Keywords: video playback, online playback, bus playback
Table of Contents for this article
I. Video playback window
The TSMaster video playback window can play mainstream video formats, and users can open one or more video playback windows, as shown in Figure 1.
1|Direct Video Playback
Click the Open button to select the video file, make sure that the drop-down box of "Associated Bus Playback Engine" is selected as "None", then the video can be freely played, paused and stopped, as shown in Figure 2.
Click the Play button to play the video file freely (shortcut key F9). Once playback has started, you can click the Pause button to pause the video playback (shortcut key F10), and click the Play button again (F9) to resume playback.
Click the Stop Play button to stop the playback of the video file (shortcut key F11).
Click the Stretch button to maximize the image stretched in the window (shortcut F4):
2|Associated Bus Playback Engine Video Playback
2-1 Configuring the Bus Online Playback Engine
Open the Bus Playback window and select Online Playback Configuration:
Right click in the blank space of the list to add the blf file to the list.
Select one of the playback engines from the list and configure its parameters, e.g. whether to start playback automatically, to which bus channel to playback, etc:
2-2 Associating the Video Playback Interface to a Bus Playback Engine
Open the "Video Playback" window, in the "Associated Bus Playback Engine" drop-down box, check the online playback engine you want to associate:
2-3 Run online playback, video playback will be triggered synchronously
After connecting TSMaster's channel, start the online playback engine and you can see that the video playback is synchronized with the bus playback:
2-4 Applying Time Offset
If the start time of the video deviates from the start of the bus time (e.g. by 10 seconds), you need to set this relative deviation time in the video playback interface:
II. Video analysis
1|Single Frame Analysis
Use the step buttons in the toolbar menu for functions such as single-frame stepping:
Due to the unidirectional nature of video playback, TSMaster supports debugging video stepping in the direction of positive time elapsed, and the buttons that support stepping are colored differently than the other buttons. The three green buttons out of the four indicate simply moving the video to the specified frame, while the blue stepping buttons step both the video and the message (if associated with an online playback engine).
Move to the first frame (shortcut key F3);
Move to the previous frame (shortcut key F7);
Moves to the next frame (shortcut key F8) while playing back all messages within the time from the current frame to the next frame;
Move to the last frame (shortcut key F12);
After a single frame step, the status bar below will be synchronized to show the frame and time information that you are currently in:
2|Video Positioning
Use the drag bar below to locate the specified frame in the video. During the dragging process, the status bar next to and below the cursor will display real-time information about the positioning of the video: