- Rip linux ��� ���
- Русский RIP Linux 12.0
- Create a USB Bootable RIP Linux from Windows
- USB Bootable RIP Linux
- How to create a RIP Linux Bootable USB Flash Drive
- Top 5 Linux DVD RIP Software
- A note about dealing with encrypted DVDs
- 1. AcidRIP – Ripping and encoding DVD tool using mplayer and mencoder
- 2. DVD::RIP – Front end for transcode and ffmpeg
- 3. HandBrake – Versatile DVD ripper and video transcoder for Linux
- 4. dvdbackup – Tool to rip DVD’s from the Linux command line
- 5. thoggen – DVD backup utility (‘DVD ripper’) for Linux
- Other tools and back-ends
- See also:
Rip linux ��� ���
You can get the (R)ecovery (I)s (P)ossible Linux rescue system here!
Please make a donation.
This is the RIP home site.
http://www.tux.org/pub/people/kent-robotti/looplinux/rip
You’ll need at least 512MB of RAM and i686 (Pentium III with PAE
support) CPU to boot it. There are 32bit and 64bit kernels.
If you want to run it in VirtualBOX (enable PAE) or VMWare, increase
the Base Memory to 1024. With QEMU using KVM, pass ‘noexec=off’ to
the kernel.
Please inform me if RIP is working or not!
Any suggestions are appreciated!
Use this Windows USB installer to put RIP on a USB drive.
Choose «RIP Linux» from its menu, then browse to where
RIPLinuX-13.7.iso is on your hard drive etc. It should
work with any ISO below, but your USB flash drive should
be at least 256MB and FAT16 or FAT32 formatted.
Other methods for putting RIP on a USB flash drive are
described in the USB readme below.
Verify the ISO under Linux or Windows.
md5sum -c RIPLinuX-13.7.md5 «It should say OK!»
Name | Size | Date |
---|
RIPLinuX (README) | 15Kb | Jan 15 2012 |
Bootable ISO (RIPLinuX-13.7.iso) | 159744Kb | Jan 15 2012 |
RIPLinuX-13.7 md5-checksum | 51b | Jan 15 2012 |
Changelog (README) | 15Kb | Jan 15 2012 |
This is a GRUB2 X version. If the one above doesn’t boot, try this.
It only boots from CD/DVD!
Name | Size | Date |
---|
Bootable ISO (RIPLinuX-13.7.grub2.iso) | 160708Kb | Jan 15 2012 |
This is a PXE network X version.
unzip -L RIPLinuX-13.7.PXE.zip «Extract under Linux!»
Name | Size | Date |
---|
RIPLinuX-13.7.PXE.zip | 156286Kb | Jan 15 2012 |
RIPLinuX-13.7.PXE md5-checksum | 55b | Jan 15 2012 |
Read the USB readme for instructions on how to install RIP
on a USB flash drive.
Read the mkextlin readme for instructions on how to install
the Linux system on a USB flash drive partition. You can
then boot and use it the same as if it was installed to a
Linux Ext2/3/4 or Btrfs formatted partition on a hard drive.
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Русский RIP Linux 12.0
RIP Linux — Live CD/Live USB–дистрибутив, нацеленный на восстановление, резервное копирование и прочее обслуживание существующей системы. Поддерживает множество файловых систем (Reiserfs, Reiser4, Btrfs, Ext2/3/4, HFS+, ISO-9660, NILFS2, UDF, XFS, JFS, UFS2, CIFS, MS DOS, NTFS (используя ntfs-3g), Squashfs+LZMA, и VFAT), а также содержит множество инструментов для восстановления системы (в том числе утилиты для восстановления и резервного копирования файловых систем, работы с сетью, работы с жестким диском и разделами). Данный релиз дистрибутива использует версию ядра 2.6.38.4.
Для русификации понадобится ПК с установленным Linux (проверено на CentOS 5.2) и подключенным Интернетом.
1. Скачиваем архив для сборки русской версии:
2. Распаковываем его в /progs/packets/ :
tar xzf riplinux_public_version.tgz -C /progs/packets/
3. Переходим в /progs/packets/riplinux/ :
4. Скачиваем отсюда последнюю версию RIP Linux (без иксов — non-X) :
5. Запускаем сборку русифицированного образа:
Результат русификации я выложил здесь .
Для установки RIP Linux в меню загрузки GRUB нужно извлечь из ISO-образа файлы: kernel32 , kernel64 , rootfs.cgz и положить их в /boot/ . А в /boot/grub/menu.lst дописать:
title RIP Linux x32
kernel /boot/kernel32 nokeymap root=/dev/ram0 rw vga=normal vt.default_utf8=1
title RIP Linux x64
kernel /boot/kernel64 nokeymap root=/dev/ram0 rw vga=normal vt.default_utf8=1
Огромное спасибо автору Кенту Роботти за адекватный дистрибутив. А также мои благодарности Владимиру Попову за статьи, на основе которых разработан пакет русификации:
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Create a USB Bootable RIP Linux from Windows
Last updated: July 29, 2010
Create a USB Bootable RIP Linux Flash Drive using YUMI from within Windows. RIP Linux ( R ecovery I s P ossible) is a Salckware based distribution created by Kent Robotti. It can be used for system recovery and maintenance. This Linux Operating System ships packed full of useful tools such as TestDisk (recover deleted partitions), GParted, fdisk, cfdisk, parted (partiton managers), PhotoRec (recover deleted files), ntfsprogs (for managing ntfs filesystems) and much more. Boot into an X Window environment or run without a GUI. Both 32bit and 64 bit kernels are available within the same distribution.
USB Bootable RIP Linux
Home Page: https://sourceforge.net/projects/riplinuxmeta4s/
Persistent Feature: Untested
Essentials to Boot RIP Linux from USB
- A Windows PC to perform the Install
- A 128MB or larger USB Flash Drive
- RIPLinuX*.iso
- YUMI
How to create a RIP Linux Bootable USB Flash Drive
- Download and launch YUMI
- (1) Select your Flash Drive (2) Then choose RIP Linux (Recovery Distro) from the list. (3) Browse to your ISO, and then click Create.
- Once YUMI has finished, reboot your PC and set your BIOS or Boot menu to boot directly from the USB device. Then boot.
If all went well, you should now be presented with the YUMI Boot Menu containing a new entry to Run RIP Linux from USB.
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Top 5 Linux DVD RIP Software
A DVD ripper software allows you to copy the content of a DVD to a hard disk drive. You transfer video on DVDs to different formats. You can make a backup of DVD content. One can convert DVD video for playback on media players, streaming, and mobile phone. A few DVD rippers software can copy protected disks so that you can make discs unrestricted and region-free.
A note about dealing with encrypted DVDs
The process of ripping a DVD broken down into two tasks:
- Data extraction – Copying DVD data to a hard disk
- Transcoding – Converting the extracted data into a suitable format such as mp4
If you wish to play or rip encrypted DVDs, you must install the libdvd* packages on your Linux distro. Most of the following programs can rip encrypted DVDs, as long as you have libdvdcss2 installed as described here. Please check the copyright laws for your country regarding the backup of any copyright-protected DVDs and other media.
1. AcidRIP – Ripping and encoding DVD tool using mplayer and mencoder
AcidRip is an automated front end for MPlayer/Mencoder (ripping and encoding DVD tool using mplayer and mencoder) written in Perl, using Gtk2::Perl for a graphical interface. Makes encoding a DVD just one button click! You can install it as follows under Debian / Ubuntu Linux:
$ sudo apt-get install acidrip
Fig.01: Linux Ripping And Encoding DVD’s With AcidRip Software
Fig.02: Preview your DVD rip
2. DVD::RIP – Front end for transcode and ffmpeg
dvd::rip is a full featured DVD copy program written in Perl i.e. fron end for transcode and ffmpeg. It provides an easy to use but feature-rich Gtk+ GUI to control almost all aspects of the ripping and transcoding process. It uses the widely known video processing swissknife transcode and many other Open Source tools. dvd::rip itself is licensed under GPL / Perl Artistic License. You can install dvd::rip as follows under Debian / Ubuntu Linux:
$ sudo apt-get install dvdrip
Fig.03: dvd::rip in action
3. HandBrake – Versatile DVD ripper and video transcoder for Linux
HandBrake is an open-source, GPL-licensed, multiplatform, multithreaded video transcoder, available for MacOS X, Linux and Windows. It can rip from any DVD or Bluray-like source such as VIDEO_TS folder, DVD image, real DVD or bluray (unencrypted — removal of copy protection is not supported), and some .VOB, .TS and M2TS files. You can install HandBrake under Debian or Ubuntu Linux as follows:
$ sudo apt-get install handbrake handbrake-cli
Fig.04: HandBrake in action
4. dvdbackup – Tool to rip DVD’s from the Linux command line
dvdbackup is a tool to rip video DVDs from the command line. It has the advantages of being small, fast, and easy to use. Install the dvdbackup package using the apt command:
$ sudo apt install dvdbackup
To backup the whole DVD, run:
$ dvdbackup -i /dev/dvd -o
-M
See dvdbackup man page for more info:
$ man dvdbackup
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5. thoggen – DVD backup utility (‘DVD ripper’) for Linux
thoggen is a DVD backup utility (‘DVD ripper’) for Linux, based on GStreamer and Gtk+ toolkit. Thoggen is designed to be easy and straight-forward to use. It attempts to hide the complexity many other transcoding tools expose and tries to offer sensible defaults that work okay for most people most of the time. It support the following features:
- Easy to use, with a nice graphical user interface (GUI).
- Supports title preview, picture cropping, and picture resizing.
- Language Selection for audio track (no subtitle support yet though).
- Encodes into Ogg/Theora video.
- Can encode from local directory with video DVD files.
- Based on the GStreamer multimedia framework, which makes it fairly easy to add additional encoding formats/codecs in future.
Fig.06: Thoggen in action
Other tools and back-ends
=> You need to install various libraries to use the above mentioned tools such as (yum or apt-get commands will install them automatically for you):
- libdvdcss2 – Simple foundation for reading DVDs – runtime libraries.
- libdvdnav4 – DVD navigation library.
- libdvdread4 – library for reading DVDs.
=> mencoder – Personally, I use mencoder to rip my DVDs into .avi files as follows:
Please note that AcidRip, is a graphical frontend for mencoder.
=> VLC – Yes, VLC can rip DVDs too.
=> FFmpeg – A complete, cross-platform solution to record, convert and stream audio and video.
=> Hybrid – It is a multi platform (Linux/Mac OS X/Windows) Qt based frontend for a bunch of other tools which can convert nearly every input to x264/x265/Xvid/VP9/… + ac3/ogg/mp3/aac/flac inside an mp4/m2ts/mkv/webm/mov/avi container, a Blu-ray or an AVCHD structure.
=> Wine – It is an open source software for running Windows applications on other operating systems. You can use popular MS-Windows application such as DVDFab to rip encrypted DVD’s and DVD Shrink to shrink them to smaller size. I do not *recommend* and encourage this option as it goes against the FOSS philosophy. The following screenshot based on trial version of DVDFab:
Fig.07: Running DVDFab under Wine v1.2.2
=> Transcode is a suite of command line utilities for transcoding video and audio codecs, and for converting between different container formats. Transcode can decode and encode many audio and video formats. Both K9Copy and dvd::rip are a graphical frontend for transcode.
See also:
Have a favorite Linux DVD ripper software or ripping tip? Let’s hear about it in the comments below.
Category | List of Unix and Linux commands |
---|---|
Documentation | help • mandb • man • pinfo |
Disk space analyzers | df • duf • ncdu • pydf |
File Management | cat • cp • less • mkdir • more • tree |
Firewall | Alpine Awall • CentOS 8 • OpenSUSE • RHEL 8 • Ubuntu 16.04 • Ubuntu 18.04 • Ubuntu 20.04 |
Linux Desktop Apps | Skype • Spotify • VLC 3 |
Modern utilities | bat • exa |
Network Utilities | NetHogs • dig • host • ip • nmap |
OpenVPN | CentOS 7 • CentOS 8 • Debian 10 • Debian 8/9 • Ubuntu 18.04 • Ubuntu 20.04 |
Package Manager | apk • apt |
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Searching | ag • grep • whereis • which |
Shell builtins | compgen • echo • printf |
Text processing | cut • rev |
User Information | groups • id • lastcomm • last • lid/libuser-lid • logname • members • users • whoami • who • w |
WireGuard VPN | Alpine • CentOS 8 • Debian 10 • Firewall • Ubuntu 20.04 |
Comments on this entry are closed.
i expected more information on which tools are most useful to rip encrypted DVDs. When is the last time you ripped an unencrypted DVD?
Once I’ve purchased a DVD, it’s my choice when and how I watch it, and my choice is on my secondary computer while surfing the web on the primary. I also choose to copy DVDs to my file server and then pack the DVD into boxes which I store in the attic. DVD ripping software is the way I accomplish this, which is fair use, not piracy. I’d appreciate if authors didn’t pretend piracy is the primary use of encryption rippers or that there is no lawful and fair use of software to rip encrypted DVDs.
I pointed out libdvdcss2 earlier in the post itself. Once you install it you can copy encrypted DVD. The mencoder command with libdvdcss2 can make copies of most of the DVDs including encrypted one.
DRM system in most DVD and/ Blu-Ray discs attempts to stop us from exercising our very own fair use rights, including playing purchased Blu-Ray and DVD media using Open Source software or backup or storing images on NAS for home network streaming. I’m not big fan of DRM either.
Do you wanna see a step-by-step guide on how to copy encrypted DVDs and BDs?
I am sorry, I missed your mention of libdvdcss2. However, said mention isn’t exactly highlighted in your article.
I appreciate the work you have done to evaluate alternatives. I’m not asking for a step-by-step guide, although others may find that more useful. What I would like is a recommendation on which is the best for copying encrypted DVDs and what packages are needed to make it work. Obviously, “best” is subjective, but the point is to help the reasonably competent user select a package and do his own research on just exactly what steps and settings are necessary to get a good result.
I admit, I’ve been using DVD Shrink, and I *HATE* relying on the PC world for quality software. But the latest encryptions are beyond DVD Shrink and I need to pick something new.
Thanks again for your work.
yes please, i want to be able to watch movies or tv shows while plugged into dialysis machine 5 hours per day three times a week
I reread your section on libdvdcss2. Is it the key piece, and there is no other which will deal with encryption? If so, that was my mistake. I assumed that, like the PC world, there were competing ways of breaking the encryption. If everything relies on that one package, then the only real choice is which interface you like best, i.e. none is inherently better than another.
I hate to break it to you, libdvdcss2 will only work with older DVDs. Try using latest DVDs from Sony or other providers and you will go nuts in no time. I’m with you Toad, when I pay a DVD, I must be allowed to copy it for my personal use. *Beep* DRM, I will download stuff from Bittorent.
Sorry to interject here, but I’ve read all the posts below and thought jumping in here might save people a lot of time and effort regarding ripping and transcoding in Linux, plus I have never read such a collection of misinformation and utter rubbish regarding the ‘supposed’ inabilities of Linux rippers and the amazing capabilities of Windows DVDFab.
I run 2 Microsoft, 1 BSD, 1 Solaris & 4 Linux OS’ on an ASUS G74SX Gamers Laptop with Quad-core CPU, an NVIDIA 580M GPU running a 17.3″ LCD a 1920 x 1080 rez, with 12GB RAM; and I have NEVER been defeated in ripping any DVD using a variety of Linux rippers! As to a comment about Linux ‘ libdvdcss2’ decryption library only being able to rip OLD DVDs…utter rubbish! Each year I successfully rip to my library betwenn 100 and 160 of the latest, supposedly un-rippable DVDs that employ the latest generations of SONY, Macrovision, or ARCO-encryption on DVDs from DIsney and others (The Incredibles, Wall-E, Farscape, LOTR, Avatar, etc, etc.) with both Windows and Linux-based apps and have yet to suffer a single defeat. Why? I am a bed-ridden parapalegic with very little else to do but enjoy movies.
As to DVDFab for Windows: admittedly, it is very good ripper BUT has spat out several mint-condition DVDs because of protection it could not overcome. 9 in 2012 to be exact. Those very same discs I was able to handily decrypt with a number of Linux apps. The best ‘test’ DVD I have EVER encountered – one that will bring DVDFab and 4 other very highly regarded Windows rippers to die, goes by the title of ‘Why We Fight’ – a very recent ddocumentary (2006?) NOT to be confused with the old, WW II, Frank Capra documentary of the same name. Yet the few DVDs that have defeated the 2012 version of DVDFab (8 so far) were easily ripped by only one other Windows ripper and SEVERAL rippers – GUI and CLI – from Linux. One of my Linux favourites is a dead-accurate, simple CLI-type named ‘dvdbackup’ that delivers an exact copy of the DVDs VIDEO_TS folder – which is present on all movie DVDs – but stripped of all it’sencryption aand is my preferred rip ‘outcome’ as decrypted VIDEO_TS folders can be played perfectly in VLC, Dragon, and several other GNOME, KDE and XFCE video and multimedia players – plus I can very easily burn that folder (along with an empty AUDIO_TS folder you create) back ‘as-is’ to a DVD-/+(DVD 5) or a DVD-/+R-DL (DVD 9) that can be played through any stand-alone DVD player (NTSC or PAL) hooked up to any TV. I can also transcode a copy of the same VIDEO-TS folder into any codec/container I wish to try out by using ‘Handbrake’ or any number of free apps from Linux, Windows, and even BSD.
As to the 21 (yes..21. ) Linux ripper/transcoders I have discovered over the years, I cannot address them all here, BUT as far as one mentioned below – OGMRip -while it can produce an inferior but reasonably viewable product (except on an HDTV), do YOU have 4 TO 5 HOURS TO KILL waiting for a result? I sure asssheck don’t and I can’t go anywhere! PLUS; if you install it then try to take it out, because of Linux’s poorly policed linkages of apps to libraries, UNINSTALLING OGMRip WILL DESTROY YOUR OS whether it be Debain, Ubuntu or Fedora-based. Please do not use it. ‘Thoggen’ produces the same quality output – evenbetter to my eyes and ears than OGMRip – and does it in 1/3 the time without dismantling your OS should you uninstall it.
Sincere best wishes and happy viewing,
Mr. J. Mars Bonfire
Now the 25th of October I read your comment (more as one and half years later).. I’v searched for the for me strange nickname of “Mars Bonfire”. But than I have to ask is it Mr. Jerry or Mr. Gerald or a normal nickname like mine. Sorry if my English translation isn’t what it likes. I learned my first English lessons about 43-years ago and used it during holidays and on the computer. My PC-period started with the Atari/Commodore C-64 with Basic & Dos and later Windows, maybe yours are the same. My period with Windows stopped at 11-02-2012, I said goodbey and shall never come back! The next day I started with a happy feeling with Ubuntu 64 desktop. That stap I had to do it years earlier… the feelings were the same as I started with Windows only now I got support from (unknown) strangers.
And support if you are bedridden is very important…. and that’s one of the reasons I replay on your comment.
If you are for real the person I found on Wikipedia, than in Music Industry you have a lot of steps before other ‘normal/general’ Linux users… because with that background (in the past) you live on another level.
If I talk for myself since Ubuntu 9.04/9.10 (I have both CD) I try to play the same music encoder as on doom9 or ubuntuforum. My bedridden is maybe not the same like yours, I must wait for the day/night to save some energy, to start something small as writing this message (incl. translation). In my country my experience is that only disabled/bedridden persons understand each other. On Twitter all are near, but i.r.l. the local neighborhoud/family are far away, they haven’t time to talk with someone who is not living in the real world.
The real world in large or small coutries are very hard, it has nothing to do with the age, we getting older yeh… that I know, but my brain has not changed. I know who are friends, most of the time disabled friends make time for support without asking for money. I’m not poor, bedridden I give less money to the real live, no holidays, so I can support p.e. Wikileaks, EFF-member, IFAW, Sea Shepherd, Tibet Dalai Lama…. And supporting others gives nice feelings… better as the 24/7 pain, which didn’t dissepear with taking more medication.
But back to your comment. Handbrake isn’t what it was… so I look for something else… I read a lot forums and try from my bed to register what I can do. I like the message of the ‘Code of Conduct’ but also that of the Open Source. In my opinion I used freeware/shareware in my Windows-period, now it’s difficult for me for p.e. buy a software product as ‘Makemkv’, it’s only $50 but than I better wait for the free to use programs with a GPL-license. Working with Linux/Unix have changed my hard back in a little softer… I don’t know how your live (from thinking) has changed on the world round you, from your health, your friends, the experiences on more levels like software, computer, free time, holidays, e.s.o.
Have a nice time.
Since the year 2006 (I became bedridden) is my lifestyle and own-made slogan:
I’m open, honest & sincere to myself, my partner and with some restrictions also to strangers…!
Thanks for that J Mars — sound advice. I’m an ol’ DVDfab fan and I’ve returned to *inux after deciding Windows >7 is not for me. dvdbackup is 101% of what I want, I can repack things to my taste now.
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