NAME¶
dvbackup — Converter from arbitrary data to a DV stream
SYNOPSIS¶
dvbackup [
--version] [
-n|--ntsc-mode] [
-d|--decode]
[
-t|--verify] [
-b|--set-backup-title=TITLE]
[
--set-picture=PPM-FILE] [
-v|--verbose]
[
-p|--prefix=COUNT] [
--test=COUNT] [
-r|--recover]
[
--enable-audio] [
-?|--help] [
--usage]
DESCRIPTION¶
This manual page documents briefly the
dvbackup tool.
This manual page was written for the
Debian distribution because the
original program does not have a manual page.
As you probably know, current digital camcorders can save approximately 13 GB of
data on those tiny DV cartridges at a speed of 3.6 MB/second. That's fast.
Very fast. It's faster than most DAT streamers which only work at 1 MB/sec or
less. We can not use all of the data, but 10 GB should be good enough for
everyone.
That's nice, but how can we use this to save data on it? And here comes the fun
part: If you read the DV documentation carefully, you will notice that the AC
DCT coefficients of the video data blocks (8x8 pixels in size) get a fixed
amount of space in the DV data stream, but can be terminated earlier with a
certain code sequence. So let's have some fun: We terminate the AC
coefficients immediately leaving only the DC coefficient for a fancy penguin
picture and use the rest for our backup data. Future implementations could
easily add a little picture showing the currently written file or something
like that.
Then there is the audio data, which is written uncompressed onto the tape. That
means: We tell the camcorder at the beginning of each frame, that we won't use
audio at all but fill the space reserved for it with data. Easy, but somewhat
hacky. In fact, I don't know, if this works on every camcorder and not only on
mine (a Sony VX700). Your mileage may vary.
To finally bring the data on tape, you have to use an additional utility, called
dvconnect, which is (hopefully soon) included into libdv. Take a look at the
patch manager if it's not in already. And then it's time to rock and roll:
Advantages of dvbackup over other backup technologies
-
- relatively cheap (the cheapest camcorder will be enough,
but if you have already one...)
-
- the tapes are quite cheap
-
- open standard: if your streamer, aah camcorder dies you can
rescue your data with any other one (except PAL/NTSC need to fit), you are
not bound to a special company
-
- it's faster than many streamers and it will be more
comfortable - you can use the search-index function to "jump" to
a recording
-
- tapes (re)wind faster than many streamers
-
- you do not need to rewind the tape to eject it
Disadvantages of dvbackup
-
- you do not get any warranty :-)
Usage of the Unix client
-
- Press record on your camcorder. (Or use your favorite avc
control program for this. For the VX700 this doesn't work and you have to
hack something together, that uses LANC. I might publish my
"solution" for this soon...)
-
- Type "find . |cpio -o -H crc |dvbackup --prefix=125
|dvconnect -s" to stream directly to your camcorder. This most likely
does only work on very fast harddisks and filesystems. You might try
something like "find . |cpio -o -H crc |dvbackup --prefix=125
|dvconnect -s -b 500" Alternatively, you can write the data in
several parts on tape. Just go experimenting, and mail me the resulting
backup scripts...
-
- Stop your camcorder and rewind.
-
- Now it's time to verify: Press play on tape ;-)
-
- Type "dvconnect |dvbackup -t" and watch for crc
errors. The data corruption bug mentioned for version 0.0.1 seems to be
fixed so there is no excuse in not using this little nifty program
;-)
-
- If you want to restore: Do a simple "dvconnect
|dvbackup -d|cpio -imV". CPIO will also happily tell you about CRC
errors. So you might want to check using cpio's archive test mode too. But
keep in mind, that cpio's CRC function is not that fast!
AUTHOR¶
This manual page was written by Robert Jordens jordens@debian.org for the
Debian system (but may be used by others). Permission is granted to
copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU
General Public License, Version 2. On Debian systems, the full text of this
license can be found in the file /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-2.