
Googling seems to bring up a lot of results for bug reports referring to MakeMKV 'skipping' desired titles on blu-ray discs. This is reflected strongly in the user interface - there just aren't that many user-adjustable options. It seems that in an effort to be as streamlined/user-friendly as possible, it is somewhat over-zealous in its 'automation'.

I did consider MakeMKV, but have had many issues in the past getting it to recognise certain titles/playlists on BDMV folders. When using eac3to, the processing output log seems to explicitly make reference to "seamless branching", processing gaps in audio streams at joins etc. m2ts files? Or should I still always use eac3to first? However, there doesn't seem to be anything in the change log for 9.7.0 that indicates what has changed to fix the issue? Generally speaking, is it now safe to use mkvtoolnix with blu-ray titles that have the main movie, with multiple AV streams, split into many. That version onwards works fine apparently, all older versions have the issue.

After some testing, I found that the first version of mkvtoolnix that doesn't have the aforementioned problem with the video corruption is version 9.7.0.

I spent ages working through older versions of mkvtoolnix from around 2016 onwards to see which versions had the problem, and which didn't. However, after another trial more recently, I note that the same issue no longer occurs and the output file doesn't appear to be different than if I had used. The latter option is obviously a lot easier, but is it recommended? When I last tried using this method in 2016 (.mpls directly into mkvtoolnix), I noticed that mkvtoolnix struggled with some blu-ray titles and I'd end up with video corruption at the points in the movie corresponding to the joining of separate. So this cuts out the process of demuxing first with eac3to. mpls files from the "PLAYLIST" folder, and then creating the MKV file directly from that (obviously allowing my to select the AV streams that I want muxed in) - again joining all the. I notice that the version of mkvtoolnix I am using (32.0.0) seems to be capable of simply reading the. However, this can be extremely time-consuming and I'm wondering if I can use a shortcut. sup etc) through the mkvtoolnix GUI to create a file. I then feed these raw stream files (.h264. mpls files to raw streams (this takes care of joining of separate. mpls files for the streams that I want (main movie title, some special features etc). I then use BDInfo to analyse the disc structure and identify the appropriate. My current process involves using DVDFab to circumvent the copy-protection on the disc, and I use Teracopy to copy the entire contents (BDMV/certificate folders) to my system drive. I am currently working through some blu-ray disc rips, and am trying to make a decision on the workflow to use.
