Monday, August 27, 2007

Convert DVD to iPod

I have just spend two weeks on holiday and before I left I wanted to transfer some of my DVDs to my iPod Video to keep my fiancee and I entertained whilst traveling to our destination. Unfortunately I didn't really think about this soon enough and didn't have time to get it organised. Now that I'm back home though I've been able to look into it further.

The biggest problem I found with converting DVDs to an iPod suitable format is that the movie studios don't seem to want to allow it. This results in either a complicated list of steps involving multiple tricky applications or purchasing an all-on-one solution from a questionable overseas company. Luckily though, Hanselman recently updated his Tools List for Windows, which included a link to Videora Converters, a suite of video transcoding programs available for free. If Hanselman recommends it and I don't have to provide payment details, it's worth a try.

I downloaded their iPod converter and started following their slightly outdated guide for converting DVDs. I grabbed my Futurama box set and put the first disc in. The first stage involves using the getting-harder-to-find DVD Decrypter to rip and decrypt the appropriate video and audio stream without all the extra DVD menu junk. Thankfully I'm familiar with DVD Decrypter and even more so that it works fine as non-admin in Vista 64-bit.

The second stage involves installing and running the Videora software, selecting the file that DVD Decrypter produced and waiting for it to convert the MPEG-2 data to Apple's particular MPEG-4 format. This took less than 10 minutes on my Core 2 Duo to convert a 22-minute animated episode into a 137MB MP4 file. When complete, the video played well in the PC QuickTime player and after using iTunes to transfer it to my iPod it played great there too.

Sadly, while the Videora software is free and written in .NET too, it suffers from two major problems. Firstly, it is so filled with advertising in the program itself that it's hard to see where to start and I began to wonder if I'd just voluntarily installed malware. Secondly, the software is designed to run as an Administrator, trying to write configuration data to Program Files, and under Vista, even as an admin, it crashes hard on exit.

Ultimately, if you want some favourite DVD movies or episodes on your iPod, this is probably the easiest way.

 Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Faster User Switching

I run several Vista machines each with several user accounts. Sometimes the different accounts are for different people, sometimes they are for different purposes with different permissions (ie development vs testing). Windows XP introduced a featured called "Fast User Switching" that allowed you to log into another user account without logging off the current session and Vista improves on this by allowing it in domain environments too.

But it's not enough. I want it to be faster. At the moment, in Vista, it takes far too many key presses or mouse clicks to switch to another user. This is the quickest method I've discovered so far:

Ctrl+Alt+Del, Alt+W, select account, enter password, Enter.

However, I recently discovered a much faster approach. I bought a new laptop with Vista and a built-in Vista-driver-compatible fingerprint reader. Now I've associated different fingers with different accounts and at any time I can just slide the appropriate finger over the reader and *bam*, I'm logged into another account.

Still, if anyone knows, a better keyboard shortcut would be great for the PCs without fingerprint readers.

 Thursday, August 02, 2007

PowerShell Registry Find and Replace

Keys I recently encountered a server where SQL Server had somehow been installed to the admin user's mapped U: drive instead of drive C:. As a result all SQL file paths in the registry referred to "U:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\..." but for most users (including the SQL service account) the U: drive did not map to C:. This prevented Management Studio from working and probably many other issues that weren't as visible.

I wanted a fast way to find all "U:\Program Files" references in the registry and repoint them to drive C:. The standard Windows regedit.exe only supports Find but not Replace (and there were a lot of keys to fix) and third party registry tools available on the Internet fall into the untrustworthy category for fixing servers.

I ended up writing a quick C# console app to perform the job.The C# app was able to solve the problem and the server works properly now but I felt there should be an easier way: PowerShell.

I've spent an evening hammering out a basic pair of find and replace functions for PowerShell. They don't make as much use of PowerShell's declarative pipelined nature as I'd like but they work well. The replace function is particular dangerous if you misuse it so be careful. Perhaps I will implement the -WhatIf switch some day.

The find function is simply named Find-RegistryValue. At the moment the function only looks in values, not keys or value names because these are already quite easy to search on with basic PowerShell one-liners. As input the function expects a "seek" parameter being the text sought and optionally a path to a registry key to begin searching from. If the "regpath" is not provided it defaults to Get-Location and if it is not a registry path it throws.

The find function will return an array of Hashtable objects with all the information you should require: the RegistryKey, the name of the value in the key, and the value itself containing the sought text. The code follows:

function Find-RegistryValue (
    [string] $seek = $(throw "seek required."),
    [System.Management.Automation.PathInfo] $regpath = (Get-Location) ) {

    if ($regpath.Provider.Name -ne "Registry") { throw "regpath required." }

    $keys = @(Get-Item $regpath -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue) `
        + @(Get-ChildItem -recurse $regpath -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue);

    $results = @();

    foreach ($key in $keys) {
        foreach ($vname in $key.GetValueNames()) {
            $val = $key.GetValue($vname);
            if ($val -match $seek) {
                $r = @{};
                $r.Key = $key;
                $r.ValueName = $vname;
                $r.Value = $val;
                $results += $r;
            }
        }
    }

    $results;
}

The replace function is named Replace-RegistryValue and relies on the find function to work, resulting in very similar behaviour. It requires the text sought and the registry path just like the find function but it also requires the "swap" parameter which is the text to replace the sought value with. It calls the find function itself and uses the output to first promote the key to a writable instance then replace the value and return the results. The results include the RegistryKey, the name of the value in the key, the old value and also the new value. Here is the code:

function Replace-RegistryValue (
    [string] $seek = $(throw "seek required."),
    [string] $swap = $(throw "swap required."),
    [System.Management.Automation.PathInfo] $regpath = (Get-Location) ) {

    $find = Find-RegistryValue -seek $seek -regpath $regpath;
    $results = @();

    foreach ($target in $find) {
        $nval = $target.Value -replace $seek, $swap;
        $r = @{};
        $r.Key = $target.Key;
        $r.ValueName = $target.ValueName;
        $r.OldValue = $target.Value;
        $r.NewValue = $nval;
        $results += $r;
        $wKey = (Get-Item $r.Key.PSParentPath).OpenSubKey($r.Key.PSChildName, "True");
        $wKey.SetValue($target.ValueName, $nval);
    }

    $results;
}

If you have any suggestions for improving the code or perhaps even a better naming convention for the pair, please leave a comment.