Is this something that might help you? No, it didn't crash the machine, but did quit mplayer and happened quite often. Or is it really a CPU load problem? [gl2] You have OpenGL >= 1.2 capable drivers, GOOD (16bpp and BGR is ok!) [gl2] antialiasing off [gl2] bilinear linear A:43728.7 V:43728.2 A-V: 0.483 ct: -0.335 9026/9026 13% 47% 1.0% 448 0 ************************************************ **** Your system is too SLOW to play this! **** ************************************************ Possible reasons, problems, workarounds: - Most common: broken/buggy _audio_ driver - Try -ao sdl or use the OSS emulation of ALSA. - Experiment with different values for -autosync, 30 is a good start. - Slow video output - Try a different -vo driver (-vo help for a list) or try -framedrop! - Slow CPU - Don't try to play a big DVD/DivX on a slow CPU! Try -hardframedrop. - Broken file - Try various combinations of -nobps -ni -forceidx -mc 0. - Slow media (NFS/SMB mounts, DVD, VCD etc) - Try -cache 8192. - Are you using -cache to play a non-interleaved AVI file? - Try -nocache. Read DOCS/HTML/en/video.html for tuning/speedup tips. If none of this helps you, read DOCS/HTML/en/bugreports.html. A:43779.1 V:43758.8 A-V: 20.345 ct: 2.725 9791/9791 14% 53% 1.5% 1211 0 Too many video packets in the buffer: (521 in 8398381 bytes). Maybe you are playing a non-interleaved stream/file or the codec failed? For AVI files, try to force non-interleaved mode with the -ni option. Broken frame at 0x9720C0 A:43779.5 V:43765.9 A-V: 13.527 ct: 3.437 9969/9969 15% 55% 1.5% 1211 0
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