VideoLink ========= VideoLink is intended to provide a simple way of producing DVDs with attractive and usable menus. It converts HTML pages into DVD menus by rendering them in Mozilla and reproducing their link structure. This allows you to design DVDs using familiar HTML editing tools or your favourite text editor. Prior to version 0.8, VideoLink was called WebDVD, but that name is also used for an extended DVD format. Requirements ------------ VideoLink depends on the following software: - dvdauthor - expat 1.x - Gtkmm 2.4 or later - either of: - ffmpeg including mpeg2video encoding ("ffmpeg -formats" should show "DEVSDT mpeg2video" in the codecs section) - both of: - mjpegtools 1.8 or later - netpbm - Mozilla 1.8 or later, or XULRunner 1.9 or later - Xvfb (from XFree86 or X.org) To build a complete DVD image you will also need: - either of: - genisoimage (from cdrkit) - mkisofs (from cdrtools) You will also need a program for producing DVD-suitable MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 video files. Usage ----- Design your DVD menus as a series of HTML pages linking to each other and to MPEG-1/2 videos that are suitable for use on a DVD. You must be careful not to link to pages that you do not want to appear on the disc, such as normal web sites. Also note the limitations listed below. Linking to video You can link directly to local MPEG video files whose names end in ".mpeg", ".mpeg2", ".mpg" or ".vob". If you wish to combine multiple files into a single video sequence ("title" in DVD terminology) or to add chapter marks to a video sequence, create and link to a VOB-list file (explained below) whose name ends in ".voblist". VOB-lists A VOB-list file is an XML file with the document element and containing elements as described in the dvdauthor manual page. The file names in a VOB-list file are resolved relative to the directory containing the list file. For example: This will result in a title with the following chapters: 1: main.vob 0:00- 4:55 2: main.vob 4:55-12:13 3: main.vob 12:13-17:45 4: main.vob 17:45- end 5: credits.vob You can link to the start of a chapter by adding "#" and the chapter number after the VOB-list's file name. For example: Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4 Video standards The encoding of analogue TV and video signals varies in many different ways between countries. Happily there are only two parameters that matter for standard-definition digital video, and two different pairs of values. You can choose between these with the --video-std option: Analogue parameters | Region of world | --video-std | Frame | | argument | size ----------------------+------------------------------+-------------+-------- 59.94 fields/second, | Americas except Argentina, | 525 | 720x576 interlaced; | Paraguay, Uruguay; | or 525/60 | 525 lines/frame | Japan; Laos; Myanmar; | or NTSC | (commonly called | Philippines; South Korea; | or ntsc | NTSC) | Taiwan; some Pacific islands | | ----------------------+------------------------------+-------------+-------- 50 fields/second, | Rest of world | 625 | 720x480 interlaced; | | or 625/50 | 625 lines/frame | | or PAL | (commonly called PAL) | | or pal | The default is to use "PAL" parameters. Preview To get a rough preview of the menus, run "videolink --preview menu-url" where menu-url is the URL or filename of the first page to show. Currently videos cannot be displayed in this preview mode. Press T to go to the "top" (main) menu or Q to quit. Processing To create a DVD filesystem, run "videolink menu-url output-dir" where menu-url is the URL or filename of the top menu page and output-dir is the directory in which to create the filesystem (which should be either nonexistent or empty). VideoLink will automatically follow links to the other pages and to the video files. By default, VideoLink now calls ffmpeg to generate MPEG-2 streams for menus. If you want it to use mjpegtools as it previously did, you must add the option "--encoder mjpegtools". If this is successful you can then use mkisofs to create a DVD image from the output directory. Alternately you can write this directory directly to a writable DVD with growisofs or with mkisofs piped to a suitable version of cdrecord. Example ------- A live example set of menus can currently be found at . Note that this has large background images that will take some time to load. Limitations ----------- Each page must fit within the frame - DVD players do not support scrolling menus and VideoLink currently is not able to split them into multiple menus. The frame size is dictated by the video standard; see above. The exact visible area varies between TVs so the background should cover all or very nearly all the frame whereas the important content such as text must not be placed near the edge. For this reason VideoLink applies a stylesheet to all pages that adds padding equal to 10% of the frame dimension on each side of the body; this doesn't apply to the background. DVD players do not have "back" buttons, so you should generally provide links to "higher" menu pages. However, they do have a button for returning to the top menu. VideoLink sends a "mouseover" event for each link and sets it into its "hover" state, then records how this changes its appearance. This change is then shown when the corresponding button on the DVD menu is highlighted. VideoLink applies a stylesheet which changes the colour of text links in the "hover" state, but this has no effect on image links. You must ensure that image links are highlighted in an obvious way when the mouse pointer is over them. The DVD specifications limit each menu to having no more than 36 buttons. In any case, it is poor design to have very large numbers of buttons on a single menu. VideoLink will warn you if you use more than this number of a links on a page, and will ignore any additional ones. The DVD specification also limits the overlays that are used for highlighting of buttons to using no more than 4 colours. VideoLink will reduce link highlighting to 1 transparent and 3 opaque colours using Floyd-Steinberg dithering, which is certainly good enough for anti-aliased text but may not be so good for complex highlighting. There is a limit of 99 "titles" on a DVD. If you need to include more than this number of video sequences, you could arrange them as chapters of a title, so long as they use the same codecs, resolution, aspect ratio and sample rate. However, each chapter will run into the next. If this is a real problem, let me know, and I may be able to provide a better solution in a later version of VideoLink. Currently VideoLink code can generate up to 999 menus but it may be possible for me to raise this internal limit if you want more. There appears to be an absolute limit of 12800 menus on a DVD. Bugs ---- VideoLink should set the assumed screen resolution to 40 dpi, which I reckon to be the average resolution of a standard definition TV display. This would mean that text with a font size expressed in millimetres or points will appear around the specified size. Earlier versions of VideoLink did this when built to use Mozilla 1.7. Unfortunately the resolution setting in Mozilla 1.8 actually affects measurements in pixels and not measurements in millimetres or points! The assumed screen resolution is always 96 dpi. Please specify measurements such as font sizes in pixels because measurements in millimetres or points are liable to change if and when I can override the assumed screen resolution again. Author and copyright -------------------- VideoLink was written by Ben Hutchings . Copyright 2005-2008 Ben Hutchings. This software is based in part on the work of the Independent JPEG Group. Copyright 1991-1998 Thomas G. Lane. (This applies to the file jquant2.c.)