I'm probably overlooking something obvious, but I wonder if anyone can
offer any suggestions.
I always just build mplayer without the gtk interface, works fine.
Editing the Makefile yields more options than the config screen.
Simple keybindings for FF, RW, play/pause. Piece 'o' cake.
--
indi
Google Groupers and X-posters are filtered. If you're not a troll
or a spammer then you might want to stop posting like one.
H.
Best bet is probably as basic X install with dual screen setup.
A couple of hints I can give are:
1. Although it's some time ago, I did once have a basic media player
setup using mplayer. I had X set to startup without a GUI, just a shell
at full screen size which ran a basic webrowser/webserver combo using PHP
to scan the "media" drive for any/all media files and presented a list.
I can't remember how I got the shell start up but IIRC was something
in .xinitrc/.xinit or something. This was a single screen setuo.
2. My current dual screen setup defaults to the VGA interface as screen
1 and the DVI interface as screen 2. As screen 2 is my larger screen, I
have KDE set to force screen 2 as the primary screen for windows to open
on, but if I run mplayer -fs it always opens on screen 1 (which happens
to be what I want.)
Now, I don't know if you can use the above, or if only KDE has the
options to do the screen selections, or even if that behavior can be got
from a basic X or some other, light window manager or via the dual head
drivers/config. But it might point you in the right direction.
It may be that if you setup X to use two separate and independent
screens, ie not dual head, desktop stretched over multiple screens, then
you can run an X program with a screen option, something like
startx command -screen:2.
Or maybe a separate instance of X. I dunno. I'm just guessing based on
vague memories as it's something I've not considered until now.
--
You cannot simply assume someone is honest
just because they are not an MP.
> Is anybody using FreeBSD as a media player, where they decode and send
> video directly to a 2nd video card while leaving the terminal coming out
> of the other card? Perhaps using mplayer or something similar? No
> front end. No pause, rewind, etc. Just something command line that
> says something like "play movie.avi /dev/somecard" ? I suppose I'd be
> willing to install X11 for it, but I don't want to have to load up a GUI.
Install X11 and run the X server on the second card only.
You can then just run mplayer on the main console and point its X11
output to DISPLAY=:0.0.
--
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber na...@mips.inka.de
That or use one of the window managers that handles multiple monitors
properly. Awesome, xmonad, dwm, wmii are all pretty good. I use
wmii mostly nowadays, and most of the apps I prefer run in a terminal
emulator (xfce4-terminal is my favorite).
On Jan 28, 7:19 am, MZ <m...@nospam.void> wrote:
> Is anybody using FreeBSD as a media player, where they decode and send
> video directly to a 2nd video card while leaving the terminal coming out
> of the other card? (...)
Some time ago I have sone 3 screen configuration, where 2 screens were
running on a first video card, and third screen was winning on a
second card - all this with Xorg (+Xinerama). It is possible to do
this with pure Xorg. What you want to do can be also accomplished by a
framebuffer output using specific video device with xine/mplayer/vlc.
This is really simple to set up, just remember to use some hardware
acceleration video card for displaying movies (nowadays its almost
each one of them will fit) - as I have used some old S3 the
performance was really bad :-)
Good luck!
Tomek