Jorge Almeida <jjalmeida@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Sep 14, 2011 at 9:44 AM, Joerg Schilling > <Joerg.Schilling@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > cdparanoia is a cdda2wav version from 1997 with some modifications. > > Even the recent version? > > Cdparanoia Correct, Monty did take a cdda2wav release from before the first major rewrite has been done. There was a major rewrite starting in 1999 another one starting around 2006. > > is Linux/gcc only. > > Tha'ts fine by me. I understand devs will think otherwise, but for a > linux-only user portability is not a plus nor a minus. All my software is portable to virtually all platforms and this is why I need to make code portable before I can ise it. > Joerg: I've been using your software, and I intend to keep using it. > Yes, I know about the -paranoia option. But sometimes cdda2wav report > some (usually minor) problems. Example: > > 100% track 4 recorded with minor problems (0.2% problem sectors) > 100% 0 rderr, 0 skip, 0 atom, 1 edge, 81 drop, 1 dup, 0 drift > 100% 466 overlap(0.5 .. 0.8274) "minor problems" means that these problems are not expected to cause audible results. If you like to most agressive parameters, I recommend to call: cdda2wav paraopts=proof > I suppose this is essentially harmless, but, being somewhat > perfectionist, I would rather have 0 problems. Most tracks usually > come out without errors. So I tried cdparanoia, and it did the ripping > with two "+" signs at full speed. So I tried at speed=1 and it came > out completely clean. This just verifies that cdparanoia doesn't inform you about the problems. > Now, I'm not that naif as to assume that "no errors reported" <=> "no > errors at all". (Maybe 0 errors from cdparanoia means that the 81 > drops are still there but deemed irrelevant?) I did visit the > cdparanoia site, but I didn't leave much wiser. > So, for someone who wants to rip a brand new, duly purchased, never > played before, CD with the maximum quality, what would be useful to > know (with proper arguments) is: I fixed some problems in the praranoia code related to error reporting.... > -- When one of the programs ("cdda2wav -paranoia" or "cdparanoia") > reports less than optimal results, is it worth to try the other one? My ststistic experience shows that you will usually not get a better overall result if you repeat the extract with all tracks as usually one track will be worse then before. I thus recommend to repeat extracting single tracks. Note: cdda2wav supports MD5 sums on the audio data since 2008. This allows an easy check on whether an identical result may give different paranoia statistics. > Note that this wouldn't mean that one is better than the other: they > might use different algorithms, and it might happen that one algorithm > performs better for a particular CD. Then again, what I'm saying may > be complete nonsense. I am not qualified to read the source of either > program. Before 2006, cdda2wav did not enable dynamic overlap with libparanoia. This may cause different results. Jörg -- EMail:joerg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (home) Jörg Schilling D-13353 Berlin js@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (uni) joerg.schilling@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (work) Blog: http://schily.blogspot.com/ URL: http://cdrecord.berlios.de/private/ ftp://ftp.berlios.de/pub/schily