Later on kept finding “one click rip” solutions, but there were two I either had to rip by hand, or… well rip by hand. One of the things that always frustrated me was ripping media such asĬD’s and DVD’s. Media center case but what’s technology if you don’t over do it here and This case is very, very big so I probably shouldn’t be using it as a It’s 4U tall and really makes one hell of a system. Recently I built myself a nice media center. I am going to copy it to here in case the site does change: The Ultimate Automated Ripping Machine I have modified the process on my setup, but here is the link to the original directions that I followed. Perhaps Handbrake can do a better job of ripping one, haven't tested yet but the results were unuseable before.I followed a Tutorial to get this done a couple years agao and it has been working great. This computer (my main desktop workhorse, Intel I3 on an Asus board w/8GB RAM running up-to-date Stretch XFCE) seems unchanged except that I can now play Blu-Ray discs on it. So far (several days now, holidays that I've been home and bad weather so I've been playing with the computer), no problems. One note, mainly just for curiosity's sake: If I have the tech details right, this should enable DVD playback without installing the DVD-CSS libs directly the MakeMKV libs should already have that covered and that's what VLC is using now, and so are most any other players. That should secure their "intellectual property"! Finally it worked! Anyway until "they" come up with yet another new form of DRM so that nobody, ever, can play any BD on any player. Then as noted above, the "no menus" box needs to be ticked. No such luck it had to point to /dev/sr0 instead. I found that (at least in my Stretch installation) VLC's "open disc" dialog pointed by default to /dev/cdrom, which seemed fine as that pointed to my BD drive. It still took me several tries to play a disc in VLC, though. So once again their instructions are very good, I can't improve them:
#MAKEMKV LINUX 2019 UPDATE#
I plan to update this post in February '19, after the current key expires, to see if the lib still works or no. But I think the necessary libs are now installed and can be used by VLC without it. Well, honestly I don't know if we'll need that key or not-I'd already installed it before I discovered the program no longer had streaming.
#MAKEMKV LINUX 2019 REGISTRATION#
If you plan to use the program to rip a BD to MKV files you'll need a registration key:īut that isn't what we want to do, is it? We want to play the disc. Anyway the good news is that they give very simple, basic, concise step-by-step instructions that I can't improve upon: Each month they update the beta registration key and you must renew it, but more on that later. Yes, compile it from source! It's a proprietary program but "free while in beta", which it has been for years now.
#MAKEMKV LINUX 2019 INSTALL#
So first you need to compile and install MakeMKV. To play a DVD you normally want the "no menu" box unchecked, for BD you want to check it. Apparently they did this because they came up with a better solution, namely a method of allowing VLC to directly use their library files to open BDs in much the same manner as it does DVDs, that is, Media>Open Disc>Blu-Ray. But that hardly matters now MakeMKV removed the streaming function. It involved installing a proprietary ripper program called MakeMKV and using it to decode the BD and then stream the result to either VLC or Kodi for playback, which sounds overly complicated (the article called it "clunky". What I did find through Google searches was both Ubuntu-based and out-of-date. The Debian Wiki covers the problem with DVDs rather thoroughly:īut information on playing Blu-Ray discs was harder to find, thus this Howto. Due to legal and licensing restrictions, Debian cannot play most commercial DVDs and Blu-ray discs out-of-the-box.