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Decent DVD-Ripping Solution For Linux?

supersloshy writes "I'm a user of Ubuntu Linux and I have been for a little while now. Recently I've been trying to copy DVDs onto a portable media player, but everything I've tried isn't working right. dvd::rip always gets the language mixed up (for example, when ripping 'Howl's Moving Castle,' one of the files it ripped to was in Japanese instead of English), Acidrip just plain isn't working for me (not recognizing a disc with spaces in its name, refusing to encode, etc.), Thoggen is having trouble with chapters (chapter 1 repeated twice for me once), and OGMRip has the audio out of sync. What I'm looking for is a reliable program to copy the movie into a single file with none of the audio or video glitches as mentioned above. Is there even such thing on Linux? If you can't think of a decent Linux-based solution, then a Windows one is fine as long as it works."

19 of 501 comments (clear)

  1. DVDFab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Try running DVDFab under WINE.

    1. Re:DVDFab by Belial6 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I say that the solution is a Linux solution since the Author supports the application running on Wine. If the Author supports it, then to me it is as much a Linux solution as any other app that uses external libraries.

    2. Re:DVDFab by Hal_Porter · · Score: 3, Informative

      Back when I did this I used DVDDecrypter to strip out protection that DVDShrink couldn't handle.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    3. Re:DVDFab by Ardrad · · Score: 5, Informative

      OR you could run a program that actually runs native under linux. Download handbrake. I believe the site is handbrake.fr (google to make sure) you also need VLC for dvd decryption, it works perfectly. I have even ripped Howl's flying castle. and many many more.

    4. Re:DVDFab by TheWanderingHermit · · Score: 5, Informative

      That could cause problems. VLC is crippled in the latest Ubuntu. While the VLC people blame Ubuntu on their mailing lists, it turns out that the FFMpeg library uses different names for some codes in their newer version -- and on the latest Ubunut (Intrepid), that version of VLC doesn't use the newer names.

      I was on both mailing lists for a while (VLC, FFMpeg) and the latter admitted to changing the names but did have all the codecs available under Ubunut. The VLC people claim some of those codecs are not available under Ubuntu (even with extra repositories), but they're there -- just with different names.

      Until Ubuntu gets this straightened out, anyone using Intrepid or following versions will have trouble with video codecs, including ripping DVDs and, in my case, trying to read files from my HD camcorder that were easily readable in Ubuntu Hardy, but which nobody was quite sure how to read (or what settings to use) in Intrepid.

      After wasting several days of my life on this issue, I gave up, ordered an iMac, and since switching, have spent more time doing what I want on my computer and less time at the computer overall. I no longer have to spend time trying to make sure the tools taht are supposed to help me are set up properly or if I'm using the right settings.

      It's nice to have more time for real life than to be spending time adjusting my tools.

  2. Funny you should ask... by darpo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just this morning, Lifehacker posted about this very topic: http://lifehacker.com/5205221/acidrip-for-linux-rips-dvds-with-two+click-ease

  3. Use Handbrake by SuperNothing307 · · Score: 5, Informative

    You won't find one better than Handbrake, works great for me. Here's a howto I wrote on the topic: http://spareclockcycles.wordpress.com/2008/12/11/handbrake-for-dvd-ripping-on-ubuntu/

    1. Re:Use Handbrake by forgottenusername · · Score: 5, Informative

      /agree

      I'm really impressed with Handbrake. I actually use it to transcode a bunch of stuff so my ps3 will play it. They have a bunch of really handy presets for various device, such as ps3, iPod video, xbox 360 long with things like tv/animation etc.

      They have a CLI mode which is useful for scripting.

      HandBrake GUI on Linux is now a full fledged port, not just a hacky frontend to the CLI tool.

      Job managment is great too, with a real time adjustable queue, ability to pause/resume etc.

      One thing I haven't found out how to do is splice AVIs, I use avidemux for that. Which is another amazingly awesome program.

      3 people who figure this AV crap out that I have 0 interest in. I just want the friggin' thing to do the thing, man.

  4. Handbrake! by imac.usr · · Score: 4, Informative

    Live it, learn it, love it.
    http://handbrake.fr/

    --
    I use Macs for work, Linux for education, and Windows for cardplaying.
  5. Mencoder? by DjangoShagnasty · · Score: 5, Informative

    Mencoder (mplayer package) works pretty well.

    Following the docs gave me decent quality rips without too much hassle.

    http://web.njit.edu/all_topics/Prog_Lang_Docs/html/mplayer/encoding.html

  6. k9copy + k3b, my friend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Through much trial and error I've found that k9copy is the most reliable and functional program for ripping DVDs. You can customize what you want or don't want and it puts everything into VOB that can easily be burned as a video dvd in k3b. Happy Burning! :)

    1. Re:k9copy + k3b, my friend by NoobixCube · · Score: 4, Informative

      Seconded. k9copy is the best DVDShrink replacement there is, no contest. You can rip to video files, or to a whole compressed disc image, or a VIDEO_TS folder, and then just burn to a disc the way you'd burn anything.

      --
      Admit it. You post strawman arguments as AC so you get modded Insightful for refuting them, rather than Troll
  7. Rips as fast as your DVD drive.... by rampant+mac · · Score: 3, Informative

    MakeMKV. No loss in quality (think Ogg). Simple, easy and high quality. Hope you have a big hard drive.

    --
    I like big butts and I cannot lie.
  8. Favorite right now is k9copy by physicsphairy · · Score: 4, Informative
    And to address some of the issues:

    dvd::rip always gets the language mixed up (for example, when ripping 'Howl's Moving Castle,' one of the files it ripped to was in Japanese instead of English),

    What makes you think it is dvd::rip that has the language mixed up? It is a Japanese movie and it is not surprising that the first audio track is Japanese. Fortunately you can select to rip a different audio track.

    Acidrip just plain isn't working for me (not recognizing a disc with spaces in its name, refusing to encode, etc.)

    I am betting you set it up wrong, since the disc name really shouldn't effect anything. It could be your ripper program should point at /dev/dvd (or equivalent), not "/mnt/Mounted File System"

  9. Re:Acid Rip by evilviper · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is mencoder making its way through the access restrictions on the disk, but encountering a lot of resistance.

    If you compiled MPlayer with Dvdnav support, you can specify the title number with dvdnav:// instead of dvd:// and you won't have to wait for your drive to time-out reading endless bad sectors.

    And BTW, this almost exclusively occurs on DVDs produced by Sony companies.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  10. Re:Why Matroska? by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Matroska Multimedia Container is an open standard free container format, a file format that can hold an unlimited number of video, audio, picture or subtitle tracks inside a single file.[1] It is intended to serve as a universal format for storing common multimedia content, like movies or TV shows. Matroska is similar in conception to other containers like AVI, MP4 or ASF, but is entirely open in specification, with implementations consisting mostly of open source software.

  11. Re:Why Matroska? by Randle_Revar · · Score: 5, Informative

    First of all, Matroska is an open spec, and most implementations (including the reference implementation, libmatroska) are Open Source (lgpl for libmatroska).

    Mkv supports B-frames, Variable bit rate audio, Variable frame rate, Chapters, and Subtitles. Not all containers support all of these, and AVI only supports any of those with workarounds, modifications or just nasty hacks.

    The mpeg container can't do chapters or subtitles, and obviously only holds media in the mpeg (1 or 2) format.

    MP4 has limited chapter and subtitle support and only deals with mpeg media (basically 1, 2, and 4 ASP/AVC).

    Ogg/ogm is designed for simplicity, streaming and specifically for Vorbis and Theora (although most/all other codecs can be used), while Mkv is meant as a completely general-purpose distribution container, and wants to replace avi, asf, mp4, mov, etc.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matroska
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_container_formats
    http://www.matroska.org/technical/guides/faq/index.html
    http://xiph.org/container/
    http://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/lofiversion/index.php/t10426.html

  12. Handbrake by cybereal · · Score: 4, Informative

    Available in a linux flavor, I ripped 462 movies for my private use (streaming from my 1tb hdd to an apple tv) from DVD last fall. At the time Handbrake used its own decoder which didn't always work for certain types of highly standard breaking locking schemes (read: broken dvd's). However the recent version, at least for my mac, has no troubles as it is using VLC player for the dvd decoding engine.

    I found the best success using constant quality, around 59% plus a bunch of other handy settings I found under the "best settings and why" section in the forums for handbrake.

    I strongly recommend this avenue as the results are magnificent AVC encodes in iTunes, iPod, iPhone, PS3, etc. compatible container and they are literally indistinguishable from their DVD counterpart (save a few exceptionally difficult to rip movies like Pi). Good software, and free too.

    --
    I read the script, and I think it would help my character's motivation if he was on fire. -Bender
  13. You have 2 choices - both under Windows by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 5, Informative

    What nobody will tell you is that to prevent some older, free ripping tools from working, some studios (mostly for DVDs released in region 1 - USA and Canada - but also sometimes seen elsewhere) use a copy protection method called ARCCOS or something similar to protect their DVDs. The only rippers I know of that can defeat this are DVDFab HD Decrypter (they have a free version available) and AnyDVD (don't know if there is a free version or only the commercial version). Both are updated regularly to deal with new variations in ARCCOS. ARCCOS uses deliberately placed bad sectors on the disc to thwart copying. It's quite complicated, but it relies on a difference between how standalone DVD players and PCs read discs to thwart copying attempts. DVDFab and AnyDVD get updated because they are produced in countries that are currently free from MPAA enslavement. I am unaware of any programs other than those that can correctly rip DVDs and those only work on Windows. I don't keep up with Handbrake as it's mostly for Mac fanboys (but they do have a Windows version), so I have no idea if Handbrake is actually able to deal with ARCCOS or not. The people I know who use it do not rip DVDs that I know to use ARCCOS, so I have no idea if Handbrake can even deal with ARCCOS correctly or not.