DGVC1DecNV Quick Start Guide

Version 1.0.6


This document is intended to help newcomers to DGVC1DecNV to quickly understand the process and become productive. It is intentionally short and to the point, and is not intended to be a complete users manual or tutorial.


What is DGVC1DecNV?

DGVC1DecNV is a VC1 decoder suite. It is used to decode VC1 Advanced Profile streams from such sources as BluRay M2TS files, captured transport streams, Matroska files, *.vc1 files, etc. Note that currently only VC1 elementary streams, Matroska files, and transport streams are supported, so if you have a different container type, such as *.wmv, you will have to demultiplex the raw VC1 stream from its container before processing it with DGVC1Dec.

This version is designed to run on Nvidia graphics cards that support DXVA video decoding.


What Do I Need to Use It?

You need the DGVC1DecNV package and Avisynth. First get Avisynth 2.5 (or better) and install it:

Avisynth 2.5

You are going to use DGVC1IndexNV.exe and DGDecodeNV.dll from the DGVC1DecNV package, so extract them from the ZIP file and put them together in a directory.

Also get VirtualDub as we will use that to view the decoded video:

VirtualDub Web Site

In addition to the above programs, you must have Nvidia drivers installed that support CUDA decoding on the graphics card. That means you need to install version 178.13 or later of the Nvidia graphics drivers.

You also need to copy the nvcuvid.dll DLL that ships with DGVC1DecNV into your Windows System32 directory.


OK. Now What?

We'll assume you have a VC1 elementary file. Fire up DGVC1IndexNV. Using File/Open, open your VC1 file. You should see the video.

Now select File/Save Project and enter a name for the index file (DGV file) that is going to be generated. Suppose your source file is called 'mystream.vc1'; you might choose the name 'mystream' to enter here, because DGVC1IndexNV will automatically append '.dgv'. Good. Hit Save. The indexing process will start and you'll see the indicator moving along the time line to indicate the progress. Be patient if your video is large. When the process finishes, exit DGVC1IndexNV.


Start the CUVID Server

The CUVID Server is a small application that handles the decoding. It must be running to execute the Avisynth script, as described next. Just double click the CUVIDServer.exe file that comes with DGVC1DecNV and leave it open in teh systray during the following steps.


What is This Index File and What Do I Do with It?

DGVC1IndexNV created an index file called *.dgv. It is read by DGDecodeNV, which actually decodes the VC1 and delivers the video. The index file just contains information that tells DGDecodeNV where each frame is located and some information about each frame.

But you can't just execute DGDecodeNV directly! It has to be done through Avisynth. We'll make a script file called mystream.avs using a text editor. Later in this document I'll show you how to configure DGVC1IndexNV to make the script automatically, but for now, you need to know the old-fashioned way. So put this text into a new text file you make called 'mystream.avs':

  LoadPlugin("...\DGDecodeNV.dll")
  DGSource("mystream.dgv")

Replace the path '...' in the first line with the path to the location where you placed DGDecodeNV.dll.

Finally, use VirtualDub to open the 'mystream.avs' script file just as if it was an AVI file. That's it! You have your video and can navigate randomly on the VirtualDub timeline. Does life get much sweeter than this?


Sure, Sure, But What About My Audio

DGVC1IndexNV saved your audio in a file(s). It will have a ".wav", ".ac3", or ".mpa" extension. If you have a ".wav" file, you can load that directly in VirtualDub. But you can also use Avisynth, which gives you access to powerful audio filtering.

Suppose we have a ".wav" file. Our Avisynth script will be like this:

  LoadPlugin("...\DGDecodeNV.dll")
  video=DGSource("myvob.dgv")
  audio=WAVSource("myvob.wav")
  AudioDub(video,audio)

Now when you open this script in VirtualDub, you will have video and audio.

We saw processing for a ".wav" audio file above. You need the corresponding source filter for the type of audio you have. Use WAVSource() for ".wav", MPASource() for ".mpa", AC3Source() for ".ac3", etc. WAVSource() is built into Avisynth. The others can be found here: Avisynth Filter Collection.

Don't forget to use LoadPlugin() to load your audio source filter. And read the Avisynth documentation to learn about how to adjust the audio/video synchronization using DelayAudio(), and other useful things.


Yeah, But How Do I Do That Automatic Script File Thing?

Ahh, you have to pay extra for that! No, not really.

Let's suppose you have a script that you use all the time. Maybe like this:

  loadplugin("...\DGDecodeNV.dll")
  loadplugin("...\Decomb.dll")
  avcsource("mystream.dgv")
  fielddeinterlace()

Copy this to a file and call it 'template.avs'. Then edit it to replace the DGV file name with __vid__ (that's two underscores before "vid" and two after). template.avs should then look like this:

  loadplugin("...\DGDecodeNV.dll")
  loadplugin("...\Decomb.dll")
  vc1source("__vid__")
  fielddeinterlace()

You see, DGVC1IndexNV is going to use this as a template and insert the right file name whenever it sees __vid__. Slick, eh?

OK, all you have to do now is fire up DGVC1IndexNV, select your template file with the Options/AVS Template menu item, and then do a Save Project. If the *.avs file does not already exist, DGVC1IndexNV will make one for you based on the template! Of course, the template has to be created only once, while you'll get an automatically generated AVS script every time you save a DGVC1IndexNV project.


Cool. One Last Question...

Shoot!


Why the Two-Step Tango? Why Can't I Do Everything Right in DGVC1IndexNV?

Good question! We want to make our video available to any application that we might find useful. Surely we can't put every possible function into DGVC1IndexNV. So instead we create a way to 'serve' the video into all these other applications. Avisynth is an AVI file server. It creates a 'fake AVI' and tricks applications into thinking they have a real AVI when they open the *.avs file.

If you just want to make an AVI out of your video, it's easy. Open the AVS in VirtualDub, set your compression, and do Save AVI.


Copyright (C) 2007-2009 Donald A. Graft, All Rights Reserved