Re: Windows command line tool for scanning if video is ok?
ghesus wrote:
If not, I guess an alternative would be to MD5 sum the source and the destination, but I'm hoping the above is faster.
I don't see how any such too could possibly be faster than md5. If you really want to make sure there are zero errors, you'll have to check every bit, right? And that's what md5 does too.
I sometimes use mplayer with -vo null and -benchmark to check a video file. It'll just play the file as fast as possible without rendering anything. If there's errors, it should (probably) show among the output.
Code:
mplayer -vo null -nosound -benchmark FILE