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Editing and Authoring dvr-ms Files

[The feature associated with this page, Microsoft TV Technologies, is a legacy feature. Microsoft strongly recommends that new code does not use this feature.]

Extended access to dvr-ms files is not limited to playback; editing and authoring applications can also access the files, as long as they are not encrypted.

In some cases, video and audio streams may need to be handled separately during the editing or authoring process. The sample content consists of MPEG-2 video stream and MPEG-1 Layer 2 audio stream. Synchronization between audio and video requires that the relationship between media sample timestamps (IMediaSample::GetTime) be maintained. These timestamps are rebased PES timestamps from 90 kHz to 10 MHz as found in the original PES header's PTS field.

The MPEG-2 video elementary stream read from a dvr-ms file is not guaranteed to start on a GOP boundary. "Start" in this instance can mean either the start of the recording or following any search into the recording. If a downstream component requires a GOP or sequence header before it can begin processing the stream, it must first discover the header in the received media samples, and discard any content that precedes it.

In simple editing scenarios, for example to remove specified time segments from a dvr-ms file and copy the resulting file to a new file, use the RecComp Object. This technique is very efficient because it does not involve any decoding or re-encoding of the elementary streams and you are not limited to the 1x rate limitation of the SBE sink.

About the dvr-ms File Format