

It should work.īasically for a multi-parted movie in 3 pieces you will end up with 6 timecodes (if im correct, i dont use this since a long time) + 3 áudios and 3 vídeo files.


When you create individual timecodes for each part-audio youre extracting, import them alongside the vídeo files in the toolnix merger via "append". Use MKV Toolnix alongside MKV Extract GUI. Watch and archive DVDs Documentation could be better Support Complex setup Flexible client/server architecture Watch and record analog and/or digital TV. Use MKVToolnix indeed but first you need to create audio timecodes for each multipart that you are later trying to "append" There is even an option named like this). If you really want to go that way with every multi-part you have (you would be better finding single encodes out there, but still): 2 episodes of The 100 TV Show) altough a single file contains both of them.Īll of this (the naming conventions of either movies as well Shows) need to be in accordance with either themoviedb and/or thetvdb API's. The only way I got them to work on Roku is by re-muxing them. They play back on the emby web client and on VLC just fine. More recently I found some special features wont play back because Roku doesnt like something in the mkv header. For instance, The 100 S01E01E02.mkv is scrapped correctly by emby and displayed correcly by KODI (i.e. The above were correctable by selecting the 'attempt playback correction' option in the emby client repeatedly. I'm not joking, maybe I'm naive.įurthermore, the only thing that I know being supported out-of-the-box is regarding TV Shows encoded differently than HDTV's releases. Why would you have multi-part movies in 2017? I have everything extended (LOTR, and other movies) and I don't see how it's useful to multi-parting them. I don't know a single person who uses multi-part movies convention which dates back from mid-2003's lol. Have a couple of multi part movie as everyone, mostly the Lord of the Ring extended secret here is in bold.
