2007-01-15, 04:31 PM
Hey sub, first off I'd like to vociferously thank you for v99.5. The major improvement for me personally is ability to edit post-padding for current recordings. This is a huge benefit during sporting events that run over EPG times. There are a few other additions that seem to make a big difference in my regular usage (Overlay mode aspect ratio, Recordings skin change). Many thanks!
The RecordingService crashes I've seen are unrelated to v.99; they've occurred since I started using GB-PVR v.96, but they are starting to really impact my timeshifts.
I am nearly positive that my crashes are due to recording a borderline ATSC channel that drops out. This screws up all current recordings on different tuners as well as future recordings until I manually restart the RecordingService.
I don't expect GB-PVR to fix a nonexistant data stream but I hope the RecordingService could fail a bit more gracefully by terminating the recording from the questionable channel, while preserving simultaneous stable recordings and future timed events.
The attached logs reveal one such RecordingService crash. The unstable recording starts on 14 Jan 2007 @ 19:00:00 (Kung Fu, channel label 47.1); see GBPVRRecordingService.exe-native-1.log. The signal stats are never better than (1,0,75,75) and jump around quite a bit.
We noticed a Windows Dr. Watson alert at approximately 19:42 which coincides with the end of the <>-native-1.log and a signal dropoff. I restarted the RecordingService approximately 19:45 which is indicated in GBPVRRecordingService.exe-native.log, and I manually terminate the questionable Kung Fu recording about 19:46:48.
Is this information enough to go on? Thanks for any help you can provide.
The RecordingService crashes I've seen are unrelated to v.99; they've occurred since I started using GB-PVR v.96, but they are starting to really impact my timeshifts.
I am nearly positive that my crashes are due to recording a borderline ATSC channel that drops out. This screws up all current recordings on different tuners as well as future recordings until I manually restart the RecordingService.
I don't expect GB-PVR to fix a nonexistant data stream but I hope the RecordingService could fail a bit more gracefully by terminating the recording from the questionable channel, while preserving simultaneous stable recordings and future timed events.
The attached logs reveal one such RecordingService crash. The unstable recording starts on 14 Jan 2007 @ 19:00:00 (Kung Fu, channel label 47.1); see GBPVRRecordingService.exe-native-1.log. The signal stats are never better than (1,0,75,75) and jump around quite a bit.
We noticed a Windows Dr. Watson alert at approximately 19:42 which coincides with the end of the <>-native-1.log and a signal dropoff. I restarted the RecordingService approximately 19:45 which is indicated in GBPVRRecordingService.exe-native.log, and I manually terminate the questionable Kung Fu recording about 19:46:48.
Is this information enough to go on? Thanks for any help you can provide.