croscalifornia.blogg.se

Vlc media player blu ray
Vlc media player blu ray






vlc media player blu ray
  1. Vlc media player blu ray activation code#
  2. Vlc media player blu ray install#
  3. Vlc media player blu ray software#

There are no (as far as I'm aware) third-party applications in the Linux universe with official Blu-ray capability (i.e. Each film's title key is encrypted using all currently valid OEM keys so any of them can decrypt it (in a process which also requires the physical volume id, which must be read by the drive). (A very good explanation is given on Wikipedia here.) Each approved OEM Blu-ray player or drive is given a key, and each film has its own title key needed to decrypt and play the film. Note: it might require a reboot ( sudo shutdown -r now) to get VLC to work with libmmbd.so.0.įilms on Blu-ray ROMs are encrypted according to a standard known as AACS, which dictates multiple layers of encryption using multiple keys, including one physically printed on the disk, a volume id, which prevents one from burning working copies. (/usr/lib might not be the correct directory for you – do a search for "libmmbd.so") cd /usr/libĪnd just like that, VLC (You may have to mount it before reading from device - /dev/sr0 for example) and other players configured to use libbluray will be able to play any blu-ray disk, without any "no valid AACS key found" errors. Step 3: Symlink MakeMKV's libmmbd to emulate libaacs and libdplus Step 2: Uninstall the open-source libaacs sudo apt-get remove libaacs0

Vlc media player blu ray install#

Sudo apt-get install makemkv-bin makemkv-oss (I built from source so haven't actually tried these packages myself) sudo add-apt-repository ppa:heyarje/makemkv-beta

Vlc media player blu ray software#

The marvellous thing about MakeMKV however is that it can "emulate" libaacs and libdplus – meaning any calls from apps that link to those libraries expecting the default open source decoder will instead get passed through MakeMKV's closed-source decoder – hence any video playback software which uses those libraries will automatically use MakeMKV's decoder and be able to play the latest titles. It's been in beta for several years already, so here's hoping they do a GMail.

Vlc media player blu ray activation code#

It will eventually become a paid app, but is free to use whilst in beta (requires entering a new temporary activation code every 30 days, found here: ). MakeMKV is an application that decodes Blu-ray disks and saves them to DRM-free files – they either have their own official decryption key or they have found one by hacking some OEM device and are keeping it unpublished to avoid it being revoked, and hence it can always decode the latest titles. But there is another option, involving partially proprietary closed-source software, which is (for the moment) free to use on Linux. Open-source Blu-ray playback is a cat and mouse game, which involves constantly waiting for hackers to discover up-to-date keys to play more recent titles.








Vlc media player blu ray