From f5c4671bfbad96bf346bd7e9a21fc4317b4959df Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Indrajith K L Date: Sat, 3 Dec 2022 17:00:20 +0530 Subject: Adds most of the tools --- ffmpeg/doc/ffmpeg.html | 3065 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 3065 insertions(+) create mode 100644 ffmpeg/doc/ffmpeg.html (limited to 'ffmpeg/doc/ffmpeg.html') diff --git a/ffmpeg/doc/ffmpeg.html b/ffmpeg/doc/ffmpeg.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..186427b --- /dev/null +++ b/ffmpeg/doc/ffmpeg.html @@ -0,0 +1,3065 @@ + + + +
+ +ffmpeg [global_options] {[input_file_options] -i input_url} ... {[output_file_options] output_url} ... +
+ +ffmpeg
is a very fast video and audio converter that can also grab from
+a live audio/video source. It can also convert between arbitrary sample
+rates and resize video on the fly with a high quality polyphase filter.
+
ffmpeg
reads from an arbitrary number of input "files" (which can be regular
+files, pipes, network streams, grabbing devices, etc.), specified by the
+-i
option, and writes to an arbitrary number of output "files", which are
+specified by a plain output url. Anything found on the command line which
+cannot be interpreted as an option is considered to be an output url.
+
Each input or output url can, in principle, contain any number of streams of
+different types (video/audio/subtitle/attachment/data). The allowed number and/or
+types of streams may be limited by the container format. Selecting which
+streams from which inputs will go into which output is either done automatically
+or with the -map
option (see the Stream selection chapter).
+
To refer to input files in options, you must use their indices (0-based). E.g.
+the first input file is 0
, the second is 1
, etc. Similarly, streams
+within a file are referred to by their indices. E.g. 2:3
refers to the
+fourth stream in the third input file. Also see the Stream specifiers chapter.
+
As a general rule, options are applied to the next specified +file. Therefore, order is important, and you can have the same +option on the command line multiple times. Each occurrence is +then applied to the next input or output file. +Exceptions from this rule are the global options (e.g. verbosity level), +which should be specified first. +
+Do not mix input and output files – first specify all input files, then all +output files. Also do not mix options which belong to different files. All +options apply ONLY to the next input or output file and are reset between files. +
+ffmpeg -i input.avi -b:v 64k -bufsize 64k output.avi +
ffmpeg -i input.avi -r 24 output.avi +
ffmpeg -r 1 -i input.m2v -r 24 output.avi +
The format option may be needed for raw input files. +
+ + +The transcoding process in ffmpeg
for each output can be described by
+the following diagram:
+
_______ ______________ +| | | | +| input | demuxer | encoded data | decoder +| file | ---------> | packets | -----+ +|_______| |______________| | + v + _________ + | | + | decoded | + | frames | + |_________| + ________ ______________ | +| | | | | +| output | <-------- | encoded data | <----+ +| file | muxer | packets | encoder +|________| |______________| + + ++
ffmpeg
calls the libavformat library (containing demuxers) to read
+input files and get packets containing encoded data from them. When there are
+multiple input files, ffmpeg
tries to keep them synchronized by
+tracking lowest timestamp on any active input stream.
+
Encoded packets are then passed to the decoder (unless streamcopy is selected +for the stream, see further for a description). The decoder produces +uncompressed frames (raw video/PCM audio/...) which can be processed further by +filtering (see next section). After filtering, the frames are passed to the +encoder, which encodes them and outputs encoded packets. Finally those are +passed to the muxer, which writes the encoded packets to the output file. +
+ +Before encoding, ffmpeg
can process raw audio and video frames using
+filters from the libavfilter library. Several chained filters form a filter
+graph. ffmpeg
distinguishes between two types of filtergraphs:
+simple and complex.
+
Simple filtergraphs are those that have exactly one input and output, both of +the same type. In the above diagram they can be represented by simply inserting +an additional step between decoding and encoding: +
+_________ ______________ +| | | | +| decoded | | encoded data | +| frames |\ _ | packets | +|_________| \ /||______________| + \ __________ / + simple _\|| | / encoder + filtergraph | filtered |/ + | frames | + |__________| + ++
Simple filtergraphs are configured with the per-stream -filter option +(with -vf and -af aliases for video and audio respectively). +A simple filtergraph for video can look for example like this: +
+_______ _____________ _______ ________ +| | | | | | | | +| input | ---> | deinterlace | ---> | scale | ---> | output | +|_______| |_____________| |_______| |________| + ++
Note that some filters change frame properties but not frame contents. E.g. the
+fps
filter in the example above changes number of frames, but does not
+touch the frame contents. Another example is the setpts
filter, which
+only sets timestamps and otherwise passes the frames unchanged.
+
Complex filtergraphs are those which cannot be described as simply a linear +processing chain applied to one stream. This is the case, for example, when the graph has +more than one input and/or output, or when output stream type is different from +input. They can be represented with the following diagram: +
+_________ +| | +| input 0 |\ __________ +|_________| \ | | + \ _________ /| output 0 | + \ | | / |__________| + _________ \| complex | / +| | | |/ +| input 1 |---->| filter |\ +|_________| | | \ __________ + /| graph | \ | | + / | | \| output 1 | + _________ / |_________| |__________| +| | / +| input 2 |/ +|_________| + ++
Complex filtergraphs are configured with the -filter_complex option. +Note that this option is global, since a complex filtergraph, by its nature, +cannot be unambiguously associated with a single stream or file. +
+The -lavfi option is equivalent to -filter_complex. +
+A trivial example of a complex filtergraph is the overlay
filter, which
+has two video inputs and one video output, containing one video overlaid on top
+of the other. Its audio counterpart is the amix
filter.
+
Stream copy is a mode selected by supplying the copy
parameter to the
+-codec option. It makes ffmpeg
omit the decoding and encoding
+step for the specified stream, so it does only demuxing and muxing. It is useful
+for changing the container format or modifying container-level metadata. The
+diagram above will, in this case, simplify to this:
+
_______ ______________ ________ +| | | | | | +| input | demuxer | encoded data | muxer | output | +| file | ---------> | packets | -------> | file | +|_______| |______________| |________| + ++
Since there is no decoding or encoding, it is very fast and there is no quality +loss. However, it might not work in some cases because of many factors. Applying +filters is obviously also impossible, since filters work on uncompressed data. +
+ + +ffmpeg
provides the -map
option for manual control of stream selection in each
+output file. Users can skip -map
and let ffmpeg perform automatic stream selection as
+described below. The -vn / -an / -sn / -dn
options can be used to skip inclusion of
+video, audio, subtitle and data streams respectively, whether manually mapped or automatically
+selected, except for those streams which are outputs of complex filtergraphs.
+
The sub-sections that follow describe the various rules that are involved in stream selection. +The examples that follow next show how these rules are applied in practice. +
+While every effort is made to accurately reflect the behavior of the program, FFmpeg is under +continuous development and the code may have changed since the time of this writing. +
+ +In the absence of any map options for a particular output file, ffmpeg inspects the output +format to check which type of streams can be included in it, viz. video, audio and/or +subtitles. For each acceptable stream type, ffmpeg will pick one stream, when available, +from among all the inputs. +
+It will select that stream based upon the following criteria: +
In the case where several streams of the same type rate equally, the stream with the lowest +index is chosen. +
+Data or attachment streams are not automatically selected and can only be included
+using -map
.
+
When -map
is used, only user-mapped streams are included in that output file,
+with one possible exception for filtergraph outputs described below.
+
If there are any complex filtergraph output streams with unlabeled pads, they will be added +to the first output file. This will lead to a fatal error if the stream type is not supported +by the output format. In the absence of the map option, the inclusion of these streams leads +to the automatic stream selection of their types being skipped. If map options are present, +these filtergraph streams are included in addition to the mapped streams. +
+Complex filtergraph output streams with labeled pads must be mapped once and exactly once. +
+ +Stream handling is independent of stream selection, with an exception for subtitles described
+below. Stream handling is set via the -codec
option addressed to streams within a
+specific output file. In particular, codec options are applied by ffmpeg after the
+stream selection process and thus do not influence the latter. If no -codec
option is
+specified for a stream type, ffmpeg will select the default encoder registered by the output
+file muxer.
+
An exception exists for subtitles. If a subtitle encoder is specified for an output file, the +first subtitle stream found of any type, text or image, will be included. ffmpeg does not validate +if the specified encoder can convert the selected stream or if the converted stream is acceptable +within the output format. This applies generally as well: when the user sets an encoder manually, +the stream selection process cannot check if the encoded stream can be muxed into the output file. +If it cannot, ffmpeg will abort and all output files will fail to be processed. +
+ +The following examples illustrate the behavior, quirks and limitations of ffmpeg’s stream +selection methods. +
+They assume the following three input files. +
++input file 'A.avi' + stream 0: video 640x360 + stream 1: audio 2 channels + +input file 'B.mp4' + stream 0: video 1920x1080 + stream 1: audio 2 channels + stream 2: subtitles (text) + stream 3: audio 5.1 channels + stream 4: subtitles (text) + +input file 'C.mkv' + stream 0: video 1280x720 + stream 1: audio 2 channels + stream 2: subtitles (image) ++ +
ffmpeg -i A.avi -i B.mp4 out1.mkv out2.wav -map 1:a -c:a copy out3.mov +
There are three output files specified, and for the first two, no -map
options
+are set, so ffmpeg will select streams for these two files automatically.
+
out1.mkv is a Matroska container file and accepts video, audio and subtitle streams,
+so ffmpeg will try to select one of each type.
+For video, it will select stream 0
from B.mp4, which has the highest
+resolution among all the input video streams.
+For audio, it will select stream 3
from B.mp4, since it has the greatest
+number of channels.
+For subtitles, it will select stream 2
from B.mp4, which is the first subtitle
+stream from among A.avi and B.mp4.
+
out2.wav accepts only audio streams, so only stream 3
from B.mp4 is
+selected.
+
For out3.mov, since a -map
option is set, no automatic stream selection will
+occur. The -map 1:a
option will select all audio streams from the second input
+B.mp4. No other streams will be included in this output file.
+
For the first two outputs, all included streams will be transcoded. The encoders chosen will +be the default ones registered by each output format, which may not match the codec of the +selected input streams. +
+For the third output, codec option for audio streams has been set
+to copy
, so no decoding-filtering-encoding operations will occur, or can occur.
+Packets of selected streams shall be conveyed from the input file and muxed within the output
+file.
+
ffmpeg -i C.mkv out1.mkv -c:s dvdsub -an out2.mkv +
Although out1.mkv is a Matroska container file which accepts subtitle streams, only a
+video and audio stream shall be selected. The subtitle stream of C.mkv is image-based
+and the default subtitle encoder of the Matroska muxer is text-based, so a transcode operation
+for the subtitles is expected to fail and hence the stream isn’t selected. However, in
+out2.mkv, a subtitle encoder is specified in the command and so, the subtitle stream is
+selected, in addition to the video stream. The presence of -an
disables audio stream
+selection for out2.mkv.
+
ffmpeg -i A.avi -i C.mkv -i B.mp4 -filter_complex "overlay" out1.mp4 out2.srt +
A filtergraph is setup here using the -filter_complex
option and consists of a single
+video filter. The overlay
filter requires exactly two video inputs, but none are
+specified, so the first two available video streams are used, those of A.avi and
+C.mkv. The output pad of the filter has no label and so is sent to the first output file
+out1.mp4. Due to this, automatic selection of the video stream is skipped, which would
+have selected the stream in B.mp4. The audio stream with most channels viz. stream 3
+in B.mp4, is chosen automatically. No subtitle stream is chosen however, since the MP4
+format has no default subtitle encoder registered, and the user hasn’t specified a subtitle encoder.
+
The 2nd output file, out2.srt, only accepts text-based subtitle streams. So, even though
+the first subtitle stream available belongs to C.mkv, it is image-based and hence skipped.
+The selected stream, stream 2
in B.mp4, is the first text-based subtitle stream.
+
ffmpeg -i A.avi -i B.mp4 -i C.mkv -filter_complex "[1:v]hue=s=0[outv];overlay;aresample" \ + -map '[outv]' -an out1.mp4 \ + out2.mkv \ + -map '[outv]' -map 1:a:0 out3.mkv +
The above command will fail, as the output pad labelled [outv]
has been mapped twice.
+None of the output files shall be processed.
+
ffmpeg -i A.avi -i B.mp4 -i C.mkv -filter_complex "[1:v]hue=s=0[outv];overlay;aresample" \ + -an out1.mp4 \ + out2.mkv \ + -map 1:a:0 out3.mkv +
This command above will also fail as the hue filter output has a label, [outv]
,
+and hasn’t been mapped anywhere.
+
The command should be modified as follows, +
ffmpeg -i A.avi -i B.mp4 -i C.mkv -filter_complex "[1:v]hue=s=0,split=2[outv1][outv2];overlay;aresample" \ + -map '[outv1]' -an out1.mp4 \ + out2.mkv \ + -map '[outv2]' -map 1:a:0 out3.mkv +
The video stream from B.mp4 is sent to the hue filter, whose output is cloned once using +the split filter, and both outputs labelled. Then a copy each is mapped to the first and third +output files. +
+The overlay filter, requiring two video inputs, uses the first two unused video streams. Those
+are the streams from A.avi and C.mkv. The overlay output isn’t labelled, so it is
+sent to the first output file out1.mp4, regardless of the presence of the -map
option.
+
The aresample filter is sent the first unused audio stream, that of A.avi. Since this filter
+output is also unlabelled, it too is mapped to the first output file. The presence of -an
+only suppresses automatic or manual stream selection of audio streams, not outputs sent from
+filtergraphs. Both these mapped streams shall be ordered before the mapped stream in out1.mp4.
+
The video, audio and subtitle streams mapped to out2.mkv
are entirely determined by
+automatic stream selection.
+
out3.mkv consists of the cloned video output from the hue filter and the first audio
+stream from B.mp4.
+
+
All the numerical options, if not specified otherwise, accept a string +representing a number as input, which may be followed by one of the SI +unit prefixes, for example: ’K’, ’M’, or ’G’. +
+If ’i’ is appended to the SI unit prefix, the complete prefix will be +interpreted as a unit prefix for binary multiples, which are based on +powers of 1024 instead of powers of 1000. Appending ’B’ to the SI unit +prefix multiplies the value by 8. This allows using, for example: +’KB’, ’MiB’, ’G’ and ’B’ as number suffixes. +
+Options which do not take arguments are boolean options, and set the +corresponding value to true. They can be set to false by prefixing +the option name with "no". For example using "-nofoo" +will set the boolean option with name "foo" to false. +
+ +Some options are applied per-stream, e.g. bitrate or codec. Stream specifiers +are used to precisely specify which stream(s) a given option belongs to. +
+A stream specifier is a string generally appended to the option name and
+separated from it by a colon. E.g. -codec:a:1 ac3
contains the
+a:1
stream specifier, which matches the second audio stream. Therefore, it
+would select the ac3 codec for the second audio stream.
+
A stream specifier can match several streams, so that the option is applied to all
+of them. E.g. the stream specifier in -b:a 128k
matches all audio
+streams.
+
An empty stream specifier matches all streams. For example, -codec copy
+or -codec: copy
would copy all the streams without reencoding.
+
Possible forms of stream specifiers are: +
Matches the stream with this index. E.g. -threads:1 4
would set the
+thread count for the second stream to 4. If stream_index is used as an
+additional stream specifier (see below), then it selects stream number
+stream_index from the matching streams. Stream numbering is based on the
+order of the streams as detected by libavformat except when a program ID is
+also specified. In this case it is based on the ordering of the streams in the
+program.
+
stream_type is one of following: ’v’ or ’V’ for video, ’a’ for audio, ’s’ +for subtitle, ’d’ for data, and ’t’ for attachments. ’v’ matches all video +streams, ’V’ only matches video streams which are not attached pictures, video +thumbnails or cover arts. If additional_stream_specifier is used, then +it matches streams which both have this type and match the +additional_stream_specifier. Otherwise, it matches all streams of the +specified type. +
Matches streams which are in the program with the id program_id. If +additional_stream_specifier is used, then it matches streams which both +are part of the program and match the additional_stream_specifier. +
+Match the stream by stream id (e.g. PID in MPEG-TS container). +
Matches streams with the metadata tag key having the specified value. If +value is not given, matches streams that contain the given tag with any +value. +
Matches streams with usable configuration, the codec must be defined and the +essential information such as video dimension or audio sample rate must be present. +
+Note that in ffmpeg
, matching by metadata will only work properly for
+input files.
+
These options are shared amongst the ff* tools. +
+Show license. +
+Show help. An optional parameter may be specified to print help about a specific +item. If no argument is specified, only basic (non advanced) tool +options are shown. +
+Possible values of arg are: +
Print advanced tool options in addition to the basic tool options. +
+Print complete list of options, including shared and private options +for encoders, decoders, demuxers, muxers, filters, etc. +
+Print detailed information about the decoder named decoder_name. Use the +-decoders option to get a list of all decoders. +
+Print detailed information about the encoder named encoder_name. Use the +-encoders option to get a list of all encoders. +
+Print detailed information about the demuxer named demuxer_name. Use the +-formats option to get a list of all demuxers and muxers. +
+Print detailed information about the muxer named muxer_name. Use the +-formats option to get a list of all muxers and demuxers. +
+Print detailed information about the filter named filter_name. Use the +-filters option to get a list of all filters. +
+Print detailed information about the bitstream filter named bitstream_filter_name. +Use the -bsfs option to get a list of all bitstream filters. +
+Print detailed information about the protocol named protocol_name. +Use the -protocols option to get a list of all protocols. +
Show version. +
+Show the build configuration, one option per line. +
+Show available formats (including devices). +
+Show available demuxers. +
+Show available muxers. +
+Show available devices. +
+Show all codecs known to libavcodec. +
+Note that the term ’codec’ is used throughout this documentation as a shortcut +for what is more correctly called a media bitstream format. +
+Show available decoders. +
+Show all available encoders. +
+Show available bitstream filters. +
+Show available protocols. +
+Show available libavfilter filters. +
+Show available pixel formats. +
+Show available sample formats. +
+Show channel names and standard channel layouts. +
+Show stream dispositions. +
+Show recognized color names. +
+Show autodetected sources of the input device. +Some devices may provide system-dependent source names that cannot be autodetected. +The returned list cannot be assumed to be always complete. +
ffmpeg -sources pulse,server=192.168.0.4 +
Show autodetected sinks of the output device. +Some devices may provide system-dependent sink names that cannot be autodetected. +The returned list cannot be assumed to be always complete. +
ffmpeg -sinks pulse,server=192.168.0.4 +
Set logging level and flags used by the library. +
+The optional flags prefix can consist of the following values: +
Indicates that repeated log output should not be compressed to the first line +and the "Last message repeated n times" line will be omitted. +
Indicates that log output should add a [level]
prefix to each message
+line. This can be used as an alternative to log coloring, e.g. when dumping the
+log to file.
+
Flags can also be used alone by adding a ’+’/’-’ prefix to set/reset a single +flag without affecting other flags or changing loglevel. When +setting both flags and loglevel, a ’+’ separator is expected +between the last flags value and before loglevel. +
+loglevel is a string or a number containing one of the following values: +
Show nothing at all; be silent. +
Only show fatal errors which could lead the process to crash, such as +an assertion failure. This is not currently used for anything. +
Only show fatal errors. These are errors after which the process absolutely +cannot continue. +
Show all errors, including ones which can be recovered from. +
Show all warnings and errors. Any message related to possibly +incorrect or unexpected events will be shown. +
Show informative messages during processing. This is in addition to +warnings and errors. This is the default value. +
Same as info
, except more verbose.
+
Show everything, including debugging information. +
For example to enable repeated log output, add the level
prefix, and set
+loglevel to verbose
:
+
ffmpeg -loglevel repeat+level+verbose -i input output +
Another example that enables repeated log output without affecting current
+state of level
prefix flag or loglevel:
+
ffmpeg [...] -loglevel +repeat +
By default the program logs to stderr. If coloring is supported by the
+terminal, colors are used to mark errors and warnings. Log coloring
+can be disabled setting the environment variable
+AV_LOG_FORCE_NOCOLOR
, or can be forced setting
+the environment variable AV_LOG_FORCE_COLOR
.
+
Dump full command line and log output to a file named
+program-YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS.log
in the current
+directory.
+This file can be useful for bug reports.
+It also implies -loglevel debug
.
+
Setting the environment variable FFREPORT
to any value has the
+same effect. If the value is a ’:’-separated key=value sequence, these
+options will affect the report; option values must be escaped if they
+contain special characters or the options delimiter ’:’ (see the
+“Quoting and escaping” section in the ffmpeg-utils manual).
+
The following options are recognized: +
set the file name to use for the report; %p
is expanded to the name
+of the program, %t
is expanded to a timestamp, %%
is expanded
+to a plain %
+
set the log verbosity level using a numerical value (see -loglevel
).
+
For example, to output a report to a file named ffreport.log
+using a log level of 32
(alias for log level info
):
+
FFREPORT=file=ffreport.log:level=32 ffmpeg -i input output +
Errors in parsing the environment variable are not fatal, and will not +appear in the report. +
+Suppress printing banner. +
+All FFmpeg tools will normally show a copyright notice, build options +and library versions. This option can be used to suppress printing +this information. +
+Allows setting and clearing cpu flags. This option is intended +for testing. Do not use it unless you know what you’re doing. +
ffmpeg -cpuflags -sse+mmx ... +ffmpeg -cpuflags mmx ... +ffmpeg -cpuflags 0 ... +
Possible flags for this option are: +
Override detection of CPU count. This option is intended +for testing. Do not use it unless you know what you’re doing. +
ffmpeg -cpucount 2 +
Set the maximum size limit for allocating a block on the heap by ffmpeg’s +family of malloc functions. Exercise extreme caution when using +this option. Don’t use if you do not understand the full consequence of doing so. +Default is INT_MAX. +
These options are provided directly by the libavformat, libavdevice and +libavcodec libraries. To see the list of available AVOptions, use the +-help option. They are separated into two categories: +
These options can be set for any container, codec or device. Generic options +are listed under AVFormatContext options for containers/devices and under +AVCodecContext options for codecs. +
These options are specific to the given container, device or codec. Private +options are listed under their corresponding containers/devices/codecs. +
For example to write an ID3v2.3 header instead of a default ID3v2.4 to +an MP3 file, use the id3v2_version private option of the MP3 +muxer: +
ffmpeg -i input.flac -id3v2_version 3 out.mp3 +
All codec AVOptions are per-stream, and thus a stream specifier +should be attached to them: +
ffmpeg -i multichannel.mxf -map 0:v:0 -map 0:a:0 -map 0:a:0 -c:a:0 ac3 -b:a:0 640k -ac:a:1 2 -c:a:1 aac -b:2 128k out.mp4 +
In the above example, a multichannel audio stream is mapped twice for output. +The first instance is encoded with codec ac3 and bitrate 640k. +The second instance is downmixed to 2 channels and encoded with codec aac. A bitrate of 128k is specified for it using +absolute index of the output stream. +
+Note: the -nooption syntax cannot be used for boolean +AVOptions, use -option 0/-option 1. +
+Note: the old undocumented way of specifying per-stream AVOptions by +prepending v/a/s to the options name is now obsolete and will be +removed soon. +
+ +Force input or output file format. The format is normally auto detected for input +files and guessed from the file extension for output files, so this option is not +needed in most cases. +
+input file url +
+Overwrite output files without asking. +
+Do not overwrite output files, and exit immediately if a specified +output file already exists. +
+Set number of times input stream shall be looped. Loop 0 means no loop, +loop -1 means infinite loop. +
+Allow forcing a decoder of a different media type than the one +detected or designated by the demuxer. Useful for decoding media +data muxed as data streams. +
+Select an encoder (when used before an output file) or a decoder (when used
+before an input file) for one or more streams. codec is the name of a
+decoder/encoder or a special value copy
(output only) to indicate that
+the stream is not to be re-encoded.
+
For example +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0 -c:v libx264 -c:a copy OUTPUT +
encodes all video streams with libx264 and copies all audio streams. +
+For each stream, the last matching c
option is applied, so
+
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0 -c copy -c:v:1 libx264 -c:a:137 libvorbis OUTPUT +
will copy all the streams except the second video, which will be encoded with +libx264, and the 138th audio, which will be encoded with libvorbis. +
+When used as an input option (before -i
), limit the duration of
+data read from the input file.
+
When used as an output option (before an output url), stop writing the +output after its duration reaches duration. +
+duration must be a time duration specification, +see (ffmpeg-utils)the Time duration section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual. +
+-to and -t are mutually exclusive and -t has priority. +
+Stop writing the output or reading the input at position. +position must be a time duration specification, +see (ffmpeg-utils)the Time duration section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual. +
+-to and -t are mutually exclusive and -t has priority. +
+Set the file size limit, expressed in bytes. No further chunk of bytes is written +after the limit is exceeded. The size of the output file is slightly more than the +requested file size. +
+When used as an input option (before -i
), seeks in this input file to
+position. Note that in most formats it is not possible to seek exactly,
+so ffmpeg
will seek to the closest seek point before position.
+When transcoding and -accurate_seek is enabled (the default), this
+extra segment between the seek point and position will be decoded and
+discarded. When doing stream copy or when -noaccurate_seek is used, it
+will be preserved.
+
When used as an output option (before an output url), decodes but discards +input until the timestamps reach position. +
+position must be a time duration specification, +see (ffmpeg-utils)the Time duration section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual. +
+Like the -ss
option but relative to the "end of file". That is negative
+values are earlier in the file, 0 is at EOF.
+
Assign an input as a sync source. +
+This will take the difference between the start times of the target and reference inputs and
+offset the timestamps of the target file by that difference. The source timestamps of the two
+inputs should derive from the same clock source for expected results. If copyts
is set
+then start_at_zero
must also be set. If either of the inputs has no starting timestamp
+then no sync adjustment is made.
+
Acceptable values are those that refer to a valid ffmpeg input index. If the sync reference is +the target index itself or -1, then no adjustment is made to target timestamps. A sync +reference may not itself be synced to any other input. +
+Default value is -1. +
+Set the input time offset. +
+offset must be a time duration specification, +see (ffmpeg-utils)the Time duration section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual. +
+The offset is added to the timestamps of the input files. Specifying +a positive offset means that the corresponding streams are delayed by +the time duration specified in offset. +
+Rescale input timestamps. scale should be a floating point number. +
+Set the recording timestamp in the container. +
+date must be a date specification, +see (ffmpeg-utils)the Date section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual. +
+Set a metadata key/value pair. +
+An optional metadata_specifier may be given to set metadata
+on streams, chapters or programs. See -map_metadata
+documentation for details.
+
This option overrides metadata set with -map_metadata
. It is
+also possible to delete metadata by using an empty value.
+
For example, for setting the title in the output file: +
ffmpeg -i in.avi -metadata title="my title" out.flv +
To set the language of the first audio stream: +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -metadata:s:a:0 language=eng OUTPUT +
Sets the disposition for a stream. +
+By default, the disposition is copied from the input stream, unless the output +stream this option applies to is fed by a complex filtergraph - in that case the +disposition is unset by default. +
+value is a sequence of items separated by ’+’ or ’-’. The first item may +also be prefixed with ’+’ or ’-’, in which case this option modifies the default +value. Otherwise (the first item is not prefixed) this options overrides the +default value. A ’+’ prefix adds the given disposition, ’-’ removes it. It is +also possible to clear the disposition by setting it to 0. +
+If no -disposition
options were specified for an output file, ffmpeg will
+automatically set the ’default’ disposition on the first stream of each type,
+when there are multiple streams of this type in the output file and no stream of
+that type is already marked as default.
+
The -dispositions
option lists the known dispositions.
+
For example, to make the second audio stream the default stream: +
ffmpeg -i in.mkv -c copy -disposition:a:1 default out.mkv +
To make the second subtitle stream the default stream and remove the default +disposition from the first subtitle stream: +
ffmpeg -i in.mkv -c copy -disposition:s:0 0 -disposition:s:1 default out.mkv +
To add an embedded cover/thumbnail: +
ffmpeg -i in.mp4 -i IMAGE -map 0 -map 1 -c copy -c:v:1 png -disposition:v:1 attached_pic out.mp4 +
Not all muxers support embedded thumbnails, and those who do, only support a few formats, like JPEG or PNG. +
+Creates a program with the specified title, program_num and adds the specified +stream(s) to it. +
+Specify target file type (vcd
, svcd
, dvd
, dv
,
+dv50
). type may be prefixed with pal-
, ntsc-
or
+film-
to use the corresponding standard. All the format options
+(bitrate, codecs, buffer sizes) are then set automatically. You can just type:
+
ffmpeg -i myfile.avi -target vcd /tmp/vcd.mpg +
Nevertheless you can specify additional options as long as you know +they do not conflict with the standard, as in: +
+ffmpeg -i myfile.avi -target vcd -bf 2 /tmp/vcd.mpg +
The parameters set for each target are as follows. +
+VCD +
pal: +-f vcd -muxrate 1411200 -muxpreload 0.44 -packetsize 2324 +-s 352x288 -r 25 +-codec:v mpeg1video -g 15 -b:v 1150k -maxrate:v 1150k -minrate:v 1150k -bufsize:v 327680 +-ar 44100 -ac 2 +-codec:a mp2 -b:a 224k + +ntsc: +-f vcd -muxrate 1411200 -muxpreload 0.44 -packetsize 2324 +-s 352x240 -r 30000/1001 +-codec:v mpeg1video -g 18 -b:v 1150k -maxrate:v 1150k -minrate:v 1150k -bufsize:v 327680 +-ar 44100 -ac 2 +-codec:a mp2 -b:a 224k + +film: +-f vcd -muxrate 1411200 -muxpreload 0.44 -packetsize 2324 +-s 352x240 -r 24000/1001 +-codec:v mpeg1video -g 18 -b:v 1150k -maxrate:v 1150k -minrate:v 1150k -bufsize:v 327680 +-ar 44100 -ac 2 +-codec:a mp2 -b:a 224k +
SVCD +
pal: +-f svcd -packetsize 2324 +-s 480x576 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 25 +-codec:v mpeg2video -g 15 -b:v 2040k -maxrate:v 2516k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 -scan_offset 1 +-ar 44100 +-codec:a mp2 -b:a 224k + +ntsc: +-f svcd -packetsize 2324 +-s 480x480 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 30000/1001 +-codec:v mpeg2video -g 18 -b:v 2040k -maxrate:v 2516k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 -scan_offset 1 +-ar 44100 +-codec:a mp2 -b:a 224k + +film: +-f svcd -packetsize 2324 +-s 480x480 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 24000/1001 +-codec:v mpeg2video -g 18 -b:v 2040k -maxrate:v 2516k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 -scan_offset 1 +-ar 44100 +-codec:a mp2 -b:a 224k +
DVD +
pal: +-f dvd -muxrate 10080k -packetsize 2048 +-s 720x576 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 25 +-codec:v mpeg2video -g 15 -b:v 6000k -maxrate:v 9000k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 +-ar 48000 +-codec:a ac3 -b:a 448k + +ntsc: +-f dvd -muxrate 10080k -packetsize 2048 +-s 720x480 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 30000/1001 +-codec:v mpeg2video -g 18 -b:v 6000k -maxrate:v 9000k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 +-ar 48000 +-codec:a ac3 -b:a 448k + +film: +-f dvd -muxrate 10080k -packetsize 2048 +-s 720x480 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 24000/1001 +-codec:v mpeg2video -g 18 -b:v 6000k -maxrate:v 9000k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 +-ar 48000 +-codec:a ac3 -b:a 448k +
DV +
pal: +-f dv +-s 720x576 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 25 +-ar 48000 -ac 2 + +ntsc: +-f dv +-s 720x480 -pix_fmt yuv411p -r 30000/1001 +-ar 48000 -ac 2 + +film: +-f dv +-s 720x480 -pix_fmt yuv411p -r 24000/1001 +-ar 48000 -ac 2 +
The dv50
target is identical to the dv
target except that the pixel format set is yuv422p
for all three standards.
+
Any user-set value for a parameter above will override the target preset value. In that case, the output may +not comply with the target standard. +
+As an input option, blocks all data streams of a file from being filtered or
+being automatically selected or mapped for any output. See -discard
+option to disable streams individually.
+
As an output option, disables data recording i.e. automatic selection or
+mapping of any data stream. For full manual control see the -map
+option.
+
Set the number of data frames to output. This is an obsolete alias for
+-frames:d
, which you should use instead.
+
Stop writing to the stream after framecount frames. +
+Use fixed quality scale (VBR). The meaning of q/qscale is +codec-dependent. +If qscale is used without a stream_specifier then it applies only +to the video stream, this is to maintain compatibility with previous behavior +and as specifying the same codec specific value to 2 different codecs that is +audio and video generally is not what is intended when no stream_specifier is +used. +
+Create the filtergraph specified by filtergraph and use it to +filter the stream. +
+filtergraph is a description of the filtergraph to apply to
+the stream, and must have a single input and a single output of the
+same type of the stream. In the filtergraph, the input is associated
+to the label in
, and the output to the label out
. See
+the ffmpeg-filters manual for more information about the filtergraph
+syntax.
+
See the -filter_complex option if you +want to create filtergraphs with multiple inputs and/or outputs. +
+This option is similar to -filter, the only difference is that its +argument is the name of the file from which a filtergraph description is to be +read. +
+This boolean option determines if the filtergraph(s) to which this stream is fed gets
+reinitialized when input frame parameters change mid-stream. This option is enabled by
+default as most video and all audio filters cannot handle deviation in input frame properties.
+Upon reinitialization, existing filter state is lost, like e.g. the frame count n
+reference available in some filters. Any frames buffered at time of reinitialization are lost.
+The properties where a change triggers reinitialization are,
+for video, frame resolution or pixel format;
+for audio, sample format, sample rate, channel count or channel layout.
+
Defines how many threads are used to process a filter pipeline. Each pipeline +will produce a thread pool with this many threads available for parallel processing. +The default is the number of available CPUs. +
+Specify the preset for matching stream(s). +
+Print encoding progress/statistics. It is on by default, to explicitly
+disable it you need to specify -nostats
.
+
Set period at which encoding progress/statistics are updated. Default is 0.5 seconds. +
+Send program-friendly progress information to url. +
+Progress information is written periodically and at the end of +the encoding process. It is made of "key=value" lines. key +consists of only alphanumeric characters. The last key of a sequence of +progress information is always "progress". +
+The update period is set using -stats_period
.
+
Enable interaction on standard input. On by default unless standard input is
+used as an input. To explicitly disable interaction you need to specify
+-nostdin
.
+
Disabling interaction on standard input is useful, for example, if
+ffmpeg is in the background process group. Roughly the same result can
+be achieved with ffmpeg ... < /dev/null
but it requires a
+shell.
+
Print timestamp information. It is off by default. This option is +mostly useful for testing and debugging purposes, and the output +format may change from one version to another, so it should not be +employed by portable scripts. +
+See also the option -fdebug ts
.
+
Add an attachment to the output file. This is supported by a few formats
+like Matroska for e.g. fonts used in rendering subtitles. Attachments
+are implemented as a specific type of stream, so this option will add
+a new stream to the file. It is then possible to use per-stream options
+on this stream in the usual way. Attachment streams created with this
+option will be created after all the other streams (i.e. those created
+with -map
or automatic mappings).
+
Note that for Matroska you also have to set the mimetype metadata tag: +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -attach DejaVuSans.ttf -metadata:s:2 mimetype=application/x-truetype-font out.mkv +
(assuming that the attachment stream will be third in the output file). +
+Extract the matching attachment stream into a file named filename. If
+filename is empty, then the value of the filename
metadata tag
+will be used.
+
E.g. to extract the first attachment to a file named ’out.ttf’: +
ffmpeg -dump_attachment:t:0 out.ttf -i INPUT +
To extract all attachments to files determined by the filename
tag:
+
ffmpeg -dump_attachment:t "" -i INPUT +
Technical note – attachments are implemented as codec extradata, so this +option can actually be used to extract extradata from any stream, not just +attachments. +
Set the number of video frames to output. This is an obsolete alias for
+-frames:v
, which you should use instead.
+
Set frame rate (Hz value, fraction or abbreviation). +
+As an input option, ignore any timestamps stored in the file and instead +generate timestamps assuming constant frame rate fps. +This is not the same as the -framerate option used for some input formats +like image2 or v4l2 (it used to be the same in older versions of FFmpeg). +If in doubt use -framerate instead of the input option -r. +
+As an output option, duplicate or drop input frames to achieve constant output +frame rate fps. +
+Set maximum frame rate (Hz value, fraction or abbreviation). +
+Clamps output frame rate when output framerate is auto-set and is higher than this value.
+Useful in batch processing or when input framerate is wrongly detected as very high.
+It cannot be set together with -r
. It is ignored during streamcopy.
+
Set frame size. +
+As an input option, this is a shortcut for the video_size private +option, recognized by some demuxers for which the frame size is either not +stored in the file or is configurable – e.g. raw video or video grabbers. +
+As an output option, this inserts the scale
video filter to the
+end of the corresponding filtergraph. Please use the scale
filter
+directly to insert it at the beginning or some other place.
+
The format is ‘wxh’ (default - same as source). +
+Set the video display aspect ratio specified by aspect. +
+aspect can be a floating point number string, or a string of the +form num:den, where num and den are the +numerator and denominator of the aspect ratio. For example "4:3", +"16:9", "1.3333", and "1.7777" are valid argument values. +
+If used together with -vcodec copy, it will affect the aspect ratio +stored at container level, but not the aspect ratio stored in encoded +frames, if it exists. +
+Set video rotation metadata. +
+rotation is a decimal number specifying the amount in degree by +which the video should be rotated counter-clockwise before being +displayed. +
+This option overrides the rotation/display transform metadata stored in
+the file, if any. When the video is being transcoded (rather than
+copied) and -autorotate
is enabled, the video will be rotated at
+the filtering stage. Otherwise, the metadata will be written into the
+output file if the muxer supports it.
+
If the -display_hflip
and/or -display_vflip
options are
+given, they are applied after the rotation specified by this option.
+
Set whether on display the image should be horizontally flipped. +
+See the -display_rotation
option for more details.
+
Set whether on display the image should be vertically flipped. +
+See the -display_rotation
option for more details.
+
As an input option, blocks all video streams of a file from being filtered or
+being automatically selected or mapped for any output. See -discard
+option to disable streams individually.
+
As an output option, disables video recording i.e. automatic selection or
+mapping of any video stream. For full manual control see the -map
+option.
+
Set the video codec. This is an alias for -codec:v
.
+
Select the pass number (1 or 2). It is used to do two-pass +video encoding. The statistics of the video are recorded in the first +pass into a log file (see also the option -passlogfile), +and in the second pass that log file is used to generate the video +at the exact requested bitrate. +On pass 1, you may just deactivate audio and set output to null, +examples for Windows and Unix: +
ffmpeg -i foo.mov -c:v libxvid -pass 1 -an -f rawvideo -y NUL +ffmpeg -i foo.mov -c:v libxvid -pass 1 -an -f rawvideo -y /dev/null +
Set two-pass log file name prefix to prefix, the default file name +prefix is “ffmpeg2pass”. The complete file name will be +PREFIX-N.log, where N is a number specific to the output +stream +
+Create the filtergraph specified by filtergraph and use it to +filter the stream. +
+This is an alias for -filter:v
, see the -filter option.
+
Automatically rotate the video according to file metadata. Enabled by +default, use -noautorotate to disable it. +
+Automatically scale the video according to the resolution of first frame. +Enabled by default, use -noautoscale to disable it. When autoscale is +disabled, all output frames of filter graph might not be in the same resolution +and may be inadequate for some encoder/muxer. Therefore, it is not recommended +to disable it unless you really know what you are doing. +Disable autoscale at your own risk. +
Set pixel format. Use -pix_fmts
to show all the supported
+pixel formats.
+If the selected pixel format can not be selected, ffmpeg will print a
+warning and select the best pixel format supported by the encoder.
+If pix_fmt is prefixed by a +
, ffmpeg will exit with an error
+if the requested pixel format can not be selected, and automatic conversions
+inside filtergraphs are disabled.
+If pix_fmt is a single +
, ffmpeg selects the same pixel format
+as the input (or graph output) and automatic conversions are disabled.
+
Set SwScaler flags. +
+Rate control override for specific intervals, formatted as "int,int,int" +list separated with slashes. Two first values are the beginning and +end frame numbers, last one is quantizer to use if positive, or quality +factor if negative. +
+Force interlacing support in encoder (MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 only).
+Use this option if your input file is interlaced and you want
+to keep the interlaced format for minimum losses.
+The alternative is to deinterlace the input stream by use of a filter
+such as yadif
or bwdif
, but deinterlacing introduces losses.
+
Calculate PSNR of compressed frames. This option is deprecated, pass the
+PSNR flag to the encoder instead, using -flags +psnr
.
+
Dump video coding statistics to vstats_HHMMSS.log. +
Dump video coding statistics to file. +
Specifies which version of the vstats format to use. Default is 2. +
+version = 1 : +
+frame= %5d q= %2.1f PSNR= %6.2f f_size= %6d s_size= %8.0fkB time= %0.3f br= %7.1fkbits/s avg_br= %7.1fkbits/s
+
version > 1: +
+out= %2d st= %2d frame= %5d q= %2.1f PSNR= %6.2f f_size= %6d s_size= %8.0fkB time= %0.3f br= %7.1fkbits/s avg_br= %7.1fkbits/s
+
top=1/bottom=0/auto=-1 field first +
Intra_dc_precision. +
Force video tag/fourcc. This is an alias for -tag:v
.
+
Show QP histogram +
Deprecated see -bsf +
+force_key_frames can take arguments of the following form: +
+If the argument consists of timestamps, ffmpeg will round the specified times to the nearest
+output timestamp as per the encoder time base and force a keyframe at the first frame having
+timestamp equal or greater than the computed timestamp. Note that if the encoder time base is too
+coarse, then the keyframes may be forced on frames with timestamps lower than the specified time.
+The default encoder time base is the inverse of the output framerate but may be set otherwise
+via -enc_time_base
.
+
If one of the times is "chapters
[delta]", it is expanded into
+the time of the beginning of all chapters in the file, shifted by
+delta, expressed as a time in seconds.
+This option can be useful to ensure that a seek point is present at a
+chapter mark or any other designated place in the output file.
+
For example, to insert a key frame at 5 minutes, plus key frames 0.1 second +before the beginning of every chapter: +
-force_key_frames 0:05:00,chapters-0.1 +
If the argument is prefixed with expr:
, the string expr
+is interpreted like an expression and is evaluated for each frame. A
+key frame is forced in case the evaluation is non-zero.
+
The expression in expr can contain the following constants: +
the number of current processed frame, starting from 0 +
the number of forced frames +
the number of the previous forced frame, it is NAN
when no
+keyframe was forced yet
+
the time of the previous forced frame, it is NAN
when no
+keyframe was forced yet
+
the time of the current processed frame +
For example to force a key frame every 5 seconds, you can specify: +
-force_key_frames expr:gte(t,n_forced*5) +
To force a key frame 5 seconds after the time of the last forced one, +starting from second 13: +
-force_key_frames expr:if(isnan(prev_forced_t),gte(t,13),gte(t,prev_forced_t+5)) +
If the argument is source
, ffmpeg will force a key frame if
+the current frame being encoded is marked as a key frame in its source.
+
If the argument is source_no_drop
, ffmpeg will force a key frame if
+the current frame being encoded is marked as a key frame in its source.
+In cases where this particular source frame has to be dropped,
+enforce the next available frame to become a key frame instead.
+
Note that forcing too many keyframes is very harmful for the lookahead +algorithms of certain encoders: using fixed-GOP options or similar +would be more efficient. +
+When doing stream copy, copy also non-key frames found at the +beginning. +
+Initialise a new hardware device of type type called name, using the +given device parameters. +If no name is specified it will receive a default name of the form "type%d". +
+The meaning of device and the following arguments depends on the +device type: +
device is the number of the CUDA device. +
+The following options are recognized: +
If set to 1, uses the primary device context instead of creating a new one. +
Examples: +
Choose the second device on the system. +
+Choose the first device and use the primary device context. +
device is the number of the Direct3D 9 display adapter. +
+device is the number of the Direct3D 11 display adapter. +
+device is either an X11 display name or a DRM render node. +If not specified, it will attempt to open the default X11 display ($DISPLAY) +and then the first DRM render node (/dev/dri/renderD128). +
+device is an X11 display name. +If not specified, it will attempt to open the default X11 display ($DISPLAY). +
+device selects a value in ‘MFX_IMPL_*’. Allowed values are: +
If not specified, ‘auto_any’ is used. +(Note that it may be easier to achieve the desired result for QSV by creating the +platform-appropriate subdevice (‘dxva2’ or ‘d3d11va’ or ‘vaapi’) and then deriving a +QSV device from that.) +
+Alternatively, ‘child_device_type’ helps to choose platform-appropriate subdevice type. +On Windows ‘d3d11va’ is used as default subdevice type. +
+Examples: +
Choose the GPU subdevice with type ‘d3d11va’ and create QSV device with ‘MFX_IMPL_HARDWARE’. +
+Choose the GPU subdevice with type ‘dxva2’ and create QSV device with ‘MFX_IMPL_HARDWARE’. +
device selects the platform and device as platform_index.device_index. +
+The set of devices can also be filtered using the key-value pairs to find only +devices matching particular platform or device strings. +
+The strings usable as filters are: +
The indices and filters must together uniquely select a device. +
+Examples: +
Choose the second device on the first platform. +
+Choose the device with a name containing the string Foo9000. +
+Choose the GPU device on the second platform supporting the cl_khr_fp16 +extension. +
If device is an integer, it selects the device by its index in a +system-dependent list of devices. If device is any other string, it +selects the first device with a name containing that string as a substring. +
+The following options are recognized: +
If set to 1, enables the validation layer, if installed. +
If set to 1, images allocated by the hwcontext will be linear and locally mappable. +
A plus separated list of additional instance extensions to enable. +
A plus separated list of additional device extensions to enable. +
Examples: +
Choose the second device on the system. +
+Choose the first device with a name containing the string RADV. +
+Choose the first device and enable the Wayland and XCB instance extensions. +
Initialise a new hardware device of type type called name, +deriving it from the existing device with the name source. +
+List all hardware device types supported in this build of ffmpeg. +
+Pass the hardware device called name to all filters in any filter graph.
+This can be used to set the device to upload to with the hwupload
filter,
+or the device to map to with the hwmap
filter. Other filters may also
+make use of this parameter when they require a hardware device. Note that this
+is typically only required when the input is not already in hardware frames -
+when it is, filters will derive the device they require from the context of the
+frames they receive as input.
+
This is a global setting, so all filters will receive the same device. +
+Use hardware acceleration to decode the matching stream(s). The allowed values +of hwaccel are: +
Do not use any hardware acceleration (the default). +
+Automatically select the hardware acceleration method. +
+Use VDPAU (Video Decode and Presentation API for Unix) hardware acceleration. +
+Use DXVA2 (DirectX Video Acceleration) hardware acceleration. +
+Use D3D11VA (DirectX Video Acceleration) hardware acceleration. +
+Use VAAPI (Video Acceleration API) hardware acceleration. +
+Use the Intel QuickSync Video acceleration for video transcoding. +
+Unlike most other values, this option does not enable accelerated decoding (that +is used automatically whenever a qsv decoder is selected), but accelerated +transcoding, without copying the frames into the system memory. +
+For it to work, both the decoder and the encoder must support QSV acceleration +and no filters must be used. +
This option has no effect if the selected hwaccel is not available or not +supported by the chosen decoder. +
+Note that most acceleration methods are intended for playback and will not be
+faster than software decoding on modern CPUs. Additionally, ffmpeg
+will usually need to copy the decoded frames from the GPU memory into the system
+memory, resulting in further performance loss. This option is thus mainly
+useful for testing.
+
Select a device to use for hardware acceleration. +
+This option only makes sense when the -hwaccel option is also specified. +It can either refer to an existing device created with -init_hw_device +by name, or it can create a new device as if +‘-init_hw_device’ type:hwaccel_device +were called immediately before. +
+List all hardware acceleration components enabled in this build of ffmpeg. +Actual runtime availability depends on the hardware and its suitable driver +being installed. +
+Set the number of audio frames to output. This is an obsolete alias for
+-frames:a
, which you should use instead.
+
Set the audio sampling frequency. For output streams it is set by +default to the frequency of the corresponding input stream. For input +streams this option only makes sense for audio grabbing devices and raw +demuxers and is mapped to the corresponding demuxer options. +
Set the audio quality (codec-specific, VBR). This is an alias for -q:a. +
Set the number of audio channels. For output streams it is set by +default to the number of input audio channels. For input streams +this option only makes sense for audio grabbing devices and raw demuxers +and is mapped to the corresponding demuxer options. +
As an input option, blocks all audio streams of a file from being filtered or
+being automatically selected or mapped for any output. See -discard
+option to disable streams individually.
+
As an output option, disables audio recording i.e. automatic selection or
+mapping of any audio stream. For full manual control see the -map
+option.
+
Set the audio codec. This is an alias for -codec:a
.
+
Set the audio sample format. Use -sample_fmts
to get a list
+of supported sample formats.
+
Create the filtergraph specified by filtergraph and use it to +filter the stream. +
+This is an alias for -filter:a
, see the -filter option.
+
Force audio tag/fourcc. This is an alias for -tag:a
.
+
Deprecated, see -bsf +
If some input channel layout is not known, try to guess only if it
+corresponds to at most the specified number of channels. For example, 2
+tells to ffmpeg
to recognize 1 channel as mono and 2 channels as
+stereo but not 6 channels as 5.1. The default is to always try to guess. Use
+0 to disable all guessing.
+
Set the subtitle codec. This is an alias for -codec:s
.
+
As an input option, blocks all subtitle streams of a file from being filtered or
+being automatically selected or mapped for any output. See -discard
+option to disable streams individually.
+
As an output option, disables subtitle recording i.e. automatic selection or
+mapping of any subtitle stream. For full manual control see the -map
+option.
+
Deprecated, see -bsf +
Fix subtitles durations. For each subtitle, wait for the next packet in the +same stream and adjust the duration of the first to avoid overlap. This is +necessary with some subtitles codecs, especially DVB subtitles, because the +duration in the original packet is only a rough estimate and the end is +actually marked by an empty subtitle frame. Failing to use this option when +necessary can result in exaggerated durations or muxing failures due to +non-monotonic timestamps. +
+Note that this option will delay the output of all data until the next +subtitle packet is decoded: it may increase memory consumption and latency a +lot. +
+Set the size of the canvas used to render subtitles. +
+Create one or more streams in the output file. This option has two forms for
+specifying the data source(s): the first selects one or more streams from some
+input file (specified with -i
), the second takes an output from some
+complex filtergraph (specified with -filter_complex
or
+-filter_complex_script
).
+
In the first form, an output stream is created for every stream from the input +file with the index input_file_id. If stream_specifier is given, +only those streams that match the specifier are used (see the +Stream specifiers section for the stream_specifier syntax). +
+A -
character before the stream identifier creates a "negative" mapping.
+It disables matching streams from already created mappings.
+
A trailing ?
after the stream index will allow the map to be
+optional: if the map matches no streams the map will be ignored instead
+of failing. Note the map will still fail if an invalid input file index
+is used; such as if the map refers to a non-existent input.
+
An alternative [linklabel] form will map outputs from complex filter +graphs (see the -filter_complex option) to the output file. +linklabel must correspond to a defined output link label in the graph. +
+This option may be specified multiple times, each adding more streams to the
+output file. Any given input stream may also be mapped any number of times as a
+source for different output streams, e.g. in order to use different encoding
+options and/or filters. The streams are created in the output in the same order
+in which the -map
options are given on the commandline.
+
Using this option disables the default mappings for this output file. +
+Examples: +
+To map ALL streams from the first input file to output +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0 output +
If you have two audio streams in the first input file, these streams are
+identified by 0:0 and 0:1. You can use -map
to select which
+streams to place in an output file. For example:
+
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0:1 out.wav +
will map the second input stream in INPUT to the (single) output stream +in out.wav. +
+To select the stream with index 2 from input file a.mov (specified by the +identifier 0:2), and stream with index 6 from input b.mov +(specified by the identifier 1:6), and copy them to the output file +out.mov: +
ffmpeg -i a.mov -i b.mov -c copy -map 0:2 -map 1:6 out.mov +
To select all video and the third audio stream from an input file: +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0:v -map 0:a:2 OUTPUT +
To map all the streams except the second audio, use negative mappings +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0 -map -0:a:1 OUTPUT +
To map the video and audio streams from the first input, and using the
+trailing ?
, ignore the audio mapping if no audio streams exist in
+the first input:
+
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0:v -map 0:a? OUTPUT +
To pick the English audio stream: +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0:m:language:eng OUTPUT +
Ignore input streams with unknown type instead of failing if copying +such streams is attempted. +
+Allow input streams with unknown type to be copied instead of failing if copying +such streams is attempted. +
+This option is deprecated and will be removed. It can be replaced by the +pan filter. In some cases it may be easier to use some combination of the +channelsplit, channelmap, or amerge filters. +
+Map an audio channel from a given input to an output. If +output_file_id.stream_specifier is not set, the audio channel will +be mapped on all the audio streams. +
+Using "-1" instead of +input_file_id.stream_specifier.channel_id will map a muted +channel. +
+A trailing ?
will allow the map_channel to be
+optional: if the map_channel matches no channel the map_channel will be ignored instead
+of failing.
+
For example, assuming INPUT is a stereo audio file, you can switch the +two audio channels with the following command: +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map_channel 0.0.1 -map_channel 0.0.0 OUTPUT +
If you want to mute the first channel and keep the second: +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map_channel -1 -map_channel 0.0.1 OUTPUT +
The order of the "-map_channel" option specifies the order of the channels in +the output stream. The output channel layout is guessed from the number of +channels mapped (mono if one "-map_channel", stereo if two, etc.). Using "-ac" +in combination of "-map_channel" makes the channel gain levels to be updated if +input and output channel layouts don’t match (for instance two "-map_channel" +options and "-ac 6"). +
+You can also extract each channel of an input to specific outputs; the following +command extracts two channels of the INPUT audio stream (file 0, stream 0) +to the respective OUTPUT_CH0 and OUTPUT_CH1 outputs: +
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map_channel 0.0.0 OUTPUT_CH0 -map_channel 0.0.1 OUTPUT_CH1 +
The following example splits the channels of a stereo input into two separate +streams, which are put into the same output file: +
ffmpeg -i stereo.wav -map 0:0 -map 0:0 -map_channel 0.0.0:0.0 -map_channel 0.0.1:0.1 -y out.ogg +
Note that currently each output stream can only contain channels from a single +input stream; you can’t for example use "-map_channel" to pick multiple input +audio channels contained in different streams (from the same or different files) +and merge them into a single output stream. It is therefore not currently +possible, for example, to turn two separate mono streams into a single stereo +stream. However splitting a stereo stream into two single channel mono streams +is possible. +
+If you need this feature, a possible workaround is to use the amerge +filter. For example, if you need to merge a media (here input.mkv) with 2 +mono audio streams into one single stereo channel audio stream (and keep the +video stream), you can use the following command: +
ffmpeg -i input.mkv -filter_complex "[0:1] [0:2] amerge" -c:a pcm_s16le -c:v copy output.mkv +
To map the first two audio channels from the first input, and using the
+trailing ?
, ignore the audio channel mapping if the first input is
+mono instead of stereo:
+
ffmpeg -i INPUT -map_channel 0.0.0 -map_channel 0.0.1? OUTPUT +
Set metadata information of the next output file from infile. Note that +those are file indices (zero-based), not filenames. +Optional metadata_spec_in/out parameters specify, which metadata to copy. +A metadata specifier can have the following forms: +
global metadata, i.e. metadata that applies to the whole file +
+per-stream metadata. stream_spec is a stream specifier as described +in the Stream specifiers chapter. In an input metadata specifier, the first +matching stream is copied from. In an output metadata specifier, all matching +streams are copied to. +
+per-chapter metadata. chapter_index is the zero-based chapter index. +
+per-program metadata. program_index is the zero-based program index. +
If metadata specifier is omitted, it defaults to global. +
+By default, global metadata is copied from the first input file, +per-stream and per-chapter metadata is copied along with streams/chapters. These +default mappings are disabled by creating any mapping of the relevant type. A negative +file index can be used to create a dummy mapping that just disables automatic copying. +
+For example to copy metadata from the first stream of the input file to global metadata +of the output file: +
ffmpeg -i in.ogg -map_metadata 0:s:0 out.mp3 +
To do the reverse, i.e. copy global metadata to all audio streams: +
ffmpeg -i in.mkv -map_metadata:s:a 0:g out.mkv +
Note that simple 0
would work as well in this example, since global
+metadata is assumed by default.
+
Copy chapters from input file with index input_file_index to the next +output file. If no chapter mapping is specified, then chapters are copied from +the first input file with at least one chapter. Use a negative file index to +disable any chapter copying. +
+Show benchmarking information at the end of an encode. +Shows real, system and user time used and maximum memory consumption. +Maximum memory consumption is not supported on all systems, +it will usually display as 0 if not supported. +
Show benchmarking information during the encode. +Shows real, system and user time used in various steps (audio/video encode/decode). +
Exit after ffmpeg has been running for duration seconds in CPU user time. +
Dump each input packet to stderr. +
When dumping packets, also dump the payload. +
Limit input read speed. +
+Its value is a floating-point positive number which represents the maximum duration of
+media, in seconds, that should be ingested in one second of wallclock time.
+Default value is zero and represents no imposed limitation on speed of ingestion.
+Value 1
represents real-time speed and is equivalent to -re
.
+
Mainly used to simulate a capture device or live input stream (e.g. when reading from a file). +Should not be used with a low value when input is an actual capture device or live stream as +it may cause packet loss. +
+It is useful for when flow speed of output packets is important, such as live streaming. +
Read input at native frame rate. This is equivalent to setting -readrate 1
.
+
Set video sync method / framerate mode. vsync is applied to all output video streams +but can be overridden for a stream by setting fps_mode. vsync is deprecated and will be +removed in the future. +
+For compatibility reasons some of the values for vsync can be specified as numbers (shown +in parentheses in the following table). +
+Each frame is passed with its timestamp from the demuxer to the muxer. +
Frames will be duplicated and dropped to achieve exactly the requested +constant frame rate. +
Frames are passed through with their timestamp or dropped so as to +prevent 2 frames from having the same timestamp. +
As passthrough but destroys all timestamps, making the muxer generate +fresh timestamps based on frame-rate. +
Chooses between cfr and vfr depending on muxer capabilities. This is the +default method. +
Note that the timestamps may be further modified by the muxer, after this. +For example, in the case that the format option avoid_negative_ts +is enabled. +
+With -map you can select from which stream the timestamps should be +taken. You can leave either video or audio unchanged and sync the +remaining stream(s) to the unchanged one. +
+Frame drop threshold, which specifies how much behind video frames can +be before they are dropped. In frame rate units, so 1.0 is one frame. +The default is -1.1. One possible usecase is to avoid framedrops in case +of noisy timestamps or to increase frame drop precision in case of exact +timestamps. +
+Set the minimum difference between timestamps and audio data (in seconds) to trigger
+adding/dropping samples to make it match the timestamps. This option effectively is
+a threshold to select between hard (add/drop) and soft (squeeze/stretch) compensation.
+-async
must be set to a positive value.
+
Pad the output audio stream(s). This is the same as applying -af apad
.
+Argument is a string of filter parameters composed the same as with the apad
filter.
+-shortest
must be set for this output for the option to take effect.
+
Do not process input timestamps, but keep their values without trying +to sanitize them. In particular, do not remove the initial start time +offset value. +
+Note that, depending on the vsync option or on specific muxer +processing (e.g. in case the format option avoid_negative_ts +is enabled) the output timestamps may mismatch with the input +timestamps even when this option is selected. +
+When used with copyts, shift input timestamps so they start at zero. +
+This means that using e.g. -ss 50
will make output timestamps start at
+50 seconds, regardless of what timestamp the input file started at.
+
Specify how to set the encoder timebase when stream copying. mode is an +integer numeric value, and can assume one of the following values: +
+Use the demuxer timebase. +
+The time base is copied to the output encoder from the corresponding input +demuxer. This is sometimes required to avoid non monotonically increasing +timestamps when copying video streams with variable frame rate. +
+Use the decoder timebase. +
+The time base is copied to the output encoder from the corresponding input +decoder. +
+Try to make the choice automatically, in order to generate a sane output. +
Default value is -1. +
+Set the encoder timebase. timebase is a floating point number, +and can assume one of the following values: +
+Assign a default value according to the media type. +
+For video - use 1/framerate, for audio - use 1/samplerate. +
+Use the input stream timebase when possible. +
+If an input stream is not available, the default timebase will be used. +
+Use the provided number as the timebase. +
+This field can be provided as a ratio of two integers (e.g. 1:24, 1:48000) +or as a floating point number (e.g. 0.04166, 2.0833e-5) +
Default value is 0. +
+Enable bitexact mode for (de)muxer and (de/en)coder +
Finish encoding when the shortest output stream ends. +
+Note that this option may require buffering frames, which introduces extra
+latency. The maximum amount of this latency may be controlled with the
+-shortest_buf_duration
option.
+
The -shortest
option may require buffering potentially large amounts
+of data when at least one of the streams is "sparse" (i.e. has large gaps
+between frames – this is typically the case for subtitles).
+
This option controls the maximum duration of buffered frames in seconds.
+Larger values may allow the -shortest
option to produce more accurate
+results, but increase memory use and latency.
+
The default value is 10 seconds. +
+Timestamp discontinuity delta threshold. +
Timestamp error delta threshold. This threshold use to discard crazy/damaged +timestamps and the default is 30 hours which is arbitrarily picked and quite +conservative. +
Set the maximum demux-decode delay. +
Set the initial demux-decode delay. +
Assign a new stream-id value to an output stream. This option should be +specified prior to the output filename to which it applies. +For the situation where multiple output files exist, a streamid +may be reassigned to a different value. +
+For example, to set the stream 0 PID to 33 and the stream 1 PID to 36 for +an output mpegts file: +
ffmpeg -i inurl -streamid 0:33 -streamid 1:36 out.ts +
Set bitstream filters for matching streams. bitstream_filters is
+a comma-separated list of bitstream filters. Use the -bsfs
option
+to get the list of bitstream filters.
+
ffmpeg -i h264.mp4 -c:v copy -bsf:v h264_mp4toannexb -an out.h264 +
ffmpeg -i file.mov -an -vn -bsf:s mov2textsub -c:s copy -f rawvideo sub.txt +
Force a tag/fourcc for matching streams. +
+Specify Timecode for writing. SEP is ’:’ for non drop timecode and ’;’ +(or ’.’) for drop. +
ffmpeg -i input.mpg -timecode 01:02:03.04 -r 30000/1001 -s ntsc output.mpg +
Define a complex filtergraph, i.e. one with arbitrary number of inputs and/or +outputs. For simple graphs – those with one input and one output of the same +type – see the -filter options. filtergraph is a description of +the filtergraph, as described in the “Filtergraph syntax” section of the +ffmpeg-filters manual. +
+Input link labels must refer to input streams using the
+[file_index:stream_specifier]
syntax (i.e. the same as -map
+uses). If stream_specifier matches multiple streams, the first one will be
+used. An unlabeled input will be connected to the first unused input stream of
+the matching type.
+
Output link labels are referred to with -map. Unlabeled outputs are +added to the first output file. +
+Note that with this option it is possible to use only lavfi sources without +normal input files. +
+For example, to overlay an image over video +
ffmpeg -i video.mkv -i image.png -filter_complex '[0:v][1:v]overlay[out]' -map +'[out]' out.mkv +
Here [0:v]
refers to the first video stream in the first input file,
+which is linked to the first (main) input of the overlay filter. Similarly the
+first video stream in the second input is linked to the second (overlay) input
+of overlay.
+
Assuming there is only one video stream in each input file, we can omit input +labels, so the above is equivalent to +
ffmpeg -i video.mkv -i image.png -filter_complex 'overlay[out]' -map +'[out]' out.mkv +
Furthermore we can omit the output label and the single output from the filter +graph will be added to the output file automatically, so we can simply write +
ffmpeg -i video.mkv -i image.png -filter_complex 'overlay' out.mkv +
As a special exception, you can use a bitmap subtitle stream as input: it +will be converted into a video with the same size as the largest video in +the file, or 720x576 if no video is present. Note that this is an +experimental and temporary solution. It will be removed once libavfilter has +proper support for subtitles. +
+For example, to hardcode subtitles on top of a DVB-T recording stored in +MPEG-TS format, delaying the subtitles by 1 second: +
ffmpeg -i input.ts -filter_complex \ + '[#0x2ef] setpts=PTS+1/TB [sub] ; [#0x2d0] [sub] overlay' \ + -sn -map '#0x2dc' output.mkv +
(0x2d0, 0x2dc and 0x2ef are the MPEG-TS PIDs of respectively the video, +audio and subtitles streams; 0:0, 0:3 and 0:7 would have worked too) +
+To generate 5 seconds of pure red video using lavfi color
source:
+
ffmpeg -filter_complex 'color=c=red' -t 5 out.mkv +
Defines how many threads are used to process a filter_complex graph.
+Similar to filter_threads but used for -filter_complex
graphs only.
+The default is the number of available CPUs.
+
Define a complex filtergraph, i.e. one with arbitrary number of inputs and/or +outputs. Equivalent to -filter_complex. +
+This option is similar to -filter_complex, the only difference is that +its argument is the name of the file from which a complex filtergraph +description is to be read. +
+This option enables or disables accurate seeking in input files with the +-ss option. It is enabled by default, so seeking is accurate when +transcoding. Use -noaccurate_seek to disable it, which may be useful +e.g. when copying some streams and transcoding the others. +
+This option enables or disables seeking by timestamp in input files with the +-ss option. It is disabled by default. If enabled, the argument +to the -ss option is considered an actual timestamp, and is not +offset by the start time of the file. This matters only for files which do +not start from timestamp 0, such as transport streams. +
+For input, this option sets the maximum number of queued packets when reading +from the file or device. With low latency / high rate live streams, packets may +be discarded if they are not read in a timely manner; setting this value can +force ffmpeg to use a separate input thread and read packets as soon as they +arrive. By default ffmpeg only does this if multiple inputs are specified. +
+For output, this option specified the maximum number of packets that may be +queued to each muxing thread. +
+Print sdp information for an output stream to file. +This allows dumping sdp information when at least one output isn’t an +rtp stream. (Requires at least one of the output formats to be rtp). +
+Allows discarding specific streams or frames from streams.
+Any input stream can be fully discarded, using value all
whereas
+selective discarding of frames from a stream occurs at the demuxer
+and is not supported by all demuxers.
+
Discard no frame. +
+Default, which discards no frames. +
+Discard all non-reference frames. +
+Discard all bidirectional frames. +
+Discard all frames excepts keyframes. +
+Discard all frames. +
Stop and abort on various conditions. The following flags are available: +
+No packets were passed to the muxer, the output is empty. +
No packets were passed to the muxer in some of the output streams. +
Set fraction of decoding frame failures across all inputs which when crossed +ffmpeg will return exit code 69. Crossing this threshold does not terminate +processing. Range is a floating-point number between 0 to 1. Default is 2/3. +
+Stop and exit on error +
+When transcoding audio and/or video streams, ffmpeg will not begin writing into +the output until it has one packet for each such stream. While waiting for that +to happen, packets for other streams are buffered. This option sets the size of +this buffer, in packets, for the matching output stream. +
+The default value of this option should be high enough for most uses, so only +touch this option if you are sure that you need it. +
+This is a minimum threshold until which the muxing queue size is not taken into +account. Defaults to 50 megabytes per stream, and is based on the overall size +of packets passed to the muxer. +
+Enable automatically inserting format conversion filters in all filter
+graphs, including those defined by -vf, -af,
+-filter_complex and -lavfi. If filter format negotiation
+requires a conversion, the initialization of the filters will fail.
+Conversions can still be performed by inserting the relevant conversion
+filter (scale, aresample) in the graph.
+On by default, to explicitly disable it you need to specify
+-noauto_conversion_filters
.
+
Declare the number of bits per raw sample in the given output stream to be +value. Note that this option sets the information provided to the +encoder/muxer, it does not change the stream to conform to this value. Setting +values that do not match the stream properties may result in encoding failures +or invalid output files. +
+A preset file contains a sequence of option=value pairs, +one for each line, specifying a sequence of options which would be +awkward to specify on the command line. Lines starting with the hash +(’#’) character are ignored and are used to provide comments. Check +the presets directory in the FFmpeg source tree for examples. +
+There are two types of preset files: ffpreset and avpreset files. +
+ +ffpreset files are specified with the vpre
, apre
,
+spre
, and fpre
options. The fpre
option takes the
+filename of the preset instead of a preset name as input and can be
+used for any kind of codec. For the vpre
, apre
, and
+spre
options, the options specified in a preset file are
+applied to the currently selected codec of the same type as the preset
+option.
+
The argument passed to the vpre
, apre
, and spre
+preset options identifies the preset file to use according to the
+following rules:
+
First ffmpeg searches for a file named arg.ffpreset in the
+directories $FFMPEG_DATADIR (if set), and $HOME/.ffmpeg, and in
+the datadir defined at configuration time (usually PREFIX/share/ffmpeg)
+or in a ffpresets folder along the executable on win32,
+in that order. For example, if the argument is libvpx-1080p
, it will
+search for the file libvpx-1080p.ffpreset.
+
If no such file is found, then ffmpeg will search for a file named
+codec_name-arg.ffpreset in the above-mentioned
+directories, where codec_name is the name of the codec to which
+the preset file options will be applied. For example, if you select
+the video codec with -vcodec libvpx
and use -vpre 1080p
,
+then it will search for the file libvpx-1080p.ffpreset.
+
avpreset files are specified with the pre
option. They work similar to
+ffpreset files, but they only allow encoder- specific options. Therefore, an
+option=value pair specifying an encoder cannot be used.
+
When the pre
option is specified, ffmpeg will look for files with the
+suffix .avpreset in the directories $AVCONV_DATADIR (if set), and
+$HOME/.avconv, and in the datadir defined at configuration time (usually
+PREFIX/share/ffmpeg), in that order.
+
First ffmpeg searches for a file named codec_name-arg.avpreset in
+the above-mentioned directories, where codec_name is the name of the codec
+to which the preset file options will be applied. For example, if you select the
+video codec with -vcodec libvpx
and use -pre 1080p
, then it will
+search for the file libvpx-1080p.avpreset.
+
If no such file is found, then ffmpeg will search for a file named +arg.avpreset in the same directories. +
+ + +If you specify the input format and device then ffmpeg can grab video +and audio directly. +
+ffmpeg -f oss -i /dev/dsp -f video4linux2 -i /dev/video0 /tmp/out.mpg +
Or with an ALSA audio source (mono input, card id 1) instead of OSS: +
ffmpeg -f alsa -ac 1 -i hw:1 -f video4linux2 -i /dev/video0 /tmp/out.mpg +
Note that you must activate the right video source and channel before +launching ffmpeg with any TV viewer such as +xawtv by Gerd Knorr. You also +have to set the audio recording levels correctly with a +standard mixer. +
+ +Grab the X11 display with ffmpeg via +
+ffmpeg -f x11grab -video_size cif -framerate 25 -i :0.0 /tmp/out.mpg +
0.0 is display.screen number of your X11 server, same as +the DISPLAY environment variable. +
+ffmpeg -f x11grab -video_size cif -framerate 25 -i :0.0+10,20 /tmp/out.mpg +
0.0 is display.screen number of your X11 server, same as the DISPLAY environment +variable. 10 is the x-offset and 20 the y-offset for the grabbing. +
+ +Any supported file format and protocol can serve as input to ffmpeg: +
+Examples: +
ffmpeg -i /tmp/test%d.Y /tmp/out.mpg +
It will use the files: +
/tmp/test0.Y, /tmp/test0.U, /tmp/test0.V, +/tmp/test1.Y, /tmp/test1.U, /tmp/test1.V, etc... +
The Y files use twice the resolution of the U and V files. They are +raw files, without header. They can be generated by all decent video +decoders. You must specify the size of the image with the -s option +if ffmpeg cannot guess it. +
+ffmpeg -i /tmp/test.yuv /tmp/out.avi +
test.yuv is a file containing raw YUV planar data. Each frame is composed +of the Y plane followed by the U and V planes at half vertical and +horizontal resolution. +
+ffmpeg -i mydivx.avi hugefile.yuv +
ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav -s 640x480 -i /tmp/a.yuv /tmp/a.mpg +
Converts the audio file a.wav and the raw YUV video file a.yuv +to MPEG file a.mpg. +
+ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav -ar 22050 /tmp/a.mp2 +
Converts a.wav to MPEG audio at 22050 Hz sample rate. +
+ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav -map 0:a -b:a 64k /tmp/a.mp2 -map 0:a -b:a 128k /tmp/b.mp2 +
Converts a.wav to a.mp2 at 64 kbits and to b.mp2 at 128 kbits. ’-map +file:index’ specifies which input stream is used for each output +stream, in the order of the definition of output streams. +
+ffmpeg -i snatch_1.vob -f avi -c:v mpeg4 -b:v 800k -g 300 -bf 2 -c:a libmp3lame -b:a 128k snatch.avi +
This is a typical DVD ripping example; the input is a VOB file, the
+output an AVI file with MPEG-4 video and MP3 audio. Note that in this
+command we use B-frames so the MPEG-4 stream is DivX5 compatible, and
+GOP size is 300 which means one intra frame every 10 seconds for 29.97fps
+input video. Furthermore, the audio stream is MP3-encoded so you need
+to enable LAME support by passing --enable-libmp3lame
to configure.
+The mapping is particularly useful for DVD transcoding
+to get the desired audio language.
+
NOTE: To see the supported input formats, use ffmpeg -demuxers
.
+
For extracting images from a video: +
ffmpeg -i foo.avi -r 1 -s WxH -f image2 foo-%03d.jpeg +
This will extract one video frame per second from the video and will +output them in files named foo-001.jpeg, foo-002.jpeg, +etc. Images will be rescaled to fit the new WxH values. +
+If you want to extract just a limited number of frames, you can use the
+above command in combination with the -frames:v
or -t
option,
+or in combination with -ss to start extracting from a certain point in time.
+
For creating a video from many images: +
ffmpeg -f image2 -framerate 12 -i foo-%03d.jpeg -s WxH foo.avi +
The syntax foo-%03d.jpeg
specifies to use a decimal number
+composed of three digits padded with zeroes to express the sequence
+number. It is the same syntax supported by the C printf function, but
+only formats accepting a normal integer are suitable.
+
When importing an image sequence, -i also supports expanding
+shell-like wildcard patterns (globbing) internally, by selecting the
+image2-specific -pattern_type glob
option.
+
For example, for creating a video from filenames matching the glob pattern
+foo-*.jpeg
:
+
ffmpeg -f image2 -pattern_type glob -framerate 12 -i 'foo-*.jpeg' -s WxH foo.avi +
ffmpeg -i test1.avi -i test2.avi -map 1:1 -map 1:0 -map 0:1 -map 0:0 -c copy -y test12.nut +
The resulting output file test12.nut will contain the first four streams +from the input files in reverse order. +
+ffmpeg -i myfile.avi -b 4000k -minrate 4000k -maxrate 4000k -bufsize 1835k out.m2v +
ffmpeg -i src.ext -lmax 21*QP2LAMBDA dst.ext +
ffmpeg-all, +ffplay, ffprobe, +ffmpeg-utils, +ffmpeg-scaler, +ffmpeg-resampler, +ffmpeg-codecs, +ffmpeg-bitstream-filters, +ffmpeg-formats, +ffmpeg-devices, +ffmpeg-protocols, +ffmpeg-filters +
+ + +The FFmpeg developers. +
+For details about the authorship, see the Git history of the project
+(git://source.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg), e.g. by typing the command
+git log
in the FFmpeg source directory, or browsing the
+online repository at http://source.ffmpeg.org.
+
Maintainers for the specific components are listed in the file +MAINTAINERS in the source code tree. +
+ ++ This document was generated using makeinfo. +
+