Disable Error Messages Mplayer
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When i play certain avi files with Mplayer, I get this error during playback "overflow in spectral RLE ignoring".. Since it's an 'ignore' message is there an option prevent mplayer disable subtitles 'ignore' errors in Mplayer? If not how do I disable all error messages mplayer disable audio from Mplayer? thanks. SubbanJanuary 18th, 2009, 03:38 PMI am going to go ahead and bump this as I can't ffxiv disable error messages find a solution using search and its a problem I also have, lots of video files throw an error in mplayer that I really do not need to see, they work normally. disable error messages wow andrew.46January 19th, 2009, 01:29 AMHi, You can probably try either of these commandline options and see if they meet your needs: -quiet Make console output less verbose; in particular, prevents the status line (i.e. A: 0.7 V: 0.6 A-V: 0.068 ...) from being displayed. Particularly useful on slow terminals or broken ones which do not properly handle carriage return (i.e. \r). and: -really-quiet (also see
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-quiet) Display even less output and status messages than with -quiet. Also suppresses the GUI error message boxes. Is this what you were after? Andrew SubbanJanuary 19th, 2009, 09:43 AMHi, You can probably try either of these commandline options and see if they meet your needs: Many thanks for the reply. --really-quiet looks just the job as it is the GUI error windows that are a problem for me, I had checked the --help for mplayer but had only seen the normal --quiet which didn't affect GUI errors. Now the second problem, how do I add this flag for gmplayer to use when I double click an avi for eg. I tried right click an avi, choose properties and add a custom command as follows: gmplayer --really-quiet After the change double clicking an avi does nothing at all, a quick google didn't come up with a fix, but admittedly I was rushing between jobs. andrew.46January 19th, 2009, 10:12 AMHi Subhan, Now the second problem, how do I add this flag for gmplayer to use when I double click an avi for eg. I don't personally use the gmplayer but I not
Every now and then, I watch video clips with mplayer which is an excellent player. A quick google points to an additional command line parameter such
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as follows, Codemplayer -msglevel all=0 But its a pain to add that mplayer turn off subtitles if you use the GUI since its not in the settings menu. As it turns out the simple solution is just to add the msglevel parameter to mplayer's config file, you can add this to /etc/mplayer.conf to affect all users or just ~/.mplayer/config in your home folder to only https://ubuntuforums.org/archive/index.php/t-837394.html affect just your own user account. Just add the following line. Codemsglevel=all=0 No feedback yet Comment feed for this postLeave a comment Name: Email: Your email address will not be revealed on this site. Comment text: Options: Remember me (For my next comment on this site) Allow message form (Allow users to contact me through a message form -- http://blogs.unbolt.net/index.php/brinley/2009/11/07/suppressing-mplayer-s-pesky-error-messages Your email will not be revealed!) Captcha question: 3 minus 2? Captcha answer: Please answer the question above. October 2016 Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun <<< >>> 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Peepholes Into My LifeBrinley Ang is a sysadmin, web dev, coder, geek boy, jedi knight fragger, caffine addict, deaf meloncholic and rockstar wannabe. Listens to the sex pistols and a wide assortment of heavy metal. HomeRecentlyArchivesSearchCategoriesAllGamesWiiLifeMicrosoftMiscRantTechnicalAJAXAndroidJavaJavascriptLinux/UnixPHPiPAQiPhoneXML FeedsSubscribe in a reader Recent PostsSolution for "This item isn't available in your country" aka Changing country in Google Play StoreDownload installers for eTax 2012 and 2013Quickstart guide to login into Microsoft 365 PowershellConnecting to Microsoft Office 365 on AndroidUbuntu Linux 11.04 and Microsoft VPN quirksGRUB floppy images for booting WindowsVLC for Android download apk package updatedVLC for Android is looking awesome3FL RSS feeds updated to only show available contentLoading ATO's e-tax file from 2
Assigned to Milestone mplayer (Ubuntu) Edit Confirmed Wishlist Unassigned Edit You need to log in to change this bug's status. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/198695 Affecting: mplayer (Ubuntu) Filed here by: martin When: 2008-03-05 Confirmed: 2010-04-17 http://mplayer-tools.sourceforge.net/README.html Target Distribution Baltix BOSS Juju Charms Collection Elbuntu Guadalinex Guadalinex Edu Kiwi Linux nUbuntu PLD Linux Tilix tuXlab Ubuntu Ubuntu Linaro Evaluation Build Ubuntu RTM Package (Find…) Project (Find…) Status Importance Confirmed Wishlist Assigned to Nobody Me Comment on this change (optional) Email disable error me about changes to this bug report Also affects project (?) Also affects distribution/package Nominate for series Bug Description Binary package hint: mplayer I would like to request the removal of the graphical error messages from MPlayer that are apparently enabled by default in Ubuntu. It seems that everything that normally would go to the disable error messages console is presented via a pop-up GUI-window instead when using the Ubuntu .deb package provided in Hardy. Example of these error messages are incomplete avi/sync errors, random codec messages (file plays fine, but displays "j-type picture is not supported" during given intervals) The most common are "header damaged" pop-ups which would be displayed a gazillion times for incomplete files that do play, but obviously this causes them to slow down. The problem is that all these errors all have to be acknowledged individually by clicking/dismissing them in order to continue watching the file. Since I've unsuccessfully scoured the MPlayer options and the web for ways to disable these, I can only conclude that they are enabled at compile-time. I've not seen this behaviour on other distros such as Gentoo, Fedora or RedHat. apt-cache policy mplayer: mplayer: Installed: 2:1.0~rc2-0ubuntu8 Candidate: 2:1.0~rc2-0ubuntu8 Version table: *** 2:1.0~rc2-0ubuntu8 0 500 http://no.archive.ubuntu.com hardy/multiverse Packages 500 http://us.archive.ubuntu.com hardy/multiverse Packages 100 /var/lib/dpkg/status 2:1.0~rc2-0ubuntu1~gutsy1 0 500 http://no.archive.ubuntu.com gutsy-backports/multiverse Packages /etc/lsb-release: DISTRIB_ID
and assignments Conditions Hashes Subjects Movie series detection Optional PERL modules Optional programs Graphical User Interface (MPlayer GUI Frontend) The main window The playlist Options Knows issues TV utilities Available commands Minimal lirc configuration Configuration options Subtitle manipulations Statistical tools Final notes 1) mcatcher The scripts automatically save the movie you are watching and next time start mplayer with the same movie from the saved position using a tiny `cdm;mstart' command. Available commands mplayerat install mplayer-tools overrides the mplayer command using a bash function, the new command starts the mcatcher utility and then it calls the original mplayer to play the movie. At any system that does not evaluate bash functions you need to associate movie files with mcatcher instead of mplayer. mstripthe purpose of this script is to keep your logfile as small as possible while retaining as much information as possible. You might want to run this periodically, maybe from a cron job otherwise mplayer tools may slow down after a while. It's options are described under the mcatcher config file You can give parameters to mstrip. mstrip passes them to msum, a utility described under the statistical tools. This way every line selected by the msum utility will be removed from the logfile. You might want to run msum first to see which lines will be removed. If you don't install the stat components the parameters will have no effect. mhelpmcatcher has so much configuration options that I can't expect anyone to remember them. Use this tool as a reminder. It lists all the available options although for now it does not provide documentation because it simply extracts the options from the config file parser module. You can add an object (anything that mhelp lists without any parameters) as parameter and mhelp will dump it's value. For example type mhelplsusb to see what USB devices you have currently plugged in. You can also add a filename as a second paramter to test your settings related to the input file. mhelp will also show the time it took to parse and evaluate the configuration file and the individual condition subject if you are dumping one. mstartif you give parameters for mstart will behave like the mplayer command with some exceptions mstart scans the beginning of the parameters for modes defined in the configuration file. If one or more is found they are not passed to mplayer but pushed into the environment as if mset were used. Read more about the modes in the config section. if there is a parameter -- then everyting before it