tccat(1) concatenate multimedia streams from medium and print on the standard output

SYNOPSIS

tccat
-i name [ -t magic ] [ -T title[,chapter[,angle]] ] [ -L ] [ -S n ] [ -P ] [ -a ] [ -d mode ] [ -v ]

COPYRIGHT

tccat is Copyright (C) by Thomas Oestreich.

DESCRIPTION

tccat is part of and usually called by transcode.
However, it can also be used independently.
tccat reads source (from stdin if not explicitely defined) and prints on the standard output. Directory contents is concatenated, if source files have the same format. Multiple AVI-files are also supported.

OPTIONS

-i name
Specify input source. If ommited, stdin is assumed.
You can specify a file, directory, device, mountpoint or host address as input source. tccat usually handles the different types correctly.
-t magic
Tell tccat about the type of input. Currently only dvd is supported - any other parameter will be ignored.
-T title[,chapter[,angle]]
Select DVD title and extract only a single chapter with selected viewing angle. Setting the argument chapter to -1 means to process all available chapters on the DVD.
If this option is given, the input type of dvd will also be assumed (see option -t).
-L
This option tells tccat to loop through all chapters starting at the one given with the option -T.
-S n
Seek to program stream (VOB) offset nx2kB before starting output.
-P
Stream full DVD title specified by -T.
-a
Use this option to dump an AVI-file/socket audio stream. The default is to extract and concatenate AVI-file video stream.
-d level
With this option you can specify a bitmask to enable different levels of verbosity (if supported). You can combine several levels by adding the corresponding values:

QUIET 0

INFO 1

DEBUG 2

STATS 4

WATCH 8

FLIST 16

VIDCORE 32

SYNC 64

COUNTER 128

PRIVATE 256

-v
Print version information and exit.

NOTES

tccat is a front end for streaming various source types and is used in transcode's import modules.

EXAMPLES

The command

tccat -i /dev/dvd -T 1,-1 | mplayer -

reads all chapters belonging to title 1 of a DVD (assuming that /dev/dvd/ is a symbolic link to a real DVD device) and pipes a MPEG program stream into player.

AUTHORS

tccat was written by Thomas Oestreich
<[email protected]> with contributions from many others. See AUTHORS for details.