Hello All,
The issue was not related to USB whatsoever - my channels.conf was the issue.
I created it with "scan" from the dvb-utils package. Turns out that "scan -o vdr" outputs the channel frequency in kHz, where vdr expects it in Hz. Obviously, the vdr still tunes but the recording part is baffled.
Refer also too: http://www.vdr-portal.de/board/thread.php?threadid=88654
Best regards, Markus
keywords: 0 Byte, Recording, Aufnahme, "ERROR: video data stream broken", vdr, restart
2010/2/4 Markus Fritsche fritsche.markus@googlemail.com:
Hello,
further investigation shows that it only affects some channels, and only if recording. Meaning: every channel is fine when streamed, some are also recorded, others just cause the vdr process to restart while recording.
Any pointers? Better antenna?
2010/2/3 VDR User user.vdr@gmail.com
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 1:37 PM, Markus Fritsche fritsche.markus@googlemail.com wrote:
Hello,
I am using (or trying to) vdr on an Eee PC 701. vdr is set up to be headless, just used for network streaming and (hopefully) recording.
I am facing some issues with the USB connection though. Some details on my setup:
- Eee 701
- Ubuntu Server 9.10
- Ubuntu VDR and dvb drivers
- USB Hauppauge Nova-T Stick 3
- USB Harddisks for storage
The issue I'm facing is that all three external USB ports of the Eee 701 are wired to the same hub (at least, that's what I think ;-)). Live TV via network streaming (vdr-plugin-streamdev-server) is fine and works like a charm.
Recording, though, cancels after 30 seconds, saying that "ERROR: video data stream broken".
I already set the autosuspend of USB to off, changed the cpufreq govenor to performance.
Are there any other tweaks you can think of that will allow vdr to record & store the stream while being on the same USB HUB? Or is this a lost cause?
I'm not sure this is the right mailing list for your question, since it's more to do with USB then VDR. However, maybe the source of your problem is with the address bandwidth being used by your USB harddrive, there isn't enough to handle everything, thus bottlenecking. That's just an idea but it's easily tested but moving one of your devices to another USB hub, using a networked harddrive for storage, or something like that. If it magically works again, then you know putting everything on the same USB hub is a problem.
vdr mailing list vdr@linuxtv.org http://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/vdr
--
Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach - "Even a stopped clock is right twice a day."