Here's the relevant part of a script I've been using to do this. It's
nothing fancy but it works, it just dumps the audio as numbered wav
files (one file for each chapter). With a bit more creative scripting
you could automatically set the variables at the start by pulling them
out of lsdvd's output, but I'll leave that as an exercise for the
curious reader (i.e. I am lazy).
#!/bin/bash
#set these to match the dvd you want to rip
#use lsdvd to figure out which title and how many chapters you need
dvdpath=/dev/sr0
title=1
number_of_chapters=18
songnumber=1
while [ $songnumber -le $number_of_chapters ]; do
mplayer dvd://$title -chapter $songnumber-$songnumber -dvd-device
$dvdpath -vo null -vc dummy -ao pcm:file=$songnumber.wav
let songnumber=songnumber+1;
done
On Sat, Feb 16, 2013 at 10:42 AM, Julien Claassen <julien(a)mail.upb.de> wrote:
Hello!
I always use mplayer for that:
mplayer -vo null -dumpaudio -dumpfile output.mp3 intput.vob
works like a treat. Maybe you could even use mencoder or ppossibly the
ffmpeg utility or whatever it was they suggested at the time for extracting
audi from youtube.
If you want a different format than mp3, something like this might do the
trick:
mplayer -ao pcm:file=tmp.wav -vo null input.vob
And then encode the tmp.wav to whatever you like. It's also easily
scriptable.
You will only get seperate songs out of that, if they are stored in
seperate .vob-files.
I have written a script to trim recordings from radio. With a slight
adjustment that script will work for videos as well. It relies on you
listening to / skipping through the input and marking times. It uses
ecasound to do the trimming.
Hope that helps.
ciao
Julien
----------------------------------------
http://juliencoder.de/nama/music.html
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