Channel Up". The <tt>lircd.conf</tt> file will
then contain a line that looks something like this:
<tscreen><verb>
ChannelUp 0x0000000000001020
</verb></tscreen>
The <tt>lircd.conf</tt> file can have multiple remote controls defined.
The second file is <tt>lircrc</tt>, which takes the name of the button which
was pressed ("ChannelUp") in the above example, and correlates that to an
action to be performed by a program using the remote control. So in MythTV,
ChannelUp means one thing, while in <bf>mplayer</bf> it means something
different. <tt>lircrc</tt> gives you the flexibility of taking the name of
the button and having it perform different actions depending on which
program you're using at the time.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: The definitions in <tt>lircd.conf</tt> come from the user
community, and there is no standard for the common button names. One
<tt>lircd.conf</tt> file may contain a definition for a button called
"ChannelUp", while another may contain a definition for "Chan+". Your
<tt>lircrc</tt> file must therefore be configured appropriately, or it won't
work.
If this fails, complaining of a missing <tt>lircd.conf</tt> file, then you
must find or make one. First look for a pre-made configuration file at <url
url="http://lirc.sourceforge.net/remotes/"
name="http://lirc.sourceforge.net/remotes/">. Mandriva 9.1 users, look in
<tt>/usr/share/lirc-remotes</tt>. If you find one your remotes either on the
website or in <tt>/usr/share</tt>, download or copy the file, name it
<tt>lircd.conf</tt> and put it in your <tt>/etc</tt> directory. If you
couldn't find your remote, you must make your own <tt>lircd.conf</tt> file.
To make your own <tt>lircd.conf</tt> file
<tscreen><verb>
$ irrecord myremote
</verb></tscreen>
Follow the on-screen directions to train your remote and define keys. If
your remote ends up working well, you should consider submitting your
<tt>lircd.conf</tt> file back to the lirc developers. Once finished:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# cp myremote /etc/lircd.conf
</verb></tscreen>
now try to start lircd again:
<tscreen><verb>
# /usr/local/sbin/lircd
</verb></tscreen>
Now, we're going to add the commands necessary for lircd to run each time we
boot. Mandriva 9.1 users, you can execute:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# chkconfig --level 35 lircd on
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
All other distributions:
<tscreen><verb>
# cd /etc/rc.d
# cat >> rc.local
echo "Starting lircd"
/usr/local/sbin/lircd
^D
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
This takes care of the lircd portion, which "listens" for the IR signals. If
everything went well, the install script for lircd put an appropriate
configuration file for your remote into <tt>/etc/lircd.conf</tt> This file
maps the buttons on the remote control to the IR pulses coming from the
receiver.
The next step is to convert those signals into something that can be used
to control MythTV. MythTV now includes native support for lirc and can
interact directly with
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythtv-0.21/contrib/configfiles
$ cp lircrc.example ~/.lircrc
</verb></tscreen>
or
<tscreen><verb>
$ cp lircrc.example.pinnaclestudiopctv ~/.lircrc
</verb></tscreen>
if you've got a Pinnacle Studio PCTV remote.
<tscreen><verb>
$ irw
</verb></tscreen>
Start pressing the keys on your remote; <bf>irw</bf> will
print the name of the button as it is defined in your
<tt>/etc/lircd.conf</tt>. If you don't see anything at this point, you need
to troubleshoot further by going back to the lirc home page and investigating
from there.
If it is working, then press <bf>CTRL-C</bf> to abort the program. Once you
know that your remote is working, you can either recompile MythTV with
native lirc support by enabling it in <bf>configure</bf> or you
need to run the <bf>irxevent</bf> program, which takes the key presses and
sends them to MythTV. If you use native lirc support, you don't need to run
<bf>irxevent</bf>. If you are going to use irxevent, then you need to run
it like this:
<tscreen><verb>
$ irxevent &
</verb></tscreen>
If <bf>irxevent</bf> isn't running, then MythTV will not respond to your remote
control unless you're using native lirc support.
<sect1>Additional information for lirc
<p>Take a look at the lircrc.example files in the <tt>contrib/configfiles/</tt>
directory. In my case, (Pinnacle Studio card) the channel up and down functions
weren't working, due to the fact that the button names were different than
the default <tt>lircrc.example</tt> file that came with MythTV.
The <tt>lircrc.example</tt> file has this:
<tscreen><verb>
begin
prog = irxevent
button = ChannelUp
config = Key Up CurrentWindow
end
begin
prog = irxevent
button = ChannelDown
config = Key Down CurrentWindow
end
</verb></tscreen>
but the <tt>/etc/lircd.conf</tt> that comes in the lircd package
defines the buttons for the Pinnacle Studio PCTV as:
<tscreen><verb>
channel+ 0x0000000000000017
channel- 0x000000000000001C
</verb></tscreen>
rather than "ChannelUp" and "ChannelDown". I added the
following to my /home/[yourusername]/.lircrc file:
<tscreen><verb>
begin
prog = irxevent
button = channel+
repeat = 3
config = Key Up CurrentWindow
end
begin
prog = irxevent
button = channel-
repeat = 3
config = Key Down CurrentWindow
end
</verb></tscreen>
which took care of basic functionality. Because the PCTV Studio remote
has additional buttons, look at the
<tt>contrib/configfiles/lircrc.example.pinnaclestudiopctv</tt> for an example of how
to define additional buttons, and how to debug potential button name
conflicts between the <tt>lircrc.example</tt> file and how <bf>your</bf>
remote defines the button names.
By examining the button names defined in <tt>/etc/lircd.conf</tt> and using
the <bf>irw</bf> program to make sure that your remote is working, you can
create the appropriate mappings in <tt>.lircrc</tt> to get excellent remote
functionality with MythTV.
Note the <bf>repeat =</bf> parameter. This informs the <tt>irxevent</tt>
program to pass through every third keypress. By default, <tt>lirc</tt>
will only send one keypress to the application, even if you're holding down
the key. The actual <bf>repeat =</bf> number will vary from system to
system, so experiment and see which value works best for you.
<sect1>Configuring lirc for use with an IR blaster
<p>
<!-- By Carlos Talbot, <url url="mailto:carlos@talbot.net"> -->
Lirc has support for various IR transmitters. A popular model is the Actisys
IR-200L <url url="http://store.snapstreamstore.com/accessories.html"
name="http://store.snapstreamstore.com/accessories.html">. It was
originally designed for IRDA communication, but can be used to transmit A/V remote
control codes. By using the lirc SIR driver, this device can easily be
integrated with MythTV. I have tested this device with an AT&T DCT2000
digital cable box but the instructions can be used to configure other IRDA
devices and A/V remotes.
Follow the steps in the previous section. When you run setup.sh, select
option 1, driver configuration. From here select option 6, IrDA hardware.
Select your appropriate device and the corresponding serial port, then Save
configuration & run configure from the main menu. Once configure is done
type:
<tscreen><verb>
$ make
</verb></tscreen>
Please note: unlike the Pinnacle receiver above you will be compiling lircd
in addition to a kernel module for the SIR transmitter. Depending on whether
you have your serial port driver configured as a kernel module you might see
the following message during make:
<tscreen><verb>
lirc_sir.c:56:2: warning: #warning
"******************************************"
lirc_sir.c:57:2: warning: #warning "Your serial port driver is compiled into "
lirc_sir.c:58:2: warning: #warning "the kernel. You will have to release the "
lirc_sir.c:59:2: warning: #warning "port you want to use for LIRC with:"
lirc_sir.c:60:2: warning: #warning "setserial /dev/ttySx uart none"
lirc_sir.c:61:2: warning: #warning
"******************************************"
</verb</tscreen>
If you do receive this statement make sure to run the <bf>setserial</bf> command
before you load the lirc_sir module. Follow this with the install:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# make install
</verb></tscreen>
You will notice that lirc installs the kernel module in
<tt>/lib/modules/uname -a/misc</tt>.
The configuration for starting <bf>lircd</bf> differs if you're going to be
sending and receiving IR versus just receiving.
<tscreen><verb>
# cd /etc/rc.d
# cat >> rc.local
echo "Starting lircd"
setserial /dev/ttySx uart none # (if required)
modprobe lirc_sir
/usr/local/sbin/lircd
^D
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
At this point you have to populate the <tt>/etc/lircd.conf</tt> file with the proper
codes for your A/V remote. You should be able to find your remote within the
lirc remote tar file located at <url
url="http://www.lirc.org/remotes.tar.bz2"
name="http://www.lirc.org/remotes.tar.bz2">. In my case I
extracted the file from remotes/motorola/DCT2000 (gi-motorola-dct2000)
To test the lirc_sir module you can run <bf>irw</bf> to verify the codes are being
received. If everything is configured correctly
you should see something similar to the following:
<tscreen><verb>
$ irw
0000000000007ff0 00 1 gi-motorola-dct2000
000000000000bff8 00 2 gi-motorola-dct2000
000000000000f7f0 00 ENTER gi-motorola-dct2000
</verb></tscreen>
Once you've verified lirc is working you can press <bf>CTRL-C</bf> to exit
<bf>irw</bf> and configure the channel changing script.
The path to the channel changing script will need to be entered on the
mythtv-setup screen for Input Connections.
This csh script will be called each time MythTV needs to change the channel.
Below is a copy of the script followed by the corresponding perl script.
Make sure both are in your path. Also make sure you leave the #!/bin/csh
setting and not change it to Bourne or bash. This will create a frustrating
symptom to diagnose where MythTV cannot open /dev/device. Unlike Bourne or
bash, csh scripts automatically close parent file descriptors before they
start.
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd /usr/local/bin
# su
# cat > change_channel.csh
#!/bin/csh
echo "changing to $1"
/usr/local/bin/channel.pl $1 &
^D
# chmod a+x change_channel.csh
# exit
$ exit
</verb></tscreen>
See <tt>contrib/channel.pl</tt> for the actual file. Copy it to
<tt>/usr/local/bin/</tt>
The last statement within the perl script is the lirc rc command. This is
the command that transmits the code to your cable/DSS box. Make sure to have
the IRDA device within a few feet of the box.
<sect>Configuring MythTV. <label id="Configuring_mythtv">
<p>By this point, all of the compile-time prerequisites have been installed,
<bf>mysql</bf> is running and has had its initial database setup. It's now
time to configure MythTV.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: If you're running Debian unstable and you have compiled
MythTV from source, you will need to install an additional package before
you will be able to run MythTV. Execute the following to install the MySQL
driver for QT.
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
$ su -
# apt-get install libqt3c102-mt-mysql
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Configuring the Master backend system
<p>Open a shell and decide where you will store your video files. This may
be one directory or multiple directories on the same or different
filesystems. There is no default directory used for new recordings, you
<bf>must</bf> create at least one storage directory and configure Myth to
use it by running <bf>mythtv-setup</bf>. If you do not do this, then MythTV
will be unable to record anything. The following example is specific for
<tt>/var/video</tt>, but the same instructions would apply for any directory
name you choose to use. See the <ref id="advancedpartitionformatting"
name="Advanced Partition Formatting"> section for hints on creating a
partition for MythTV.
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# mkdir /var/video
# chmod a+rwx /var/video
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: The last slash "/" is not required.
<label id="storagegrouptip">
<bf>TIP</bf>: Try not to have your video mount point on the same partition
as your root partition, which could lead to the filling up of your root
partition with video data if the mount fails. For example:
If <tt>/var/video</tt> is created on your root partition and you then
perform a mount of another drive to this directory there won't be any
problems if everything is working the way it should. However, if the mount
fails for some reason, <tt>/var/video</tt> still exists, so MythTV will find
the directory and write files to it. If your <tt>/</tt> mount point is
space limited, <tt>/var/video</tt> will <bf>also</bf> be space limited, and
it won't take long to fill the partition. This will cause a number of
side-effects, most of them bad. Instead, create subdirectories as the
destination for the storage group.
Your directory structure could then look something like this:
<tscreen><verb>
/mnt/video/drive1/video
/mnt/video/drive2/video
</verb></tscreen>
Your <tt>/etc/fstab</tt> would look like this:
<tscreen><verb>
/dev/hdb1 /mnt/video/drive1
/dev/hdc1 /mnt/video/drive2
</verb></tscreen>
Because the Storage Group path is <tt>/mnt/video/drive1/video</tt>, if the
mythbackend can only find <tt>/mnt/video/drive1</tt> it will <em>not</em>
write files to that share.
After you create the desired directory or directories for storing your video
files, you will need to add them to the proper Storage Group using
<bf>mythtv-setup</bf>. This procedure is described below in the <ref
id="storagegroups" name="Storage Groups"> section.
The first thing to configure is the Master backend system. If you are
running multiple backend systems, the Master backend will make all
decisions about which programs will be recorded on which tuners. If you
have only one backend, then it will be its own master.
The Master backend will always choose the first available tuner in the same
order as you add cards through "mythtv-setup". In other words, the second
card you add will only be used when there are two overlapping recordings,
the third when there are three, and so on.
<!-- Remove the next part once .21 is released --> Therefore, you will want to have
the greatest amount of disk space on the Master backend because its tuner
will always be the first choice. You will then want to add your <ref
id="nonmaster_backend" name="other backends"> in the order of your
preference for recording.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: It is possible to <em>not</em> have the cards on the Master
backend be the first ones used. However, if you are new to MythTV it is
easier to configure the Master backend first before moving on to the Slaves,
at least until you become more familiar with the MythTV system. See <ref
id="advanced_backend_config" name="Advanced Backend Configurations"> for
information on configuring multiple backend systems in various ways.
</caption>
</figure>
Because MythTV uses a database to store all configuration variables,
part of the bootstrap of MythTV is to indicate the location of the MySQL
database server. If the frontend, backend and MySQL database server are all
going to be running on the same box, you can continue to the next step. If
not, you'll need to change the Host Name in the "Database Configuration"
screen of the mythfrontend program.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Users that have been running the frontend and the backend on
different machines have stated that they have been having issues with remote
access to the MySQL database. The following instructions may or may not
work. Add the following to <tt>/etc/my.cnf</tt> on the backend machine and
restart MySQL.
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
skip-innodb
set-variable=thread_stack=256k
</verb></tscreen>
Run the setup program:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mythtv-setup
</verb></tscreen>
The backend setup program will start and offer you a number of choices. It
is <em>strongly</em> recommended that you go through them in order.
The first question will ask if you wish to clear out your existing
configurations for your capture cards. Initially, you should say "YES" so
that there are no surprises later.
The next question will ask you if you wish to clear out your video source
information. You should answer "YES" to this as well.
Once the graphical setup starts, you'll see that there are six choices
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="add.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="add.png">
<caption>
The Storage Directories feature is available only in the SVN version of MythTV.
</caption>
</figure>
<enum>
<item>General
<item>Capture Cards
<item>Video Sources
<item>Input connections
<item>Channel Editor
<item>Storage Directories
</enum>
Use the arrow keys to move around, and press the space bar to select which
option you wish to configure.
<sect2>General
<p>The first screen of the General configuration deals with IP addresses of the
system that you're running mythtv-setup on and any master backend you may have.
If you've only got one machine, then the default values are fine and you can
move to the next page by pressing the space bar. If you need to move around
the screen, use the arrow keys to move focus between settings, not the
mouse.
If you will be deploying multiple backends, or if your backend is on one
system and you're running the frontend on another machine then <em>do
not</em> use the "127.0.0.1" IP address.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: If you modify the 127.0.0.1 address and use a "real" IP
address, you must use real IP addresses in both fields, otherwise your
frontend machines will generate "Unexpected response to MYTH_PROTO_VERSION"
errors.
Changing any of the port settings is very strongly discouraged.
(If you do accidentally change them, the defaults are 6543 for
the master/backend server, and 6544 for the HTTP requests)
Once you're satisfied with the values, move the focus down to Next and hit
the space bar.
The next screen details the Host-specific Backend setup. This is where you
will set the specific directory paths for this particular backend. Make
sure that you've followed the steps at the beginning of this section and
created a directory that exists and that MythTV will have write privileges
to. When you're done, press Next to continue, taking you to the Global
Backend Setup.
On the Global Backend Setup configure your backend with the appropriate
settings. Use the left and right arrow keys to iterate through the choices
available on each setting, and the up and down keys to move between
settings. Move to Finish when you're done and press the space bar, taking
you back to the main configuration screen.
<sect2>Capture Cards
<p>You should have no capture cards defined, so the highlight will be on
(New Capture Card). Press space to begin.
Choose the appropriate settings for your particular tuner. Use the arrow
keys to move around and to make your choices, and press RETURN when
complete. Pressing RETURN will take you back to the Capture Cards screen;
if you have additional capture cards in this machine, press the space bar
when the highlight is on the (New Capture Card) row to define another card.
If you have made a mistake, you can delete a card by highlighting it and
pressing the 'D' key, or you can highlight it and press the RETURN or 'E'
key to edit it.
Once you have no additional cards to setup, press ESC.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: If you have a dual digital/analog card, such as the pcHDTV
cards and some DViCO cards, then you should not configure this as two
separate cards. Configure the digital portion as a DVB card, then click
on the "Analog Options" button within the DVB configuration panel for
the card and configure the analog portion of the card there.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect2>Video Sources <label id="VideoSources">
<p>When you start, the highlight should be on (New Video Source). Press the
space bar to begin. The first field asks for the name of the video source.
You may choose something easy to remember, like "Antenna" or "Cable". Once
you've chosen a name, press the down arrow to move to the next field.
If you're in North America, change the grabber to
"SchedulesDirect.org(Internal)", then continue pressing the down arrow to
move to the next field. Fill in the username (lowercase only) and password
that you have established with Schedules Direct, then move to the "Retrieve
Listings" button and press the space bar.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: You need <bf>wget</bf> version 1.9.1 or higher to use
Schedules Direct.
The mythtv-setup program will contact the Schedules Direct servers and get
your account information. Once you're done, you may click the Finish button
and skip the next few paragraphs in this document since they only apply to
users that are using the external XMLTV script to get their guide data.
If you wish to continue using the XMLTV grabber, then move to the Zip/postal
code field and put in the appropriate value.
If you're outside of North America, then some manual interaction will be
required with XMLTV. You may need to switch from the MythTV setup program
to the console it was run on to interact with XMLTV.
Once you have chosen your provider, press RETURN to continue. XMLTV will
now begin collecting the initial data for your location. The screen may
blank for a few seconds to several minutes, depending on the load of the
listings provider and the speed of your connection to the Internet. Be
patient!
You will then be returned to the Video Sources screen. If you have multiple
video sources available, such as Antenna, Cable, etc, go ahead and define
them all, even if they're not all going to be physically connected to the
master backend server. Once you're done, press ESC to return to the main
screen.
<sect2>Input Connections
<p>The final configuration item is Input Connections. On this screen, you
will associate the various video sources you defined earlier with a physical
input to a encoder card. It's entirely possible that you have multiple
tuners, and each tuner has a different input, so on this screen you let
MythTV know which device will connect to which input source.
When you start this screen, you should see a listing of the various input
connections available on each of the Capture cards you defined earlier. For
example, you may have a capture card with a tuner, a SVideo and a Composite
connection. If you wanted to associate the tuner (a.k.a., "Television")
with an "Antenna" source you defined in Video Sources, you would move to the
<tt>/dev/videodevice (Television) -> </tt> line and press the space bar.
Using the left and right arrow keys will show you the various choices you
have already created for video source. In our case, you would use the
left/right cursor keys until "Antenna" was shown in the Video Source field.
Press down to move to the next setting.
On the connection pane there is a "Scan for channels" button, if you are
configuring a digital source such as a DVB card, you need scan for channels
and you must do this before pressing the "Fetch channels from listings
source" button. You may scan for analog channels on an analog input, but
this is not needed.
<!-- Ugh! Who's been editing the HOWTO? This next section needs some cleanup -->
The other button is called "Fetch channels from listings source". As long as
you have a real listings source you should fetch channels from them for
analog channels. You can do this for digital sources as well (unless the
listing source is transmitted EIT data). If you are using XMLTV, you may need
to switch from the MythTV setup program to the console it was run on to
interact with XMLTV after pressing this button. It is possible to fetch the
channels on the command line using mythfilldatabase. But if you need to do
this, you will probably need to re-enter the MythTV setup program to
configure the "Starting channel" setting for this source->input connection.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: If you have a Hauppauge PVR-500, you must think of
it has two PVR-150's on a single PCI card. For example, if you have a
single PVR-500 card, it will appear as <tt>/dev/video0</tt> and
<tt>/dev/video1</tt>. Each <tt>/dev/video</tt> device will have a Tuner input.
</caption>
</figure>
Once you're done, press RETURN to go back to the Input Connections screen.
You would then finish associating the video sources to any other hardware
devices you have available.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Don't add a video source to a hardware input if you don't
actually have anything connected there. For example, adding "Cable" to the
Tuner and to the Composite inputs without having something connected to
Composite will lead to blank recordings.
</caption>
</figure>
Press ESC to return to the main menu, and press ESC again if you have no
further items to configure, thereby returning you to the command line.
<sect2>Channel Editor
<p>The channel editor is used to globally alter channel information,
including items like hue, contrast, fine tuning and others. Users in North
America shouldn't run the channel editor until you've completed the initial
mythtv-setup and ran <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> at least once to populate the
database.
<sect2>Storage Groups <label id="storagegroups">
<p>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="add.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="add.png">
<caption>
New in MythTV 0.21
</caption>
</figure>
<sect3>Introduction.
<p>
Storage Groups are lists of directories that are used to hold MythTV
recording files giving you a flexible way to allow you to add capacity to
your MythTV system without having to use exotic solutions such as LVM,
filesystem expansion or RAID Online Capacity Expansion. You can also use
Storage Groups to organize recordings and to put recordings of a certain
type into one subdirectory.
Storage Groups do not offer redundancy in case of hard drive failure, but
unlike LVM, if you lose a hard drive, you only lose the recordings that were
on that drive. With LVM, if you lose a hard drive, you will most likely
lose <bf>everything</bf>.
<sect3>How to use Storage Groups.
<p>
By default, there is only one Storage Group called "Default", and it is
used for all recordings and Live TV.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: You need to add at least one directory to the Default
Storage Group or else you will not be able to record anything with MythTV.
</caption>
</figure>
For example, if you have 5 hard drives in your system, your first hard drive
could be your "boot" drive, and the remaining four could be dedicated to
media storage. You could format the drives and mount them as
<tt>/mnt/store/d2</tt>, <tt>/mnt/store/d3</tt>, <tt>/mnt/store/d4</tt> and
<tt>/mnt/store/d5</tt>.
Within each mount point, it's <em>strongly</em> recommended that you use a
sub-directory and make that the destination path for the Storage Group. See
the <ref id="storagegrouptip" name="Tip"> in the "Configuring the Master
backend" section for additional information.
You would then add the four subdirectories you created under the mount
points (<tt>/mnt/store/d1/video</tt>, etc) into the "Default" Storage Group.
At recording time, if there were four simultaneous recordings, MythTV would
put one recording onto each drive.
Or, say that you originally installed MythTV to a 80GB hard drive, and that
hard drive is now filling up. You could simply add a new drive to your
system, mount it and update the Storage Group to add additional space.
You may create additional Storage Groups to store specific recordings in
their own directories. Storage Groups are edited via the 'Storage
Directories' section of mythtv-setup.
You can also create multiple Storage Groups to group recordings together;
recording schedules now have an option to specify which Storage Group to
use.
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, Myth 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.
Storage Groups are global, but can be overridden on a slave backend by
creating a local Storage Group by running <bf>mythtv-setup</bf> on the
slave. If a problem occurs and the slave backend is unable to use the
desired Storage Group, it will fail back and try the directories defined in
the master's Storage Group.
There's also a special 'LiveTV' Storage Group, but the directory list starts
out empty. If you add a directory to the Storage Group, it will be used
instead of putting LiveTV recordings in the Default Storage Group. This
will allow you to put your LiveTV recordings on their own filesystem, which
is similar to the old MythTV method which used a RingBuffer for LiveTV. Of
course, you don't have to do anything, and Live TV recordings will just go
into the Default Storage Group where they'll be the first programs eligible
for expiration if the system needs free space for recordings.
Usage information for all Storage Group directories is visible on the
mythfrontend status screen as well as the mythbackend status webpage.
MythTV is smart enough to determine which directories are on shared
filesystems so it should not count free or used space multiple times if you
have more than one directory on the same filesystem.
<sect3>Migrating to Storage Groups.
<p>Migrating to Storage groups is very simple: if you have existing
recordings in a storage directory, then the system will automatically add
that directory to the Default Storage Group. If you then add additional
directories to a storage group, the system is flexible enough to check
<em>all</em> Storage Groups for a file before deciding that it can't be
found, which means that you can use the <bf>mv</bf> command from the Unix
command line to arrange files however you'd like.
<sect3>Advanced: Algorithm used by the Storage Group
<p>This section details the logic of the Storage Group allocation engine.
The current load-balancing preferences (in order) are:
<itemize>
<item>Local filesystems over remote
<item>Less-busy (less weight) over more-busy (more weight)
<item>More Free Space over Less Free Space
</itemize>
The 'business' of a filesystem is determined by weights. The following
weights are added to a filesystem if it is in use for the following things:
<itemize>
<item>recording = +10
<item>playback = +5 (mythfrontend)
<item>comm flagging = +5 (mythcommflag)
<item>transcoding = +5 (mythtranscode)
</itemize>
If a recording is due to end within 3 minutes, it is not counted against
the weight of a filesystem. This is done to account for the pre/post-roll
and start-early/end-late settings.
<sect1>Post-configuration
<p>Run the <tt>mythfilldatabase</tt> program as directed. The master
backend will obtain guide data for all the video sources you defined during
setup.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: If you are using Schedules Direct and watching the output messages
on the console or the log file it is normal to see a "401 Unauthorized"
error followed by a "200 OK" when the connection to Schedules Direct is being
established.
<tscreen><verb>
From : Sun Jun 13 05:00:00 2004 To : Mon Jun 14 05:00:00 2004 (UTC)
--02:58:01--
http://datadirect.webservices.zap2it.com/tvlistings/xtvdService
=> -'
Resolving datadirect.webservices.zap2it.com... 206.18.98.160
Connecting to datadirect.webservices.zap2it.com[206.18.98.160]:80...
connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 401 Unauthorized
Connecting to datadirect.webservices.zap2it.com[206.18.98.160]:80...
connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: unspecified [text/xml]
[ <=> ] 114,125 63.57K/s
02:58:03 (63.53 KB/s) - -' saved [114125]
Your subscription expires on 08/20/2004 12:00:00 AM
Grab complete. Actual data from Sun Jun 13 05:00:00 2004 to Mon Jun 14
00:00:00 2004 (UTC)
</verb></tscreen>
Once <tt>mythfilldatabase</tt> has finished, start the master server before
continuing.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mythbackend
</verb></tscreen>
mythbackend will print information about connections and what it's doing to
the console. If you'd like to see the options that are available for
mythbackend, type <tt>mythbackend -h</tt> for help.
As of MythTV v0.21, the available options are:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mythbackend --help
Valid options are:
-h or --help List valid command line parameters
-l or --logfile filename Writes STDERR and STDOUT messages to filename
-p or --pidfile filename Write PID of mythbackend to filename
-d or --daemon Runs mythbackend as a daemon
-v or --verbose debug-level Use '-v help' for level info
--printexpire List of auto-expire programs
--printsched Upcoming scheduled programs
--testsched Test run scheduler (ignore existing schedule)
--resched Force the scheduler to update
--nosched Do not perform any scheduling
--nojobqueue Do not start the JobQueue
--noautoexpire Do not start the AutoExpire thread
--version Version information
</verb></tscreen>
Running mythbackend as a daemon and using the logfile option will allow you
to have mythbackend automatically start up during boot. You can follow the
steps outlined in the section called <ref id="mythbackend_autostart"
name="Automatically starting mythbackend at system boot time"> for
configuration steps.
If you enable the <tt>-l</tt> parameter, you will want to keep your logfiles
rotated (so that they don't fill up a partition). See the section called
<ref id="logrotate" name="Automatically rotating logs"> for more
information.
<sect1>Configuring a non-master backend <label id="nonmaster_backend">
<p>Ensure that you've granted access to the master MySQL database for remote
backends as discussed in the section titled <ref id="modify_perm_mysql"
name="Modifying access to the MySQL database for multiple systems"> and that
you have the correct IP address for the database server in the "Database
Configuration" screen of the mythtv-setup application on this slave backend.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Slave backends <bf>must not</bf> run a local MySQL
daemon. By default, they will connect to their local daemon rather than the
central database, causing unexpected behavior such as empty "Watch
Recordings" lists and a failure to locate the Video Sources defined on the
master backend. Modify the <tt>/usr/local/share/mythtv/mysql.txt</tt> file
on all slave backends to ensure that the <tt>DBHostName</tt> has the address
of the MySQL server.
Caveat: You may make a slave backend the primary MySQL server, or run a
non-MythTV database on a slave backend as long as you have edited the
<tt>mysql.txt</tt> file on <bf>all</bf> systems and made it consistent.
There can be only one authoritative MySQL database in a MythTV system -
errors such as the one above ensue if backends and frontends have differing
ideas of which MySQL database they should talk to.
</caption>
</figure>
Make sure that the IP addresses on the General setup screen are accurate.
If the slave backend can't communicate with the master backend due to IP
address misconfiguration then MythTV will not function properly.
Configuration of a non-master backend follows the same general procedure
as that of the master backend, with the exception that you skip over the
"Video Sources" step. All possible video sources need to be defined on the
master backend system; only the master backend will query a listings
provider to obtain guide data for all the non-master backends.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Do not run <tt>mythfilldatabase</tt> on a non-master backend.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect1>Configuring and running mythfilldatabase
<p><figure loc="here">
<eps file="warning.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="warning.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> might take a while to complete,
depending on any number of factors, most of which you can't control. It's
best to just let the program run to completion.
</caption>
</figure>
<bf>mythfilldatabase --help</bf> will give a full listing of the options
available.
<bf>mythfilldatabase --manual</bf> is another option; the manual option will
allow you to fine tune channel frequencies and specify which channels will
be added to the database.
<bf>mythfilldatabase --file</bf> is an option if there isn't an XMLTV grabber
for your country, but you <bf>do</bf> have an XML formatted listings file
created by some other program.
<bf>mythfilldatabase --xawchannels</bf> is an option if you have used
<bf>xawtv</bf> to fine-tune your channels and would like to import the fine
tuning offsets into MythTV.
<bf>mythfilldatabase --refresh-today</bf> will only pull guide data for
today (in case of late-breaking changes to the schedule).
<!-- get more information on the manual setting -->
<sect2>Periodically running <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf>
<p>In order to keep your database filled, <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> should be
run once a day.
To use MythTV's built-in capability, you'll need to run the
<bf>mythfrontend</bf> Setup option. From the mythfrontend, enter the
Setup>General screen and advance to "Mythfilldatabase", the fourth screen.
Select the checkbox, then complete the options as you see fit. The
<bf>mythbackend</bf> program will now run <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> for you.
<sect1>Grabbing channel icons for Schedules Direct users
<p>While the Schedules Direct TV listings service has several advantages, it
does not support grabbing logo icons for the stations you receive. However,
there are utilities provided with MythTV which you may use to grab your
initial set of icons and to keep them updated if your lineups change.
First, you need to generate or obtain an XML file with the information for
your stations.
If you have XMLTV software installed, there is a perl script in MythTV's
<tt>contrib/</tt> directory which will generate this file for you. Run the
command:
<tscreen><verb>
$ perl mkiconmap.pl
</verb></tscreen>
You will be asked for your zip code and the service that you use. If there
are no errors, the <tt>iconmap.xml</tt> file that you need for the next step
will be created.
If you do not have XMLTV software installed and do not want to install it
for the sake of this minor task, there is a generic
<tt>contrib/master_iconmap.xml</tt> which you can copy and use but this may
not be as complete as using the specific information for your service.
Once you have an <tt>iconmap.xml</tt> file, add the icon information to your
database and grab any new icons with the command:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mythfilldatabase --import-icon-map iconmap.xml --update-icon-map
</verb></tscreen>
<sect>Configuring mythfrontend.
<p>Once you have completed configuration of your backend systems, the next
step is to configure the frontend client.
When you start mythfrontend for the first time, it will attempt to connect
to a configuration database on the local machine. If there is none, a
"Database Configuration" screen will appear, and you will need to fill in
some details. The "Host name" field needs the backend or database server's
IP address or DNS name, and the User or password fields may need to be set
to match your database user accounts. After editing those fields, press
Enter twice to write these configurations on your local machine, and attempt
to connect to the database. If you make any mistakes, the screens will pop
up again.
Now that mythfrontend has started up, you should have a number of
buttons/choices. Before doing anything, go to TV, then to Setup and
configure the frontend client.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: You should go through the various setup screens in
mythfrontend before using any other modules to ensure that the the database
is correctly initialized.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect1>General
<p>The General screen has configuration items that don't really fit anywhere
else. The first few configuration items ask you to indicate the number of
seconds to record before or after a program, which is useful if the
broadcast network or your system clock are out of sync and will help prevent
you missing the beginning or end of a program.
To change the value, use the left and right arrow keys to increment and
decrement the number of seconds. When you're satisfied with the result, use
the down arrow to put the input focus on the Next button or press RETURN to
continue to the next page.
The next page has a number of options to do with how channels are displayed
on your system. The help text will give you more information. Move the
focus to Next and press the space bar to continue.
The last General page sets up some final configuration items. See the help
text for more information.
<sect1>Appearance
<p>This set of screens is mostly concerned with how MythTV will look on your
system. From here, you can choose different themes and set the resolution
of your system.
<sect1>Program Guide
<p>Fairly self explanatory. Note that the alternate program guide does not
use the same font settings as defined in Appearance, so if the EPG is
unreadable this is where you make the adjustments to fonts, number of
elements displayed, etc.
<sect1>Playback <label id="deinterlace_">
<p>The one configuration item which may cause problems on your system is the
"Deinterlace playback" setting. MythTV uses a linear blend algorithm for
deinterlacing, which will improve how the image looks on your screen.
Deinterlacing requires that your processor support SSE. (Streaming SIMD
Extensions, aka "MMX2"). Early Intel Celeron (those that don't use the
Coppermine 0.18um core and are usually <600MHz), Pentium Pro and Pentium II
CPUs do not have SSE, so make sure you haven't enabled deinterlacing if
your processor doesn't support it. If you enable it, and your processor
doesn't support SSE, you will get "Illegal Instruction" errors.
To determine if you've got SSE on an Intel processor, you can:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cat /proc/cpuinfo
[snip]
flags : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge mca
cmov pat pse36 mmx fxsr sse
</verb></tscreen>
Notice the <bf>sse</bf> at the end of the line - this tells you that this
processor will be able to deinterlace correctly.
On an AMD processor, look for "3dnow" in the cpuinfo line; "3dnow" is AMD's
implementation of SSE instructions, so if your processor has 3dnow you
shouldn't have any issues with deinterlacing.
<sect2>Video Filters
<!-- Submitted by Bruce Markey -->
<p>MythTV provides a means of employing video filters while recording and
during playback. These filters can be used to improve or modify the video
image, including hiding the effects of an interlaced image or reducing the
impact of noise in a poor video signal. The following is a brief
introduction to introduce you to the filters that are available in MythTV
version 0.20 and higher.
<sect2>Applying filters
<p>One or more filters can be included in a "filter chain". The filters to
be used are identified in a "filter string". A filter string is a group of
filter names and parameters separated by commas. To include parameters, the
filter name is followed by "=" and the parameter information. There should
be no spaces in the filter string. Here is an example filter string:
With parameters: <tt>kerneldeint=10:1,denoise3d=12</tt>
Without: <tt>kerneldeint,denoise3d</tt>
Recording filters are set for each individual channel. These may be used
when encoding in software (MPEG-4, RTjpeg) but do not apply when using a
capture card with hardware encoding such as those supported by the ivtv
driver, DVB, HDTV or MJPEG cards. You can run MythTV's "setup" program and
select the "Channel Editor". On the first page for each channel, you can
enter a filter string in the box titled "Video filters". If you are running
"mythweb" on your web server, you can click on "Settings" then "Channels"
and enter filter strings in the "videofilters" column.
Playback filters are per-host and apply to any recording you watch from the
frontend where filters have been applied. Playback filtering can only
work with software decoding so the viaslice, xvmc, and ivtv outputs ignore
filters entirely. From "mythfrontend" go to Setup->TV Settings->Playback.
Enter your filter string in the box titled "Custom Filters".
<sect2>Currently Available Filters
<p>"Deinterlace Playback" checkbox.
This implements special behavior needed for the "bobdeint" filter but can
also be used to choose any of the deinterlace filters. If you prefer, you
may leave this unchecked and include any of the deinterlace filters, other
than "bobdeint", in your custom filter chain.
o The "invert" filter
Invert ignores any parameters and inverts the pixel values of the video
frames. In other words, a negative image. This would rarely be useful but
may be a good example to verify that your filter strings take effect.
o The "linearblend" filter
It is a simple deinterlacing filter that ignores parameters and works by
blending adjacent lines. It replaces combing in interlaced video with a
less distracting "ghost" image.
o The "bobdeint" filter
This filter splits the interlaced image into two separate fields that
can be line doubled then displayed at twice the frame rate. If the
display is at the same refresh rate as the recording (59.92Hz NTSC or
50Hz PAL) this will cause each refresh to show objects in motion in
a new position with no jagged edges. However, if the display is not
synchronous, it will cause flickering or the appearance of the picture
moving up and down by one line.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: This filter requires the frame rate to be doubled
and therefore can only be used with the "Deinterlace Playback" checkbox.
Do not include this in your filter chain.
</caption>
</figure>
o The "kerneldeint" filter
Kerneldeint is a more complex deinterlacing filter which applies a filter
kernel using input from several lines. It generally removes combing without
a "ghost" image, sometimes leaving a faint outline of the image from the
other field. It is considered to be less distracting to watch than
linearblend or no filter at all. It accepts one or two integer parameters
separated by a colon.
The first parameter is the filter threshold and defaults to 12. Adjacent
lines differing by more than the threshold value are filtered. The second
option defaults to 0. If set to a non-zero value, it will cause the filter
to skip chroma, and filter only the luminance. It may be useful on some
capture cards which do not capture the chroma fields of interlaced video
correctly.
o The "onefield" filter
This is a simple one-field deinterlacing filter that uses only one field of
the interlaced video. By default it keeps the top field, though passing the
parameter "bottom" will cause it to keep the bottom field instead.
This filter is primarily useful for those who display 1080i HDTV signals
with a video mode that has 540 pixels vertically. The advantage over other
deinterlacing filters is that scenes with motion never show combing or
ghosting.
o The "adjust" filter
This filter adjusts the digital values for luma and chroma to ensure that
they will fall within the ranges specified in the ITU-R601 standard. By
default, this corrects a known problem for the luma range used by bt8x8
chips which causes video to look washed out. If parameters are passed, there
need to be exactly six. However, passing a single parameter of "-1" will
disable the filter.
1: luma minimum input value (int)
2: luma maximum input value (int)
3: luma gamma correction (float)
4: chroma minimum input value (int)
5: chroma maximum input value (int)
6: chroma gamma correction (float)
The default bt8x8 correction values are equivalent to
"16:253:1.0:2:253:1.0". Output ranges are fixed at ITU-R601 values (16-235
luma, 16-240 chroma).
<bf>NOTE</bf>: If it is not already specified in the filter chain, this
filter will be automatically applied when recording with the "bttv" driver.
o The "quickdnr" filter
A fast temporal denoiser. This can take 1, 2 or 4 parameters, each being a
value from "0" for the least filtering to "255" for the greatest filtering.
With one parameter, the filter will compute the values it should use for all
of its variables. Two parameters will set the filter strength for luma and
chroma independently. If you are interested in how the algorithm works, you
may examine the source code to see how four parameter are used.
o The "denoise3d" filter
A slower denoiser that applies a spatial and temporal low-pass filter. The
spatial filter can remove some noise that quickdnr can't, but a more
powerful CPU is needed. This filter accepts 3 float parameters:
<itemize>
<item>luma spatial filter strength
<item>chroma spatial filter strength
<item>luma temporal filter strength
</itemize>
Reasonable defaults will be selected for omitted parameters. The chroma
temporal filter strength is calculated from the other filter strengths.
o The "crop" filter
Covers edges of video with black bars. This helps improve video quality
when the edges of the frame are distorted. By default, this removes 16
pixels from each edge. This can optionally take four parameters representing
top:left:bottom:right. The number times 16 is the number of pixels to remove
so, for example, the default is "=1:1:1:1".
o The "forceyv12" and "forceyuv422p" filters
These force the filter manager to use the given format. You can use one of
these at the head of a filter chain to change the capture format. The most
likely use would be forceyuv422p to use YUV422P capture on cards with known
chroma interlacing problems with YV12.
There are some filters included in the MythTV source code that should
not be used:
o The "forcergb24" and "forceargb32" filters
The two RGB formats should not be used because there is no conversion filter
for them yet.
o The "convert" filter
It exists but don't use it. The filter manager uses this filter
automatically when it is unable to match the input/output formats of two
adjacent filters.
o The "postprocess" filter
While this exists in MythTV source code, it is currently not recommended for
use.
<sect2>Usage Considerations
<p>There are trade-offs to consider when deciding if it would be wise to use
a filter. Any processing will modify the original image so you should assess
if the filter has made a noticeable improvement to the picture in order to
justify the impact of the processing. Adding any filter will inherently
increase CPU usage. The impact can vary dramatically depending on your CPU
type and speed, the resolution of the recording, which filters you are using
and other factors. You can only determine what is right for you through
experimentation. However, as a starting point, here are some filter strings
that you may find useful:
For typical broadcast stations: "kerneldeint,quickdnr"
For stations with poor signal quality: "linearblend,denoise3d=12"
For synchronous TV-out: check Deinterlace with "Bob (2x framerate)"
<sect1>Recording <label id="Recording">
<p>Depending on your capture card, MythTV offers different video encoders.
The following types of hardware encoding cards are supported:
<itemize>
<item>MJPEG - Zoran-based cards; see <url url="http://mjpeg.sourceforge.net" name="http://mjpeg.sourceforge.net">
<item>MPEG-2 - iTVC15/16 based cards (Hauppauge PVR-250/PVR-350); see <url
url="http://ivtvdriver.org" name="http://ivtvdriver.org">
<item>HDTV - pcHDTV cards; see <url url="http://pchdtv.com" name="http://pchdtv.com"> and
the Air2PC-ATSC-PCI see <url
url="http://www.cyberestore.com/product_info.php?cPath=28&products_id=103"
name="http://www.cyberestore.com/product_info.php?cPath=28&products_id=103">
<item>DVB - cards supporting DVB; see <url url="http://linuxtv.org" name="http://linuxtv.org">
</itemize>
For cards without hardware encoding capabilities (all cards supported by
V4L not listed above), Myth includes two methods for software encoding:
RTjpeg and MPEG-4. RTjpeg has significantly fewer CPU demands than MPEG-4,
but it generates larger files than MPEG-4 for a given recording.
For DVB and HDTV cards, no further configuration is required after
setting up the card using the 'mythtv-setup' program.
For all other cards, configuration is done through MythFrontend.
Selecting 'Recording Profiles' from the 'TV Settings' screen will list
the profiles currently available for the cards in your system.
Depending on what types of cards you have installed you may see:
<tscreen><verb>
(Create new profile group)
Software Encoders
Hardware MPEG Encoders
Hardware MJPEG Encoders
Transcoders
</verb></tscreen>
The '(Create new profile group)' option will allow you to create custom
profiles in case you have multiple backends. Note that custom profiles
are per backend and card type. If you have 2 MPEG-2 encoders in a given
backend system, creating a custom profile will affect both of them. This
option should not be needed otherwise.
The 'Transcoders' group is a little different from the others. Selecting
this group will result in a menu with the following options: 'RTjpeg/MPEG-4'
and 'MPEG-2'. These types indicate what transcoder options will be used for
a given input type (i.e. the 'MPEG-2' settings would be used to transcode
MPEG-2 files into MPEG-4. The source of the MPEG-2 stream (DVB, HDTV, or
PVR-x50) does not matter. Configuration of the options is the same as below
(although any resolution settings will be ignored).
Selecting any of the other options will show a new screen with a list of
four profiles:
<itemize>
<item>Default
<item>Live TV
<item>Low Quality
<item>High Quality
</itemize>
The Default profile will be used for any recording which does not otherwise
have a specific profile assigned. The 'Live TV' profile will be used when
watching TV. The remaining two profiles are available for customizing to
allow for more precise control over what quality is used for a given
program.
Selecting a profile will allow you to adjust the relevant options for that
card. The most significant setting is the recording resolution, but you can
also choose encoding format, audio format, and tweak other encoder specific
properties.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: although the width and height can be changed to almost
anything, if you start MythTV and don't see video or you get "segmentation
fault" errors, it is likely that the video4linux (v4l) subsystem did not
like the height and width parameters specified. It's best to leave the
default as-is until you're sure that MythTV is operational.
</caption>
</figure>
See the <ref id="capture_resolution_" name="What capture resolution should I
use? How does video work?"> section for more information.
<sect1>Xbox Frontends
<p>MythTV is able to control the LED on the Xbox to indicate backend
recording status.
To control the LED, you will need the <bf>blink</bf> program from the
xbox-linux project, which is installed as <tt>/bin/led</tt> on GentooX. On
Xebian (the new Ed's Debian) you must install it yourself. On other
distributions it may or may not be installed as a program called
<bf>blink</bf> and should be located in your path. (Type <tt>which
blink</tt> to see if the program is available.) If you do not have
<bf>blink</bf>, you may obtain it from the Xbox-Linux project site at <url
url="http://xbox-linux.sf.net/" name="http://xbox-linux.sf.net/">. The
program you need is part of the <tt>eds_i2c_staff</tt> module in CVS. Note
the spelling.
Once you have installed <bf>blink</bf> you will need to set permissions.
<bf>blink</bf> needs write permission to the i2c device to function
properly. There are three methods to accomplish this. First, you could run
<tt>mythfrontend</tt> as root, which is the simplest method, but could
potentially be a security risk. Next, you may make the <bf>blink</bf>
binary setuid root, which allows non-privileged users to run a program with
root capability. This is done by typing the command:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# chmod u+s /path/to/blink
</verb></tscreen>
The final technique would be to set the <tt>/dev/i2c/0</tt> device read/write
for all users, but this is the least preferred method.
Now it's time to setup MythTV for Xbox hardware. Enter Setup -> General.
On the second page check the 'Enable Xbox Hardware' option. Upon reentering
the settings, you should have a new option named 'Xbox'. Within this option
you may select the distribution, LED colors for recording and the update
interval. If you select GentooX as the distribution <bf>led</bf> will be
used as the <bf>blink</bf> binary name, otherwise, <bf>blink</bf> is used.
Colors should be self explanatory. The update interval determines how often
the frontend should poll the backend to determine if the status has changed.
<sect>Using MythTV.
<p><figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
<bf>NOTE to Red Hat/Fedora 4 users</bf>: Red Hat Linux and Fedora Core ship
with Gnome as the default desktop environment. However, Gnome seems to have
issues with window focus and window switching which sometimes cause
mythfrontend to obscure the video. KDE does not seem to have any such
issues. Therefore you will need to switch to KDE by selecting
RedHatMenu>Extras>System Settings>Desktop Switching Tool and choose "KDE".
<bf>NOTE to Fedora Core 5 and 6 users</bf>: Fedora 5 and 6 no longer have
this tool in the Menu. Use "switchdesk KDE" from a command line. Read "man
switchdesk" for further information about changing to other desktop
environments.
</caption></figure>
<sect1>Keyboard commands
<p>The <tt>keys.txt</tt> file describes what the various keyboard commands are.
If you have loaded mythweb, you may change the default keys to your liking.
<sect2>mythfrontend
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
Arrow keys | used to move the highlight point around @
ALT-F4 | exit out of the application @
Space/Enter | take action on the item under the highlight point @
P | play in both "Watch a Recording" and "Delete a Recording" @
D | delete in both "Watch a Recording" and "Delete a Recording" @
U | to view details for the currently selected show on the Watch
or Delete screens, EPG, "Program Finder", "Fix Scheduling
Conflicts" and search results screens @
O | to list the upcoming episodes for the currently selected show
on the EPG, "Program Finder", "Program Recording Priorities",
"Fix Scheduling Conflicts" or search results screens @
I | edit recording options from the EPG, "Program Finder",
"Program Recording Priorities", or "Fix Scheduling Conflicts"
screens. From the Playback and Delete screens, 'I' presents
options for recorded shows such as Auto Expire or Stop Recording.
Pressing 'I' while on the Recording Options screen will take you
to the Advanced Recording Options screen.
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Watching TV or a recording
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
Up or down | keys change the channel @
num pad | Type a number to enter a channel number or jump amount (HHMM format) @
P | pause / play. You may also add an explicit keybinding for 'Play' through
MythWeb, returning you to normal speed if you are in slow motion, rewind
fast forward or pause mode. @
C | change inputs on TV Tuner card @
ESC | quits @
I | puts the On-screen Display up again. During playback, 'I' toggles
between position and show description info. If a jump amount is
entered, jump to that position. @
M | brings up the electronic program guide (Grid) -- see the EPG section @
Page Up | jump back the configured number of minutes (default is 10) @
Page Down | jump ahead the configured number of minutes (default is 10) @
End or Z | skip to next commercial break marker @
Home or Q | skip back to previous commercial break marker @
T | toggle close caption support
Pressing 0-9 (preferably 3 times) + T changes teletext page and turns on teletext. @
F | rotate between the various Picture Adjustments (Colour, Hue, etc.)
While Picture Adjustment is on-screen, use Left and Right arrows to
adjust. These settings adjust the look of the video playback, and are
independent of the G-key settings used at record-time. @
[ or F10 | decrease volume @
] or F11 | increase volume @
| or F9 | toggle mute @
/ | jump to the next "favorite" channel @
? | mark/unmark the current channel as a "favorite" @
U | increase the play speed @
J | decrease the play speed @
A | Adjust time stretch (speed up or slow down normal play of audio and video @
W | cycle through zoom and fill modes: 4:3 aspect ratio, 16:9, 4:3 Zoom
(like Pan and Scan), 16:9 Zoom, and 16:9 Stretch (eliminates black
sidebars in TV signal) @
F8 | toggle the sleep timer 30m->1hr->1hr30m->2hr->Off @
CTRL-B | Jump to the beginning of the recording / ringbuffer @
+ | Switch between audio streams @
Left | (if a jump amount is entered) to jump back that amount @
Right | (if a jump amount is entered) to jump ahead that amount @
| @
| @
| <bf>Without the stickykeys option selected</bf> @
Left | rewind the configured number of seconds (default is 5) @
Right | fast forward the configured number of seconds (default is 30) @
< | starts rewind mode as if stickykeys are selected @
> | starts fast forward mode as if stickykeys are selected @
| @
| @
| <BF>With Stickykeys option selected</BF> @
Right | starts fast forward mode @
Left | starts rewind mode @
| @
| @
| <bf>In fast forward or rewind mode:</bf> @
Left/Right | increases the ff/rew speed @
0 | plays at normal speed, but leaves the time indicator on screen @
1 or 2 | plays back more slowly than normal ff/rew speed (1 is slowest) @
3 | plays back at normal ff/rew speed @
4-9 | plays back faster than normal ff/rew speed (9 is fastest) @
Space | exits fast forward or rewind mode @
| @
| @
| <bf>While video is paused:</bf> @
Left | rewind 1 frame @
< | rewind 1 second @
Right | advance 1 frame @
> | advance 1 second
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Watching TV only
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
G | rotate between the various Picture Adjustments (Colour, Hue, etc.)
for recording. These values affect the look of the resulting .nuv
file, and are independent of the playback picture settings. While
Picture Adjustment is on-screen, use Left and Right arrows to adjust. @
H | Channel history. Each repeat steps back through the previous channels. @
O | Turns on 'Browse' mode, allowing user to browse channels and program
info while watching current show FullScreen. @
Y | switch between multiple capture cards. <bf>NOTE</bf>:
you will lose your LiveTV buffer on your current card. Useful
for different-sourced cards (such as Dish Network on one, HDTV over-the-air on another card.) @
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>LiveTV Browse Mode
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
Left | browse program prior to current listed program @
Right | browse program following current listed program @
Up | browse program on channel above current listed channel/program @
Down | browse program on channel below current listed channel/program @
/ | browse program on next favorite channel @
0-9 | enter a channel number to browse @
Space/Enter | change channel to channel of current listed program @
R/r | Toggle recording of current program (cycles through types) @
ESC/O | Exit Browse mode
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Playback Recording Zoom Mode
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
Left | Move video to Left @
Right | Move video to Right @
Up | Move video Up @
Down | Move video Down @
PageUp | Zoom In @
PageDown | Zoom Out @
Space/Enter | Exit Zoom mode leaving picture at current size and position @
ESC | Exit Zoom mode and return to original size
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>If you have two or more tuner cards
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
V | toggle Picture-in-picture on or off @
B | toggles the window focus (lets you change channels on the PiP window) @
N | swaps the two channels by changing channels on both cards
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Watching a recording only
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
Space/Enter | set a bookmark at that point. Next time you start the
recording, you will automatically jump forward to this point
and clear the bookmark. @
X | queues the current recording for transcoding @
O | brings up menu to allow toggling settings such as Commercial
Auto-Skip, Auto-Expire, etc. @
D | exits the current recording and displays the Delete menu @
E or M | enters/exits edit mode. @
| @
| @
| <bf>In edit mode</bf> @
Left/Right | move forward and backward @
Up/Down | alter the amount of time you jump forward and backward.
Increments are: nearest cutpoint, nearest video keyframe, 1
frame, 0.5 seconds, 1 second, 20 seconds, 1 minute, 5 minutes,
and 10 minutes. @
PageUp/PageDown | move forward and backward to the nearest cut point @
< or > | move forward or backward by 10 times the normal jump amount @
Space/Enter | allows you to set or delete a cut point @
Z | loads the commercial skip list (if one exists) into the cutlist @
C or Q | clear all cut points in the cutlist @
I | Inverts the cutlist
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>EPG
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
Arrows | are used to move the highlighted program point around @
A, D, S, W | perform the same as left, right, down and up @
PageUp/PageDown | move the channel list up or down a page @
Home/End | move the highlight left or right by one day @
Ctrl+Left or < | move the highlight left by one page @
Ctrl+Right or > | move the highlight right by one page @
9, 3, 7, 1 | (like a numeric keypad) perform the same as PageUp, PageDown,
Home and End @
I | bring up more information about a show, and allow you to
schedule a recording. If you select "Record this showing"
while watching Live TV you can "Instant Record" a program. @
Space/Enter | allow you resolve conflicts or change overrides. If the
program is not already scheduled to record, it will instead act like
pressing 'I'. @
M | when on a channel will change to that channel @
ESC or C | exits without changing the channel @
R | change the current item from Recording/Not-Recording.
Successive keypresses cycle through the scheduled recording
type list. @
X | change the channel to the currently selected channel without
leaving the EPG (Most useful in the alternate EPG) @
? | mark/unmark the current channel as a "favorite" @
/ or 4 | toggle the guide listing between all channels and filtered
"favorites"
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Setting Program or Channel Recording Priorities
<p>
<table loc="l">
<tabular ca="rll">
Right | increases priority value @
Left | decreases priority value @
1 | sorts by title @
2 | sorts by priority @
Home/End | toggle sort priority @
I | edit recording options @
ESC | commits changes and exits
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Viewing Scheduled Recordings/Resolving Conflicts
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
1 | show all recordings @
2 | show only important recordings @
Home/End | toggle show showing all/important @
I | edit recording options @
Space/Enter | resolve conflict or override
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Viewing Search Listings
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
Home | change to the previous view if applicable @
End | change to the next view if applicable @
M | select another view if applicable. In the
title and description search popup, press
M again to edit or delete the selected view.
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Recording Profiles Setup Screen
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
D | on a custom profile group displays a popup to delete the group@
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Recording Groups
<p>In the Watch Recordings screen, Recording Groups allow you to separate
programs into user-defined categories, such as "Kids", "Alice", "Bob", etc.
This can be used to reduce clutter, or to segregate content if you use the
PIN function.
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
M | change the view or to set a group password @
I | move a program from one Recording Group to another
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Watch Recordings Screen
<p>
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
1 or F1 | Meaning of the icons @
/ | Tags a recording. Tagged recordings can be played
either in order or shuffled and deleted as a group.
You can also change the recording group for several
recordings at once by tagging them and using the
Menu (m) button, selecting "Playlist options",
then "Change Recording Group". @
? | Clear the tagged list.
</tabular>
</table>
<sect2>Remote Controls
<p>
If you are using MythTV with just a remote control then it is suggested that you
map the remote control keys as described below. Your remote control may not
have the same set of keys as those named below, the names are only a suggestion
that roughly correspond to the function.
<p>
If you are adding new key bindings to the program then consideration of this
suggested list will help users with remote controls.
<p>
This list assumes a minimal remote control that only has 20 keys, nearly all
features can be used with this configuration. If you have more keys then you
can access all of the features. With only 16 keys most features are usable.
<table loc=p>
<tabular ca="rll">
REMOTE CONTROL | LIRC KEYSTROKE | FUNCTION @
0 - 9 | 0 - 9 | channel selection, EPG navigation, ff/rew speed setting (with stickykeys) @
Left Arrow | Left | scroll left, rewind @
Right Arrow | Right | scroll right, fast forward @
Up Arrow | Up | scroll up, channel change up @
Down Arrow | Down | scroll down, channel change down @
Select / OK / Play | Space | Select item, play (with stickykeys) set bookmark @
Cancel | Escape | Cancel, quit playback @
Menu | m | EPG (from watching TV) edit (from playback). @
Pause | p | Pause @
Other key 1 | i | Information @
Other key 2 | c | Change tuner card input
</tabular>
</table>
<sect1>Using themes with MythTV
<p>MythTV is "themeable", meaning that the visual appearance of the program
can be modified by the user without re-compiling or altering the program
functionality. Download the MythThemes tarball from the website and untar it:
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xjf myththemes-0.21.tar.bz2
$ cd ~/myththemes-0.21
$ qmake myththemes.pro
$ su -
# make install
# exit
$
</verb</tscreen>
The theme will now be available in the mythfrontend Appearance section.
<sect1>Adding DishTV information to the database
<p>A script for adding Pay Per View information into the MythTV database for
DishTV subscribers is available at <url url="http://www.mythppv.com/"
name="http://www.mythppv.com/">.
<sect1>Adding support for an external tuner
<p>MythTV supports changing the channel on an external tuner. If you have
an external tuner, such as a DirecTV or digital cable set top box, you
should add <tt>/usr/local/bin/changechannel</tt> to your Input Connections in the
mythbackend configuration GUI.
However, there is not <bf>changechannel</bf> program per-se, because this is
going to be dependent on what sort of external tuner you have. Look in the
<tt>contrib/channel_changers</tt> directory for a number of programs and
scripts which may be used to change channels. Once you find one which
works, copy it to <tt>/usr/local/bin/changechannel</tt>.
Feel free to browse some of what sort of hardware is available at <url
url="http://store.snapstream.com/accessories.html"
name="http://store.snapstream.com/accessories.html">, or if you wish to
assemble your own, rather than purchase, the following may be helpful: <url
url="http://www.dtvcontrol.com/" name="http://www.dtvcontrol.com/"> for
cable pinouts.
<sect1>Using Shutdown/Wakeup
<p>What does the MythTV Shutdown/Wakeup function do? The scheduler on the
Master backend (MBE) keeps track of the idle status of the entire MythTV
system, including the Slave backends (SBE). If it considers the system to be
idle, and thus ready to shutdown, it sets the wakeuptime to the time of the
next recording and then proceeds to shut down all Slave backends and then
itself. Once it is time to begin recording, the Master backend and the Slave
Backends are automatically woken up. This system allows MythTV to record
like a normal VCR, thereby conserving power when not in active use.
In order to use the Shutdown/Wakeup function there must be some method of
waking up the Master backend. There are any number of solutions, but we
will discuss in detail two possibilities:
<itemize>
<item>Use another server that runs 24/7 and have it send a WakeOnLAN (WOL)
packet to wake the Master backend. This assumes that you have the WOL tools
installed, and that your Master backend motherboard supports WOL.
<item>Use your motherboard's BIOS wakeup capability. You'll need a motherboard
that supports BIOS wakeup, and some tools. Two that work are: <url
url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/nvram-wakeup"
name="http://sourceforge.net/projects/nvram-wakeup"> and <url
url="http://www.malloc.de/tools/wakeup_clock.html"
name="http://www.malloc.de/tools/wakeup_clock.html">
</itemize>
<sect2>A deeper look into the operation
<p>The scheduler keeps track of the idle status of the MythTV system. To
determine whether or not the MythTV system is idle, the following conditions
must be met for a period of time defined in the "Idle timeout (secs)"
parameter.
<itemize>
<item>no client is connected to the server
<item>no recording (neither LiveTV nor a regular recording) is currently taking place
<item>no recording starts within a definable amount of time ("Max. wait for recording (min)")
<item>the "pre Shutdown check-command" returns 0
</itemize>
If we get to this idle state the Master backend will set the wakeuptime using the "Set
wakeuptime command", which is the same for WOL and BIOS wakeup. The Master backend will
then shut down the Slave backends and itself using the "Server halt command".
One caveat is that the scheduler tries to guess if the Master backend was started by a
wakeup call or by the user. If it thinks it was woken up by a user, it
blocks shutdown until a client connects to the Master backend, after which it will
behave as described above. To disable this feature, unset "Block shutdown
before client connected" in the mythfrontend Setup->Setup->General screen.
Once it is time to startup the system, the Master backend is woken up first and will
wakeup the Slave backends using the "Wake command for slaves". At this time, there is
no support for starting only the required Slave backend, so all Slave backends will startup.
<sect2>Setting up the MythTV side of this extension.
<p>There are a number of options that are used to control the Shutdown /
Wakeup feature.
Shutdown/Wakeup Options:
<itemize>
<item>"Idle timeout (secs)" is the time the server waits while idle until a
shutdown occurs.
<item>"Max. wait for recording (min)" is the time the Master backend waits for a recording
without shutting down. For example, this would be used to prevent a 10
minute system shutdown if a recording is set to start 15 minutes from now.
<item>"Startup before rec. (secs)" Sets how long before a programmed
recording the MythTV system will be woken up. This should be roughly be the
time your systems need to bootup, and if you have Slave backends, you'll
need to ensure this value is long enough for all your machines to perform
their bootup cycle.
<item>"Wakeup time format" is the format of the wakeup time that is given in
the "Set wakeuptime command" as a parameter "$time". You need to set this
according to your wakeup mechanism. If you need seconds since the epoch
(1970-01-01) set the "Wakeup time format" to "time_t".
<item>"Set wakeuptime command" is the command executed to set the new wakeuptime.
<item>"Server Halt Command" is the command executed to shutdown the Master
backend and the Slave backends.
<item>"pre Shutdown check-command" is used to give a
"Go/NO-GO" decision from a non-MythTV source. This command is executed
immediately before the shutdown would occur. The return value is use to make
the following choices:
<itemize>
<item>If it returns a "0" the shutdown will occur as scheduled.
<item>If it returns a "1" the "idle timeout" will be reset and the system
waits again for the timeout.
<item>If it returns a "2" the entire shutdown sequence is reset. This means
that a new client connect is needed before a shutdown occurs, unless you have
the "Wait for client connect" setting disabled, in which case this is the same as
returning "1". An example of a use for this return value is to prevent the shutdown
if a user is currently logged in, or if a specific program (i.e. transcode,
automatic updates, etc.) is currently running. If you don't need it, leave
the field blank.
</itemize>
</itemize>
The "WakeOnLan settings":
These settings have nothing to do with using BIOS or WOL wakeup, they are
the same for both.
<itemize>
<item>"Master backend" This setting defines timings for the frontends to
wakeup the Master backend using WOL. Useful if your frontend can emit a WOL
packet so you don't need to physically go to the Master backend if you're
trying to watch TV.
<item>"Reconnect wait time (secs)" is the time the frontend waits after
executing the "Wake command" before attempting to retry the connection. This
should be roughly the amount of time your Master backend needs for bootup.
Set to "0" to disable. The frontends will retry to connect for "Count of
reconnect tries" times before giving up.
<item>"Wake command for slaves" is the <em>one</em> command executed to wake
your Slave backends. This should be a script that contains the calls to
wakeup all Slave backend systems.
</itemize>
<sect3>Using WOL to wake your Master backend.
<p>To use WOL to wake your Master backend you will need a WOL capable Master
backend, a machine that runs 24/7 which can execute an at-job and nc (netcat)
on the Master backend. I use some little bash scripts to make my DSL router
wakeup my mythbox if required.
Replace $SERVER and $PORT with your own settings!
On my Master backend I have a script that gets called as 'setwakeuptime command' which
looks like the following:
<tscreen><verb>
#! /bin/sh
echo $@ | nc $SERVER $PORT
</verb></tscreen>
This simply cats the parameters (that is $time) to my 24/7 server. On my
$SERVER I have (x)inetd listening on $PORT starting a little script which
cares about setting the at-job. The following additions are necessary on the
$SERVER:
If you use <bf>inetd</bf>:
<p>In <tt>/etc/inetd.conf</tt> add:
<tscreen><verb>
mythwake stream tcp nowait mythtv /usr/sbin/tcpd /usr/local/bin/mythwake
</verb></tscreen>
If you use <bf>xinetd</bf>, save the following as <bf>mythwake</bf> in your
<tt>/etc/xinet.d/</tt> directory:
<tscreen><verb>
service mythwake
{
socket_type = stream
wait = no
user = mythtv
protocol = tcp
id = mythwake
server = /usr/local/bin/mythwake
}
</verb></tscreen>
and add the following to <tt>/etc/services</tt>:
<tscreen><verb>
mythwake $PORT/tcp
</verb></tscreen>
Finally, <tt>/usr/local/bin/mythwake</tt> looks like:
<tscreen><verb>
#! /bin/bash
#this should be a command to wake your server
WAKECMD="#!/bin/sh\n /usr/local/bin/wakeMBE"
#first we need to delete all wake jobs in queue
for JOB in atq | cut -f 1 ; do
atrm $JOB;
done
#now we read the date from 'nc'
read date;
#now set the atjob
echo -e "$WAKECMD" | at $date ;
</verb></tscreen>
<bf>SECURITY WARNING</bf>:
Be sure to secure $SERVER:$PORT from untrusted networks, because this
allows 3rd parties to run arbitrary code on your server!
<sect3>Using BIOS wakeup to wake your Master backend.
<p>Since I don't use this, I cannot say much about this. If your motherboard
supports any wakeup tool you have to call that tool as "Set wakeuptime
command" with the "Wakeup time format" suitable for that tool.
<sect2>Wakeup the MySQL server using WOL
<p>If your MySQL server and your Master backend are not on the same machine,
you can have the Master backend wake your MySQL server using WOL. You will
find the settings for this in the second page of the mythtv-setup program,
or at the end of <tt>mysql.txt</tt>. The meanings are the same as
discussed in "The WakeOnLan settings" above.
<sect2>Tips/Tricks:
<p>If, for example, one of the Slave backends is also your desktop computer,
you could simply use a little script as 'server halt command' which first
calls <tt>/sbin/shutdown -t TIMEOUT</tt> where TIMEOUT is a value sufficient
for you to react. You could then popup a window using *dialog, asking for
permission to shutdown. If you cancel the shutdown, simply call
<tt>/sbin/shutdown -c</tt>.
If you get "nvram-wakeup: /dev/rtc: Device or resource busy" your
set-wakeuptime-script should stop the program that uses <tt>/dev/rtc</tt> before
setting the wakeuptime.
<sect1>Controlling the mythfrontend via telnet
<p>To use this feature you must first enable it in Settings>General>General
The network control listens on port 6546, as demonstrated below:
<tscreen><verb>
$ telnet basement 6546
Connected to basement.
Escape character is '^]'.
MythFrontend Network Control
Type 'help' for usage information
---------------------------------
# help
Valid Commands:
---------------
jump - Jump to a specified location in Myth
key - Send a keypress to the program
play - Playback related commands
query - Queries
exit - Exit Network Control
Type 'help COMMANDNAME' for help on any specific command.
# help jump
Usage: jump JUMPPOINT
Where JUMPPOINT is one of the following:
channelpriorities - Channel Recording Priorities
channelrecpriority - Channel Recording Priorities
deletebox - TV Recording Deletion
deleterecordings - TV Recording Deletion
guidegrid - Program Guide
livetv - Live TV
livetvinguide - Live TV In Guide
mainmenu - Main Menu
...snip...
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
Please note that this feature only allows one connection at a time, so any
new connections will automatically terminate prior ones.
<sect>Scheduling Recordings.
<p>The MythTV master backend is responsible for managing the schedule for
all TV tuner cards on the master and any slave. Its job is to search the TV
listing for the shows you have requested and assign recordings to the TV
tuner cards. If none of the shows that you've chosen overlap, it simply
records all of them. However, if there are shows where the beginning
and end times overlap, the scheduler follows rules that you've specified or
makes logical decisions about what would be best if you haven't expressed your
preference. Further, the "Upcoming Recordings" page allows you make specific
decisions about what you really do and don't want to record.
<sect1>Record Types
<p>When you choose a show that you would like to record from the
Options Page, there are eight different types of rules to help the
scheduler find which showings you would like to record.
<itemize>
<item>Single Record -- record only this title at this specific time and
this station. This is the best way to be sure that a certain showing will
be recorded. However, if the TV listings change and the show is not broadcast
at that time, the show will not be recorded but will be marked as Not Listed
to let you know that you should investigate.
<item>Find One -- this will record a title once from any of the times
that appear in the TV listings. This is useful for recording a movie
or special that has multiple showings because it allows the scheduler
to choose one that doesn't conflict. It is not a good choice for
recording a single episode of a series because it records the first
available showing of the title without regard to the episode
information.
<item>Record Weekly -- this records a show whenever the title is listed
on the same channel, weekday and time. Note that if the TV station
changes the schedule for a special episode, it would not be
recorded. However, you can add a Single record for the special
episode. If there are no matching showings in the TV listings,
a Not Listed item will be added to your schedule for the next
time slot to let you know that you should investigate.
<item>Find Weekly -- this will record a title once per week from any
of the times that appear in the TV listings beginning from the time of
the showing that was selected when the rule was set. This is useful
for news, current events or other programs where the same episode is
shown several times each week but the listings may not include
descriptive information. This may not be a good choice if there are
different episodes shown during the week.
<item>Record Daily -- this records a show whenever the title is listed
for the time and station on any day of the week. Here again, a show
will not be recorded if the time was altered by the station. If there
are no matching showings in the TV listings, a Not Listed item will be
added to your schedule for the next time slot to let you know that you
should investigate.
<item>Find Daily -- this will record a title once per day from any
of the times that appear in the TV listings beginning from the time of
the showing that was selected when the rule was set. This is useful
for news, current events or other programs where the same episode is
shown several times each day but the listings may not include
descriptive information. This may not be a good choice if there are
different episodes shown during the day.
<item>Channel Record -- records one showing of each unique episode from
any of the times the title is listed on this station. This is perhaps
the most common rule to use for most shows.
<item>Record All -- records one showing of each unique episode from
any of the times this title is listed on any channel. This can be
useful if a station has sister stations where shows are rebroadcast
allowing the scheduler to record rebroadcasts on the other station
when the original airing cannot be recorded.
</itemize>
<sect1>Scheduling Options
<sect2>Priority
<p>By default, all shows you select have equal value to the
scheduler. There are a set of rules to make good choices when
two or more shows are in conflict. However, priority values let the
scheduler know what you prefer so that it can set the schedule based
on your preferences.
Initially, recording rule priority values are set to zero. You may choose
to leave everything at "0" and let the scheduler follow rules to guess
what you might prefer when there are conflicts. However, if you have
one or two favorite shows, you may want to increase the priority
value so the scheduler will know that you would prefer recording
these over other shows. You might use certain values to rate shows
so that all favorites are 2. good shows are 1 and extra 'filler'
shows are all -1 for example. You could sort each title on the "Set
Priorities" page to have a unique value so the scheduler can know
which show you'd prefer versus any other show. The choice and style
are entirely up to you. However, the more information you give to
the scheduler, the more likely it will make the choices you would
prefer in the first place.
The scheduler choices are based on the total priority for a showing by
adding up all priority factors that match the showing. By default, most
of these factors are "0" but you may use any combination to express your
likes and needs.
<itemize>
<item>Per record rule -- this is the "priority" selection in the "Scheduling
Options" section of the options page and this value is included for any
showings that match the recording rule. You may choose to only use these
values and not use the other factors for the sake of simplicity and clarity.
<item>
Per record type -- Setup->TV Settings->Recording Priorities->General allows
you to add to the priority based on the type. It may make sense to increase
the value for "Single" so that by default they have an extra advantage over
other shows. The default is +1. You may want to decrease the value for Find
rules so that they will be less likely to interfere with regularly scheduled
shows and will be more likely to record in a non-conflicting time instead.
The default is -1.
<item>
Per channel -- Setup->TV Settings->Recording Priorities->Channel Priorities
can be useful if you believe that you prefer any of the shows on certain
channels. This would give all shows on a channel an advantage by default.
<item>
Input priority -- in the "mythtv-setup" program, the "Input Connections"
section allows you to add additional priority in the "Input priority".
This is simply another priority factor but has an interesting effect. If a
card input has a higher value than the other cards, the scheduler will see
that you would rather record showings of episodes on this input rather than a
showing on other inputs. If you have multiple cards of different quality,
you may want to set input priority to encourage the scheduler to record
shows on your best card(s) whenever possible. This can also be useful if you
have multiple video sources which include the same stations. For example,
with digital and analog cable you could increase the digital cable input
preference by 1 to tell the scheduler that you want to record from the
digital channel whenever possible but the channel on the analog input could
still be used when the digital input is busy.
<item>
Custom Priority -- this allows you to add any specialized factors you
would like in order to influence scheduling decisions. See the
<ref id="Custom Priority" name="Custom Priority"> section below.
</itemize>
For any single showing of any show you've chosen to record, these factors
are added together to find the "total priority". This is the priority that
the scheduler uses to decide which showings are given the first choice when
filling in the schedule.
The scheduling priority of a show may also be used to determine
auto-expiration of recordings when disk space gets full (see <ref
id="Auto-Expire" name="Auto-Expire">, below).
<sect2>Duplicates
<p>Singles will record without regard to duplicate matching.
<p>The standard recurring methods of All, Channel, Weekly and Daily use the
descriptive information in the TV listings to try to record only one showing
of each unique episode. However, This goal is sometimes complicated by the
fact that the stations may not include a description for a specific episode
but use a generic description for the series instead. When there is a
generic description, the default behavior is to assume that it may be an
episode that you have not seen and to record it for you. One of the
duplicate matching options is "Record new episodes only". If this is
selected, listing that have an original air date of more than 14 days
earlier are considered repeats and are not eligible to record. Generally,
generic episodes will be marked as repeats also.
<p>Because of generic episodes and other situations, MythTV offers an
alternative approach where shows may be recorded by choosing from multiple
showings even when the descriptive information is not reliable. All of the
"Find" record types look for matching titles in the listings. If there is a
showing with specific episode information and that episode has recorded
before, that showing is marked as previously or currently recorded. The
scheduler will then choose to record the earliest non-conflicting showing
from any of other remaining showings regardless of the descriptive
information. Generally, Find One is most useful for movies or specials and
the Find Daily and Find Weekly rules are best for news or current events
shows that are repeated. However, these may be useful in other situations
where the standard recording rules may not work correctly.
<sect2>Conflicts
<p>As you add more shows that you would like to record, the scheduler
will eventually encounter conflicts. If there are two shows at the
same time and you have two or more TV tuner cards, both shows will
record. However, if there are more shows than cards, the scheduler
will have to decide what it thinks it should not record based on the
information you have given. If you see an unexpected situation you
are not "stuck" with the scheduler's choice. You can still tell the
scheduler exactly which shows you do want to record and/or don't
want to record in any situation.
<sect2>Scheduling decisions
<p>Here are the actual decisions made by the scheduler as it fills in the
schedule.
<itemize>
<item>Currently recording beats not currently recording -- A recording
in progress can not be moved to another input or time so it "wins"
its current timeslot.
<item>Single, Daily, or Weekly rules with no match are marked Not Listed --
If these or Overrides do not match the current listings because the
listings have changed, they are added to the schedule and marked to
indicate that they will not record.
<item>Rules that could record beat rules that can not record a showing --
If two rules match the same showing of a program, a rule marked as inactive
or a showing marked as a repeat, for example, yield to the other rule.
<item>More specific record type is used in place of less specific -- If
two rules match the same showing of a program, preference is given to
Don't Record then Override, Single, Find One, Record Weekly, Find Weekly,
Record Daily, Find Daily, Channel and finally All.
<item>Higher total priority beats lower total priority -- This is the
core of the scheduling process. Episodes of the highest priority show
are placed on the first available input followed by the next highest
priority show and so on.
<item>Future start time beats past start time -- If there is an
episode in progress and also a later showing of the same episode, it
is better to record the complete episode. If there isn't another
showing, it will start recording immediately to record the remaining
portion. This should only happen if you add a new rule while the show
is in progress or if the master backend is started after the start time
of a scheduled show.
<item>More specific record type beats less specific record type -- If
two shows are on at the same time and have the same total priority but
different types they will be sorted by Single then Find One, Record
Weekly, Find Weekly, Record Daily, Find Daily, Channel and finally
All. This only applies if the priorities are the same.
<item>If both start times have passed, later start time beats earlier start
time -- This attempts to miss the least amount of time.
<item>If neither start time has passed, earlier start time beats later
start time -- This helps assure that the earliest showing of an episode
has the advantage.
<item>Lower input id beats higher input id -- The scheduler fills in
open time slots on the first available input for the video source. The
next input is used when there is another show already placed for the
card of the first input.
<item>Older record rule beats newer record rule -- If two shows are still
equal after all of these other checks, the show whose record rule was added
first is preferred over a more recent addition.
<item>Postpone showings to resolve conflicts -- If Reschedule Higher
Priorities is set or if a conflict has the same priority as a show
that was scheduled at the same time, the scheduler will check to see
if a scheduled show can be moved to another input or later matching
showing without creating a new conflict so that the conflicting show
can be scheduled to record.
</itemize>
<sect2>Reschedule Higher Priorities
<p>Setup->TV Settings->Recording Priorities->General has a checkbox for
"Reschedule Higher Priorities" which tells the scheduler to try to be a
little smarter in certain situations. If this is checked, the scheduler will
look for situations where a show cannot record because all inputs for the
channel are used for higher priority shows. It will check to see if any of
the other shows could be recorded at another time so that the conflicting
show can be recorded in its place.
Generally, this is a good strategy but there are tradeoffs. If a higher
priority show is postponed, you will not get to watch it until it is
recorded in the later timeslot. There is also a risk that the TV listings
may change and the later showing may go away. In this rare case the higher
priority show may never record. On the other hand, if you do not use this
option you will miss recording some lower priority shows unnecessarily
unless you manually make similar changes.
By using Reschedule Higher Priorities, the scheduler will do a better job of
recording as many of your shows as possible when left unattended. It will
also be easy to see that shows have been marked to record at a later time.
You can then decide for yourself when you would prefer to record the first
showing by clicking "Record anyway".
<sect2>Controlling Your Schedule
<p>The Manage Recordings->Upcoming Recordings page is your control center
for the MythTV scheduler. Unlike other DVR systems, this one page gives you
all of the information and tools you need to see all of your alternatives
and make whatever adjustments you desire.
The upper half of the screen has a scrollable box listing items that match
your record rules sorted by time. The lower half shows the details for the
highlighted item. There are two 'views' available. Press "1" to include all
of the items that match record rules even if they do not need to be
recorded. Press "2" to focus on just the things that will record and items
that may need your attention. The message in the upper right-hand corner
will remind you when there are conflicts that would prevent one or more
shows from being recorded.
The items in the list are colored in the record color for things that
will record, white for things that may need attention, gray for those
that do not need to record and yellow when there is a time conflict.
Items at the top of the list may also be highlighted indicating that the
recording is in progress.
Along with the channels, start times and titles, the right-hand column has
a status code. Numbers indicate which card number has been assigned to
record the show. Letters are used to indicate the reason that something
will not be recorded. Just below the box is a short status message for the
highlighted item that indicates the type of record rule that was matched,
the "total priority" for this showing and a one or two word explanation of
the status code. If you press SELECT, you will see more information about
the status.
There are a few status codes that may require your attention. "C" indicates
that there are more overlapping shows to record than there are TV tuners to
record them. "L" indicates that the scheduler found that it may be better to
record a later showing of this episode. These states happen as a result of
your choices and should normally reflect your preferences. However, you may
notice situations where you would like to modify the scheduler's initial
choices.
The first thing you can do is to highlight an item and press INFO to
see the recording options page. From this page you can change the
record rule type, the duplicate matching rules, or raise or lower the
priority to resolve whatever problem you noticed.
Additionally, you can treat any individual showing as an exception that you
do want to record or don't want to record. To use these "override" features,
highlight the item and press SELECT. You will see a message explaining the
current status and at least an "OK" button to exit without making changes.
For items scheduled to record, there will be a button for "Don't record"
which will prevent recording this showing but will still allow the same
episode to record in the future. If there is episode description
information, you may also see a button for "Never record". This prevents
recording this showing and tells MythTV to remember that this is an episode
that you've seen or don't need to see if it is ever in the TV listings
again.
For items that are not scheduled to record, the message will describe the
reason and in the case of "C" or "L" it will include a list of the shows
that are scheduled to record instead. For any item that could potentially be
recorded there will be buttons for "Edit Options" and "Add Override". "Edit
Options" will allow you to change the options for the existing record rule
such as raising the priority so that the show will record. These changes
would apply to this and all future showings that match this record rule.
"Add Override" will allow you to set options that apply to the specific
showing without affecting the recurring record rule.
If you return to an override page after an override has already been set,
you will also see a "Clear Override" to undo your changes. This option makes
it very easy to try out some "what if" attempts when deciding on your best
strategy in a difficult situation.
For a recording in progress, there will be a "Change Ending Time" button.
This will take you to the options page for a Single or Override or create
an Override if it is a recurring rule. Here you can go to the Recording
Options section to change the program end time offset. If you extend the
end time so that it overlaps upcoming recordings, the schedule will change
to accommodate the new end time. This may cause a conflict or later showing
even for a show with higher priority. Therefore, it is a good idea to
check your schedule after changing the end time of a recording in
progress.
<sect1>Storage Options
<sect2>Recording Profile
<p>Each recording rule can be configured with a different recording
profile. For example, colorful cinematography can be configured with a
"High Quality" profile, while 'talking heads' interviews shows can be
configured with a "Low Quality" profile. These recording profiles need to
be configured before using them (see <ref id="Recording" name="Recording">,
above).
<sect2>Recording Group <label id="Recording Group">
<p>For organization of the "Watch Recordings" screen and the MythWeb
interface, recordings can be assigned into "recording groups".
<sect2><ref id="storagegroups" name="Storage Groups">
<p>This allows you to select any special "Storage Groups" you may have
created to determine where recordings from this rule should be stored
on your disks. The "Default" storage group is always available.
<sect2>Playback Group <label id="Playback Group">
<p>This selects a set of pre-configured playback parameters which can be
created and edited in Setup->TV Settings->Playback Groups. When the
recording is played, the values from this playback group will be
used. This allows you to choose a default time stretch value, skip and
jump amounts appropriate for this type of television program.
<sect2>Auto-Expire <label id="Auto-Expire">
<p>MythTV will "autoexpire" old recordings to make room for new recordings
when disk space gets filled up. This option can be set to "Don't allow
auto expire" to prevent these recordings from being automatically deleted
when disk space fills up.
<p>The default setting is for all scheduled recordings to be eligible
for auto-expiration; this can be changed in the Settings->TV
Settings->General page by manipulating the "Auto Expire Default"
checkbox.
<p>The default auto-expire policy is "Oldest Show First"; the oldest
recordings are deleted first. The "Lowest Priority First" method
chooses to expire the lowest-priority recordings first.
<sect2>Episode Limit
<p>An episode limit can also be configured to limit the maximum number
of episodes recorded of a single series, to restrict that series' disk
usage. If this is set, you can further decide what to do when this
limit is reached; either stop recording that series, or to delete the
oldest episodes in favor of the new ones.
<sect1>Post Recording Processing
<sect2>Commercial Flagging
<p>Select whether or not to automatically flag commercials for these
recordings. Commercial Flagging parameters can be set in
Setup->TV Settings->General.
<sect2>Transcoding
<p>Select whether or not to automatically transcode recordings to save
disk space. Before using this, you must first enable auto-transcode in
the recording profile and configure the transcoding parameters; see
<ref id="Recording" name="Recording">, above.
<sect2>User Jobs
<p>User Jobs allow you to configure up to 4 custom commands to run on
recordings. They can be configured in mythtv-setup. The following
tokens have special meaning when used in the User Job commands:
<itemize>
<item>%DIR% - the directory component of the recording's filename
<item>%FILE% - the filename component of the recording's filename
<item>%TITLE% - the title of the recording (e.g., name of the series)
<item>%SUBTITLE% - the subtitle of the recording (e.g., name of the
episode)
<item>%DESCRIPTION% - description text for the recording (from guide
data)
<item>%HOSTNAME% - the backend making the recording
<item>%CATEGORY% - the category of the recording (from guide data)
<item>%RECGROUP% - the <ref id="Recording Group" name="recording
group">
<item>%CHANID% - the MythTV channel ID making the recording
<item>%STARTTIME% - the recording start time (YYYYMMDDhhmmss)
<item>%ENDTIME% - the recording end time (YYYYMMDDhhmmss)
<item>%STARTTIMEISO% - the recording start time in ISO 8601 format
(YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS)
<item>%ENDTIMEISO% - the recording end time in ISO 8601 format
<item>%PROGSTART% - the recording's start time (from guide data;
YYYYMMDDhhmmss)
<item>%PROGEND% - the recording's end time (from guide data)
<item>%PROGSTARTISO%, %PROGENDISO% - the recording's start and end
time in ISO 8601 format.
</itemize>
<sect1>Advanced Recording Options
<sect2>Creating Power Search rules with Custom Record
<p>
MythTV's "Custom Record" feature gives you unlimited control for creating
specialized search recording rules to meet your needs. It allows you to
choose your criteria to search for matching shows based on any of the
information in the program listings, channel information, time functions and
more. This goes beyond the capabilities of any other DVR system and it is
unlikely that this level of scheduling customization will ever be available
in any commercial DVR system.
<sect2>Getting Started
<p>
Go to Schedule Recordings->Custom Record. This page, helps you build a
database search one clause at a time. Each added clause further limits
which showings will be matched in the TV listings. You can test the
search at any time and when you are done, you can save your search as a
recording rule.
To familiarize yourself with how you can create custom rules, create a
simple rule to record "Nova" only in primetime.
The first item at the top of the page allows you to edit an existing rule
or create a new rule. Leave it on "<New rule>". Arrow down to the
third item which says "Match an exact title". Right and left arrows would
allow you to select any of several prefabricated pieces or full examples
but leave it on the default for now. Arrow down to "Add this example
clause" and press SELECT (Enter or Space on a keyboard). The large text
box should now show:
<tscreen><verb>
program.title = 'Nova'
</verb></tscreen>
As you have probably guessed, this says that we want to search for all
programs with the title "Nova" regardless of the time, day, channel, etc.
If you do not receive a PBS station that carries "Nova" or would like to use
another title, edit the title by pressing the down arrow to highlight the
text box and right arrow over the the word "Nova". If you are using a
keyboard you can simply delete the four letters and type a different title
between the quotes. With a remote control, you can do 'cell phone' style
text entry with the number pad. The delete key is the "X" in the grouping
for "1", zero is grouped with "9" and "0" acts as the "Caps Lock" key. You
can press ENTER in the text box to popup a virtual keyboard.
Note: the text box honors many familiar Emacs control keys. It is also
possible to cut and paste text into the text box so you can edit with a
favorite editor or insert a rule sent in email or from other sources.
In any case, choose a title that is shown both in primetime and late night
or daytime. Next, click the "Test" button. You should see a list of the
upcoming episodes for "Nova" just as if you had clicked the Upcoming
button for "Nova" elsewhere in MythTV.
Press ESC to go back to the Custom Record page. Move to the example
selector then press the right or left arrows until you find "Only in
primetime". Click "Add this example clause". You should now see:
<tscreen><verb>
program.title = 'Nova'
AND HOUR(program.starttime) >= 19
AND HOUR(program.starttime) < 23
</verb></tscreen>
Click "Test". You should now see a shorter list with only the showings that
begin between 7PM and 11PM. To create a rule for this, press ESC to go back
to the custom page and move to "Rule Name:" then type "Nova" or anything
else you would like. This is only a label and will not affect the search
results. Once a name has been entered, the "Record" button will light up.
Click this to enter the recording options page. If you named it "Nova" the
title will say "Nova (Power Search)". Set whatever options you would like
then click "Save these settings". You now have a special rule to record
"Nova" but only when it is shown in primetime.
You can make further modifications to this rule by returning to the Custom
Record page then press the right or left arrow keys on "Edit Rule:" until
you find "Nova". You can experiment and test but the saved rule will not
be updated until you click "Record" then "Save these settings".
To remove this, or any other rule, you can go to the "Recording Priorities"
page, arrow down to the title, press Enter and change the the recording type
to "Do not record this program" then "Save these settings".
<sect2>How it Works
<p>
MythTV stores TV program information in a database and uses the Structured
Query Language (SQL) to access the data. Information about each TV program
is stored in the 'program' table and information about each TV station you
receive is stored in 'channel'. These two tables are used in the scheduler
queries and their columns are available to be used in your rules. The rules
you create are stored in 'record'.
Normal rules in MythTV simply match the title in the rule with the titles
in the 'program' table. MythTV also has search rules for "Titles",
"Keywords" and "People". These store the key phrase in the description
column of the rule and includes them in specialized SQL replacements for
the normal title check. There is also a type called "Power Search" which
takes the raw SQL in the description as the replacement for title
matching.
Custom Record is a tool to help you build valid SQL for Power Search rules.
You do not need to be a SQL expert to use Custom Record because the
examples are known to work correctly and are usually self-explanatory so you
can choose the pieces you need then modify them. Many powerful solutions to
unique problems are possible by combining the examples. With some creativity
and some knowledge of SQL, the possibilities are limitless.
<sect2>Common Tricks and Tips
<p>
The example clauses marked "complete example" are actual rules that have
been used to address specific problems. You may find that some of these
are useful for you as-is or with slight modifications. These show off how
powerful custom rules can be but there are also several simple idioms that
you may find useful for many of the shows you would like to record.
Wait for a known title -- If there is a movie that you anticipate will be
televised in the coming months but is not yet in the listings, you can
select "Match an exact title", edit the movie title, click "Record" then
choose "Record one showing of this title". The rule will wait weeks, months
or years until this title shows up in your listings then it will record one
showing. These rules have no impact on the scheduler throughout the day and
only take a tiny fraction of a second when the master backend starts or when
the listings are updated.
Silence series out of season -- "Celebrity Poker Showdown", for example,
will have new episodes for a while then long periods where reruns are shown
dozens of times per week. By checking the previously shown flag you can
create a rule that will only match new episodes. Therefore, your schedule
won't be polluted with dozens of entries marked as "Repeat" or "Previously
Recorded".
<tscreen><verb>
program.title = "Celebrity Poker Showdown"
AND program.previouslyshown = 0
</verb></tscreen>
This allows you to keep rules for your favorite shows that are dormant while
out of season but will spring back to life when new episodes appear.
Choose showings on certain days -- Several cable stations will show their
highest rated shows a dozen on more times per week. However, the scheduler
only needs two or three choices to do a good job of making a flexible
choice.
<tscreen><verb>
program.title LIKE "Celebrity Fit Club%"
AND DAYNAME(program.starttime) = "Sunday"
</verb></tscreen>
This says to choose any showing of an episode that hasn't been recorded
when it appears on Sunday. This prevents all the other showings during the
week from being listed in the schedule.
Notice the word "LIKE" and the "%" at the end. This does wildcard matching
so that this would match even if the title ended with "2". "III" or
":Revenge of the Snapple Lady". This can be useful where the title may
change from one season to the next like "Survivor: %", "Big Brother%" or
"The Amazing Race%".
<sect2>Working with SQL
<p>
As you experiment, it is possible that you may misplace a quote or mistype a
word. If there is a mistake when you press "Test" or "Record" you will see
an error message returned from the database. This will usually give you a
good idea about what needs to be fixed. However, for more subtle MySQL
syntax errors, you can find more information in the documentation at <url
url="http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/"
name="http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/">. This contains a lot of
information that can be useful for Power Search rules such as the "Date and
Time Functions". There are many other good resources for SQL on the Web.
While the example clauses demonstrate how to use many of the data columns,
you can get a more complete list of all the columns that are available by
using a MySQL client program:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u mythtv -pmythtv mythconverg
mysql> describe program;
mysql> describe channel;
</verb></tscreen>
This will show the names of all of the columns along with their type and
default value. Most are easy to understand but a few need some explanation
in order to use them effectively with Power Search.
<itemize>
<item>"program.category_type" holds one of these exact four strings: "movie",
"series", "sports" or "tvshow".
<item>"program.airdate" is a string representing the year of release for
movies and may have no meaning for other types of shows.
<item>"program.stars" is a floating point number from 0.0 to 1.0. On a
four star scale, 1.0 would be four stars, 0.75 would be three stars and so
on.
<item>"program.originalairdate" if provided is the date when a show
was, or will be, first televised. This may be useful for finding
episodes before or after a certain date such as finding just the
original series of "Battlestar Galactica".
<item>"program.previouslyshown" is a column created by MythTV to try to
determine if a showing is more than 14 days after its original air date or
if the show was marked as a repeat and did not have a date for the first
airing. If this is "0" it usually means that this is a brand new show or a
rebroadcast within the first two weeks.
<item>"program.generic" is a column created by MythTV to try mark
showings for a series where the specific episode information is not
included. When these generic showings appear, it is impossible for the
system to determine if they are repeats of the same episode(s) or if
they are all different episodes.
<item>"program.first" is a column created by MythTV to mark the first
showing in the current listings for each episode, movie or special.
Choosing to match only the "first" showing can be useful for sports
that are brodcast live then repeated.
<item>"program.last" is a column created by MythTV to mark the last
showing in the current listings for each episode, movie or special.
If a showing is marked both "first" and "last" then it is the only
showing of that program in the current TV listings.
<item>"program.programid" is the Tribune Media Service database record
identifier for each program description. In general, these start with a two
letter prefix, MV, EP, SP or SH that correspond to the
"program.category_type". For most, the last four digits are "0000" except
EP where the last four digits are the episode number in the series. Note
that these are generated by TMS and not the show's producers but they are
usually in the same order as the original air dates for the episodes.
<item>"program.videoprop" also "audioprop" and "subtitletypes".
These columns contain bit flags for a variety of attributes that
may be associated with a program. These are filled with information
offered by the TV listings provider. However, your listings source
will not have information for all of the available flags. Therefore,
some of these may not be useful for your search rules. This information
is organized in "sets" and the MySQL function FIND_IN_SET() can be used
to test for any of these flags. For example:
<tscreen><verb>
FIND_IN_SET('SURROUND', program.audioprop) > 0
</verb></tscreen>
would be true for the programs where the surround sound bit is present.
To see all of the available attribute names:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u mythtv -pmythtv mythconverg
mysql> SHOW COLUMNS FROM program LIKE '%prop'\G
mysql> SHOW COLUMNS FROM program LIKE 'subtitletypes'\G
</verb></tscreen>
</itemize>
Finally, if you are doing something very experimental and a column is not
giving you the results you had anticipated, you can always check the MythTV
source code to see exactly how a column is used. The open source for MythTV
is available from <url url="http://www.mythtv.org/"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/"> .
<sect1>Scheduling with more than one Input
<p>
MythTV is designed to allow recording television programs from one or more
service providers, or video source, on one or more video input from each
provider. Some inputs may not be allowed to record at the same time as
each other while others may record simultaneously.
A television station may be broadcast on more than one channel from one
provider or may be available on channels from two or more providers. If a TV
station is available from more than one source, the video quality or type of
broadcast may differ. Therefore, MythTV allows you to control how you would
like the scheduler to select the best channel and input for a show which is
available on more than one input or more than one channel.
<sect2>Mutually Exclusive Inputs
<p>
A single TV capture card may have video connections to more than
one of its inputs and each input may be from a different service. The card
may only be allowed to record from one of these inputs at one time because
there is only one encoder on the card that actually captures the content.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="BlockDiagramofavideocapturedevice.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="BlockDiagramofavideocapturedevice.png">
<caption>
</caption>
</figure>
These are mutually exclusive meaning that only one input or the other
may record at a given time but not both.
Usually, inputs on different cards can record at the same time
but two or more inputs on the same card cannot. However, there are cases
where inputs on different cards should not be allowed to record at the
same time, for example, a firewire card and s-video analog card connected
to the same set top cable box.
<tscreen><verb>
|
| coax +--------------+ firewire ------------------+
| .-=|Cable Provider|=------------=| Card 1 input 1 | HDTV
| | |HD/Cable STB |=--. +-----||||||||||||
| | +--------------+ | s-video ------------------+
| | `---------=| input 2 | Digital
|wall | coax | Card 2 |
|=---=^=------------------------------=| input 3 | Cable
| +-----||||||||||||
</verb></tscreen>
Input 1 and input 2 receive content from the same set top box and the
channels can not be tuned independently. Therefore only one of these two
inputs should be used at any given time. The solution is to create an "Input
Group" with <bf>mythtv-setup</bf> in "Input connections". Including these
two inputs in the same Input Group will tell the scheduler that these are
mutually exclusive and may not record at the same time. Inputs 2 and 3 are
automatically mutually exclusive because they are on the same card so there
is no need to create an Input Group for these inputs.
Cards such as the Hauppauge PVR-500 are able to record as two cards
simultaneously because it has two MPEG-2 encoders and each encoder appears
as a separate device. DVB cards may be allowed to capture content from more
than one channel at a time if the channels are in the same MUX.
<sect2>Stations, Channels and Video Sources
<p>
Although we may be accustomed to thinking of a broadcast station and its
channel number as being synonymous, stations and channels are very different
things. A "station" is in a building with wires and employees. A "channel"
is a carrier frequency or digital ID that carries a broadcast stream. The
same TV station may be broadcast over different frequencies in different
cities or by different providers in the same city. The same frequency will
carry different stations in different cities. In the digital realm of DVB
and ATSC (HDTV), it is even possible for a single frequency to carry
multiple program streams but each of these streams of content are actually
different channels that the receiving devices can 'tune' to independently.
<itemize>
<item>Station: building
<item>Channel: frequency
</itemize>
In MythTV, a "video source" is a set of channels from a provider, or over
the air, that can be received by an input. The set defines the channels and
the broadcasters primarily associated with each of those channels. If you
have more than one device or cable from the same provider connected to more
than one card and input, you only need to create one video source in
mythtv-setup then associate that one source with each of these connected
inputs. This will let your MythTV system know that the same channels and
their TV listings are available to be recorded from any of these inputs.
For example. A MythTV system may have two capture cards. Both have a cable
connected to the coaxial connectors. These cables carry the local cable TV
service. In mythtv-setup, the user should create one "Video source" called
"Cable", for example. Under "Input connections", "Cable" should be
associated with each of the two tuner inputs. The scheduler will then know
that any program on one of the channels from the "Cable" source could be
recorded by either card from the card's tuner input.
You need to create a different video source for each provider or service
that has a different set of channels. Each input with a connection to that
service should be associated with the video source for that service so the
system will know which set of channels are available for each of your active
inputs.
Let's say that this user also has one digital cable set top box. The digital
cable service carries channels that are not available over basic cable. The
user would create another source called "Digital". This set top box is
connected to the second card by S-Video so under "Input connections",
"Digital" is associated with the S-Video input of card 2. The system would
then know that programs on channels from the Digital source can only be
recorded from this input. Further, the scheduler understands that it can
only record one show at a time from card 2 so it can assign Cable or Digital
shows to the card but not both at the same time.
Some TV stations may be broadcast over a channel from the Cable source and
also broadcast over a channel from the Digital source. Note that two
channels carrying the same primary station may not have the same TV listings
due to carrying the primary station part time, including local programming
exclusive to one of the channels, the channels may be in different
timezones, etc. Listings information must be associated with each channel
even if two or more channels report that they carry the same station.
<sect2>Order of Inputs
<p>
By default the scheduler chooses the first (lowest numbered) input which has
a showing of the scheduled program as it fills the schedule. If a lower
priority show is on at the same time as a higher priority show that has been
assigned to input 1, then input 2 will be used next and so on. Therefore,
configure your best card and input first and next best card and input
second. There may be differences in the type or brand of capture card,
signal quality from the cable, system resources such as disk space, CPU,
etc. By configuring your best input first, more recordings, and your highest
priority recordings, will use that input.
A common situation is that a newer and better card is added last. For
example, you may initially setup your system with two analog cable cards and
then add a HDTV card. If NBC is on a cable channel and "The Apprentice" is
shown in HDTV on an NBC HD channel, the scheduler would still prefer analog
inputs 1 and 2 over the new HD input 3.
So, if you'd like the scheduler to prefer a new source, the simplest thing
is to run <bf>mythtv-setup</bf> and "Delete all capture cards" then enter
your cards and inputs in your preferred order. This will not remove your
sources and channels - you want to keep those and only renumber your cards
and inputs. In this example, once the changes have been made and the Master
Backend is restarted, the scheduler would then choose "The Apprentice" in HD
on the new input 1 and only use the analog inputs (now numbered 2 and 3)
when the HDTV input was occupied with another show.
<sect2>Matching Callsigns
<p>
If a recording rule is a type that can record from any channel, "The
Apprentice" would match for any channel that shows episodes which may
include CNBC or BRAVO. However, for Single, Timeslot, Weekslot or Channel
rules, "The Apprentice" would only match showings on the selected station as
identified by the "callsign". For example, KVBC is an NBC affiliate on
channel 3. Channel 733 is KVBCDT which is HDTV over cable from the same
station. If a Single record rule was set for "The Apprentice" on KVBC
channel 3, it could not record this showing from KVBCDT on 733. If 733 was
chosen when the rule was saved, channel 3 could not be used to record.
However, the "Channel Editor" in mythtv-setup can be used to change the
Callsign for channel 733 to "KVBC". MythTV would then understand that both
of these channels are from the same broadcast station. Assuming the HDTV
input was input number "1", "The Apprentice" would record on 733. If,
however, this HDTV input already had a higher priority show assigned to it
in that time slot, "The Apprentice" would be assigned to KVBC channel 3 on
input 2.
Having two channels with the same callsign may affect how program
information is shown in mythfrontend. If two sources have the same callsign
and channel number, the program guide and program lists will only show one
instance of the channel number and callsign. If the same callsign is on two
different channel numbers, both will be shown and if two sources have
different callsigns with the same channel number, both of those will be
shown.
Continuing with the example above, the Electronic Program Guide would
include rows for both "3 KVBC" and "733 KVBC". If channel 3 KVBC was also
included in the Digital cable source, the EPG would still include just one
line for "3 KVBC" even though there are two different channels, Cable and
Digital, with this identification. Regardless of how these are displayed and
which "KVBC" channel you select to add a rule to record "The Apprentice",
the scheduler will pick the best channel, source and input to record "The
Apprentice" on "KVBC".
<sect2>Using Priorities to Prefer an Input
<p>
The fundamental concept to keep in mind is that the MythTV scheduler will
choose the lowest numbered input available when showings have the same
priority. If there are factors that cause two showings of the same show to
have different priorities then the higher priority showing will be
considered before the showings with lower priority.
<sect2>Input Priority
<p>
"Input Connections" in mythtv-setup includes a box to set "Input priority"
which defaults to "0". If a value is set, that amount will be added to the
"total priority" for showings on that input. This can be used to influence
using favored cards or not using less favored cards unless necessary.
Let's say the "The Apprentice" is on at 8:00pm with a priority of 3. "Who
Cares" is -2 and an episode is shown at 8:00pm then repeated at 11:00pm. The
scheduler would assign "The Apprentice" to card 1 and "Who Cares" to card 2
at 8:00pm. If the input priority for the input on card 2 was changed to -1,
"Who Cares" would have a total priority of -2 for showings on card 1 and -3
for showings on card 2. The scheduler would assign "The Apprentice" to card
1 at 8:00pm and "Who Cares" to card 1 at 11:00pm when the better card is
available. If there was another higher priority show at 11pm, the next best
choice for "Who Cares" would be card 2 at 8pm with the priority -3.
Card 1 and 2 have input priority "0":
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="Card1 Pri 0 Card2 Pri 0.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="Card1 Pri 0 Card2 Pri 0.png">
<caption>
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
Time Title Priority Card Status
8:00 The Apprentice +3 1 Will Record
8:00 Who Cares -2 2 Will Record
11:00 Who Cares -2 1 Earlier Showing
</verb></tscreen>
Card 2 with input priority "-1":
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="Card1 Pri 0 Card2 Pri -1.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="Card1 Pri 0 Card2 Pri -1.png">
<caption>
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
Time Title Priority Card Status
8:00 The Apprentice +3 1 Will Record
8:00 Who Cares -3 2 Later Showing
11:00 Who Cares -2 1 Will Record
</verb></tscreen>
Card 2 at "-1" but higher priority shows at both 8 P.M. and 11 P.M.:
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="Card1 Pri 0 Card2 Pri -1-TDS.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="Card1 Pri 0 Card2 Pri -1-TDS.png">
<caption>
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
Time Title Priority Card Status
8:00 The Apprentice +3 1 Will Record
8:00 Who Cares -3 2 Will Record
11:00 The Daily Show +1 1 Will Record
11:00 Who Cares -3 2 Earlier Showing
</verb></tscreen>
Note the two different effects, each of which may be what you desire
depending on circumstance. If input priorities are equal, shows will record
at the earliest time if any input is available. If input priorities differ,
shows may be postponed to a later time in order to record on the best input.
<sect2>Channel Priority
<p>
Priority can be added for individual channels (remember, frequencies from a
video source, not stations). This can be used to tell the system that you
generally prefer the content of the station on a channel over the formats of
other stations. You may want to raise the priority for ESPN, SciFi, Comedy
Central or lower the priority for CSPAN, CourtTV, etc. If the same station
is on two different channels, you can use channel priority to have the same
effect for these channels as input priority would have for whole inputs.
For example, say CNN is on analog channel 20 and there is an HD CNN on 750.
You may not want to tie up the HD input for news originating in standard
definition. Under TV Settings->Recording Priorities->Channel Priorities you
could set channel 750 to -1. The scheduler would then prefer to record CNN
shows on any analog channel 20 before considering using 750 only when there
are no analog inputs available.
<sect2>Preferred Input
<p>
For an even finer grain of control, there is a per rule option to specify
which input should be preferred for showings that match the rule. By
default, this adds +2 to the priority for showings on the specified input.
For illustration, let's say there will be a Space Shuttle launch on CNN that
will be broadcast in high definition. Adding a rule to record the launch
with priority "0" should default to channel 20 on input 2. Channel 750 would
have this at -1 due to the channel priority set in the previous example. If
on the recording options page for this rule, the "Scheduling Options" had
the input set to prefer the HD input on card 1, then the showing on channel
750 for this input would be increased in value by +2 for a total of +1 and
would be the best choice for this launch coverage. While this one rule
would prefer the HD input with channel 750, all other rules that match shows
on CNN would still prefer channel 20.
Note that this will not work properly if the preferred input priority does
not out weigh differences in input and channel priorities. The value of the
priority boost when this option is chosen defaults to +2 but can be modified
in TV Settings->Recording Priorities->Set Recording Priorities.
<sect2>HDTV Priority
<p>
In the preceeding fictious example, the Space Shuttle launch is broadcast in
high definition and a preferred input is selected to give preference to the
HD input. However, TV listings from zap2it.com through the DataDirect
service may allow this to work without having to use this per rule option.
In Settings->Recording Priorities->Set Recording Priorities there is an
option for "HDTV Recording Priority". This value will be added automatically
if the listings for the show have the "hdtv" flag set. DataDirect will set
this flag for shows known to be broadcast in HDTV on HD channels. However,
the flag is not set for standard definition channels. This is another
example of the listings being different for the same station on a different
channel. If the HDTV priority is set to "+2", the shuttle launch would
automatically have a total priority of +1 so that channel 750 would be
preferred over channel 20 for this HDTV broadcast.
Channel "750 CNN" at priority "-1" and HDTV broadcast priority at "+2":
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="Card1 HDTV Card2 Cable.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="Card1 HDTV Card2 Cable.png">
<caption>
</caption>
</figure>
<sect2>Custom Priority <label id="Custom Priority">
<p>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="add.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="add.png">
<caption>
New for MythTV 0.21</caption>
</figure>
While Input, Channel, and HDTV Priority can be used for indicating a
preference for certain programs and inputs, there may be circumstances that
cannot be resolved easily with these standard features. MythTV version 0.21
includes a feature for "power priority". The Custom Priority editor in
mythfrontend's "TV Settings" screen is similar to Custom Record, however,
Custom Priority allows you to create specialized power priority factors to
influence scheduling decisions.
For example, the 'program.closecaptioned' flag can be used in a
similar way as the 'program.hdtv' flag.
<tscreen><verb>
Priority Rule Name: Closed Captioned priority
Priority Value: 2
program.closecaptioned > 0
</verb></tscreen>
This will raise the priority of shows marked with "CC" over those that are
not by applying the "Priority Value" whenever the SQL fragment evaluates to
true. If the expression evaluates to false for a showing, the "Priority
Value" is not applied.
<tscreen><verb>
Priority Rule Name: Priority when shown once
Priority Value: 1
program.first > 0 AND program.last > 0
</verb></tscreen>
The "first" and "last" flags for an episode will only be set for the
same showing when there is only one showing of that episode in the
current TV listings. This rule would raise the priority in these cases
so that these shows would have an advantage to record in their only
available time slot.
<tscreen><verb>
Priority Rule Name: Input 1 signal quality
Priority Value: -1
cardinput.cardinputid = 1 AND
channel.channum IN (3, 5, 39, 66)
</verb></tscreen>
A common issue with two or more analog capture cards is that one of
the cards may have more interference on some channels than the same
channels on other cards. This example gives a disadvantage to the
channels in this list but only for the first input. Therefore, a show
on channel 39 would choose input 2 or 3 if possible but for channels
not in this list, input 1 is still the first choice.
The Custom Priority editor includes many example fragments and complete
examples that can be used or you can create your own to suit your needs.
<sect>MythPlugins. <label id="mythplugins_">
<p>MythTV has a rich set of plugins available. Once you have downloaded
the tarball, untar it and run the <bf>configure</bf> script:
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xjf mythplugins-0.21.tar.bz2
$ cd mythplugins-0.21
$ ./configure --help
Usage: configure [options]
Options: [defaults in brackets after descriptions]
NB: all --enable-* options can be reversed with --disable-*
Generic options:
--help print this message
--enable-all Enable all options
--enable-opengl enable OpenGL (Music and Gallery) [default=no]
MythBrowser related options:
--enable-mythbrowser build the mythbrowser plugin [default=yes]
MythDVD related options:
--enable-mythdvd build the mythdvd plugin [default=yes]
--enable-transcode enable DVD ripping and transcoding [default=no]
--enable-vcd enable VCD playing [default=no]
MythGallery related options:
--enable-mythgallery build the mythgallery plugin [default=yes]
--enable-exif enable reading of EXIF headers [default=no]
MythGame related options:
--enable-mythgame build the mythgame plugin [default=yes]
MythMusic related options:
--enable-mythmusic build the mythmusic plugin [default=yes]
--enable-fftw enable fftw visualizers [default=no]
--enable-sdl use SDL for the synaesthesia output [default=no]
--enable-aac enable AAC/MP4 audio file decompression [default=no]
MythNews related options:
--enable-mythnews build the mythnews plugin [default=yes]
MythPhone related options:
--enable-mythphone build the mythphone plugin [default=yes]
--enable-festival enable festival TTS Engine [default=no]
MythVideo related options:
--enable-mythvideo build the mythvideo plugin [default=yes]
MythWeather related options:
--enable-mythweather build the mythweather plugin [default=yes]
</verb></tscreen>
The sections detailing configuration of the plugins assume that you are
already in the <tt>~/mythplugins-0.21/</tt> directory.
Note that a single <bf>configure</bf> script now does configuration for all
modules. By default, it will compile all modules. If you do not wish to
compile a module, either because it is of no use to you, or you do not have
the prerequisites, the simplest course of action is to go through the
various sections below, satisfying the prerequisites, and then compile all
modules at once.
For example, you would only like to compile and install MythGallery and
MythMusic. For MythGallery, you would like to use the EXIF data in the .JPG
file to present additional information onscreen. For MythMusic, you would
like to enable support for the opengl and FFT visualizations. The command
line would look like:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.21
$ ./configure --disable-all --enable-opengl --enable-mythgallery --enable-exif --enable-mythmusic --enable-fft
$ qmake mythplugins.pro
$ make
$ su -
# make install
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
For simplicity, the examples below will disable compilation of all other
modules other than the one being discussed.
<sect>MythWeb.
<p>MythWeb allows you to use a web page to control various aspects of your
MythTV system. MythWeb is a separate application, but it's dependent on
MythTV being installed and operational.
<sect1>Installation and prerequisites
<p>Mythweb is a part of the <bf>mythplugins</bf> package. See <ref
id="mythplugins_" name="MythPlugins"> for instructions on downloading the
tarball. The next step depends on whether your distribution has a web server
and if you have PHP support.
<sect2>Mandriva
<p>Mandriva has <bf>apache</bf> and <bf>PHP</bf> pre-packaged, so
installation is quite simple.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Mandriva 9.1 users, perform the following:
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi apache2 apache2-mod_php php-mysql
# chkconfig --level 345 httpd on
# /etc/rc.d/init.d/httpd restart
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Completing the installation
<p>
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.21/mythweb
$ su
# mkdir /var/www/html/mythweb
# cp -r . /var/www/html/mythweb
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
By default, MythWeb uses an Apache <tt>.htaccess</tt> file to restrict
access to the website and to configure some variables.
To create the password file for Apache (if your system doesn't already have
one), you could do something like this:
<tscreen><verb>
# cd /var/www
# htpasswd -c htpasswd mythtv
New password:
Re-type new password:
Adding password for user mythtv
</verb></tscreen>
See the man page for <bf>htpasswd</bf> for more examples.
To access the web page, open a web browser and use <bf>http://[name or ip
address]/mythweb/</bf>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Make sure that you have a trailing slash on the URL,
otherwise you will get a <tt>404 Page not Found</tt> error.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect1>Resetting the key binding table
<p>MythWeb allows you to configure which keys are bound to which actions
within MythTV. If you'd like to reset this back to the default, execute the
following command:
<tscreen><verb>
$ echo "delete from keybindings ;" | mysql -u mythtv -pmythtv mythconverg
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Resetting the theme.
<p>If you find yourself wedged into a theme that isn't working, open your
web browser and go to site:
<tt>http://mythweb_name_or_ip_address/mythweb/settings.php?RESET_THEME=yes</tt>
<sect>MythGallery.
<p>MythGallery is a photo and slideshow application. MythGallery is a
separate application, but it's dependent on MythTV being installed and
operational.
<sect1>Installation and prerequisites
<p>MythGallery is a part of the <bf>mythplugins</bf> package. See <ref
id="mythplugins_" name="MythPlugins"> for instructions on downloading the
tarball.
There are a number of transitions available, some requiring OpenGL
support. You will also need to install a TIFF library. Under Mandriva, you
would perform the following command:
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi libtiff3-devel
</verb></tscreen>
Once you have satisfied the prerequisites for your distribution, install the application:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.21
$ ./configure --disable-all --enable-opengl --enable-mythgallery
$ qmake mythplugins.pro
$ make
# su
# make install
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
The configuration for MythGallery is accessed through the main Setup option
in mythfrontend. Make sure you set your pictures directory to wherever
you're storing your photos.
The controls for MythGallery can be found in the README that comes with the
application.
<sect1>Using MythGallery
<p>When you first start MythGallery, you will see a thumbnail view of any
folders and pictures in the Gallery Directory you specified in setup. If
this is the first time you have accessed this directory, the thumbnails will
be generated on the fly. If the Gallery Dir is writable, these thumbnails
will be cached thus speeding up future access. On the left is a greyed-out
menu of options.
Use the arrow keys to select a folder or picture to open/view with the
Select key, or use the Menu key to toggle access the menu on the left. The
menu options are as follows:
<itemize>
<item> Slideshow - Will cycle through all the pictures in the current folder.
The currently selected item must be a picture (not a folder) for this to
work. It does not currently traverse subfolders.
<item> Rotate CW - Rotate the current image 90 degrees in the clockwise
direction. This change persists if the current directory is writable.
<item> Rotate CCW - As above except the direction of rotation is counter(anti)
clockwise.
<item> Import - Import pictures into your Gallery Dir. This option is
described in the next section.
<item> Settings - Access the MythGallery settings screen.
</itemize>
<sect1>Importing Pictures
<p>The import path in the setup dialog is a colon separated list of
directories and/or executable files. When the import key is pressed, a new
directory (the destination directory) under the current directory will be
created and the import path will be searched. If the item in the import
path is a directory (the source directory), the contents of that directory
will be copied to the destination directory. If you would like the source
directory to be that of a removable device, it might be a good idea to use
autofs. See the automount howto at <url url="www.linuxdoc.org"
name="www.linuxdoc.org"> for info on how to get it working.
If the item in the import path is an executable file, MythGallery will
attempt to execute it with the destination directory as its sole argument.
Be careful when using executable scripts that the script runs unattended
(doesn't need user intervention) and returns properly, otherwise it could
create the appearance of MythGallery hanging (e.g. running
<bf>smbclient</bf> and prompting for password). Also be sure that scripts
have executable permissions set.
Here is an example script that a user may want to run
on import:
<tscreen><verb>
#!/bin/csh
if ($#argv == 0) then
echo "Usage: $0 dest_dir"
exit
endif
cd $argv[1]
# get stuff over the network
wget http://www.somesite.dom/dir/file1.jpg
wget http://www.somesite.dom/dir/file2.jpg
wget http://www.somesite.dom/dir/file3.jpg
# stuff that requires manual module loading and/or fs mounting
modprobe camera_module
mount /dev/camera /mnt/camera
cp /mnt/camera/* $argv[1]
umount /mnt/camera
rmmod camera_module
# perform some processing
foreach pname (`ls *.jpg`)
jpegtran -flip vertical $pname > $pname.new
mv $pname.new $pname
end
</verb></tscreen>
<sect>MythGame.
<!-- Install instructions by Hary Wilke (harywilke at yahoo.com -->
<p>MythGame can used as a frontend to start any emulator that your host OS
runs. This is an example of how to set up xmame on Linux.
<url url="http://www.mameworld.net/" name="http://www.mameworld.net/"> is
an excellent resource for all things mame.
Installation overview:
<enum>
<item>Setup directory structure
<item>Download and install xmame
<item>Download and place extra files (artwork/catver.ini/etc..)
<item>Download and install MythGame plugin
<item>Setup xmame in MythGame
<item>Hints
</enum>
<sect1>Setup Directory Structure
<p>To keep things organized, create the following directories for <bf>xmame</bf> to use
in <tt>/usr/local/share/xmame</tt>: hiscore, roms, and snaps.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mkdir -p /usr/local/share/xmame/{highscore,roms,snaps}
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Download and Install xmame
<p><bf>NOTE</bf>: There may be pre-packaged versions of <bf>xmame</bf>
available for your distribution. Check <url
url="http://x.mame.net/download.html"
name="http://x.mame.net/download.html"> for the latest version.
Download the source to <bf>xmame</bf> from <url
url="http://x.mame.net/download/xmame-0.103.tar.bz2"
name="http://x.mame.net/download/xmame-0.103.tar.bz2">
<tscreen><verb>
$ wget http://x.mame.net/download/xmame-0.103.tar.bz2
$ tar -xjf xmame-0.103.tar.bz2
$ cd xmame-0.103
</verb></tscreen>
Edit the Makefile with your favorite editor. Adjust the options as required for your system.
<tscreen><verb>
$ joe Makefile
</verb></tscreen>
Then make and install xmame
<tscreen><verb>
$ make
$ su
(enter password)
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
After <bf>mame</bf> has been installed, we need to create some defaults.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mkdir ~/.xmame
$ cp docs/xmamerc.dist ~/.xmame/xmamerc
</verb></tscreen>
Because some ROMS work better with different display toolkits, or possibly
even older versions of xmame, it's convenient to keep all of your
<bf>xmame</bf> binaries and to rename them to include the version number.
MythGame allows you to match individual roms to preferred binaries.
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
(enter password)
# mv /usr/local/bin/xmame.x11 /usr/local/bin/xmame-0.103.x11
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Depending on how you compiled <bf>xmame</bf>, you may have
<bf>xmame.X11</bf>, <bf>xmame.SDL</bf> or <bf>xmame.xgl</bf> based on what
display toolkit you used. Also, you may need to remove and recreate
<tt>xmamerc</tt> after upgrading since some of the default options may have
changed.
Edit <tt>~/.xmame/xmamerc</tt> to include your paths.
<tscreen><verb>
### Fileio Related ###
rompath /usr/local/share/xmame/roms
snapshot_directory /usr/local/share/xmame/snaps
cheat_file /usr/local/share/xmame/cheat.dat
hiscore_file /usr/local/share/xmame/hiscore.dat
hiscore_directory /usr/local/share/xmame/hiscore
history_file /usr/local/share/xmame/history.dat
mameinfo_file /usr/local/share/xmame/mameinfo.dat
</verb></tscreen>
Confirm that <bf>xmame</bf> works before running it inside MythTV. Place
your ROM in the <tt>/usr/local/share/xmame/roms</tt> directory you created
earlier.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: There are three public domain ROM sets available at
<url url="http://www.mame.net/downmisc.html" name="http://www.mame.net/downmisc.html">
Launch <bf>xmame</bf> with your game of choice. In this example, we are using Gauntlet.
<tscreen><verb>
$ xmame gauntlet
</verb></tscreen>
Some basic <bf>mame</bf> keyboard commands:
<tscreen><verb>
5 = Insert coin
1 = Player 1 start
arrow keys = movement
left control = button 1
left alt = button 2
SPACE = button 3
ESC = exit
TAB - menu
~ to adjust Volume
< and >
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Download extra files
<p>The following files allow you to add extra functionality. Place them
into <tt>/usr/local/share/xmame</tt>
- <tt>catver.ini</tt> is a catalog of categories and versions of popular mame ROMs.
<p>Useful for keeping large libraries of ROMs organized.
It may be downloaded from <url url="http://www.catver.com"
name="http://www.catver.com"> or <url url="http://www.mameworld.net/catlist"
name="http://www.mameworld.net/catlist">
- Screenshots aka "snaps"
<p>These may be downloaded from <url
url="http://www.classicgaming.com/mame32qa/"
name="http://www.classicgaming.com/mame32qa/">
Screenshots are displayed when you are browsing your ROMS in <bf>mythgame</bf>.
Unzip and place them in <tt>/usr/local/share/xmame/snaps</tt>
- <tt>history.dat</tt>
<p>Download from <url url="http://www.arcade-history.com/"
name="http://www.arcade-history.com/">
This file fills in a bit of background about each ROM.
- <tt>hiscore.dat</tt>
<p>Download from <url url="http://www.mameworld.net/highscore/"
name="http://www.mameworld.net/highscore/">
- Cheats
<p>Download from <url url="http://cheat.retrogames.com/"
name="http://cheat.retrogames.com/">
<sect1>Download and Install MythGame.
<p><bf>MythGame</bf> is part of the mythplugins package. See the instructions
in the <ref id="DownloadAndCompile" name="Downloading and Compiling">
section to obtain mythplugins.
Switch to the mythplugins directory:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.21
</verb></tscreen>
Compile and install mythgame:
<tscreen><verb>
$ ./configure --disable-all --enable-mythgame
$ qmake mythplugins.pro
$ make
$ su
(enter password)
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Setup xmame in MythGame
<p>Start <bf>mythfrontend</bf> and navigate to Utilities/Setup > Setup > Media
Settings > Game Settings > Game Players. Select <tt>(New Game Player)</tt>.
To set up a new player for xmame enter the following:
<tscreen><verb>
Player Name: xmame-0.103.x11 (Name by which you want your emulator or game called)
Type: xmame (This is used for display purposes only and does not affect the function of your system)
Command: xmame-0.103.x11 -vidmod 1 -fullscreen (Path and name of binary + any optional parameters)
Rom Path: /usr/local/share/xmame/roms (This tells MythGame what directories to scan for roms to be used with this emulator)
ScreenShots: /usr/local/share/xmame/snaps (This tells MythGame what directories to scan for snapshots to be used with these roms)
Working Directory: (Directory to change to before launching game or emulator. Blank in our case ignores this setting)
File Extensions: (List of all file extension to be used for this emulator. Blank menas any file under the Rom Path)
[] Allow games to span multiple roms/disks (will treat game.1.rom game.2.rom game.3.rom as one game)
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Hints:
<p>
<itemize>
<item>Rom name before options: %s can be used as a standin for rom names on the command line.
<item>Multiple disk/rom games: %d1 %d2 etc can be used as standins for multiple disc games on the command line.
<item>Associating a rom with an emulator: Browse to the desired rom and press 'M' to enter the settings page for that rom.
<item>Assign a Game Favorite Status: Browse to the desired game and press "/".
</itemize>
<sect>MythMusic.
<p>MythMusic has a number of prerequisites that must be satisfied before it
is operational. Depending on your distribution, some of these prerequisites can
be satisfied through the various package managers. If your distribution doesn't
offer pre-compiled versions of the software below, then follow the generic
instructions for manually compiling and installing the software.
The prerequisites for MythMusic are:
<itemize>
<item>MAD
<item>taglib
<item>libogg and libvorbis
<item>FLAC
<item>libcdaudio
<item>CDParanoia
</itemize>
<sect1>Manual installation of prerequisites
<p>These instructions are for distributions which don't have pre-compiled
versions of the software necessary to run MythTV.
Download MAD from <url url="http://www.underbit.com/products/mad"
name="http://www.underbit.com/products/mad"> and install:
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xzf mad-0.15.1b.tar.gz
$ cd mad-0.15.1b
$ ./configure
$ make
$ su
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
Download TagLib from <url url="http://developer.kde.org/~wheeler/taglib.html"
name="http://developer.kde.org/~wheeler/taglib.html"> and install:
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xzf taglib-1.4.tar.gz
$ cd taglib-1.4
$ ./configure
$ make
$ su
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
Download libogg and libvorbis from <url url="http://www.xiph.org/downloads"
name="http://www.xiph.org/downloads"> and install in a similar manner
to the above packages.
Download FLAC from <url url="http://flac.sourceforge.net"
name="http://flac.sourceforge.net"> and install:
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xzf flac-1.1.2.tar.gz
$ cd flac-1.1.2
$ ./configure
$ make
$ su
# make install
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
Download libcdaudio from <url name="http://libcdaudio.sourceforge.net"
url="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=27134"> and
install:
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xzf libcdaudio-0.99.12p2.tar.gz
$ cd libcdaudio-0.99.12p2
$ ./configure
$ make
$ su
# make install
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
Download cdparanoia from <url name="http://www.xiph.org/paranoia/down.html"
url="http://www.xiph.org/paranoia/download/cdparanoia-III-alpha9.8.src.tgz">.
<tscreen><verb>
$ tar -xzf cdparanoia-III-alpha9.8.src.tgz
$ cd cdparanoia-III-alpha9.8
$ ./configure
$ make
$ su
# make install
# cd /usr/lib
# ln -sf libcdda_interface.so.0.9.8 libcdda_interface.so
# ln -sf libcdda_paranoia.so.0.9.8 libcdda_paranoia.so
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Mandriva
<p>Mandriva has a number of the prerequisites available on the
installation CD. Some of the software you're going to need will have to be
obtained from the "contrib" or "cooker" development repositories.
Applications downloaded from "cooker" come from the development branch, so
there may be issues with some software. It isn't recommended that you mix
cooker and release-level software.
<p><bf>urpmi</bf> is the simplest tool for installation of packages from the
command line. The difficult part is the configuration, but this has been
made easier at the following website: <url
url="http://addmedia.linuxfornewbies.org/"
name="http://addmedia.linuxfornewbies.org/"> The website will allow
you to choose a mirror site and then present the command-line configuration
text for that mirror. You will most likely need to add a "Contrib" mirror
to your setup. Once you have done that, you can proceed. If <bf>urpmi</bf>
prompts you about other modules that need to be installed to satisfy
dependencies, say "Yes".
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi libmad0 libmad0-devel libflac4 libflac4-devel libcdaudio1 cdparanoia
# urpmi libcdda0 libcdda0-devel libvorbis0 libvorbis0-devel
# urpmi libcdaudio1-devel libid3tag0 libid3tag0-devel
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>Additional options with MythMusic
<p>Additional visualizations have been added to MythMusic. If you wish to
use these, there are some prerequisites you must install prior to compiling.
<itemize>
<item>fftw
<item>OpenGL
<item>SDL
</itemize>
<tt>fftw</tt> may be obtained from <url url="http://www.fftw.org/"
name="http://www.fftw.org/">. In Mandriva it may be installed by
typing:
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi libfftw2 libfftw2-devel
</verb></tscreen>
<tt>OpenGL</tt> should be installed on practically all distributions.
However, you will need the devel module. In Mandriva it may be
installed by typing:
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi libMesaGLU1-devel
</verb></tscreen>
<tt>SDL</tt> may be obtained from <url url="http://www.libsdl.org"
name="http://www.libsdl.org">. In Mandriva it may be installed by
typing:
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi libSDL1.2 libSDL1.2-devel
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Red Hat Linux 9
<p>Red Hat provides packages for several of the prerequisites, making
installation very simple. Of the prerequisites, Red Hat provides
packages for Vorbis, cdparanoia, SDL, and OpenGL (which you probably
already have installed). To install these all at once, simply type (all on
the same line):
<tscreen><verb>
$ up2date --solvedeps libvorbis libvorbis-devel vorbis-tools cdparanoia-devel cdparanoia-libs cdparanoia SDL-devel SDL
</verb></tscreen>
If you get the following message: "None of the packages you requested
were found, or they are already updated" it probably means you already
have all of those packages installed.
You must install the remaining packages, (MAD, FLAC, libcdaudio and
optionally fftw) manually following the installation directions above. When
installing fftw do not use the rpm package offered on the website because it
will cause an error, so use the source package instead.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: you can use the instructions given at the <ref id="atrpms"
name="automated installation section"> to install all of MythMusic in one
step.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect1>Compiling MythMusic
<p>Once all the prerequisites have been installed, you can proceed with
compiling MythMusic.
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.21
$ ./configure --disable-all --enable-mythmusic --enable-fftw --enable-sdl --enable-aac
$ qmake mythplugins.pro
$ make
$ su
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Configuring MythMusic
<p>Configuration of MythMusic occurs in two places. The main mythfrontend
Setup is for global MythMusic configuration. Go to the
Setup/MythMusic/General Setup screen and adjust it for your particular
configuration.
The second configuration screen is within the MythMusic program and will
allow you rescan your music library, etc.
Here's some explanation about the Ignore_ID3 and The NonID3FileNameFormat:
If Ignore_ID3 is set to TRUE, MythMusic will try to determine the
Genre, Artist, Album, Track Number, and Title from the filename of the
mp3 file. The NonID3FileNameFormat variable should be set to the
directory/file format where the mp3 files are stored. For instance, I
store mine in the above shown Genre/Artist/Album/Track format. MythMusic
will then use this information to fill in the proper fields when it
populates the musicmetadata table rather than searching for an ID3 tag in
the mp3 file.
The files can be laid out in any format, such as:
Genre/Artist/Album/Title
Artist/Genre/Album/Title
Artist/Album/Title (with Genre left as Unknown)
The track number is optional but can be specified with the title by using
the TRACK_TITLE keyword instead of TITLE. If TRACK_TITLE is used,
then the filename can have a space, hyphen, or underscore separating the
track number from the track title. Keywords are case insensitive, so if
you specify GENRE it's the same as Genre in the format field.
The Ignore_ID3 option does not disable the code that determines the track
length, just the portion that tries to read ID3 info.
<sect1>Using MythMusic
<p>MythMusic is fairly simple to use. It is recommended that you insert the
CD before selecting "Import CD". You should also ensure that your system
doesn't try to automount the CD and begin playing it automatically.
<!--
Next stuff is from a message by jasonmiller [jasonmiller@micron.com]
with additional comments by Thor
-->
Here's some information on playlist management:
Q: How do I create a new playlist?
A: Using the MythMusic "Select Music" menu option, setup the playlist as you
normally would by adding songs or other playlists as needed. When you are
ready to save the new playlist, highlight "Active Play Queue" at the bottom
of the selection tree and hit the "i" key. This will pop up a menu allowing
you to name and save the new playlist. You can also hit Enter to bring up
the popup on the Active Play Queue. This does not work on the playlists
above, as Enter is obviously bound to checking/unchecking the boxes. Any
number (i.e. keypad on remote) will also bring up the menu in both cases.
Q: How do I enter the playlist name in the text field without a keyboard?
A: Use the keypad number keys (bound to your remote) to select letters
quasi-cell phone style. Keys 2-9 work pretty much like any cell phone text
entry. 1 cycles through a few special characters, delete, and space. 0 is
like a CAPS LOCK. Hard to describe, fairly easy to use. You will soon be
able to specify the cycle timing in a Setup screen. You can type fairly
quickly through a combination of jumping around the number keys AND hitting
a non-number key (right arrow is particularly good for this) to force the
current character.
Q: How do I edit a playlist?
A: Highlight the playlist in the selection tree and hit the "i" key then
select "Move to Active Play Queue" in the popup. You can now modify the
"Active Play Queue" like normal, adding songs and playlists by selecting
them from the song tree. When you are done, highlight the "Active Play
Queue" in the selection tree and hit the "i" key then select "Save Back to
Playlist Tree". And whatever you were editing as your Active Queue before
you moved an existing playlist "on top" of Active reappears. Think of Active
has having a push on, pop off capability, but with a depth of only 1.
Q: How do I delete an item from a playlist?
A: Highlight the item in the selection tree and hit the "d" key.
Q: How do I rearrange the songs in my playlist?
A: Highlight a song and hit the "space" bar, the song will now have pair of
red arrows in front of it. Use the up and down arrow keys to move it around
in the playlist. When you have it where you want it, hit the "space" bar
again.
Q: How do I delete a playlist?
A: Highlight the playlist in the selection tree and hit the "i" key then
select "Delete this Playlist" from the popup.
<sect1>Troubleshooting MythMusic
<p>You may run into errors when running MythMusic.
<sect2>When I run MythMusic and try and look up a CD, I get an error message
<p>The full text of the message will say:
databasebox.o: Couldn't find your CD. It may not be in the freedb database.
More likely, however, is that you need to delete ~/.cddb and ~/.cdserverrc
and restart mythmusic. Have a nice day.
If you get this message, you should go to the home directory of whatever
user MythMusic is running as and type:
<tscreen><verb>
rm .cdserverrc
rm -rf .cddb/
</verb></tscreen>
These files aren't automatically deleted because of a conscious design
decision by the author that programs that automatically delete things are
bad.
The files are used to locally cache CD lookups. If you are re-inserting
CDs, your machine will not actually have to go out to the Internet to
determine what is on them. However, the URL used to access the freedb
database has recently changed, so the stale information in the files from
previous runs of MythMusic would cause the error above. Once the files have
been deleted the stale information will be gone and your local database
will be rebuilt as you use CDs.
<sect>MythWeather.
<p>
MythWeather is a part of the <bf>mythplugins</bf> package. See <ref
id="mythplugins_" name="MythPlugins"> for instructions on downloading the
tarball.
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.21
$ ./configure --disable-all --enable-mythweather
$ qmake mythplugins.pro
$ make
$ su
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
MythWeather uses MSNBC.com as its source for weather data and weather.com
for its radar image.
These are the keyboard commands for MythWeather:
<tscreen><verb>
Left Key Goes back one page, and extends the time spent
on the page you are on.
Right Key Goes forward one page, see above.
Space Pause, wait on the current page until space is hit
again.
Numeric Keys You can check other weather by keying in other ZIP codes.
Enter Key Switch between Celsius and Fahrenheit. Can also
be used a way to force a data update.
"m" Key Resets the location to the database default, then updates the data.
"i" Enter / Save settings
ESC Exit the settings screen without saving / Exit the program
</verb></tscreen>
MythWeather also has an "Aggressiveness" setting. This affects how long
MythWeather waits for data from the msnbc.com website before timing out. If
you are on a slow connection, or have a slow DNS, or MythWeather just
doesn't seem to be working and you've already tried everything else, then
try increasing the aggressiveness level parameter. This parameter is
inverse; a higher number actually means that MythWeather will be less
aggressive, and will therefore wait longer before timing out.
MythWeather will print debugging information on the terminal. If you wish
to see additional debugging information while MythWeather is running, run
mythweather from the command line with as <tt>mythweather --debug</tt>
You may also force mythweather to re-run the configuration by starting it on
the command line as <tt>mythweather --configure</tt>. These two options are
mutually exclusive.
<sect>MythVideo.
<p>MythVideo is a part of the <bf>mythplugins</bf> package. See <ref
id="mythplugins_" name="MythPlugins"> for instructions on downloading the
tarball.
MythVideo will allow you to use an external program to watch media files
that are not directly supported by MythTV.
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.21
$ ./configure --disable-all --enable-mythvideo
$ qmake mythplugins.pro
$ make
$ su
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
See MythVideo's <tt>README</tt> file for additional information.
<sect>MythDVD.
<p>MythDVD is a part of the <bf>mythplugins</bf> package. See <ref
id="mythplugins_" name="MythPlugins"> for instructions on downloading the
tarball. MythDVD is an application which rips DVDs and makes them available for
use with MythVideo. You may also transcode the DVD content from MPEG-2 to
other formats which should greatly reduce the amount of space the DVD
material takes up on your hard drive.
MythDVD has a number of prerequisites to enable transcoding functionality.
If you only wish to play DVDs rather than convert them to something like
MPEG-4 or xvid you may skip the prerequisite installation step.
<sect1>Manual Compilation of Prerequisites
<p>
<sect1>Pre-compiled binaries
<p>Mandriva users may install the prerequisites this way:
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi libdvdread3 libdvdread3-devel a52dec liba52dec-devel
# urpmi mplayer ogle xine
</verb></tscreen>
Assuming that you've added a PLF mirror, you may also load the rest of the
prerequisites using the following command:
<tscreen><verb>
# urpmi xvid xvid-devel fame libfame0.9-devel transcode libdvdcss
</verb></tscreen>
In the example below, we have enabled support for transcoding and for VCD
playing. You may remove these options if you don't need them.
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.20
$ ./configure --disable-all --enable-mythdvd --enable-transcode --enable-vcd
$ qmake mythplugins.pro
$ make
$ su
# make install
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Running the Myth Transcoding Daemon
<p>Transcoding ("ripping") a DVD requires you to run the Myth Transcoding
Daemon (mtd). To ensure that mtd is configured correctly, you should first
test it at the command line.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mtd -n
</verb></tscreen>
The last line of text should show something like:
<tscreen><verb>
mtd is listening on port 2342
</verb></tscreen>
This indicates that mtd is ready for use. Once you've successfully
tested mtd in the foreground, type <bf>CTRL-C</bf> to stop mtd. You may
then start it as a background (daemon) process.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mtd -d
</verb></tscreen>
Running mtd as a daemon will allow you to automatically start it during the
boot process. For example, you may add <tt>mtd -d</tt> to your
<tt>rc.local</tt> file, or you can adjust the script/steps outlined in the
section called <ref id="mythbackend_autostart" name="Automatically starting
mythbackend at system boot time"> to start mtd instead of mythbackend.
<sect>MythNews.
<p>MythNews is a part of the <bf>mythplugins</bf> package. See <ref
id="mythplugins_" name="MythPlugins"> for instructions on downloading the
tarball. MythNews is a RSS reader.
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd ~/mythplugins-0.21
$ ./configure --disable-all --enable-mythnews
$ qmake mythplugins.pro
$ make
$ su
# make install
</verb></tscreen>
<sect>Troubleshooting.
<sect1>Compiling
<sect2>Compile errors
<p>Some compile errors are worse than others. If you get an error that
doesn't abort the compilation, and says something like:
<tscreen><verb>
cc1plus: warning: changing search order for system directory
"/usr/local/include"
cc1plus: warning: as it has already been specified as a non-system
directory
</verb></tscreen>
then it shouldn't be a problem.
If you get an error like <tt>/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lXext</tt>, the
compiler is telling you that you don't have XFree86-devel installed, or that
your distribution hasn't set it up correctly. This needs to be fixed before
MythTV will compile.
<sect2>make: *** No rule to make target /usr/lib/qt3/mkspecs/default/qmake.conf', needed by Makefile'. Stop.
<label id="mkspecs_error">
<p>This error happens when there's a missing link in the
<tt>/usr/lib/qt3/mkspecs</tt> directory. There are two ways to fix this
error:
1. Create the link manually:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# cd /usr/lib/qt3/mkspecs
# ln -sf linux-g++ default
</verb></tscreen>
and then restart the compile,
or
2. Run <bf>qmake mythtv.pro</bf> in the mythtv directory. Rerunning
<bf>qmake</bf> will create a new Makefile for you, however this still
doesn't fix the root cause of the issue, which is that your distribution
didn't create the symlink for you when the qt3 package was installed. The
first choice is the better solution.
<sect2>make: *** No rule to make target /mkspecs/default/qmake.conf', needed by Makefile'. Stop.
<p>You didn't set your <tt>QTDIR</tt>. Re-read the section on <ref
id="Setting_up_paths" name="Setting up paths">.
<sect2>Internal Segmentation Fault.
<p>This is most likely to be caused by an overheating processor rather than
an actual programming fault within gcc.
<sect1>Debugging <label id="debugging">
<sect2>MythTV segfaults
<sect2>MythTV isn't doing anything
<sect2>Debugging with GDB
<p>Without details, the developers will not be able to determine if you have
discovered a genuine code-bug, or if the problem is with your system. In
order to determine what's going on, you must recompile MythTV with debugging
support and run MythTV within <bf>gdb</bf>, the GNU debugger.
Note that, on OS X, some data is provided without going through these steps.
See ~/Library/Logs/CrashReporter/MythFrontend.crash.log
Re-run the <bf>configure</bf> script and add <tt>--compile-type=debug</tt>
to any previous configuration options you may have used. Check the
<tt>config.log</tt> file if you have forgotten.
Now, you need to clear out the old versions of the software to ensure that
you're running with the debugging code, then compile and install.
<tscreen><verb>
$ make distclean
$ ./configure --compile-type=debug
$ make
$ su
# make install
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
At this point, you now have debug-enabled software ready. To make sure that
you don't forget to type a command required for debugging, it's best to
setup a <tt>gdbcommands</tt> file. This will be read by <bf>gdb</bf> when it's
started.
Put the following into <tt>gdbcommands</tt> in your home directory:
<tscreen><verb>
handle SIGPIPE nostop noprint
handle SIG33 nostop noprint
set logging on
set pagination off
set args -l myth.log -v record,channel,siparser
run
thread apply all bt full
set logging off
</verb></tscreen>
Let's assume that the problem you're having is in <bf>mythbackend</bf>.
<tscreen><verb>
$ gdb mythbackend -x gdbcommands
GNU gdb 6.3-debian
Copyright 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and you are
welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain conditions.
Type "show copying" to see the conditions.
There is absolutely no warranty for GDB. Type "show warranty" for details.
This GDB was configured as "i386-linux".Using host libthread_db library "/lib/tls/libthread_db.so.1".
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]
</verb></tscreen>
<bf>gdb</bf> will automatically read the commands that you've placed in the
<tt>gdbcommands</tt> file and begin running the program you specified on the
command line.
If the program appears to be locked up, press CTRL-C to create the backtrace
file.
All of the output from <tt>gdb.txt</tt> should be posted to the mythtv-dev
mailing list, along with the steps you followed to get the program to crash.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: If you're trimming the <tt>gdb.txt</tt> file to remove
extraneous information from the beginning of the file, make sure you include
at least 10 lines <em>prior</em> to the point where the backtrace actually
begins. This ensures that there is some context to the backtrace, and so
that it's possible to see what exactly caused the segfault.
<bf>gdb</bf> has a number of options, read the <tt>man</tt> page for more
information.
Using the <tt>gdbcommands</tt> file in conjunction with a <bf>while</bf> loop
will ensure that <bf>gdb</bf> creates a trace file and then restarts:
<tscreen><verb>
$ while true; do date >> gdb.txt; gdb mythbackend -x gdbcommands; done;
</verb></tscreen>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: To exit this loop you will need to kill the while loop.
If you're trying to troubleshoot and you can't get back to the <bf>gdb</bf> window
for some reason, it may be easier to use two systems or to start
mythfrontend from the text console.
If you're going to troubleshoot from a remote system, connect to the machine
that you're going to test using <bf/ssh</> or <bf>telnet</bf>. Next, type
<tt>$ export DISPLAY=localhost:0.0</tt>. This will allow the graphics to be
displayed on the X console (usually ALT-F6 or ALT-F7) and still give you
output and control of <bf>mythfrontend</bf>, either from the <bf>ssh</bf>
session, or by switching back to the text console by pressing CTRL-ALT-F1.
You can now continue troubleshooting using <bf>gdb</bf> as detailed in the
instructions.
<sect2>MythTV is crashing your system
<p>When run as a non-privileged user, MythTV <em>can not</em> crash your
system. If your system is crashing when you run MythTV, then you have some
issue with the drivers for your capture card or other hardware, or the CPU
fan has fallen off/broken and your system is overheating when asked to
perform a CPU intensive task like encoding video.
If you are running as root, which is <bf>strongly discouraged</bf>, it is
possible that your system may crash due to the real-time thread using all
available CPU. You will not be able to interrupt the process, so for all
intents and purposes your computer will have crashed.
<sect1>Installing
<sect2>When trying to run mythtv-setup, you get an error like this:
"mythtv-setup: error while loading shared libraries:"
<p>You didn't add <tt>/usr/local/lib</tt> to <tt>/etc/ld.so.conf</tt>. See the
section on modifying <ref id="modifying_ld.so.conf" name="/etc/ld.so.conf">.
<sect1>Using
<sect2>No programs are displayed in "Watch Recordings"
<p>This situation occurs most often with a system that acts as a frontend
and a slave backend. MythTV supports system-global and user-specific
configuration files, with user-configuration files taking precedence. 99%
of the configuration for MythTV is in the MySQL database, but MythTV still
needs to know where the MySQL server is running. This information is in the
<tt>mysql.txt</tt> file. By default, it will be installed to
<tt>/usr/local/share/mythtv</tt>, but a copy placed into <tt>~/.mythtv</tt>
will over-ride the global configuration.
You must ensure that there aren't multiple, conflicting versions of this
file on your system!
<tscreen><verb>
$ locate mysql.txt
/usr/local/share/mythtv/mysql.txt
/home/mythtv/.mythtv/mysql.txt
$
</verb></tscreen>
As you can see, in this example there are two <tt>mysql.txt</tt> files. If
they are not identical, then there may be unintended consequences.
You may also see this error if you completely fill the <tt>/var</tt>
partition. The most likely <em>mythtv-related</em> reason for this is an
overly large mythbackend or mythfrontend log file in <tt>/var/log</tt>. If
you have logging enabled for the backend, and myth runs for weeks at a time,
this may creep up and surprise you. Note that many system processes also
write to <tt>/var</tt> and the system may not boot if it is unable to write
to <tt>/var</tt> due to a full partition.
<sect2>MySQL not connecting correctly
<p>Your <bf>MySQL</bf> installation may have networking turned off.
Check that <tt>/etc/mysql/my.cnf</tt> <em>does not</em> contain
<tt>skip-networking</tt>. If it does, remove it. Also verify that
<tt>bind-address</tt> is set to your IP address instead of
<tt>127.0.0.1</tt>. If you change either of these items, restart
<bf>MySQL</bf>.
<sect2>MySQL database is corrupt
<p>If you have reason to believe that your MySQL database is corrupt,
execute the following commands to attempt to repair it.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Ensure that there are no programs accessing the database
while you attempt to repair it. Make sure that all backend and frontend
programs have exited.
<tt>mysqlcheck -r -umythtv -p<password> mythconverg</tt>
<sect2>Using a MPEG-2 encoder card and the video appears "jittery"
<sect2>Using a MPEG-2 encoder card and the video is jumping up and down
<p>This is a different problem than the one discussed in the previous
section. Currently, the ivtv driver or firmware appear to have some issues
if the vertical capture resolution is not the full screen height. If you
are having a jitter problem then ensure that you are capturing either 480
lines (for NTSC) or 576 lines (for PAL). The default capture profiles may
need to be edited for your setup. Go to Settings->TV Settings->Recording
Profiles and adjust the <bf>Default</bf> and <bf>Live TV</bf> options to
480 or 576 from their defaults.
<sect2>Screen goes blank but returns when mouse is moved or keyboard is used
<p>This is due to DPMS, the Display Power Management System, which is used
to save power by turning off your monitor when the system decides that it's
not being used or due to a screensaver that has defaulted to a blank screen.
MythTV now has DPMS support built-in, and should intelligently handle the
screen. Continue reading if you wish to override DPMS and force it off.
Since it's likely that watching TV will not generate keyboard or mouse
events for a time, you need to turn off DPMS and the screensaver. There are
a few ways to do this. You may also need to check your BIOS for power
saving modes and disable screen blanking there as well.
Edit your <tt>/etc/X11/XF86Config-4</tt> or <tt>/etc/X11/xorg.conf</tt>
file, and look for:
<tscreen><verb>
Section "ServerFlags"
#DontZap # disable <Ctrl><Alt><BS> (server abort)
#DontZoom # disable <Ctrl><Alt><KP_+>/<KP_-> (resolution switching)
AllowMouseOpenFail # allows the server to start up even if the mouse doesn't work
Option "blank time" "0"
Option "standby time" "0"
Option "suspend time" "0"
Option "off time" "0"
Option "NoPM" "1"
EndSection
</verb></tscreen>
Also, look for:
<tscreen><verb>
Section "Device"
Identifier "device1"
VendorName "nVidia Corporation"
BoardName "NVIDIA GeForce 256 (generic)"
Driver "nv"
Option "DPMS"
EndSection
</verb></tscreen>
In this case, you would need to either delete the <tt>Option "DPMS"</tt>
line, or change it to <tt># Option "DPMS"</tt> to comment it out. The next
time you start XFree this change will take effect.
Finally, check:
<tscreen><verb>
Section "Monitor"
Identifier "monitor1"
VendorName "Plug'n Play"
HorizSync 30-85
VertRefresh 50-160
# Sony Vaio C1(X,XS,VE,VN)?
# 1024x480 @ 85.6 Hz, 48 kHz hsync
ModeLine "1024x480" 65.00 1024 1032 1176 1344 480 488 494 563 -hsync -vsync
# TV fullscreen mode or DVD fullscreen output.
# 768x576 @ 79 Hz, 50 kHz hsync
ModeLine "768x576" 50.00 768 832 846 1000 576 590 595 630
# 768x576 @ 100 Hz, 61.6 kHz hsync
ModeLine "768x576" 63.07 768 800 960 1024 576 578 590 616
EndSection
</verb></tscreen>
Ensure that there isn't an <tt>Option "DPMS"</tt> in the Monitor
configuration.
You can also turn off DPMS from the Command Line, but this will not survive
a reboot.
<tscreen><verb>
$ xset -dpms
</verb></tscreen>
Using <tt>xset +dpms</tt> will turn it back on.
Another technique to try, which will turn off the screensaver:
<tscreen><verb>
$ xset s off
</verb></tscreen>
You may also combine the command to turn off DPMS and the screensaver:
<tscreen><verb>
$ xset -dpms s off
</verb></tscreen>
Finally, depending on your distribution, you may be able to turn it off from
within the control panel.
<sect1>Miscellaneous
<sect2>mythfilldatabase failing
<p>If mythfilldatabase suddenly appears to be failing, there are at least
two things to check.
First, if you are in North America, ensure that your DataDirect subscription
is still valid, otherwise, check to see what version of XMLTV you're
running and that it's the latest version.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: It is highly recommended that you run the latest
version of XMLTV available. Your listings provider may have made changes
which negatively impact XMLTV.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect2>Fast CPU, choppy or jittery video <label id="Setting_DMA">
<p>First, you should check that your kernel has been enabled for DMA:
<tscreen><verb>
[mythtv@pvr mythtv]$ dmesg |grep DMA
ide0: BM-DMA at 0xd800-0xd807, BIOS settings: hda:DMA, hdb:DMA
ide1: BM-DMA at 0xd808-0xd80f, BIOS settings: hdc:DMA, hdd:pio
hda: 156301488 sectors (80026 MB) w/2048KiB Cache, CHS=9729/255/63, UDMA(33)
hdb: 80043264 sectors (40982 MB) w/2048KiB Cache, CHS=4982/255/63, UDMA(33)
</verb></tscreen>
From the listing above, you can see that hda, hdb and hdc are set for DMA,
and hdd is set for pio. If your kernel is not reporting DMA being enabled,
you may need to recompile your kernel. Check your motherboard's chipset
(look in the "ATA/IDE/MFM/RLL support" section in "make menuconfig") for more
information.
Next, check that the hard drive has DMA enabled. Use the <bf>hdparm</bf>
program to check and enable DMA.
<tscreen><verb>
# hdparm -d /dev/hd?
</verb></tscreen> will tell you the DMA status for your hard drives. If you run
<bf>hdparm</bf> with the <tt>-d1</tt> parameter, it will turn DMA on.
<!-- Next section adopted from a post by Dwaine Garden
dwainegarden@rogers.com to the mailing list. -->
You may also setup your PC to do this at boot time, either by adding the
command to your <tt>/etc/rc.local</tt> file, or by adding files to
/etc/sysconfig.
On Mandriva and other distributions, if you install <bf>hdparm</bf> from an RPM you
will most likely get a <tt>/etc/sysconfig/harddisks</tt> file installed.
This file will be parsed by the <tt>/etc/rc.sysinit</tt> script. If you use
the default <tt>harddisks</tt> file, your changes will affect all IDE devices
(including CD ROMs). If you wish to use different parameters for various
devices, rename and/or copy the file to <tt>harddiskhda</tt>,
<tt>harddiskhdb</tt>, etc. Edit the file to your liking and on the next
reboot your setting will be preserved.
<sect2>Frontend appears to be slow at jumping / seeking.
<sect2>On-screen Display shows incorrect program length.
<p>This may occur when MythTV doesn't have an accurate seek table. Run
<bf>mythcommflag --rebuild</bf>
<sect2>Troubleshooting audio <label id="Troubleshooting_Audio">
<!-- By Bruce Markey -->
<p>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: the following instructions do not apply to PVR-250/350
encoders; the MPEG-2 file will have the audio embedded in the stream so it
is not accessible using <tt>/dev/dsp</tt>.
</caption>
</figure>
Audio appears to be one of the bigger issues that users run into on the
mailing list. If the audio isn't configured correctly, then MythTV will
often appear to hang, when in fact it is trying to manipulate the audio
subsystem and failing. You may or may not receive error messages indicating
that the source of the error is the audio subsystem.
You can not use <bf>xawtv</bf> to determine if your audio is working
correctly, since <bf>xawtv</bf> is simply using the analog sound patched
through line-in to line-out. It doesn't need to digitize the sound unless
you are using the recording function.
A better test to verify that sound will work for MythTV (and recording with
<bf>xawtv</bf> for that matter) is to startup <bf>xawtv</bf>, mute the
line-in then run <tt>aplay /dev/dsp</tt>. You should hear the recorded audio
slightly delayed behind the real-time video. You should see messages about
"underrun". These can be ignored but they do confirm that the driver is
loaded and there is an active device. Once this test succeeds, MythTV
should work correctly because it writes to and read from /dev/dsp in
the same way that <bf>aplay</bf> does.
To record audio along with video the audio signal must be digitized by a DSP
so that the audio data can be stored in a file. On playback, the audio data
is written to /dev/dsp and converted back to an analog signal. This analog
signal should then be sent to your speakers. Here is what is needed in
<bf>alsamixer</bf>. If you are using an ALSA version after 1.0.6, use
<bf>alsamixer -V all</bf>:
CAPTUR source - the analog source to be sent to the DSP. This should be set
to the input source from the tuner card to the sound card. In most cases
this is Line but this could also be Aux, CD, Mic, etc., depending on how you
connect the input cable. This source should be muted to prevent patching
through the analog sound. The volume of this source will not affect the
record level.
Capture mixer - this sets the level for the analog to digital recording.
While a volume of 100% is recommended for testing, distortion may occur.
Lowering this level to 75% to 85% may result in better audio quality.
"Capture" should be marked as the CAPTUR destination.
PCM mixer - this sets the level for the digital to analog playback. While a
volume of 100% is recommended for testing, distortion may occur. Lowering
this level to 75% to 85% may result in better audio quality.
Master mixer - sets the level for the analog signal sent to line-out or the
speakers.
You may also want to ensure that <tt>/dev/dsp</tt> , or whatever device file
is being used, hasn't already been grabbed by another process, like
<bf>esd</bf> or <bf>artsd</bf>. If the device file isn't available, then
MythTV won't work. You may wish to run <bf>configure</bf> and enable
support for these.
If you wish to see what application is grabbing a resource, you can use the
<tt>fuser</tt> command:
<tscreen><verb>
# fuser -v /dev/dsp
</verb></tscreen>
To disable aRts in KDE, go to KDE->Control Center->Sound->Sound System and
uncheck the "Start aRts soundserver on KDE startup" box. Run <tt># killall
artsd</tt> from the command line to stop the artsd program.
If you're using multiple sound cards and multiple tuners, use <tt>alsamixer
-c 1</tt> to work with the second sound card. The first card is #0, the
second card is #1, etc.
<sect2>Mythbackend reports that your card is not reporting full duplex capabilities
<sect2>The mythbackend program told me to look at this section
<p>mythbackend does a check to see if your sound device is capable of full
duplex operation. If it's not, it's most likely that you're going to run
into issues when you try to record and play sound at the same time. If your
backend is a separate machine than your frontend, then there's no problem,
since you're only going to be doing one thing at a time with the card.
Likewise, if you're running the frontend and backend on the same machine,
but you're using btaudio or a hardware encoder card such as the Hauppauge
PVR-250, DVB cards or HDTV capture cards as your recording source and you're
only using the playback function of your sound card, then you also shouldn't
have an issue, since the sound card isn't being asked to perform two
functions at once.
If you can't get your sound card to go full-duplex and need it to, then check
your distribution for updated sound drivers. If your sound card is not
capable of full-duplex operation, either because the drivers don't support
it, or it has been designed that way, then you're pretty much out of luck
and will either need to purchase a new sound card, or will need to get
btaudio <ref id="btaudio" name="operational">.
<sect2>My remote doesn't work / works sometimes and not others / "ghost" keypresses
<p>This can be due to a number of factors. The simplest case is the
"ghost" keypresses. For me, it was due to compact fluorescent lights in
the same room as the IR receiver, which the receiver was picking up as
keypresses. Once the lights were switched to incandescent bulbs, the ghost
went away.
You may have an issue with <bf>lirc</bf> misinterpreting IR commands from a
different remote. I also have an issue where the TiVo "Peanut" remote will
eventually cause <bf>lircd</bf> to stop responding; even though <bf>lircd</bf>
is configured for the Pinnacle Systems remote, the TiVo remote IR patterns
are being seen by the IR receiver.
If your remote has been properly configured, and <bf>irw</bf> and
<bf>irxevent</bf> are working correctly, then it's highly likely that your
window manager is not giving focus correctly to the various Myth programs as
they run. The following window managers are known to work correctly:
<itemize>
<item>fvwm
<item>blackbox (using "Sloppy Focus" and "Focus New Windows")
</itemize>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: You do not need to use <bf>irxevent</bf> if you are using
MythTV's native LIRC support, so the window manager focus issue does not
apply in that case.
<sect2>Where's "canada-cable"?
<sect2>Channels are off by one
<p>There is no such thing as "Canada Cable"; Canada uses the same
frequencies as the United States. "Canada Cable" was a hack that some
people used when they would discover that their channels were off-by-one,
i.e. when tuning to channel 42, they might get channel 41 or 43. This is
actually due to the tuner on the video capture device being mis-detected.
You must manually specify the tuner type in your <tt>/etc/modules.conf</tt>.
See the video4linux mailing list (<url
url="https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/video4linux-list"
name="https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/video4linux-list">) for
more information.
<sect2>Mythweb is showing a db_open error when I connect to it
<!-- Fix by Chris Ripp [chris@ripp.net] post to mailing list -->
<p>Find your <tt>php.ini</tt> file. Make sure you've got a line in it like this:
<tt>extension=mysql.so</tt>
Restart <bf>apache</bf> for it to take effect.
<sect2>Mouse pointer disappears when placed over the MythTV windows
<p>This is the intended behavior. The MythTV interface is meant for use
with a remote control or a keyboard.
<sect2>What does "strange error flushing buffer" mean on the console?
<p>Nothing, really. It's just lame (the mp3 encoder) complaining for some
obscure reason. This seems to be fixed in more recent versions of the
libmp3lame library.
<sect2>Can't change the channel when watching Live TV.
<p>Something's wrong with your program database. Did mythfilldatabase run
with no major errors? Or, MythTV may not have permissions to the
appropriate video4linux devices. See the section titled <ref id="devperms"
name="Device Permissions"> for an example.
<sect2>Screen goes black when you try to play something
<p>MythTV prints error and status messages to the shell that was used to
start the application. If nothing seems to be happening when you try to
view a program, try switching back to the shell and look for error messages
there, or, if you're running from a startup script, check the log file.
<sect2>Poor performance with NVidia cards and XvMC
<p>XvMC is a NVidia driver feature which is supposed to help with decoding
video. Users have reported that rather than speeding up their video it
appears to be doing the opposite. You may want to check that your color
depth is set for 24bpp.
<sect2>Computer is loading a media player application when you insert a CD or DVD
<p>You need to disable any sort of auto-running media player in your
environment, otherwise MythDVD or MythMusic will not be able to work
properly.
In KDE, you may want to perform the following:
<tscreen><verb>
$ rm ~/.kde/Autostart/Autorun.desktop
</verb></tscreen>
<sect>Miscellaneous.
<sect1>I'd like to watch the files without using MythTV / I'd like to convert the files to some other format
<p>First, check if the <bf>mytharchive</bf> plugin does what you want. If not, then
read on:
MythTV comes with a utility called <bf>mythtranscode</bf> which can
decode nuv files into raw format for use with other applications. This
command-line utility was not designed to be used by the end-user, but
instead to be called by other applications or scripts. Programs like
<bf>nuvexport</bf> (<url url="http://forevermore.net/myth/"
name="http://forevermore.net/myth/">) are better suited for the end user.
However, since <bf>mythtranscode</bf> can be a useful tool, directions on
using it follow.
<bf>mythtranscode</bf> creates raw streams, which means that they do not
contain any container information such as resolution, frame-rate, or audio
sampling rate. In order to process the output, you must supply this
information to the processing utility. <bf>mythtranscode</bf> provides the
relevant information on STDOUT.
There are two modes in which <bf>mythtranscode</bf> can create raw streams.
The first has no synchronization and assumes that the processing utility
will read audio and video at a constant rate. This method is useful when a
single application will be processing the raw output, such as
<bf>mencoder</bf> or <bf>ffmpeg</bf>. The second method assumes that two
separate applications will be processing the audio and video streams
independently, and there is no rate control between them which means that
the two programs don't coordinate their efforts to maintain synchronization.
<sect2>mythtranscode example
<p>First, start <bf>mythtranscode</bf>. You will need to determine the
channel and the start time manually.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mythtranscode --chanid 1036 --starttime 2003-10-20T15:30:00 --profile \
autodetect --fifodir . &
</verb></tscreen>
When <bf>mythtranscode</bf> begins executing, it will create two FIFOs
("audout" and "vidout") in the directory specified (in this case ".",
meaning the current directory) and will print out information about the
video stream.
The next step is to start the processing application. The following assumes
that the stream is NTSC 640x480 with 32Kbps audio.
To use <bf>mencoder</bf> you would enter a command like:
<tscreen><verb>
mencoder -audiofile audout -audio-demuxer 20 -rawaudio rate=32000 \
-rawvideo on:w=640:h=480:fps=29.97 -ovc lavc -oac mp3lame -o out.avi \
vidout
</verb></tscreen>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: You must use mencoder 1.0PRE1 or later. <bf>mencoder</bf>
version 0.9x <em>WILL NOT WORK!</em>
</caption>
</figure>
Using ffmepg:
<tscreen><verb>
ffmpeg -f u16le -ar 32000 -ac 2 -i audout -f rawvideo -s 640x480 -r 29.97 \
-i vidout -vcodec mpeg4 -b 2000 -acodec mp3 -ab 128 out.avi
</verb></tscreen>
Or to play directly using mplayer (again 1.0PRE1 or later is needed):
<tscreen><verb>
mplayer -audiofile audout -audio-demuxer 20 -rawaudio rate=32000 \
-rawvideo on:w=640:h=480:fps=29.97 vidout
</verb></tscreen>
If you wanted to write the raw data to separate audio and video files for
later processing, the following would work (note the use of --fifosync
for rate-control):
<tscreen><verb>
$ mythtranscode --chanid 1036 --starttime 2003-10-20T15:30:00 \
--profile autodetect --fifodir . --fifosync &
$ cat audout > audio.raw &
$ cat vidout > video.yuv
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Using a different window manager
<p>MythTV is not dependent on any particular window manager. If you wish to
run a lightweight window manager, the <tt>contrib/configfiles/</tt> directory has an
example of a <tt>.twmrc</tt> and <tt>.fvwmrc</tt> file you may use.
<sect1>What capture resolution should I use? How does video work?
<label id="capture_resolution_">
<!-- Lots of the following is from a Bruce Markey mailto:bjm@lvcm.com post
to the mailing list, 2003-01-21. Updated 2005-02-09 bjm -->
<p>While MythTV allows you to set various GUI and capture resolutions, not
all combinations make sense.
First, analog video signals have a defined vertical resolution. In NTSC,
the video standard specifies that there are 525 vertical scan lines. Once
the "extra" lines are removed (they're used to synchronize the video signal,
and encode closed captioning data), you have 480 horizontal lines stacked
vertically.
In PAL, there are 625 "raw" lines of resolution, with a net of 576
horizontal lines stacked vertically.
Horizontally, the maximum value allowed for a Bt8X8 chip is 720. However,
due to limitations in the chip and other limitations of broadcast
television, there may not be a noticeable improvement in image quality
beyond 400 or 500 pixels.
With this in mind, there are certain commonly accepted values for
resolution. While other values may be accepted for the vertical
resolution, they will cause scan lines to be repeated or dropped.
From "best" to "worst", in NTSC:
<itemize>
<item>720x480 "DVD" resolution. ReplayTV High and medium resolution
<item>704x480 DVD standalone recorder standard resolution
<item>640x480 4:3
<item>544x480 TiVo Best resolution
<item>480x480 SuperVCD (SVCD) Video CD resolution, TiVo High resolution
<item>352x480 ReplayTV "Standard" quality, TiVo Basic and Medium resolution, DVD "LP" resolution
<item>320x480
<item>544x240
<item>480x240
<item>352x240 Video CD (VCD) resolution
<item>320x240
</itemize>
As you can see, the lower quality values are half of the better ones.
720x240 is possible, but isn't a good tradeoff relative to the number of
vertical lines lost. In a PAL country, the you would use values like
720x576 or x288.
The higher resolutions will be more CPU intensive if you're using software
encoding (PVR-250/350 will have minimal host CPU impact even if you're using
720x480). If the CPU is overtaxed, frames will be dropped causing uneven
motion. You will likely see the best results at resolutions which average at
least 10% CPU idle time. You can use system tools such as <tt>top</tt> or
<tt>sar</tt> to check the CPU % idle while recording. If the CPU average
usage is consistently exceeding 90%, frames will need to be dropped during
peak times when more than 100% of the available CPU would be needed to
process all of the frames.
If you'd like to read more on this, go to the vcdhelp website at <url
url="http://www.vcdhelp.com/forum/userguides/94382.php"
name="http://www.vcdhelp.com/forum/userguides/94382.php">.
<sect1>MythTV GUI and X Display Sizes
<p>MythTV is designed to be run as dedicated full screen TV application
but can also be run as a desktop application on a computer monitor. Here
are a few consideration for configuring sizes to best suit you needs.
<sect2>X Dimensions
<p>For output to a Television, common resolutions are 640x480, 800x600, and
some rare devices support 1024x768. Generally, higher resolutions are
better. However, you may find that you prefer the picture quality at one of
the lower resolutions. Everything in MythTV is scalable and should 'fit'
regardless of the resolution you choose.
Edit your X configuration file, usually <tt>/etc/X11/XF86Config-4</tt> for
XFree, or <tt>/etc/X11/xorg.conf</tt> for Xorg, so that the resolution you
want to use is listed first in the lists under "Screen". If this resolution
is higher than the resolutions supported by your output device, you will see
a 'panning' effect where moving the mouse to the edge will scroll around a
desktop area which is larger than the display size. If this happens, edit
your X configuration file to match the display size then restart X.
<sect2>MythTV Dimensions
<p>From "mythfrontend" go to Setup->Appearance.
The default for the height and width is "0" - this will cause
MythTV to automatically size itself to full screen.
If the MythTV GUI width and height are not 0, mythfrontend uses these GUI
dimensions and is anchored to the upper left corner of the X Desktop. If
the GUI X and/or Y are not 0, the upper left corner is positioned at the
specified coordinates. If the "Run the frontend in a window" box is checked,
the window will have a frame and can then be dragged to any position on the
desktop.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: When the GUI is full screen, you may see windows rapidly
flipping on top of each other. If this happens you will need to set your
window manager to 'Click to Focus' for windows to stack properly.
</caption>
</figure>
The fonts for the GUI and OSD will scale to whatever sizes you use. Most
font sizes can be changed in setup selections or in the .xml files under
<tt>/usr/local/share/mythtv/</tt> . Make sure to use fonts large enough
to be read on a TV screen from a distance.
The full screen TV size is based on the X display size. For Xinerama, you
can specify a screen in Setup->General. The TV picture will be stretched
to fit the entire GUI area regardless of the <ref id="capture_resolution_"
name="capture resolutions"> used. However, during playback, the "W" key can
to used to correct differences between 16:9 and 4:3.
<sect2>Overscan Dimensions
<p>Because picture edges can be ragged and screen edges aren't straight,
Television is designed to project an image larger than the physical screen.
This is called "overscan". Underscan is fitting the entire image inside the
screen. Underscan is useful for computer monitors so that toolbars and
scrollbars at the edges can be seen.
For best results, match the X display area as close as possible to the edges
of the physical screen. This can only be adjusted by your tv-out device or
by the settings for the television set. Many sets have these adjustments in
a 'service mode'. If you cannot make these adjustments, there will be black
borders around the edges of the X desktop, MythTV GUI and TV playback.
MythTV has settings for "Overscan" in Setup->Playback. These can not, and do
not, cause the image to display beyond the edge of the X display area. The
purpose of these settings are to cut off rough edges and to expand the image
so that objects will appear to be the same size as a normal overscanned TV
picture.
<sect1>Saving or restoring the database <label id="backupdb">
<p>See the <bf>mysqldump</bf> manpage for more information.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysqldump -u mythtv -pmythtv mythconverg -c > mythtv_backup.sql
</verb></tscreen>
To restore: (assuming that you've dropped the database)
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root
mysql>create database mythconverg;
mysql>exit
$ mysql -u mythtv -pmythtv mythconverg < mythtv_backup.sql
</verb></tscreen>
You may need to alter the MySQL permissions if this database is being shared
with multiple systems. See the <ref id="modify_perm_mysql" name="Modifying
access to the MySQL database for multiple systems"> section for more
information.
<sect1>Deleting the MySQL database
<p><figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Performing this step will remove the entire database.
You will lose all of your settings and will need to re-run the mc.sql script
to setup the database structure before running the mythtv-setup program.
</caption>
</figure>
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root
mysql> drop database mythconverg;
mysql> quit
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Moving your data to new hardware
<p>This assumes that you will be moving your data to newer / bigger hardware
and don't want to lose your programs.
The first step is to create a database backup as demonstrated in an earlier
section.
Next, you will extract only the data that is relevant to the programs:
<tscreen><verb>
$ grep "INSERT INTO record " mythtv_backup.sql > restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO recorded " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO oldrecorded " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO recordedprogram " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO recordedrating " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO recordedmarkup " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO recordedseek " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
</verb></tscreen>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: Newer versions of <bf>mysqldump</bf> place backticks around
the table names. Backticks are not the same as apostrophes! On a typical
North American keyboard, backticks are located to the left of the "1" key,
on the same key as the tilde. Also, because the <bf>bash</bf> shell may try
to interpret the backticks, make sure you use a \ before each one.
If your <tt>restore.sql</tt> file is empty, you'll need to re-run the
commands like this:
<tscreen><verb>
$ grep "INSERT INTO \`record\` " mythtv_backup.sql > restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO \`recorded\` " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO \`oldrecorded\` " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO \`recordedprogram\` " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO \`recordedrating\` " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO \`recordedmarkup\` " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
$ grep "INSERT INTO \`recordedseek\` " mythtv_backup.sql >> restore.sql
</verb></tscreen>
Note the space after the table name and the ">>" to append to the file for
all but the first <bf>grep</bf>. "recordedmarkup" and "recordedseek" are
huge and there may be hundreds of thousands of lines if you had lots of
hours of recordings.
After you have moved the data files to the new hardware, configure MythTV
using the <bf>mythtv-setup</bf> program as you normally would with a
standard MythTV installation.
At this point we will restore the information about your programs back into
the database:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u mythtv -pmythtv mythconverg < restore.sql
</verb></tscreen>
After successful insertion of the data you may delete the
<tt>restore.sql</tt> file.
<sect1>btaudio <label id="btaudio">
<p>btaudio allows you to obtain the audio data from your tuner card directly
over the PCI bus without using a sound card. This is useful if you would
like to use multiple tuner cards in a system without adding a sound card for
each one, or if your existing sound card is not capable of full-duplex
operation.
In order to use btaudio, your tuner card will need certain hardware
installed on it, and that hardware must be wired correctly. The chip that
will allow you to use the btaudio module is the MSP34xx. However, having a
MSP34xx is no guarantee that you will be able to use the btaudio module.
As of 2003-03-31, this is the current list of cards and their status:
Works with btaudio:
<itemize>
<item>Hauppauge WinTV-radio with dbx-TV stereo, model 401
<item>Hauppauge WinTV-Theater, model 495, 498 (Europe)
<item>ATI TV Wonder
</itemize>
The following cards do not work:
<itemize>
<item>Pinnacle Studio PCTV Pro - note: this has a MSP34xx, but it's not
wired correctly to the BT878 chip.
<item>ATI TV Wonder VE
<item>Leadtek Winfast 2000 XP (PAL, UK and NTSC)
<item>I/O Magic PC-PVR. No MSP34xx chip.
</itemize>
The following cards have been reported to work, but have issues:
<itemize>
<item>Avermedia AVerTV Studio (no digital DSP output, "whiney noise" on
analog)
</itemize>
Once btaudio loads, it should register additional <tt>/dev/dsp</tt> and
<tt>/dev/mixer</tt> devices. Typing <tt>$ dmesg</tt> will let you know
what's going on.
<sect1>Removing unwanted channels
<p>If <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> grabbed a channel which you do not want to
include in your TV listings, you can remove the entries from the grabber
configuration and the MySQL database. This often happens with premium
channels; for example, HBO or Showtime may be available on your cable TV
system, but is scrambled because you're not a subscriber to that channel.
Since you can never watch it, you want to get rid of it.
If you are using the DataDirect service, login to your account at
<url url="http://labs.zap2it.com/" name="http://labs.zap2it.com/"> to
modify your lineup. Uncheck the boxes for any unwanted channels, and they
will no longer be included in your download.
If you are using a grabber from XMLTV, comment out the channel from the
<tt>~/.mythtv/<sourcename>.xmltv</tt> file by inserting the word "not
" (including the space) in front of the unwanted entry. This will prevent
<bf>xmltv</bf> from grabbing future listings.
Next, delete the unwanted item from the channel table so that it will not
appear in the EPG or when changing channels. To delete the data from the
database we need to perform some steps. First, assuming that HBO is channel
15, we need to find out the internal <tt>chanid</tt> used by MySQL:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root mythconverg
mysql> select chanid from channel where channum=15;
+--------+
| chanid |
+--------+
| 1015 |
+--------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> delete from channel where chanid = 1015;
</verb></tscreen>
Old program data will be removed over the course of a week. However, you may
want to immediately delete any current program listings for the channel that
has been removed:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root mythconverg
mysql> delete from program where chanid = 1015;
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>NFS
<p>You may want to use a central server to store your files.
On the host machine, (in this case, the hostname is "masterbackend") you'll
want to edit your <tt>/etc/exports</tt> file and use something like:
<tscreen><verb>
/var/video (rw)
</verb></tscreen>
To export the <tt>/var/video</tt> directory with read / write privileges.
On the "slave" machine, you'll want to edit the <tt>/etc/fstab</tt> file and
add something like:
<tscreen><verb>
masterbackend:/var/video /var/video nfs rsize=8192,wsize=8192,hard,intr,nfsvers=3,actimeo=0
</verb></tscreen>
Then run <tt># mount -a</tt> to re-read the file to mount the file system.
In this case, the source is a machine called "masterbackend" which is
exporting the directory "/var/video", which we're mounting locally at
"/var/video". The rsize and wsize options are used to increase the
performance of NFS; "hard,intr" is there because that's the recommendation
of the NFS-HOWTO, the nfsvers is required for filesizes over 2GB and actimeo
is used to turn off file attribute caching. Attribute caching for a shared
media point causes problems; you always want to see the latest state of the
directory and files. See <url
url="http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/index.php/Optimizing_Performance"
name="http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/index.php/Optimizing_Performance"> for
additional information regarding performance optimization.
<sect1>Automatically starting mythfrontend at system boot time
<p>Here's an example submitted to the mythtv-dev list by Pat Pflaum
<url url="mailto:pat@netburp.com" name="mailto:pat@netburp.com"> using fvwm:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cat > .xinitrc
fvwm &
mythfrontend
^D
$ cat > .fvwmrc
Style myth* NoTitle, NoHandles, Sticky, WindowListSkip, SloppyFocus, GrabFocus, BorderWidth 0
^D
$
</verb></tscreen>
The following also works with blackbox:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cat > .xinitrc
xset -dpms s off &
irxevent &
mythfrontend &
blackbox
</verb></tscreen>
Make sure that your <tt>.blackboxrc</tt> file has:
<tscreen><verb>
session.screen0.focusNewWindows: True
session.screen0.focusModel: SloppyFocus
</verb></tscreen> in it.
<label id="mythbackend_autostart">
<sect1>Automatically starting mythbackend at system boot time
<sect2>Red Hat And Mandriva
<p>Here's a method for automatically starting mythbackend submitted by Mike
Thomson (<url url="mailto:linux@m-thomson.net" name="mailto:linux@m-thomson.net">) and Stu Tomlinson (<url
url="mailto:stu@nosnilmot.com" name="mailto:stu@nosnilmot.com">).
Copy the files from the MythTV <tt>contrib</tt> directory or from Mike's web
site (<url url="http://m-thomson.net/mythtv/"
name="http://m-thomson.net/mythtv/">) as follows:
<tt>etc.rc.d.init.mythbackend</tt> should be made executable and copied to
<tt>/etc/rc.d/init.d/</tt>:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd contrib
$ su
# chmod a+x etc.rc.d.init.d.mythbackend
# cp etc.rc.d.init.d.mythbackend /etc/rc.d/init.d/mythbackend
</verb></tscreen>
<tt>etc.sysconfig.mythbackend</tt> should be copied to
<tt>/etc/sysconfig/</tt>:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd contrib
$ su
# cp etc.sysconfig.mythbackend /etc/sysconfig/mythbackend
</verb></tscreen>
Edit <tt>/etc/sysconfig/mythbackend</tt> if you want to change the defaults
(the userid that should start mythbackend, location of the logfile and (if
required) the name and location of the mythbackend binary).
Use <bf>chkconfig</bf> to make sure the script is called when
entering runlevels 3, 4 or 5:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# chkconfig --level 345 mythbackend on
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
<label id="logrotate">
<sect3>Log files
<p>By default, the log file for mythbackend will be written to
<tt>/var/tmp/mythbackend.log</tt>. This has been tested and is known to work
on Mandriva and Red Hat, but many people prefer to place logs under
<tt>/var/log/</tt>.
To do this, create a group called <tt>mythtv</tt> (or anything you prefer)
and add your usual MythTV users to that group. If you changed the user that
starts mythbackend from the default of root you <em>must</em> perform this
step.
Create the directory <tt>/var/log/mythtv</tt> and set its
permissions as follows:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# mkdir /var/log/mythtv
# chown root:mythtv /var/log/mythtv
# chmod 0775 /var/log/mythtv
# exit
$ ls -ld /var/log/mythtv
drwxrwxr-x 2 root mythtv 4096 Apr 28 21:58 /var/log/mythtv/
$
</verb></tscreen>
<!-- From an email by chris at cpr.homelinux.net on 2006-09-01 -->
Create a <tt>mythtv</tt> file in <tt>/etc/logrotate.d</tt>:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# cat > /etc/logrotate.d/mythtv
# Set default values for all log files first...
# Rotate the logs once a week, or more frequently if they
# exceed 10Mb in size (size is checked daily).
weekly
size 10M
# 'copytruncate' is used for logs generated by
# currently-running programs that should not be restarted
# (and can't be signalled to start a new log) after the
# rotation. It duplicates the existing log file and then
# sets the length of the existing file to 0. The only time
# this would break would be if the program writing the log
# was using lseek.
copytruncate
# After rotating the files, leave the most recent rotated
# copy alone but gzip everything else to save space.
compress
delaycompress
# If a log isn't present then don't worry about it.
missingok
# Don't rotate an empty file.
notifempty
# end of the global options
/var/log/mythtv/mythbackend.log /var/log/mythtv/mythfrontend.log {
# Keep logs until they are 2 months old or the number of
# logs reaches 12. If the log files stay small, the age will
# kick in first and you'll only have 8 log files. If they
# get larger than 10Mb then you won't keep all 60 days.
rotate 12
maxage 60
}
# Different options for mythfilldatabase:
/var/log/mythtv/mythfilldatabase.log {
rotate 2
}
^D
#
</verb></tscreen>
<sect3>Mandriva
<p>Mandriva adds one more twist in the form of the <tt>msec</tt> utility,
which runs regularly and (at the default or any higher security level) sets
permissions on many files, including those under <tt>/var/log</tt>.
To tell msec about the MythTV log files and their directory, you need to
edit the <tt>/etc/security/msec/perm.local</tt> file to include the
following:
<tscreen><verb>
# /etc/security/msec/perm.local
# Local overrides to the msec program
#
# Full file path user.group permissions
/var/log/mythtv/ root.mythtv 775
/var/log/mythtv/* root.mythtv 664
</verb></tscreen>
A copy of the above has been included in the contrib/ directory. You may
add it by typing:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd contrib
$ su
# cat etc.security.msec.perm.local >> /etc/security/msec/perm.local
# exit
</verb></tscreen>
Finally run the <tt>msec</tt> tool to check and implement your
changes.
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# msec
# exit
$
</verb></tscreen>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: msec can only <em>reduce</em> the permissions of files, so if
you don't get the results you expect, check that you're not asking
<tt>msec</tt> to add missing permissions to the files or directories you
created.
</caption>
</figure>
<sect2>Gentoo
<p>The portage file for MythTV has scripts that will allow you to run
mythbackend at startup.
To run mythbackend as a daemon which starts at boot time:
<tscreen><verb>
# rc-update add mythbackend default
</verb></tscreen>
To stop mythbackend as a daemon:
<tscreen><verb>
# /etc/init.d/mythbackend stop
</verb></tscreen>
To obtain a list of options:
<tscreen><verb>
# /etc/init.d/mythbackend
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Advanced Backend Configurations <label id="advanced_backend_config">
<p>MythTV is flexible in the way that you define multiple backend tuner
configurations. The only hard-and-fast rule is that the Master backend
<em>must</em> have a capture device defined, but shouldn't imply that the
capture device in the Master backend must be the first capture card defined in the
database.
One example of an advanced configuration is the round-robin scheme. Rather
than defining all of the cards on the master, you could first go into
mythtv-setup on the master to define globals such as the general configuration
and the channel lineup but not the host-specific configuration item like the
capture card. In this example, we will use a 4 tuner configuration, where two
slaves have one card each and the master has two.
<enum>
<item>Add the first capture card on one of the slaves. Complete the
configuration, connecting the input source to the card. This will get
cardid #1 in the database. Exit mythtv-setup.
<item>Configure the first capture card on the master backend. This will get
cardid #2 in the database. Exit mythtv-setup.
<item>Configure the first capture card on the second slave. This will be
cardid #3 in the database. Exit mythtv-setup.
<item>Configure the second capture card on the master backend. This will
get cardid #4 in the database. Exit mythtv-setup.
</enum>
Using this scheme, the master backend will not use both capture cards until
one of the following happens:
<itemize>
<item>There are four recordings scheduled for the same time
<item>Both slaves are unavailable
</itemize>
The scheduler in MythTV checks whether an encoder is available; if a slave
backend isn't running, its encoder isn't available, so the scheduler will
look for the next available encoder. This makes MythTV very flexible; slave
tuners can come and go, and as long as there are enough tuners for what
you'd like to record it doesn't matter which tuner in particular is going to
be used.
Using this round-robin scheme along with a shared storage directory like
NFS and enabling the Master Backend Override setting will allow you to view
content even if the slave backend that recorded a program is not available.
<sect1>Using the transcoder
<!-- Aran Cox, spin667 at mchsi.com -->
<p>MythTV's built-in transcoder re-encodes recordings from one codec to
another. The transcoder has three primary uses; it can transcode MPEG-2
files captured using a hardware encoder (PVR cards, DVB cards, ATSC HD,
etc.) to MPEG-4, it can be used to transcode RTjpeg files (usually only used
on systems that can not real-time encode to MPEG-4 using a framegrabber) to
MPEG-4, and finally it can be used to remove commercials from a MPEG-2 file
while leaving the file in MPEG-2 format.
When MythTV transcodes a file to MPEG-4 or RTjpeg the resulting file format
is NuppelVideo (nuv). NuppelVideo is a container which provides a method of
keeping the audio and video in sync throughout the recording, which is why
it is used instead of the <tt>.avi</tt> format. You may have difficulty
playing <tt>.nuv</tt> files in non-MythTV systems.
<!-- If
you want something more portable you can look at some of the other sections
in this HOWTO. -->
The original file is removed when the transcoding process is complete.
Unless you're sure that you will be satisfied with the result you may want
to enable the <bf>mythtv-setup</bf> option which causes <bf>mythbackend</bf>
to keep the original file after transcoding. This option is on the second
page of the General section in mythtv-setup. Enabling this allows you to
compare the two files and restore the original if you like. Outside of the
initial setup phase it usually isn't necessary to leave this option enabled.
A recording can be transcoded in two ways:
<itemize>
<item>Automatically transcode the file once it has completed
recording.</item>
<item>Manually choosing to transcode a recording, usually after
importing a cutlist or manually marking commercials to be
removed.</item>
</itemize>
The second method can be used on files that have already been transcoded (or
files which were are already in the desired format), so only the frames
immediately following a cut section will be re-encoded, resulting in a
minimal loss of quality when removing commercials with the added benefit of
being extremely quick.
The current transcoding system has a lot flexibility, but there are
a number of steps involved in setting it up. In order to
automatically transcode a given recording you must do the following:
<enum>
<item>Configure recording profile for your capture source and enable
transcoding on one or more profiles.</item>
<item>Configure one or more transcoding profiles.</item>
<item>Create or alter existing scheduled recordings to enable
transcoding for that recording.</item>
</enum>
<sect2>Configuring Recording Profiles to Allow Transcoding
<p>Enter the Utilities/Setup > Setup > TV Settings > Recording Profiles
section in <bf>mythfrontend</bf>. Choose the option that corresponds to
your capture source (ignore the Transcoders for now.) Choose the quality
profile you are interested in using for transcoding. Ensure that "Enable
auto-transcode after recording" is checked. <!-- This option might ought to
be called "allow auto-transcode" as we'll soon see though. You might want to
verify that the other settings for this profile are correct while your here.
-->
<sect2>Configure Transcoding Profiles
<p>Enter the Recording Profiles > Transcoders menu. There are three quality
settings to choose from and a two special Autodetect settings. Later, when
scheduling recordings you'll have to choose one of Autodetect, High, Medium,
and Low Quality transcode settings in addition to the recording profile we
set up above. If you choose the Autodetect transcoding profile for a
recording, MythTV will use the "Autodetect from RTjpeg/MPEG-4" profile for
recordings which are RTjpeg/MPEG-4 files. Otherwise, it will use the
"Autodetect from MPEG-2" profile provided it's an MPEG-2 recording. If you
choose one of the others (High, Medium, Low) it will use the settings in
that profile regardless of the codec of the original recording.
There are a number of options for transcoding but the simplest is to enable
lossless transcoding (the first option) which subsequently removes all other
options. Enabling lossless encoding simply removes commercials (if you've
marked them) and attempts to clean up MPEG-2 streams. Note that with this
option MythTV will not apply any sort of filters and will only attempt to
normalize the stream into something cleaner and less likely to have trouble
with other less forgiving MPEG-2 hardware/software (including players, video
editors, etc.)
If you enable resizing of the recording the next page has the settings for
choosing the final resolution. MythTV will scale the video as appropriate,
not crop it to this resolution.
The final two pages allow configuration of the video and audio codecs.
Although RTjpeg is an option for video codec there is no reason to transcode
<em>to</em> this format because it will produce larger files than MPEG-4 and
the recording will take <em>more</em> CPU power to play back. The MPEG-4
settings are described in the documentation for the <bf>ffmpeg</bf> project
at <url url="http://ffmpeg.sourceforge.net/ffmpeg-doc.html"
name="http://ffmpeg.sourceforge.net/ffmpeg-doc.html">. It's a matter of
trial and error to discover which settings achieve a good compromise between
size and quality.
If you wish to return to the default settings, they are Bitrate: 2200-2500,
MaxQ: 2, MinQ: 15, MaxQDiff: 3, and "Scale bitrate for frame size" is
enabled. The other options are unchecked. <!-- If you're getting weird
results from MPEG-4 transcoding try setting as above and go from there. -->
<sect2>Create/Alter Scheduled Recordings to Enable Transcoding
<p>Transcoding is actually enabled on a per-recording basis. Two things
must be true before any given recording will be auto-transcoded, however.
The first is that the recording must have been made with a recording profile
that has auto-transcode enabled. Under "Storage Options" for the recording
you must set the "Record using the "X" profile" to the profile you
configured in the first step. In addition, under the "Post Recording
Options" section of the recording you must also set "Transcode new
recordings." This is also where you specify the Transcoding profile to use
(Auto, High, Medium, Low.)
It may not be obvious from above but the flexibility of this system is
primarily to make it possible to auto-transcode a show recorded via one
source (ie: pcHDTV 3000), and not transcode that same show if it's recorded
on another kind of card (ie: PVR-250.) There are other uses however. You
could have a PVR-250 and a V4L card. You may want to transcode the MPEG-2
from the PVR-250 but there is no need to transcode the recordings made with
the V4L card, as it's already likely to be MPEG-4.
As an example, you could configure the Default profile for "Hardware DVB
Encoders" (the profile group used for DVB cards, including ATSC cards like
the pcHDTV 3000) to "Enable auto-transcoding". In the Default profile for
MPEG-2 Encoders (PVR cards) you'd leave "Enable auto-transcoding" unchecked.
For programs that are available on both kinds of cards you'd set the
recording profile to Default and enable auto-transcoding in the record
settings. Then you pick your transcoding profile. The result is that when
a program is recorded on your DVB card, it will get transcoded. When it
plays on a channel available via your PVR card, it won't be.
<sect2>Manual Transcoding
<p>Manually transcoding is activated while watching a show by hitting 'x',
from the OSD menu by choosing the Transcode option, or by choosing Job
Options/Transcode from the info menu from the Watch or Delete
Recordings screens.
The transcoding profile used for manual transcoding is whatever was set when
the recording was originally configured, even if you didn't enable
auto-transcoding. The only way to change what transcoding profile will be
used is to alter the transcoder column in the recorded table in the
database. The transcoder column contains a number which corresponds with
the id column in the recordingprofiles table. You can find out the id
number for each profile in the transcoder group with an SQL command like:
<tscreen><verb>
mysql> select r.* from recordingprofiles r,profilegroups p where p.name='Transcoders' and p.id=r.profilegroup;
+----+----------------+------------+------------+--------------+
| id | name | videocodec | audiocodec | profilegroup |
+----+----------------+------------+------------+--------------+
| 21 | RTjpeg/MPEG4 | MPEG-4 | MP3 | 6 |
| 22 | MPEG2 | MPEG-4 | MP3 | 6 |
| 27 | High Quality | MPEG-4 | MP3 | 6 |
| 28 | Medium Quality | MPEG-4 | MP3 | 6 |
| 29 | Low Quality | MPEG-4 | MP3 | 6 |
+----+----------------+------------+------------+--------------+
5 rows in set (0.01 sec)
mysql>
</verb></tscreen>
Armed with the knowledge of what the profile ID's are you can also choose to
run mythtranscode from the command line and explicitly specify the transcoder
profile. Run <tt>mythtranscode --help</tt> for usage information.
<sect1>Changing your hostname
<!-- Edited instructions from a post by Alan Snyder ax763 at yahoo.com -->
<p>If you need to change the name of the computers used with MythTV you'll
need to perform a sequence of steps. There are a number of pieces of
information that MythTV keeps track of which are tied to the hostname of the
box, so changing the hostname involves altering the name in the
operating system and in the MySQL database. In the examples below, the old
name of the system was "frontend1" and we're going to change it to
"kidsroom".
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: Changing the hostname using direct SQL update commands will
break things. You <em>MUST</em> use this indirect method.
</caption>
</figure>
1. Stop all backends. If you run <bf>mythbackend</bf> from a terminal
session, press control-c. If your backends are started with an init
script, you would do something like the following:
<tscreen><verb>
$ su
# /etc/init.d/mythbackend stop
</verb></tscreen>
2. Change the hostname.
For Red Hat and derived distributions, edit the
<tt>/etc/sysconfig/network</tt> file. Look for
<tt>HOSTNAME=frontend1</tt> and change this to
<tt>HOSTNAME=kidsroom</tt> or whatever you'll be using. For other
distributions, refer to the documentation, such as the
<verb>hostname(1)</verb> man page.
<p>
To alter the
hostname in the current session, run:
<tscreen><verb>
# hostname kidsroom
</verb></tscreen>
3. Dump the database.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysqldump -u mythtv -pmythtv mythconverg -c > mythtv_backup.sql
</verb></tscreen>
4. Rename the host in the database. First, ensure that the new hostname
you'll be using isn't already in the database.
<tscreen><verb>
$ grep kidsroom mythtv_backup.sql
</verb></tscreen>
Now we're actually going to change the name. The following should all be
typed on the same line:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cat mythtv_backup.sql | sed s/\'frontend1\'/\'kidsroom\'/g >> mythtv_restore.sql
</verb></tscreen>
If you don't feel comfortable using <bf>sed</bf>, you can open the
<tt>mythtv_backup.sql</tt> file in a text editor and perform a global search
and replace. When saving the file, make sure you use the new name,
<tt>mythtv_restore.sql</tt> or the rest of the steps below will fail.
5. Drop and recreate the database.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u root
mysql>drop database mythconverg;
mysql>create database mythconverg;
mysql>exit
</verb></tscreen>
6. Restore the database using your edited version.
<tscreen><verb>
$ mysql -u mythtv -pmythtv mythconverg < mythtv_restore.sql
</verb></tscreen>
If you are running slave backends or frontends, don't forget to re-enable
access as detailed in <ref id="modify_perm_mysql" name="Modifying access to
the MySQL database for multiple systems">.
7. Start the backends. If you use init scripts, do the following, otherwise
start them from terminal consoles.
<tscreen><verb>
# /etc/init.d/mythbackend start
</verb></tscreen>
8. Quit and restart all frontends. Delete the <tt>mythtv_backup.sql</tt>
and <tt>mythtv_restore.sql</tt> files.
<sect1>Can I run MythTV on my TiVo?
<sect1>Can I run MythTV on my ReplayTV?
<p>No.
While it is true that the TiVo runs the Linux kernel, and TiVo has released
their changes to the kernel under the GPL, the TiVo is <em>not</em> a
general-purpose computer, and there is no programming information available
for the custom hardware contained within a TiVo. TiVo is under no
obligation to release the source code to their <em>application</em>.
The ReplayTV runs VxWorks, a Real Time Operating System from Wind River
Systems.
<sect1>Can a wireless connection be used between the frontend and the backend?
<p>Yes, assuming that your wireless connection has sufficient bandwidth to
maintain the datarate between the frontend and the backend. 802.11b should
be sufficient if the encoded bitrate of the content is less than the
datarate of your wireless connection, which in the case of 802.11b would be
approximately 4 Mbps. (The advertised rate of 11Mbps gives an actual
throughput of 4 Mbps.) 802.11a and 802.11g, if operating in their high-speed
modes, or proprietary 802.11b "Turbo" schemes should be adequate. Multiple
wireless frontends, poor signal strength or other factors can severely
impact the viewing experience on the frontend.
<sect1>How can I burn shows that I have recorded to a DVD?
<p>Use the mytharchive plugin.
<sect1>Using the DBoxII within MythTV
<p>The configuration of the DBoxII for use within MythTV is tricky (as of
May 16 2005), that's why it's covered here. Your DBoxII has to be running
linux and the Neutrino GUI instead of the stock BetaNova firmware. For
further information, please refer to <url url="http://www.tuxbox.org"
name="http://www.tuxbox.org">. Additionally, you need to enable the SPTS
mode in Neutrino.
<itemize>
<item>Add a new "Capture Card" in the setup. The "Card type" is "DBOX2 Input",
the other values have to be adjusted according to your setup.
The default values, except for the "DBOX2 host ip", should work fine.
<item>Define a new video source. It doesn't need to be configured,
you just need to define it. MythTV grabs the EPG from the DBoxII.
<item>Connect the DBoxII to the newly defined input source in "input connections".
<item>Since channel scanning is not implemented yet, you need to define channels
in the "Channel Editor". Make sure that you use the same value for
"Channel Name" as on the DBoxII. You can get a list of available
channels from the web interface of Neutrino at http://ip-of-your-box:80/.
Associate the channel with your new video source and repeat when needed.
</itemize>
You may leave the Setup now and proceed as usual.
<sect1>What do the icons on the Watch Recordings screen mean?
<p>Press "1" or F1 to get a popup.
<sect1>What do the letters mean when I change channels?
<p>These letters let you know what's going on with the backend as it tries
to tune to a channel.
Lower case = seen
Upper Case = seen & good
<itemize>
<item>l/L = Lock : This could be seen by PVR-250/BTTV users
<item>a/A = PAT : Any recording transmitted in MPEG
<item>m/M = PMT : Any recording transmitted in MPEG
<item>g/G = MGT : ATSC only
<item>v/V = VCT : ATSC only
<item>n/N = NIT : DVB only
<item>s/S = SDT : DVB only
</itemize>
<sect1>What is the difference between the various Hauppauge PVR models?
<p>This is covered in the hardware section, and extensively covered on the
Hauppauge website. (<url
url="http://www.hauppauge.com/pages/compare_pvr.html"
name="http://www.hauppauge.com/pages/compare_pvr.html">) Please check the
Hauppauge website for the most accurate information.
A PVR-150 comes in a number of versions:
<itemize>
<item>The PVR-150 (Model 1045) is the retail kit. It comes with a remote
control and an IR Blaster. It does not have a radio tuner.
<item>The PVR-150 MCE (Model 1042) will usually come in a plain white box and is
sold as an OEM device. It does not come with a remote control, since it's
usually used as the second, third, etc capture device.
<item>The PVR-150 MCE Kit (Model 1062) does not have a radio tuner and
comes with a Microsoft Media Center remote control instead of Hauppauge's.
<item>The PVR-150 low profile (Model 1086) is a low-profile card. It has a
radio tuner and is approximately half the height of a standard card.
However, it comes with a low-profile PCI bracket, so it is not suitable for
use in a standard PCI slot without removing the bracket, which may not be
worth the trouble.
</itemize>
A PVR-250 (Model 980) is a retail kit which comes with an IR receiver and a
remote control.
The PVR-250 MCE (Model 975) contains a FM radio tuner. The PVR-250 MCE does
not contain a IR receiver or a remote.
The PVR-250 Rev 1 contained an MPEG-2 decoder. However, this function was
not connected to any output jacks, and there doesn't appear to be any way to
pull decoded video from the card, so it's a fairly useless feature.
The PVR-350 (model 990) has the features of the PVR-250 as well as being
able to decode MPEG-2. The encode and decode functions may be used
simultaneously. The MPEG-2 decoder function gives superior video quality
compared to what you'll find on a standard video card. However, the decoder
function is only available once Linux has started, so you will not see any
boot-time messages. Also, the card is not capable of resolutions higher
than 720x480, so it cannot be used with HDTV. Make a conscious decision
(and ask for advice on the mailing list) that you want to tradeoff potential
HDTV use in the future compared to video quality.
The X-driver for the PVR-350 support playback using Xv efficiently but does
not support any other 2D or 3D acceleration. For some application this may
place a large load on the host CPU, some will run without any problem and
others (mplayer, xine, xmame etc.) should be configured to utilize the Xv
interface.
Note that for the PVR-350 there are some <ref id="PVR-350" name="considerations">
regarding the way audio is handled.
The PVR-500 is a dual-encoder version of the PVR-150 card, so you can
simultaneously record two different programs at the same time, because there
are two encoder chips on the PCI card. Hauppuage has also installed an
onboard splitter, so you can use one COAX to feed both tuners. Current
versions of the PVR-500 should come with an adapter to allow you to connect
a second S-Video or composite input, but this will take up a second PCI
slot. Early adopters may need to purchase this item separately.
<sect1>Changing channels on an external Set Top Box
<p>If you need to use an external Set Top Box (STB), such as for satellite
TV or for digital cable you will need some way for MythTV to tell the STB to
switch to a new channel. There are several methods:
<enum>
<item>Use an IR blaster. An IR blaster is an infrared transmitter connected
to your computer. When MythTV needs to change channels it will send IR
pulses, thereby emulating a remote control.
<item>Use a direct serial connection. Some STB's have a serial port on the
back, although it may not look like a serial port. It may look like a phone
jack, or a strange VGA connector. It may be labeled "Low Speed Data". A
direct serial connection is more reliable than an IR blaster. Not all STB's
that have a Low Speed Data port have it enabled; you may need to convince
your service provider to turn it on. Stating that you have a Tivo may help;
the Tivo has a direct-connect capability.
<item>Use a firewire connection. There is a <tt>6200ch.c</tt> in the MythTV
contrib directory which may work for you.
</enum>
<sect1>Configuring one machine to flag all commercials
<p>Commercial flagging can be CPU intensive. By default, the backend that
created a recording is the one which will flag commercials. You may wish to
use a different machine to run commercial flagging.
On the slower machine:
Start the mythtv-setup program. Advance through the pages until you get to
the Job Queue page. Turn off the setting that says "Allow Commercial
Detection jobs", thereby preventing any commercial flagging jobs from
running on this machine.
Next, make sure that "Run Jobs only on original recording host" is turned
OFF so that new jobs are allowed to run anywhere.
Restart <bf>mythbackend</bf> since it only reads this setting when it starts
up.
On the faster machine:
Start the <bf>mythtv-setup</bf> program. Advance through the pages until
you get to the Job Queue page. Ensure that "Allow Commercial Detection
jobs" is turned ON for this machine.
Run <bf>mythjobqueue</bf>. <bf>mythjobqueue</bf> will examine the JobQueue
and run any jobs it finds. <bf>mythjobqueue</bf> should be left running so
that it will pick up any new commercial flagging jobs that are added to the
queue, otherwise new jobs will be added to the queue and your programs won't
be flagged until you run manually run <bf>mythjobqueue</bf>.
Using this technique it's possible to add commercial flagging machines as
needed, even on systems that aren't running a backend. It's also possible
to run the commercial flagger in a virtual machine environment such as
VMWare.
<sect>Example Configurations.
<sect1>Logical Volume Manager (LVM) <label id="LVM">
<!-- Contributed by Martin Smith martin at spamcop.net -->
<!-- XXXXX REMOVE ME FOR 0.22 -->
<p>LVM greatly increases the flexibility you have in managing your storage
than traditional physical partitions. This section will provide some brief
notes on how to use LVM to create storage space for your video files and how
to add additional disk space in the future. There's lots more that can be
done with LVM, so check the LVM HOWTO <url
url="http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/"
name="http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/"> document for details.
<p><figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
<bf>NOTE</bf>: If you are running MythTV 0.21 and you are using LVM to
create one large filesystem to store your recordings, it's no longer
recommended that you go the LVM route. The preferred solution is to use <ref
id="storagegroups" name="Storage Groups">. They're more flexible and less
likely to lose all of your recordings if you have a drive failure.
</caption>
</figure>
If you don't understand how to partition a drive, or how to change the
partition type you should stop and look at documentation on how to perform
these steps.
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption>
<bf>BIG FAT WARNING</bf>: Using an incorrect parameter can make your files
inaccessible, prevent your computer from booting, etc. Be careful!
</caption>
</figure>
Make sure your kernel configuration includes LVM support or that it's
available as a module. Today, most vendors include this by default. You'll
also want to ensure that you have a copy of the LVM utilities; check your
distribution, or get the latest versions from <url
url="http://www.sistina.com/products_lvm.htm"
name="http://www.sistina.com/products_lvm.htm"> and build them manually.
Check that the <bf>vgscan</bf> program is being run at some point during
your boot sequence - most distributions do this by default. Look for a
message during boot up that looks like this: <tt>vgscan -- reading all
physical volumes (this may take a while...)</tt> If you don't see any
messages during boot, you may need to install a LVM init script or confirm
that you have all of the LVM packages installed from your distribution.
LVM uses a few concepts you should be familiar with before starting.
<itemize>
<item>PV (Physical Volume). The actual partition on the hard drive.
<item>VG (Volume Group). The aggregation of all the PVs make a VG.
<item>LV (Logical Volume). Subdivision of the pool of space available in
the VG into individual chunks, like /usr, /var/video, etc.
</itemize>
The following example assumes that you want to create a LVM partition from a
chunk of space in /dev/hda5, using a reiserfs filesystem and mounted on
/var/video. You later decide to extend this filesystem by adding a new disk:
/dev/hdb.
You need to create at least one LVM partition for a physical volume. Use
<bf>fdisk</bf> or your favorite partition editor to set the type to LVM
(0x8e). If you're using an entire disk, create one big partition rather than
using the device itself. e.g. use /dev/hdb1 not /dev/hdb.
In the following example, you have a 15GB disk. The first 6GB are set as
your boot partition. <tt>/dev/hda2</tt> was added as an extended partition,
and within that partition you created the <tt>/dev/hda5</tt> linux (ext2)
partition.
<tscreen><verb>
# fdisk /dev/hda
The number of cylinders for this disk is set to 1823.
There is nothing wrong with that, but this is larger than 1024,
and could in certain setups cause problems with:
1) software that runs at boot time (e.g., old versions of LILO)
2) booting and partitioning software from other OSs
(e.g., DOS FDISK, OS/2 FDISK)
Command (m for help): p
Disk /dev/hda: 15.0 GB, 15000330240 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 1823 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/hda1 * 1 764 6136798+ 83 Linux
/dev/hda2 765 1823 8506417+ 5 Extended
/dev/hda5 765 1823 8506417 83 Linux
Command (m for help): t
Partition number (1-6): 5
Hex code (type L to list codes): 8e
Command (m for help): p
Disk /dev/hda: 15.0 GB, 15000330240 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 1823 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/hda1 * 1 764 6136798+ 83 Linux
/dev/hda2 765 1823 8506417+ 5 Extended
/dev/hda5 765 1823 8506417 8e Linux LVM
Command (m for help): w
#
</verb></tscreen>
Create the LVM physical volume from the partitions (repeat if you have
multiple partitions to use):
<tscreen><verb>
# pvcreate /dev/hda5
</verb></tscreen>
Create a LVM volume group out of this physical volume called "VGforMyth" that is
allocated in chunks that are a multiple of 64MB
<tscreen><verb>
# vgcreate VGforMyth -s 64m /dev/hda5
</verb></tscreen>
Create a logical volume of 5GB called "video" and then create the reiserfs
filesystem and mount it:
<tscreen><verb>
# lvcreate --name video --size 5G VGforMyth
# mkreiserfs /dev/VGforMyth/video
# mount /dev/VGforMyth/video /var/video
</verb></tscreen>
Now create a 3GB volume for mythmusic files if you like:
<tscreen><verb>
# lvcreate --name music --size 3G VGforMyth
# mkreiserfs /dev/VGforMyth/music
# mount /dev/VGforMyth/music /var/music
</verb></tscreen>
Display the volume group status:
<tt># vgdisplay -v</tt>
Now, lets suppose you want to add a 60GB hard disk to the system as hdb and
allocate 50GB of it to video storage.
First, create a single partition /dev/hdb1 covering the whole disk and make
it type 0x8e using your partition editor.
<tt># fdisk /dev/hdb</tt>
.... create partition, set type, save and reboot if it says you have to
Create the new LVM physical volume:
<tt># pvcreate /dev/hdb1</tt>
Add the new physical volume to the volume group:
<tt># vgextend VGforMyth /dev/hdb1</tt>
<figure loc="here">
<eps file="stop.eps" height="1cm">
<img src="stop.png">
<caption><bf>NOTE</bf>: You may get errors at this point stating that there are no
physical volumes available for adding to the LV, even though you know for a
fact that there are. You may need to specify the physical volume in the
<tt>/dev/ide/host/bus/target/lun/etc</tt> format.
</caption>
</figure>
Once you've completed one of the following two procedures, use <bf>df</bf>
to check that you've got more space.
Make the logical volume used for video bigger:
<tt># lvextend --size +50G /dev/VGforMyth/video</tt>
<sect2>ReiserFS
<p>Unmount, resize and remount the filesystem. Technically, you don't need to
unmount and remount the ReiserFS.
<tscreen><verb>
# umount /var/video
# resize_reiserfs /dev/VGforMyth/video
# mount /dev/VGforMyth/video /var/video
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>ext2 or ext3
<p>LVM comes with a program called <bf>resize2fs</bf>.
Unmount, resize and remount the filesystem. The filesystem <em>must</em> be
unmounted during this procedure.
<tscreen><verb>
# umount /var/video
# resize2fs --size +50G /dev/VGforMyth/video
# mount /dev/VGforMyth/video /var/video
</verb></tscreen>
<sect2>xfs
<p>XFS does not need to be unmounted to extend the size:
<tscreen><verb>
# xfs_growfs /var/video
</verb></tscreen>
<sect1>Advanced Partition Formatting <label
id="advancedpartitionformatting">
<p>The partitions that your distribution sets up for you may not be
optimized for large files. Using LVM in conjunction with the following
techniques can be quite useful.
Unlike a typical filesystem, a MythTV video partition is usually a very
large filesystem filled with a fairly small number of large files.
Filesystem I/O is usually not an issue, even in multi-tuner and/or
multi-frontend setups.
There is however, one aspect of filesystem performance that can have a
bearing on the performance of MythTV. In Linux, deleting a file will
utilize I/O bandwidth until the deletion has been completed. If deleting
the file takes long enough, the video capture buffer may overrun, thereby
resulting in dropped frames. Some filesystems are faster at deleting files
than others and, for multi-gigabyte MythTV video files, these differences
can be significant.
Fortunately, there are published tests (<url
url="http://aurora.zemris.fer.hr/filesystems/big.html"
name="http://aurora.zemris.fer.hr/filesystems/big.html">) that provide
insight into filesystem performance under conditions relevant to MythTV
usage. In addition, some limited testing (archived at <url
url="http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/users/52672"
name="http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/mythtv/users/52672">)
with very large files (10 gigabytes) was reported in the MythTV Users
mailing list.
<sect2>Ext2
<p>Ext2 was the defacto standard Linux filesystem for many years. It is
stable, provides good I/O performance and can quickly delete large files.
The primary disadvantage of Ext2 is that it is not a journaling filesystem,
so a file system consistency check (fsck, which is normally only performed
after a system crash) can take many hours on a filesystem the size of a
typical MythTV partition.
<sect2>Ext3
<p>Ext3 is Ext2 with a journal, so your biggest gain is that in case of a
crash and reboot you won't have to wait very long for your partition to be
remounted.
There are options available when formatting an Ext3 partition, as in:
<tscreen><verb>
# mkfs.ext3 -T largefile4 /dev/hdb1
</verb></tscreen>
This example assumes that <tt>/dev/hdb1</tt> has already been created using
<bf>fdisk</bf>. If you're using LVM, <tt>/dev/hdb1</tt> may be something like
<tt>/dev/VGforMyth/video</tt>.
The "-T largefile4" option creates one inode per 4 megabytes, which can
provide a few percent more storage space. However, tests indicate that
using the "-T largefile4" option can drastically increase the amount of time
required to delete a large file and thus it should only be used with encoder
settings that produce small video files (YMMV).
You can check on your filesystem using the <bf>dumpe2fs</bf> program. See
the man page for details.
<sect2>ReiserFS
<p>The Reiser filesystem is another journaling filesystem commonly
distributed with Linux. It is known to be an extremely efficient filesystem
and it especially excels at managing partitions containing a large number of
small files. However, tests indicate it is not the fastest at deleting very
large files. For that reason, it may not be the best choice when using
encoder bitrates that produce very large files.
<sect2>JFS
<p>JFS (Journaling File System) is a journaling filesystem originally
developed by IBM for AIX which was later released as open source. While not
as common as Ext3 or ReiserFS, it is distributed with RedHat 9 (RH9), Fedora
Core and Mandriva as well as other distros. According to tests, JFS is the
file deletion speed king, deleting virtually any file in under one second,
even files as large as 10 gigabytes.
<sect2>XFS
<p>XFS is a journaling file system originally developed by SGI for Irix, and
later released as open source. While not a part of the default RedHat Linux
9 or Fedora Core installation (although it is a part of Mandriva and Fedora
Core 2+), it can be easily installed via ATrpms. XFS provides deletion
speeds for large files only slightly slower than JFS. According to the test
results shown at (<url
url="http://aurora.zemris.fer.hr/filesystems/big.html"
name="http://aurora.zemris.fer.hr/filesystems/big.html">), XFS provide
higher I/O rates than JFS, albeit at a higher CPU loading. This may cause
issues if you do not have the spare CPU capacity to handle XFS, potentially
leading to dropped frames.
<label id="migratingtoSD">
<!-- Mostly from a post by Bruce Markey -->
<sect1>Migrating from DataDirect Labs to Schedules Direct
<p>MythTV v0.20.2 or later is required to natively support Schedules Direct.
Code has been included to make the transition as simple as possible.
<bf>You do not need to delete your existing video sources or add new ones!</bf>
The following steps should work for most users:
<itemize>
<item>Create a Schedules Direct account and use the same information as your
existing lineups at Zap2It Labs. Do not add or delete channels at this
time.
<item>Shut down any running <bf>mythfrontend</bf> and <bf>mythbackend</bf> programs.
<item>Perform a backup of your existing database. See <ref id="backupdb"
name="Saving or restoring the database"> for instructions.
<item>Run <bf>mythtv-setup</bf> -> Video Sources. Change the grabber to
Schedules Direct, update the username and password fields with the account
information you created at Schedules Direct and select "Retrieve Lineups".
Click Finish.
<item>Exit <bf>mythtv-setup</bf> and run <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf>. Check
if there were any errors.
<item>Restart your <bf>mythbackend</bf> and <bf>mythfrontend</bf> programs.
</itemize>
<sect1>Caching support for Schedules Direct
<p>MythTV 0.20.2 or later supports caching of downloaded information from
Schedules Direct, so devices that share a common source do not require
multiple downloads.
Before beginning, perform a backup of your existing database. See <ref
id="backupdb" name="Saving or restoring the database"> for instructions.
In the following scenario, assume that you have the following:
<enum>
<item>A PVR-150 MPEG-2 encoder card connected directly to a CATV source.
<item>A PVR-250 MPEG-2 encoder card connected via S-Video to a CATV Set Top Box.
</enum>
What we are going to do is to create a single lineup at Schedules Direct and
then create two Video Sources which use the same login information but have
different channels associated with them.
On your Schedules Direct account, create a lineup that has all of the
channels that you can receive. Because we have a Set Top Box (STB), choose
a Digital lineup. Yes, this means that you may have 900 channels in this
lineup, but that's OK.
Use the Schedules Direct channel editor and unselect any channels that you
can't tune without the STB. This will usually be channels higher than 125,
but check your CATV provider lineup if you're not sure. Once you've
deselected them (using a click on the first channel you can't receive and
then a shift-click on the last channel you can't receive will deselect all
the channels in between those two.) click the Save Changes button at the
bottom of the screen.
In <bf>mythtv-setup</bf>, create a Video Source with an appropriate name.
"SD-Analog Only" will be used in this example. Click "Retrieve Lineups"
and select the digital lineup you just created at Schedules Direct.
Click "Finish" to return to the Video sources selector and then press the
ESC key to go back to the main screen.
Now choose Input Connections. Select the PVR-150 which is connected
directly to the CATV. Set the Video Source to "SD-Analog Only" and click
"Fetch channels from listings source".
Set the start channel to an appropriate value.
<bf>NOTE</bf>: There is a bug where the "Fetch" command may not work; you
can tell that the Fetch did not retrieve any channels in one of two ways: in
the text-mode console, you will see a connection to Schedules Direct, but it
doesn't appear to retrieve any channel information:
<tscreen><verb>
2007-08-25 15:03:05.526 New DB DataDirect connection
2007-08-25 15:03:05.526 Connected to database 'mythconverg' at host: localhost
2007-08-25 15:03:05.536 DataDirect: Your subscription expires on 11/23/2007 01:12:10 PM
2007-08-25 15:03:05.707 New DB connection, total: 3
2007-08-25 15:03:05.707 Connected to database 'mythconverg' at host: localhost
2007-08-25 15:03:05.708 sourceid 2 has lineup type: CableDigital
2007-08-25 15:03:06.623 Data fetching complete.
2007-08-25 15:03:06.624 DataDirect: Deleting temporary files
</verb></tscreen>
or, the "Please add channels to this source" message in the "Starting
channel" field stays on the screen.
If either of these happens, save the information on this screen by clicking
the "Finish" button. Exit back to the Input connections screen by pressing
ESC, then select this Input Connection again. This time the Fetch will work
and the "Please add channels to this source" message will disappear.
If you look at the text-mode console, you'll see this if the channel
retrieval is working:
<tscreen><verb>
2007-08-25 15:04:32.437 New DB DataDirect connection
2007-08-25 15:04:32.437 Connected to database 'mythconverg' at host: localhost
2007-08-25 15:04:32.447 DataDirect: Your subscription expires on 11/23/2007 01:12:10 PM
2007-08-25 15:04:32.622 New DB connection, total: 3
2007-08-25 15:04:32.622 Connected to database 'mythconverg' at host: localhost
2007-08-25 15:04:32.623 sourceid 2 has lineup type: CableDigital
2007-08-25 15:04:33.418 DataDirect: Adding channel 41 'AMC' (AMC).
2007-08-25 15:04:33.422 DataDirect: Adding channel 32 'A & E Network' (AETV).
2007-08-25 15:04:33.425 DataDirect: Adding channel 66 'Black Entertainment Television' (BET).
2007-08-25 15:04:33.427 DataDirect: Adding channel 180 'Bravo' (BRAVO).
2007-08-25 15:04:33.430 DataDirect: Adding channel 51 'ABC Family' (FAM).
2007-08-25 15:04:33.432 DataDirect: Adding channel 146 'Country Music Television' (CMTV).
2007-08-25 15:04:33.435 DataDirect: Adding channel 39 'CNBC' (CNBC).
2007-08-25 15:04:33.437 DataDirect: Adding channel 36 'Cable News Network' (CNN).
2007-08-25 15:04:33.440 DataDirect: Adding channel 35 'CNN Headline News' (CNNH).
</verb></tscreen>
Repeat the Input Connection configuration for any other capture devices that
are connected directly to the CATV system. You do not need to click Fetch
once you've done one successful download of the channel information - the
Starting channel should be automatically populated.
Go back to Schedules Direct and re-enable the channels that you had
previously deselected, then click Save Changes.
Create a new Video Source, here called "SD-All Digital Channels". Perform
the same "Retrieve Listings" you did before.
Go back to the Input Connections screen, select the PVR-250 which is
connected to the STB, assign the "SD-All Digital Channels" video source and
perform a retrieve channels. This will pull down the complete channel
listing, but only for <em>this</em> device.
When <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> runs, it will cache the "big" download which
is appropriate for the STB, and then copy the information to the channels
that can only be accessed without the STB. But by default
<bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> is going to notice that the "Analog only" video
source is missing the channels that are in the Digital lineup you created at
Schedules Direct, so we need to override the addition of new channels.
When you run <bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> to populate your database, you'll
need to run it like this:
<tscreen><verb>
$ mythfilldatabase --remove-new-channels
</verb></tscreen>
You will also need to modify how the <bf>mythbackend</bf> calls
<bf>mythfilldatabase</bf> when it performs its automatic listings update.
In <bf>mythfrontend</bf>, select "Setup" -> "General".
Continue press ENTER until you reach the Mythfilldatabase configuration
screen. In the "mythfilldatabase Arguments" field, type
--remove-new-channels
then press the TAB key until you reach Finish, then press ENTER to save.
You can then press ESC until you return to the main screen.
</article>
<!-- Revision History
v0.21.00, 2008-03-10. Initial version for 0.21. Update link to ATSC
devices. Add note that ivtv driver is in kernel. Add note that xbox
mini-distribution site appears dead. Update information on HVR-1600.
Update minimum MySQL version.
v0.21.01, 2008-06-03. Add mythbuntu.
v0.21.02, 2008-06-04. Update minimyth link.
-->
<!--
To create documentation, run "make" in the docs/ subdirectory
-->
<!-- Basic Style Guide for the HOWTO.
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Program names are specified with <bf>
Use full close tags, such as </tt> rather than the "/>" shortcut.
For a URL link, the url= and name= should be the same. This ensures that
users who are reading the text version of the document will see what the URL
is.
For "Notes", the format is <bf>NOTE</bf>: text here.
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Don't make a section "a" if there's no section "b". Same for numbers; no
number 1 if there's no number 2, etc.
Itemized and enumerated items should be full sentences, and should end with
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All major sections end with a period; subsections don't.
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-->
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