XBMC: Difference between revisions

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To ensure your Raspberry Pi can keep up in fast moving complex scenes you need to set the refresh rate of your monitor to match that of the video. To achieve this head over to System => Settings => Videos => Playback and set  Adjust display refresh rate to match video to Always.
To ensure your Raspberry Pi can keep up in fast moving complex scenes you need to set the refresh rate of your monitor to match that of the video. To achieve this head over to System => Settings => Videos => Playback and set  Adjust display refresh rate to match video to Always.
Now fast moving scenes will play without glitches or stuttering because XBMC no longer has to pull up the refresh rate to 50 or 60 Hz.The only downside is the slightly increased chance of interference patterns. But these are still far less annoying than shocking movement in scenes.
Now fast moving scenes will play without glitches or stuttering because XBMC no longer has to pull up the refresh rate to 50 or 60 Hz.The only downside is the slightly increased chance of interference patterns. But these are still far less annoying than shocking movement in scenes.
ALSO 1080p MKV files stutter like hell. The solution is to mount the NAS using NFS, see below!


==Mounting with NFS==
==Mounting with NFS==

Revision as of 08:00, 14 April 2015

OpenElec

installation instructions

You can find a whole load of settings files in:

/storage/.xbmc/userdata/

/storage/.config

SSH

login as user: root pass: openelec

Optimising

wiki link here

Menu speed

Turn off Extract thumbnail and video information from System => Settings => File lists

Turn off the RSS feed in System => Settings => Appearance.

Improving stutter

To ensure your Raspberry Pi can keep up in fast moving complex scenes you need to set the refresh rate of your monitor to match that of the video. To achieve this head over to System => Settings => Videos => Playback and set Adjust display refresh rate to match video to Always. Now fast moving scenes will play without glitches or stuttering because XBMC no longer has to pull up the refresh rate to 50 or 60 Hz.The only downside is the slightly increased chance of interference patterns. But these are still far less annoying than shocking movement in scenes.

ALSO 1080p MKV files stutter like hell. The solution is to mount the NAS using NFS, see below!

Mounting with NFS

Also see here mount stuff in:

mount -t nfs 192.168.0.100:/c/media/Videos /storage/NAS -o nolock;

To remount at boot, don't use fstab, but:

vi /storage/.config/autostart.sh

#!/bin/sh
(sleep 30; \
mount -t nfs 192.168.0.100:/c/media/Videos /storage/NAS -o nolock; \
)&

chmod +x /storage/.config/autostart.sh

and here

mount -t nfs 192.168.1.77:/multimedia /thor -o udp,noatime,rsize=32768,wsize=32768,nolock

and here for stuff about changing the buffering

Add ons

Mash Up

Turkish

guide

XBMCTR Dream-Clup addon

XBMCTR forum

XBMCTR scraper

Codec keys:

Thank you for purchasing codec license keys from the Raspberry Pi Store.To enable codecs on your device(s), add the following lines to the config.txt file in the FAT partition of your SD card:


decode_MPG2=0x5c6af7b5

decode_WVC1=0xad51e9bb


If you want to verify that the codecs are now enabled, the following commands will report their status:


vcgencmd codec_enabled MPG2

vcgencmd codec_enabled WVC1


Regards The Raspberry Pi Foundation

Bluetooth

[1]

lsusb - shows you if the device is there

Bus 001 Device 007: ID 0a12:0001 Cambridge Silicon Radio, Ltd Bluetooth Dongle (HCI mode)

bluetoothctl - opens a control panel to help play with your bluetooth device. Use help for commands.

list - lists the controller

show - shows the statusses

scan on - scans for devices

devices - shows you the devices it has found

you can also use hcitool - it has a few more options

hcitool scan

rebooting a LOT helps a lot on the pi!

LiveTV

The system needs to be running Tvheadend which takes the input from a DVB card and moves it to XBMC Live TV. It's configured through a web interface. In the Howto's there's a section on Ziggo that may apply to UPC as well.

DVB

DVB-C = cable DVB-S or S2 = satellite DVB-T or T2 = terrestrial

A list of linux (and therefore XBMC compatible) hardware is to be found on the LinuxTV wiki

Standard you need a DVB-C card with a CI interface. Some DVB-T boxen also have DVB-C compatibility and a CI card.

The HDHomeRun with TVHeadEnd is your best bet, but unfortunately this is not CI+ certified. So far, nothing is, as CI+ was developed to stop people from watching TV on their PCs.

You can find a list of raspberry pi verified peripherals at here

Help links

XBMC Raspberry Pi FAQ

XBMC Community forum