

Next time I rip one of those discs I'll have to pay more attention.Īnyway, I came across this a little while ago.

Maybe the only way to work out which is the correct title is by checking them, although you'd assume if a Bluray player can tell which one is correct then ripping software should be able to. It's possible you're not having problems when using the PS3 as many discs contain PS3 updates which I assume are installed automatically? You're not using an old version of BDInfo are you? It was updated to fix handling of multi-whatsit discs a while back. If you're not re-encoding it probably doesn't make much difference either way (you still have to mux the MKV containing the video with the audio stream after extracting with HD-DVD/Blu-Ray Stream Extractor), but if you're converting it might save time by eliminating the extra ISO step. I use the latter mainly because it's a tool built into MeGUI, which I generally use for encoding. I don't know if ripping to an ISO could be causing the problem, but it there any particular reason you do it that way? I use the same method as fritzi93, only instead of running Passkey in the background and extracting with Clown BD, I run AnyDVD in the background and extract with HD-DVD/Blu-Ray Stream Extractor. Mind you I've only ripped a handful of those multi-whatsit discs using AnyDVD but I didn't seem to have any problems doing so. Then you only have the same count of segments than MakeMKV has.Have you tried AnyDVD HD? I'd be curious to see if it makes the same choices as DVDFab.

Why you don't search for IRP_MJ_CLEANUP instead? However, maybe it is because I am on Win 10 X64, or because my Process Monitor is the latest, the only difference is that instead of " CloseFile", choose " IRP_MJ_CLOSE" from the combo box/drop down menu. m2ts method a go.and guess what as expected I was able to find the correct playlist. mpls according to M$ Process Monitor does not show entirely in the MakeMKV list. It saves you a lot of trouble if you have many playlists, because you don't spend time searching for the correct playlist if you followed the OP method. The method I described above (not mine BTW), is the perfect starting point. and then I used makmkv to extract that one only. The only way was a tutorial on YouTube using ProcessMonitor + PowerDVD + filtering Path only "mpls".This lead to the correct play list. The issue is the "CloseFile" operation, it is not in the drop down menu, and typing "CloseFile" does not help.
