Click the "Select File" button above, and choose your DVM file.
You’ll see a preview, if available.
Click the "Convert file to..." button to extract text information.
Convert DVM to another file type
To convert your DVM file to another format, you need DivX Player or other Video software.
Convert a file to DVM
To convert other file formats to the "Encrypted Media File" file type, you need software like DivX Player or a similar tool.
About DVM files
The .dvm file extension represents a split ecosystem, most commonly serving as an encrypted mobile video file associated with DivX technology. These files are typically generated by older mobile devices or proprietary recorders and are often heavily compressed or encrypted, rendering them unplayable on standard media players like VLC media player or modern web browsers. Users frequently face "codec not supported" errors or black screens due to this proprietary lock-in. To fix this, converting DVM videos to universally supported formats like MP4 (H.264) or WebP is essential for sharing, editing, or archiving.
Alternatively, in enterprise environments, a .dvm file is likely a Domain Value Map used by Oracle SOA Suite. These are XML-based configuration files used to map data values between different application domains (e.g., mapping "United States" to "US"). While text-readable, raw DVM files are complex to interpret without the Oracle JDeveloper environment. Converting these to standard XML, JSON, or CSV allows developers to easily document, audit, and migrate data logic without requiring the full middleware stack.
Convert.Guru analyzes your DVM file, detects the exact format, and lets you read the text inside.
If you want to convert DVM file to MP4, AVI, MOV, WMV, FLV, WEBM, MKV, M4V, 3GP, OGV, ASF or RM, you can use DivX Player or similar software from the "Encrypted Mobile Video" category. In the File menu, look for Save As… or Export….
To convert MTS, MOV, RMVB, DIVX, RM, H264, TS, WMV, VOB, MP4, XVID or AVI files to DVM, try DivX Player or another comparable tool in the "Encrypted Mobile Video" category.
The DVM Converter Story
The history of Convert.Guru began over 25 years ago in California with Tom Simondi’s file-format database. A former contributor to Space Shuttle development and a software pioneer of the 1980s, Simondi established a trusted resource for file type analysis that was even referenced by Microsoft Windows XP. Today, we use modern technology to process and convert thousands of file formats while continually improving our DVM converter.