Provided by: vdr_2.6.9-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       vdr - the Video Disk Recorder

SYNOPSIS

       vdr [options]

DESCRIPTION

       vdr implements a complete digital Set-Top Box and Video Recorder.  It can work with signals received from
       satellites (DVB-S) as well as cable (DVB-C) and terrestrial (DVB-T) signals.

       At  least  one DVB card is required to run vdr. With it you can watch live TV while recording one or more
       other broadcasts from the same transponder.  It is also possible to start watching a  recorded  programme
       before  the  live  broadcast  has  ended  (time shifting). In order to record from different transponders
       simultaneously two or more DVB cards are necessary.  By default vdr can support up to  eight  DVB  cards.
       The  primary  DVB  card (the one your TV set is connected to) can either be a "full featured" card, which
       means it contains an MPEG decoder and provides audio and video signal outputs, or you can use some  third
       party plugin that implements software decoding of the MPEG data and displays it via the system's graphics
       adapter.

       vdr  uses  an On Screen Display (OSD) to display its menus.  It can be controlled by the PC keyboard, the
       "Linux Infrared Remote Control" (LIRC), or any other means of remote  control,  implemented  by  a  third
       party plugin.

       Remote access is possible via the "Simple Video Disk Recorder Protocol" (SVDRP), which can be accessed on
       port 6419, for instance by telnet.

OPTIONS

       -a cmd, --audio=cmd
              Send Dolby Digital audio to stdin of command cmd.

       --cachedir=dir
              Save cache files in dir (default is to save them in the video directory).

       --chartab=character_table
              Set  the  character  table  to  use  for  strings  in  the DVB data stream that don't begin with a
              character table indicator, but don't use  the  standard  default  character  table  (for  instance
              ISO-8859-9).

       -c dir, --config=dir
              Read config files from directory dir (default is to read them from the video directory).

       -d, --daemon
              Run in daemon mode (implies --no-kbd).

       -D num, --device=num
              Use only the given DVB device (num = 0, 1, 2...).  There may be several -D options (by default all
              DVB  devices  will  be used).  If -D- is given, no DVB devices will be used at all, independent of
              any other -D options.

       --dirnames=path[,name[,enc]]
              Set the maximum directory path length to path  (default  is  the  maximum  value  allowed  on  the
              system).  If  name  is  also  given,  it defines the maximum directory name length (default is the
              maximum value allowed on the system).  The optional enc can  be  0  or  1,  and  controls  whether
              special characters in directory names are encoded as hex values (default: 0).  If path or name are
              left  empty  (as in ",,1" to only set enc), the defaults apply.  The length of the video directory
              name and that of the actual recording  directory  is  subtracted  from  path,  to  make  sure  the
              directory path will never become too long.

       --edit=rec
              Edit  the  given recording.  rec must be the full path name of an existing recording.  The program
              will return immediately after editing the recording.

       -E file, --epgfile=file
              Write the EPG data into the given file (default is epg.data in the cache directory).  Use  -E-  to
              disable this.  If file is a directory, the file epg.data will be created in that directory.

       --filesize=size
              Limit  video  files  to  size bytes (default is 2000M).  This option is only useful in conjunction
              with --edit, and must precede that option to have an effect.  size is an integer number and may be
              followed by one of the letters K, M, G or  T  to  abbreviate  Kilo-,  Mega-,  Giga-  or  Terabyte,
              respectively.   The  given value is silently limited to the program's internal minimum and maximum
              values.

       --genindex=rec
              Generate the index file for the given recording.  rec must be the full path name  of  an  existing
              recording.   The  recording  must be in TS format.  If the recording already has an index file, it
              will be deleted before creating the new one.  The program will return immediately after generating
              the index.  Note that using this option while another instance of VDR is currently  replaying  the
              given recording, or if the recording has not been finished yet, may lead to unexpected results.

       -g, --grab=dir
              Write  images  from the SVDRP command GRAB into the given directory dir. dir must be the full path
              name of an existing directory, without any "..", double '/' or symlinks. By default, or if -g-  is
              given, grabbing images to disk is disabled.

       -h, --help
              Print a help message and exit.

       -i instance, --instance=instance
              Use  instance  as  the  id  of  this VDR instance (default is 0).  In an environment where several
              instances of VDR use the same video directory, this parameter can be set  to  a  positive  integer
              value  that's  unique for each instance, so that they won't interfere with each other in case they
              record exactly the same broadcast.  The number given here will be part of the  directory  name  in
              which the recordings will be stored.

       -l level, --log=level
              Set  logging to level.  0 = no logging, 1 = errors only, 2 = errors and info, 3 = errors, info and
              debug.  The default logging level is 3.  If logging  should  be  done  to  LOG_LOCALn  instead  of
              LOG_USER, add '.n' to LEVEL, as in 3.7 (n=0..7).

       -L dir, --lib=dir
              Search  for  plugins in directory dir (default is ./PLUGINS/lib).  There can be several -L options
              with different dir values.  Each of them will apply to the -P options following it.

       --lirc[=path]
              Use a LIRC remote control device.  If path is omitted, vdr uses /var/run/lirc/lircd.

       --localedir=dir
              Search for locale files in dir (default is ./locale).

       -m, --mute
              Mute audio of the primary DVB device at startup.

       --no-kbd
              Don't use the keyboard as an input device.

       -p port, --port=port
              Use port for SVDRP. A value of 0 turns off SVDRP.  The default SVDRP port is 6419.   You  need  to
              edit  the  file  svdrphosts.conf in order to enable access to the SVDRP port from hosts other than
              the localhosts.  Note that this option only changes the TCP port used for SVDRP commands.  The UDP
              port for discovering peer VDRs in the same network is always set to 6419 and can't be changed.

       -P options, --plugin=options
              Load a plugin, defined by the given options.  The first word in options must be  the  name  of  an
              existing  vdr  plugin,  optionally  followed by a blank separated list of command line options for
              that plugin. If options contains any blanks, you need to enclose it in quotes, like for example

              vdr -P "abc -a -b xyz"

              which would load a plugin named abc, giving it the command line options -a -b xyz. If you want  to
              load all available plugins (without any particular options) you can use

              vdr -P "*"

              (note the quotes around the asterisk to prevent wildcard expansion).

       -r cmd, --record=cmd
              Call cmd before and after a recording. See the file INSTALL for more information.

       --resdir=dir
              Read resource files from dir (default is to read them from the config directory).

       --showargs[=dir]
              Read command line arguments from dir (default is /etc/vdr/conf.d), display them to the console and
              exit.

       -s cmd, --shutdown=cmd
              Call cmd to shutdown the computer. See the file INSTALL for more information.

       --split
              Split  edited  files at the editing marks.  This option is only useful in conjunction with --edit,
              and must precede that option to have an effect.

       -t tty, --terminal=tty
              Set the controlling terminal.

       -u user, --user=user
              Run as user user in case vdr was started as user 'root'.  Starting vdr as 'root' is  necessary  if
              the system time shall be set from the transponder data, but for security reasons vdr can switch to
              a lesser privileged user id during normal operation. user can be a user name or a numerical id.

       --updindex=rec
              Update  the  index  file  for  the given recording.  rec must be the full path name of an existing
              recording.  The recording must be in TS format.  If the recording already has an  index  file,  it
              will be checked whether it is complete, and will be updated if it isn't. If there is no index file
              yet,  a  new one will be generated.  The program will return immediately after updating the index.
              Note that using this option while another  instance  of  VDR  is  currently  replaying  the  given
              recording, or if the recording has not been finished yet, may lead to unexpected results.

       --userdump
              Allow coredumps if -u is given (only for debugging).

       --vfat For backwards compatibility (same as --dirnames= 250,40,1).

       -v dir, --video=dir
              Use dir as video directory.  The default is /video.

       -V, --version
              Print version information and exit.

       -w sec, --watchdog=sec
              Activate  the  watchdog  timer with a timeout of sec seconds.  A value of 0 (default) disables the
              watchdog.

       If started without any options, vdr tries to read command line options from files named '*.conf'  in  the
       directory /etc/vdr/conf.d. Files are read in alphabetical order. See vdr(5) for details.

SIGNALS

       SIGINT, SIGTERM
              Program exits with status 0.

       SIGHUP Program exits with status 1. This can be used to force a reload, for example if an update has been
              installed.

EXIT STATUS

       0      Successful program execution.

       1      An error has been detected which requires the DVB driver and vdr to be reloaded.

       2      An non-recoverable error has been detected, vdr has given up.

FILES

       channels.conf
              Channel configuration.

       timers.conf
              Timer configuration.

       setup.conf
              User definable setup.

       commands.conf
              User definable commands (executed from the Commands menu).

       svdrphosts.conf
              SVDRP host configuration, defining which hosts or networks are given access to the SVDRP port.

       marks  Contains the editing marks defined for a recording.

       info   Contains a description of the recording.

       resume Contains the index into the recording where the last replay session left off.

       index  Contains the file number, offset and type of each frame of the recording.

       remote.conf
              Contains the key assignments for the remote control.

       keymacros.conf
              Contains user defined remote control key macros.

       00001.ts ... 65535.ts
              The actual data files of a recording.

       epg.data
              Contains  all  current  EPG  data.  Can  be  used for external processing and will also be read at
              program startup to have the full EPG data available immediately.

       donerecs.data
              Contains the names of recordings that have been done by pattern  timers  with  '@'  as  the  first
              character of the pattern. File names are appended to this file after a recording has finished, and
              the entire file is read upon startup of VDR.

       .update
              If this file is present in the video directory, its last modification time will be used to trigger
              an update of the list of recordings in the "Recordings" menu.

SEE ALSO

       vdr(5),svdrpsend(1)

AUTHOR

       Written  by Klaus Schmidinger, with contributions from many others.  See the file CONTRIBUTORS in the vdr
       source distribution.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs to <vdr-bugs@tvdr.de>.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2021 Klaus Schmidinger.

       This is free software; see the source for copying  conditions.   There  is  NO  warranty;  not  even  for
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

2.6                                                27 Dec 2021                                            vdr(1)