Hi everyone!
I have around 200 DVD (with movies) that I’d want to backup in order to save them from rotting or physical media disappearance.
My most powerful computer with a DVD drive is a 2012 MacBook Pro upgraded to 16gb of Ram with an SSD running Fedora 42.
If possible, I’d want to keep all the bonuses of the movies, but I could also just backup the movies if keeping the whole disc is too difficult.
My goal would be to keep the original quality.
Also 6-7 discs are already skipping scenes even if the disc shows no damage.
I’ve bought some of these discs 20 years ago with my teenager pocket money so I wouldn’t want to lose them.
Thanks for the help.
As I own these discs and nothing would be illegal in my country, I thought it would be better to post here instead of the piracy community.
Edit: I guess I’ll use Make MKV Beta as it seems to work well and VLC can open the MKV files. Thanks for your help!
You should be able to make a complete backup of a DVD to an iso file using dd.
But then would I be able to read them on any computer without burning them?
Yes. You could use vlc or even as an iso file just open them as a virtual drive.
you can make an iso, that is a digital replica. the iso can be played with for example vlc.
you can use makemkv, which creates an mkv file out of every video. this allows additional file managing, cause you get a lot of mkv files if the dvd has several bonuses. mkv wont change the encoding, cause its just a container.
as for the skipping…i used to clean up all my nonreadable dvds. just plain old simple soap and luke warm water. cleaned with microfiber cloth.
warner currently has a dvd rot replacment project, but people said you have to jump though too many hoops to make it work. and thats just warner, the other dont even care.
dvdbackup with the -M option makes a 1/1 clone of your dvd aswell as decrypts the video. One of the best ways to backup old dvds. Takes alot of storage tho and is cli rather if thats a plus or minus for yah.
Yeah I miss DVD bonuses like directors commentary, cut scenes, bloopers and alternate scenes.
MakeMKV to backup the contents and if you need it in a different format Handbrake so it can be converted to MP4.
I’ve found my happiness with MakeMKV for the DVD’s at least.
I’ll see how I’ll proceed with the Blurays in the future, but I don’t have any other Bluray player except my Playstation 3-4-5 for now.
It works with a usb bluray drive. Though I got an internal bluray drive for my PC
I’d recommend using Make MKV if possible, and then you might use Handbrake to transcode it.
“Handbrake” is quite good at making high quality mkv files, you should be able to Automate a lot of it
You could use
dd
to create full disk images. This maintains everything.I don’t think this works correctly on copy protected media, although I’m not sure.
This should work for -most- DVDs, unless they’re using some unique copy protection.
The following packages are needed: dvdbackup, libdvdcss, cdrtools
To get info on an inserted DVD (and check it can be read): dvdbackup -i /dev/sr0 -I
To rip the DVD to a directory (-M will mirror the disc): dvdbackup -i /dev/sr0 -o /path/to/store/dvd/ -M
And then to write the directory contents to an iso image: mkisofs -dvd-video -udf -o /path/to/save/movie.iso /path/of/ripped/dvd
From there you can archive the iso, mount it for playback, etc. My next step was a combination of MakeMKV and Handbrake to encode the main movie (H.265 MKV 480p30) for storage on a media server.
Replying to say dd is probably the better method for archival, but this works for me in most cases.
I guess I’ll use Make MKV Beta as it seems to work well and VLC can open the MKV files. Thanks for your help!
Mini hijack but what software would yall recommend for vhs backups, preferably linux native? I figure need to do this before they start degrading. I have a capture card already, just was wondering the best software. I tried potplayer but didnt love it…id really need software with an auto shutoff so I can play a tape when I go to work or bed and not have 6 hours of blank recorded…
I’m way too lazy for such an endeavor… so what I would do instead is
- buy a DVD player on a standard interface (right now seems to be USB-C) that seems to cost (wow… seriously that cheap?!) about the price of a lunch, so 30 EUR.
- download RIPs from a Torrent tracker
once that’s done then I would only do the additional content of a per-need basis which I would then upload back to a Website that cares about this kind of content, potentially the Internet Archive.
I know you are mostly asking about ripping the media. But I would recommend looking at tiny media manager to pull metadata and organize.