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pcapreport(1) [debian man page]

PCAPREPORT:(1)							   User Commands						    PCAPREPORT:(1)

NAME
pcapreport - Report on network captures SYNOPSIS
pcapreport [switches] <infile> [switches] DESCRIPTION
TS tools version 1.11, pcap built Nov 11 2008 17:15:51 Report on a pcap capture file. -o <output file> Dump selected UDP payloads to the named output file. -d <dest ip>:<port> Select data with the given destination IP and port. --dump-data | -D Dump any data in the input file to stdout. --extra-dump | -e Dump only data which isn't being sent to the -o file. --times | -t Report on PCR vs PCAP timing for the destination specified in -d. --verbose | -v Output metadata about every packet. --skew-discontinuity-threshold <number> Gives the skew discontinuity threshold in 90kHz units. Specifying 0.0.0.0 for destination IP or 0 for destination port will capture all hosts and ports respectively. Network packet and TS packet numbers start at 0. Positive skew means that we received too low a PCR for this timestamp. TS tools version 1.11, pcap built Nov 11 2008 17:15:51 Report on a pcap capture file. -o <output file> Dump selected UDP payloads to the named output file. -d <dest ip>:<port> Select data with the given destination IP and port. --dump-data | -D Dump any data in the input file to stdout. --extra-dump | -e Dump only data which isn't being sent to the -o file. --times | -t Report on PCR vs PCAP timing for the destination specified in -d. --verbose | -v Output metadata about every packet. --skew-discontinuity-threshold <number> Gives the skew discontinuity threshold in 90kHz units. Specifying 0.0.0.0 for destination IP or 0 for destination port will capture all hosts and ports respectively. Network packet and TS packet numbers start at 0. Positive skew means that we received too low a PCR for this timestamp. SEE ALSO
The full documentation for pcapreport is maintained as a Texinfo manual. Please check http://tstools.berlios.de for more information. pcapreport 1.11 November 2008 PCAPREPORT:(1)

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PS2TS(1)							   User Commands							  PS2TS(1)

NAME
ps2ts - Convert an H.222 program stream to H.222 transport stream SYNOPSIS
ps2ts [switches] <infile> <outfile> DESCRIPTION
TS tools version 1.11, ps2ts built Nov 11 2008 17:15:47 Convert an H.222 program stream to H.222 transport stream. This program does not make use of any Program Stream Map packets in the data (mainly because I have yet to see data with any). This means that the program has to determine the stream type of the data based on the first few ES units. This program does not output more than one video and one audio stream. If the program stream data contains more than one of each, the first will be used, and the others ignored (with a message indicating this). It is assumed that the video stream will contain DTS values in its PES packets at reasonable intervals, which can be used as PCR values in the transport stream, and thus the video stream's PID can be used as the PCR PID in the transport stream. Files: <infile> is a file containing the program stream data (but see -stdin below) <outfile> is an transport stream file (but see -stdout and -host below) Input switches: -stdin Take input from <stdin>, instead of a named file -dvd The PS data is from a DVD. This is the default. This switch has no effect on MPEG-1 PS data. -notdvd, -nodvd The PS data is not from a DVD. The DVD specification stores AC-3 (Dolby), DTS and other audio in a specialised manner in pri- vate_stream_1. -vstream <n> Take video from video stream <n> (0..7). The default is the first video stream found. -astream <n> Take audio from audio stream <n> (0..31). The default is the first audio stream found (this includes private_stream_1 on non-DVD streams). -ac3stream <n> Take audio from AC3 substream <n> (0..7), from private_stream_1. This implies -dvd. (If audio is being taken from a substream, the user is assumed to have determined which one is wanted, e.g., using psreport) Output switches: -stdout Write output to <stdout>, instead of a named file Forces -quiet. -host <host>, -host <host>:<port> Writes output (over TCP/IP) to the named <host>, instead of to a named file. If <port> is not specified, it defaults to 88. -vpid <pid> <pid> is the video PID to use for the data. Use '-vpid 0x<pid>' to specify a hex value. Defaults to 0x68. -apid <pid> <pid> is the audio PID to use for the data. Use '-apid 0x<pid>' to specify a hex value. Defaults to 0x67. -noaudio Don't output the audio data -pmt <pid> <pid> is the PMT PID to use. Use '-pmt 0x<pid>' to specify a hex value. Defaults to 0x66 -prepeat <n> Output the program data (PAT/PMT) after every <n> PS packs. Defaults to 100. -pad <n> Pad the start with <n> filler TS packets, to allow a TS reader to synchronize with the datastream. Defaults to 8. General switches: -verbose, -v Print a 'v' for each video packet and an 'a' for each audio packet, as it is read -quiet, -q Only output error messages -max <n>, -m <n> Maximum number of PS packs to read Stream type: When the TS data is being output, it is flagged to indicate whether it conforms to H.262, H.264, etc. It is important to get this right, as it will affect interpretation of the TS data. If input is from a file, then the program will look at the start of the file to determine if the stream is H.264 or H.262 data. This process may occasionally come to the wrong conclusion, in which case the user can override the choice using the following switches. If input is from standard input (via -stdin), then it is not possible for the program to make its own decision on the input stream type. Instead, it defaults to H.262, and relies on the user indicating if this is wrong. -h264, -avc Force the program to treat the input as MPEG-4/AVC. -h262 Force the program to treat the input as MPEG-2. -mp42 Force the program to treat the input as MPEG-4/Part 2. -vtype <type> Force the program to treat the input as video of stream type <type> (e.g., 0x42 means AVS video). It is up to the user to specify a valid <type>. If the audio stream being output is Dolby (AC-3), then the stream type used to output it differs for DVB (European) and ATSC (USA) data. It may be specified as follows: -dolby dvb Use stream type 0x06 (the default) -dolby atsc Use stream type 0x81 TS tools version 1.11, ps2ts built Nov 11 2008 17:15:47 Convert an H.222 program stream to H.222 transport stream. This program does not make use of any Program Stream Map packets in the data (mainly because I have yet to see data with any). This means that the program has to determine the stream type of the data based on the first few ES units. This program does not output more than one video and one audio stream. If the program stream data contains more than one of each, the first will be used, and the others ignored (with a message indicating this). It is assumed that the video stream will contain DTS values in its PES packets at reasonable intervals, which can be used as PCR values in the transport stream, and thus the video stream's PID can be used as the PCR PID in the transport stream. Files: <infile> is a file containing the program stream data (but see -stdin below) <outfile> is an transport stream file (but see -stdout and -host below) Input switches: -stdin Take input from <stdin>, instead of a named file -dvd The PS data is from a DVD. This is the default. This switch has no effect on MPEG-1 PS data. -notdvd, -nodvd The PS data is not from a DVD. The DVD specification stores AC-3 (Dolby), DTS and other audio in a specialised manner in pri- vate_stream_1. -vstream <n> Take video from video stream <n> (0..7). The default is the first video stream found. -astream <n> Take audio from audio stream <n> (0..31). The default is the first audio stream found (this includes private_stream_1 on non-DVD streams). -ac3stream <n> Take audio from AC3 substream <n> (0..7), from private_stream_1. This implies -dvd. (If audio is being taken from a substream, the user is assumed to have determined which one is wanted, e.g., using psreport) Output switches: -stdout Write output to <stdout>, instead of a named file Forces -quiet. -host <host>, -host <host>:<port> Writes output (over TCP/IP) to the named <host>, instead of to a named file. If <port> is not specified, it defaults to 88. -vpid <pid> <pid> is the video PID to use for the data. Use '-vpid 0x<pid>' to specify a hex value. Defaults to 0x68. -apid <pid> <pid> is the audio PID to use for the data. Use '-apid 0x<pid>' to specify a hex value. Defaults to 0x67. -noaudio Don't output the audio data -pmt <pid> <pid> is the PMT PID to use. Use '-pmt 0x<pid>' to specify a hex value. Defaults to 0x66 -prepeat <n> Output the program data (PAT/PMT) after every <n> PS packs. Defaults to 100. -pad <n> Pad the start with <n> filler TS packets, to allow a TS reader to synchronize with the datastream. Defaults to 8. General switches: -verbose, -v Print a 'v' for each video packet and an 'a' for each audio packet, as it is read -quiet, -q Only output error messages -max <n>, -m <n> Maximum number of PS packs to read Stream type: When the TS data is being output, it is flagged to indicate whether it conforms to H.262, H.264, etc. It is important to get this right, as it will affect interpretation of the TS data. If input is from a file, then the program will look at the start of the file to determine if the stream is H.264 or H.262 data. This process may occasionally come to the wrong conclusion, in which case the user can override the choice using the following switches. If input is from standard input (via -stdin), then it is not possible for the program to make its own decision on the input stream type. Instead, it defaults to H.262, and relies on the user indicating if this is wrong. -h264, -avc Force the program to treat the input as MPEG-4/AVC. -h262 Force the program to treat the input as MPEG-2. -mp42 Force the program to treat the input as MPEG-4/Part 2. -vtype <type> Force the program to treat the input as video of stream type <type> (e.g., 0x42 means AVS video). It is up to the user to specify a valid <type>. If the audio stream being output is Dolby (AC-3), then the stream type used to output it differs for DVB (European) and ATSC (USA) data. It may be specified as follows: -dolby dvb Use stream type 0x06 (the default) -dolby atsc Use stream type 0x81 SEE ALSO
The full documentation for ps2ts is maintained as a Texinfo manual. Please check http://tstools.berlios.de for more information. ps2ts 1.11 November 2008 PS2TS(1)
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