![]() Lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/art/03_ac Lua debug: skipping script (unmatched scope) /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/art/02_ac Lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/art/02_ac Lua debug: skipping script (unmatched scope) /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/art/01_ac Lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/art/01_ac Lua debug: skipping script (unmatched scope) /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/art/00_ac Lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/art/00_ac Lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/art Lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in /home/heta/.local/share/vlc/lua/meta/art Main debug: looking for art finder module matching "any": 2 candidates Main debug: no meta fetcher modules matched Lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in /usr/share/vlc/lua/meta/fetcher Lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/vlc/lua/meta/fetcher Lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in /home/heta/.local/share/vlc/lua/meta/fetcher Main debug: looking for meta fetcher module matching "any": 1 candidates Main debug: looking for access_demux module matching "dvd": 18 candidates Main debug: creating demux: access='dvd' demux='any' location='/dev/sr0' file='/dev/sr0' Main debug: `dvd:///dev/sr0' gives access `dvd' demux `any' path `/dev/sr0' Main debug: using timeshift granularity of 50 MiB Main debug: requesting art for new input thread Main debug: Creating an input for 'dvd:///dev/sr0' Main debug: starting playback of new item Main debug: rebuild done - 1 items, index 0 Main debug: rebuilding array of current - root Playlist Either you create such a link in a boot script after each boot or you modify the vlc preferences for dvd reading directly from /dev/sr0 or you call vlc with an option such as: "vlc dvd:///dev/sr0".Code: main debug: processing request item: dvd:///dev/sr0, node: Playlist, skip: 0 Unfornuately this will be lost at next boot (nowadays the device files are mounted on a temporary filesystem and not on the harddisk as it was the case with very old Linux versions). ![]() In this case you should probably add a symbolic link from /dev/sr0 to /dev/dvd. However, after this command the user toto should completely logout and log in again in the system since only shells and processes started after this modification will have the new group properties and resulting read/write permissions.ģ) vlc uses by default (or depending on your preference settings) something like /dev/dvd as dvd device. If necessary you can use the command "sudo groupmod -A toto cdrom" to add the user toto to the group cdrom which should give read/write permissions to the dvd drive. The command "groups" tell you the groups in which you are actually in. Therefore check that your user account belongs to the group "cdrom" (as well as to audio and video for other usual things). In usual Linux distributions (at least in opensuse 12.1 which I know) only root and the group "cdrom" have read and write access to this file. Typically for DVD reading it uses /dev/sr0 (or sr1 if you have more than one drive). ![]() In linux a DVD drive uses different types of device files in /dev/ with certain file permissions. However, if you compile vlc and libraries on your own it is "possible" to forget libdvdnav.Ģ) other more realistic practicable problem: existence and write permission of the device files for your DVD drive. If libdvdcss is correctly working and if you have also problems with "free DVDs" (burned by some PC software or with DVD-VCR etc.) you should verify:ġ) other libraries such as livdvdnav but with a correct vlc installation this should not be problem. ![]()
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