"jerryt wrote:
Please give us a step by step, I have never understood the ROT.
ROT stands for "Running Object Table" and it is well defined in the link below
http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms787252.aspx
As I said before, you need to do those steps (from 8 and after) relatively fast or dvbdream will freeze so this is rough a solution but it should work
Here are the steps:
1- Menu options -> video -> Make sure “Reset DS after channel-change†is unchecked. This will avoid recreating the graph each channel change so changes to the graph that you make would remain. If you change between SD HD H.264 channels your changes will not remain as I believe it resets the graph.
2- Menu references -> General -> Make sure attach the graph to ROT is checked. -> click ok.
You might need to restart DVBdream if you change that option.
3- Restart DVBdream
4- Menu Tools -> Graphedit. It will open the Graphedit app. Or you can start it directly
5- Graphedit menu : File -> connect to Remote Graph. Select the IFilterGraph -> ok.
Now you should see the filer graph that is created and used by DVBDream.
6- Menu -> view Disable AutoArrange: this will make it easier to disconnect / connect filters faster.
7- Add your desired filters to the graph by using: Menu Graph -> Insert Filters
8- Now to the critical phase: pause the graph
9- Stop the graph
10- Disconnect the filters and reconnect the new ones.
11- Run the graph.
12- If all is ok, you can go back to using dvbdream
Small example of what can be done with this change:
http://www.zshare.net/image/379221342cd90e/
With this kind of changes possible, I believe that you can change filters, audio and video renderers, maybe output video to hardware decoders etc…
Of course I do not think that DVBdream was not designed to work with such changes so please note that a lot of changes you might make to the graph will cause crashes in DVBDream.
Hope this helps.
Cheers
Stlllts"
NA users follow Stlllts's steps and build this graph;
