openbsd-ports/x11/ogle/pkg/DESCR

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Ogle is a dvd player with support for menus and
subtitles. Currently, it lacks some audio formats
support (PCM and ???), so a few DVDs will work
with sound.
As shipped, ogle cannot descramble DVDs. There are
a few DVDs out there with no scramble protection.
However, ogle will recognize and use an installed
descrambling library.
To run ogle, you need a graphics card well supported
by XFree, including the Xvideo extension in YUV mode,
and a sound card with 48KHz output (ATI card owners
may wish to use the ATI-4.1.0.i386.tgz package)
You can check your display Xvideo capabilities with
xdpyinfo (presence of the Xvideo extension) and
xvinfo (presence of an adapter with correct YUV
capabilities).
A positive test will usually look like:
xvinfo
Number of image formats: 4
...
id: 0x32315659 (YV12)
guid: 59563132-0000-0010-8000-00aa00389b71
...
which is the encoding that ogle is looking for.
Alternately, at the expense of more cpu power,
ogle can also use SystemV shared memory, but the
shared memory requirements exceed GENERIC parameters.
You will need to crank them up. Configure a kernel with
option SHMMAXPGS=4096
and edit param.c to set SHMSEG to 16, then recompile.
The graphical interface add-on ogle-gui currently
does not work on OpenBSD, but the program can be fully
controlled from the keyboard anyways, see oglerc(5).
Overall, ogle needs about 50% cpu for full-framerate decoding
on a PIII700 with an ATI Mach64 Mobility and an ESS
Maestro 2.
If Xvideo YV12 is not available, ogle roughly needs 120% cpu
on the same machine in 24 bits mode, and full screen rescale
is not available. On i386, it's highly recommended to go
to a 16 bits mode, where MMX acceleration code exists (requirements
go down to 70% cpu).
If you can, you may also wish to add several `non-standard'
modes to your XF86Config. The most useful being 720x576.
WWW: ${HOMEPAGE}