David G. Mackay wrote:
On Fri, 2008-05-02 at 15:39 -0400, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
Patrick wrote:
On Fri, 2008-05-02 at 14:10 -0400, Jeffrey Ross wrote:
I'm trying to get a PVR-350 working in the system which is Fedora 9
x86_64. I've search and seem to only be able to find instructions for
Ubunto or older versions of Fedora.
pointers would be appreciated.
The card shows up with lspci -v as:
07:02.0 Multimedia video controller: Internext Compression Inc iTVC15
MPEG-2 Encoder (rev 01)
Subsystem: Hauppauge computer works Inc. WinTV PVR-350
Flags: bus master, medium devsel, latency 32, IRQ 11
Memory at 90000000 (32-bit, prefetchable) [size=64M]
Capabilities: [44] Power Management version 2
Kernel modules: ivtv
Last week I installed MythTV 0.21 on a box with F8 and a Hauppage
PVR-500. The only thing it took was enabling the atrpms repo and do a
yum install mythtv. I looked at using F9/Rawhide too but iirc atrpms
does not have MythTV RPMs for F9/Rawhide yet. Or maybe it just uses the
ones from F8. Not sure, you can give it a try. This guide still applies
to F8 and probably to F9 too. Includes stuff about drivers for your PVR
card (ivtv): http://wilsonet.com/mythtv/fcmyth.php
Regards,
Patrick
right now Mythtv is a little more than I wanted to install at the
moment. However I tried, but I run into a failure with
"Error: Missing Dependency: libmp4ff.so.0()(64bit) is needed by package
mythmusic"
of course I wasn't using the ATrpms but the Livna repository...
suggestions on how to get out of the dependency problems?
I'm using a pvr-150 on F7-x86_64. It uses the ivtv driver, which is
already included in the kernel. A yum install ivtv should pull in
several modules, including the perl video and ivtv firmware modules,
assuming that they're ready for f9. I'm guessing that the two different
tuners will occupy /dev/video0 and /dev/video1 unless you've got a
webcam, or some other video input. Do a google for "pvr-150 lirc" and
you should find a modified lirc that will let you use both the input and
output ir devices. Note that the outputs on /dev/videox are encoded in
mpeg2, so you'll need something like mplayer or vlc to play it.
Unfortunately, it doesn't throw in nav packets, so you'll have to do a
demux/mux operation if you want to burn the output to a video dvd.
Dave
First my bad, I guess I was anticipating Fedora 9, I'm still running
Fedora 8.... sorry for the confusion..
I tried installing ivtv and I had no luck:
[root@wisdom yum.repos.d]# yum install ivtv
Loading "fastestmirror" plugin
Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile
* livna: mirror.atrpms.net
* fedora: mirror.umoss.org
* adobe-linux-i386: linuxdownload.adobe.com
* updates: mirror.umoss.org
Setting up Install Process
Parsing package install arguments
No package ivtv available.
Nothing to do
I did however find ivtv-firmware and installed that.
What repo can I find ivtv?
Thanks,Jeff
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