GNU/Linux Desktop Survival Guide by Graham Williams |
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You can extract sound from a DVD, one track at a time or a chapter at a time. Some simple command line examples should suffice to demonstrate how this is done.
First off place the DVD into the DVD drive! This should probably be identified as /dev/dvd. Have a look at its table of contents with the lsdvd command:
$ lsdvd libdvdread: Using libdvdcss version 1.2.5 for DVD access Title: 01, Length: 02:32:44 Chapters: 26, Cells: 27, Audio streams: 02, Subpictures: 01 Title: 02, Length: 00:17:36 Chapters: 02, Cells: 02, Audio streams: 01, Subpictures: 00 Title: 03, Length: 00:00:11 Chapters: 02, Cells: 02, Audio streams: 01, Subpictures: 00 Longest track: 1 |
This DVD has three titles, the first one (Title 01) probably contains the main material, as it is identified as being the longest track. It also has two audio streams.
To capture the audio from the tenth chapter of the first title, saving
it as OGG format, the command line is simply:
transcode -i /dev/dvd -x dvd -T 1,10,1 -a 0 -y ogg -m track10.ogg |
To extract multiple chapters from a title you can do the following
composite command:
for i in '1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9'; do echo transcode -i /dev/dvd -x dvd -T 1,$i,1 -a 0 -y ogg -m track0$i.ogg; done |
Another example generates MP3 output of chapter 20 from title 1:
transcode -i /dev/dvd -x dvd -T 1,20,1 -a 0 -y raw -m track20.mp3 |
To extract the whole audio track of a title (all chapters) as OGG audio:
transcode -i /dev/dvd -x dvd -T 1,-1 -a 0 -y ogg -m audiotrack.ogg |
If you prefer WAV files, the following will do it:
$ transcode -i /dev/dvd -x dvd -T 1,20 -a 0 -y wav -m track20.wav |