Archive for the 'Xbox 360' Category

Xbox 360 Compatible Codec for Streaming (using vlc)- Part 2

Okay, so I called Microsoft and talked with a Media Center specialist about the right codec/containers to use to properly encode your movie files and have them play over UPnP. I haven’t tested all of them out yet, but I hope that one of these will work. I will be pushing all of them through vlc to see if I can get one working and will get back. Again, I am looking for DVD quality in my file, I don’t care the size, so this isn’t for crunching, this is for quality.

From Microsoft:

Q1: What are the details of Xbox 360 Audio Video Interleaved (AVI) support?
A1: The following list contains Xbox 360 AVI support details:
. File extensions: .avi, .divx
. Containers: AVI
. Video profiles: MPEG-4 Part 2, Simple and Advanced Simple Profile
. Video bitrate: 5 megabits per second (Mbps) with resolutions of 1280 x 720 at 30 frames per second (fps)
. Audio profiles: Dolby Digital 2 channel and 5.1 channel, MP3
. Audio max bitrate: No restrictions

Q2: Can you describe Xbox 360 support for the H.264 standard?
A2: Xbox 360 provides the following H.264 support:
. File name extensions: .mp4, .m4v, mp4v, .mov
. Containers: MPEG-4, QuickTime
. Video profiles: Baseline, main, and high (up to level 4.1) profiles
. Video bitrate: 10 Mbps with resolutions of 1920 x 1080 at 30 fps
. Audio profiles: two-channel AAC low complexity (LC)
. Audio max bitrate: No restrictions

Q3: What exactly does Xbox 360 support for MPEG-4 Part 2?
A3: The following information describes Xbox 360 support for MPEG-4:
. File name extensions: .mp4, .m4v, mp4v, .mov
. Containers: MPEG-4, QuickTime
. Video profiles: Simple and Advanced Simple Profile
. Video bitrate: 5 Mbps with resolutions of 1280 x 720 at 30 fps
. Audio profiles: two-channel AAC low complexity (LC)
. Audio max bitrate: No restrictions
Q4: What exactly does Xbox 360 support for WMV (VC-1)?
A4: The following information describes Xbox 360 support for WMV:
. File name extensions: .wmv
. Container: asf
. Video profiles: WMV7 (WMV1), WMV8 (WMV2), WMV9 (WMV3), VC-1 (WVC1 or WMVA) in simple, main, and advanced up to level 3
. Video bitrate: 15 Mbps with resolutions of 1920 x 1080 at 30 fps
. Audio profiles: WMA7/8, WMA 9 Pro (stereo and 5.1), WMA lossless
. Audio max bitrate: No restrictions

Q5: Can I mix and match the video and audio codecs outside of those defined in questions 1 through 4 above?
A5: No, you cannot. We only support each audio and video codec in the explicit containers as defined in questions 1 through 4.

Q7: How do I create WMV, AVI, H.264, and MPEG-4 content? What encoders does Xbox 360 support?
A7: You can create this content by using one of the many third-party applications that are available. Xbox 360 supports many popular encoders. Specifically, for encoding to WMV, you can use Microsoft Expression Encoder or Windows Media Encoder.

Rip DVDs in Linux for your Xbox 360

So I have found many posts out there where everyone can’t seem to find the “easy” or “user friendly” software that makes ripping DVD’s to your computer to stream to 360 via UPnP easy. Hopefully I have the solution that people want. I found that dumping the DVD stream with mplayer and using vlc to convert was the easiest method. I have also been playing with the formats and containers to encode with, and found the one that seems to look the best and still manage to save a little space.

First, simply put your DVD in the drive and use mplayer to dump the stream:

mplayer dvd://1 -dumpstream

If you have an ISO image, then:

mplayer dvd:// -dvd-device DVD.ISO -dumpstream

You should now have “stream.dump” in the folder that your executed the command in.

Next, launch vlc, then click on the “Media” menu option, and select “Convert / Save”.

file-media-convert

Click “Browse” and select a location to save your file.  Save your file as a “.mov” file.

add

Before starting, you will want to create a profile so that you can repeat this easily.  Click the “New Profile” button which looks like a sheet of paper with a star on it. (last button in the Settings block)

convert

In the “Encapsulation” tab, select “MP4/MOV”.

encap

In the “Video codec” tab, check Video, Codec H-264, Bitrate 3200 kb/s, Frame Rate 35 fps.  (I am still tweaking these settings for best quality, so any help would be appreciated).

vcodec

In the “Audio codec” tab, check Audio, Codec MPEG 4 Audio (AAC), Bitrate 256 kb/s, Channels 2, Sample 48000.

acodec

After that, label your profile, save, and start your ripping.  My video files, on average, are about 1.5GB in size.

Any help on fps and bitrates would be appreciated, for me, file size isn’t as much of a problem, I want the best quality.

Xbox 360 Media UPnP Server with uShare

After a little work, I finally got my Xbox 360 to connect with my computer using uShare. uShare allows you to share music, movies and pictures to your Xbox via UPnP. For Gentoo/Funtoo users out there, it is a bit of a pain to get working. First, it isn’t in Gentoo’s official Portage, so you have to get the overlay, and add… for Funtoo users though, the version listed in Portage has problems with the init scripts, so it is better to get the Overlay anyway.

Overlay: http://bugs.gentoo.org/192561

Next, the config files; if you had an old version of uShare, ditch it, and all of it’s config files(/etc/ushare.conf).  I used the following config for /etc/conf.d/ushare … and make sure that you add ‘-c’ in front of the directories you plan on sharing, or uShare wont start up, and wont give you any proper error readout.

# Copyright 1999-2007 Gentoo Foundation
# Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v2
# $Header: $

# User to run ushare daemon (if none, root will be used)
USHARE_USER=""

# UPNP Friendly Name:
USHARE_NAME="reaper"

# The interface to bind to:
USHARE_IFACE="eth0"

# A List of directories to share, each precieded by '-c':
USHARE_DIRS="-c /home/roberts/media"

# Misc. options, like:
#  -p $port        Use specific port to listen ($port)
#  -x, --xbox        Use XboX 360 compliant profile
#  -d, --dlna        Use DLNA compliant profile (PlayStation3 needs this)
#  -w, --no-web        Disable the control web page (enabled by default)
#  -t, --no-telnet    Disable the telnet control (enabled by default)
USHARE_OPTS="-x -p 49152"

After this, you should be good. Start uShare with ‘/etc/init.d/ushare start’, point your browser to YOUR.IP:49152/web/ushare.html , and you can add more directories to share there.

Overall, the web interface is really bare and has no automatic refresh option, so every time you add files to the share directories, you have to restart the service, or click the refresh button on the web interface, however, it works. The only downfall is that it doesn’t perform transcoding, so you have to make sure you encode your videos in the right format. (I am working on that now, because I can see all of the directories, but the files are the “wrong format”)

Another tip, when trying to connect from the Xbox, make sure that you are in the “Video Library”, “Music Library”, or “Picture Library” and not in the Windows Media Center section. UPnP does not substitute WMC.