For me, looking at a random new bluray (Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood), from starting the bluray until looking at the first episode shows a wealth of activity: This will print only successful requests to open files under /mnt/bluray. Strace -z -tt -e trace=open,openat -f vlc 2>&1 | grep /mnt/bluray this should do the trick (change /mnt/bluray to wherever your bluray is mounted): Once I've finished kicking myself for not thinking of this years ago. Thank you to both dcoke22 and awdspyder for the info (and the rest of the community for contributing to the conversation). That said, I'm curious to know a better process on any OS. I'm multi-OS I'm using Ubuntu right now to read this. MetalDave was asking about how to do it on a Mac. It seems like OpenedFilesView ( ) is a Windows program. Any thoughts appreciated since I have now confirmed you HAVE to have the disc to find the correct movie file. I'm not sure why once you make a backup with MakeMKV, it plays the wrong file. *Edit: I just inserted the disc and it found the correct segments/mpls no problem. Why is it any different if you are playing the BDMV or an ISO of the created file from MakeMKV vs if you have the disc inserted? I figured it would yield the same results as having the disc. The file it plays from the BDMV folder is not the correct overall length of the film and the last segment is NOT end credits. I tried a few different ways using Procmon + PowerDVD and also even tried VLC + ProcMon and both gave me the same file. I have used this method in the OP successfully for discs, but have not tried a disc that I have backed up previously with MakeMKV until tonight. It looks like if you have already backed up a disc that has Obfuscation on it, then this method will NOT work once you're ready to extract the movie and make an MKV file out of it.
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