Okay, burned Blu-Rays again. This time, set up my video camera on a stable surface, pulled up one of the internal white-balance patterns on my TV, white-balanced the camera, and took photos from each input.
005 is the cable box. This is the target.
006 is the first matrix conversion, from 601 to 709.
007 is the second matrix conversion, 709 to 601.
The latter two are very clearly a horrid shade of orange.
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Yeah...
I think everything is off, even your "target". I realize that it was taken from a camera, but much of the black detail is obscured
But in terms of red/orange, the "alcohol think again" logo on the ground beneath the basket , I think the "again" supposed to be more orange, not red. A quick search on google shows some variation, but mostly more "orange" than red. Also go to another frame, with the gatorade jug. Usually that is orange, not red.
So everything is off IMO, even your "goal" . I would use reference images of known colors and objects / logos as your guide. But it's up to you -
The lack of black detail is entirely to do with the exposure of the camera. I was erring on the side of not washing anything out. It seems to have tipped everything a bit towards red, too; the ATA logo is correct from the cable box on my TV screen.
The exact colors aren't critical, it's more about the comparison between the cable version and the versions I can come up with. -
I've got an mp4 file that hasn't been through television, or my crappy home capture methods. Only a couple of minutes of it though. Frame grabs from Premiere. So the MJPEG is coming in wrong, and the ffmpeg MP4 is coming in pretty much the same, except with more contrast for some reason. I tried setting fullrange to on in ffmpeg to see if that would help, and it didn't.
Also attached a sample from the frameserver. Opened the frameserved AVI in Vdub, cut it down, fast recompress to Lagarith YUY2. -
Ugh, more fun.
HD MP4 -> uncompressed UYVY AVI -> HD2SD -> 601 422 Ut -> Premiere...shifts red the other way, towards purple. Remains true if I output as uncompressed UYVY AVI from the HD2SD script. -
The screenshot taken from the source mp4 looks more correct, at least to me. The "think" is more yellow, the "again" is more orange both matching the known logo. The "red" jerseys don't look oversaturated, and definitely not orange
So basically you do the double shift mentioned earlier to "reverse" the problem incurred because of the frameserver and again from wrong import matrix. There is a slight yellow/green residual shift with that alone, perhaps from rounding, but it's easy to fix with something like coloryuv
e.g
And the screenshot was taken by converting to RGB with 709Code:AVISource("Frameserve.avi",audio=false) colormatrix(mode="rec.601->rec.709",clamp=0, interlaced=true) colormatrix(mode="rec.601->rec.709",clamp=0, interlaced=true) coloryuv(off_u=0.5, off_v=0.5)
How did I know what values to use off the u , v offsets ? Well you can do it by "eyeballing", but you can use histogram("levels") or any number of various monitoring/scopes in avisynth too
I don't know what your ffmpeg mp4 is supposed to indicate. The ffmpeg -vf filter is because mjpeg decodes as full range yuvj422p (the "j" ) . In case you didn't notice, there were 2 versions of mp4's , one with the -vf filter, one without. The one with the filter should be full range data (same output from mjpeg decoder), but unflagged as full range. Thus it will look "illegal" on scopes, and over saturated. The point of doing it that way is so you have all the data so you can adjust it, instead of clipping or clamping. If you use the same command with MP4 input it won't work, unless it has been flagged full range. AVC will decode as standard range in ffmpeg unless it has a full range flag -
You have to be careful with this ;
Is the UYVY a direct physical export (from AME) , ie. not afs set to "UYVY" ?
And how are you "loading" the UYVY ? (what source filter?) because there might be another filter inbetween that you don't know about
Assuming it was loaded correctly , HD2SD should be using colormatrix to convert 709 to 601 in YUV .
Premiere treats 601 YUV422 utvideo as RGB, and uses 601, at least in CC. Not so sure about CS6 so you should verify it's handling first before using UT
Can you upload 1 frame of the UYVY export ?Last edited by poisondeathray; 14th Apr 2017 at 20:04.
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Is there a way to fix it before it comes into Premiere/AE? I had a signal dropout at one point, and the idea is to use the source MP4 to cover the gap. So I need them to match...could I load the MJPEG in AviSynth and do the double color matrix that way?
Excess contrast.I don't know what your ffmpeg mp4 is supposed to indicate.
...what? I actually meant to ask about the p in "422p" earlier but forgot, as I have no idea what that means. Nor do I know what the alternative to a j is...The ffmpeg -vf filter is because mjpeg decodes as full range yuvj422p (the "j" )
...no, no I did not. This is news to me. In my defense, with timezones and me trying to cram as much of this in as I can around the rest of my schedule, I'm often on here at 5am. So I just remove the "-vf" and it fixes the excess contrast? Or do I have to remove the bit after that as well?In case you didn't notice, there were 2 versions of mp4's
I selected "AVI (Uncompressed)" in the PP export dialog, then UYVY.Is the UYVY a direct physical export (from AME) , ie. not afs set to "UYVY" ?
And how are you "loading" the UYVY ? (what source filter?)I don't think UT is the issue, given that an uncompressed UYVY output from the HD2SD script looks identical, color-wise. Unless I generated that wrong? Fast recompress, Compression->Uncompressed, Color Depth->UYVY for both in and out. Changed OutputColorspace to "UYVY" in HD2SD as well.Code:AVISource("BSB_HD.avi") hd2sd(interlaced=false, OutputColorSpace="YUY2", Widescreentype=1, VerticalBlur=0.25)
I tried pulling the uncompressed UYVY HD file into Premiere and it looks identical to the original, so the issue is somewhere along the HD2SD path.
I've attached the uncompressed UYVY that went into HD2SD, and the YUY2 UT that came out the first time. -
There should be, you just have to figure out what is going on. And there will be a fudge factor (it's not perfect - for whatever reason coloryuv was required to make it "closer" for the mjpeg import + frameserver). If it was only import and frameserver issue, purely 601/709 issues, you shouldn't need coloryuv - so something else is going on too, the residual shift seems more than just 8bit rounding errors.
If your other source MP4 looks correct, PP imports correctly as 709 - then that section should only require 709->601 for import format - again theoretically . You can try it out. But because of the fudging required for the mjpeg section I suspect it's probably not that simple. Probably some other mjpeg inconsistencies in the mix.
Also the choice of import makes a difference. You are seeing that in this thread how different formats give different interpretation results.
If you use PP filters and match it within PP, that should work too.
So IMO , if it's a continuous section (you're not editing/mixing bits and pieces) it's probably better to "fix" it afterwards, you want to minimize to as few operations as possible. It doesn't make sense to alter/filter it beforehand, only to filter it a few more times later to "reverse" what you filtered earlier. Those operations are not lossless - you lose quality and accuracy each time, and it's slower.
So you can apply different filters to different sections. You're going to be using avisynth to "fix" the mjpeg derived section anyways. Just apply a different "fix" to the MP4 derived section(s)
yuv422p means YUV, 4:2:2 chroma subsampling, planar.
...what? I actually meant to ask about the p in "422p" earlier but forgot, as I have no idea what that means. Nor do I know what the alternative to a j is...The ffmpeg -vf filter is because mjpeg decodes as full range yuvj422p (the "j" )
The "j" is upon when decoding ; mjpeg is decoded as full range. The -vf filter stuff was to adjust the levels. Recall I said you can adjust it to however you want.
I already explained this, and uploaded 2 samples. Just try it out ....no, no I did not. This is news to me. In my defense, with timezones and me trying to cram as much of this in as I can around the rest of my schedule, I'm often on here at 5am. So I just remove the "-vf" and it fixes the excess contrast? Or do I have to remove the bit after that as well?In case you didn't notice, there were 2 versions of mp4's
When you have the -vf scale forcing in/out range to TV . The YUV data is full range, because that is how libavcodec decodes mjpeg data 0-255. But you didn't encode it full range. But the data is full range. Thus when you import into PP, it only "looks" to 16-235, so it looks "contrasty". Recall there was a lot of data outside of 0-100 IRE (or below 16, above 235) if you imported a format treated as YUV. If you imported a format treated as RGB, those data would be clipped
If you don't force ffmpeg handling (erase the filter) , it decodes mjpeg as full range (yuvj422p, the "j") , but auto clamps the data to 16-235, but in a "dumb" fashion. Thus less contrasty, but some sections will not be ideal (elevated black) . Just try it out.
I selected "AVI (Uncompressed)" in the PP export dialog, then UYVY.Is the UYVY a direct physical export (from AME) , ie. not afs set to "UYVY" ?
And how are you "loading" the UYVY ? (what source filter?)I don't think UT is the issue, given that an uncompressed UYVY output from the HD2SD script looks identical, color-wise. Unless I generated that wrong? Fast recompress, Compression->Uncompressed, Color Depth->UYVY for both in and out. Changed OutputColorspace to "UYVY" in HD2SD as well.Code:AVISource("BSB_HD.avi") hd2sd(interlaced=false, OutputColorSpace="YUY2", Widescreentype=1, VerticalBlur=0.25)
I tried pulling the uncompressed UYVY HD file into Premiere and it looks identical to the original, so the issue is somewhere along the HD2SD path.
I've attached the uncompressed UYVY that went into HD2SD, and the YUY2 UT that came out the first time.
The SD version is shifted the wrong way when decoded and viewed correctly. (HD using 709, SD using 601 for viewing in RGB) . It's purely 601/709 issue.
But your UYVY was directly from the PP timeline, derived from mjpeg , correct ? So no frameserver ? Thus you should need 1 shift for the HD (to reverse the import, recall it was already incorrect upon import from the mjpeg decoding), and no shift for the SD, at least theoretically
Or sorry, was this the MP4 as source, UYVY direct export ? There is a discrepancy with the SD version. I have to ask why use the HD2SD script at all ? You'll get better results just resizing it and using colormatrix . This is a progressive resize, nothing tricky. But I get different (the expected) results with your same script. So it's probably some user error with vdub, or you have some other indavertent filters or rgb conversions going on) . 2 most common errors are not using video=>fast recompress (color space conversion) , and using ffmpeg input driver instead of AVI driver (if you have ffmpeg input driver for vdub, sometimes it gets selected and can mess up avs scripts)
It would have been nicer if you included the same or similar frame from before to compare instead of a "blob"
1) Open the avs script as you normally would in 32bit vdub, and check file=>file information in vdub, what does it say ?
2) In 32bit vdub, file=>open , select the UYVY directly (not through avs), and in the open video file dialog box, under files of type dropdown, select "AVIFile input driver" . Now go file=>file information , what does it say ?
3) In avisynth, what does this say?
Code:AVISource("BSB_sample.avi") info()
(Also, you're using ITU rules for AR interpretation. Notice in the "SD" version has the top and bottom pixels missing and vertically stretched. There are ways to "fix" that in the HD2SD script with the outputPAR parameter IIRC . Or maybe you want that AR interpretation ? ) . If you wanted full frame, no missing pixels, to override the ITU AR for PAL 16:9 , use outputPAR=1.4222 . Or just avoid HD2SD and do the simpler resize + colormatrixLast edited by poisondeathray; 15th Apr 2017 at 11:14.
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If it's currently correct, why would it need anything?If your other source MP4 looks correct, PP imports correctly as 709 - then that section should only require 709->601 for import format
Would I not simply fix the MJPEG first, and then it matches the MP4 and nothing further needs doing?So IMO , if it's a continuous section (you're not editing/mixing bits and pieces) it's probably better to "fix" it afterwards, you want to minimize to as few operations as possible. It doesn't make sense to alter/filter it beforehand, only to filter it a few more times later to "reverse" what you filtered earlier.
I was warned away from resizing in PP some years ago, and HD2SD was recommended. Although that was interlaced footage.I have to ask why use the HD2SD script at all ? You'll get better results just resizing it and using colormatrix .
It's different footage.It would have been nicer if you included the same or similar frame from before to compare instead of a "blob"
File information...what areas am I looking at? They're both using the Internal DIB decoder. One is YUY2, the other is UYVY, obviously.
The AVS script you posted...is RGB32. Could that be the problem?
I don't see stretching, just cropping (small letterboxes if I drop the SD onto the HD sequence and scale to frame size), and I was under the impression that was how it was supposed to work?Notice in the "SD" version has the top and bottom pixels missing and vertically stretched.
Remember that EPS that was shifting towards green from yellow? Replaced it with the AI and it all looks fine in AE. Exported as a PNG sequence, brought it into Premiere and IT'S SHIFTED TOWARDS GREEN AGAIN. The same file in a different project shifted significantly less and in a different direction (it looks more saturated, not sure what the actual movement is) when its PNG sequence was imported into Premiere. This one probably is color management, seeing as the green-shifted comp was in an HD project and the other was in an SD project and I can't think of any other differences. AE is rendering right now though so I can't dig too much. -
Exactly! But you said you wanted to adjust the import to match. So it doesn't make sense to adjust the mp4 to match the mjpeg, only to undo it twice later + coloryuv . That was my point. But now it's clear that you were referring to the mjpeg, not the source mp4 . But if the "coverage" mp4 is just a small section, it might be ok to treat it that way, especially if you're having difficulting getting the mjpeg to match
You can try that too. The other ffmpeg without -vf filter version. But I bet the black level is different because it's a "dumb" clamp as explained earlierWould I not simply fix the MJPEG first, and then it matches the MP4 and nothing further needs doing?So IMO , if it's a continuous section (you're not editing/mixing bits and pieces) it's probably better to "fix" it afterwards, you want to minimize to as few operations as possible. It doesn't make sense to alter/filter it beforehand, only to filter it a few more times later to "reverse" what you filtered earlier.
But you'd still have to fix the frameserver step if using that
yes, definitely avoid interlaced resizing in NLE's . But that "source" MP4 was progressiveI was warned away from resizing in PP some years ago, and HD2SD was recommended. Although that was interlaced footage.I have to ask why use the HD2SD script at all ? You'll get better results just resizing it and using colormatrix .
It is , but you should have some sections that are remotely similar shouldn't you ?It's different footage.It would have been nicer if you included the same or similar frame from before to compare instead of a "blob"
I'm looking for 3rd party decoders for your AVI 32bit VFW pathway - they should be identified if you had themFile information...what areas am I looking at? They're both using the Internal DIB decoder. One is YUY2, the other is UYVY, obviously.
The AVISource and Info() ?The AVS script you posted...is RGB32. Could that be the problem?
Yes, that is likely the problem . You're not decoding it correctly (or rather you inadvertently converted to RGB , as I guessed earlier). Your AVISource VFW decoder for UYVY is probably auto inserting a RGB filter in between . To avoid all that inconsistency an alternative is to use ffms2 or lsmash (uh-oh here we go again...
) . Another free alternative for VFW is "DT Codecs" , but it can be a hassle finding the right version - but that would make AVISource work for you (check with info() of course)
It's a different AR interpretation, that's all. PP uses ITU AR interpretation , most NLE's do . But some people don't like losing pixels or active image area. Just be aware of what's happening.I don't see stretching, just cropping (small letterboxes if I drop the SD onto the HD sequence and scale to frame size), and I was under the impression that was how it was supposed to work?Notice in the "SD" version has the top and bottom pixels missing and vertically stretched.
lots of funRemember that EPS that was shifting towards green from yellow? Replaced it with the AI and it all looks fine in AE. Exported as a PNG sequence, brought it into Premiere and IT'S SHIFTED TOWARDS GREEN AGAIN. The same file in a different project shifted significantly less and in a different direction (it looks more saturated, not sure what the actual movement is) when its PNG sequence was imported into Premiere. This one probably is color management, seeing as the green-shifted comp was in an HD project and the other was in an SD project and I can't think of any other differences. AE is rendering right now though so I can't dig too much.
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The ffmpeg I was using doesn't color shift at all, it only expands the range. Would the other ffmpeg help with the colors at all?
Not even slightly.It is , but you should have some sections that are remotely similar shouldn't you ?
*bangs head on desk*The AVISource and Info() ?
Yes, that is likely the problem . You're not decoding it correctly (or rather you inadvertently converted to RGB , as I guessed earlier). Your AVISource VFW decoder for UYVY is probably auto inserting a RGB filter in between .
WHY DO YOU HATE ME, INFERNAL MACHINE!
Not that I know what much of that actually means...is there a way to locate this encoder and change what it's doing or something?
So just never use AVISource() for anything? I managed to find both ffms2 and lsmash on the AviSynth wiki, finally! Is there any reason to use one or the other?To avoid all that inconsistency an alternative is to use ffms2 or lsmash (uh-oh here we go again...
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I'm aware it's cropping, yes. I was led to believe that was proper (and it's HD2SD's default behaviour, although it is alterable).It's a different AR interpretation, that's all. PP uses ITU AR interpretation , most NLE's do . But some people don't like losing pixels or active image area. Just be aware of what's happening.
😒lots of fun
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That example commandline only used in and out range . But there are in_color_matrix, out_color_matrix arguments too with -vf scale. ffmpeg has many other filters as well, including a separate color matrix. There is even a filter for custom LUTs . So it's entirely possible you could get it working . But when you fed it through the frameserver, there were 2 shifts + coloryuv required to "fix" it, so I'll hazard to guess it's not going to be super simple, you're going to have to try a few things out
https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-filters.html#scale-1
https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-filters.html
When you load an AVI directly in vdub (with the AVI driver) , file=>file information will list the VFW decoder used. AVISource() in 32bit avisynth will usually use that same 32bit VFW decoder indicated by vdub . For example if DT codecs or some other 3rd party codec was being used, that would likely be listed in file=>file information. Same with 64bit vdub, for x64. So I know some types of AVI imported in to AE and PP use the system x64 VFW decoder. That's at least one of the reasons why we were getting different results for the mjpeg AVI for example. There are utilities to manage codecs such as vcswap for VFW, graphstudio for directshow, a few others . It's simpler/easier for most people to use ffms2 or lsmash. Less room for error or inconsistency.
*bangs head on desk*The AVISource and Info() ?
Yes, that is likely the problem . You're not decoding it correctly (or rather you inadvertently converted to RGB , as I guessed earlier). Your AVISource VFW decoder for UYVY is probably auto inserting a RGB filter in between .
WHY DO YOU HATE ME, INFERNAL MACHINE!
Not that I know what much of that actually means...is there a way to locate this encoder and change what it's doing or something?
If you have your VFW system sorted out, I still prefer AVISource() for AVI formats. No indexing is a big reason (indexing takes time , adds index clutter)So just never use AVISource() for anything? I managed to find both ffms2 and lsmash on the AviSynth wiki, finally! Is there any reason to use one or the other?To avoid all that inconsistency an alternative is to use ffms2 or lsmash (uh-oh here we go again...
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They are both good. But in general, lsmash is preferred for MP4/MOV because it doesn't need to index with LSMASHVideoSource() . LWLibavVideoSource() is used for other non MP4, non MOV formats . There will be times when sometimes ffms2 works better, or maybe you need to make use of some auxiliary functions that one has but other doesn't. Sometimes a specific build version wasn't compiled with support for a specific format (e.g. some might not support HEVC) . So it's nice to have plan B, plan C, and so forth in case you need to. -
Is it coming out of the frameserver any worse than it's going in, though?But when you fed it through the frameserver, there were 2 shifts + coloryuv required to "fix" it
Okay, so after playing around with the sample clip...scaling from 601 to 709 and full to TV seems to be pretty damn good. Will have to grab a clip that matches the source MP4 and check, but the contrast is visually exact, with minute scope changes, and the reds are red. Would also be nice if I could fix the environment variable thing; I've just got my sample stuck in the bin folder at the moment. It's a refreshing metaphor for this experience, but it also adds difficulty.
As previously mentioned, it says 'internal DIB decoder' for the UYVY. It uses Ut for the Ut file.When you load an AVI directly in vdub (with the AVI driver) , file=>file information will list the VFW decoder used. -
Yes, and any time you use filters like, especially in 8bit, you lose accuracy . The more manipulations, the worse it gets. Had frameserver not caused a shift, that would be 2 fewer quality hits. The loss might be negligible , but it's still avoidable quality loss
So was that the mjpeg sample AVI ? And what is the screenshot, in PP, or frameserver, or how was the RGB conversion done ?Okay, so after playing around with the sample clip...scaling from 601 to 709 and full to TV seems to be pretty damn good.
If you're just trying to match within PP, you should be able to get it closer with PP filters
I can't offer more suggestions without seeing the console log and what it says exactly. It should tell you what is wrong.Would also be nice if I could fix the environment variable thing; I've just got my sample stuck in the bin folder at the moment. It's a refreshing metaphor for this experience, but it also adds difficulty.
There are many guides on ffmpeg and setting up environment variables, try resetting the path
Yes, that means vdub's internal DIB decoder. Avisynth doesn't use vdub's internal decoder. It means you have no VFW decoder for that, so it probably inserted some colorspace filter hence your problemsAs previously mentioned, it says 'internal DIB decoder' for the UYVY. It uses Ut for the Ut file.When you load an AVI directly in vdub (with the AVI driver) , file=>file information will list the VFW decoder used. -
So that's the same yellow green shift I mentioned earlier that coloryuv addressed; another way is smoothtweak(hue1=1, hue2=1) . Both give same results, both shift U,V to the right towards blue/red
To do that in ffmpeg, one way is to apply a lut to u,v planes
If you had a linear chain of filters in ffmpeg, just separate them by commaCode:-vf lutyuv="u=val+1:v=val+1"
Illustration (these are in jpg, to save bandwitdh), you can flip back and forth and notice the U,V shift
src
ffmpeg
ffmpeg + avs (either coloryuv or smoothtweak as described above)
ffmpeg + lut
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AviSynth doesn't support UYVY. So it has to find a filter that converts UYVY into something it does support. On my system it's one of UtVideo's filters * -- which converts to RGB32. Probably the same on yours. If you have ffdshow installed, you can use its "raw video" codec to convert UYVY to YUY2.
* By the way, I determined this with GraphStudio.Last edited by jagabo; 15th Apr 2017 at 21:15.
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I don't know what a 'linear chain of filters' is.If you had a linear chain of filters in ffmpeg, just separate them by comma
That appears to just be the AviSynth version again.ffmpeg + lut
How do I do that? I tried going to the video decoder options and setting the Raw Video to "UYVY", but that still resulted in an RGB32 AVS file.If you have ffdshow installed, you can use its "raw video" codec to convert UYVY to YUY2.
I tried installing LSMASH, but there's already an LSMASHSource.dll in my plugins folder. Yet when I try to use LSMASH, I get a 'no such function' error.
With ffmpeg, I can open a command prompt anywhere and 'ffmpeg -version' works. But the batch command only works if it's in the bin folder, whether I run the batch or type the same ffmpeg command in manually. -
That's the idea wasn't it ? Instead of using avisynth you batch ffmpeg to convert your files upon import ? I'm not saying you have to use those values, adjust them to however you like . Or, you can just "fix" everything with avisynth after near the end as shown earlier, whatever you feel like
A linear filter chain is like filter A, filter B, filter C .... in sequential order. So if you used -vf filter with in/out color matrix to get the results of "ffmpeg" screenshot in PP, you could use -vf lut to shift the colors similar to coloryuv or smoothtweak without having to go to avisynth . A simple filter chain doesn't require -filter_complex graph in ffmpeg, they are just applied one after the other in sequential order when separated by a comma. Colons separate arguments within a filter, commas separate separate filters
Code:-vf filterA,filterB,filterC
hmm ffms2 opens the UYVY "BSB_sample.avi" for me as YV16, which is planar 4:2:2 - Which is correct in avisynth . YV16, YUY2, UYVY , 2vuy, etc... are all YUV422 . They are just stored slightly differently.ffms2...at least opens, I guess.
which avisynth version are you using?
What ffms2 version are you using ? -
I meant that your screenshot appears to be the same file.That's the idea wasn't it ?
AviSynth 2.60, ffms2 2.23.1. I had an old ffms2 already installed, and copied the dlls but not the avsi. Copied that over and now FFmpegSource2() results in the same half-correct, half-green result I got with FFVideoSource().
I tried the simple script with only FFMpegSource2() and info() and it shows as YV16 and looks fine. But if I add the HD2SD line, I get the half-green output.
Any idea why LSMASH won't open? -
hd2sd probably doesn't support planar 422 or additional avisynth 2.6 colorspaces - it's an ancient script. Convert to YUY2 ( don't forget interlaced true/false) , or don't even bother with hd2sd
for lsmash , use the msvc version , 32bit if you're using 32bit avisynth -
The first frame is still green when I load it in VDub, but if I scrub past it and scrub back it's normal. Is that worth worrying about?
Grabbed the msvc version, and there's no error anymore but Vdub completely locks up when I try to open the AVS using LwLibavVideoSource(), and I get a fatal error about being unable to read the source file if I use LSMASHVideoSource().
The color shift in the EPS file appears isolated to PP, the PNGs in the sequence are fine in PS or Photo Viewer. The HD2SD avi file matches Premiere but the DVD-compliant m2v seems to match AE. -
Yes green frame is a problem . Do you get it without hd2sd ?
Might be threading issue. Try threads=1 .
for lsmash error, you sometimes get something like that when you have incompatible plugins autoloading in the avisynth plugins folder . Might be some of the ancient ones that hd2sd relies on. Some people manually load plugins in their scripts (plugins in subfolders, LoadPlugin(....) ) so you don't get those sorts of issues with old pluginsCode:FFVideoSource("video.avi", threads=1)
But LWLibavVideoSource("BSB_sample.avi") works for me . I think I'm using an older version of the dll r901 -
Yes, the green frame occurs without HD2SD. threads=1 changed nothing.
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720x576 25fps, 1644 frames (1:05.76), Internal DIB decoder (YUY2), 1644 key frames, all key frame sizes are 829440 (1331640K), no delta frames, data rate 165888 kbps, 0% overhead.
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