I am trying to export my project and sequence to the final video format for distribution, which ideally would be H.264, however, after reviewing the resulting MP4 video in MediaInfo, I am concerned that it exhibits a Variable Frame Rate. The variables being Min 29.97fps and Max 30fps. To my knowledge most film distributors require video submissions to have a constant frame rate, and yes, I realize I could use Handbrake to achieve this in post production, but I would like to know if this is how all H.264 codecs currently process video with VFR. I say this, because I have some older MP4 videos that I previously created through PP CS5, and they are reported to have a constant frame rate by MediaInfo. Yet, all my exports to H.264 from PP CS6 have a Variable Frame Rate. Any help would be appreciated, I have been experimenting with all of this for 5 weeks and I can't afford any more time being lost. Thank you
		
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- 
	Your file should be 29.97 fps constant. 
 You can try two things:
 1. remux to mkv.
 2. use the Fix framerate function of clever FFmpeg-GUI.
 Both are fast and maintain quality (streamcopy).
 
 
 [Attachment 77146 - Click to enlarge]
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	Like I say, Handbrake does a fine job of converting Variable Frame Rate to Constant for H.264 without loss of quality, but I am still wondering if I am missing something in terms of the H264 codec. In other words, has it been modified over the years to allow for exports to constant frame rates. I should also mention that the film distributor is limited to the codecs it accepts, that being ProRes 422, DNxHD and H264. To be fair, it may accept the variable frame rate I describe given that it is very small between 29.97 and 30 fps, but I am still interested in knowing if more current H264 codecs encode in CFR. This would resolve allot of problems, albeit I have read that a constant frame rate can actually reduce the quality for H264 videos. 
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	All versions of Premiere should output CFR . Even if you import VFR video , it will export CFR because it will conform all assets to the sequence settings (an they are all CFR) 
 
 Maybe you mixed up the files, or a buggy mediainfo version (Try updating)
 
 I have older exports from CS4,5,6 , CC 2015,2018,2023...etc.. all CFR
- 
	Yes, if I export to MPEG 2, DNxHD, XDCAM EX and AVI etc, it is Constant Frame Rate. Exporting to H.264 however results in Variable 29.97 to 30 fps every time, and yes I am using the latest MediaInfo. I have read that H.264 does in fact encode to VFR, which surprised me, because I have H264 files exported from PP CS5 that are constant. With CS6 I get this: 
 
 Video
 ID : 1
 Format : AVC
 Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec
 Format profile : High@L5.1
 Format settings : CABAC / 3 Ref Frames
 Format settings, CABAC : Yes
 Format settings, Reference frames : 3 frames
 Format settings, GOP : M=3, N=18
 Codec ID : avc1
 Codec ID/Info : Advanced Video Coding
 Duration : 1 min 39 s
 Source duration : 1 min 39 s
 Bit rate : 25.1 Mb/s
 Width : 1 920 pixels
 Height : 1 080 pixels
 Display aspect ratio : 16:9
 Frame rate mode : Variable
 Frame rate : 29.970 (30000/1001) FPS
 Minimum frame rate : 29.970 FPS
 Maximum frame rate : 30.000 FPS
 Standard : NTSC
 Color space : YUV
 Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0
 Bit depth : 8 bits
 Scan type : Progressive
 Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.405
 Stream size : 297 MiB (99%)
 Source stream size : 297 MiB (99%)
 Language : English
 Encoded date : 2024-02-18 17:27:13 UTC
 Tagged date : 2024-02-18 17:27:13 UTC
 Color range : Limited
 Color primaries : BT.709
 Transfer characteristics : BT.709
 Matrix coefficients : BT.709
 mdhd_Duration : 99199
 Codec configuration box : avcC
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	Newer ones are 100% definitely CFR. 
 
 Your file is High@L5.1, when it really shouldn't be for 1920x1080p29.97 with 3 reference frames , it might have something to do with it, it should have been High@L4.1 by default . That will cause problems for certain older hardware
 
 If you don't feel like upgrading to CC, you can install old version of voukoder to get CFR out of CS6 , and a better AVC encoder to boot - x264
 
 It's probably not really VFR - because premiere doesn't export VFR - but jitter in the timestamps, perhaps a timebase issue . You can make it CFR to mediainfo with mp4fpsmod - it doesn't reencode
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	Thank you very much for your suggestions poisondeathray, I'm learning some good information from you. I tried resetting the Level to 4.2, which is the default for 1920X1080, whereas 4.1 changes the dimensions by default to 1280x720 at 59.94fps. The results using Level 4.2 are the same in terms of VFR, and the reference frames are again set to 3 automatically. If I choose Main instead of High for format, the reference frames are set to 4. There's no way of setting the reference frames manually with the H.264 codec in CS6, so 3 is the lowest we can go by selecting High for format. If it is timestamps, I'm not sure if there's something I can do about that, but I've tried many exports from different videos both from the timeline and direct exports and it's always VFR. I will definitely look into mp4fpsmod. If it doesn't re-encode, does that mean it will be super-fast. Handbrake does an excellent job of converting to CFR using the Lossless settings, but it is painfully slow. I will also look into Voukoder, never heard of it. 
- 
	Also, is there a portable version of mp4fpsmod. I'm not interested in command line solutions at this point. 
- 
	Yes, mp4fpsmod is fast, and commandline only - you can batch process a folder for example, and it has option to do in-place editing as well (instead of stream copying a 2nd file, but the latter is "safer" if you're paranoid) 
 
 If you're not interested in commandline, look at upgrading to CC, or voukoder. (This doesn't help if you had previous exports you want to "fix", only for future use or if you want to re-export a project, and it will be slower )
 
 You should be able to demux, remux with mp4box or lsmash commandline or GUI's as well. This would be faster than re-encoding but slower than mp4fpsmod
- 
	poisondeathray, I just discovered some things while doing further experiments. All of the 1080p mp4 files I have been using for my experiments were from sequence exports that contained both 1080 clips as well as 480 upscaled clips. This would explain the Variable Frame Rate to some extent. I discovered this after exporting a sequence that contained on 1080p clips and the exported file was reported as having a Constant Frame Rate. So you're absolutely right poisondeathray, that PP CS6 normally exports to CFR, just like CS5 did. So then I did more experiments today, because I still don't understand why this is happening given that I used Handbrake on the Videos containing upscaled clips to convert them to CFR, before placing them back into the 1080 sequence. Bearing in mind that MediaInfo reported that they now have a Constant Frame Rate. With that in mind, the subsequent Exports to H.264 should have been CFR, but they were back to having VFR. Interestingly, I also tried exporting only a small portion of a clip that was recoded with Handbrake, from the 1080p sequence and it was reported to have a constant frame rate. Then exporting the full clip from the sequence, the result was VFR. Obviously Handbrake did not do a good enough job of recoding the mp4 to CFR if one portion exports to Constant but the full clip exports to Variable. This is literally driving me crazy. I figured all I had to do was to export the 480 segments to XDCAM EX HQ, or Uncompressed AVI which MediaInfo reads as CFR, then use those files in my project, but no, those clips will result in VFR when I export the timeline to H.264. That makes it even more bizarre. In other words, if I place an XDCAM MXF file in the timeline (containing upscaled content) that MediaInfo considers to be CFR and export it to H264, the result will be VFR 29.97 to 30 fps. 
- 
	It shouldn't - because all the assets should conform to the sequence settings (and at CFR) 
 
 Very bizarre behaviour . I can't recall any version of PP doing thisI discovered this after exporting a sequence that contained on 1080p clips and the exported file was reported as having a Constant Frame Rate. So you're absolutely right poisondeathray, that PP CS6 normally exports to CFR, just like CS5 did. So then I did more experiments today, because I still don't understand why this is happening given that I used Handbrake on the Videos containing upscaled clips to convert them to CFR, before placing them back into the 1080 sequence. Bearing in mind that MediaInfo reported that they now have a Constant Frame Rate. With that in mind, the subsequent Exports to H.264 should have been CFR, but they were back to having VFR. Interestingly, I also tried exporting only a small portion of a clip that was recoded with Handbrake, from the 1080p sequence and it was reported to have a constant frame rate. Then exporting the full clip from the sequence, the result was VFR. Obviously Handbrake did not do a good enough job of recoding the mp4 to CFR if one portion exports to Constant but the full clip exports to Variable. This is literally driving me crazy. I figured all I had to do was to export the 480 segments to XDCAM EX HQ, or Uncompressed AVI which MediaInfo reads as CFR, then use those files in my project, but no, those clips will result in VFR when I export the timeline to H.264. That makes it even more bizarre. In other words, if I place an XDCAM MXF file in the timeline (containing upscaled content) that MediaInfo considers to be CFR and export it to H264, the result will be VFR 29.97 to 30 fps.
- 
	Thank you for that additional information poisondeathray. Unfortunately for now, I am strapped financially. Just turned 65 and my income has dropped to poverty level. Have documentaries to finish that I had to abandoned many years ago due to life setbacks. 
- 
	I will now concentrate on my comment: "Obviously Handbrake did not do a good enough job of recoding the mp4 to CFR if one portion exports to Constant but the full clip exports to Variable." Had it done a good job, the files would work just like my regular 1080p files. Instead, PP is reading these recoded files differently which is prolonging the problem. I'm going to take a break for the rest of the night. It's been a tough day all around. 
- 
	Well, more experiments and more failures. There seems to be no way to truly change the underlying structure of these MP4 files that contain the upscaled 480p 4:3 segments to be recognized by Premiere Pro as having a Constant Frame Rate. I have tried Handbrake, TMPGEnc and My MP4Box GUI to convert to CFR, and although it satisfies MediaInfo, it does not satisfy Premiere. So if I use the converted MP4 in another 1080p sequence and export again to MP4 I'm back to having a video with a Variable Frame Rate. Another day lost. I believe I'm up to 7 weeks lost now. Very discouraging, because I need a solution for my multi-episode documentary, almost all of which needs to be converted from 480p to 1080p. I am at a complete loss. 
- 
	The simple answer is mp4fpsmod 
 
 Or try voukoder
 
 Or try frameserving out of PP using advanced frameserver and use another encoder - this bypasses the intemediate export step
 
 Something might be broken in your CS6 install, you can try re-installing it too
 
 Also check that your imported files are read correctly in the project panel, not some off frame rate . You can interpret the framerate there . e.g. A true VFR file at the import stage would show some "off" frame rate like 29.67 or something instead of 29.97 . If the import was supposed to be CFR, and it's "broken" at the import stage you can interpret to 29.97
 
 
 And if you have to , export uncompressed AVI , then use something else like handbrake or whatever tool . Better than wasting a week in which you could have finished already
- 
	Thank you for the reply, I will try voukoder, but I doubt that it's PP, because I reinstalled it recently and it works fine with everything else, always has. It always exports to Constant Frame Rate with files that were originally 1080i or 1080p. I can't afford to invest time in learning mp4fpsmod. I've done my time doing things that no creator should have to do, bearing in mind I started working on computers in the 80s when everything required in depth technical knowledge. I've suffered 3 serious brain injuries in recent years and so I go easier on myself these days. My time is better spent creating. 
 
 I also tried MeGUI and it seemed to be processing, but no output file. Others have experienced this as well.
 
 If it was just a couple of files, I'd just live with it, but we are talking huge numbers of files that need to be properly upscaled and converted. All of the tools so far including Handbrake are simply changing something to simulate a CFR but not actually changing the structure to conform to PP's interpretation of CFR. Clearly this is what is happening.
 
 Hopefully voukoder will work, but I have to do some research on this plug in cause I don't want to waste more time re-installing Premiere if it messes things up.
 
 thanks again.
- 
	As a point of interest for people reading this thread, Premiere Pro does not offer a way to set the number of reference frames for H.264 exports. It only allows the user to set the key frame distance. The reference frames used is set automatically according to the Profile we select as per the following: 
 
 Baseline@L4.1 results in M=1, Main@L4.1 results in M=4 and High@L4.1 results in M=3.
 
 My immediate instinct would be to choose Baseline because I've always been told to keep the reference frame below 3 for best results. However, choosing Baseline over the more efficient High Profile could actually reduce quality, at least according to one commentor who wrote: CABAC entropy coding uses Main and High and is more efficient than CAVLC coding used in the Baseline profile. It is also computationally more intensive. Thus, if you give the encoder a certain bit rate to spend, it'll be able to create a better quality video with CABAC than with CAVLC because it achieves much better compression.
 
 I don't know how true this is, but I do know that CABAC is the norm these days, so I don't think it would be wise to choose Baseline just to achieve a reference frame value of 1. I'm not technical enough to know for sure, but that's my hunch.
- 
	UPDATE: I have not yet tried Voukoder, because I want to exhaust all possibilities of resolving the problem at the source before doing so, in an attempt to avoid using non-native codecs in Premiere Pro. The source of the problem is in the AVI file itself, and I don't know how many of my DV AVI files are affected by this problem because I've been focusing on just a few. As it turns out, these problem files have a few Timecode Breaks in them that creates slight audio/video sync issues that are not even noticeable when viewing-listening the videos, but are enough of a nuisance to cause havoc with the export codecs. In the case of the H264 codec, it subsequently exports to VFR, but even the other codecs are affected by this problem even though the frame rate is not reported as being variable. It also is not being reported as being constant for these. I know this, because if I re-export these files back out to H264 the resulting file will be VFR. Yet, any other file of these other codecs would export to H264 with a Constant Frame Rate. So the question then is, how do we repair these AVI files with the timecode breaks once and for all. Note: these breaks supposedly occur at the camera level by a sudden power shut down etc, and this gets coded into the tape and it gets transferred to the avi file during capture. I have tried a number of small transcoders and GUI's to try and repair these breaks including MPEG Streamclip, WinFF, Handbrake etc, and none have been able to completely cure these files. Yes, the resulting files may have been modified enough to convince MediaInfo that they now have a constant frame rate, but if you re-export them from Premiere, we are back to square one. So in the end, not one program has properly addressed these timecode breaks. I have a couple of older programs I need to try, but if anyone has other suggestions on how to fix these AVI files, I would appreciate your input. thanks 
- 
	- I'd check Dvdate, it was useful back then 
 - how about export to DVavi from Premiere and import them again, or some other app
 
 If you have project edited already just replace old DV avis for the new fixed DVavi files, not sure what Premiere uses for it. If you have DV avis chopped in clips, then you have to fix them in a batch and then force Premiere to read them (same names) from different directory, or you replace them.
- 
	Thank you for the suggestions Al. I have tried re-exporting the problem clips and/or the sections back to DV AVI, but that didn't fix the problem. I will try Dvdate next, but at this point I have my doubts about resolving this, which I find ridiculous because I know I'm not the first person to experience an old AVI file having these timecode breaks. Under normal circumstances, I wouldn't worry about this, given that these videos play perfectly. In fact I've used a few of them in other projects and didn't even know there was a problem. In this case however, my projects are going to a new distributor that has very strict criteria for video submissions. I've already had my final video refused once, and they only give you three chances before refusing the documentary outright. So that's how I discovered the variable frame rate, and I am concerned that simply using handbrake or My MP4Box to fool MediaInfo into thinking it has a Constant Framerate may backfire. The distributor doesn't offer any guidance for these things. Anyway, thanks again. 
- 
	Hi ProWo, 
 
 Are you looking for the AVI that is causing the exports to h264 to have a variable frame rates or the exported h264 that subsequently has the variable frame rate. Bear in mind that the AVIs that have the timecode brakes that are causing the problem are considered to have a constant frame rate.
- 
	Also, cutting it out could be tricky, because I failed to write down the exact frames that bear the timecode breaks. I believe it was MPEG Streamclip that provided that information. If I don't cut out the right section, then you won't see the problem. In other words, if I were to export a portion of the AVI that is clean with no breaks to H264, the result is Constant Frame Rate. This is crucial information for technical experts. 
- 
	If could you share a small example of the generated output file, that would be great. I'm curious to check how the actual timestamps differ from the expected values. 
- 
	Hi ivanb, I will do that as well thanks. This may take some time, I need to leave for part of the day. 
- 
	Hello people, 
 
 It was Winff that identified the problem parts of the AVI file, not MPEG Streamclip. I just ran it through again to identify the frames I need to cut out for you all to look at: Reported as:
 
 Frame=28531 fps=170 q=2.0 size = 504016kb time=00:15:53.02
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=69
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=64
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=66
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=64
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=65
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=71
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=64
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=65
 Last message repeated 1 times
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=64
 Last message repeated 1 times
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=66
 [dvvideo @ 041bc2c0] AC EOB Marker is Absent pos=64
 Last message repeated 2 times
 Frame=28620 fps=170 q=1.6 size = 505318kb time=00:15:55.92
 
 So I need to include frames 28531 through 28620, but I will include additional frames on either side as well.
- 
	Here's the original AVI File that we are working with: 
 
 General
 Count : 349
 Count of stream of this kind : 1
 Kind of stream : General
 Kind of stream : General
 Stream identifier : 0
 Count of video streams : 1
 Count of audio streams : 1
 Video_Format_List : DV
 Video_Format_WithHint_List : DV (Sony)
 Codecs Video : DV
 Audio_Format_List : PCM
 Audio_Format_WithHint_List : PCM
 Audio codecs : PCM
 Audio_Channels_Total : 2
 Complete name : C:\Users\Tay Young\Desktop\Upscaling Test using Corel Video\LinusHearty2.avi
 Folder name : C:\Users\Tay Young\Desktop\Upscaling Test using Corel Video
 File name extension : LinusHearty2.avi
 File name : LinusHearty2
 File extension : avi
 Format : AVI
 Format : AVI
 Format/Info : Audio Video Interleave
 Format/Extensions usually used : avi
 Commercial name : AVI DVCPRO
 Commercial name : DVCPRO
 Format profile : OpenDML
 Format settings : BitmapInfoHeader / PcmWaveformat
 Internet media type : video/vnd.avi
 Interleaved : Yes
 File size : 4309054320
 File size : 4.01 GiB
 File size : 4 GiB
 File size : 4.0 GiB
 File size : 4.01 GiB
 File size : 4.013 GiB
 Duration : 1141909
 Duration : 19 min 1 s
 Duration : 19 min 1 s 909 ms
 Duration : 19 min 1 s
 Duration : 00:19:01.909
 Duration : 00:19:01;29
 Duration : 00:19:01.909 (00:19:01;29)
 Overall bit rate mode : CBR
 Overall bit rate mode : Constant
 Overall bit rate : 30188425
 Overall bit rate : 30.2 Mb/s
 Frame rate : 29.970
 Frame rate : 29.970 FPS
 Frame count : 34223
 Stream size : 861752
 Stream size : 842 KiB (0%)
 Stream size : 842 KiB
 Stream size : 842 KiB
 Stream size : 842 KiB
 Stream size : 841.6 KiB
 Stream size : 842 KiB (0%)
 Proportion of this stream : 0.00020
 Recorded date : 2008-09-28 09:10:14 UTC
 File creation date : 2024-02-11 04:31:11.000 UTC
 File creation date (local) : 2024-02-10 23:31:11.000
 File last modification date : 2024-02-26 22:50:09.909 UTC
 File last modification date (local) : 2024-02-26 17:50:09.909
 
 Video
 Count : 390
 Count of stream of this kind : 1
 Kind of stream : Video
 Kind of stream : Video
 Stream identifier : 0
 StreamOrder : 0
 ID : 0
 ID : 0
 Format : DV
 Format : DV
 Commercial name : DVCPRO
 Commercial name : DVCPRO
 Internet media type : video/DV
 Codec ID : dvsd
 Codec ID/Hint : Sony
 Duration : 1141909
 Duration : 19 min 1 s
 Duration : 19 min 1 s 909 ms
 Duration : 19 min 1 s
 Duration : 00:19:01.909
 Duration : 00:19:01;29
 Duration : 00:19:01.909 (00:19:01;29)
 Bit rate mode : CBR
 Bit rate mode : Constant
 Bit rate : 24417183
 Bit rate : 24.4 Mb/s
 Encoded bit rate : 28771229
 Encoded bit rate : 28.8 Mb/s
 Width : 720
 Width : 720 pixels
 Height : 480
 Height : 480 pixels
 Pixel aspect ratio : 0.889
 Display aspect ratio : 1.333
 Display aspect ratio : 4:3
 Frame rate mode : CFR
 Frame rate mode : Constant
 Frame rate : 29.970
 Frame rate : 29.970 (30000/1001) FPS
 FrameRate_Num : 30000
 FrameRate_Den : 1001
 Original frame rate : 29.970
 Original frame rate : 29.970 (29970/1000) FPS
 FrameRate_Original_Num : 29970
 FrameRate_Original_Den : 1000
 Frame count : 34223
 Standard : NTSC
 Color space : YUV
 Chroma subsampling : 4:1:1
 Chroma subsampling : 4:1:1
 Bit depth : 8
 Bit depth : 8 bits
 Scan type : Interlaced
 Scan type : Interlaced
 Scan order : BFF
 Scan order : Bottom Field First
 Compression mode : Lossy
 Compression mode : Lossy
 Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 2.357
 Delay : 0
 Delay : 00:00:00.000
 Delay : 00:00:00;00
 Delay : 00:00:00.000 (00:00:00;00)
 Delay_DropFrame : Yes
 Delay, origin : Stream
 Delay, origin : Raw stream
 Time code of first frame : 00:37:38;25
 TimeCode_DropFrame : Yes
 Time code source : Subcode time code
 Stream size : 4106760000
 Stream size : 3.82 GiB (95%)
 Stream size : 4 GiB
 Stream size : 3.8 GiB
 Stream size : 3.82 GiB
 Stream size : 3.825 GiB
 Stream size : 3.82 GiB (95%)
 Proportion of this stream : 0.95305
 Encoding settings : ae mode=full automatic / wb mode=automatic / white balance= / fcm=manual focus
 
 Audio
 Count : 285
 Count of stream of this kind : 1
 Kind of stream : Audio
 Kind of stream : Audio
 Stream identifier : 0
 StreamOrder : 1
 ID : 1
 ID : 1
 Format : PCM
 Format : PCM
 Commercial name : PCM
 Format settings : Little / Signed
 Format settings, Endianness : Little
 Format settings, Sign : Signed
 Codec ID : 1
 Codec ID/Url : http://www.microsoft.com/windows/
 Duration : 1141908
 Duration : 19 min 1 s
 Duration : 19 min 1 s 908 ms
 Duration : 19 min 1 s
 Duration : 00:19:01.908
 Duration : 00:19:01.908
 Bit rate mode : CBR
 Bit rate mode : Constant
 Bit rate : 1411200
 Bit rate : 1 411.2 kb/s
 Channel(s) : 2
 Channel(s) : 2 channels
 Sampling rate : 44100
 Sampling rate : 44.1 kHz
 Samples count : 50358143
 Bit depth : 16
 Bit depth : 16 bits
 Delay : 0
 Delay : 00:00:00.000
 Delay : 00:00:00.000
 Delay, origin : Stream
 Delay, origin : Raw stream
 Delay relative to video : 0
 Delay relative to video : 00:00:00.000
 Delay relative to video : 00:00:00.000
 Stream size : 201432568
 Stream size : 192 MiB (5%)
 Stream size : 192 MiB
 Stream size : 192 MiB
 Stream size : 192 MiB
 Stream size : 192.1 MiB
 Stream size : 192 MiB (5%)
 Proportion of this stream : 0.04675
 Alignment : Aligned
 Alignment : Aligned on interleaves
 Interleave, duration : 28.98
 Interleave, duration : 967
 Interleave, duration : 967 ms (28.98 video frames)
 Interleave, preload duration : 966
 Interleave, preload duration : 966 ms
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