ffmpeg.texi 31 KB

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  1. \input texinfo @c -*- texinfo -*-
  2. @settitle ffmpeg Documentation
  3. @titlepage
  4. @center @titlefont{ffmpeg Documentation}
  5. @end titlepage
  6. @top
  7. @contents
  8. @chapter Synopsis
  9. The generic syntax is:
  10. @example
  11. @c man begin SYNOPSIS
  12. ffmpeg [[infile options][@option{-i} @var{infile}]]... @{[outfile options] @var{outfile}@}...
  13. @c man end
  14. @end example
  15. @chapter Description
  16. @c man begin DESCRIPTION
  17. ffmpeg is a very fast video and audio converter that can also grab from
  18. a live audio/video source. It can also convert between arbitrary sample
  19. rates and resize video on the fly with a high quality polyphase filter.
  20. The command line interface is designed to be intuitive, in the sense
  21. that ffmpeg tries to figure out all parameters that can possibly be
  22. derived automatically. You usually only have to specify the target
  23. bitrate you want.
  24. As a general rule, options are applied to the next specified
  25. file. Therefore, order is important, and you can have the same
  26. option on the command line multiple times. Each occurrence is
  27. then applied to the next input or output file.
  28. @itemize
  29. @item
  30. To set the video bitrate of the output file to 64kbit/s:
  31. @example
  32. ffmpeg -i input.avi -b 64k output.avi
  33. @end example
  34. @item
  35. To force the frame rate of the output file to 24 fps:
  36. @example
  37. ffmpeg -i input.avi -r 24 output.avi
  38. @end example
  39. @item
  40. To force the frame rate of the input file (valid for raw formats only)
  41. to 1 fps and the frame rate of the output file to 24 fps:
  42. @example
  43. ffmpeg -r 1 -i input.m2v -r 24 output.avi
  44. @end example
  45. @end itemize
  46. The format option may be needed for raw input files.
  47. By default ffmpeg tries to convert as losslessly as possible: It
  48. uses the same audio and video parameters for the outputs as the one
  49. specified for the inputs.
  50. @c man end DESCRIPTION
  51. @chapter Options
  52. @c man begin OPTIONS
  53. @include fftools-common-opts.texi
  54. @section Main options
  55. @table @option
  56. @item -f @var{fmt}
  57. Force format.
  58. @item -i @var{filename}
  59. input file name
  60. @item -y
  61. Overwrite output files.
  62. @item -t @var{duration}
  63. Restrict the transcoded/captured video sequence
  64. to the duration specified in seconds.
  65. @code{hh:mm:ss[.xxx]} syntax is also supported.
  66. @item -fs @var{limit_size}
  67. Set the file size limit.
  68. @item -ss @var{position}
  69. Seek to given time position in seconds.
  70. @code{hh:mm:ss[.xxx]} syntax is also supported.
  71. @item -itsoffset @var{offset}
  72. Set the input time offset in seconds.
  73. @code{[-]hh:mm:ss[.xxx]} syntax is also supported.
  74. This option affects all the input files that follow it.
  75. The offset is added to the timestamps of the input files.
  76. Specifying a positive offset means that the corresponding
  77. streams are delayed by 'offset' seconds.
  78. @item -timestamp @var{time}
  79. Set the recording timestamp in the container.
  80. The syntax for @var{time} is:
  81. @example
  82. now|([(YYYY-MM-DD|YYYYMMDD)[T|t| ]]((HH[:MM[:SS[.m...]]])|(HH[MM[SS[.m...]]]))[Z|z])
  83. @end example
  84. If the value is "now" it takes the current time.
  85. Time is local time unless 'Z' or 'z' is appended, in which case it is
  86. interpreted as UTC.
  87. If the year-month-day part is not specified it takes the current
  88. year-month-day.
  89. @item -metadata @var{key}=@var{value}
  90. Set a metadata key/value pair.
  91. For example, for setting the title in the output file:
  92. @example
  93. ffmpeg -i in.avi -metadata title="my title" out.flv
  94. @end example
  95. @item -v @var{number}
  96. Set the logging verbosity level.
  97. @item -target @var{type}
  98. Specify target file type ("vcd", "svcd", "dvd", "dv", "dv50", "pal-vcd",
  99. "ntsc-svcd", ... ). All the format options (bitrate, codecs,
  100. buffer sizes) are then set automatically. You can just type:
  101. @example
  102. ffmpeg -i myfile.avi -target vcd /tmp/vcd.mpg
  103. @end example
  104. Nevertheless you can specify additional options as long as you know
  105. they do not conflict with the standard, as in:
  106. @example
  107. ffmpeg -i myfile.avi -target vcd -bf 2 /tmp/vcd.mpg
  108. @end example
  109. @item -dframes @var{number}
  110. Set the number of data frames to record.
  111. @item -scodec @var{codec}
  112. Force subtitle codec ('copy' to copy stream).
  113. @item -newsubtitle
  114. Add a new subtitle stream to the current output stream.
  115. @item -slang @var{code}
  116. Set the ISO 639 language code (3 letters) of the current subtitle stream.
  117. @end table
  118. @section Video Options
  119. @table @option
  120. @item -b @var{bitrate}
  121. Set the video bitrate in bit/s (default = 200 kb/s).
  122. @item -vframes @var{number}
  123. Set the number of video frames to record.
  124. @item -r @var{fps}
  125. Set frame rate (Hz value, fraction or abbreviation), (default = 25).
  126. @item -s @var{size}
  127. Set frame size. The format is @samp{wxh} (ffserver default = 160x128).
  128. There is no default for input streams,
  129. for output streams it is set by default to the size of the source stream.
  130. If the input file has video streams with different resolutions, the behaviour is undefined.
  131. The following abbreviations are recognized:
  132. @table @samp
  133. @item sqcif
  134. 128x96
  135. @item qcif
  136. 176x144
  137. @item cif
  138. 352x288
  139. @item 4cif
  140. 704x576
  141. @item 16cif
  142. 1408x1152
  143. @item qqvga
  144. 160x120
  145. @item qvga
  146. 320x240
  147. @item vga
  148. 640x480
  149. @item svga
  150. 800x600
  151. @item xga
  152. 1024x768
  153. @item uxga
  154. 1600x1200
  155. @item qxga
  156. 2048x1536
  157. @item sxga
  158. 1280x1024
  159. @item qsxga
  160. 2560x2048
  161. @item hsxga
  162. 5120x4096
  163. @item wvga
  164. 852x480
  165. @item wxga
  166. 1366x768
  167. @item wsxga
  168. 1600x1024
  169. @item wuxga
  170. 1920x1200
  171. @item woxga
  172. 2560x1600
  173. @item wqsxga
  174. 3200x2048
  175. @item wquxga
  176. 3840x2400
  177. @item whsxga
  178. 6400x4096
  179. @item whuxga
  180. 7680x4800
  181. @item cga
  182. 320x200
  183. @item ega
  184. 640x350
  185. @item hd480
  186. 852x480
  187. @item hd720
  188. 1280x720
  189. @item hd1080
  190. 1920x1080
  191. @end table
  192. @item -aspect @var{aspect}
  193. Set the video display aspect ratio specified by @var{aspect}.
  194. @var{aspect} can be a floating point number string, or a string of the
  195. form @var{num}:@var{den}, where @var{num} and @var{den} are the
  196. numerator and denominator of the aspect ratio. For example "4:3",
  197. "16:9", "1.3333", and "1.7777" are valid argument values.
  198. @item -croptop @var{size}
  199. @item -cropbottom @var{size}
  200. @item -cropleft @var{size}
  201. @item -cropright @var{size}
  202. All the crop options have been removed. Use -vf
  203. crop=width:height:x:y instead.
  204. @item -padtop @var{size}
  205. @item -padbottom @var{size}
  206. @item -padleft @var{size}
  207. @item -padright @var{size}
  208. @item -padcolor @var{hex_color}
  209. All the pad options have been removed. Use -vf
  210. pad=width:height:x:y:color instead.
  211. @item -vn
  212. Disable video recording.
  213. @item -bt @var{tolerance}
  214. Set video bitrate tolerance (in bits, default 4000k).
  215. Has a minimum value of: (target_bitrate/target_framerate).
  216. In 1-pass mode, bitrate tolerance specifies how far ratecontrol is
  217. willing to deviate from the target average bitrate value. This is
  218. not related to min/max bitrate. Lowering tolerance too much has
  219. an adverse effect on quality.
  220. @item -maxrate @var{bitrate}
  221. Set max video bitrate (in bit/s).
  222. Requires -bufsize to be set.
  223. @item -minrate @var{bitrate}
  224. Set min video bitrate (in bit/s).
  225. Most useful in setting up a CBR encode:
  226. @example
  227. ffmpeg -i myfile.avi -b 4000k -minrate 4000k -maxrate 4000k -bufsize 1835k out.m2v
  228. @end example
  229. It is of little use elsewise.
  230. @item -bufsize @var{size}
  231. Set video buffer verifier buffer size (in bits).
  232. @item -vcodec @var{codec}
  233. Force video codec to @var{codec}. Use the @code{copy} special value to
  234. tell that the raw codec data must be copied as is.
  235. @item -sameq
  236. Use same quantizer as source (implies VBR).
  237. @item -pass @var{n}
  238. Select the pass number (1 or 2). It is used to do two-pass
  239. video encoding. The statistics of the video are recorded in the first
  240. pass into a log file (see also the option -passlogfile),
  241. and in the second pass that log file is used to generate the video
  242. at the exact requested bitrate.
  243. On pass 1, you may just deactivate audio and set output to null,
  244. examples for Windows and Unix:
  245. @example
  246. ffmpeg -i foo.mov -vcodec libxvid -pass 1 -an -f rawvideo -y NUL
  247. ffmpeg -i foo.mov -vcodec libxvid -pass 1 -an -f rawvideo -y /dev/null
  248. @end example
  249. @item -passlogfile @var{prefix}
  250. Set two-pass log file name prefix to @var{prefix}, the default file name
  251. prefix is ``ffmpeg2pass''. The complete file name will be
  252. @file{PREFIX-N.log}, where N is a number specific to the output
  253. stream.
  254. @item -newvideo
  255. Add a new video stream to the current output stream.
  256. @item -vlang @var{code}
  257. Set the ISO 639 language code (3 letters) of the current video stream.
  258. @item -vf @var{filter_graph}
  259. @var{filter_graph} is a description of the filter graph to apply to
  260. the input video.
  261. Use the option "-filters" to show all the available filters (including
  262. also sources and sinks).
  263. @end table
  264. @section Advanced Video Options
  265. @table @option
  266. @item -pix_fmt @var{format}
  267. Set pixel format. Use 'list' as parameter to show all the supported
  268. pixel formats.
  269. @item -sws_flags @var{flags}
  270. Set SwScaler flags.
  271. @item -g @var{gop_size}
  272. Set the group of pictures size.
  273. @item -intra
  274. Use only intra frames.
  275. @item -vdt @var{n}
  276. Discard threshold.
  277. @item -qscale @var{q}
  278. Use fixed video quantizer scale (VBR).
  279. @item -qmin @var{q}
  280. minimum video quantizer scale (VBR)
  281. @item -qmax @var{q}
  282. maximum video quantizer scale (VBR)
  283. @item -qdiff @var{q}
  284. maximum difference between the quantizer scales (VBR)
  285. @item -qblur @var{blur}
  286. video quantizer scale blur (VBR) (range 0.0 - 1.0)
  287. @item -qcomp @var{compression}
  288. video quantizer scale compression (VBR) (default 0.5).
  289. Constant of ratecontrol equation. Recommended range for default rc_eq: 0.0-1.0
  290. @item -lmin @var{lambda}
  291. minimum video lagrange factor (VBR)
  292. @item -lmax @var{lambda}
  293. max video lagrange factor (VBR)
  294. @item -mblmin @var{lambda}
  295. minimum macroblock quantizer scale (VBR)
  296. @item -mblmax @var{lambda}
  297. maximum macroblock quantizer scale (VBR)
  298. These four options (lmin, lmax, mblmin, mblmax) use 'lambda' units,
  299. but you may use the QP2LAMBDA constant to easily convert from 'q' units:
  300. @example
  301. ffmpeg -i src.ext -lmax 21*QP2LAMBDA dst.ext
  302. @end example
  303. @item -rc_init_cplx @var{complexity}
  304. initial complexity for single pass encoding
  305. @item -b_qfactor @var{factor}
  306. qp factor between P- and B-frames
  307. @item -i_qfactor @var{factor}
  308. qp factor between P- and I-frames
  309. @item -b_qoffset @var{offset}
  310. qp offset between P- and B-frames
  311. @item -i_qoffset @var{offset}
  312. qp offset between P- and I-frames
  313. @item -rc_eq @var{equation}
  314. Set rate control equation (see section "Expression Evaluation")
  315. (default = @code{tex^qComp}).
  316. When computing the rate control equation expression, besides the
  317. standard functions defined in the section "Expression Evaluation", the
  318. following functions are available:
  319. @table @var
  320. @item bits2qp(bits)
  321. @item qp2bits(qp)
  322. @end table
  323. and the following constants are available:
  324. @table @var
  325. @item iTex
  326. @item pTex
  327. @item tex
  328. @item mv
  329. @item fCode
  330. @item iCount
  331. @item mcVar
  332. @item var
  333. @item isI
  334. @item isP
  335. @item isB
  336. @item avgQP
  337. @item qComp
  338. @item avgIITex
  339. @item avgPITex
  340. @item avgPPTex
  341. @item avgBPTex
  342. @item avgTex
  343. @end table
  344. @item -rc_override @var{override}
  345. Rate control override for specific intervals, formated as "int,int,int"
  346. list separated with slashes. Two first values are the beginning and
  347. end frame numbers, last one is quantizer to use if positive, or quality
  348. factor if negative.
  349. @item -me_method @var{method}
  350. Set motion estimation method to @var{method}.
  351. Available methods are (from lowest to best quality):
  352. @table @samp
  353. @item zero
  354. Try just the (0, 0) vector.
  355. @item phods
  356. @item log
  357. @item x1
  358. @item hex
  359. @item umh
  360. @item epzs
  361. (default method)
  362. @item full
  363. exhaustive search (slow and marginally better than epzs)
  364. @end table
  365. @item -dct_algo @var{algo}
  366. Set DCT algorithm to @var{algo}. Available values are:
  367. @table @samp
  368. @item 0
  369. FF_DCT_AUTO (default)
  370. @item 1
  371. FF_DCT_FASTINT
  372. @item 2
  373. FF_DCT_INT
  374. @item 3
  375. FF_DCT_MMX
  376. @item 4
  377. FF_DCT_MLIB
  378. @item 5
  379. FF_DCT_ALTIVEC
  380. @end table
  381. @item -idct_algo @var{algo}
  382. Set IDCT algorithm to @var{algo}. Available values are:
  383. @table @samp
  384. @item 0
  385. FF_IDCT_AUTO (default)
  386. @item 1
  387. FF_IDCT_INT
  388. @item 2
  389. FF_IDCT_SIMPLE
  390. @item 3
  391. FF_IDCT_SIMPLEMMX
  392. @item 4
  393. FF_IDCT_LIBMPEG2MMX
  394. @item 5
  395. FF_IDCT_PS2
  396. @item 6
  397. FF_IDCT_MLIB
  398. @item 7
  399. FF_IDCT_ARM
  400. @item 8
  401. FF_IDCT_ALTIVEC
  402. @item 9
  403. FF_IDCT_SH4
  404. @item 10
  405. FF_IDCT_SIMPLEARM
  406. @end table
  407. @item -er @var{n}
  408. Set error resilience to @var{n}.
  409. @table @samp
  410. @item 1
  411. FF_ER_CAREFUL (default)
  412. @item 2
  413. FF_ER_COMPLIANT
  414. @item 3
  415. FF_ER_AGGRESSIVE
  416. @item 4
  417. FF_ER_VERY_AGGRESSIVE
  418. @end table
  419. @item -ec @var{bit_mask}
  420. Set error concealment to @var{bit_mask}. @var{bit_mask} is a bit mask of
  421. the following values:
  422. @table @samp
  423. @item 1
  424. FF_EC_GUESS_MVS (default = enabled)
  425. @item 2
  426. FF_EC_DEBLOCK (default = enabled)
  427. @end table
  428. @item -bf @var{frames}
  429. Use 'frames' B-frames (supported for MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and MPEG-4).
  430. @item -mbd @var{mode}
  431. macroblock decision
  432. @table @samp
  433. @item 0
  434. FF_MB_DECISION_SIMPLE: Use mb_cmp (cannot change it yet in ffmpeg).
  435. @item 1
  436. FF_MB_DECISION_BITS: Choose the one which needs the fewest bits.
  437. @item 2
  438. FF_MB_DECISION_RD: rate distortion
  439. @end table
  440. @item -4mv
  441. Use four motion vector by macroblock (MPEG-4 only).
  442. @item -part
  443. Use data partitioning (MPEG-4 only).
  444. @item -bug @var{param}
  445. Work around encoder bugs that are not auto-detected.
  446. @item -strict @var{strictness}
  447. How strictly to follow the standards.
  448. @item -aic
  449. Enable Advanced intra coding (h263+).
  450. @item -umv
  451. Enable Unlimited Motion Vector (h263+)
  452. @item -deinterlace
  453. Deinterlace pictures.
  454. @item -ilme
  455. Force interlacing support in encoder (MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 only).
  456. Use this option if your input file is interlaced and you want
  457. to keep the interlaced format for minimum losses.
  458. The alternative is to deinterlace the input stream with
  459. @option{-deinterlace}, but deinterlacing introduces losses.
  460. @item -psnr
  461. Calculate PSNR of compressed frames.
  462. @item -vstats
  463. Dump video coding statistics to @file{vstats_HHMMSS.log}.
  464. @item -vstats_file @var{file}
  465. Dump video coding statistics to @var{file}.
  466. @item -top @var{n}
  467. top=1/bottom=0/auto=-1 field first
  468. @item -dc @var{precision}
  469. Intra_dc_precision.
  470. @item -vtag @var{fourcc/tag}
  471. Force video tag/fourcc.
  472. @item -qphist
  473. Show QP histogram.
  474. @item -vbsf @var{bitstream_filter}
  475. Bitstream filters available are "dump_extra", "remove_extra", "noise", "h264_mp4toannexb", "imxdump", "mjpegadump", "mjpeg2jpeg".
  476. @example
  477. ffmpeg -i h264.mp4 -vcodec copy -vbsf h264_mp4toannexb -an out.h264
  478. @end example
  479. @item -force_key_frames @var{time}[,@var{time}...]
  480. Force key frames at the specified timestamps, more precisely at the first
  481. frames after each specified time.
  482. This option can be useful to ensure that a seek point is present at a
  483. chapter mark or any other designated place in the output file.
  484. The timestamps must be specified in ascending order.
  485. @end table
  486. @section Audio Options
  487. @table @option
  488. @item -aframes @var{number}
  489. Set the number of audio frames to record.
  490. @item -ar @var{freq}
  491. Set the audio sampling frequency. For input streams it is set by
  492. default to 44100 Hz, for output streams it is set by default to the
  493. frequency of the input stream. If the input file has audio streams
  494. with different frequencies, the behaviour is undefined.
  495. @item -ab @var{bitrate}
  496. Set the audio bitrate in bit/s (default = 64k).
  497. @item -aq @var{q}
  498. Set the audio quality (codec-specific, VBR).
  499. @item -ac @var{channels}
  500. Set the number of audio channels. For input streams it is set by
  501. default to 1, for output streams it is set by default to the same
  502. number of audio channels in input. If the input file has audio streams
  503. with different channel count, the behaviour is undefined.
  504. @item -an
  505. Disable audio recording.
  506. @item -acodec @var{codec}
  507. Force audio codec to @var{codec}. Use the @code{copy} special value to
  508. specify that the raw codec data must be copied as is.
  509. @item -newaudio
  510. Add a new audio track to the output file. If you want to specify parameters,
  511. do so before @code{-newaudio} (@code{-acodec}, @code{-ab}, etc..).
  512. Mapping will be done automatically, if the number of output streams is equal to
  513. the number of input streams, else it will pick the first one that matches. You
  514. can override the mapping using @code{-map} as usual.
  515. Example:
  516. @example
  517. ffmpeg -i file.mpg -vcodec copy -acodec ac3 -ab 384k test.mpg -acodec mp2 -ab 192k -newaudio
  518. @end example
  519. @item -alang @var{code}
  520. Set the ISO 639 language code (3 letters) of the current audio stream.
  521. @end table
  522. @section Advanced Audio options:
  523. @table @option
  524. @item -atag @var{fourcc/tag}
  525. Force audio tag/fourcc.
  526. @item -audio_service_type @var{type}
  527. Set the type of service that the audio stream contains.
  528. @table @option
  529. @item ma
  530. Main Audio Service (default)
  531. @item ef
  532. Effects
  533. @item vi
  534. Visually Impaired
  535. @item hi
  536. Hearing Impaired
  537. @item di
  538. Dialogue
  539. @item co
  540. Commentary
  541. @item em
  542. Emergency
  543. @item vo
  544. Voice Over
  545. @item ka
  546. Karaoke
  547. @end table
  548. @item -absf @var{bitstream_filter}
  549. Bitstream filters available are "dump_extra", "remove_extra", "noise", "mp3comp", "mp3decomp".
  550. @end table
  551. @section Subtitle options:
  552. @table @option
  553. @item -scodec @var{codec}
  554. Force subtitle codec ('copy' to copy stream).
  555. @item -newsubtitle
  556. Add a new subtitle stream to the current output stream.
  557. @item -slang @var{code}
  558. Set the ISO 639 language code (3 letters) of the current subtitle stream.
  559. @item -sn
  560. Disable subtitle recording.
  561. @item -sbsf @var{bitstream_filter}
  562. Bitstream filters available are "mov2textsub", "text2movsub".
  563. @example
  564. ffmpeg -i file.mov -an -vn -sbsf mov2textsub -scodec copy -f rawvideo sub.txt
  565. @end example
  566. @end table
  567. @section Audio/Video grab options
  568. @table @option
  569. @item -vc @var{channel}
  570. Set video grab channel (DV1394 only).
  571. @item -tvstd @var{standard}
  572. Set television standard (NTSC, PAL (SECAM)).
  573. @item -isync
  574. Synchronize read on input.
  575. @end table
  576. @section Advanced options
  577. @table @option
  578. @item -map @var{input_file_id}.@var{input_stream_id}[:@var{sync_file_id}.@var{sync_stream_id}]
  579. Designate an input stream as a source for the output file. Each input
  580. stream is identified by the input file index @var{input_file_id} and
  581. the input stream index @var{input_stream_id} within the input
  582. file. Both indexes start at 0. If specified,
  583. @var{sync_file_id}.@var{sync_stream_id} sets which input stream
  584. is used as a presentation sync reference.
  585. The @code{-map} options must be specified just after the output file.
  586. If any @code{-map} options are used, the number of @code{-map} options
  587. on the command line must match the number of streams in the output
  588. file. The first @code{-map} option on the command line specifies the
  589. source for output stream 0, the second @code{-map} option specifies
  590. the source for output stream 1, etc.
  591. For example, if you have two audio streams in the first input file,
  592. these streams are identified by "0.0" and "0.1". You can use
  593. @code{-map} to select which stream to place in an output file. For
  594. example:
  595. @example
  596. ffmpeg -i INPUT out.wav -map 0.1
  597. @end example
  598. will map the input stream in @file{INPUT} identified by "0.1" to
  599. the (single) output stream in @file{out.wav}.
  600. For example, to select the stream with index 2 from input file
  601. @file{a.mov} (specified by the identifier "0.2"), and stream with
  602. index 6 from input @file{b.mov} (specified by the identifier "1.6"),
  603. and copy them to the output file @file{out.mov}:
  604. @example
  605. ffmpeg -i a.mov -i b.mov -vcodec copy -acodec copy out.mov -map 0.2 -map 1.6
  606. @end example
  607. To add more streams to the output file, you can use the
  608. @code{-newaudio}, @code{-newvideo}, @code{-newsubtitle} options.
  609. @item -map_meta_data @var{outfile}[,@var{metadata}]:@var{infile}[,@var{metadata}]
  610. Deprecated, use @var{-map_metadata} instead.
  611. @item -map_metadata @var{outfile}[,@var{metadata}]:@var{infile}[,@var{metadata}]
  612. Set metadata information of @var{outfile} from @var{infile}. Note that those
  613. are file indices (zero-based), not filenames.
  614. Optional @var{metadata} parameters specify, which metadata to copy - (g)lobal
  615. (i.e. metadata that applies to the whole file), per-(s)tream, per-(c)hapter or
  616. per-(p)rogram. All metadata specifiers other than global must be followed by the
  617. stream/chapter/program number. If metadata specifier is omitted, it defaults to
  618. global.
  619. By default, global metadata is copied from the first input file to all output files,
  620. per-stream and per-chapter metadata is copied along with streams/chapters. These
  621. default mappings are disabled by creating any mapping of the relevant type. A negative
  622. file index can be used to create a dummy mapping that just disables automatic copying.
  623. For example to copy metadata from the first stream of the input file to global metadata
  624. of the output file:
  625. @example
  626. ffmpeg -i in.ogg -map_metadata 0:0,s0 out.mp3
  627. @end example
  628. @item -map_chapters @var{outfile}:@var{infile}
  629. Copy chapters from @var{infile} to @var{outfile}. If no chapter mapping is specified,
  630. then chapters are copied from the first input file with at least one chapter to all
  631. output files. Use a negative file index to disable any chapter copying.
  632. @item -debug
  633. Print specific debug info.
  634. @item -benchmark
  635. Show benchmarking information at the end of an encode.
  636. Shows CPU time used and maximum memory consumption.
  637. Maximum memory consumption is not supported on all systems,
  638. it will usually display as 0 if not supported.
  639. @item -dump
  640. Dump each input packet.
  641. @item -hex
  642. When dumping packets, also dump the payload.
  643. @item -bitexact
  644. Only use bit exact algorithms (for codec testing).
  645. @item -ps @var{size}
  646. Set RTP payload size in bytes.
  647. @item -re
  648. Read input at native frame rate. Mainly used to simulate a grab device.
  649. @item -loop_input
  650. Loop over the input stream. Currently it works only for image
  651. streams. This option is used for automatic FFserver testing.
  652. @item -loop_output @var{number_of_times}
  653. Repeatedly loop output for formats that support looping such as animated GIF
  654. (0 will loop the output infinitely).
  655. @item -threads @var{count}
  656. Thread count.
  657. @item -vsync @var{parameter}
  658. Video sync method.
  659. @table @option
  660. @item 0
  661. Each frame is passed with its timestamp from the demuxer to the muxer.
  662. @item 1
  663. Frames will be duplicated and dropped to achieve exactly the requested
  664. constant framerate.
  665. @item 2
  666. Frames are passed through with their timestamp or dropped so as to
  667. prevent 2 frames from having the same timestamp.
  668. @item -1
  669. Chooses between 1 and 2 depending on muxer capabilities. This is the
  670. default method.
  671. @end table
  672. With -map you can select from which stream the timestamps should be
  673. taken. You can leave either video or audio unchanged and sync the
  674. remaining stream(s) to the unchanged one.
  675. @item -async @var{samples_per_second}
  676. Audio sync method. "Stretches/squeezes" the audio stream to match the timestamps,
  677. the parameter is the maximum samples per second by which the audio is changed.
  678. -async 1 is a special case where only the start of the audio stream is corrected
  679. without any later correction.
  680. @item -copyts
  681. Copy timestamps from input to output.
  682. @item -copytb
  683. Copy input stream time base from input to output when stream copying.
  684. @item -shortest
  685. Finish encoding when the shortest input stream ends.
  686. @item -dts_delta_threshold
  687. Timestamp discontinuity delta threshold.
  688. @item -muxdelay @var{seconds}
  689. Set the maximum demux-decode delay.
  690. @item -muxpreload @var{seconds}
  691. Set the initial demux-decode delay.
  692. @item -streamid @var{output-stream-index}:@var{new-value}
  693. Assign a new stream-id value to an output stream. This option should be
  694. specified prior to the output filename to which it applies.
  695. For the situation where multiple output files exist, a streamid
  696. may be reassigned to a different value.
  697. For example, to set the stream 0 PID to 33 and the stream 1 PID to 36 for
  698. an output mpegts file:
  699. @example
  700. ffmpeg -i infile -streamid 0:33 -streamid 1:36 out.ts
  701. @end example
  702. @end table
  703. @section Preset files
  704. A preset file contains a sequence of @var{option}=@var{value} pairs,
  705. one for each line, specifying a sequence of options which would be
  706. awkward to specify on the command line. Lines starting with the hash
  707. ('#') character are ignored and are used to provide comments. Check
  708. the @file{ffpresets} directory in the FFmpeg source tree for examples.
  709. Preset files are specified with the @code{vpre}, @code{apre},
  710. @code{spre}, and @code{fpre} options. The @code{fpre} option takes the
  711. filename of the preset instead of a preset name as input and can be
  712. used for any kind of codec. For the @code{vpre}, @code{apre}, and
  713. @code{spre} options, the options specified in a preset file are
  714. applied to the currently selected codec of the same type as the preset
  715. option.
  716. The argument passed to the @code{vpre}, @code{apre}, and @code{spre}
  717. preset options identifies the preset file to use according to the
  718. following rules:
  719. First ffmpeg searches for a file named @var{arg}.ffpreset in the
  720. directories @file{$FFMPEG_DATADIR} (if set), and @file{$HOME/.ffmpeg}, and in
  721. the datadir defined at configuration time (usually @file{PREFIX/share/ffmpeg})
  722. or in a @file{ffpresets} folder along the executable on win32,
  723. in that order. For example, if the argument is @code{libx264-max}, it will
  724. search for the file @file{libx264-max.ffpreset}.
  725. If no such file is found, then ffmpeg will search for a file named
  726. @var{codec_name}-@var{arg}.ffpreset in the above-mentioned
  727. directories, where @var{codec_name} is the name of the codec to which
  728. the preset file options will be applied. For example, if you select
  729. the video codec with @code{-vcodec libx264} and use @code{-vpre max},
  730. then it will search for the file @file{libx264-max.ffpreset}.
  731. @c man end
  732. @chapter Tips
  733. @c man begin TIPS
  734. @itemize
  735. @item
  736. For streaming at very low bitrate application, use a low frame rate
  737. and a small GOP size. This is especially true for RealVideo where
  738. the Linux player does not seem to be very fast, so it can miss
  739. frames. An example is:
  740. @example
  741. ffmpeg -g 3 -r 3 -t 10 -b 50k -s qcif -f rv10 /tmp/b.rm
  742. @end example
  743. @item
  744. The parameter 'q' which is displayed while encoding is the current
  745. quantizer. The value 1 indicates that a very good quality could
  746. be achieved. The value 31 indicates the worst quality. If q=31 appears
  747. too often, it means that the encoder cannot compress enough to meet
  748. your bitrate. You must either increase the bitrate, decrease the
  749. frame rate or decrease the frame size.
  750. @item
  751. If your computer is not fast enough, you can speed up the
  752. compression at the expense of the compression ratio. You can use
  753. '-me zero' to speed up motion estimation, and '-intra' to disable
  754. motion estimation completely (you have only I-frames, which means it
  755. is about as good as JPEG compression).
  756. @item
  757. To have very low audio bitrates, reduce the sampling frequency
  758. (down to 22050 Hz for MPEG audio, 22050 or 11025 for AC-3).
  759. @item
  760. To have a constant quality (but a variable bitrate), use the option
  761. '-qscale n' when 'n' is between 1 (excellent quality) and 31 (worst
  762. quality).
  763. @item
  764. When converting video files, you can use the '-sameq' option which
  765. uses the same quality factor in the encoder as in the decoder.
  766. It allows almost lossless encoding.
  767. @end itemize
  768. @c man end TIPS
  769. @chapter Examples
  770. @c man begin EXAMPLES
  771. @section Video and Audio grabbing
  772. If you specify the input format and device then ffmpeg can grab video
  773. and audio directly.
  774. @example
  775. ffmpeg -f oss -i /dev/dsp -f video4linux2 -i /dev/video0 /tmp/out.mpg
  776. @end example
  777. Note that you must activate the right video source and channel before
  778. launching ffmpeg with any TV viewer such as xawtv
  779. (@url{http://linux.bytesex.org/xawtv/}) by Gerd Knorr. You also
  780. have to set the audio recording levels correctly with a
  781. standard mixer.
  782. @section X11 grabbing
  783. Grab the X11 display with ffmpeg via
  784. @example
  785. ffmpeg -f x11grab -s cif -r 25 -i :0.0 /tmp/out.mpg
  786. @end example
  787. 0.0 is display.screen number of your X11 server, same as
  788. the DISPLAY environment variable.
  789. @example
  790. ffmpeg -f x11grab -s cif -r 25 -i :0.0+10,20 /tmp/out.mpg
  791. @end example
  792. 0.0 is display.screen number of your X11 server, same as the DISPLAY environment
  793. variable. 10 is the x-offset and 20 the y-offset for the grabbing.
  794. @section Video and Audio file format conversion
  795. Any supported file format and protocol can serve as input to ffmpeg:
  796. Examples:
  797. @itemize
  798. @item
  799. You can use YUV files as input:
  800. @example
  801. ffmpeg -i /tmp/test%d.Y /tmp/out.mpg
  802. @end example
  803. It will use the files:
  804. @example
  805. /tmp/test0.Y, /tmp/test0.U, /tmp/test0.V,
  806. /tmp/test1.Y, /tmp/test1.U, /tmp/test1.V, etc...
  807. @end example
  808. The Y files use twice the resolution of the U and V files. They are
  809. raw files, without header. They can be generated by all decent video
  810. decoders. You must specify the size of the image with the @option{-s} option
  811. if ffmpeg cannot guess it.
  812. @item
  813. You can input from a raw YUV420P file:
  814. @example
  815. ffmpeg -i /tmp/test.yuv /tmp/out.avi
  816. @end example
  817. test.yuv is a file containing raw YUV planar data. Each frame is composed
  818. of the Y plane followed by the U and V planes at half vertical and
  819. horizontal resolution.
  820. @item
  821. You can output to a raw YUV420P file:
  822. @example
  823. ffmpeg -i mydivx.avi hugefile.yuv
  824. @end example
  825. @item
  826. You can set several input files and output files:
  827. @example
  828. ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav -s 640x480 -i /tmp/a.yuv /tmp/a.mpg
  829. @end example
  830. Converts the audio file a.wav and the raw YUV video file a.yuv
  831. to MPEG file a.mpg.
  832. @item
  833. You can also do audio and video conversions at the same time:
  834. @example
  835. ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav -ar 22050 /tmp/a.mp2
  836. @end example
  837. Converts a.wav to MPEG audio at 22050 Hz sample rate.
  838. @item
  839. You can encode to several formats at the same time and define a
  840. mapping from input stream to output streams:
  841. @example
  842. ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav -ab 64k /tmp/a.mp2 -ab 128k /tmp/b.mp2 -map 0:0 -map 0:0
  843. @end example
  844. Converts a.wav to a.mp2 at 64 kbits and to b.mp2 at 128 kbits. '-map
  845. file:index' specifies which input stream is used for each output
  846. stream, in the order of the definition of output streams.
  847. @item
  848. You can transcode decrypted VOBs:
  849. @example
  850. ffmpeg -i snatch_1.vob -f avi -vcodec mpeg4 -b 800k -g 300 -bf 2 -acodec libmp3lame -ab 128k snatch.avi
  851. @end example
  852. This is a typical DVD ripping example; the input is a VOB file, the
  853. output an AVI file with MPEG-4 video and MP3 audio. Note that in this
  854. command we use B-frames so the MPEG-4 stream is DivX5 compatible, and
  855. GOP size is 300 which means one intra frame every 10 seconds for 29.97fps
  856. input video. Furthermore, the audio stream is MP3-encoded so you need
  857. to enable LAME support by passing @code{--enable-libmp3lame} to configure.
  858. The mapping is particularly useful for DVD transcoding
  859. to get the desired audio language.
  860. NOTE: To see the supported input formats, use @code{ffmpeg -formats}.
  861. @item
  862. You can extract images from a video, or create a video from many images:
  863. For extracting images from a video:
  864. @example
  865. ffmpeg -i foo.avi -r 1 -s WxH -f image2 foo-%03d.jpeg
  866. @end example
  867. This will extract one video frame per second from the video and will
  868. output them in files named @file{foo-001.jpeg}, @file{foo-002.jpeg},
  869. etc. Images will be rescaled to fit the new WxH values.
  870. If you want to extract just a limited number of frames, you can use the
  871. above command in combination with the -vframes or -t option, or in
  872. combination with -ss to start extracting from a certain point in time.
  873. For creating a video from many images:
  874. @example
  875. ffmpeg -f image2 -i foo-%03d.jpeg -r 12 -s WxH foo.avi
  876. @end example
  877. The syntax @code{foo-%03d.jpeg} specifies to use a decimal number
  878. composed of three digits padded with zeroes to express the sequence
  879. number. It is the same syntax supported by the C printf function, but
  880. only formats accepting a normal integer are suitable.
  881. @item
  882. You can put many streams of the same type in the output:
  883. @example
  884. ffmpeg -i test1.avi -i test2.avi -vcodec copy -acodec copy -vcodec copy -acodec copy test12.avi -newvideo -newaudio
  885. @end example
  886. In addition to the first video and audio streams, the resulting
  887. output file @file{test12.avi} will contain the second video
  888. and the second audio stream found in the input streams list.
  889. The @code{-newvideo}, @code{-newaudio} and @code{-newsubtitle}
  890. options have to be specified immediately after the name of the output
  891. file to which you want to add them.
  892. @end itemize
  893. @c man end EXAMPLES
  894. @include eval.texi
  895. @include decoders.texi
  896. @include encoders.texi
  897. @include demuxers.texi
  898. @include muxers.texi
  899. @include indevs.texi
  900. @include outdevs.texi
  901. @include protocols.texi
  902. @include bitstream_filters.texi
  903. @include filters.texi
  904. @include metadata.texi
  905. @ignore
  906. @setfilename ffmpeg
  907. @settitle ffmpeg video converter
  908. @c man begin SEEALSO
  909. ffplay(1), ffprobe(1), ffserver(1) and the FFmpeg HTML documentation
  910. @c man end
  911. @c man begin AUTHORS
  912. The FFmpeg developers
  913. @c man end
  914. @end ignore
  915. @bye