![]() REM Pause for 5 seconds once processing is complete to let things settle a bit Only if you add another format (Container) OldASF, OldWMV etc.ĮCHO Looking in "%~1" for %OldAVI% or %OldMKV% files. REM You shouldn't need to edit anything below here. REM Change these variables to match your system REM It is intended to be used with SABNZBD+ as a post-process script in combination with Sonarr and Radarr on a Windows system. It will NOT work with earlier generation cards or the GT1030 (which lacks NVENC). REM This script REQUIRES an nVidia GeForce GTX 1050 or higher card be present in the system. REM Script by illrigger, based on work by BrooBee Remember if you do go with Plex on Kodi to check the box in Plex settings there to enable HEVC support.Īnd as per all scripts, use at your own risk, and ALWAYS test on something before you put it into full production.ĮCHO Begin converting MKV video files from h.264 to h.265 via nVidia hardware accelleration (NVENC) while leaving audio and subtitles untouched. I even do this on Android TV, because it supports direct audio streaming better than the native Plex client. For Windows users who have issues with the Windows 10 Plex client (which is most of them), I highly recommend using Kodi with the Plex plugin. This may have a large impact on the performance of your media server, especially for 4K files. Also note that if you are using Plex, any videos played on the web interface will be transcoded no matter what your hardware supports since that player does not support HEVC hardware acceleration. Keep in mind that not every playback device can directly play HEVC, so be sure to check. If you have a RAMDISK, it will probably be even faster, but that would need to be a very large disk, large enough to hold both files at the same time. If you do your work on SSD, it is considerably faster, 7.5x to 12x depending on the file. It's faster on some things, slower on others, but 5x seems to be a good average. Speed, in my media server (Core i3 6100 with a GTX 1050, with my work directory on standard 7200RPM NAS disks) it will encode a Blu-Ray rip at around 5x speed. It's a trade off - if disk space is more important to you than pristine quality on your rips, this will save you a LOT of space. There is a loss in video quality when encoding with NVENC, but it's not really noticeable to me on my 70" 1080p TV, your preference will vary. ![]() This process has a very strong impact on disk space used for your files, as HVEC files are 33% to 66% smaller than AVC. You can manually convert such failures using the code below, copy them into the base directory, and Sonarr and Radarr will either see them automatically or you can manually point at them if they don't. ![]() It relies on all files unpacking into the base directory like most downloads do, and will fail but leave the files untouched if that is not the case (as will Sonarr and Radarr). I designed it to work alongside Sonarr and Radarr, but will likely work with other download apps. It also cleans up the residual files in your download, while keeping. It automatically converts all of the video tracks inside the mkv container while copying all audio and subtitle tracks in an untouched state. It does NOT work with GT series cards like the GT 1030, as nVidia does not include the NVENC engine in those GPUs. This is a script that converts AVC/x.264 mkv files to HEVC/x.265 using the latest version of NVENC that is included with the nVidia GTX 1050 and higher (it *might* work with the GTX 9xx cards, as they only had limited HEVC encode support - YMMV) and REQUIRES one to be present in the system. It's based on a script I pulled from a post by BrooBee, so credit to him for the framework that makes it work so well in SAB. It took me a while to get the major kinks out of this, so I thought I would post it and save someone else some time.
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