Pcdripper (PBcdripper) - version 2.9 posted
Yes, I'm running Puppy from a multisession DVD with no hard drive. I see that I'm actually running 2.10, not 2.11, but I doubt that makes any difference. I ran the Menu -> Setup -> CD/DVD drive wizard, but nothing changed. I will await your version 1.3. Thanks.
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Okay, it sees the CD reader now. Boy, what settings did you use for ripping? RipperX is a snail by comparison. Unfortunately, something seems to have gone wrong with the mp3 conversion. It seems to think it converted the wav files but there's nothing in the resulting mp3 files.
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First off the ripping is much faster when you disable paranoia and/or extra paranoia which will make cdparanoia rip like cdda2wav. cdda2wav is faster but cdparanoia is better because it does more checks and therefore should give you an exact copy everytime. As for the mp3 issue I'm really not sure, It still works fine for me. I just set up PBcdripper exactly like you did in the picture and my files encoded and play fine. Anyone else?
It could be an issue with using your ram to store the ripped files, maybe it filled up and caused errors. If you don't have an internal hard drive to rip to, do you have an external drive? You may also want to just try and rip and encode one track instead of the whole cd to see if it possibly is an issue with filling up your ram or if you're somehow missing a library or executable. You may want to reboot before you try and rip the single track so you can clear out your ram and start fresh. I've got to get to bed but I'll check back in the morning.
I did think to try just one track before I shut down last night. It rips and encodes a single track perfectly.
I seem to remember this happening with RipperX too. I don't remember what I did, if anything, to make it work but I kept tinkering and finally it did.
I'm pretty sure I experimented with turning off paranoia, in an attempt to speed up ripping in RipperX, but I was still disappointed.
There's certainly enough RAM in the computer. Freemem showed 1.8G when I started.
How can I change the program so that if "encode to mp3" is checked, it encodes each track (and then discards the wav) before ripping the next track? That would be more in keeping with Puppy's low-resource philosophy.
Again, thanks for the great program.
I seem to remember this happening with RipperX too. I don't remember what I did, if anything, to make it work but I kept tinkering and finally it did.
I'm pretty sure I experimented with turning off paranoia, in an attempt to speed up ripping in RipperX, but I was still disappointed.
There's certainly enough RAM in the computer. Freemem showed 1.8G when I started.
How can I change the program so that if "encode to mp3" is checked, it encodes each track (and then discards the wav) before ripping the next track? That would be more in keeping with Puppy's low-resource philosophy.
Again, thanks for the great program.
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You could try ripping a range of tracks, say for example 1-10 and when you're done with that 11-20, and so on. I know that'd be more steps but to do a rip and then encode to mp3 then delete the wav and on to the next track may be a pretty tall order. I'd have to scan the disc for track information, grep the number of tracks, and write a script that would rip 1 track at a time, encode and then move to the next. I'll see if I can come up with something, maybe if the keep wavs box isn't checked I can try to make it run like that.
No joy, plinej.
I've only had time to try it once. I stuck in a CD with 96 tracks and ripped the whole thing using the same settings as before. PBcdripper looks like it's trying to do exactly what I want. I can see the ripping seems to be going fine, but when the encoding runs, the numbers in the orange screen stay on zero and at the end the folder where the mp3s should be is empty. Not even empty files, as there were before.
Everything happens too rapidly for me to tell what's going on. Is it possible the Sempron 2800+ is so blazing fast that the program can't keep up? Seriously, I'll try to freeze the screen with ctrl-s while it's encoding and take a screenshot if that will help. One question: where does it put the wav files? The same place as the mp3s?
I can't think of anything else to add until I've done more tinkering. Does anyone have any suggestions?
I've only had time to try it once. I stuck in a CD with 96 tracks and ripped the whole thing using the same settings as before. PBcdripper looks like it's trying to do exactly what I want. I can see the ripping seems to be going fine, but when the encoding runs, the numbers in the orange screen stay on zero and at the end the folder where the mp3s should be is empty. Not even empty files, as there were before.
Everything happens too rapidly for me to tell what's going on. Is it possible the Sempron 2800+ is so blazing fast that the program can't keep up? Seriously, I'll try to freeze the screen with ctrl-s while it's encoding and take a screenshot if that will help. One question: where does it put the wav files? The same place as the mp3s?
I can't think of anything else to add until I've done more tinkering. Does anyone have any suggestions?
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That is weird Flash, it works perfectly for me. I really can't think what the issue may be. Yes the wav files rip to the same directory as the mp3s. A shot of the terminal when encoding may help. It really has me stumped if you can rip and encode one track at a time why it won't work for you to rip and encode the entire disc.
Ctrl-s and ctrl-q stop and start the orange window. I got a screenshot of what I hope was a representative part of it. Is there anything else you want me to add to the screenshot I post?
I haven't made a tarball before. I assume that's the "tar.gz" I can make with the pupzip icon.
I haven't made a tarball before. I assume that's the "tar.gz" I can make with the pupzip icon.
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It looks like the mp3 files were created, they just weren't put in /tmp/<name of book> where I thought I told PBcdripper to put them.
I tried to rip/convert just one track as before and it didn't work. I noticed an error message at the very end of the orange screen, something like "wav file doesn't exist," but it went too fast. I'll try to stop the screen and get a screenshot next time.
I tried to rip/convert just one track as before and it didn't work. I noticed an error message at the very end of the orange screen, something like "wav file doesn't exist," but it went too fast. I'll try to stop the screen and get a screenshot next time.
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Yep, I did use spaces. I guess I should RTFM, huh? Actually I did read it and I think now I remember something about not using spaces. I thought you did something about that later on. Maybe that was in another thread. At least now I know where it puts the mp3 files if I use spaces: in /usr/local/PBcdripper.
Anyway, PBcdripper rips and encodes perfectly -- if you don't use spaces. It took just under 6 minutes to rip a whole CD containing 95 very short tracks, and encode them to 32 kb/s, with the settings as in the last screenshot. It even adds the mp3 tracks from the next CD into the same directory as the first CD, in the right order. I haven't tried the result in my mp3 player yet, but it looks real good for that.
Thanks, plinej, for this very useful program.
P.S. Could you make it pop out the CD tray and go "ding" when it's finished?
Anyway, PBcdripper rips and encodes perfectly -- if you don't use spaces. It took just under 6 minutes to rip a whole CD containing 95 very short tracks, and encode them to 32 kb/s, with the settings as in the last screenshot. It even adds the mp3 tracks from the next CD into the same directory as the first CD, in the right order. I haven't tried the result in my mp3 player yet, but it looks real good for that.
Thanks, plinej, for this very useful program.
P.S. Could you make it pop out the CD tray and go "ding" when it's finished?