Hi, I'm now 100% sure that this is a DVB-H transport stream. the appearing/disappearing TS-PIDs in the dvbtraffic are indicating that timeslicing is active. The dvbsnoop clearly says that there are only MPE-sections which is another indicator for that. I will commit my two little, proof-of-concept-like, tools soon and tell you where to find and how to try it. Patrick. On Mon, 12 May 2008, Rogan Dawes wrote: > Patrick Boettcher wrote: >> Hi Rogan, >> >> your dvbtraffic output raises a question: What happens when you run it for >> several seconds ? >> >> Are the PIDs always the same? Especially the one with the higher bitrate? >> >> I'm asking because if that is the case, it could be that this is a DVB-H >> transmission. >> >> I have some tools (which I did not commit yet) which "scan", in a very >> basic way, for DVB-H services, maybe this could help you. >> >> Before that you can try to use dvbsnoop on PID 0x00 and 0x10 to see >> whether it signals a INT-section. >> >> I could also be a pure radio transmission, but in that case scan should >> detect those channels. >> >> Patrick. > > Hi Patrick, > > Actually, I think you may well be right. Our cell networks are trialling (or > even deploying) DVB-H, and the content is provided by MultiChoice. > Unfortunately (for me) that content is almost definitely encrypted. > > I guess I might have to retry w_scan to see if it picks up any other > frequencies that might have the real DVB-T signals on them. And maybe improve > my antennae - I am currently using a Technisat DigiFlex TT2, which is just > sitting on my desk. > > I am attaching the results of "dvbsnoop -s pidscan", as well as a longer > capture of dvbtraffic (using "dvbtraffic | tee dvbtraffic.txt", then Ctrl-C > after 6-7 seconds). > > Thanks for your help. > > Regards, > > Rogan > > _______________________________________________ linux-dvb mailing list linux-dvb@xxxxxxxxxxx http://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/linux-dvb