Some DVD hardware or software players may play discs whose MPEG files do not conform to the above standards; commonly this is used to support discs authored with formats such as
VCD and
SVCD. While VCD and
CVD video is supported by the DVD standard, neither SVCD video nor VCD, CVD, or SVCD audio is compatible with the DVD standard. Some hardware players will also play DVD-ROMs or
CD-ROMs containing "raw" MPEG video files; these are "unauthored" and lack the
file and header structure that defines DVD-Video. Standard DVD-Video files contain extra information (such as the number of video tracks, chapters and links to extra features) that DVD players use to navigate the disc. The maximum chapters allowed per title is 99 and the maximum titles allowed per DVD is 99.
File system Almost all DVD-Video discs use the
UDF bridge format, which is a combination of the DVD MicroUDF (a subset of
UDF 1.02) and
ISO 9660 file systems. The UDF bridge format provides backwards compatibility for operating systems that support only ISO 9660.
Directory and file structure A DVD volume for the DVD-Video format has the following structure of directories and files: •
AUDIO_TS directory: empty or not present on DVD-Video discs; contains files only on
DVD-Audio discs; it is also known as an Audio Title Sets directory; included on DVD-Video discs for compatibility reasons •
VIDEO_TS directory: stores all data for the DVD-Video; it is also known as a Video Title Sets directory. This directory is required to be present on a DVD-compliant disc. •
Video Manager (VMG) files: •
VIDEO_TS.IFO file: the
Video
Mana
ger (VMG) information file – stores control and playback information for the entire DVD – e. g. the First Play PGC (
Pro
gram
Chain), locations of all
Video
Title
Sets (VTS), table of titles, number of volumes, domains for multiple languages and regional and parental control settings, information about subtitles, audio tracks, etc. This file is required to be present on a DVD-compliant disc. •
VIDEO_TS.BUP file: the backup copy of the VIDEO_TS.IFO file. It is part of Video Manager. •
VIDEO_TS.VOB file: the first-play Video Object of the DVD-Video disc, usually a copyright notice or a menu. It is part of Video Manager. This file is not required to be present on a DVD-compliant disc. •
Video Title Set (VTS) files: •
VTS_01_0.IFO file: stores control and playback information for the Video Title Set 01—e. g. information about chapters, subtitles and audio tracks. A VTS_zz_0.IFO file (where zz is from 01 to 99) is required to be present on each VTS. •
VTS_01_0.BUP file: a backup copy of the VTS_01_0.IFO file. This file is required to be present on a DVD-compliant disc. It is part of the Video Title Set. •
VTS_01_0.VOB file: "Video Title Set 01, Video Object 0" contains the menu for this title. This file is not required to be present on a DVD-compliant disc. •
VTS_01_1.VOB file: "Video Title Set 01, Video Object 1" contains the video for this title. At least one file VTS_zz_1.VOB is required in the Video Title Set and each VTS_zz_x. DVD-Video can contain up to 99 (1–99) titles with a maximum of 10 (0–9) VOB files each. The last possible VOB file is VTS_99_9.VOB. • … etc.
IFO files store control and playback information – e. g. information about chapters, subtitles and audio tracks. They do not store any video or audio data or subtitles.
BUP files are only backups of the IFO files.
Domains Data structures recorded on a DVD-compliant disc are components of one of the four data groups called domains: •
First-play (FP): First Play PGC located in the VIDEO_TS.IFO file •
Video Manager (VMG): contains VIDEO_TS.IFO, VIDEO_TS.BUP and VIDEO_TS.VOB •
Video Title Set (VTS): contains VTS_zz_x.IFO, VTS_zz_x.BUP and VTS_zz_x.VOB files (where x is from 1 to 9) •
Video Title Set Menu (VTSM): uses VTS_zz_0.VOB files
Container Video, audio, subtitle and navigation streams are
multiplexed and stored on a DVD-Video disc in the
VOB container format (
Video
Object). VOB is based on the
MPEG program stream format, but with additional limitations and specifications in the private streams. The MPEG program stream has provisions for non-standard data (as AC-3, DTS, LPCM or subtitles used in VOB files) in the form of so-called private streams. VOB files are a very strict subset of the MPEG program stream standard. While all VOB files are MPEG program streams, not all MPEG program streams comply with the definition for a VOB file. VRO file is an equivalent to a collection of DVD-Video VOB files. Fragmented VRO files are not widely supported by hardware or software players and video editing software. The subtitle tracks are contained within the
VOB file of the DVD. DVD-Video may also contain
EIA-608 closed captioning material, which can generally only be viewed on a television set with a decoder and with the DVD player connected to it via analogue video cables, such as
CVBS.
Chapters and angles DVD-Video may contain chapters for easy navigation, and continuation of a partially watched film. If space permits, it is also possible to include several versions of certain scenes, called "angles". Today, the multi-angle feature is mostly used for internationalization. For example, it can be used to supply different language versions of images containing written text when subtitles would not do (e. g., the
Queen's spell book in
Snow White, and the scrolling text in the openings of the
Star Wars films). Multiple angles have found a niche in markets such as
yoga,
erotica,
animation (e. g. for
storyboards), and live performances.
Extra features A significant selling point of DVD-Video is that the storage capacity allows for a wide variety of extra, or bonus, features in addition to the feature film. These extra features can include •
audio commentary, •
documentary features (commonly about the making of the main title), •
interviews, •
deleted footage, •
outtakes, • photo galleries, •
storyboards, • isolated
music scores, • trivia text commentary, • simple games, •
film shorts, •
TV spots, •
radio spots, •
theatrical trailers (which were used to promote the main title) and •
teaser trailers (advertising related movies or DVDs). Extra features often provide entertainment or add depth and understanding to the film. Games,
bloopers, and galleries provide entertainment. Deleted scenes and alternative endings allow the audience to view additional content which was not included in a theatrical release. Directors cuts allow the audience to see how the director envisioned the main title without the constraints which are placed on a theatrical release. Other extras that can be included on DVDs are motion menus, still pictures, up to 32 selectable subtitles,
seamless branching for multiple storylines, up to 9 camera angles, and DVD-ROM / data files that can be accessed on a computer. Extra features require additional storage space, which often means encoding the main title with lower than possible data rate to fit both the main title and the extras on one disc. Lower data rate may decrease visual and sound quality, which manifests itself in various
compression artifacts. To maintain quality the main title and the extras may be released on several discs, or the extras may be omitted completely like in the "
Superbit" line of DVDs. == Restrictions ==