As Woodstock said and also, we do not condone piracy.Adrian_Bonz wrote: ↑Wed May 06, 2020 7:05 pmHello,
I've just started today with makemkv.
Can anyone please help me how to extract a file (Remux, UHD, True HD 7.1 Atmos)? I already have about 20Movies and only 2 of them display in my soundbar the Atmos. Already tested with some Atmos demos and its working. The only problem is with the torrent movie files (all are Remux 2160p, True HD 7.1 Atmos).
All the help is needed, thank you soo much.
Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
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Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Cheers
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For UHD enabled drives (AU/NZ/SG + Others) & DIY Single Drive Flasher (WW): https://uhdenableddrives.com
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For UHD enabled drives (AU/NZ/SG + Others) & DIY Single Drive Flasher (WW): https://uhdenableddrives.com
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Try buying the discs! Then use MakeMKV to make your own remux’sAdrian_Bonz wrote:Hello,
I've just started today with makemkv.
Can anyone please help me how to extract a file (Remux, UHD, True HD 7.1 Atmos)? I already have about 20Movies and only 2 of them display in my soundbar the Atmos. Already tested with some Atmos demos and its working. The only problem is with the torrent movie files (all are Remux 2160p, True HD 7.1 Atmos).
All the help is needed, thank you soo much.
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- Posts: 20
- Joined: Fri Mar 27, 2020 10:38 pm
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
YES, as Marty/Woodstock said.............. Buy the media, support the Artists, the Film Makers, the Crew, keep the studios receptive and motivated to creating UHD media in the first place as its the best quality one can get. Streaming will never be at that level. Buy it, then make your MKV.
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Truthfully, my comment was about how MakeMKV wasn't going to be helpful to the process. A torrent download would be missing key things MakeMKV needs to decrypt the data. If it's already decrypted, other tools can be used.
But the piracy aspect does come into play.
But the piracy aspect does come into play.
MakeMKV Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ about BETA and PERMANENT keys.
How to aid in finding the answer to your problem: Activating Debug Logging
FAQ about BETA and PERMANENT keys.
How to aid in finding the answer to your problem: Activating Debug Logging
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
This issue has been bothering me more than it should over the last few months, so I ended up writing my own tool because still no demuxer (including MakeMKV 1.15.1) handles TrueHD flawlessly.
https://github.com/domyd/mlp
The core issue was never Atmos or high bitrate. It is simply caused by demuxers cutting up the TrueHD track inappropriately. Disney/Pixar tracks are just much more susceptible due to their sheer number of segments. MakeMKV 1.15.1 fixed those egregiously loud pops and snaps, but they're still there if you listen closely. Take Monsters University, US UHD disc, playlist 00800, the audio between 2m29s and 2m30s. You can still hear a pop at normal listening volume, but it's quiet enough where you won't notice unless you're actively listening for it. I've written up my findings here in more detail, including a picture of said section of audio.
So I wrote a demuxer that does it right. It only cuts away TrueHD frames that are duplicates, ensuring there aren't any discontinuities anywhere in the track. And that's it, really - if you get that right, A/V sync ends up perfect and pops and snaps are completely gone.
I'd love for you guys to try it out. I've tried it on most Disney/Pixar discs, as well as Alita: Battle Angel, and it works perfectly there. Feedback on a wider variety of discs would be great.
It's also open source and I invite the creators of MakeMKV and others to have a look; perhaps we can all have flawless demuxed TrueHD streams in the future :)
https://github.com/domyd/mlp
The core issue was never Atmos or high bitrate. It is simply caused by demuxers cutting up the TrueHD track inappropriately. Disney/Pixar tracks are just much more susceptible due to their sheer number of segments. MakeMKV 1.15.1 fixed those egregiously loud pops and snaps, but they're still there if you listen closely. Take Monsters University, US UHD disc, playlist 00800, the audio between 2m29s and 2m30s. You can still hear a pop at normal listening volume, but it's quiet enough where you won't notice unless you're actively listening for it. I've written up my findings here in more detail, including a picture of said section of audio.
So I wrote a demuxer that does it right. It only cuts away TrueHD frames that are duplicates, ensuring there aren't any discontinuities anywhere in the track. And that's it, really - if you get that right, A/V sync ends up perfect and pops and snaps are completely gone.
I'd love for you guys to try it out. I've tried it on most Disney/Pixar discs, as well as Alita: Battle Angel, and it works perfectly there. Feedback on a wider variety of discs would be great.
It's also open source and I invite the creators of MakeMKV and others to have a look; perhaps we can all have flawless demuxed TrueHD streams in the future :)
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Quoting this post because you've made my week. This issue has been so annoying for SO LONG.domy94 wrote: ↑Mon May 25, 2020 7:00 pmThis issue has been bothering me more than it should over the last few months, so I ended up writing my own tool because still no demuxer (including MakeMKV 1.15.1) handles TrueHD flawlessly.
https://github.com/domyd/mlp
The core issue was never Atmos or high bitrate. It is simply caused by demuxers cutting up the TrueHD track inappropriately. Disney/Pixar tracks are just much more susceptible due to their sheer number of segments. MakeMKV 1.15.1 fixed those egregiously loud pops and snaps, but they're still there if you listen closely. Take Monsters University, US UHD disc, playlist 00800, the audio between 2m29s and 2m30s. You can still hear a pop at normal listening volume, but it's quiet enough where you won't notice unless you're actively listening for it. I've written up my findings here in more detail, including a picture of said section of audio.
So I wrote a demuxer that does it right. It only cuts away TrueHD frames that are duplicates, ensuring there aren't any discontinuities anywhere in the track. And that's it, really - if you get that right, A/V sync ends up perfect and pops and snaps are completely gone.
I'd love for you guys to try it out. I've tried it on most Disney/Pixar discs, as well as Alita: Battle Angel, and it works perfectly there. Feedback on a wider variety of discs would be great.
It's also open source and I invite the creators of MakeMKV and others to have a look; perhaps we can all have flawless demuxed TrueHD streams in the future
The question is: Can we take an existing Remux and "fix" it, or do we need to dig out the original discs and re-do it from the physical media. The reason I ask is that the first way is less work for me, and the second way means doing one disc at a time, physically, which will take me an age.
Thank you for all your efforts. Brilliant.
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Thank you! :)
That's a good question and I've been wondering that myself. It's kind of complicated.
It's certainly possible to fix existing tracks to some degree by having a pass over the TrueHD stream and removing duplicate frames. That would, for example, catch that segment transition I pictured. This is relatively straightforward to do.
What's impossible to fix, however, are places where multiple frames were cut off. MakeMKV does this seemingly at every other segment boundary or so. I imagine it would technically be possible, but it would be a ridiculous amount of effort for something that's only going to make a faulty TrueHD track slightly less faulty.
I'll add a command for checking and fixing existing streams, but it's never going to produce as good of a result as re-ripping from source. The exception would be if the ripped track originated from DGDemux 1.0.0.21 or earlier, which didn't do gaps processing on TrueHD at all. Those rips can be fixed without sacrificing quality.
That's a good question and I've been wondering that myself. It's kind of complicated.
It's certainly possible to fix existing tracks to some degree by having a pass over the TrueHD stream and removing duplicate frames. That would, for example, catch that segment transition I pictured. This is relatively straightforward to do.
What's impossible to fix, however, are places where multiple frames were cut off. MakeMKV does this seemingly at every other segment boundary or so. I imagine it would technically be possible, but it would be a ridiculous amount of effort for something that's only going to make a faulty TrueHD track slightly less faulty.
I'll add a command for checking and fixing existing streams, but it's never going to produce as good of a result as re-ripping from source. The exception would be if the ripped track originated from DGDemux 1.0.0.21 or earlier, which didn't do gaps processing on TrueHD at all. Those rips can be fixed without sacrificing quality.
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Thank you for the reply! That’s fine, a little more effort and I can make this work, but for now I’ll have to wait till it’s Mac-compatible!
Thank you again for all your efforts!
Thank you again for all your efforts!
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
I'm not able to get this working. I downloaded the latest binaries (mlp-0.4.0.zip). I also installed Rust. I have C:\Users\MyUser\.cargo\bin in the PATH env var. Ideas?domy94 wrote: ↑Mon May 25, 2020 7:00 pmThis issue has been bothering me more than it should over the last few months, so I ended up writing my own tool because still no demuxer (including MakeMKV 1.15.1) handles TrueHD flawlessly.
https://github.com/domyd/mlp
The core issue was never Atmos or high bitrate. It is simply caused by demuxers cutting up the TrueHD track inappropriately. Disney/Pixar tracks are just much more susceptible due to their sheer number of segments. MakeMKV 1.15.1 fixed those egregiously loud pops and snaps, but they're still there if you listen closely. Take Monsters University, US UHD disc, playlist 00800, the audio between 2m29s and 2m30s. You can still hear a pop at normal listening volume, but it's quiet enough where you won't notice unless you're actively listening for it. I've written up my findings here in more detail, including a picture of said section of audio.
So I wrote a demuxer that does it right. It only cuts away TrueHD frames that are duplicates, ensuring there aren't any discontinuities anywhere in the track. And that's it, really - if you get that right, A/V sync ends up perfect and pops and snaps are completely gone.
I'd love for you guys to try it out. I've tried it on most Disney/Pixar discs, as well as Alita: Battle Angel, and it works perfectly there. Feedback on a wider variety of discs would be great.
It's also open source and I invite the creators of MakeMKV and others to have a look; perhaps we can all have flawless demuxed TrueHD streams in the future
Code: Select all
C:\mlp>mlp.exe demux playlist --force -vv "D:\BDMV\PLAYLIST\00800.mpls" --output "C:\Temp\output.thd"
20:43:44 [DEBUG] Playlist has 1 angle.
20:43:44 [DEBUG] Using angle 1.
20:43:44 [WARN] Overwriting existing output file C:\Temp\output.thd.
20:43:44 [INFO] Processing file 1/59 ('D:\BDMV\STREAM\01108.m2ts') ...
20:43:44 [DEBUG] Overrun is now 0 samples.
20:43:44 [DEBUG] Copying TrueHD stream to output ...
thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: DemuxErr(NoTrueHdStreamFound)', src\main.rs:191:41
stack backtrace:
0: 0x7ff74f6709df - <unknown>
1: 0x7ff74f686e8b - <unknown>
2: 0x7ff74f66d73c - <unknown>
3: 0x7ff74f673b4c - <unknown>
4: 0x7ff74f67379f - <unknown>
5: 0x7ff74f6742a7 - <unknown>
6: 0x7ff74f673e2f - <unknown>
7: 0x7ff74f684df0 - <unknown>
8: 0x7ff74f684c23 - <unknown>
9: 0x7ff74f520e57 - <unknown>
10: 0x7ff74f518372 - <unknown>
11: 0x7ff74f673cc7 - <unknown>
12: 0x7ff74f6776b2 - <unknown>
13: 0x7ff74f6744e8 - <unknown>
14: 0x7ff74f5245f7 - <unknown>
15: 0x7ff74f68df54 - <unknown>
16: 0x7ff8cf6c7bd4 - BaseThreadInitThunk
17: 0x7ff8cff8ce51 - RtlUserThreadStart
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Nice work and very interesting, domy94. It's amazing the number of issues that Dolby TrueHD/Dolby Atmos have caused over the past couple of years from both the demuxers and software players as can be seen by my previous lengthy post in this thread. While my major Dolby issues have been addressed with the latest versions of MakeMKV/Shield/Exoplayer it will be great to take care of any additional issues like the one you've identified. Many of us are looking for 1:1 rips of Video/Audio and it seems that Dolby lossless tracks have been causing an issue for a while now.domy94 wrote: ↑Mon May 25, 2020 7:00 pmThis issue has been bothering me more than it should over the last few months, so I ended up writing my own tool because still no demuxer (including MakeMKV 1.15.1) handles TrueHD flawlessly.
https://github.com/domyd/mlp
The core issue was never Atmos or high bitrate. It is simply caused by demuxers cutting up the TrueHD track inappropriately. Disney/Pixar tracks are just much more susceptible due to their sheer number of segments. MakeMKV 1.15.1 fixed those egregiously loud pops and snaps, but they're still there if you listen closely. Take Monsters University, US UHD disc, playlist 00800, the audio between 2m29s and 2m30s. You can still hear a pop at normal listening volume, but it's quiet enough where you won't notice unless you're actively listening for it. I've written up my findings here in more detail, including a picture of said section of audio.
So I wrote a demuxer that does it right. It only cuts away TrueHD frames that are duplicates, ensuring there aren't any discontinuities anywhere in the track. And that's it, really - if you get that right, A/V sync ends up perfect and pops and snaps are completely gone.
I'd love for you guys to try it out. I've tried it on most Disney/Pixar discs, as well as Alita: Battle Angel, and it works perfectly there. Feedback on a wider variety of discs would be great.
It's also open source and I invite the creators of MakeMKV and others to have a look; perhaps we can all have flawless demuxed TrueHD streams in the future
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
@HEVCc, seems like there's no TrueHD stream on that disk. What blu-ray is it, and what's the output of `ffprobe D:\BDMV\STREAM\01108.m2ts`?
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Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Is there anyway to know whether the TrueHD Atmos track has been remuxed without problems other than playing the whole file?
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
@Domy94
the Kodi High Bitrate audio issue is in fact a seperate issue as it has a hardcoded ceiling. i tried your tool on frozen II, and the same issue is present as before. the file exceeds the max bitrate, hence the dropouts
the Kodi High Bitrate audio issue is in fact a seperate issue as it has a hardcoded ceiling. i tried your tool on frozen II, and the same issue is present as before. the file exceeds the max bitrate, hence the dropouts
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
Back to square one then. I can’t believe this issue hasn’t been addressed yet.
Re: Ripping Dolby Atmos into MKV
How do you guys get the dropouts? Where in Frozen II using what player?