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The generic syntax is:
ffmpeg [[infile options][‘-i’ infile]]... {[outfile options] outfile}... |
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FFmpeg is a very fast video and audio converter. It can also grab from a live audio/video source.
The command line interface is designed to be intuitive, in the sense that FFmpeg tries to figure out all parameters that can possibly be derived automatically. You usually only have to specify the target bitrate you want.
FFmpeg can also convert from any sample rate to any other, and resize video on the fly with a high quality polyphase filter.
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.
* To set the video bitrate of the output file to 64kbit/s:
ffmpeg -i input.avi -b 64k output.avi |
* To force the frame rate of the output file to 24 fps:
ffmpeg -i input.avi -r 24 output.avi |
* To force the frame rate of the input file (valid for raw formats only) to 1 fps and the frame rate of the output file to 24 fps:
ffmpeg -r 1 -i input.m2v -r 24 output.avi |
The format option may be needed for raw input files.
By default, FFmpeg tries to convert as losslessly as possible: It uses the same audio and video parameters for the outputs as the one specified for the inputs.
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All the numerical options, if not specified otherwise, accept in input a string representing a number, which may contain one of the International System number postfixes, for example 'K', 'M', 'G'. If 'i' is appended after the postfix, powers of 2 are used instead of powers of 10. The 'B' postfix multiplies the value for 8, and can be appended after another postfix or used alone. This allows using for example 'KB', 'MiB', 'G' and 'B' as postfix.
Options which do not take arguments are boolean options, and set the corresponding value to true. They can be set to false by prefixing with "no" the option name, for example using "-nofoo" in the commandline will set to false the boolean option with name "foo".
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These options are shared amongst the ff* tools.
Show license.
Show help.
Show version.
Show available formats.
The fields preceding the format names have the following meanings:
Decoding available
Encoding available
Show available codecs.
The fields preceding the codec names have the following meanings:
Decoding available
Encoding available
Video/audio/subtitle codec
Codec supports slices
Codec supports direct rendering
Codec can handle input truncated at random locations instead of only at frame boundaries
Show available bitstream filters.
Show available protocols.
Show available libavfilter filters.
Show available pixel formats.
Set the logging level used by the library. loglevel is a number or a string containing one of the following values:
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 NO_COLOR
.
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Force format.
input file name
Overwrite output files.
Restrict the transcoded/captured video sequence
to the duration specified in seconds.
hh:mm:ss[.xxx]
syntax is also supported.
Set the file size limit.
Seek to given time position in seconds.
hh:mm:ss[.xxx]
syntax is also supported.
Set the input time offset in seconds.
[-]hh:mm:ss[.xxx]
syntax is also supported.
This option affects all the input files that follow it.
The offset is added to the timestamps of the input files.
Specifying a positive offset means that the corresponding
streams are delayed by 'offset' seconds.
Set the recording timestamp in the container. The syntax for time is:
now|([(YYYY-MM-DD|YYYYMMDD)[T|t| ]]((HH[:MM[:SS[.m...]]])|(HH[MM[SS[.m...]]]))[Z|z]) |
If the value is "now" it takes the current time. Time is local time unless 'Z' or 'z' is appended, in which case it is interpreted as UTC. If the year-month-day part is not specified it takes the current year-month-day.
Set a metadata key/value pair.
For example, for setting the title in the output file:
ffmpeg -i in.avi -metadata title="my title" out.flv |
Set the logging verbosity level.
Specify target file type ("vcd", "svcd", "dvd", "dv", "dv50", "pal-vcd", "ntsc-svcd", ... ). 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 |
Set the number of data frames to record.
Force subtitle codec ('copy' to copy stream).
Add a new subtitle stream to the current output stream.
Set the ISO 639 language code (3 letters) of the current subtitle stream.
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Set the video bitrate in bit/s (default = 200 kb/s).
Set the number of video frames to record.
Set frame rate (Hz value, fraction or abbreviation), (default = 25).
Set frame size. The format is ‘wxh’ (ffserver default = 160x128, ffmpeg default = same as source). The following abbreviations are recognized:
128x96
176x144
352x288
704x576
1408x1152
160x120
320x240
640x480
800x600
1024x768
1600x1200
2048x1536
1280x1024
2560x2048
5120x4096
852x480
1366x768
1600x1024
1920x1200
2560x1600
3200x2048
3840x2400
6400x4096
7680x4800
320x200
640x350
852x480
1280x720
1920x1080
Set aspect ratio (4:3, 16:9 or 1.3333, 1.7777).
Set top crop band size (in pixels).
Set bottom crop band size (in pixels).
Set left crop band size (in pixels).
Set right crop band size (in pixels).
All the pad options have been removed. Use -vf pad=width:height:x:y:color instead.
Disable video recording.
Set video bitrate tolerance (in bits, default 4000k). Has a minimum value of: (target_bitrate/target_framerate). In 1-pass mode, bitrate tolerance specifies how far ratecontrol is willing to deviate from the target average bitrate value. This is not related to min/max bitrate. Lowering tolerance too much has an adverse effect on quality.
Set max video bitrate (in bit/s). Requires -bufsize to be set.
Set min video bitrate (in bit/s). Most useful in setting up a CBR encode:
ffmpeg -i myfile.avi -b 4000k -minrate 4000k -maxrate 4000k -bufsize 1835k out.m2v |
It is of little use elsewise.
Set video buffer verifier buffer size (in bits).
Force video codec to codec. Use the copy
special value to
tell that the raw codec data must be copied as is.
Use same video quality as source (implies VBR).
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 -vcodec libxvid -pass 1 -an -f rawvideo -y NUL ffmpeg -i foo.mov -vcodec 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.
Add a new video stream to the current output stream.
Set the ISO 639 language code (3 letters) of the current video stream.
filter_graph is a description of the filter graph to apply to the input video. Use the option "-filters" to show all the available filters (including also sources and sinks).
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Set pixel format. Use 'list' as parameter to show all the supported pixel formats.
Set SwScaler flags.
Set the group of pictures size.
Use only intra frames.
Discard threshold.
Use fixed video quantizer scale (VBR).
minimum video quantizer scale (VBR)
maximum video quantizer scale (VBR)
maximum difference between the quantizer scales (VBR)
video quantizer scale blur (VBR) (range 0.0 - 1.0)
video quantizer scale compression (VBR) (default 0.5). Constant of ratecontrol equation. Recommended range for default rc_eq: 0.0-1.0
minimum video lagrange factor (VBR)
max video lagrange factor (VBR)
minimum macroblock quantizer scale (VBR)
maximum macroblock quantizer scale (VBR)
These four options (lmin, lmax, mblmin, mblmax) use 'lambda' units, but you may use the QP2LAMBDA constant to easily convert from 'q' units:
ffmpeg -i src.ext -lmax 21*QP2LAMBDA dst.ext |
initial complexity for single pass encoding
qp factor between P- and B-frames
qp factor between P- and I-frames
qp offset between P- and B-frames
qp offset between P- and I-frames
Set rate control equation (see FFmpeg formula evaluator) (default = tex^qComp
).
rate control override for specific intervals
Set motion estimation method to method. Available methods are (from lowest to best quality):
Try just the (0, 0) vector.
(default method)
exhaustive search (slow and marginally better than epzs)
Set DCT algorithm to algo. Available values are:
FF_DCT_AUTO (default)
FF_DCT_FASTINT
FF_DCT_INT
FF_DCT_MMX
FF_DCT_MLIB
FF_DCT_ALTIVEC
Set IDCT algorithm to algo. Available values are:
FF_IDCT_AUTO (default)
FF_IDCT_INT
FF_IDCT_SIMPLE
FF_IDCT_SIMPLEMMX
FF_IDCT_LIBMPEG2MMX
FF_IDCT_PS2
FF_IDCT_MLIB
FF_IDCT_ARM
FF_IDCT_ALTIVEC
FF_IDCT_SH4
FF_IDCT_SIMPLEARM
Set error resilience to n.
FF_ER_CAREFUL (default)
FF_ER_COMPLIANT
FF_ER_AGGRESSIVE
FF_ER_VERY_AGGRESSIVE
Set error concealment to bit_mask. bit_mask is a bit mask of the following values:
FF_EC_GUESS_MVS (default = enabled)
FF_EC_DEBLOCK (default = enabled)
Use 'frames' B-frames (supported for MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and MPEG-4).
macroblock decision
FF_MB_DECISION_SIMPLE: Use mb_cmp (cannot change it yet in FFmpeg).
FF_MB_DECISION_BITS: Choose the one which needs the fewest bits.
FF_MB_DECISION_RD: rate distortion
Use four motion vector by macroblock (MPEG-4 only).
Use data partitioning (MPEG-4 only).
Work around encoder bugs that are not auto-detected.
How strictly to follow the standards.
Enable Advanced intra coding (h263+).
Enable Unlimited Motion Vector (h263+)
Deinterlace pictures.
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 with ‘-deinterlace’, but deinterlacing introduces losses.
Calculate PSNR of compressed frames.
Dump video coding statistics to ‘vstats_HHMMSS.log’.
Dump video coding statistics to file.
top=1/bottom=0/auto=-1 field first
Intra_dc_precision.
Force video tag/fourcc.
Show QP histogram.
Bitstream filters available are "dump_extra", "remove_extra", "noise", "h264_mp4toannexb", "imxdump", "mjpegadump".
ffmpeg -i h264.mp4 -vcodec copy -vbsf h264_mp4toannexb -an out.h264 |
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Set the number of audio frames to record.
Set the audio sampling frequency (default = 44100 Hz).
Set the audio bitrate in bit/s (default = 64k).
Set the audio quality (codec-specific, VBR).
Set the number of audio channels. For input streams it is set by default to 1, for output streams it is set by default to the same number of audio channels in input. If the input file has audio streams with different channel count, the behaviour is undefined.
Disable audio recording.
Force audio codec to codec. Use the copy
special value to
specify that the raw codec data must be copied as is.
Add a new audio track to the output file. If you want to specify parameters,
do so before -newaudio
(-acodec
, -ab
, etc..).
Mapping will be done automatically, if the number of output streams is equal to
the number of input streams, else it will pick the first one that matches. You
can override the mapping using -map
as usual.
Example:
ffmpeg -i file.mpg -vcodec copy -acodec ac3 -ab 384k test.mpg -acodec mp2 -ab 192k -newaudio |
Set the ISO 639 language code (3 letters) of the current audio stream.
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Force audio tag/fourcc.
Bitstream filters available are "dump_extra", "remove_extra", "noise", "mp3comp", "mp3decomp".
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Force subtitle codec ('copy' to copy stream).
Add a new subtitle stream to the current output stream.
Set the ISO 639 language code (3 letters) of the current subtitle stream.
Disable subtitle recording.
Bitstream filters available are "mov2textsub", "text2movsub".
ffmpeg -i file.mov -an -vn -sbsf mov2textsub -scodec copy -f rawvideo sub.txt |
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Set video grab channel (DV1394 only).
Set television standard (NTSC, PAL (SECAM)).
Synchronize read on input.
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Set stream mapping from input streams to output streams. Just enumerate the input streams in the order you want them in the output. sync_stream_id if specified sets the input stream to sync against.
Set meta data information of outfile from infile.
Print specific debug info.
Show benchmarking information at the end of an encode. Shows CPU time used and maximum memory consumption. Maximum memory consumption is not supported on all systems, it will usually display as 0 if not supported.
Dump each input packet.
When dumping packets, also dump the payload.
Only use bit exact algorithms (for codec testing).
Set RTP payload size in bytes.
Read input at native frame rate. Mainly used to simulate a grab device.
Loop over the input stream. Currently it works only for image streams. This option is used for automatic FFserver testing.
Repeatedly loop output for formats that support looping such as animated GIF (0 will loop the output infinitely).
Thread count.
Video sync method. 0 Each frame is passed with its timestamp from the demuxer to the muxer 1 Frames will be duplicated and dropped to achieve exactly the requested constant framerate. 2 Frames are passed through with their timestamp or dropped so as to prevent 2 frames from having the same timestamp -1 Chooses between 1 and 2 depending on muxer capabilities. This is the default method.
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.
Audio sync method. "Stretches/squeezes" the audio stream to match the timestamps, the parameter is the maximum samples per second by which the audio is changed. -async 1 is a special case where only the start of the audio stream is corrected without any later correction.
Copy timestamps from input to output.
Finish encoding when the shortest input stream ends.
Timestamp discontinuity delta threshold.
Set the maximum demux-decode delay.
Set the initial demux-decode delay.
Assign a new value to a stream's stream-id field in the next output file. All stream-id fields are reset to default for each output file.
For example, to set the stream 0 PID to 33 and the stream 1 PID to 36 for an output mpegts file:
ffmpeg -i infile -streamid 0:33 -streamid 1:36 out.ts |
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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 ‘ffpresets’ directory in the FFmpeg source tree for examples.
Preset 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’)
in that order. For example, if the argument is libx264-max
, it will
search for the file ‘libx264-max.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 libx264
and use -vpre max
,
then it will search for the file ‘libx264-max.ffpreset’.
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When evaluating a rate control string, FFmpeg uses an internal formula evaluator.
The following binary operators are available: +
, -
,
*
, /
, ^
.
The following unary operators are available: +
, -
,
(...)
.
The following statements are available: ld
, st
,
while
.
The following functions are available:
The following constants are available:
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ffmpeg -g 3 -r 3 -t 10 -b 50k -s qcif -f rv10 /tmp/b.rm |
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FFmpeg can grab video and audio from devices given that you specify the input format and device.
ffmpeg -f oss -i /dev/dsp -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 (http://linux.bytesex.org/xawtv/) by Gerd Knorr. You also have to set the audio recording levels correctly with a standard mixer.
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FFmpeg can grab the X11 display.
ffmpeg -f x11grab -s cif -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 -s cif -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.
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* FFmpeg can use any supported file format and protocol as input:
Examples:
* You can use YUV files as input:
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.
* You can input from a raw YUV420P file:
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.
* You can output to a raw YUV420P file:
ffmpeg -i mydivx.avi hugefile.yuv |
* You can set several input files and output files:
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.
* You can also do audio and video conversions at the same time:
ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav -ar 22050 /tmp/a.mp2 |
Converts a.wav to MPEG audio at 22050 Hz sample rate.
* You can encode to several formats at the same time and define a mapping from input stream to output streams:
ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav -ab 64k /tmp/a.mp2 -ab 128k /tmp/b.mp2 -map 0:0 -map 0:0 |
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.
* You can transcode decrypted VOBs:
ffmpeg -i snatch_1.vob -f avi -vcodec mpeg4 -b 800k -g 300 -bf 2 -acodec libmp3lame -ab 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 -formats
.
* You can extract images from a video, or create a video from many images:
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 -vframes 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 -i foo-%03d.jpeg -r 12 -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.
* You can put many streams of the same type in the output:
ffmpeg -i test1.avi -i test2.avi -vcodec copy -acodec copy -vcodec copy -acodec copy test12.avi -newvideo -newaudio |
In addition to the first video and audio streams, the resulting output file ‘test12.avi’ will contain the second video and the second audio stream found in the input streams list.
The -newvideo
, -newaudio
and -newsubtitle
options have to be specified immediately after the name of the output
file to which you want to add them.
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Input devices are configured elements in FFmpeg which allow to access the data coming from a multimedia device attached to your system.
When you configure your FFmpeg build, all the supported input devices are enabled by default. You can list all available ones using the configure option "–list-indevs".
You can disable all the input devices using the configure option "–disable-indevs", and selectively enable an input device using the option "–enable-indev=INDEV", or you can disable a particular input device using the option "–disable-indev=INDEV".
The option "-formats" of the ff* tools will display the list of supported input devices (amongst the demuxers).
A description of the currently available input devices follows.
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ALSA (Advanced Linux Sound Architecture) input device.
To enable this input device during configuration you need libasound installed on your system.
This device allows capturing from an ALSA device. The name of the device to capture has to be an ALSA card identifier.
An ALSA identifier has the syntax:
hw:CARD[,DEV[,SUBDEV]] |
where the DEV and SUBDEV components are optional.
The three arguments (in order: CARD,DEV,SUBDEV) specify card number or identifier, device number and subdevice number (-1 means any).
To see the list of cards currently recognized by your system check the files ‘/proc/asound/cards’ and ‘/proc/asound/devices’.
For example to capture with ‘ffmpeg’ from an ALSA device with card id 0, you may run the command:
ffmpeg -f alsa -i hw:0 alsaout.wav |
For more information see: http://www.alsa-project.org/alsa-doc/alsa-lib/pcm.html
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BSD video input device.
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Linux DV 1394 input device.
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JACK input device.
To enable this input device during configuration you need libjack installed on your system.
A JACK input device creates one or more JACK writable clients, one for each audio channel, with name client_name:input_N, where client_name is the name provided by the application, and N is a number which identifies the channel. Each writable client will send the acquired data to the FFmpeg input device.
Once you have created one or more JACK readable clients, you need to connect them to one or more JACK writable clients.
To connect or disconnect JACK clients you can use the ‘jack_connect’ and ‘jack_disconnect’ programs, or do it through a graphical interface, for example with ‘qjackctl’.
To list the JACK clients and their properties you can invoke the command ‘jack_lsp’.
Follows an example which shows how to capture a JACK readable client with ‘ffmpeg’.
# Create a JACK writable client with name "ffmpeg". $ ffmpeg -f jack -i ffmpeg -y out.wav # Start the sample jack_metro readable client. $ jack_metro -b 120 -d 0.2 -f 4000 # List the current JACK clients. $ jack_lsp -c system:capture_1 system:capture_2 system:playback_1 system:playback_2 ffmpeg:input_1 metro:120_bpm # Connect metro to the ffmpeg writable client. $ jack_connect metro:120_bpm ffmpeg:input_1 |
For more information read: http://jackaudio.org/
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IIDC1394 input device, based on libdc1394 and libraw1394.
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Open Sound System input device.
The filename to provide to the input device is the device node representing the OSS input device, and is usually set to ‘/dev/dsp’.
For example to grab from ‘/dev/dsp’ using ‘ffmpeg’ use the command:
ffmpeg -f oss -i /dev/dsp /tmp/oss.wav |
For more information about OSS see: http://manuals.opensound.com/usersguide/dsp.html
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Video4Linux and Video4Linux2 input video devices.
The name of the device to grab is a file device node, usually Linux systems tend to automatically create such nodes when the device (e.g. an USB webcam) is plugged into the system, and has a name of the kind ‘/dev/videoN’, where N is a number associated to the device.
Video4Linux and Video4Linux2 devices only support a limited set of widthxheight sizes and framerates. You can check which are supported for example with the command ‘dov4l’ for Video4Linux devices and the command ‘v4l-info’ for Video4Linux2 devices.
If the size for the device is set to 0x0, the input device will try to autodetect the size to use.
Video4Linux support is deprecated since Linux 2.6.30, and will be dropped in later versions.
Follow some usage examples of the video4linux devices with the ff* tools.
# Grab and show the input of a video4linux device. ffplay -s 320x240 -f video4linux /dev/video0 # Grab and show the input of a video4linux2 device, autoadjust size. ffplay -f video4linux2 /dev/video0 # Grab and record the input of a video4linux2 device, autoadjust size. ffmpeg -f video4linux2 -i /dev/video0 out.mpeg |
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VfW (Video for Windows) capture input device.
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X11 video input device.
This device allows to capture a region of an X11 display.
The filename passed as input has the syntax:
[hostname]:display_number.screen_number[+x_offset,y_offset] |
hostname:display_number.screen_number specifies the
X11 display name of the screen to grab from. hostname can be
ommitted, and defaults to "localhost". The environment variable
DISPLAY
contains the default display name.
x_offset and y_offset specify the offsets of the grabbed area with respect to the top-left border of the X11 screen. They default to 0.
Check the X11 documentation (e.g. man X) for more detailed information.
Use the ‘dpyinfo’ program for getting basic information about the properties of your X11 display (e.g. grep for "name" or "dimensions").
For example to grab from ‘:0.0’ using ‘ffmpeg’:
ffmpeg -f x11grab -r 25 -s cif -i :0.0 out.mpg # Grab at position 10,20. ffmpeg -f x11grab -25 -s cif -i :0.0+10,20 out.mpg |
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Output devices are configured elements in FFmpeg which allow to write multimedia data to an output device attached to your system.
When you configure your FFmpeg build, all the supported output devices are enabled by default. You can list all available ones using the configure option "–list-outdevs".
You can disable all the output devices using the configure option "–disable-outdevs", and selectively enable an output device using the option "–enable-outdev=OUTDEV", or you can disable a particular input device using the option "–disable-outdev=OUTDEV".
The option "-formats" of the ff* tools will display the list of enabled output devices (amongst the muxers).
A description of the currently available output devices follows.
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ALSA (Advanced Linux Sound Architecture) output device.
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OSS (Open Sound System) output device.
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Protocols are configured elements in FFmpeg which allow to access resources which require the use of a particular protocol.
When you configure your FFmpeg build, all the supported protocols are enabled by default. You can list all available ones using the configure option "–list-protocols".
You can disable all the protocols using the configure option "–disable-protocols", and selectively enable a protocol using the option "–enable-protocol=PROTOCOL", or you can disable a particular protocol using the option "–disable-protocol=PROTOCOL".
The option "-protocols" of the ff* tools will display the list of supported protocols.
A description of the currently available protocols follows.
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Physical concatenation protocol.
Allow to read and seek from many resource in sequence as if they were a unique resource.
A URL accepted by this protocol has the syntax:
concat:URL1|URL2|...|URLN |
where URL1, URL2, ..., URLN are the urls of the resource to be concatenated, each one possibly specifying a distinct protocol.
For example to read a sequence of files ‘split1.mpeg’, ‘split2.mpeg’, ‘split3.mpeg’ with ‘ffplay’ use the command:
ffplay concat:split1.mpeg\|split2.mpeg\|split3.mpeg |
Note that you may need to escape the character "|" which is special for many shells.
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File access protocol.
Allow to read from or read to a file.
For example to read from a file ‘input.mpeg’ with ‘ffmpeg’ use the command:
ffmpeg -i file:input.mpeg output.mpeg |
The ff* tools default to the file protocol, that is a resource specified with the name "FILE.mpeg" is interpreted as the URL "file:FILE.mpeg".
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Gopher protocol.
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HTTP (Hyper Text Transfer Protocol).
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MMS (Microsoft Media Server) protocol over TCP.
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MMS (Microsoft Media Server) protocol over HTTP.
The required syntax is:
mmsh://server[:port][/app][/playpath] |
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MD5 output protocol.
Computes the MD5 hash of the data to be written, and on close writes this to the designated output or stdout if none is specified. It can be used to test muxers without writing an actual file.
Some examples follow.
# Write the MD5 hash of the encoded AVI file to the file output.avi.md5. ffmpeg -i input.flv -f avi -y md5:output.avi.md5 # Write the MD5 hash of the encoded AVI file to stdout. ffmpeg -i input.flv -f avi -y md5: |
Note that some formats (typically MOV) require the output protocol to be seekable, so they will fail with the MD5 output protocol.
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UNIX pipe access protocol.
Allow to read and write from UNIX pipes.
The accepted syntax is:
pipe:[number] |
number is the number corresponding to the file descriptor of the pipe (e.g. 0 for stdin, 1 for stdout, 2 for stderr). If number is not specified, by default the stdout file descriptor will be used for writing, stdin for reading.
For example to read from stdin with ‘ffmpeg’:
cat test.wav | ffmpeg -i pipe:0 # ...this is the same as... cat test.wav | ffmpeg -i pipe: |
For writing to stdout with ‘ffmpeg’:
ffmpeg -i test.wav -f avi pipe:1 | cat > test.avi # ...this is the same as... ffmpeg -i test.wav -f avi pipe: | cat > test.avi |
Note that some formats (typically MOV), require the output protocol to be seekable, so they will fail with the pipe output protocol.
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Real-Time Messaging Protocol.
The Real-Time Messaging Protocol (RTMP) is used for streaming multimeā dia content across a TCP/IP network.
The required syntax is:
rtmp://server[:port][/app][/playpath] |
The accepted parameters are:
The address of the RTMP server.
The number of the TCP port to use (by default is 1935).
It is the name of the application to access. It usually corresponds to the path where the application is installed on the RTMP server (e.g. ‘/ondemand/’, ‘/flash/live/’, etc.).
It is the path or name of the resource to play with reference to the application specified in app, may be prefixed by "mp4:".
For example to read with ‘ffplay’ a multimedia resource named "sample" from the application "vod" from an RTMP server "myserver":
ffplay rtmp://myserver/vod/sample |
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Real-Time Messaging Protocol and its variants supported through librtmp.
Requires the presence of the librtmp headers and library during configuration. You need to explicitely configure the build with "–enable-librtmp". If enabled this will replace the native RTMP protocol.
This protocol provides most client functions and a few server functions needed to support RTMP, RTMP tunneled in HTTP (RTMPT), encrypted RTMP (RTMPE), RTMP over SSL/TLS (RTMPS) and tunneled variants of these encrypted types (RTMPTE, RTMPTS).
The required syntax is:
rtmp_proto://server[:port][/app][/playpath] options |
where rtmp_proto is one of the strings "rtmp", "rtmpt", "rtmpe", "rtmps", "rtmpte", "rtmpts" corresponding to each RTMP variant, and server, port, app and playpath have the same meaning as specified for the RTMP native protocol. options contains a list of space-separated options of the form key=val.
See the librtmp manual page (man 3 librtmp) for more information.
For example, to stream a file in real-time to an RTMP server using ‘ffmpeg’:
ffmpeg -re -i myfile -f flv rtmp://myserver/live/mystream |
To play the same stream using ‘ffplay’:
ffplay "rtmp://myserver/live/mystream live=1" |
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Real-Time Protocol.
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Trasmission Control Protocol.
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User Datagram Protocol.
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When you configure your FFmpeg build, you can disable any of the existing filters using –disable-filters. The configure output will show the audio filters included in your build.
Below is a description of the currently available audio filters.
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Pass the audio source unchanged to the output.
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When you configure your FFmpeg build, you can disable any of the existing filters using –disable-filters. The configure output will show the video filters included in your build.
Below is a description of the currently available video filters.
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Crop the input video to x:y:width:height.
./ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "crop=0:0:0:240" out.avi |
x and y specify the position of the top-left corner of the output (non-cropped) area.
The default value of x and y is 0.
The width and height parameters specify the width and height of the output (non-cropped) area.
A value of 0 is interpreted as the maximum possible size contained in the area delimited by the top-left corner at position x:y.
For example the parameters:
"crop=100:100:0:0" |
will delimit the rectangle with the top-left corner placed at position 100:100 and the right-bottom corner corresponding to the right-bottom corner of the input image.
The default value of width and height is 0.
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Buffer input images and send them when they are requested.
This filter is mainly useful when auto-inserted by the libavfilter framework.
The filter does not take parameters.
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Convert the input video to one of the specified pixel formats. Libavfilter will try to pick one that is supported for the input to the next filter.
The filter accepts a list of pixel format names, separated by “:”, for example “yuv420p:monow:rgb24”.
The following command:
./ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "format=yuv420p" out.avi |
will convert the input video to the format “yuv420p”.
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Flip the input video horizontally.
For example to horizontally flip the video in input with ‘ffmpeg’:
ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "hflip" out.avi |
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Force libavfilter not to use any of the specified pixel formats for the input to the next filter.
The filter accepts a list of pixel format names, separated by “:”, for example “yuv420p:monow:rgb24”.
The following command:
./ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "noformat=yuv420p, vflip" out.avi |
will make libavfilter use a format different from “yuv420p” for the input to the vflip filter.
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Pass the video source unchanged to the output.
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Add paddings to the input image, and places the original input at the given coordinates x, y.
It accepts the following parameters: width:height:x:y:color.
Follows the description of the accepted parameters.
Specify the size of the output image with the paddings added. If the value for width or height is 0, the corresponding input size is used for the output.
The default value of width and height is 0.
Specify the offsets where to place the input image in the padded area with respect to the top/left border of the output image.
The default value of x and y is 0.
Specify the color of the padded area, it can be the name of a color (case insensitive match) or a 0xRRGGBB[AA] sequence.
The default value of color is “black”.
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Pixel format descriptor test filter, mainly useful for internal testing. The output video should be equal to the input video.
For example:
format=monow, pixdesctest |
can be used to test the monowhite pixel format descriptor definition.
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Scale the input video to width:height and/or convert the image format.
For example the command:
./ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "scale=200:100" out.avi |
will scale the input video to a size of 200x100.
If the input image format is different from the format requested by the next filter, the scale filter will convert the input to the requested format.
If the value for width or height is 0, the respective input size is used for the output.
If the value for width or height is -1, the scale filter will use, for the respective output size, a value that maintains the aspect ratio of the input image.
The default value of width and height is 0.
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Pass the images of input video on to next video filter as multiple slices.
./ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "slicify=32" out.avi |
The filter accepts the slice height as parameter. If the parameter is not specified it will use the default value of 16.
Adding this in the beginning of filter chains should make filtering faster due to better use of the memory cache.
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Sharpen or blur the input video.
It accepts the following parameters: luma_msize_x:luma_msize_y:luma_amount:chroma_msize_x:chroma_msize_y:chroma_amount
Negative values for the amount will blur the input video, while positive values will sharpen. All parameters are optional and default to the equivalent of the string '5:5:1.0:0:0:0.0'.
Set the luma matrix horizontal size. It can be an integer between 3 and 13, default value is 5.
Set the luma matrix vertical size. It can be an integer between 3 and 13, default value is 5.
Set the luma effect strength. It can be a float number between -2.0 and 5.0, default value is 1.0.
Set the chroma matrix horizontal size. It can be an integer between 3 and 13, default value is 0.
Set the chroma matrix vertical size. It can be an integer between 3 and 13, default value is 0.
Set the chroma effect strength. It can be a float number between -2.0 and 5.0, default value is 0.0.
# Strong luma sharpen effect parameters
unsharp=7:7:2.5
# Strong blur of both luma and chroma parameters
unsharp=7:7:-2:7:7:-2
# Use the default values with |
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Flip the input video vertically.
./ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "vflip" out.avi |
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Below is a description of the currently available video sources.
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Buffer video frames, and make them available to the filter chain.
This source is mainly intended for a programmatic use, in particular through the interface defined in ‘libavfilter/vsrc_buffer.h’.
It accepts the following parameters: width:height:pix_fmt_string
All the parameters need to be explicitely defined.
Follows the list of the accepted parameters.
Specify the width and height of the buffered video frames.
A string representing the pixel format of the buffered video frames. It may be a number corresponding to a pixel format, or a pixel format name.
For example:
buffer=320:240:yuv410p |
will instruct the source to accept video frames with size 320x240 and with format "yuv410p". Since the pixel format with name "yuv410p" corresponds to the number 6 (check the enum PixelFormat definition in ‘libavutil/pixfmt.h’), this example corresponds to:
buffer=320:240:6 |
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Provide an uniformly colored input.
It accepts the following parameters: color:frame_size:frame_rate
Follows the description of the accepted parameters.
Specify the color of the source. It can be the name of a color (case insensitive match) or a 0xRRGGBB[AA] sequence, possibly followed by an alpha specifier. The default value is "black".
Specify the size of the sourced video, it may be a string of the form widthxheigth, or the name of a size abbreviation. The default value is "320x240".
Specify the frame rate of the sourced video, as the number of frames generated per second. It has to be a string in the format frame_rate_num/frame_rate_den, an integer number, a float number or a valid video frame rate abbreviation. The default value is "25".
For example the following graph description will generate a red source with an opacity of 0.2, with size "qcif" and a frame rate of 10 frames per second, which will be overlayed over the source connected to the pad with identifier "in".
"color=red@0.2:qcif:10 [color]; [in][color] overlay [out]" |
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Null video source, never return images. It is mainly useful as a template and to be employed in analysis / debugging tools.
It accepts as optional parameter a string of the form width:height, where width and height specify the size of the configured source.
The default values of width and height are respectively 352 and 288 (corresponding to the CIF size format).
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Below is a description of the currently available video sinks.
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Null video sink, do absolutely nothing with the input video. It is mainly useful as a template and to be employed in analysis / debugging tools.
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