Thanks linuxlover. I investigated it a bit deeper, and I found several problems and only one little advance.
First, I used gnome-dvb-setup and tried to find channels. As I already stated, my region/antenna is not listed on its lists, so I put no information about my country or antenna and it, theoretically, perform a full scan on all the frequencies. It didn't work at all, no channel was found. Then, I tried with "scan", but I have the problem that I don't have an input file for "scan", so I avoided it at the beginning. As linuxlover stated, I tried with dvbscan, but it has the same "problem" for me, it needs an input file (different file than "scan" AFAIK). At the end, I discovered w-scan package, and the w_scan tool. It is able to generate as output the input for "scan", "dvbscan" or a VDR "channels.conf" directly. I tried first using w_scan -ft -c ES -x for generating an input file for scan/dvbscan (it is intended to work with gnome-dvb-daemon if you put that file on the right directory). The three tools perform an scan, but theynever return me a valid VDR channels.conf (empty files) or was unable to find nothing (gnome-dvb-setup). At the end, I tried to generate the VDR channels.conf using "w_scan -ft -c ES > vdr_channels.conf". Then, I tried to use that file is gnome-dvb-control [1], but no channel was added and I was unable to see TV through Totem [1] https://live.gnome.org/DVBDaemon/UserGuide P.S. I'm trying gnome-dvb-daemon because I'm interested in adopting this package and I want to know how it works before ITA it. On 10/10/12 10:25, linuxlover wrote: > I think that this page can be of help: > http://linuxtv.org/wiki/index.php/Dvbscan > >
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature