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Please share your experience here.
A Wiki is the natural place for reference articles from the community. Useful articles include:
- Use case descriptions, with explanatory comments and complete commands. Attaching shell scripts would be nice.
- Technical details about standards which could be useful for others to implement plugins or enhance TSDuck.
- Experience reports with DVB tuners or Dektec devices with TSDuck.
- Local tuning information (satellite, terrestrial) and links to sites which provide them.
- Any other useful information for TSDuck users.
In the absence of a discussion forum, this Wiki can also be used to ask questions or discuss topics. This is far from ideal but the TSDuck community is probably not large enough to deserve a dedicated discussion forum on some other site.
Please keep those discussion threads organised and well formatted. Specifically, use GitHub markdown to properly format commands and textual output from commands; the default proportional fonts are really a pain to read when analysing long command output.
Let's agree on a formatting convention. Each time you want to add a comment to a discussion thread, edit the corresponding Wiki page (click on Edit on the upper-right corner) and add your contribution at end of the text. Please an horizontal rule to separate your contribution from the rest of the article, include your GitHub '@
' reference and the date.
Example markdown template:
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@lelegard 2017-11-20
This is my comment.
Giving the following result:
@lelegard 2017-11-20
This is my comment.
@lelegard 2019-11-14
Can you teach us how to use the $tsp tool to abstract the ES payload of a PID, how to output the time-stamps.
Likewise, it will be great to have a tutorial / mixing case in how to do the inverse, create a PID based on an ES with a particular timestamp from sources such as RTP.h264 or V4L sources or STDIN
I saw the example in how to create and inject a PID based on a FFmpeg toolchain, however doing this directly from TSDuck sounds like a better way (No offense FFmpeg)