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6124 lines
170 KiB
6124 lines
170 KiB
@chapter Filtering Introduction |
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@c man begin FILTERING INTRODUCTION |
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|
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Filtering in FFmpeg is enabled through the libavfilter library. |
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|
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In libavfilter, it is possible for filters to have multiple inputs and |
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multiple outputs. |
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To illustrate the sorts of things that are possible, we can |
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use a complex filter graph. For example, the following one: |
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@example |
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input --> split ---------------------> overlay --> output |
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| ^ |
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| | |
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+-----> crop --> vflip -------+ |
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@end example |
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splits the stream in two streams, sends one stream through the crop filter |
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and the vflip filter before merging it back with the other stream by |
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overlaying it on top. You can use the following command to achieve this: |
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@example |
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ffmpeg -i input -vf "[in] split [T1], [T2] overlay=0:H/2 [out]; [T1] crop=iw:ih/2:0:ih/2, vflip [T2]" output |
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@end example |
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The result will be that in output the top half of the video is mirrored |
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onto the bottom half. |
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Filters are loaded using the @var{-vf} or @var{-af} option passed to |
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@command{ffmpeg} or to @command{ffplay}. Filters in the same linear |
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chain are separated by commas. In our example, @var{split, |
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overlay} are in one linear chain, and @var{crop, vflip} are in |
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another. The points where the linear chains join are labeled by names |
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enclosed in square brackets. In our example, that is @var{[T1]} and |
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@var{[T2]}. The special labels @var{[in]} and @var{[out]} are the points |
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where video is input and output. |
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Some filters take in input a list of parameters: they are specified |
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after the filter name and an equal sign, and are separated from each other |
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by a colon. |
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There exist so-called @var{source filters} that do not have an |
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audio/video input, and @var{sink filters} that will not have audio/video |
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output. |
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@c man end FILTERING INTRODUCTION |
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@chapter graph2dot |
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@c man begin GRAPH2DOT |
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The @file{graph2dot} program included in the FFmpeg @file{tools} |
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directory can be used to parse a filter graph description and issue a |
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corresponding textual representation in the dot language. |
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Invoke the command: |
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@example |
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graph2dot -h |
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@end example |
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|
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to see how to use @file{graph2dot}. |
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You can then pass the dot description to the @file{dot} program (from |
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the graphviz suite of programs) and obtain a graphical representation |
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of the filter graph. |
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For example the sequence of commands: |
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@example |
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echo @var{GRAPH_DESCRIPTION} | \ |
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tools/graph2dot -o graph.tmp && \ |
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dot -Tpng graph.tmp -o graph.png && \ |
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display graph.png |
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@end example |
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|
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can be used to create and display an image representing the graph |
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described by the @var{GRAPH_DESCRIPTION} string. Note that this string must be |
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a complete self-contained graph, with its inputs and outputs explicitly defined. |
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For example if your command line is of the form: |
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@example |
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ffmpeg -i infile -vf scale=640:360 outfile |
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@end example |
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your @var{GRAPH_DESCRIPTION} string will need to be of the form: |
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@example |
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nullsrc,scale=640:360,nullsink |
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@end example |
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you may also need to set the @var{nullsrc} parameters and add a @var{format} |
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filter in order to simulate a specific input file. |
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@c man end GRAPH2DOT |
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@chapter Filtergraph description |
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@c man begin FILTERGRAPH DESCRIPTION |
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A filtergraph is a directed graph of connected filters. It can contain |
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cycles, and there can be multiple links between a pair of |
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filters. Each link has one input pad on one side connecting it to one |
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filter from which it takes its input, and one output pad on the other |
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side connecting it to the one filter accepting its output. |
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Each filter in a filtergraph is an instance of a filter class |
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registered in the application, which defines the features and the |
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number of input and output pads of the filter. |
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A filter with no input pads is called a "source", a filter with no |
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output pads is called a "sink". |
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@anchor{Filtergraph syntax} |
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@section Filtergraph syntax |
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A filtergraph can be represented using a textual representation, which is |
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recognized by the @option{-filter}/@option{-vf} and @option{-filter_complex} |
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options in @command{ffmpeg} and @option{-vf} in @command{ffplay}, and by the |
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@code{avfilter_graph_parse()}/@code{avfilter_graph_parse2()} function defined in |
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@file{libavfilter/avfiltergraph.h}. |
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A filterchain consists of a sequence of connected filters, each one |
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connected to the previous one in the sequence. A filterchain is |
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represented by a list of ","-separated filter descriptions. |
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|
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A filtergraph consists of a sequence of filterchains. A sequence of |
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filterchains is represented by a list of ";"-separated filterchain |
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descriptions. |
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A filter is represented by a string of the form: |
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[@var{in_link_1}]...[@var{in_link_N}]@var{filter_name}=@var{arguments}[@var{out_link_1}]...[@var{out_link_M}] |
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@var{filter_name} is the name of the filter class of which the |
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described filter is an instance of, and has to be the name of one of |
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the filter classes registered in the program. |
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The name of the filter class is optionally followed by a string |
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"=@var{arguments}". |
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@var{arguments} is a string which contains the parameters used to |
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initialize the filter instance, and are described in the filter |
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descriptions below. |
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The list of arguments can be quoted using the character "'" as initial |
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and ending mark, and the character '\' for escaping the characters |
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within the quoted text; otherwise the argument string is considered |
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terminated when the next special character (belonging to the set |
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"[]=;,") is encountered. |
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The name and arguments of the filter are optionally preceded and |
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followed by a list of link labels. |
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A link label allows to name a link and associate it to a filter output |
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or input pad. The preceding labels @var{in_link_1} |
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... @var{in_link_N}, are associated to the filter input pads, |
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the following labels @var{out_link_1} ... @var{out_link_M}, are |
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associated to the output pads. |
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When two link labels with the same name are found in the |
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filtergraph, a link between the corresponding input and output pad is |
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created. |
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If an output pad is not labelled, it is linked by default to the first |
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unlabelled input pad of the next filter in the filterchain. |
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For example in the filterchain: |
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@example |
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nullsrc, split[L1], [L2]overlay, nullsink |
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@end example |
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the split filter instance has two output pads, and the overlay filter |
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instance two input pads. The first output pad of split is labelled |
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"L1", the first input pad of overlay is labelled "L2", and the second |
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output pad of split is linked to the second input pad of overlay, |
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which are both unlabelled. |
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In a complete filterchain all the unlabelled filter input and output |
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pads must be connected. A filtergraph is considered valid if all the |
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filter input and output pads of all the filterchains are connected. |
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Libavfilter will automatically insert scale filters where format |
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conversion is required. It is possible to specify swscale flags |
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for those automatically inserted scalers by prepending |
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@code{sws_flags=@var{flags};} |
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to the filtergraph description. |
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Follows a BNF description for the filtergraph syntax: |
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@example |
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@var{NAME} ::= sequence of alphanumeric characters and '_' |
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@var{LINKLABEL} ::= "[" @var{NAME} "]" |
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@var{LINKLABELS} ::= @var{LINKLABEL} [@var{LINKLABELS}] |
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@var{FILTER_ARGUMENTS} ::= sequence of chars (eventually quoted) |
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@var{FILTER} ::= [@var{LINKNAMES}] @var{NAME} ["=" @var{ARGUMENTS}] [@var{LINKNAMES}] |
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@var{FILTERCHAIN} ::= @var{FILTER} [,@var{FILTERCHAIN}] |
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@var{FILTERGRAPH} ::= [sws_flags=@var{flags};] @var{FILTERCHAIN} [;@var{FILTERGRAPH}] |
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@end example |
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@section Notes on filtergraph escaping |
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|
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Some filter arguments require the use of special characters, typically |
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@code{:} to separate key=value pairs in a named options list. In this |
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case the user should perform a first level escaping when specifying |
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the filter arguments. For example, consider the following literal |
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string to be embedded in the @ref{drawtext} filter arguments: |
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@example |
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this is a 'string': may contain one, or more, special characters |
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@end example |
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Since @code{:} is special for the filter arguments syntax, it needs to |
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be escaped, so you get: |
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@example |
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text=this is a \'string\'\: may contain one, or more, special characters |
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@end example |
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A second level of escaping is required when embedding the filter |
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arguments in a filtergraph description, in order to escape all the |
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filtergraph special characters. Thus the example above becomes: |
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@example |
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drawtext=text=this is a \\\'string\\\'\\: may contain one\, or more\, special characters |
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@end example |
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Finally an additional level of escaping may be needed when writing the |
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filtergraph description in a shell command, which depends on the |
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escaping rules of the adopted shell. For example, assuming that |
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@code{\} is special and needs to be escaped with another @code{\}, the |
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previous string will finally result in: |
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@example |
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-vf "drawtext=text=this is a \\\\\\'string\\\\\\'\\\\: may contain one\\, or more\\, special characters" |
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@end example |
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Sometimes, it might be more convenient to employ quoting in place of |
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escaping. For example the string: |
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@example |
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Caesar: tu quoque, Brute, fili mi |
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@end example |
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Can be quoted in the filter arguments as: |
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@example |
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text='Caesar: tu quoque, Brute, fili mi' |
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@end example |
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And finally inserted in a filtergraph like: |
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@example |
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drawtext=text=\'Caesar: tu quoque\, Brute\, fili mi\' |
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@end example |
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See the ``Quoting and escaping'' section in the ffmpeg-utils manual |
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for more information about the escaping and quoting rules adopted by |
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FFmpeg. |
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@c man end FILTERGRAPH DESCRIPTION |
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@chapter Audio Filters |
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@c man begin AUDIO FILTERS |
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When you configure your FFmpeg build, you can disable any of the |
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existing filters using @code{--disable-filters}. |
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The configure output will show the audio filters included in your |
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build. |
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Below is a description of the currently available audio filters. |
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@section aconvert |
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Convert the input audio format to the specified formats. |
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The filter accepts a string of the form: |
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"@var{sample_format}:@var{channel_layout}". |
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@var{sample_format} specifies the sample format, and can be a string or the |
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corresponding numeric value defined in @file{libavutil/samplefmt.h}. Use 'p' |
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suffix for a planar sample format. |
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@var{channel_layout} specifies the channel layout, and can be a string |
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or the corresponding number value defined in @file{libavutil/channel_layout.h}. |
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The special parameter "auto", signifies that the filter will |
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automatically select the output format depending on the output filter. |
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Some examples follow. |
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@itemize |
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@item |
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Convert input to float, planar, stereo: |
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@example |
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aconvert=fltp:stereo |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Convert input to unsigned 8-bit, automatically select out channel layout: |
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@example |
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aconvert=u8:auto |
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@end example |
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@end itemize |
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@section allpass |
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Apply a two-pole all-pass filter with central frequency (in Hz) |
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@var{frequency}, and filter-width @var{width}. |
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An all-pass filter changes the audio's frequency to phase relationship |
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without changing its frequency to amplitude relationship. |
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
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pairs, separated by ":". |
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A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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@table @option |
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@item frequency, f |
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Set frequency in Hz. |
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@item width_type |
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Set method to specify band-width of filter. |
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@table @option |
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@item @var{h} (Hz) |
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@item @var{q} (Q-Factor) |
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@item @var{o} (octave) |
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@item @var{s} (slope) |
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@end table |
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@item width, w |
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Specify the band-width of a filter in width_type units. |
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@end table |
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@section highpass |
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Apply a high-pass filter with 3dB point frequency. |
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The filter can be either single-pole, or double-pole (the default). |
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The filter roll off at 6dB per pole per octave (20dB per pole per decade). |
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
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pairs, separated by ":". |
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A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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@table @option |
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@item frequency, f |
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Set frequency in Hz. Default is 3000. |
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@item poles, p |
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Set number of poles. Default is 2. |
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@item width_type |
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Set method to specify band-width of filter. |
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@table @option |
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@item @var{h} (Hz) |
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@item @var{q} (Q-Factor) |
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@item @var{o} (octave) |
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@item @var{s} (slope) |
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@end table |
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@item width, w |
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Specify the band-width of a filter in width_type units. |
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Applies only to double-pole filter. |
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The default is 0.707q and gives a Butterworth response. |
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@end table |
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@section lowpass |
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Apply a low-pass filter with 3dB point frequency. |
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The filter can be either single-pole or double-pole (the default). |
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The filter roll off at 6dB per pole per octave (20dB per pole per decade). |
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
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pairs, separated by ":". |
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A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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@table @option |
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@item frequency, f |
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Set frequency in Hz. Default is 500. |
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@item poles, p |
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Set number of poles. Default is 2. |
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@item width_type |
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Set method to specify band-width of filter. |
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@table @option |
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@item @var{h} (Hz) |
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@item @var{q} (Q-Factor) |
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@item @var{o} (octave) |
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@item @var{s} (slope) |
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@end table |
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@item width, w |
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Specify the band-width of a filter in width_type units. |
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Applies only to double-pole filter. |
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The default is 0.707q and gives a Butterworth response. |
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@end table |
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@section bass |
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Boost or cut the bass (lower) frequencies of the audio using a two-pole |
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shelving filter with a response similar to that of a standard |
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hi-fi's tone-controls. This is also known as shelving equalisation (EQ). |
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
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pairs, separated by ":". |
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A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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@table @option |
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@item gain, g |
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Give the gain at 0 Hz. Its useful range is about -20 |
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(for a large cut) to +20 (for a large boost). |
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Beware of clipping when using a positive gain. |
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@item frequency, f |
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Set the filter's central frequency and so can be used |
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to extend or reduce the frequency range to be boosted or cut. |
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The default value is @code{100} Hz. |
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@item width_type |
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Set method to specify band-width of filter. |
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@table @option |
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@item @var{h} (Hz) |
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@item @var{q} (Q-Factor) |
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@item @var{o} (octave) |
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@item @var{s} (slope) |
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@end table |
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@item width, w |
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Determine how steep is the filter's shelf transition. |
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@end table |
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@section treble |
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Boost or cut treble (upper) frequencies of the audio using a two-pole |
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shelving filter with a response similar to that of a standard |
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hi-fi's tone-controls. This is also known as shelving equalisation (EQ). |
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
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pairs, separated by ":". |
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A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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@table @option |
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@item gain, g |
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Give the gain at whichever is the lower of ~22 kHz and the |
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Nyquist frequency. Its useful range is about -20 (for a large cut) |
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to +20 (for a large boost). Beware of clipping when using a positive gain. |
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|
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@item frequency, f |
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Set the filter's central frequency and so can be used |
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to extend or reduce the frequency range to be boosted or cut. |
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The default value is @code{3000} Hz. |
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|
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@item width_type |
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Set method to specify band-width of filter. |
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@table @option |
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@item @var{h} (Hz) |
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@item @var{q} (Q-Factor) |
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@item @var{o} (octave) |
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@item @var{s} (slope) |
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@end table |
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@item width, w |
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Determine how steep is the filter's shelf transition. |
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@end table |
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@section bandpass |
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|
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Apply a two-pole Butterworth band-pass filter with central |
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frequency @var{frequency}, and (3dB-point) band-width width. |
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The @var{csg} option selects a constant skirt gain (peak gain = Q) |
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instead of the default: constant 0dB peak gain. |
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The filter roll off at 6dB per octave (20dB per decade). |
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|
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
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pairs, separated by ":". |
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A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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|
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@table @option |
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@item frequency, f |
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Set the filter's central frequency. Default is @code{3000}. |
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@item csg |
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Constant skirt gain if set to 1. Defaults to 0. |
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|
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@item width_type |
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Set method to specify band-width of filter. |
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@table @option |
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@item @var{h} (Hz) |
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@item @var{q} (Q-Factor) |
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@item @var{o} (octave) |
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@item @var{s} (slope) |
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@end table |
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|
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@item width, w |
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Specify the band-width of a filter in width_type units. |
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@end table |
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|
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@section bandreject |
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|
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Apply a two-pole Butterworth band-reject filter with central |
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frequency @var{frequency}, and (3dB-point) band-width @var{width}. |
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The filter roll off at 6dB per octave (20dB per decade). |
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|
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
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pairs, separated by ":". |
|
|
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A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
|
|
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@table @option |
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@item frequency, f |
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Set the filter's central frequency. Default is @code{3000}. |
|
|
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@item width_type |
|
Set method to specify band-width of filter. |
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@table @option |
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@item @var{h} (Hz) |
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@item @var{q} (Q-Factor) |
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@item @var{o} (octave) |
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@item @var{s} (slope) |
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@end table |
|
|
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@item width, w |
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Specify the band-width of a filter in width_type units. |
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@end table |
|
|
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@section biquad |
|
|
|
Apply a biquad IIR filter with the given coefficients. |
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Where @var{b0}, @var{b1}, @var{b2} and @var{a0}, @var{a1}, @var{a2} |
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are the numerator and denominator coefficients respectively. |
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|
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@section equalizer |
|
|
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Apply a two-pole peaking equalisation (EQ) filter. With this |
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filter, the signal-level at and around a selected frequency can |
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be increased or decreased, whilst (unlike bandpass and bandreject |
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filters) that at all other frequencies is unchanged. |
|
|
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In order to produce complex equalisation curves, this filter can |
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be given several times, each with a different central frequency. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
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pairs, separated by ":". |
|
|
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A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
|
|
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@table @option |
|
@item frequency, f |
|
Set the filter's central frequency in Hz. |
|
|
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@item width_type |
|
Set method to specify band-width of filter. |
|
@table @option |
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@item @var{h} (Hz) |
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@item @var{q} (Q-Factor) |
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@item @var{o} (octave) |
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@item @var{s} (slope) |
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@end table |
|
|
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@item width, w |
|
Specify the band-width of a filter in width_type units. |
|
|
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@item gain, g |
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Set the required gain or attenuation in dB. |
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Beware of clipping when using a positive gain. |
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@end table |
|
|
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@section afade |
|
|
|
Apply fade-in/out effect to input audio. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
|
pairs, separated by ":". |
|
|
|
A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item type, t |
|
Specify the effect type, can be either @code{in} for fade-in, or |
|
@code{out} for a fade-out effect. Default is @code{in}. |
|
|
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@item start_sample, ss |
|
Specify the number of the start sample for starting to apply the fade |
|
effect. Default is 0. |
|
|
|
@item nb_samples, ns |
|
Specify the number of samples for which the fade effect has to last. At |
|
the end of the fade-in effect the output audio will have the same |
|
volume as the input audio, at the end of the fade-out transition |
|
the output audio will be silence. Default is 44100. |
|
|
|
@item start_time, st |
|
Specify time in seconds for starting to apply the fade |
|
effect. Default is 0. |
|
If set this option is used instead of @var{start_sample} one. |
|
|
|
@item duration, d |
|
Specify the number of seconds for which the fade effect has to last. At |
|
the end of the fade-in effect the output audio will have the same |
|
volume as the input audio, at the end of the fade-out transition |
|
the output audio will be silence. Default is 0. |
|
If set this option is used instead of @var{nb_samples} one. |
|
|
|
@item curve |
|
Set cuve for fade transition. |
|
@table @option |
|
@item @var{tri} (triangular, linear slope (default)) |
|
@item @var{qsin} (quarter of sine wave) |
|
@item @var{hsin} (half of sine wave) |
|
@item @var{esin} (exponential sine wave) |
|
@item @var{log} (logarithmic) |
|
@item @var{par} (inverted parabola) |
|
@item @var{qua} (quadratic) |
|
@item @var{cub} (cubic) |
|
@item @var{squ} (square root) |
|
@item @var{cbr} (cubic root) |
|
@end table |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Fade in first 15 seconds of audio: |
|
@example |
|
afade=t=in:ss=0:d=15 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Fade out last 25 seconds of a 900 seconds audio: |
|
@example |
|
afade=t=out:ss=875:d=25 |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section aformat |
|
|
|
Set output format constraints for the input audio. The framework will |
|
negotiate the most appropriate format to minimize conversions. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item sample_fmts |
|
A comma-separated list of requested sample formats. |
|
|
|
@item sample_rates |
|
A comma-separated list of requested sample rates. |
|
|
|
@item channel_layouts |
|
A comma-separated list of requested channel layouts. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If a parameter is omitted, all values are allowed. |
|
|
|
For example to force the output to either unsigned 8-bit or signed 16-bit stereo: |
|
@example |
|
aformat='sample_fmts=u8,s16:channel_layouts=stereo' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section amerge |
|
|
|
Merge two or more audio streams into a single multi-channel stream. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named options: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item inputs |
|
Set the number of inputs. Default is 2. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If the channel layouts of the inputs are disjoint, and therefore compatible, |
|
the channel layout of the output will be set accordingly and the channels |
|
will be reordered as necessary. If the channel layouts of the inputs are not |
|
disjoint, the output will have all the channels of the first input then all |
|
the channels of the second input, in that order, and the channel layout of |
|
the output will be the default value corresponding to the total number of |
|
channels. |
|
|
|
For example, if the first input is in 2.1 (FL+FR+LF) and the second input |
|
is FC+BL+BR, then the output will be in 5.1, with the channels in the |
|
following order: a1, a2, b1, a3, b2, b3 (a1 is the first channel of the |
|
first input, b1 is the first channel of the second input). |
|
|
|
On the other hand, if both input are in stereo, the output channels will be |
|
in the default order: a1, a2, b1, b2, and the channel layout will be |
|
arbitrarily set to 4.0, which may or may not be the expected value. |
|
|
|
All inputs must have the same sample rate, and format. |
|
|
|
If inputs do not have the same duration, the output will stop with the |
|
shortest. |
|
|
|
Example: merge two mono files into a stereo stream: |
|
@example |
|
amovie=left.wav [l] ; amovie=right.mp3 [r] ; [l] [r] amerge |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Example: multiple merges: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i " |
|
amovie=input.mkv:si=0 [a0]; |
|
amovie=input.mkv:si=1 [a1]; |
|
amovie=input.mkv:si=2 [a2]; |
|
amovie=input.mkv:si=3 [a3]; |
|
amovie=input.mkv:si=4 [a4]; |
|
amovie=input.mkv:si=5 [a5]; |
|
[a0][a1][a2][a3][a4][a5] amerge=inputs=6" -c:a pcm_s16le output.mkv |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section amix |
|
|
|
Mixes multiple audio inputs into a single output. |
|
|
|
For example |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i INPUT1 -i INPUT2 -i INPUT3 -filter_complex amix=inputs=3:duration=first:dropout_transition=3 OUTPUT |
|
@end example |
|
will mix 3 input audio streams to a single output with the same duration as the |
|
first input and a dropout transition time of 3 seconds. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item inputs |
|
Number of inputs. If unspecified, it defaults to 2. |
|
|
|
@item duration |
|
How to determine the end-of-stream. |
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item longest |
|
Duration of longest input. (default) |
|
|
|
@item shortest |
|
Duration of shortest input. |
|
|
|
@item first |
|
Duration of first input. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item dropout_transition |
|
Transition time, in seconds, for volume renormalization when an input |
|
stream ends. The default value is 2 seconds. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section anull |
|
|
|
Pass the audio source unchanged to the output. |
|
|
|
@section apad |
|
|
|
Pad the end of a audio stream with silence, this can be used together with |
|
-shortest to extend audio streams to the same length as the video stream. |
|
|
|
@anchor{aresample} |
|
@section aresample |
|
|
|
Resample the input audio to the specified parameters, using the |
|
libswresample library. If none are specified then the filter will |
|
automatically convert between its input and output. |
|
|
|
This filter is also able to stretch/squeeze the audio data to make it match |
|
the timestamps or to inject silence / cut out audio to make it match the |
|
timestamps, do a combination of both or do neither. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the syntax |
|
[@var{sample_rate}:]@var{resampler_options}, where @var{sample_rate} |
|
expresses a sample rate and @var{resampler_options} is a list of |
|
@var{key}=@var{value} pairs, separated by ":". See the |
|
ffmpeg-resampler manual for the complete list of supported options. |
|
|
|
For example, to resample the input audio to 44100Hz: |
|
@example |
|
aresample=44100 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
To stretch/squeeze samples to the given timestamps, with a maximum of 1000 |
|
samples per second compensation: |
|
@example |
|
aresample=async=1000 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section asetnsamples |
|
|
|
Set the number of samples per each output audio frame. |
|
|
|
The last output packet may contain a different number of samples, as |
|
the filter will flush all the remaining samples when the input audio |
|
signal its end. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
|
separated by ":". |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item nb_out_samples, n |
|
Set the number of frames per each output audio frame. The number is |
|
intended as the number of samples @emph{per each channel}. |
|
Default value is 1024. |
|
|
|
@item pad, p |
|
If set to 1, the filter will pad the last audio frame with zeroes, so |
|
that the last frame will contain the same number of samples as the |
|
previous ones. Default value is 1. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For example, to set the number of per-frame samples to 1234 and |
|
disable padding for the last frame, use: |
|
@example |
|
asetnsamples=n=1234:p=0 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section ashowinfo |
|
|
|
Show a line containing various information for each input audio frame. |
|
The input audio is not modified. |
|
|
|
The shown line contains a sequence of key/value pairs of the form |
|
@var{key}:@var{value}. |
|
|
|
A description of each shown parameter follows: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item n |
|
sequential number of the input frame, starting from 0 |
|
|
|
@item pts |
|
Presentation timestamp of the input frame, in time base units; the time base |
|
depends on the filter input pad, and is usually 1/@var{sample_rate}. |
|
|
|
@item pts_time |
|
presentation timestamp of the input frame in seconds |
|
|
|
@item pos |
|
position of the frame in the input stream, -1 if this information in |
|
unavailable and/or meaningless (for example in case of synthetic audio) |
|
|
|
@item fmt |
|
sample format |
|
|
|
@item chlayout |
|
channel layout |
|
|
|
@item rate |
|
sample rate for the audio frame |
|
|
|
@item nb_samples |
|
number of samples (per channel) in the frame |
|
|
|
@item checksum |
|
Adler-32 checksum (printed in hexadecimal) of the audio data. For planar audio |
|
the data is treated as if all the planes were concatenated. |
|
|
|
@item plane_checksums |
|
A list of Adler-32 checksums for each data plane. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section asplit |
|
|
|
Split input audio into several identical outputs. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts a single parameter which specifies the number of outputs. If |
|
unspecified, it defaults to 2. |
|
|
|
For example: |
|
@example |
|
[in] asplit [out0][out1] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
will create two separate outputs from the same input. |
|
|
|
To create 3 or more outputs, you need to specify the number of |
|
outputs, like in: |
|
@example |
|
[in] asplit=3 [out0][out1][out2] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i INPUT -filter_complex asplit=5 OUTPUT |
|
@end example |
|
will create 5 copies of the input audio. |
|
|
|
|
|
@section astreamsync |
|
|
|
Forward two audio streams and control the order the buffers are forwarded. |
|
|
|
The argument to the filter is an expression deciding which stream should be |
|
forwarded next: if the result is negative, the first stream is forwarded; if |
|
the result is positive or zero, the second stream is forwarded. It can use |
|
the following variables: |
|
|
|
@table @var |
|
@item b1 b2 |
|
number of buffers forwarded so far on each stream |
|
@item s1 s2 |
|
number of samples forwarded so far on each stream |
|
@item t1 t2 |
|
current timestamp of each stream |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The default value is @code{t1-t2}, which means to always forward the stream |
|
that has a smaller timestamp. |
|
|
|
Example: stress-test @code{amerge} by randomly sending buffers on the wrong |
|
input, while avoiding too much of a desynchronization: |
|
@example |
|
amovie=file.ogg [a] ; amovie=file.mp3 [b] ; |
|
[a] [b] astreamsync=(2*random(1))-1+tanh(5*(t1-t2)) [a2] [b2] ; |
|
[a2] [b2] amerge |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section atempo |
|
|
|
Adjust audio tempo. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts exactly one parameter, the audio tempo. If not |
|
specified then the filter will assume nominal 1.0 tempo. Tempo must |
|
be in the [0.5, 2.0] range. |
|
|
|
For example, to slow down audio to 80% tempo: |
|
@example |
|
atempo=0.8 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
For example, to speed up audio to 125% tempo: |
|
@example |
|
atempo=1.25 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section earwax |
|
|
|
Make audio easier to listen to on headphones. |
|
|
|
This filter adds `cues' to 44.1kHz stereo (i.e. audio CD format) audio |
|
so that when listened to on headphones the stereo image is moved from |
|
inside your head (standard for headphones) to outside and in front of |
|
the listener (standard for speakers). |
|
|
|
Ported from SoX. |
|
|
|
@section pan |
|
|
|
Mix channels with specific gain levels. The filter accepts the output |
|
channel layout followed by a set of channels definitions. |
|
|
|
This filter is also designed to remap efficiently the channels of an audio |
|
stream. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts parameters of the form: |
|
"@var{l}:@var{outdef}:@var{outdef}:..." |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item l |
|
output channel layout or number of channels |
|
|
|
@item outdef |
|
output channel specification, of the form: |
|
"@var{out_name}=[@var{gain}*]@var{in_name}[+[@var{gain}*]@var{in_name}...]" |
|
|
|
@item out_name |
|
output channel to define, either a channel name (FL, FR, etc.) or a channel |
|
number (c0, c1, etc.) |
|
|
|
@item gain |
|
multiplicative coefficient for the channel, 1 leaving the volume unchanged |
|
|
|
@item in_name |
|
input channel to use, see out_name for details; it is not possible to mix |
|
named and numbered input channels |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If the `=' in a channel specification is replaced by `<', then the gains for |
|
that specification will be renormalized so that the total is 1, thus |
|
avoiding clipping noise. |
|
|
|
@subsection Mixing examples |
|
|
|
For example, if you want to down-mix from stereo to mono, but with a bigger |
|
factor for the left channel: |
|
@example |
|
pan=1:c0=0.9*c0+0.1*c1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
A customized down-mix to stereo that works automatically for 3-, 4-, 5- and |
|
7-channels surround: |
|
@example |
|
pan=stereo: FL < FL + 0.5*FC + 0.6*BL + 0.6*SL : FR < FR + 0.5*FC + 0.6*BR + 0.6*SR |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Note that @command{ffmpeg} integrates a default down-mix (and up-mix) system |
|
that should be preferred (see "-ac" option) unless you have very specific |
|
needs. |
|
|
|
@subsection Remapping examples |
|
|
|
The channel remapping will be effective if, and only if: |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item gain coefficients are zeroes or ones, |
|
@item only one input per channel output, |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
If all these conditions are satisfied, the filter will notify the user ("Pure |
|
channel mapping detected"), and use an optimized and lossless method to do the |
|
remapping. |
|
|
|
For example, if you have a 5.1 source and want a stereo audio stream by |
|
dropping the extra channels: |
|
@example |
|
pan="stereo: c0=FL : c1=FR" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Given the same source, you can also switch front left and front right channels |
|
and keep the input channel layout: |
|
@example |
|
pan="5.1: c0=c1 : c1=c0 : c2=c2 : c3=c3 : c4=c4 : c5=c5" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
If the input is a stereo audio stream, you can mute the front left channel (and |
|
still keep the stereo channel layout) with: |
|
@example |
|
pan="stereo:c1=c1" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Still with a stereo audio stream input, you can copy the right channel in both |
|
front left and right: |
|
@example |
|
pan="stereo: c0=FR : c1=FR" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section silencedetect |
|
|
|
Detect silence in an audio stream. |
|
|
|
This filter logs a message when it detects that the input audio volume is less |
|
or equal to a noise tolerance value for a duration greater or equal to the |
|
minimum detected noise duration. |
|
|
|
The printed times and duration are expressed in seconds. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item duration, d |
|
Set silence duration until notification (default is 2 seconds). |
|
|
|
@item noise, n |
|
Set noise tolerance. Can be specified in dB (in case "dB" is appended to the |
|
specified value) or amplitude ratio. Default is -60dB, or 0.001. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Detect 5 seconds of silence with -50dB noise tolerance: |
|
@example |
|
silencedetect=n=-50dB:d=5 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Complete example with @command{ffmpeg} to detect silence with 0.0001 noise |
|
tolerance in @file{silence.mp3}: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i amovie=silence.mp3,silencedetect=noise=0.0001 -f null - |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section asyncts |
|
Synchronize audio data with timestamps by squeezing/stretching it and/or |
|
dropping samples/adding silence when needed. |
|
|
|
This filter is not built by default, please use @ref{aresample} to do squeezing/stretching. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item compensate |
|
Enable stretching/squeezing the data to make it match the timestamps. Disabled |
|
by default. When disabled, time gaps are covered with silence. |
|
|
|
@item min_delta |
|
Minimum difference between timestamps and audio data (in seconds) to trigger |
|
adding/dropping samples. Default value is 0.1. If you get non-perfect sync with |
|
this filter, try setting this parameter to 0. |
|
|
|
@item max_comp |
|
Maximum compensation in samples per second. Relevant only with compensate=1. |
|
Default value 500. |
|
|
|
@item first_pts |
|
Assume the first pts should be this value. The time base is 1 / sample rate. |
|
This allows for padding/trimming at the start of stream. By default, no |
|
assumption is made about the first frame's expected pts, so no padding or |
|
trimming is done. For example, this could be set to 0 to pad the beginning with |
|
silence if an audio stream starts after the video stream or to trim any samples |
|
with a negative pts due to encoder delay. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section channelsplit |
|
Split each channel in input audio stream into a separate output stream. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item channel_layout |
|
Channel layout of the input stream. Default is "stereo". |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For example, assuming a stereo input MP3 file |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i in.mp3 -filter_complex channelsplit out.mkv |
|
@end example |
|
will create an output Matroska file with two audio streams, one containing only |
|
the left channel and the other the right channel. |
|
|
|
To split a 5.1 WAV file into per-channel files |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i in.wav -filter_complex |
|
'channelsplit=channel_layout=5.1[FL][FR][FC][LFE][SL][SR]' |
|
-map '[FL]' front_left.wav -map '[FR]' front_right.wav -map '[FC]' |
|
front_center.wav -map '[LFE]' lfe.wav -map '[SL]' side_left.wav -map '[SR]' |
|
side_right.wav |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section channelmap |
|
Remap input channels to new locations. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item channel_layout |
|
Channel layout of the output stream. |
|
|
|
@item map |
|
Map channels from input to output. The argument is a comma-separated list of |
|
mappings, each in the @code{@var{in_channel}-@var{out_channel}} or |
|
@var{in_channel} form. @var{in_channel} can be either the name of the input |
|
channel (e.g. FL for front left) or its index in the input channel layout. |
|
@var{out_channel} is the name of the output channel or its index in the output |
|
channel layout. If @var{out_channel} is not given then it is implicitly an |
|
index, starting with zero and increasing by one for each mapping. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If no mapping is present, the filter will implicitly map input channels to |
|
output channels preserving index. |
|
|
|
For example, assuming a 5.1+downmix input MOV file |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i in.mov -filter 'channelmap=map=DL-FL\,DR-FR' out.wav |
|
@end example |
|
will create an output WAV file tagged as stereo from the downmix channels of |
|
the input. |
|
|
|
To fix a 5.1 WAV improperly encoded in AAC's native channel order |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i in.wav -filter 'channelmap=1\,2\,0\,5\,3\,4:channel_layout=5.1' out.wav |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section join |
|
Join multiple input streams into one multi-channel stream. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item inputs |
|
Number of input streams. Defaults to 2. |
|
|
|
@item channel_layout |
|
Desired output channel layout. Defaults to stereo. |
|
|
|
@item map |
|
Map channels from inputs to output. The argument is a comma-separated list of |
|
mappings, each in the @code{@var{input_idx}.@var{in_channel}-@var{out_channel}} |
|
form. @var{input_idx} is the 0-based index of the input stream. @var{in_channel} |
|
can be either the name of the input channel (e.g. FL for front left) or its |
|
index in the specified input stream. @var{out_channel} is the name of the output |
|
channel. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The filter will attempt to guess the mappings when those are not specified |
|
explicitly. It does so by first trying to find an unused matching input channel |
|
and if that fails it picks the first unused input channel. |
|
|
|
E.g. to join 3 inputs (with properly set channel layouts) |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i INPUT1 -i INPUT2 -i INPUT3 -filter_complex join=inputs=3 OUTPUT |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
To build a 5.1 output from 6 single-channel streams: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i fl -i fr -i fc -i sl -i sr -i lfe -filter_complex |
|
'join=inputs=6:channel_layout=5.1:map=0.0-FL\,1.0-FR\,2.0-FC\,3.0-SL\,4.0-SR\,5.0-LFE' |
|
out |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section resample |
|
Convert the audio sample format, sample rate and channel layout. This filter is |
|
not meant to be used directly. |
|
|
|
@section volume |
|
|
|
Adjust the input audio volume. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters. If the key of the |
|
first options is omitted, the arguments are interpreted according to |
|
the following syntax: |
|
@example |
|
volume=@var{volume}:@var{precision} |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item volume |
|
Expresses how the audio volume will be increased or decreased. |
|
|
|
Output values are clipped to the maximum value. |
|
|
|
The output audio volume is given by the relation: |
|
@example |
|
@var{output_volume} = @var{volume} * @var{input_volume} |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Default value for @var{volume} is 1.0. |
|
|
|
@item precision |
|
Set the mathematical precision. |
|
|
|
This determines which input sample formats will be allowed, which affects the |
|
precision of the volume scaling. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item fixed |
|
8-bit fixed-point; limits input sample format to U8, S16, and S32. |
|
@item float |
|
32-bit floating-point; limits input sample format to FLT. (default) |
|
@item double |
|
64-bit floating-point; limits input sample format to DBL. |
|
@end table |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Halve the input audio volume: |
|
@example |
|
volume=volume=0.5 |
|
volume=volume=1/2 |
|
volume=volume=-6.0206dB |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
In all the above example the named key for @option{volume} can be |
|
omitted, for example like in: |
|
@example |
|
volume=0.5 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Increase input audio power by 6 decibels using fixed-point precision: |
|
@example |
|
volume=volume=6dB:precision=fixed |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section volumedetect |
|
|
|
Detect the volume of the input video. |
|
|
|
The filter has no parameters. The input is not modified. Statistics about |
|
the volume will be printed in the log when the input stream end is reached. |
|
|
|
In particular it will show the mean volume (root mean square), maximum |
|
volume (on a per-sample basis), and the beginning of an histogram of the |
|
registered volume values (from the maximum value to a cumulated 1/1000 of |
|
the samples). |
|
|
|
All volumes are in decibels relative to the maximum PCM value. |
|
|
|
Here is an excerpt of the output: |
|
@example |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] mean_volume: -27 dB |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] max_volume: -4 dB |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] histogram_4db: 6 |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] histogram_5db: 62 |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] histogram_6db: 286 |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] histogram_7db: 1042 |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] histogram_8db: 2551 |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] histogram_9db: 4609 |
|
[Parsed_volumedetect_0 @ 0xa23120] histogram_10db: 8409 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
It means that: |
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
The mean square energy is approximately -27 dB, or 10^-2.7. |
|
@item |
|
The largest sample is at -4 dB, or more precisely between -4 dB and -5 dB. |
|
@item |
|
There are 6 samples at -4 dB, 62 at -5 dB, 286 at -6 dB, etc. |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
In other words, raising the volume by +4 dB does not cause any clipping, |
|
raising it by +5 dB causes clipping for 6 samples, etc. |
|
|
|
@c man end AUDIO FILTERS |
|
|
|
@chapter Audio Sources |
|
@c man begin AUDIO SOURCES |
|
|
|
Below is a description of the currently available audio sources. |
|
|
|
@section abuffer |
|
|
|
Buffer audio 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 @file{libavfilter/asrc_abuffer.h}. |
|
|
|
It accepts the following mandatory parameters: |
|
@var{sample_rate}:@var{sample_fmt}:@var{channel_layout} |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item sample_rate |
|
The sample rate of the incoming audio buffers. |
|
|
|
@item sample_fmt |
|
The sample format of the incoming audio buffers. |
|
Either a sample format name or its corresponging integer representation from |
|
the enum AVSampleFormat in @file{libavutil/samplefmt.h} |
|
|
|
@item channel_layout |
|
The channel layout of the incoming audio buffers. |
|
Either a channel layout name from channel_layout_map in |
|
@file{libavutil/channel_layout.c} or its corresponding integer representation |
|
from the AV_CH_LAYOUT_* macros in @file{libavutil/channel_layout.h} |
|
|
|
@item channels |
|
The number of channels of the incoming audio buffers. |
|
If both @var{channels} and @var{channel_layout} are specified, then they |
|
must be consistent. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For example: |
|
@example |
|
abuffer=44100:s16p:stereo |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
will instruct the source to accept planar 16bit signed stereo at 44100Hz. |
|
Since the sample format with name "s16p" corresponds to the number |
|
6 and the "stereo" channel layout corresponds to the value 0x3, this is |
|
equivalent to: |
|
@example |
|
abuffer=44100:6:0x3 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section aevalsrc |
|
|
|
Generate an audio signal specified by an expression. |
|
|
|
This source accepts in input one or more expressions (one for each |
|
channel), which are evaluated and used to generate a corresponding |
|
audio signal. |
|
|
|
It accepts the syntax: @var{exprs}[::@var{options}]. |
|
@var{exprs} is a list of expressions separated by ":", one for each |
|
separate channel. In case the @var{channel_layout} is not |
|
specified, the selected channel layout depends on the number of |
|
provided expressions. |
|
|
|
@var{options} is an optional sequence of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
|
separated by ":". |
|
|
|
The description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item channel_layout, c |
|
Set the channel layout. The number of channels in the specified layout |
|
must be equal to the number of specified expressions. |
|
|
|
@item duration, d |
|
Set the minimum duration of the sourced audio. See the function |
|
@code{av_parse_time()} for the accepted format. |
|
Note that the resulting duration may be greater than the specified |
|
duration, as the generated audio is always cut at the end of a |
|
complete frame. |
|
|
|
If not specified, or the expressed duration is negative, the audio is |
|
supposed to be generated forever. |
|
|
|
@item nb_samples, n |
|
Set the number of samples per channel per each output frame, |
|
default to 1024. |
|
|
|
@item sample_rate, s |
|
Specify the sample rate, default to 44100. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Each expression in @var{exprs} can contain the following constants: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item n |
|
number of the evaluated sample, starting from 0 |
|
|
|
@item t |
|
time of the evaluated sample expressed in seconds, starting from 0 |
|
|
|
@item s |
|
sample rate |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate silence: |
|
@example |
|
aevalsrc=0 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
|
|
Generate a sin signal with frequency of 440 Hz, set sample rate to |
|
8000 Hz: |
|
@example |
|
aevalsrc="sin(440*2*PI*t)::s=8000" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate a two channels signal, specify the channel layout (Front |
|
Center + Back Center) explicitly: |
|
@example |
|
aevalsrc="sin(420*2*PI*t):cos(430*2*PI*t)::c=FC|BC" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate white noise: |
|
@example |
|
aevalsrc="-2+random(0)" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate an amplitude modulated signal: |
|
@example |
|
aevalsrc="sin(10*2*PI*t)*sin(880*2*PI*t)" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate 2.5 Hz binaural beats on a 360 Hz carrier: |
|
@example |
|
aevalsrc="0.1*sin(2*PI*(360-2.5/2)*t) : 0.1*sin(2*PI*(360+2.5/2)*t)" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section anullsrc |
|
|
|
Null audio source, return unprocessed audio frames. It is mainly useful |
|
as a template and to be employed in analysis / debugging tools, or as |
|
the source for filters which ignore the input data (for example the sox |
|
synth filter). |
|
|
|
It accepts an optional sequence of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
|
separated by ":". |
|
|
|
The description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item sample_rate, s |
|
Specify the sample rate, and defaults to 44100. |
|
|
|
@item channel_layout, cl |
|
|
|
Specify the channel layout, and can be either an integer or a string |
|
representing a channel layout. The default value of @var{channel_layout} |
|
is "stereo". |
|
|
|
Check the channel_layout_map definition in |
|
@file{libavutil/channel_layout.c} for the mapping between strings and |
|
channel layout values. |
|
|
|
@item nb_samples, n |
|
Set the number of samples per requested frames. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Follow some examples: |
|
@example |
|
# set the sample rate to 48000 Hz and the channel layout to AV_CH_LAYOUT_MONO. |
|
anullsrc=r=48000:cl=4 |
|
|
|
# same as |
|
anullsrc=r=48000:cl=mono |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section abuffer |
|
Buffer audio frames, and make them available to the filter chain. |
|
|
|
This source is not intended to be part of user-supplied graph descriptions but |
|
for insertion by calling programs through the interface defined in |
|
@file{libavfilter/buffersrc.h}. |
|
|
|
It accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item time_base |
|
Timebase which will be used for timestamps of submitted frames. It must be |
|
either a floating-point number or in @var{numerator}/@var{denominator} form. |
|
|
|
@item sample_rate |
|
Audio sample rate. |
|
|
|
@item sample_fmt |
|
Name of the sample format, as returned by @code{av_get_sample_fmt_name()}. |
|
|
|
@item channel_layout |
|
Channel layout of the audio data, in the form that can be accepted by |
|
@code{av_get_channel_layout()}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
All the parameters need to be explicitly defined. |
|
|
|
@section flite |
|
|
|
Synthesize a voice utterance using the libflite library. |
|
|
|
To enable compilation of this filter you need to configure FFmpeg with |
|
@code{--enable-libflite}. |
|
|
|
Note that the flite library is not thread-safe. |
|
|
|
The source accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
|
separated by ":". |
|
|
|
The description of the accepted parameters follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item list_voices |
|
If set to 1, list the names of the available voices and exit |
|
immediately. Default value is 0. |
|
|
|
@item nb_samples, n |
|
Set the maximum number of samples per frame. Default value is 512. |
|
|
|
@item textfile |
|
Set the filename containing the text to speak. |
|
|
|
@item text |
|
Set the text to speak. |
|
|
|
@item voice, v |
|
Set the voice to use for the speech synthesis. Default value is |
|
@code{kal}. See also the @var{list_voices} option. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Read from file @file{speech.txt}, and synthetize the text using the |
|
standard flite voice: |
|
@example |
|
flite=textfile=speech.txt |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Read the specified text selecting the @code{slt} voice: |
|
@example |
|
flite=text='So fare thee well, poor devil of a Sub-Sub, whose commentator I am':voice=slt |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Input text to ffmpeg: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i flite=text='So fare thee well, poor devil of a Sub-Sub, whose commentator I am':voice=slt |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Make @file{ffplay} speak the specified text, using @code{flite} and |
|
the @code{lavfi} device: |
|
@example |
|
ffplay -f lavfi flite=text='No more be grieved for which that thou hast done.' |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
For more information about libflite, check: |
|
@url{http://www.speech.cs.cmu.edu/flite/} |
|
|
|
@c man end AUDIO SOURCES |
|
|
|
@chapter Audio Sinks |
|
@c man begin AUDIO SINKS |
|
|
|
Below is a description of the currently available audio sinks. |
|
|
|
@section abuffersink |
|
|
|
Buffer audio frames, and make them available to the end of filter chain. |
|
|
|
This sink is mainly intended for programmatic use, in particular |
|
through the interface defined in @file{libavfilter/buffersink.h}. |
|
|
|
It requires a pointer to an AVABufferSinkContext structure, which |
|
defines the incoming buffers' formats, to be passed as the opaque |
|
parameter to @code{avfilter_init_filter} for initialization. |
|
|
|
@section anullsink |
|
|
|
Null audio sink, do absolutely nothing with the input audio. It is |
|
mainly useful as a template and to be employed in analysis / debugging |
|
tools. |
|
|
|
@section abuffersink |
|
This sink is intended for programmatic use. Frames that arrive on this sink can |
|
be retrieved by the calling program using the interface defined in |
|
@file{libavfilter/buffersink.h}. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts no parameters. |
|
|
|
@c man end AUDIO SINKS |
|
|
|
@chapter Video Filters |
|
@c man begin VIDEO FILTERS |
|
|
|
When you configure your FFmpeg build, you can disable any of the |
|
existing filters using @code{--disable-filters}. |
|
The configure output will show the video filters included in your |
|
build. |
|
|
|
Below is a description of the currently available video filters. |
|
|
|
@section alphaextract |
|
|
|
Extract the alpha component from the input as a grayscale video. This |
|
is especially useful with the @var{alphamerge} filter. |
|
|
|
@section alphamerge |
|
|
|
Add or replace the alpha component of the primary input with the |
|
grayscale value of a second input. This is intended for use with |
|
@var{alphaextract} to allow the transmission or storage of frame |
|
sequences that have alpha in a format that doesn't support an alpha |
|
channel. |
|
|
|
For example, to reconstruct full frames from a normal YUV-encoded video |
|
and a separate video created with @var{alphaextract}, you might use: |
|
@example |
|
movie=in_alpha.mkv [alpha]; [in][alpha] alphamerge [out] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Since this filter is designed for reconstruction, it operates on frame |
|
sequences without considering timestamps, and terminates when either |
|
input reaches end of stream. This will cause problems if your encoding |
|
pipeline drops frames. If you're trying to apply an image as an |
|
overlay to a video stream, consider the @var{overlay} filter instead. |
|
|
|
@section ass |
|
|
|
Same as the @ref{subtitles} filter, except that it doesn't require libavcodec |
|
and libavformat to work. On the other hand, it is limited to ASS (Advanced |
|
Substation Alpha) subtitles files. |
|
|
|
@section bbox |
|
|
|
Compute the bounding box for the non-black pixels in the input frame |
|
luminance plane. |
|
|
|
This filter computes the bounding box containing all the pixels with a |
|
luminance value greater than the minimum allowed value. |
|
The parameters describing the bounding box are printed on the filter |
|
log. |
|
|
|
@section blackdetect |
|
|
|
Detect video intervals that are (almost) completely black. Can be |
|
useful to detect chapter transitions, commercials, or invalid |
|
recordings. Output lines contains the time for the start, end and |
|
duration of the detected black interval expressed in seconds. |
|
|
|
In order to display the output lines, you need to set the loglevel at |
|
least to the AV_LOG_INFO value. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts a list of options in the form of |
|
@var{key}=@var{value} pairs separated by ":". A description of the |
|
accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item black_min_duration, d |
|
Set the minimum detected black duration expressed in seconds. It must |
|
be a non-negative floating point number. |
|
|
|
Default value is 2.0. |
|
|
|
@item picture_black_ratio_th, pic_th |
|
Set the threshold for considering a picture "black". |
|
Express the minimum value for the ratio: |
|
@example |
|
@var{nb_black_pixels} / @var{nb_pixels} |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
for which a picture is considered black. |
|
Default value is 0.98. |
|
|
|
@item pixel_black_th, pix_th |
|
Set the threshold for considering a pixel "black". |
|
|
|
The threshold expresses the maximum pixel luminance value for which a |
|
pixel is considered "black". The provided value is scaled according to |
|
the following equation: |
|
@example |
|
@var{absolute_threshold} = @var{luminance_minimum_value} + @var{pixel_black_th} * @var{luminance_range_size} |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@var{luminance_range_size} and @var{luminance_minimum_value} depend on |
|
the input video format, the range is [0-255] for YUV full-range |
|
formats and [16-235] for YUV non full-range formats. |
|
|
|
Default value is 0.10. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The following example sets the maximum pixel threshold to the minimum |
|
value, and detects only black intervals of 2 or more seconds: |
|
@example |
|
blackdetect=d=2:pix_th=0.00 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section blackframe |
|
|
|
Detect frames that are (almost) completely black. Can be useful to |
|
detect chapter transitions or commercials. Output lines consist of |
|
the frame number of the detected frame, the percentage of blackness, |
|
the position in the file if known or -1 and the timestamp in seconds. |
|
|
|
In order to display the output lines, you need to set the loglevel at |
|
least to the AV_LOG_INFO value. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the syntax: |
|
@example |
|
blackframe[=@var{amount}:[@var{threshold}]] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@var{amount} is the percentage of the pixels that have to be below the |
|
threshold, and defaults to 98. |
|
|
|
@var{threshold} is the threshold below which a pixel value is |
|
considered black, and defaults to 32. |
|
|
|
@section boxblur |
|
|
|
Apply boxblur algorithm to the input video. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the parameters: |
|
@var{luma_radius}:@var{luma_power}:@var{chroma_radius}:@var{chroma_power}:@var{alpha_radius}:@var{alpha_power} |
|
|
|
Chroma and alpha parameters are optional, if not specified they default |
|
to the corresponding values set for @var{luma_radius} and |
|
@var{luma_power}. |
|
|
|
@var{luma_radius}, @var{chroma_radius}, and @var{alpha_radius} represent |
|
the radius in pixels of the box used for blurring the corresponding |
|
input plane. They are expressions, and can contain the following |
|
constants: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item w, h |
|
the input width and height in pixels |
|
|
|
@item cw, ch |
|
the input chroma image width and height in pixels |
|
|
|
@item hsub, vsub |
|
horizontal and vertical chroma subsample values. For example for the |
|
pixel format "yuv422p" @var{hsub} is 2 and @var{vsub} is 1. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The radius must be a non-negative number, and must not be greater than |
|
the value of the expression @code{min(w,h)/2} for the luma and alpha planes, |
|
and of @code{min(cw,ch)/2} for the chroma planes. |
|
|
|
@var{luma_power}, @var{chroma_power}, and @var{alpha_power} represent |
|
how many times the boxblur filter is applied to the corresponding |
|
plane. |
|
|
|
Some examples follow: |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply a boxblur filter with luma, chroma, and alpha radius |
|
set to 2: |
|
@example |
|
boxblur=2:1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Set luma radius to 2, alpha and chroma radius to 0 |
|
@example |
|
boxblur=2:1:0:0:0:0 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Set luma and chroma radius to a fraction of the video dimension |
|
@example |
|
boxblur=min(h\,w)/10:1:min(cw\,ch)/10:1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section colormatrix |
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|
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The colormatrix filter allows conversion between any of the following color |
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space: BT.709 (@var{bt709}), BT.601 (@var{bt601}), SMPTE-240M (@var{smpte240m}) |
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and FCC (@var{fcc}). |
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The syntax of the parameters is @var{source}:@var{destination}: |
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|
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@example |
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colormatrix=bt601:smpte240m |
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@end example |
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|
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@section copy |
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Copy the input source unchanged to the output. Mainly useful for |
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testing purposes. |
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@section crop |
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Crop the input video. |
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|
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This filter accepts a list of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs as argument, |
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separated by ':'. If the key of the first options is omitted, the |
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arguments are interpreted according to the syntax |
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@var{out_w}:@var{out_h}:@var{x}:@var{y}:@var{keep_aspect}. |
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|
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A description of the accepted options follows: |
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@table @option |
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@item w, out_w |
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Set the crop area width. It defaults to @code{iw}. |
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This expression is evaluated only once during the filter |
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configuration. |
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@item h, out_h |
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Set the crop area width. It defaults to @code{ih}. |
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This expression is evaluated only once during the filter |
|
configuration. |
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|
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@item x |
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Set the expression for the x top-left coordinate of the cropped area. |
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It defaults to @code{(in_w-out_w)/2}. |
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This expression is evaluated per-frame. |
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|
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@item y |
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Set the expression for the y top-left coordinate of the cropped area. |
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It defaults to @code{(in_h-out_h)/2}. |
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This expression is evaluated per-frame. |
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|
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@item keep_aspect |
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If set to 1 will force the output display aspect ratio |
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to be the same of the input, by changing the output sample aspect |
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ratio. It defaults to 0. |
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@end table |
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|
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The @var{out_w}, @var{out_h}, @var{x}, @var{y} parameters are |
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expressions containing the following constants: |
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|
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@table @option |
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@item x, y |
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the computed values for @var{x} and @var{y}. They are evaluated for |
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each new frame. |
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|
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@item in_w, in_h |
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the input width and height |
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|
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@item iw, ih |
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same as @var{in_w} and @var{in_h} |
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|
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@item out_w, out_h |
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the output (cropped) width and height |
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|
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@item ow, oh |
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same as @var{out_w} and @var{out_h} |
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|
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@item a |
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same as @var{iw} / @var{ih} |
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|
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@item sar |
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input sample aspect ratio |
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@item dar |
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input display aspect ratio, it is the same as (@var{iw} / @var{ih}) * @var{sar} |
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|
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@item hsub, vsub |
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horizontal and vertical chroma subsample values. For example for the |
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pixel format "yuv422p" @var{hsub} is 2 and @var{vsub} is 1. |
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@item n |
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the number of input frame, starting from 0 |
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@item pos |
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the position in the file of the input frame, NAN if unknown |
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|
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@item t |
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timestamp expressed in seconds, NAN if the input timestamp is unknown |
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@end table |
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|
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The expression for @var{out_w} may depend on the value of @var{out_h}, |
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and the expression for @var{out_h} may depend on @var{out_w}, but they |
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cannot depend on @var{x} and @var{y}, as @var{x} and @var{y} are |
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evaluated after @var{out_w} and @var{out_h}. |
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|
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The @var{x} and @var{y} parameters specify the expressions for the |
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position of the top-left corner of the output (non-cropped) area. They |
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are evaluated for each frame. If the evaluated value is not valid, it |
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is approximated to the nearest valid value. |
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|
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The expression for @var{x} may depend on @var{y}, and the expression |
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for @var{y} may depend on @var{x}. |
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@subsection Examples |
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@itemize |
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@item |
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Crop area with size 100x100 at position (12,34). |
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@example |
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crop=100:100:12:34 |
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@end example |
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Using named options, the example above becomes: |
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@example |
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crop=w=100:h=100:x=12:y=34 |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Crop the central input area with size 100x100: |
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@example |
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crop=100:100 |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Crop the central input area with size 2/3 of the input video: |
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@example |
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crop=2/3*in_w:2/3*in_h |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Crop the input video central square: |
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@example |
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crop=in_h |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Delimit the rectangle with the top-left corner placed at position |
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100:100 and the right-bottom corner corresponding to the right-bottom |
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corner of the input image: |
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@example |
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crop=in_w-100:in_h-100:100:100 |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Crop 10 pixels from the left and right borders, and 20 pixels from |
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the top and bottom borders |
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@example |
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crop=in_w-2*10:in_h-2*20 |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Keep only the bottom right quarter of the input image: |
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@example |
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crop=in_w/2:in_h/2:in_w/2:in_h/2 |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Crop height for getting Greek harmony: |
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@example |
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crop=in_w:1/PHI*in_w |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Appply trembling effect: |
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@example |
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crop=in_w/2:in_h/2:(in_w-out_w)/2+((in_w-out_w)/2)*sin(n/10):(in_h-out_h)/2 +((in_h-out_h)/2)*sin(n/7) |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Apply erratic camera effect depending on timestamp: |
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@example |
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crop=in_w/2:in_h/2:(in_w-out_w)/2+((in_w-out_w)/2)*sin(t*10):(in_h-out_h)/2 +((in_h-out_h)/2)*sin(t*13)" |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Set x depending on the value of y: |
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@example |
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crop=in_w/2:in_h/2:y:10+10*sin(n/10) |
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@end example |
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@end itemize |
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|
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@section cropdetect |
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|
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Auto-detect crop size. |
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Calculate necessary cropping parameters and prints the recommended |
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parameters through the logging system. The detected dimensions |
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correspond to the non-black area of the input video. |
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|
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It accepts the syntax: |
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@example |
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cropdetect[=@var{limit}[:@var{round}[:@var{reset}]]] |
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@end example |
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@table @option |
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@item limit |
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Threshold, which can be optionally specified from nothing (0) to |
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everything (255), defaults to 24. |
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@item round |
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Value which the width/height should be divisible by, defaults to |
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16. The offset is automatically adjusted to center the video. Use 2 to |
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get only even dimensions (needed for 4:2:2 video). 16 is best when |
|
encoding to most video codecs. |
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|
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@item reset |
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Counter that determines after how many frames cropdetect will reset |
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the previously detected largest video area and start over to detect |
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the current optimal crop area. Defaults to 0. |
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|
|
This can be useful when channel logos distort the video area. 0 |
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indicates never reset and return the largest area encountered during |
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playback. |
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@end table |
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|
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@section decimate |
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|
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This filter drops frames that do not differ greatly from the previous |
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frame in order to reduce framerate. The main use of this filter is |
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for very-low-bitrate encoding (e.g. streaming over dialup modem), but |
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it could in theory be used for fixing movies that were |
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inverse-telecined incorrectly. |
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|
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It accepts the following parameters: |
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@var{max}:@var{hi}:@var{lo}:@var{frac}. |
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@table @option |
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|
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@item max |
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Set the maximum number of consecutive frames which can be dropped (if |
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positive), or the minimum interval between dropped frames (if |
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negative). If the value is 0, the frame is dropped unregarding the |
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number of previous sequentially dropped frames. |
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|
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Default value is 0. |
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|
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@item hi, lo, frac |
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Set the dropping threshold values. |
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|
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Values for @var{hi} and @var{lo} are for 8x8 pixel blocks and |
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represent actual pixel value differences, so a threshold of 64 |
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corresponds to 1 unit of difference for each pixel, or the same spread |
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out differently over the block. |
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|
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A frame is a candidate for dropping if no 8x8 blocks differ by more |
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than a threshold of @var{hi}, and if no more than @var{frac} blocks (1 |
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meaning the whole image) differ by more than a threshold of @var{lo}. |
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|
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Default value for @var{hi} is 64*12, default value for @var{lo} is |
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64*5, and default value for @var{frac} is 0.33. |
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@end table |
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|
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@section delogo |
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|
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Suppress a TV station logo by a simple interpolation of the surrounding |
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pixels. Just set a rectangle covering the logo and watch it disappear |
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(and sometimes something even uglier appear - your mileage may vary). |
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The filter accepts parameters as a string of the form |
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"@var{x}:@var{y}:@var{w}:@var{h}:@var{band}", or as a list of |
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@var{key}=@var{value} pairs, separated by ":". |
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|
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The description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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|
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@table @option |
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|
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@item x, y |
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Specify the top left corner coordinates of the logo. They must be |
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specified. |
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@item w, h |
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Specify the width and height of the logo to clear. They must be |
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specified. |
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@item band, t |
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Specify the thickness of the fuzzy edge of the rectangle (added to |
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@var{w} and @var{h}). The default value is 4. |
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@item show |
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When set to 1, a green rectangle is drawn on the screen to simplify |
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finding the right @var{x}, @var{y}, @var{w}, @var{h} parameters, and |
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@var{band} is set to 4. The default value is 0. |
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|
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@end table |
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Some examples follow. |
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|
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@itemize |
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|
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@item |
|
Set a rectangle covering the area with top left corner coordinates 0,0 |
|
and size 100x77, setting a band of size 10: |
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@example |
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delogo=0:0:100:77:10 |
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@end example |
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@item |
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As the previous example, but use named options: |
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@example |
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delogo=x=0:y=0:w=100:h=77:band=10 |
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@end example |
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@end itemize |
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|
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@section deshake |
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|
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Attempt to fix small changes in horizontal and/or vertical shift. This |
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filter helps remove camera shake from hand-holding a camera, bumping a |
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tripod, moving on a vehicle, etc. |
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|
|
The filter accepts parameters as a string of the form |
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"@var{x}:@var{y}:@var{w}:@var{h}:@var{rx}:@var{ry}:@var{edge}:@var{blocksize}:@var{contrast}:@var{search}:@var{filename}" |
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|
|
A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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|
|
@table @option |
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|
|
@item x, y, w, h |
|
Specify a rectangular area where to limit the search for motion |
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vectors. |
|
If desired the search for motion vectors can be limited to a |
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rectangular area of the frame defined by its top left corner, width |
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and height. These parameters have the same meaning as the drawbox |
|
filter which can be used to visualise the position of the bounding |
|
box. |
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|
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This is useful when simultaneous movement of subjects within the frame |
|
might be confused for camera motion by the motion vector search. |
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|
|
If any or all of @var{x}, @var{y}, @var{w} and @var{h} are set to -1 |
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then the full frame is used. This allows later options to be set |
|
without specifying the bounding box for the motion vector search. |
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|
|
Default - search the whole frame. |
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|
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@item rx, ry |
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Specify the maximum extent of movement in x and y directions in the |
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range 0-64 pixels. Default 16. |
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|
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@item edge |
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Specify how to generate pixels to fill blanks at the edge of the |
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frame. An integer from 0 to 3 as follows: |
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@table @option |
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@item 0 |
|
Fill zeroes at blank locations |
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@item 1 |
|
Original image at blank locations |
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@item 2 |
|
Extruded edge value at blank locations |
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@item 3 |
|
Mirrored edge at blank locations |
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@end table |
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The default setting is mirror edge at blank locations. |
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|
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@item blocksize |
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Specify the blocksize to use for motion search. Range 4-128 pixels, |
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default 8. |
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|
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@item contrast |
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Specify the contrast threshold for blocks. Only blocks with more than |
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the specified contrast (difference between darkest and lightest |
|
pixels) will be considered. Range 1-255, default 125. |
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|
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@item search |
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Specify the search strategy 0 = exhaustive search, 1 = less exhaustive |
|
search. Default - exhaustive search. |
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|
|
@item filename |
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If set then a detailed log of the motion search is written to the |
|
specified file. |
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@end table |
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@section drawbox |
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|
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Draw a colored box on the input image. |
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|
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
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separated by ":". |
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|
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The description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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|
|
@table @option |
|
@item x, y |
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Specify the top left corner coordinates of the box. Default to 0. |
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|
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@item width, w |
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@item height, h |
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Specify the width and height of the box, if 0 they are interpreted as |
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the input width and height. Default to 0. |
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|
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@item color, c |
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Specify the color of the box to write, it can be the name of a color |
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(case insensitive match) or a 0xRRGGBB[AA] sequence. If the special |
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value @code{invert} is used, the box edge color is the same as the |
|
video with inverted luma. |
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|
|
@item thickness, t |
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Set the thickness of the box edge. Default value is @code{4}. |
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@end table |
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|
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If the key of the first options is omitted, the arguments are |
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interpreted according to the syntax |
|
@var{x}:@var{y}:@var{width}:@var{height}:@var{color}:@var{thickness}. |
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|
|
Some examples follow: |
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@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Draw a black box around the edge of the input image: |
|
@example |
|
drawbox |
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@end example |
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|
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@item |
|
Draw a box with color red and an opacity of 50%: |
|
@example |
|
drawbox=10:20:200:60:red@@0.5 |
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@end example |
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|
|
The previous example can be specified as: |
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@example |
|
drawbox=x=10:y=20:w=200:h=60:color=red@@0.5 |
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@end example |
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|
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@item |
|
Fill the box with pink color: |
|
@example |
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drawbox=x=10:y=10:w=100:h=100:color=pink@@0.5:t=max |
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@end example |
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@end itemize |
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|
|
@anchor{drawtext} |
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@section drawtext |
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|
|
Draw text string or text from specified file on top of video using the |
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libfreetype library. |
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|
|
To enable compilation of this filter you need to configure FFmpeg with |
|
@code{--enable-libfreetype}. |
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|
|
@subsection Syntax |
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|
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The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
|
separated by ":". |
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|
|
The description of the accepted parameters follows. |
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|
|
@table @option |
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|
|
@item box |
|
Used to draw a box around text using background color. |
|
Value should be either 1 (enable) or 0 (disable). |
|
The default value of @var{box} is 0. |
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|
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@item boxcolor |
|
The color to be used for drawing box around text. |
|
Either a string (e.g. "yellow") or in 0xRRGGBB[AA] format |
|
(e.g. "0xff00ff"), possibly followed by an alpha specifier. |
|
The default value of @var{boxcolor} is "white". |
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|
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@item draw |
|
Set an expression which specifies if the text should be drawn. If the |
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expression evaluates to 0, the text is not drawn. This is useful for |
|
specifying that the text should be drawn only when specific conditions |
|
are met. |
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|
|
Default value is "1". |
|
|
|
See below for the list of accepted constants and functions. |
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|
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@item expansion |
|
Select how the @var{text} is expanded. Can be either @code{none}, |
|
@code{strftime} (deprecated) or |
|
@code{normal} (default). See the @ref{drawtext_expansion, Text expansion} section |
|
below for details. |
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|
|
@item fix_bounds |
|
If true, check and fix text coords to avoid clipping. |
|
|
|
@item fontcolor |
|
The color to be used for drawing fonts. |
|
Either a string (e.g. "red") or in 0xRRGGBB[AA] format |
|
(e.g. "0xff000033"), possibly followed by an alpha specifier. |
|
The default value of @var{fontcolor} is "black". |
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|
|
@item fontfile |
|
The font file to be used for drawing text. Path must be included. |
|
This parameter is mandatory. |
|
|
|
@item fontsize |
|
The font size to be used for drawing text. |
|
The default value of @var{fontsize} is 16. |
|
|
|
@item ft_load_flags |
|
Flags to be used for loading the fonts. |
|
|
|
The flags map the corresponding flags supported by libfreetype, and are |
|
a combination of the following values: |
|
@table @var |
|
@item default |
|
@item no_scale |
|
@item no_hinting |
|
@item render |
|
@item no_bitmap |
|
@item vertical_layout |
|
@item force_autohint |
|
@item crop_bitmap |
|
@item pedantic |
|
@item ignore_global_advance_width |
|
@item no_recurse |
|
@item ignore_transform |
|
@item monochrome |
|
@item linear_design |
|
@item no_autohint |
|
@item end table |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is "render". |
|
|
|
For more information consult the documentation for the FT_LOAD_* |
|
libfreetype flags. |
|
|
|
@item shadowcolor |
|
The color to be used for drawing a shadow behind the drawn text. It |
|
can be a color name (e.g. "yellow") or a string in the 0xRRGGBB[AA] |
|
form (e.g. "0xff00ff"), possibly followed by an alpha specifier. |
|
The default value of @var{shadowcolor} is "black". |
|
|
|
@item shadowx, shadowy |
|
The x and y offsets for the text shadow position with respect to the |
|
position of the text. They can be either positive or negative |
|
values. Default value for both is "0". |
|
|
|
@item tabsize |
|
The size in number of spaces to use for rendering the tab. |
|
Default value is 4. |
|
|
|
@item timecode |
|
Set the initial timecode representation in "hh:mm:ss[:;.]ff" |
|
format. It can be used with or without text parameter. @var{timecode_rate} |
|
option must be specified. |
|
|
|
@item timecode_rate, rate, r |
|
Set the timecode frame rate (timecode only). |
|
|
|
@item text |
|
The text string to be drawn. The text must be a sequence of UTF-8 |
|
encoded characters. |
|
This parameter is mandatory if no file is specified with the parameter |
|
@var{textfile}. |
|
|
|
@item textfile |
|
A text file containing text to be drawn. The text must be a sequence |
|
of UTF-8 encoded characters. |
|
|
|
This parameter is mandatory if no text string is specified with the |
|
parameter @var{text}. |
|
|
|
If both @var{text} and @var{textfile} are specified, an error is thrown. |
|
|
|
@item reload |
|
If set to 1, the @var{textfile} will be reloaded before each frame. |
|
Be sure to update it atomically, or it may be read partially, or even fail. |
|
|
|
@item x, y |
|
The expressions which specify the offsets where text will be drawn |
|
within the video frame. They are relative to the top/left border of the |
|
output image. |
|
|
|
The default value of @var{x} and @var{y} is "0". |
|
|
|
See below for the list of accepted constants and functions. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The parameters for @var{x} and @var{y} are expressions containing the |
|
following constants and functions: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item dar |
|
input display aspect ratio, it is the same as (@var{w} / @var{h}) * @var{sar} |
|
|
|
@item hsub, vsub |
|
horizontal and vertical chroma subsample values. For example for the |
|
pixel format "yuv422p" @var{hsub} is 2 and @var{vsub} is 1. |
|
|
|
@item line_h, lh |
|
the height of each text line |
|
|
|
@item main_h, h, H |
|
the input height |
|
|
|
@item main_w, w, W |
|
the input width |
|
|
|
@item max_glyph_a, ascent |
|
the maximum distance from the baseline to the highest/upper grid |
|
coordinate used to place a glyph outline point, for all the rendered |
|
glyphs. |
|
It is a positive value, due to the grid's orientation with the Y axis |
|
upwards. |
|
|
|
@item max_glyph_d, descent |
|
the maximum distance from the baseline to the lowest grid coordinate |
|
used to place a glyph outline point, for all the rendered glyphs. |
|
This is a negative value, due to the grid's orientation, with the Y axis |
|
upwards. |
|
|
|
@item max_glyph_h |
|
maximum glyph height, that is the maximum height for all the glyphs |
|
contained in the rendered text, it is equivalent to @var{ascent} - |
|
@var{descent}. |
|
|
|
@item max_glyph_w |
|
maximum glyph width, that is the maximum width for all the glyphs |
|
contained in the rendered text |
|
|
|
@item n |
|
the number of input frame, starting from 0 |
|
|
|
@item rand(min, max) |
|
return a random number included between @var{min} and @var{max} |
|
|
|
@item sar |
|
input sample aspect ratio |
|
|
|
@item t |
|
timestamp expressed in seconds, NAN if the input timestamp is unknown |
|
|
|
@item text_h, th |
|
the height of the rendered text |
|
|
|
@item text_w, tw |
|
the width of the rendered text |
|
|
|
@item x, y |
|
the x and y offset coordinates where the text is drawn. |
|
|
|
These parameters allow the @var{x} and @var{y} expressions to refer |
|
each other, so you can for example specify @code{y=x/dar}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If libavfilter was built with @code{--enable-fontconfig}, then |
|
@option{fontfile} can be a fontconfig pattern or omitted. |
|
|
|
@anchor{drawtext_expansion} |
|
@subsection Text expansion |
|
|
|
If @option{expansion} is set to @code{strftime}, |
|
the filter recognizes strftime() sequences in the provided text and |
|
expands them accordingly. Check the documentation of strftime(). This |
|
feature is deprecated. |
|
|
|
If @option{expansion} is set to @code{none}, the text is printed verbatim. |
|
|
|
If @option{expansion} is set to @code{normal} (which is the default), |
|
the following expansion mechanism is used. |
|
|
|
The backslash character '\', followed by any character, always expands to |
|
the second character. |
|
|
|
Sequence of the form @code{%@{...@}} are expanded. The text between the |
|
braces is a function name, possibly followed by arguments separated by ':'. |
|
If the arguments contain special characters or delimiters (':' or '@}'), |
|
they should be escaped. |
|
|
|
Note that they probably must also be escaped as the value for the |
|
@option{text} option in the filter argument string and as the filter |
|
argument in the filter graph description, and possibly also for the shell, |
|
that makes up to four levels of escaping; using a text file avoids these |
|
problems. |
|
|
|
The following functions are available: |
|
|
|
@table @command |
|
|
|
@item expr, e |
|
The expression evaluation result. |
|
|
|
It must take one argument specifying the expression to be evaluated, |
|
which accepts the same constants and functions as the @var{x} and |
|
@var{y} values. Note that not all constants should be used, for |
|
example the text size is not known when evaluating the expression, so |
|
the constants @var{text_w} and @var{text_h} will have an undefined |
|
value. |
|
|
|
@item gmtime |
|
The time at which the filter is running, expressed in UTC. |
|
It can accept an argument: a strftime() format string. |
|
|
|
@item localtime |
|
The time at which the filter is running, expressed in the local time zone. |
|
It can accept an argument: a strftime() format string. |
|
|
|
@item n, frame_num |
|
The frame number, starting from 0. |
|
|
|
@item pts |
|
The timestamp of the current frame, in seconds, with microsecond accuracy. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
Some examples follow. |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Draw "Test Text" with font FreeSerif, using the default values for the |
|
optional parameters. |
|
|
|
@example |
|
drawtext="fontfile=/usr/share/fonts/truetype/freefont/FreeSerif.ttf: text='Test Text'" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Draw 'Test Text' with font FreeSerif of size 24 at position x=100 |
|
and y=50 (counting from the top-left corner of the screen), text is |
|
yellow with a red box around it. Both the text and the box have an |
|
opacity of 20%. |
|
|
|
@example |
|
drawtext="fontfile=/usr/share/fonts/truetype/freefont/FreeSerif.ttf: text='Test Text':\ |
|
x=100: y=50: fontsize=24: fontcolor=yellow@@0.2: box=1: boxcolor=red@@0.2" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Note that the double quotes are not necessary if spaces are not used |
|
within the parameter list. |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Show the text at the center of the video frame: |
|
@example |
|
drawtext="fontsize=30:fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:text='hello world':x=(w-text_w)/2:y=(h-text_h-line_h)/2" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Show a text line sliding from right to left in the last row of the video |
|
frame. The file @file{LONG_LINE} is assumed to contain a single line |
|
with no newlines. |
|
@example |
|
drawtext="fontsize=15:fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:text=LONG_LINE:y=h-line_h:x=-50*t" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Show the content of file @file{CREDITS} off the bottom of the frame and scroll up. |
|
@example |
|
drawtext="fontsize=20:fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:textfile=CREDITS:y=h-20*t" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Draw a single green letter "g", at the center of the input video. |
|
The glyph baseline is placed at half screen height. |
|
@example |
|
drawtext="fontsize=60:fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:fontcolor=green:text=g:x=(w-max_glyph_w)/2:y=h/2-ascent" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Show text for 1 second every 3 seconds: |
|
@example |
|
drawtext="fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:fontcolor=white:x=100:y=x/dar:draw=lt(mod(t\,3)\,1):text='blink'" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Use fontconfig to set the font. Note that the colons need to be escaped. |
|
@example |
|
drawtext='fontfile=Linux Libertine O-40\:style=Semibold:text=FFmpeg' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Print the date of a real-time encoding (see strftime(3)): |
|
@example |
|
drawtext='fontfile=FreeSans.ttf:text=%@{localtime:%a %b %d %Y@}' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
For more information about libfreetype, check: |
|
@url{http://www.freetype.org/}. |
|
|
|
For more information about fontconfig, check: |
|
@url{http://freedesktop.org/software/fontconfig/fontconfig-user.html}. |
|
|
|
@section edgedetect |
|
|
|
Detect and draw edges. The filter uses the Canny Edge Detection algorithm. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the following optional named parameters: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item low, high |
|
Set low and high threshold values used by the Canny thresholding |
|
algorithm. |
|
|
|
The high threshold selects the "strong" edge pixels, which are then |
|
connected through 8-connectivity with the "weak" edge pixels selected |
|
by the low threshold. |
|
|
|
@var{low} and @var{high} threshold values must be choosen in the range |
|
[0,1], and @var{low} should be lesser or equal to @var{high}. |
|
|
|
Default value for @var{low} is @code{20/255}, and default value for @var{high} |
|
is @code{50/255}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Example: |
|
@example |
|
edgedetect=low=0.1:high=0.4 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section fade |
|
|
|
Apply fade-in/out effect to input video. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
|
pairs, separated by ":". If the key of the first options is omitted, |
|
the arguments are interpreted according to the syntax |
|
@var{type}:@var{start_frame}:@var{nb_frames}. |
|
|
|
A description of the accepted parameters follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item type, t |
|
Specify if the effect type, can be either @code{in} for fade-in, or |
|
@code{out} for a fade-out effect. Default is @code{in}. |
|
|
|
@item start_frame, s |
|
Specify the number of the start frame for starting to apply the fade |
|
effect. Default is 0. |
|
|
|
@item nb_frames, n |
|
Specify the number of frames for which the fade effect has to last. At |
|
the end of the fade-in effect the output video will have the same |
|
intensity as the input video, at the end of the fade-out transition |
|
the output video will be completely black. Default is 25. |
|
|
|
@item alpha |
|
If set to 1, fade only alpha channel, if one exists on the input. |
|
Default value is 0. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Fade in first 30 frames of video: |
|
@example |
|
fade=in:0:30 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
The command above is equivalent to: |
|
@example |
|
fade=t=in:s=0:n=30 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Fade out last 45 frames of a 200-frame video: |
|
@example |
|
fade=out:155:45 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Fade in first 25 frames and fade out last 25 frames of a 1000-frame video: |
|
@example |
|
fade=in:0:25, fade=out:975:25 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Make first 5 frames black, then fade in from frame 5-24: |
|
@example |
|
fade=in:5:20 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Fade in alpha over first 25 frames of video: |
|
@example |
|
fade=in:0:25:alpha=1 |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section field |
|
|
|
Extract a single field from an interlaced image using stride |
|
arithmetic to avoid wasting CPU time. The output frames are marked as |
|
non-interlaced. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the following named options: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item type |
|
Specify whether to extract the top (if the value is @code{0} or |
|
@code{top}) or the bottom field (if the value is @code{1} or |
|
@code{bottom}). |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If the option key is not specified, the first value sets the @var{type} |
|
option. For example: |
|
@example |
|
field=bottom |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
is equivalent to: |
|
@example |
|
field=type=bottom |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section fieldorder |
|
|
|
Transform the field order of the input video. |
|
|
|
It accepts one parameter which specifies the required field order that |
|
the input interlaced video will be transformed to. The parameter can |
|
assume one of the following values: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item 0 or bff |
|
output bottom field first |
|
@item 1 or tff |
|
output top field first |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is "tff". |
|
|
|
Transformation is achieved by shifting the picture content up or down |
|
by one line, and filling the remaining line with appropriate picture content. |
|
This method is consistent with most broadcast field order converters. |
|
|
|
If the input video is not flagged as being interlaced, or it is already |
|
flagged as being of the required output field order then this filter does |
|
not alter the incoming video. |
|
|
|
This filter is very useful when converting to or from PAL DV material, |
|
which is bottom field first. |
|
|
|
For example: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i in.vob -vf "fieldorder=bff" out.dv |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section fifo |
|
|
|
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. |
|
|
|
@section format |
|
|
|
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". |
|
|
|
Some examples follow: |
|
@example |
|
# convert the input video to the format "yuv420p" |
|
format=yuv420p |
|
|
|
# convert the input video to any of the formats in the list |
|
format=yuv420p:yuv444p:yuv410p |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section fps |
|
|
|
Convert the video to specified constant framerate by duplicating or dropping |
|
frames as necessary. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item fps |
|
Desired output framerate. The default is @code{25}. |
|
|
|
@item round |
|
Rounding method. |
|
|
|
Possible values are: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item zero |
|
zero round towards 0 |
|
@item inf |
|
round away from 0 |
|
@item down |
|
round towards -infinity |
|
@item up |
|
round towards +infinity |
|
@item near |
|
round to nearest |
|
@end table |
|
The default is @code{near}. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Alternatively, the options can be specified as a flat string: |
|
@var{fps}[:@var{round}]. |
|
|
|
See also the @ref{setpts} filter. |
|
|
|
@section framestep |
|
|
|
Select one frame every N. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts in input a string representing a positive |
|
integer. Default argument is @code{1}. |
|
|
|
@anchor{frei0r} |
|
@section frei0r |
|
|
|
Apply a frei0r effect to the input video. |
|
|
|
To enable compilation of this filter you need to install the frei0r |
|
header and configure FFmpeg with @code{--enable-frei0r}. |
|
|
|
The filter supports the syntax: |
|
@example |
|
@var{filter_name}[@{:|=@}@var{param1}:@var{param2}:...:@var{paramN}] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@var{filter_name} is the name of the frei0r effect to load. If the |
|
environment variable @env{FREI0R_PATH} is defined, the frei0r effect |
|
is searched in each one of the directories specified by the colon (or |
|
semicolon on Windows platforms) separated list in @env{FREIOR_PATH}, |
|
otherwise in the standard frei0r paths, which are in this order: |
|
@file{HOME/.frei0r-1/lib/}, @file{/usr/local/lib/frei0r-1/}, |
|
@file{/usr/lib/frei0r-1/}. |
|
|
|
@var{param1}, @var{param2}, ... , @var{paramN} specify the parameters |
|
for the frei0r effect. |
|
|
|
A frei0r effect parameter can be a boolean (whose values are specified |
|
with "y" and "n"), a double, a color (specified by the syntax |
|
@var{R}/@var{G}/@var{B}, @var{R}, @var{G}, and @var{B} being float |
|
numbers from 0.0 to 1.0) or by an @code{av_parse_color()} color |
|
description), a position (specified by the syntax @var{X}/@var{Y}, |
|
@var{X} and @var{Y} being float numbers) and a string. |
|
|
|
The number and kind of parameters depend on the loaded effect. If an |
|
effect parameter is not specified the default value is set. |
|
|
|
Some examples follow: |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Apply the distort0r effect, set the first two double parameters: |
|
@example |
|
frei0r=distort0r:0.5:0.01 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply the colordistance effect, take a color as first parameter: |
|
@example |
|
frei0r=colordistance:0.2/0.3/0.4 |
|
frei0r=colordistance:violet |
|
frei0r=colordistance:0x112233 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply the perspective effect, specify the top left and top right image |
|
positions: |
|
@example |
|
frei0r=perspective:0.2/0.2:0.8/0.2 |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
For more information see: |
|
@url{http://frei0r.dyne.org} |
|
|
|
@section geq |
|
|
|
The filter takes one, two or three equations as parameter, separated by ':'. |
|
The first equation is mandatory and applies to the luma plane. The two |
|
following are respectively for chroma blue and chroma red planes. |
|
|
|
The filter syntax allows named parameters: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item lum_expr |
|
the luminance expression |
|
@item cb_expr |
|
the chrominance blue expression |
|
@item cr_expr |
|
the chrominance red expression |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If one of the chrominance expression is not defined, it falls back on the other |
|
one. If none of them are specified, they will evaluate the luminance |
|
expression. |
|
|
|
The expressions can use the following variables and functions: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item N |
|
The sequential number of the filtered frame, starting from @code{0}. |
|
|
|
@item X, Y |
|
The coordinates of the current sample. |
|
|
|
@item W, H |
|
The width and height of the image. |
|
|
|
@item SW, SH |
|
Width and height scale depending on the currently filtered plane. It is the |
|
ratio between the corresponding luma plane number of pixels and the current |
|
plane ones. E.g. for YUV4:2:0 the values are @code{1,1} for the luma plane, and |
|
@code{0.5,0.5} for chroma planes. |
|
|
|
@item T |
|
Time of the current frame, expressed in seconds. |
|
|
|
@item p(x, y) |
|
Return the value of the pixel at location (@var{x},@var{y}) of the current |
|
plane. |
|
|
|
@item lum(x, y) |
|
Return the value of the pixel at location (@var{x},@var{y}) of the luminance |
|
plane. |
|
|
|
@item cb(x, y) |
|
Return the value of the pixel at location (@var{x},@var{y}) of the |
|
blue-difference chroma plane. |
|
|
|
@item cr(x, y) |
|
Return the value of the pixel at location (@var{x},@var{y}) of the |
|
red-difference chroma plane. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For functions, if @var{x} and @var{y} are outside the area, the value will be |
|
automatically clipped to the closer edge. |
|
|
|
Some examples follow: |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Flip the image horizontally: |
|
@example |
|
geq=p(W-X\,Y) |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate a bidimensional sine wave, with angle @code{PI/3} and a |
|
wavelength of 100 pixels: |
|
@example |
|
geq=128 + 100*sin(2*(PI/100)*(cos(PI/3)*(X-50*T) + sin(PI/3)*Y)):128:128 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate a fancy enigmatic moving light: |
|
@example |
|
nullsrc=s=256x256,geq=random(1)/hypot(X-cos(N*0.07)*W/2-W/2\,Y-sin(N*0.09)*H/2-H/2)^2*1000000*sin(N*0.02):128:128 |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section gradfun |
|
|
|
Fix the banding artifacts that are sometimes introduced into nearly flat |
|
regions by truncation to 8bit color depth. |
|
Interpolate the gradients that should go where the bands are, and |
|
dither them. |
|
|
|
This filter is designed for playback only. Do not use it prior to |
|
lossy compression, because compression tends to lose the dither and |
|
bring back the bands. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts a list of options in the form of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs |
|
separated by ":". A description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item strength |
|
The maximum amount by which the filter will change |
|
any one pixel. Also the threshold for detecting nearly flat |
|
regions. Acceptable values range from @code{0.51} to @code{64}, default value |
|
is @code{1.2}. |
|
|
|
@item radius |
|
The neighborhood to fit the gradient to. A larger |
|
radius makes for smoother gradients, but also prevents the filter from |
|
modifying the pixels near detailed regions. Acceptable values are |
|
@code{8-32}, default value is @code{16}. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Alternatively, the options can be specified as a flat string: |
|
@var{strength}[:@var{radius}] |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Apply the filter with a @code{3.5} strength and radius of @code{8}: |
|
@example |
|
gradfun=3.5:8 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Specify radius, omitting the strength (which will fall-back to the default |
|
value): |
|
@example |
|
gradfun=radius=8 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section hflip |
|
|
|
Flip the input video horizontally. |
|
|
|
For example to horizontally flip the input video with @command{ffmpeg}: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "hflip" out.avi |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section histeq |
|
This filter applies a global color histogram equalization on a |
|
per-frame basis. |
|
|
|
It can be used to correct video that has a compressed range of pixel |
|
intensities. The filter redistributes the pixel intensities to |
|
equalize their distribution across the intensity range. It may be |
|
viewed as an "automatically adjusting contrast filter". This filter is |
|
useful only for correcting degraded or poorly captured source |
|
video. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
|
pairs, separated by ":". If the key of the first options is omitted, |
|
the arguments are interpreted according to syntax |
|
@var{strength}:@var{intensity}:@var{antibanding}. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the following named options: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item strength |
|
Determine the amount of equalization to be applied. As the strength |
|
is reduced, the distribution of pixel intensities more-and-more |
|
approaches that of the input frame. The value must be a float number |
|
in the range [0,1] and defaults to 0.200. |
|
|
|
@item intensity |
|
Set the maximum intensity that can generated and scale the output |
|
values appropriately. The strength should be set as desired and then |
|
the intensity can be limited if needed to avoid washing-out. The value |
|
must be a float number in the range [0,1] and defaults to 0.210. |
|
|
|
@item antibanding |
|
Set the antibanding level. If enabled the filter will randomly vary |
|
the luminance of output pixels by a small amount to avoid banding of |
|
the histogram. Possible values are @code{none}, @code{weak} or |
|
@code{strong}. It defaults to @code{none}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section hqdn3d |
|
|
|
High precision/quality 3d denoise filter. This filter aims to reduce |
|
image noise producing smooth images and making still images really |
|
still. It should enhance compressibility. |
|
|
|
It accepts the following optional parameters: |
|
@var{luma_spatial}:@var{chroma_spatial}:@var{luma_tmp}:@var{chroma_tmp} |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item luma_spatial |
|
a non-negative float number which specifies spatial luma strength, |
|
defaults to 4.0 |
|
|
|
@item chroma_spatial |
|
a non-negative float number which specifies spatial chroma strength, |
|
defaults to 3.0*@var{luma_spatial}/4.0 |
|
|
|
@item luma_tmp |
|
a float number which specifies luma temporal strength, defaults to |
|
6.0*@var{luma_spatial}/4.0 |
|
|
|
@item chroma_tmp |
|
a float number which specifies chroma temporal strength, defaults to |
|
@var{luma_tmp}*@var{chroma_spatial}/@var{luma_spatial} |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section hue |
|
|
|
Modify the hue and/or the saturation of the input. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the following optional named options: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item h |
|
Specify the hue angle as a number of degrees. It accepts a float |
|
number or an expression, and defaults to 0.0. |
|
|
|
@item H |
|
Specify the hue angle as a number of degrees. It accepts a float |
|
number or an expression, and defaults to 0.0. |
|
|
|
@item s |
|
Specify the saturation in the [-10,10] range. It accepts a float number and |
|
defaults to 1.0. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The @var{h}, @var{H} and @var{s} parameters are expressions containing the |
|
following constants: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item n |
|
frame count of the input frame starting from 0 |
|
|
|
@item pts |
|
presentation timestamp of the input frame expressed in time base units |
|
|
|
@item r |
|
frame rate of the input video, NAN if the input frame rate is unknown |
|
|
|
@item t |
|
timestamp expressed in seconds, NAN if the input timestamp is unknown |
|
|
|
@item tb |
|
time base of the input video |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The options can also be set using the syntax: @var{hue}:@var{saturation} |
|
|
|
In this case @var{hue} is expressed in degrees. |
|
|
|
Some examples follow: |
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Set the hue to 90 degrees and the saturation to 1.0: |
|
@example |
|
hue=h=90:s=1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Same command but expressing the hue in radians: |
|
@example |
|
hue=H=PI/2:s=1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Same command without named options, hue must be expressed in degrees: |
|
@example |
|
hue=90:1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Note that "h:s" syntax does not support expressions for the values of |
|
h and s, so the following example will issue an error: |
|
@example |
|
hue=PI/2:1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Rotate hue and make the saturation swing between 0 |
|
and 2 over a period of 1 second: |
|
@example |
|
hue="H=2*PI*t: s=sin(2*PI*t)+1" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply a 3 seconds saturation fade-in effect starting at 0: |
|
@example |
|
hue="s=min(t/3\,1)" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
The general fade-in expression can be written as: |
|
@example |
|
hue="s=min(0\, max((t-START)/DURATION\, 1))" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply a 3 seconds saturation fade-out effect starting at 5 seconds: |
|
@example |
|
hue="s=max(0\, min(1\, (8-t)/3))" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
The general fade-out expression can be written as: |
|
@example |
|
hue="s=max(0\, min(1\, (START+DURATION-t)/DURATION))" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@subsection Commands |
|
|
|
This filter supports the following command: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item reinit |
|
Modify the hue and/or the saturation of the input video. |
|
The command accepts the same named options and syntax than when calling the |
|
filter from the command-line. |
|
|
|
If a parameter is omitted, it is kept at its current value. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section idet |
|
|
|
Interlaceing detect filter. This filter tries to detect if the input is |
|
interlaced or progressive. Top or bottom field first. |
|
|
|
@section kerndeint |
|
|
|
Deinterlace input video by applying Donald Graft's adaptive kernel |
|
deinterling. Work on interlaced parts of a video to produce |
|
progressive frames. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
|
pairs, separated by ":". If the key of the first options is omitted, |
|
the arguments are interpreted according to the following syntax: |
|
@var{thresh}:@var{map}:@var{order}:@var{sharp}:@var{twoway}. |
|
|
|
The description of the accepted parameters follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item thresh |
|
Set the threshold which affects the filter's tolerance when |
|
determining if a pixel line must be processed. It must be an integer |
|
in the range [0,255] and defaults to 10. A value of 0 will result in |
|
applying the process on every pixels. |
|
|
|
@item map |
|
Paint pixels exceeding the threshold value to white if set to 1. |
|
Default is 0. |
|
|
|
@item order |
|
Set the fields order. Swap fields if set to 1, leave fields alone if |
|
0. Default is 0. |
|
|
|
@item sharp |
|
Enable additional sharpening if set to 1. Default is 0. |
|
|
|
@item twoway |
|
Enable twoway sharpening if set to 1. Default is 0. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Apply default values: |
|
@example |
|
kerndeint=thresh=10:map=0:order=0:sharp=0:twoway=0 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Enable additional sharpening: |
|
@example |
|
kerndeint=sharp=1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Paint processed pixels in white: |
|
@example |
|
kerndeint=map=1 |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section lut, lutrgb, lutyuv |
|
|
|
Compute a look-up table for binding each pixel component input value |
|
to an output value, and apply it to input video. |
|
|
|
@var{lutyuv} applies a lookup table to a YUV input video, @var{lutrgb} |
|
to an RGB input video. |
|
|
|
These filters accept in input a ":"-separated list of options, which |
|
specify the expressions used for computing the lookup table for the |
|
corresponding pixel component values. |
|
|
|
The @var{lut} filter requires either YUV or RGB pixel formats in |
|
input, and accepts the options: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item @var{c0} (first pixel component) |
|
@item @var{c1} (second pixel component) |
|
@item @var{c2} (third pixel component) |
|
@item @var{c3} (fourth pixel component, corresponds to the alpha component) |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The exact component associated to each option depends on the format in |
|
input. |
|
|
|
The @var{lutrgb} filter requires RGB pixel formats in input, and |
|
accepts the options: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item @var{r} (red component) |
|
@item @var{g} (green component) |
|
@item @var{b} (blue component) |
|
@item @var{a} (alpha component) |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The @var{lutyuv} filter requires YUV pixel formats in input, and |
|
accepts the options: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item @var{y} (Y/luminance component) |
|
@item @var{u} (U/Cb component) |
|
@item @var{v} (V/Cr component) |
|
@item @var{a} (alpha component) |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The expressions can contain the following constants and functions: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item w, h |
|
the input width and height |
|
|
|
@item val |
|
input value for the pixel component |
|
|
|
@item clipval |
|
the input value clipped in the @var{minval}-@var{maxval} range |
|
|
|
@item maxval |
|
maximum value for the pixel component |
|
|
|
@item minval |
|
minimum value for the pixel component |
|
|
|
@item negval |
|
the negated value for the pixel component value clipped in the |
|
@var{minval}-@var{maxval} range , it corresponds to the expression |
|
"maxval-clipval+minval" |
|
|
|
@item clip(val) |
|
the computed value in @var{val} clipped in the |
|
@var{minval}-@var{maxval} range |
|
|
|
@item gammaval(gamma) |
|
the computed gamma correction value of the pixel component value |
|
clipped in the @var{minval}-@var{maxval} range, corresponds to the |
|
expression |
|
"pow((clipval-minval)/(maxval-minval)\,@var{gamma})*(maxval-minval)+minval" |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
All expressions default to "val". |
|
|
|
Some examples follow: |
|
@example |
|
# negate input video |
|
lutrgb="r=maxval+minval-val:g=maxval+minval-val:b=maxval+minval-val" |
|
lutyuv="y=maxval+minval-val:u=maxval+minval-val:v=maxval+minval-val" |
|
|
|
# the above is the same as |
|
lutrgb="r=negval:g=negval:b=negval" |
|
lutyuv="y=negval:u=negval:v=negval" |
|
|
|
# negate luminance |
|
lutyuv=y=negval |
|
|
|
# remove chroma components, turns the video into a graytone image |
|
lutyuv="u=128:v=128" |
|
|
|
# apply a luma burning effect |
|
lutyuv="y=2*val" |
|
|
|
# remove green and blue components |
|
lutrgb="g=0:b=0" |
|
|
|
# set a constant alpha channel value on input |
|
format=rgba,lutrgb=a="maxval-minval/2" |
|
|
|
# correct luminance gamma by a 0.5 factor |
|
lutyuv=y=gammaval(0.5) |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section mp |
|
|
|
Apply an MPlayer filter to the input video. |
|
|
|
This filter provides a wrapper around most of the filters of |
|
MPlayer/MEncoder. |
|
|
|
This wrapper is considered experimental. Some of the wrapped filters |
|
may not work properly and we may drop support for them, as they will |
|
be implemented natively into FFmpeg. Thus you should avoid |
|
depending on them when writing portable scripts. |
|
|
|
The filters accepts the parameters: |
|
@var{filter_name}[:=]@var{filter_params} |
|
|
|
@var{filter_name} is the name of a supported MPlayer filter, |
|
@var{filter_params} is a string containing the parameters accepted by |
|
the named filter. |
|
|
|
The list of the currently supported filters follows: |
|
@table @var |
|
@item detc |
|
@item dint |
|
@item divtc |
|
@item down3dright |
|
@item dsize |
|
@item eq2 |
|
@item eq |
|
@item fil |
|
@item fspp |
|
@item harddup |
|
@item il |
|
@item ilpack |
|
@item ivtc |
|
@item kerndeint |
|
@item mcdeint |
|
@item noise |
|
@item ow |
|
@item perspective |
|
@item phase |
|
@item pp7 |
|
@item pullup |
|
@item qp |
|
@item sab |
|
@item softpulldown |
|
@item softskip |
|
@item spp |
|
@item telecine |
|
@item tinterlace |
|
@item unsharp |
|
@item uspp |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The parameter syntax and behavior for the listed filters are the same |
|
of the corresponding MPlayer filters. For detailed instructions check |
|
the "VIDEO FILTERS" section in the MPlayer manual. |
|
|
|
Some examples follow: |
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Adjust gamma, brightness, contrast: |
|
@example |
|
mp=eq2=1.0:2:0.5 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Add temporal noise to input video: |
|
@example |
|
mp=noise=20t |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
See also mplayer(1), @url{http://www.mplayerhq.hu/}. |
|
|
|
@section negate |
|
|
|
Negate input video. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts an integer in input, if non-zero it negates the |
|
alpha component (if available). The default value in input is 0. |
|
|
|
@section noformat |
|
|
|
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". |
|
|
|
Some examples follow: |
|
@example |
|
# force libavfilter to use a format different from "yuv420p" for the |
|
# input to the vflip filter |
|
noformat=yuv420p,vflip |
|
|
|
# convert the input video to any of the formats not contained in the list |
|
noformat=yuv420p:yuv444p:yuv410p |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section null |
|
|
|
Pass the video source unchanged to the output. |
|
|
|
@section ocv |
|
|
|
Apply video transform using libopencv. |
|
|
|
To enable this filter install libopencv library and headers and |
|
configure FFmpeg with @code{--enable-libopencv}. |
|
|
|
The filter takes the parameters: @var{filter_name}@{:=@}@var{filter_params}. |
|
|
|
@var{filter_name} is the name of the libopencv filter to apply. |
|
|
|
@var{filter_params} specifies the parameters to pass to the libopencv |
|
filter. If not specified the default values are assumed. |
|
|
|
Refer to the official libopencv documentation for more precise |
|
information: |
|
@url{http://opencv.willowgarage.com/documentation/c/image_filtering.html} |
|
|
|
Follows the list of supported libopencv filters. |
|
|
|
@anchor{dilate} |
|
@subsection dilate |
|
|
|
Dilate an image by using a specific structuring element. |
|
This filter corresponds to the libopencv function @code{cvDilate}. |
|
|
|
It accepts the parameters: @var{struct_el}:@var{nb_iterations}. |
|
|
|
@var{struct_el} represents a structuring element, and has the syntax: |
|
@var{cols}x@var{rows}+@var{anchor_x}x@var{anchor_y}/@var{shape} |
|
|
|
@var{cols} and @var{rows} represent the number of columns and rows of |
|
the structuring element, @var{anchor_x} and @var{anchor_y} the anchor |
|
point, and @var{shape} the shape for the structuring element, and |
|
can be one of the values "rect", "cross", "ellipse", "custom". |
|
|
|
If the value for @var{shape} is "custom", it must be followed by a |
|
string of the form "=@var{filename}". The file with name |
|
@var{filename} is assumed to represent a binary image, with each |
|
printable character corresponding to a bright pixel. When a custom |
|
@var{shape} is used, @var{cols} and @var{rows} are ignored, the number |
|
or columns and rows of the read file are assumed instead. |
|
|
|
The default value for @var{struct_el} is "3x3+0x0/rect". |
|
|
|
@var{nb_iterations} specifies the number of times the transform is |
|
applied to the image, and defaults to 1. |
|
|
|
Follow some example: |
|
@example |
|
# use the default values |
|
ocv=dilate |
|
|
|
# dilate using a structuring element with a 5x5 cross, iterate two times |
|
ocv=dilate=5x5+2x2/cross:2 |
|
|
|
# read the shape from the file diamond.shape, iterate two times |
|
# the file diamond.shape may contain a pattern of characters like this: |
|
# * |
|
# *** |
|
# ***** |
|
# *** |
|
# * |
|
# the specified cols and rows are ignored (but not the anchor point coordinates) |
|
ocv=0x0+2x2/custom=diamond.shape:2 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@subsection erode |
|
|
|
Erode an image by using a specific structuring element. |
|
This filter corresponds to the libopencv function @code{cvErode}. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the parameters: @var{struct_el}:@var{nb_iterations}, |
|
with the same syntax and semantics as the @ref{dilate} filter. |
|
|
|
@subsection smooth |
|
|
|
Smooth the input video. |
|
|
|
The filter takes the following parameters: |
|
@var{type}:@var{param1}:@var{param2}:@var{param3}:@var{param4}. |
|
|
|
@var{type} is the type of smooth filter to apply, and can be one of |
|
the following values: "blur", "blur_no_scale", "median", "gaussian", |
|
"bilateral". The default value is "gaussian". |
|
|
|
@var{param1}, @var{param2}, @var{param3}, and @var{param4} are |
|
parameters whose meanings depend on smooth type. @var{param1} and |
|
@var{param2} accept integer positive values or 0, @var{param3} and |
|
@var{param4} accept float values. |
|
|
|
The default value for @var{param1} is 3, the default value for the |
|
other parameters is 0. |
|
|
|
These parameters correspond to the parameters assigned to the |
|
libopencv function @code{cvSmooth}. |
|
|
|
@anchor{overlay} |
|
@section overlay |
|
|
|
Overlay one video on top of another. |
|
|
|
It takes two inputs and one output, the first input is the "main" |
|
video on which the second input is overlayed. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts a list of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs as argument, |
|
separated by ":". If the key of the first options is omitted, the |
|
arguments are interpreted according to the syntax @var{x}:@var{y}. |
|
|
|
A description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item x, y |
|
Set the expression for the x and y coordinates of the overlayed video |
|
on the main video. Default value is 0. |
|
|
|
The @var{x} and @var{y} expressions can contain the following |
|
parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item main_w, main_h |
|
main input width and height |
|
|
|
@item W, H |
|
same as @var{main_w} and @var{main_h} |
|
|
|
@item overlay_w, overlay_h |
|
overlay input width and height |
|
|
|
@item w, h |
|
same as @var{overlay_w} and @var{overlay_h} |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item rgb |
|
If set to 1, force the filter to accept inputs in the RGB |
|
color space. Default value is 0. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Be aware that frames are taken from each input video in timestamp |
|
order, hence, if their initial timestamps differ, it is a a good idea |
|
to pass the two inputs through a @var{setpts=PTS-STARTPTS} filter to |
|
have them begin in the same zero timestamp, as it does the example for |
|
the @var{movie} filter. |
|
|
|
You can chain together more overlays but you should test the |
|
efficiency of such approach. |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Draw the overlay at 10 pixels from the bottom right corner of the main |
|
video: |
|
@example |
|
overlay=main_w-overlay_w-10:main_h-overlay_h-10 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Using named options the example above becomes: |
|
@example |
|
overlay=x=main_w-overlay_w-10:y=main_h-overlay_h-10 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Insert a transparent PNG logo in the bottom left corner of the input, |
|
using the @command{ffmpeg} tool with the @code{-filter_complex} option: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i input -i logo -filter_complex 'overlay=10:main_h-overlay_h-10' output |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Insert 2 different transparent PNG logos (second logo on bottom |
|
right corner) using the @command{ffmpeg} tool: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i input -i logo1 -i logo2 -filter_complex 'overlay=10:H-h-10,overlay=W-w-10:H-h-10' output |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Add a transparent color layer on top of the main video, WxH specifies |
|
the size of the main input to the overlay filter: |
|
@example |
|
color=red@@.3:WxH [over]; [in][over] overlay [out] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Play an original video and a filtered version (here with the deshake |
|
filter) side by side using the @command{ffplay} tool: |
|
@example |
|
ffplay input.avi -vf 'split[a][b]; [a]pad=iw*2:ih[src]; [b]deshake[filt]; [src][filt]overlay=w' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
The above command is the same as: |
|
@example |
|
ffplay input.avi -vf 'split[b], pad=iw*2[src], [b]deshake, [src]overlay=w' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Chain several overlays in cascade: |
|
@example |
|
nullsrc=s=200x200 [bg]; |
|
testsrc=s=100x100, split=4 [in0][in1][in2][in3]; |
|
[in0] lutrgb=r=0, [bg] overlay=0:0 [mid0]; |
|
[in1] lutrgb=g=0, [mid0] overlay=100:0 [mid1]; |
|
[in2] lutrgb=b=0, [mid1] overlay=0:100 [mid2]; |
|
[in3] null, [mid2] overlay=100:100 [out0] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section pad |
|
|
|
Add paddings to the input image, and places the original input at the |
|
given coordinates @var{x}, @var{y}. |
|
|
|
It accepts the following parameters: |
|
@var{width}:@var{height}:@var{x}:@var{y}:@var{color}. |
|
|
|
The parameters @var{width}, @var{height}, @var{x}, and @var{y} are |
|
expressions containing the following constants: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item in_w, in_h |
|
the input video width and height |
|
|
|
@item iw, ih |
|
same as @var{in_w} and @var{in_h} |
|
|
|
@item out_w, out_h |
|
the output width and height, that is the size of the padded area as |
|
specified by the @var{width} and @var{height} expressions |
|
|
|
@item ow, oh |
|
same as @var{out_w} and @var{out_h} |
|
|
|
@item x, y |
|
x and y offsets as specified by the @var{x} and @var{y} |
|
expressions, or NAN if not yet specified |
|
|
|
@item a |
|
same as @var{iw} / @var{ih} |
|
|
|
@item sar |
|
input sample aspect ratio |
|
|
|
@item dar |
|
input display aspect ratio, it is the same as (@var{iw} / @var{ih}) * @var{sar} |
|
|
|
@item hsub, vsub |
|
horizontal and vertical chroma subsample values. For example for the |
|
pixel format "yuv422p" @var{hsub} is 2 and @var{vsub} is 1. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Follows the description of the accepted parameters. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item width, height |
|
|
|
Specify the size of the output image with the paddings added. If the |
|
value for @var{width} or @var{height} is 0, the corresponding input size |
|
is used for the output. |
|
|
|
The @var{width} expression can reference the value set by the |
|
@var{height} expression, and vice versa. |
|
|
|
The default value of @var{width} and @var{height} is 0. |
|
|
|
@item x, y |
|
|
|
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 @var{x} expression can reference the value set by the @var{y} |
|
expression, and vice versa. |
|
|
|
The default value of @var{x} and @var{y} is 0. |
|
|
|
@item color |
|
|
|
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 @var{color} is "black". |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Add paddings with color "violet" to the input video. Output video |
|
size is 640x480, the top-left corner of the input video is placed at |
|
column 0, row 40: |
|
@example |
|
pad=640:480:0:40:violet |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Pad the input to get an output with dimensions increased by 3/2, |
|
and put the input video at the center of the padded area: |
|
@example |
|
pad="3/2*iw:3/2*ih:(ow-iw)/2:(oh-ih)/2" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Pad the input to get a squared output with size equal to the maximum |
|
value between the input width and height, and put the input video at |
|
the center of the padded area: |
|
@example |
|
pad="max(iw\,ih):ow:(ow-iw)/2:(oh-ih)/2" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Pad the input to get a final w/h ratio of 16:9: |
|
@example |
|
pad="ih*16/9:ih:(ow-iw)/2:(oh-ih)/2" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
In case of anamorphic video, in order to set the output display aspect |
|
correctly, it is necessary to use @var{sar} in the expression, |
|
according to the relation: |
|
@example |
|
(ih * X / ih) * sar = output_dar |
|
X = output_dar / sar |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Thus the previous example needs to be modified to: |
|
@example |
|
pad="ih*16/9/sar:ih:(ow-iw)/2:(oh-ih)/2" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Double output size and put the input video in the bottom-right |
|
corner of the output padded area: |
|
@example |
|
pad="2*iw:2*ih:ow-iw:oh-ih" |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section pixdesctest |
|
|
|
Pixel format descriptor test filter, mainly useful for internal |
|
testing. The output video should be equal to the input video. |
|
|
|
For example: |
|
@example |
|
format=monow, pixdesctest |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
can be used to test the monowhite pixel format descriptor definition. |
|
|
|
@section pp |
|
|
|
Enable the specified chain of postprocessing subfilters using libpostproc. This |
|
library should be automatically selected with a GPL build (@code{--enable-gpl}). |
|
Subfilters must be separated by '/' and can be disabled by prepending a '-'. |
|
Each subfilter and some options have a short and a long name that can be used |
|
interchangeably, i.e. dr/dering are the same. |
|
|
|
All subfilters share common options to determine their scope: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item a/autoq |
|
Honor the quality commands for this subfilter. |
|
|
|
@item c/chrom |
|
Do chrominance filtering, too (default). |
|
|
|
@item y/nochrom |
|
Do luminance filtering only (no chrominance). |
|
|
|
@item n/noluma |
|
Do chrominance filtering only (no luminance). |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
These options can be appended after the subfilter name, separated by a ':'. |
|
|
|
Available subfilters are: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item hb/hdeblock[:difference[:flatness]] |
|
Horizontal deblocking filter |
|
@table @option |
|
@item difference |
|
Difference factor where higher values mean more deblocking (default: @code{32}). |
|
@item flatness |
|
Flatness threshold where lower values mean more deblocking (default: @code{39}). |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item vb/vdeblock[:difference[:flatness]] |
|
Vertical deblocking filter |
|
@table @option |
|
@item difference |
|
Difference factor where higher values mean more deblocking (default: @code{32}). |
|
@item flatness |
|
Flatness threshold where lower values mean more deblocking (default: @code{39}). |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item ha/hadeblock[:difference[:flatness]] |
|
Accurate horizontal deblocking filter |
|
@table @option |
|
@item difference |
|
Difference factor where higher values mean more deblocking (default: @code{32}). |
|
@item flatness |
|
Flatness threshold where lower values mean more deblocking (default: @code{39}). |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item va/vadeblock[:difference[:flatness]] |
|
Accurate vertical deblocking filter |
|
@table @option |
|
@item difference |
|
Difference factor where higher values mean more deblocking (default: @code{32}). |
|
@item flatness |
|
Flatness threshold where lower values mean more deblocking (default: @code{39}). |
|
@end table |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The horizontal and vertical deblocking filters share the difference and |
|
flatness values so you cannot set different horizontal and vertical |
|
thresholds. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item h1/x1hdeblock |
|
Experimental horizontal deblocking filter |
|
|
|
@item v1/x1vdeblock |
|
Experimental vertical deblocking filter |
|
|
|
@item dr/dering |
|
Deringing filter |
|
|
|
@item tn/tmpnoise[:threshold1[:threshold2[:threshold3]]], temporal noise reducer |
|
@table @option |
|
@item threshold1 |
|
larger -> stronger filtering |
|
@item threshold2 |
|
larger -> stronger filtering |
|
@item threshold3 |
|
larger -> stronger filtering |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item al/autolevels[:f/fullyrange], automatic brightness / contrast correction |
|
@table @option |
|
@item f/fullyrange |
|
Stretch luminance to @code{0-255}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item lb/linblenddeint |
|
Linear blend deinterlacing filter that deinterlaces the given block by |
|
filtering all lines with a @code{(1 2 1)} filter. |
|
|
|
@item li/linipoldeint |
|
Linear interpolating deinterlacing filter that deinterlaces the given block by |
|
linearly interpolating every second line. |
|
|
|
@item ci/cubicipoldeint |
|
Cubic interpolating deinterlacing filter deinterlaces the given block by |
|
cubically interpolating every second line. |
|
|
|
@item md/mediandeint |
|
Median deinterlacing filter that deinterlaces the given block by applying a |
|
median filter to every second line. |
|
|
|
@item fd/ffmpegdeint |
|
FFmpeg deinterlacing filter that deinterlaces the given block by filtering every |
|
second line with a @code{(-1 4 2 4 -1)} filter. |
|
|
|
@item l5/lowpass5 |
|
Vertically applied FIR lowpass deinterlacing filter that deinterlaces the given |
|
block by filtering all lines with a @code{(-1 2 6 2 -1)} filter. |
|
|
|
@item fq/forceQuant[:quantizer] |
|
Overrides the quantizer table from the input with the constant quantizer you |
|
specify. |
|
@table @option |
|
@item quantizer |
|
Quantizer to use |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item de/default |
|
Default pp filter combination (@code{hb:a,vb:a,dr:a}) |
|
|
|
@item fa/fast |
|
Fast pp filter combination (@code{h1:a,v1:a,dr:a}) |
|
|
|
@item ac |
|
High quality pp filter combination (@code{ha:a:128:7,va:a,dr:a}) |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Apply horizontal and vertical deblocking, deringing and automatic |
|
brightness/contrast: |
|
@example |
|
pp=hb/vb/dr/al |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply default filters without brightness/contrast correction: |
|
@example |
|
pp=de/-al |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply default filters and temporal denoiser: |
|
@example |
|
pp=default/tmpnoise:1:2:3 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply deblocking on luminance only, and switch vertical deblocking on or off |
|
automatically depending on available CPU time: |
|
@example |
|
pp=hb:y/vb:a |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section removelogo |
|
|
|
Suppress a TV station logo, using an image file to determine which |
|
pixels comprise the logo. It works by filling in the pixels that |
|
comprise the logo with neighboring pixels. |
|
|
|
This filter requires one argument which specifies the filter bitmap |
|
file, which can be any image format supported by libavformat. The |
|
width and height of the image file must match those of the video |
|
stream being processed. |
|
|
|
Pixels in the provided bitmap image with a value of zero are not |
|
considered part of the logo, non-zero pixels are considered part of |
|
the logo. If you use white (255) for the logo and black (0) for the |
|
rest, you will be safe. For making the filter bitmap, it is |
|
recommended to take a screen capture of a black frame with the logo |
|
visible, and then using a threshold filter followed by the erode |
|
filter once or twice. |
|
|
|
If needed, little splotches can be fixed manually. Remember that if |
|
logo pixels are not covered, the filter quality will be much |
|
reduced. Marking too many pixels as part of the logo does not hurt as |
|
much, but it will increase the amount of blurring needed to cover over |
|
the image and will destroy more information than necessary, and extra |
|
pixels will slow things down on a large logo. |
|
|
|
@section scale |
|
|
|
Scale (resize) the input video, using the libswscale library. |
|
|
|
The scale filter forces the output display aspect ratio to be the same |
|
of the input, by changing the output sample aspect ratio. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts a list of named options in the form of |
|
@var{key}=@var{value} pairs separated by ":". If the key for the first |
|
two options is not specified, the assumed keys for the first two |
|
values are @code{w} and @code{h}. If the first option has no key and |
|
can be interpreted like a video size specification, it will be used |
|
to set the video size. |
|
|
|
A description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item width, w |
|
Set the video width expression, default value is @code{iw}. See below |
|
for the list of accepted constants. |
|
|
|
@item height, h |
|
Set the video heiht expression, default value is @code{ih}. |
|
See below for the list of accepted constants. |
|
|
|
@item interl |
|
Set the interlacing. It accepts the following values: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item 1 |
|
force interlaced aware scaling |
|
|
|
@item 0 |
|
do not apply interlaced scaling |
|
|
|
@item -1 |
|
select interlaced aware scaling depending on whether the source frames |
|
are flagged as interlaced or not |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is @code{0}. |
|
|
|
@item flags |
|
Set libswscale scaling flags. If not explictly specified the filter |
|
applies a bilinear scaling algorithm. |
|
|
|
@item size, s |
|
Set the video size, the value must be a valid abbreviation or in the |
|
form @var{width}x@var{height}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The values of the @var{w} and @var{h} options are expressions |
|
containing the following constants: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item in_w, in_h |
|
the input width and height |
|
|
|
@item iw, ih |
|
same as @var{in_w} and @var{in_h} |
|
|
|
@item out_w, out_h |
|
the output (cropped) width and height |
|
|
|
@item ow, oh |
|
same as @var{out_w} and @var{out_h} |
|
|
|
@item a |
|
same as @var{iw} / @var{ih} |
|
|
|
@item sar |
|
input sample aspect ratio |
|
|
|
@item dar |
|
input display aspect ratio, it is the same as (@var{iw} / @var{ih}) * @var{sar} |
|
|
|
@item hsub, vsub |
|
horizontal and vertical chroma subsample values. For example for the |
|
pixel format "yuv422p" @var{hsub} is 2 and @var{vsub} is 1. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
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 @var{width} or @var{height} is 0, the respective input |
|
size is used for the output. |
|
|
|
If the value for @var{width} or @var{height} is -1, the scale filter will |
|
use, for the respective output size, a value that maintains the aspect |
|
ratio of the input image. |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Scale the input video to a size of 200x100: |
|
@example |
|
scale=200:100 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
This is equivalent to: |
|
@example |
|
scale=w=200:h=100 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
or: |
|
@example |
|
scale=200x100 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Specify a size abbreviation for the output size: |
|
@example |
|
scale=qcif |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
which can also be written as: |
|
@example |
|
scale=size=qcif |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Scale the input to 2x: |
|
@example |
|
scale=2*iw:2*ih |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
The above is the same as: |
|
@example |
|
scale=2*in_w:2*in_h |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Scale the input to 2x with forced interlaced scaling: |
|
@example |
|
scale=2*iw:2*ih:interl=1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Scale the input to half size: |
|
@example |
|
scale=iw/2:ih/2 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Increase the width, and set the height to the same size: |
|
@example |
|
scale=3/2*iw:ow |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Seek for Greek harmony: |
|
@example |
|
scale=iw:1/PHI*iw |
|
scale=ih*PHI:ih |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Increase the height, and set the width to 3/2 of the height: |
|
@example |
|
scale=3/2*oh:3/5*ih |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Increase the size, but make the size a multiple of the chroma: |
|
@example |
|
scale="trunc(3/2*iw/hsub)*hsub:trunc(3/2*ih/vsub)*vsub" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Increase the width to a maximum of 500 pixels, keep the same input |
|
aspect ratio: |
|
@example |
|
scale='min(500\, iw*3/2):-1' |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section setdar, setsar |
|
|
|
The @code{setdar} filter sets the Display Aspect Ratio for the filter |
|
output video. |
|
|
|
This is done by changing the specified Sample (aka Pixel) Aspect |
|
Ratio, according to the following equation: |
|
@example |
|
@var{DAR} = @var{HORIZONTAL_RESOLUTION} / @var{VERTICAL_RESOLUTION} * @var{SAR} |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Keep in mind that the @code{setdar} filter does not modify the pixel |
|
dimensions of the video frame. Also the display aspect ratio set by |
|
this filter may be changed by later filters in the filterchain, |
|
e.g. in case of scaling or if another "setdar" or a "setsar" filter is |
|
applied. |
|
|
|
The @code{setsar} filter sets the Sample (aka Pixel) Aspect Ratio for |
|
the filter output video. |
|
|
|
Note that as a consequence of the application of this filter, the |
|
output display aspect ratio will change according to the equation |
|
above. |
|
|
|
Keep in mind that the sample aspect ratio set by the @code{setsar} |
|
filter may be changed by later filters in the filterchain, e.g. if |
|
another "setsar" or a "setdar" filter is applied. |
|
|
|
The @code{setdar} and @code{setsar} filters accept a string in the |
|
form @var{num}:@var{den} expressing an aspect ratio, or the following |
|
named options, expressed as a sequence of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
|
separated by ":". |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item max |
|
Set the maximum integer value to use for expressing numerator and |
|
denominator when reducing the expressed aspect ratio to a rational. |
|
Default value is @code{100}. |
|
|
|
@item r, ratio: |
|
Set the aspect ratio used by the filter. |
|
|
|
The parameter can be a floating point number string, an expression, or |
|
a string of the form @var{num}:@var{den}, where @var{num} and |
|
@var{den} are the numerator and denominator of the aspect ratio. If |
|
the parameter is not specified, it is assumed the value "0". |
|
In case the form "@var{num}:@var{den}" the @code{:} character should |
|
be escaped. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If the keys are omitted in the named options list, the specifed values |
|
are assumed to be @var{ratio} and @var{max} in that order. |
|
|
|
For example to change the display aspect ratio to 16:9, specify: |
|
@example |
|
setdar='16:9' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
The example above is equivalent to: |
|
@example |
|
setdar=1.77777 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
To change the sample aspect ratio to 10:11, specify: |
|
@example |
|
setsar='10:11' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
To set a display aspect ratio of 16:9, and specify a maximum integer value of |
|
1000 in the aspect ratio reduction, use the command: |
|
@example |
|
setdar=ratio='16:9':max=1000 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section setfield |
|
|
|
Force field for the output video frame. |
|
|
|
The @code{setfield} filter marks the interlace type field for the |
|
output frames. It does not change the input frame, but only sets the |
|
corresponding property, which affects how the frame is treated by |
|
following filters (e.g. @code{fieldorder} or @code{yadif}). |
|
|
|
This filter accepts a single option @option{mode}, which can be |
|
specified either by setting @code{mode=VALUE} or setting the value |
|
alone. Available values are: |
|
|
|
@table @samp |
|
@item auto |
|
Keep the same field property. |
|
|
|
@item bff |
|
Mark the frame as bottom-field-first. |
|
|
|
@item tff |
|
Mark the frame as top-field-first. |
|
|
|
@item prog |
|
Mark the frame as progressive. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section showinfo |
|
|
|
Show a line containing various information for each input video frame. |
|
The input video is not modified. |
|
|
|
The shown line contains a sequence of key/value pairs of the form |
|
@var{key}:@var{value}. |
|
|
|
A description of each shown parameter follows: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item n |
|
sequential number of the input frame, starting from 0 |
|
|
|
@item pts |
|
Presentation TimeStamp of the input frame, expressed as a number of |
|
time base units. The time base unit depends on the filter input pad. |
|
|
|
@item pts_time |
|
Presentation TimeStamp of the input frame, expressed as a number of |
|
seconds |
|
|
|
@item pos |
|
position of the frame in the input stream, -1 if this information in |
|
unavailable and/or meaningless (for example in case of synthetic video) |
|
|
|
@item fmt |
|
pixel format name |
|
|
|
@item sar |
|
sample aspect ratio of the input frame, expressed in the form |
|
@var{num}/@var{den} |
|
|
|
@item s |
|
size of the input frame, expressed in the form |
|
@var{width}x@var{height} |
|
|
|
@item i |
|
interlaced mode ("P" for "progressive", "T" for top field first, "B" |
|
for bottom field first) |
|
|
|
@item iskey |
|
1 if the frame is a key frame, 0 otherwise |
|
|
|
@item type |
|
picture type of the input frame ("I" for an I-frame, "P" for a |
|
P-frame, "B" for a B-frame, "?" for unknown type). |
|
Check also the documentation of the @code{AVPictureType} enum and of |
|
the @code{av_get_picture_type_char} function defined in |
|
@file{libavutil/avutil.h}. |
|
|
|
@item checksum |
|
Adler-32 checksum (printed in hexadecimal) of all the planes of the input frame |
|
|
|
@item plane_checksum |
|
Adler-32 checksum (printed in hexadecimal) of each plane of the input frame, |
|
expressed in the form "[@var{c0} @var{c1} @var{c2} @var{c3}]" |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section smartblur |
|
|
|
Blur the input video without impacting the outlines. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following parameters: |
|
@var{luma_radius}:@var{luma_strength}:@var{luma_threshold}[:@var{chroma_radius}:@var{chroma_strength}:@var{chroma_threshold}] |
|
|
|
Parameters prefixed by @var{luma} indicate that they work on the |
|
luminance of the pixels whereas parameters prefixed by @var{chroma} |
|
refer to the chrominance of the pixels. |
|
|
|
If the chroma parameters are not set, the luma parameters are used for |
|
either the luminance and the chrominance of the pixels. |
|
|
|
@var{luma_radius} or @var{chroma_radius} must be a float number in the |
|
range [0.1,5.0] that specifies the variance of the gaussian filter |
|
used to blur the image (slower if larger). |
|
|
|
@var{luma_strength} or @var{chroma_strength} must be a float number in |
|
the range [-1.0,1.0] that configures the blurring. A value included in |
|
[0.0,1.0] will blur the image whereas a value included in [-1.0,0.0] |
|
will sharpen the image. |
|
|
|
@var{luma_threshold} or @var{chroma_threshold} must be an integer in |
|
the range [-30,30] that is used as a coefficient to determine whether |
|
a pixel should be blurred or not. A value of 0 will filter all the |
|
image, a value included in [0,30] will filter flat areas and a value |
|
included in [-30,0] will filter edges. |
|
|
|
@anchor{subtitles} |
|
@section subtitles |
|
|
|
Draw subtitles on top of input video using the libass library. |
|
|
|
To enable compilation of this filter you need to configure FFmpeg with |
|
@code{--enable-libass}. This filter also requires a build with libavcodec and |
|
libavformat to convert the passed subtitles file to ASS (Advanced Substation |
|
Alpha) subtitles format. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts the following named options, expressed as a |
|
sequence of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, separated by ":". |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item filename, f |
|
Set the filename of the subtitle file to read. It must be specified. |
|
|
|
@item original_size |
|
Specify the size of the original video, the video for which the ASS file |
|
was composed. Due to a misdesign in ASS aspect ratio arithmetic, this is |
|
necessary to correctly scale the fonts if the aspect ratio has been changed. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If the first key is not specified, it is assumed that the first value |
|
specifies the @option{filename}. |
|
|
|
For example, to render the file @file{sub.srt} on top of the input |
|
video, use the command: |
|
@example |
|
subtitles=sub.srt |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
which is equivalent to: |
|
@example |
|
subtitles=filename=sub.srt |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section split |
|
|
|
Split input video into several identical outputs. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts a single parameter which specifies the number of outputs. If |
|
unspecified, it defaults to 2. |
|
|
|
For example |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i INPUT -filter_complex split=5 OUTPUT |
|
@end example |
|
will create 5 copies of the input video. |
|
|
|
For example: |
|
@example |
|
[in] split [splitout1][splitout2]; |
|
[splitout1] crop=100:100:0:0 [cropout]; |
|
[splitout2] pad=200:200:100:100 [padout]; |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
will create two separate outputs from the same input, one cropped and |
|
one padded. |
|
|
|
@section super2xsai |
|
|
|
Scale the input by 2x and smooth using the Super2xSaI (Scale and |
|
Interpolate) pixel art scaling algorithm. |
|
|
|
Useful for enlarging pixel art images without reducing sharpness. |
|
|
|
@section swapuv |
|
Swap U & V plane. |
|
|
|
@section thumbnail |
|
Select the most representative frame in a given sequence of consecutive frames. |
|
|
|
It accepts as argument the frames batch size to analyze (default @var{N}=100); |
|
in a set of @var{N} frames, the filter will pick one of them, and then handle |
|
the next batch of @var{N} frames until the end. |
|
|
|
Since the filter keeps track of the whole frames sequence, a bigger @var{N} |
|
value will result in a higher memory usage, so a high value is not recommended. |
|
|
|
The following example extract one picture each 50 frames: |
|
@example |
|
thumbnail=50 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Complete example of a thumbnail creation with @command{ffmpeg}: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf thumbnail,scale=300:200 -frames:v 1 out.png |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section tile |
|
|
|
Tile several successive frames together. |
|
|
|
It accepts a list of options in the form of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs |
|
separated by ":". A description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item layout |
|
Set the grid size (i.e. the number of lines and columns) in the form |
|
"@var{w}x@var{h}". |
|
|
|
@item margin |
|
Set the outer border margin in pixels. |
|
|
|
@item padding |
|
Set the inner border thickness (i.e. the number of pixels between frames). For |
|
more advanced padding options (such as having different values for the edges), |
|
refer to the pad video filter. |
|
|
|
@item nb_frames |
|
Set the maximum number of frames to render in the given area. It must be less |
|
than or equal to @var{w}x@var{h}. The default value is @code{0}, meaning all |
|
the area will be used. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Alternatively, the options can be specified as a flat string: |
|
|
|
@var{layout}[:@var{nb_frames}[:@var{margin}[:@var{padding}]]] |
|
|
|
For example, produce 8×8 PNG tiles of all keyframes (@option{-skip_frame |
|
nokey}) in a movie: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -skip_frame nokey -i file.avi -vf 'scale=128:72,tile=8x8' -an -vsync 0 keyframes%03d.png |
|
@end example |
|
The @option{-vsync 0} is necessary to prevent @command{ffmpeg} from |
|
duplicating each output frame to accomodate the originally detected frame |
|
rate. |
|
|
|
Another example to display @code{5} pictures in an area of @code{3x2} frames, |
|
with @code{7} pixels between them, and @code{2} pixels of initial margin, using |
|
mixed flat and named options: |
|
@example |
|
tile=3x2:nb_frames=5:padding=7:margin=2 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section tinterlace |
|
|
|
Perform various types of temporal field interlacing. |
|
|
|
Frames are counted starting from 1, so the first input frame is |
|
considered odd. |
|
|
|
This filter accepts options in the form of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs |
|
separated by ":". |
|
Alternatively, the @var{mode} option can be specified as a value alone, |
|
optionally followed by a ":" and further ":" separated @var{key}=@var{value} |
|
pairs. |
|
|
|
A description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item mode |
|
Specify the mode of the interlacing. This option can also be specified |
|
as a value alone. See below for a list of values for this option. |
|
|
|
Available values are: |
|
|
|
@table @samp |
|
@item merge, 0 |
|
Move odd frames into the upper field, even into the lower field, |
|
generating a double height frame at half framerate. |
|
|
|
@item drop_odd, 1 |
|
Only output even frames, odd frames are dropped, generating a frame with |
|
unchanged height at half framerate. |
|
|
|
@item drop_even, 2 |
|
Only output odd frames, even frames are dropped, generating a frame with |
|
unchanged height at half framerate. |
|
|
|
@item pad, 3 |
|
Expand each frame to full height, but pad alternate lines with black, |
|
generating a frame with double height at the same input framerate. |
|
|
|
@item interleave_top, 4 |
|
Interleave the upper field from odd frames with the lower field from |
|
even frames, generating a frame with unchanged height at half framerate. |
|
|
|
@item interleave_bottom, 5 |
|
Interleave the lower field from odd frames with the upper field from |
|
even frames, generating a frame with unchanged height at half framerate. |
|
|
|
@item interlacex2, 6 |
|
Double frame rate with unchanged height. Frames are inserted each |
|
containing the second temporal field from the previous input frame and |
|
the first temporal field from the next input frame. This mode relies on |
|
the top_field_first flag. Useful for interlaced video displays with no |
|
field synchronisation. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Numeric values are deprecated but are accepted for backward |
|
compatibility reasons. |
|
|
|
Default mode is @code{merge}. |
|
|
|
@item flags |
|
Specify flags influencing the filter process. |
|
|
|
Available value for @var{flags} is: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item low_pass_filter, vlfp |
|
Enable vertical low-pass filtering in the filter. |
|
Vertical low-pass filtering is required when creating an interlaced |
|
destination from a progressive source which contains high-frequency |
|
vertical detail. Filtering will reduce interlace 'twitter' and Moire |
|
patterning. |
|
|
|
Vertical low-pass filtering can only be enabled for @option{mode} |
|
@var{interleave_top} and @var{interleave_bottom}. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section transpose |
|
|
|
Transpose rows with columns in the input video and optionally flip it. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
|
pairs, separated by ':'. If the key of the first options is omitted, |
|
the arguments are interpreted according to the syntax |
|
@var{dir}:@var{passthrough}. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item dir |
|
Specify the transposition direction. Can assume the following values: |
|
|
|
@table @samp |
|
@item 0, 4 |
|
Rotate by 90 degrees counterclockwise and vertically flip (default), that is: |
|
@example |
|
L.R L.l |
|
. . -> . . |
|
l.r R.r |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item 1, 5 |
|
Rotate by 90 degrees clockwise, that is: |
|
@example |
|
L.R l.L |
|
. . -> . . |
|
l.r r.R |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item 2, 6 |
|
Rotate by 90 degrees counterclockwise, that is: |
|
@example |
|
L.R R.r |
|
. . -> . . |
|
l.r L.l |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item 3, 7 |
|
Rotate by 90 degrees clockwise and vertically flip, that is: |
|
@example |
|
L.R r.R |
|
. . -> . . |
|
l.r l.L |
|
@end example |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For values between 4-7, the transposition is only done if the input |
|
video geometry is portrait and not landscape. These values are |
|
deprecated, the @code{passthrough} option should be used instead. |
|
|
|
@item passthrough |
|
Do not apply the transposition if the input geometry matches the one |
|
specified by the specified value. It accepts the following values: |
|
@table @samp |
|
@item none |
|
Always apply transposition. |
|
@item portrait |
|
Preserve portrait geometry (when @var{height} >= @var{width}). |
|
@item landscape |
|
Preserve landscape geometry (when @var{width} >= @var{height}). |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is @code{none}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For example to rotate by 90 degrees clockwise and preserve portrait |
|
layout: |
|
@example |
|
transpose=dir=1:passthrough=portrait |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
The command above can also be specified as: |
|
@example |
|
transpose=1:portrait |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section unsharp |
|
|
|
Sharpen or blur the input video. |
|
|
|
It accepts the following parameters: |
|
@var{luma_msize_x}:@var{luma_msize_y}:@var{luma_amount}:@var{chroma_msize_x}:@var{chroma_msize_y}:@var{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 '5:5:1.0:5:5:0.0'. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item luma_msize_x |
|
Set the luma matrix horizontal size. It can be an integer between 3 |
|
and 13, default value is 5. |
|
|
|
@item luma_msize_y |
|
Set the luma matrix vertical size. It can be an integer between 3 |
|
and 13, default value is 5. |
|
|
|
@item luma_amount |
|
Set the luma effect strength. It can be a float number between -2.0 |
|
and 5.0, default value is 1.0. |
|
|
|
@item chroma_msize_x |
|
Set the chroma matrix horizontal size. It can be an integer between 3 |
|
and 13, default value is 5. |
|
|
|
@item chroma_msize_y |
|
Set the chroma matrix vertical size. It can be an integer between 3 |
|
and 13, default value is 5. |
|
|
|
@item chroma_amount |
|
Set the chroma effect strength. It can be a float number between -2.0 |
|
and 5.0, default value is 0.0. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@example |
|
# 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 @command{ffmpeg} |
|
ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "unsharp" out.mp4 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section vflip |
|
|
|
Flip the input video vertically. |
|
|
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i in.avi -vf "vflip" out.avi |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section yadif |
|
|
|
Deinterlace the input video ("yadif" means "yet another deinterlacing |
|
filter"). |
|
|
|
The filter accepts parameters as a list of @var{key}=@var{value} |
|
pairs, separated by ":". If the key of the first options is omitted, |
|
the arguments are interpreted according to syntax |
|
@var{mode}:@var{parity}:@var{deint}. |
|
|
|
The description of the accepted parameters follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item mode |
|
Specify the interlacing mode to adopt. Accept one of the following |
|
values: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item 0, send_frame |
|
output 1 frame for each frame |
|
@item 1, send_field |
|
output 1 frame for each field |
|
@item 2, send_frame_nospatial |
|
like @code{send_frame} but skip spatial interlacing check |
|
@item 3, send_field_nospatial |
|
like @code{send_field} but skip spatial interlacing check |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is @code{send_frame}. |
|
|
|
@item parity |
|
Specify the picture field parity assumed for the input interlaced |
|
video. Accept one of the following values: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item 0, tff |
|
assume top field first |
|
@item 1, bff |
|
assume bottom field first |
|
@item -1, auto |
|
enable automatic detection |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is @code{auto}. |
|
If interlacing is unknown or decoder does not export this information, |
|
top field first will be assumed. |
|
|
|
@item deint |
|
Specify which frames to deinterlace. Accept one of the following |
|
values: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item 0, all |
|
deinterlace all frames |
|
@item 1, interlaced |
|
only deinterlace frames marked as interlaced |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is @code{all}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@c man end VIDEO FILTERS |
|
|
|
@chapter Video Sources |
|
@c man begin VIDEO SOURCES |
|
|
|
Below is a description of the currently available video sources. |
|
|
|
@section buffer |
|
|
|
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 @file{libavfilter/vsrc_buffer.h}. |
|
|
|
It accepts a list of options in the form of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs |
|
separated by ":". A description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item video_size |
|
Specify the size (width and height) of the buffered video frames. |
|
|
|
@item pix_fmt |
|
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. |
|
|
|
@item time_base |
|
Specify the timebase assumed by the timestamps of the buffered frames. |
|
|
|
@item time_base |
|
Specify the frame rate expected for the video stream. |
|
|
|
@item pixel_aspect |
|
Specify the sample aspect ratio assumed by the video frames. |
|
|
|
@item sws_param |
|
Specify the optional parameters to be used for the scale filter which |
|
is automatically inserted when an input change is detected in the |
|
input size or format. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For example: |
|
@example |
|
buffer=size=320x240:pix_fmt=yuv410p:time_base=1/24:pixel_aspect=1/1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
will instruct the source to accept video frames with size 320x240 and |
|
with format "yuv410p", assuming 1/24 as the timestamps timebase and |
|
square pixels (1:1 sample aspect ratio). |
|
Since the pixel format with name "yuv410p" corresponds to the number 6 |
|
(check the enum AVPixelFormat definition in @file{libavutil/pixfmt.h}), |
|
this example corresponds to: |
|
@example |
|
buffer=size=320x240:pixfmt=6:time_base=1/24:pixel_aspect=1/1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Alternatively, the options can be specified as a flat string, but this |
|
syntax is deprecated: |
|
|
|
@var{width}:@var{height}:@var{pix_fmt}:@var{time_base.num}:@var{time_base.den}:@var{pixel_aspect.num}:@var{pixel_aspect.den}[:@var{sws_param}] |
|
|
|
@section cellauto |
|
|
|
Create a pattern generated by an elementary cellular automaton. |
|
|
|
The initial state of the cellular automaton can be defined through the |
|
@option{filename}, and @option{pattern} options. If such options are |
|
not specified an initial state is created randomly. |
|
|
|
At each new frame a new row in the video is filled with the result of |
|
the cellular automaton next generation. The behavior when the whole |
|
frame is filled is defined by the @option{scroll} option. |
|
|
|
This source accepts a list of options in the form of |
|
@var{key}=@var{value} pairs separated by ":". A description of the |
|
accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item filename, f |
|
Read the initial cellular automaton state, i.e. the starting row, from |
|
the specified file. |
|
In the file, each non-whitespace character is considered an alive |
|
cell, a newline will terminate the row, and further characters in the |
|
file will be ignored. |
|
|
|
@item pattern, p |
|
Read the initial cellular automaton state, i.e. the starting row, from |
|
the specified string. |
|
|
|
Each non-whitespace character in the string is considered an alive |
|
cell, a newline will terminate the row, and further characters in the |
|
string will be ignored. |
|
|
|
@item rate, r |
|
Set the video rate, that is the number of frames generated per second. |
|
Default is 25. |
|
|
|
@item random_fill_ratio, ratio |
|
Set the random fill ratio for the initial cellular automaton row. It |
|
is a floating point number value ranging from 0 to 1, defaults to |
|
1/PHI. |
|
|
|
This option is ignored when a file or a pattern is specified. |
|
|
|
@item random_seed, seed |
|
Set the seed for filling randomly the initial row, must be an integer |
|
included between 0 and UINT32_MAX. If not specified, or if explicitly |
|
set to -1, the filter will try to use a good random seed on a best |
|
effort basis. |
|
|
|
@item rule |
|
Set the cellular automaton rule, it is a number ranging from 0 to 255. |
|
Default value is 110. |
|
|
|
@item size, s |
|
Set the size of the output video. |
|
|
|
If @option{filename} or @option{pattern} is specified, the size is set |
|
by default to the width of the specified initial state row, and the |
|
height is set to @var{width} * PHI. |
|
|
|
If @option{size} is set, it must contain the width of the specified |
|
pattern string, and the specified pattern will be centered in the |
|
larger row. |
|
|
|
If a filename or a pattern string is not specified, the size value |
|
defaults to "320x518" (used for a randomly generated initial state). |
|
|
|
@item scroll |
|
If set to 1, scroll the output upward when all the rows in the output |
|
have been already filled. If set to 0, the new generated row will be |
|
written over the top row just after the bottom row is filled. |
|
Defaults to 1. |
|
|
|
@item start_full, full |
|
If set to 1, completely fill the output with generated rows before |
|
outputting the first frame. |
|
This is the default behavior, for disabling set the value to 0. |
|
|
|
@item stitch |
|
If set to 1, stitch the left and right row edges together. |
|
This is the default behavior, for disabling set the value to 0. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Read the initial state from @file{pattern}, and specify an output of |
|
size 200x400. |
|
@example |
|
cellauto=f=pattern:s=200x400 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate a random initial row with a width of 200 cells, with a fill |
|
ratio of 2/3: |
|
@example |
|
cellauto=ratio=2/3:s=200x200 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Create a pattern generated by rule 18 starting by a single alive cell |
|
centered on an initial row with width 100: |
|
@example |
|
cellauto=p=@@:s=100x400:full=0:rule=18 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Specify a more elaborated initial pattern: |
|
@example |
|
cellauto=p='@@@@ @@ @@@@':s=100x400:full=0:rule=18 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section mandelbrot |
|
|
|
Generate a Mandelbrot set fractal, and progressively zoom towards the |
|
point specified with @var{start_x} and @var{start_y}. |
|
|
|
This source accepts a list of options in the form of |
|
@var{key}=@var{value} pairs separated by ":". A description of the |
|
accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item end_pts |
|
Set the terminal pts value. Default value is 400. |
|
|
|
@item end_scale |
|
Set the terminal scale value. |
|
Must be a floating point value. Default value is 0.3. |
|
|
|
@item inner |
|
Set the inner coloring mode, that is the algorithm used to draw the |
|
Mandelbrot fractal internal region. |
|
|
|
It shall assume one of the following values: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item black |
|
Set black mode. |
|
@item convergence |
|
Show time until convergence. |
|
@item mincol |
|
Set color based on point closest to the origin of the iterations. |
|
@item period |
|
Set period mode. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is @var{mincol}. |
|
|
|
@item bailout |
|
Set the bailout value. Default value is 10.0. |
|
|
|
@item maxiter |
|
Set the maximum of iterations performed by the rendering |
|
algorithm. Default value is 7189. |
|
|
|
@item outer |
|
Set outer coloring mode. |
|
It shall assume one of following values: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item iteration_count |
|
Set iteration cound mode. |
|
@item normalized_iteration_count |
|
set normalized iteration count mode. |
|
@end table |
|
Default value is @var{normalized_iteration_count}. |
|
|
|
@item rate, r |
|
Set frame rate, expressed as number of frames per second. Default |
|
value is "25". |
|
|
|
@item size, s |
|
Set frame size. Default value is "640x480". |
|
|
|
@item start_scale |
|
Set the initial scale value. Default value is 3.0. |
|
|
|
@item start_x |
|
Set the initial x position. Must be a floating point value between |
|
-100 and 100. Default value is -0.743643887037158704752191506114774. |
|
|
|
@item start_y |
|
Set the initial y position. Must be a floating point value between |
|
-100 and 100. Default value is -0.131825904205311970493132056385139. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@section mptestsrc |
|
|
|
Generate various test patterns, as generated by the MPlayer test filter. |
|
|
|
The size of the generated video is fixed, and is 256x256. |
|
This source is useful in particular for testing encoding features. |
|
|
|
This source accepts an optional sequence of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
|
separated by ":". The description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item rate, r |
|
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 |
|
@var{frame_rate_num}/@var{frame_rate_den}, an integer number, a float |
|
number or a valid video frame rate abbreviation. The default value is |
|
"25". |
|
|
|
@item duration, d |
|
Set the video duration of the sourced video. The accepted syntax is: |
|
@example |
|
[-]HH:MM:SS[.m...] |
|
[-]S+[.m...] |
|
@end example |
|
See also the function @code{av_parse_time()}. |
|
|
|
If not specified, or the expressed duration is negative, the video is |
|
supposed to be generated forever. |
|
|
|
@item test, t |
|
|
|
Set the number or the name of the test to perform. Supported tests are: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item dc_luma |
|
@item dc_chroma |
|
@item freq_luma |
|
@item freq_chroma |
|
@item amp_luma |
|
@item amp_chroma |
|
@item cbp |
|
@item mv |
|
@item ring1 |
|
@item ring2 |
|
@item all |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is "all", which will cycle through the list of all tests. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For example the following: |
|
@example |
|
testsrc=t=dc_luma |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
will generate a "dc_luma" test pattern. |
|
|
|
@section frei0r_src |
|
|
|
Provide a frei0r source. |
|
|
|
To enable compilation of this filter you need to install the frei0r |
|
header and configure FFmpeg with @code{--enable-frei0r}. |
|
|
|
The source supports the syntax: |
|
@example |
|
@var{size}:@var{rate}:@var{src_name}[@{=|:@}@var{param1}:@var{param2}:...:@var{paramN}] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@var{size} is the size of the video to generate, may be a string of the |
|
form @var{width}x@var{height} or a frame size abbreviation. |
|
@var{rate} is the rate of the video to generate, may be a string of |
|
the form @var{num}/@var{den} or a frame rate abbreviation. |
|
@var{src_name} is the name to the frei0r source to load. For more |
|
information regarding frei0r and how to set the parameters read the |
|
section @ref{frei0r} in the description of the video filters. |
|
|
|
For example, to generate a frei0r partik0l source with size 200x200 |
|
and frame rate 10 which is overlayed on the overlay filter main input: |
|
@example |
|
frei0r_src=200x200:10:partik0l=1234 [overlay]; [in][overlay] overlay |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section life |
|
|
|
Generate a life pattern. |
|
|
|
This source is based on a generalization of John Conway's life game. |
|
|
|
The sourced input represents a life grid, each pixel represents a cell |
|
which can be in one of two possible states, alive or dead. Every cell |
|
interacts with its eight neighbours, which are the cells that are |
|
horizontally, vertically, or diagonally adjacent. |
|
|
|
At each interaction the grid evolves according to the adopted rule, |
|
which specifies the number of neighbor alive cells which will make a |
|
cell stay alive or born. The @option{rule} option allows to specify |
|
the rule to adopt. |
|
|
|
This source accepts a list of options in the form of |
|
@var{key}=@var{value} pairs separated by ":". A description of the |
|
accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item filename, f |
|
Set the file from which to read the initial grid state. In the file, |
|
each non-whitespace character is considered an alive cell, and newline |
|
is used to delimit the end of each row. |
|
|
|
If this option is not specified, the initial grid is generated |
|
randomly. |
|
|
|
@item rate, r |
|
Set the video rate, that is the number of frames generated per second. |
|
Default is 25. |
|
|
|
@item random_fill_ratio, ratio |
|
Set the random fill ratio for the initial random grid. It is a |
|
floating point number value ranging from 0 to 1, defaults to 1/PHI. |
|
It is ignored when a file is specified. |
|
|
|
@item random_seed, seed |
|
Set the seed for filling the initial random grid, must be an integer |
|
included between 0 and UINT32_MAX. If not specified, or if explicitly |
|
set to -1, the filter will try to use a good random seed on a best |
|
effort basis. |
|
|
|
@item rule |
|
Set the life rule. |
|
|
|
A rule can be specified with a code of the kind "S@var{NS}/B@var{NB}", |
|
where @var{NS} and @var{NB} are sequences of numbers in the range 0-8, |
|
@var{NS} specifies the number of alive neighbor cells which make a |
|
live cell stay alive, and @var{NB} the number of alive neighbor cells |
|
which make a dead cell to become alive (i.e. to "born"). |
|
"s" and "b" can be used in place of "S" and "B", respectively. |
|
|
|
Alternatively a rule can be specified by an 18-bits integer. The 9 |
|
high order bits are used to encode the next cell state if it is alive |
|
for each number of neighbor alive cells, the low order bits specify |
|
the rule for "borning" new cells. Higher order bits encode for an |
|
higher number of neighbor cells. |
|
For example the number 6153 = @code{(12<<9)+9} specifies a stay alive |
|
rule of 12 and a born rule of 9, which corresponds to "S23/B03". |
|
|
|
Default value is "S23/B3", which is the original Conway's game of life |
|
rule, and will keep a cell alive if it has 2 or 3 neighbor alive |
|
cells, and will born a new cell if there are three alive cells around |
|
a dead cell. |
|
|
|
@item size, s |
|
Set the size of the output video. |
|
|
|
If @option{filename} is specified, the size is set by default to the |
|
same size of the input file. If @option{size} is set, it must contain |
|
the size specified in the input file, and the initial grid defined in |
|
that file is centered in the larger resulting area. |
|
|
|
If a filename is not specified, the size value defaults to "320x240" |
|
(used for a randomly generated initial grid). |
|
|
|
@item stitch |
|
If set to 1, stitch the left and right grid edges together, and the |
|
top and bottom edges also. Defaults to 1. |
|
|
|
@item mold |
|
Set cell mold speed. If set, a dead cell will go from @option{death_color} to |
|
@option{mold_color} with a step of @option{mold}. @option{mold} can have a |
|
value from 0 to 255. |
|
|
|
@item life_color |
|
Set the color of living (or new born) cells. |
|
|
|
@item death_color |
|
Set the color of dead cells. If @option{mold} is set, this is the first color |
|
used to represent a dead cell. |
|
|
|
@item mold_color |
|
Set mold color, for definitely dead and moldy cells. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Read a grid from @file{pattern}, and center it on a grid of size |
|
300x300 pixels: |
|
@example |
|
life=f=pattern:s=300x300 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate a random grid of size 200x200, with a fill ratio of 2/3: |
|
@example |
|
life=ratio=2/3:s=200x200 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Specify a custom rule for evolving a randomly generated grid: |
|
@example |
|
life=rule=S14/B34 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Full example with slow death effect (mold) using @command{ffplay}: |
|
@example |
|
ffplay -f lavfi life=s=300x200:mold=10:r=60:ratio=0.1:death_color=#C83232:life_color=#00ff00,scale=1200:800:flags=16 |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section color, nullsrc, rgbtestsrc, smptebars, testsrc |
|
|
|
The @code{color} source provides an uniformly colored input. |
|
|
|
The @code{nullsrc} source returns unprocessed video frames. It is |
|
mainly useful to be employed in analysis / debugging tools, or as the |
|
source for filters which ignore the input data. |
|
|
|
The @code{rgbtestsrc} source generates an RGB test pattern useful for |
|
detecting RGB vs BGR issues. You should see a red, green and blue |
|
stripe from top to bottom. |
|
|
|
The @code{smptebars} source generates a color bars pattern, based on |
|
the SMPTE Engineering Guideline EG 1-1990. |
|
|
|
The @code{testsrc} source generates a test video pattern, showing a |
|
color pattern, a scrolling gradient and a timestamp. This is mainly |
|
intended for testing purposes. |
|
|
|
These sources accept an optional sequence of @var{key}=@var{value} pairs, |
|
separated by ":". The description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item color, c |
|
Specify the color of the source, only used in the @code{color} |
|
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". |
|
|
|
@item size, s |
|
Specify the size of the sourced video, it may be a string of the form |
|
@var{width}x@var{height}, or the name of a size abbreviation. The |
|
default value is "320x240". |
|
|
|
@item rate, r |
|
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 |
|
@var{frame_rate_num}/@var{frame_rate_den}, an integer number, a float |
|
number or a valid video frame rate abbreviation. The default value is |
|
"25". |
|
|
|
@item sar |
|
Set the sample aspect ratio of the sourced video. |
|
|
|
@item duration, d |
|
Set the video duration of the sourced video. The accepted syntax is: |
|
@example |
|
[-]HH[:MM[:SS[.m...]]] |
|
[-]S+[.m...] |
|
@end example |
|
See also the function @code{av_parse_time()}. |
|
|
|
If not specified, or the expressed duration is negative, the video is |
|
supposed to be generated forever. |
|
|
|
@item decimals, n |
|
Set the number of decimals to show in the timestamp, only used in the |
|
@code{testsrc} source. |
|
|
|
The displayed timestamp value will correspond to the original |
|
timestamp value multiplied by the power of 10 of the specified |
|
value. Default value is 0. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
For example the following: |
|
@example |
|
testsrc=duration=5.3:size=qcif:rate=10 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
will generate a video with a duration of 5.3 seconds, with size |
|
176x144 and a frame rate of 10 frames per second. |
|
|
|
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. |
|
@example |
|
color=c=red@@0.2:s=qcif:r=10 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
If the input content is to be ignored, @code{nullsrc} can be used. The |
|
following command generates noise in the luminance plane by employing |
|
the @code{geq} filter: |
|
@example |
|
nullsrc=s=256x256, geq=random(1)*255:128:128 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@c man end VIDEO SOURCES |
|
|
|
@chapter Video Sinks |
|
@c man begin VIDEO SINKS |
|
|
|
Below is a description of the currently available video sinks. |
|
|
|
@section buffersink |
|
|
|
Buffer video frames, and make them available to the end of the filter |
|
graph. |
|
|
|
This sink is mainly intended for a programmatic use, in particular |
|
through the interface defined in @file{libavfilter/buffersink.h}. |
|
|
|
It does not require a string parameter in input, but you need to |
|
specify a pointer to a list of supported pixel formats terminated by |
|
-1 in the opaque parameter provided to @code{avfilter_init_filter} |
|
when initializing this sink. |
|
|
|
@section nullsink |
|
|
|
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. |
|
|
|
@c man end VIDEO SINKS |
|
|
|
@chapter Multimedia Filters |
|
@c man begin MULTIMEDIA FILTERS |
|
|
|
Below is a description of the currently available multimedia filters. |
|
|
|
@section aselect, select |
|
Select frames to pass in output. |
|
|
|
These filters accept a single option @option{expr} or @option{e} |
|
specifying the select expression, which can be specified either by |
|
specyfing @code{expr=VALUE} or specifying the expression |
|
alone. |
|
|
|
The select expression is evaluated for each input frame. If the |
|
evaluation result is a non-zero value, the frame is selected and |
|
passed to the output, otherwise it is discarded. |
|
|
|
The expression can contain the following constants: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item n |
|
the sequential number of the filtered frame, starting from 0 |
|
|
|
@item selected_n |
|
the sequential number of the selected frame, starting from 0 |
|
|
|
@item prev_selected_n |
|
the sequential number of the last selected frame, NAN if undefined |
|
|
|
@item TB |
|
timebase of the input timestamps |
|
|
|
@item pts |
|
the PTS (Presentation TimeStamp) of the filtered video frame, |
|
expressed in @var{TB} units, NAN if undefined |
|
|
|
@item t |
|
the PTS (Presentation TimeStamp) of the filtered video frame, |
|
expressed in seconds, NAN if undefined |
|
|
|
@item prev_pts |
|
the PTS of the previously filtered video frame, NAN if undefined |
|
|
|
@item prev_selected_pts |
|
the PTS of the last previously filtered video frame, NAN if undefined |
|
|
|
@item prev_selected_t |
|
the PTS of the last previously selected video frame, NAN if undefined |
|
|
|
@item start_pts |
|
the PTS of the first video frame in the video, NAN if undefined |
|
|
|
@item start_t |
|
the time of the first video frame in the video, NAN if undefined |
|
|
|
@item pict_type @emph{(video only)} |
|
the type of the filtered frame, can assume one of the following |
|
values: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item I |
|
@item P |
|
@item B |
|
@item S |
|
@item SI |
|
@item SP |
|
@item BI |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item interlace_type @emph{(video only)} |
|
the frame interlace type, can assume one of the following values: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item PROGRESSIVE |
|
the frame is progressive (not interlaced) |
|
@item TOPFIRST |
|
the frame is top-field-first |
|
@item BOTTOMFIRST |
|
the frame is bottom-field-first |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@item consumed_sample_n @emph{(audio only)} |
|
the number of selected samples before the current frame |
|
|
|
@item samples_n @emph{(audio only)} |
|
the number of samples in the current frame |
|
|
|
@item sample_rate @emph{(audio only)} |
|
the input sample rate |
|
|
|
@item key |
|
1 if the filtered frame is a key-frame, 0 otherwise |
|
|
|
@item pos |
|
the position in the file of the filtered frame, -1 if the information |
|
is not available (e.g. for synthetic video) |
|
|
|
@item scene @emph{(video only)} |
|
value between 0 and 1 to indicate a new scene; a low value reflects a low |
|
probability for the current frame to introduce a new scene, while a higher |
|
value means the current frame is more likely to be one (see the example below) |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The default value of the select expression is "1". |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Select all frames in input: |
|
@example |
|
select |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
The example above is the same as: |
|
@example |
|
select=1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Skip all frames: |
|
@example |
|
select=0 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Select only I-frames: |
|
@example |
|
select='eq(pict_type\,I)' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Select one frame every 100: |
|
@example |
|
select='not(mod(n\,100))' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Select only frames contained in the 10-20 time interval: |
|
@example |
|
select='gte(t\,10)*lte(t\,20)' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Select only I frames contained in the 10-20 time interval: |
|
@example |
|
select='gte(t\,10)*lte(t\,20)*eq(pict_type\,I)' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Select frames with a minimum distance of 10 seconds: |
|
@example |
|
select='isnan(prev_selected_t)+gte(t-prev_selected_t\,10)' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Use aselect to select only audio frames with samples number > 100: |
|
@example |
|
aselect='gt(samples_n\,100)' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Create a mosaic of the first scenes: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i video.avi -vf select='gt(scene\,0.4)',scale=160:120,tile -frames:v 1 preview.png |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Comparing @var{scene} against a value between 0.3 and 0.5 is generally a sane |
|
choice. |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section asendcmd, sendcmd |
|
|
|
Send commands to filters in the filtergraph. |
|
|
|
These filters read commands to be sent to other filters in the |
|
filtergraph. |
|
|
|
@code{asendcmd} must be inserted between two audio filters, |
|
@code{sendcmd} must be inserted between two video filters, but apart |
|
from that they act the same way. |
|
|
|
The specification of commands can be provided in the filter arguments |
|
with the @var{commands} option, or in a file specified by the |
|
@var{filename} option. |
|
|
|
These filters accept the following options: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item commands, c |
|
Set the commands to be read and sent to the other filters. |
|
@item filename, f |
|
Set the filename of the commands to be read and sent to the other |
|
filters. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Commands syntax |
|
|
|
A commands description consists of a sequence of interval |
|
specifications, comprising a list of commands to be executed when a |
|
particular event related to that interval occurs. The occurring event |
|
is typically the current frame time entering or leaving a given time |
|
interval. |
|
|
|
An interval is specified by the following syntax: |
|
@example |
|
@var{START}[-@var{END}] @var{COMMANDS}; |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
The time interval is specified by the @var{START} and @var{END} times. |
|
@var{END} is optional and defaults to the maximum time. |
|
|
|
The current frame time is considered within the specified interval if |
|
it is included in the interval [@var{START}, @var{END}), that is when |
|
the time is greater or equal to @var{START} and is lesser than |
|
@var{END}. |
|
|
|
@var{COMMANDS} consists of a sequence of one or more command |
|
specifications, separated by ",", relating to that interval. The |
|
syntax of a command specification is given by: |
|
@example |
|
[@var{FLAGS}] @var{TARGET} @var{COMMAND} @var{ARG} |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@var{FLAGS} is optional and specifies the type of events relating to |
|
the time interval which enable sending the specified command, and must |
|
be a non-null sequence of identifier flags separated by "+" or "|" and |
|
enclosed between "[" and "]". |
|
|
|
The following flags are recognized: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item enter |
|
The command is sent when the current frame timestamp enters the |
|
specified interval. In other words, the command is sent when the |
|
previous frame timestamp was not in the given interval, and the |
|
current is. |
|
|
|
@item leave |
|
The command is sent when the current frame timestamp leaves the |
|
specified interval. In other words, the command is sent when the |
|
previous frame timestamp was in the given interval, and the |
|
current is not. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
If @var{FLAGS} is not specified, a default value of @code{[enter]} is |
|
assumed. |
|
|
|
@var{TARGET} specifies the target of the command, usually the name of |
|
the filter class or a specific filter instance name. |
|
|
|
@var{COMMAND} specifies the name of the command for the target filter. |
|
|
|
@var{ARG} is optional and specifies the optional list of argument for |
|
the given @var{COMMAND}. |
|
|
|
Between one interval specification and another, whitespaces, or |
|
sequences of characters starting with @code{#} until the end of line, |
|
are ignored and can be used to annotate comments. |
|
|
|
A simplified BNF description of the commands specification syntax |
|
follows: |
|
@example |
|
@var{COMMAND_FLAG} ::= "enter" | "leave" |
|
@var{COMMAND_FLAGS} ::= @var{COMMAND_FLAG} [(+|"|")@var{COMMAND_FLAG}] |
|
@var{COMMAND} ::= ["[" @var{COMMAND_FLAGS} "]"] @var{TARGET} @var{COMMAND} [@var{ARG}] |
|
@var{COMMANDS} ::= @var{COMMAND} [,@var{COMMANDS}] |
|
@var{INTERVAL} ::= @var{START}[-@var{END}] @var{COMMANDS} |
|
@var{INTERVALS} ::= @var{INTERVAL}[;@var{INTERVALS}] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Specify audio tempo change at second 4: |
|
@example |
|
asendcmd=c='4.0 atempo tempo 1.5',atempo |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Specify a list of drawtext and hue commands in a file. |
|
@example |
|
# show text in the interval 5-10 |
|
5.0-10.0 [enter] drawtext reinit 'fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:text=hello world', |
|
[leave] drawtext reinit 'fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:text='; |
|
|
|
# desaturate the image in the interval 15-20 |
|
15.0-20.0 [enter] hue reinit s=0, |
|
[enter] drawtext reinit 'fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:text=nocolor', |
|
[leave] hue reinit s=1, |
|
[leave] drawtext reinit 'fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:text=color'; |
|
|
|
# apply an exponential saturation fade-out effect, starting from time 25 |
|
25 [enter] hue s=exp(t-25) |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
A filtergraph allowing to read and process the above command list |
|
stored in a file @file{test.cmd}, can be specified with: |
|
@example |
|
sendcmd=f=test.cmd,drawtext=fontfile=FreeSerif.ttf:text='',hue |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@anchor{setpts} |
|
@section asetpts, setpts |
|
|
|
Change the PTS (presentation timestamp) of the input frames. |
|
|
|
@code{asetpts} works on audio frames, @code{setpts} on video frames. |
|
|
|
Accept in input an expression evaluated through the eval API, which |
|
can contain the following constants: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
@item FRAME_RATE |
|
frame rate, only defined for constant frame-rate video |
|
|
|
@item PTS |
|
the presentation timestamp in input |
|
|
|
@item N |
|
the count of the input frame, starting from 0. |
|
|
|
@item NB_CONSUMED_SAMPLES |
|
the number of consumed samples, not including the current frame (only |
|
audio) |
|
|
|
@item NB_SAMPLES |
|
the number of samples in the current frame (only audio) |
|
|
|
@item SAMPLE_RATE |
|
audio sample rate |
|
|
|
@item STARTPTS |
|
the PTS of the first frame |
|
|
|
@item STARTT |
|
the time in seconds of the first frame |
|
|
|
@item INTERLACED |
|
tell if the current frame is interlaced |
|
|
|
@item T |
|
the time in seconds of the current frame |
|
|
|
@item TB |
|
the time base |
|
|
|
@item POS |
|
original position in the file of the frame, or undefined if undefined |
|
for the current frame |
|
|
|
@item PREV_INPTS |
|
previous input PTS |
|
|
|
@item PREV_INT |
|
previous input time in seconds |
|
|
|
@item PREV_OUTPTS |
|
previous output PTS |
|
|
|
@item PREV_OUTT |
|
previous output time in seconds |
|
|
|
@item RTCTIME |
|
wallclock (RTC) time in microseconds. This is deprecated, use time(0) |
|
instead. |
|
|
|
@item RTCSTART |
|
wallclock (RTC) time at the start of the movie in microseconds |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Start counting PTS from zero |
|
@example |
|
setpts=PTS-STARTPTS |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply fast motion effect: |
|
@example |
|
setpts=0.5*PTS |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply slow motion effect: |
|
@example |
|
setpts=2.0*PTS |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Set fixed rate of 25 frames per second: |
|
@example |
|
setpts=N/(25*TB) |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Set fixed rate 25 fps with some jitter: |
|
@example |
|
setpts='1/(25*TB) * (N + 0.05 * sin(N*2*PI/25))' |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Apply an offset of 10 seconds to the input PTS: |
|
@example |
|
setpts=PTS+10/TB |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Generate timestamps from a "live source" and rebase onto the current timebase: |
|
@example |
|
setpts='(RTCTIME - RTCSTART) / (TB * 1000000)' |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section ebur128 |
|
|
|
EBU R128 scanner filter. This filter takes an audio stream as input and outputs |
|
it unchanged. By default, it logs a message at a frequency of 10Hz with the |
|
Momentary loudness (identified by @code{M}), Short-term loudness (@code{S}), |
|
Integrated loudness (@code{I}) and Loudness Range (@code{LRA}). |
|
|
|
The filter also has a video output (see the @var{video} option) with a real |
|
time graph to observe the loudness evolution. The graphic contains the logged |
|
message mentioned above, so it is not printed anymore when this option is set, |
|
unless the verbose logging is set. The main graphing area contains the |
|
short-term loudness (3 seconds of analysis), and the gauge on the right is for |
|
the momentary loudness (400 milliseconds). |
|
|
|
More information about the Loudness Recommendation EBU R128 on |
|
@url{http://tech.ebu.ch/loudness}. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item video |
|
Activate the video output. The audio stream is passed unchanged whether this |
|
option is set or no. The video stream will be the first output stream if |
|
activated. Default is @code{0}. |
|
|
|
@item size |
|
Set the video size. This option is for video only. Default and minimum |
|
resolution is @code{640x480}. |
|
|
|
@item meter |
|
Set the EBU scale meter. Default is @code{9}. Common values are @code{9} and |
|
@code{18}, respectively for EBU scale meter +9 and EBU scale meter +18. Any |
|
other integer value between this range is allowed. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Example of real-time graph using @command{ffplay}, with a EBU scale meter +18: |
|
@example |
|
ffplay -f lavfi -i "amovie=input.mp3,ebur128=video=1:meter=18 [out0][out1]" |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Run an analysis with @command{ffmpeg}: |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -nostats -i input.mp3 -filter_complex ebur128 -f null - |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section settb, asettb |
|
|
|
Set the timebase to use for the output frames timestamps. |
|
It is mainly useful for testing timebase configuration. |
|
|
|
It accepts in input an arithmetic expression representing a rational. |
|
The expression can contain the constants "AVTB" (the |
|
default timebase), "intb" (the input timebase) and "sr" (the sample rate, |
|
audio only). |
|
|
|
The default value for the input is "intb". |
|
|
|
@subsection Examples |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Set the timebase to 1/25: |
|
@example |
|
settb=1/25 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Set the timebase to 1/10: |
|
@example |
|
settb=0.1 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Set the timebase to 1001/1000: |
|
@example |
|
settb=1+0.001 |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Set the timebase to 2*intb: |
|
@example |
|
settb=2*intb |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Set the default timebase value: |
|
@example |
|
settb=AVTB |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section concat |
|
|
|
Concatenate audio and video streams, joining them together one after the |
|
other. |
|
|
|
The filter works on segments of synchronized video and audio streams. All |
|
segments must have the same number of streams of each type, and that will |
|
also be the number of streams at output. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item n |
|
Set the number of segments. Default is 2. |
|
|
|
@item v |
|
Set the number of output video streams, that is also the number of video |
|
streams in each segment. Default is 1. |
|
|
|
@item a |
|
Set the number of output audio streams, that is also the number of video |
|
streams in each segment. Default is 0. |
|
|
|
@item unsafe |
|
Activate unsafe mode: do not fail if segments have a different format. |
|
|
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The filter has @var{v}+@var{a} outputs: first @var{v} video outputs, then |
|
@var{a} audio outputs. |
|
|
|
There are @var{n}×(@var{v}+@var{a}) inputs: first the inputs for the first |
|
segment, in the same order as the outputs, then the inputs for the second |
|
segment, etc. |
|
|
|
Related streams do not always have exactly the same duration, for various |
|
reasons including codec frame size or sloppy authoring. For that reason, |
|
related synchronized streams (e.g. a video and its audio track) should be |
|
concatenated at once. The concat filter will use the duration of the longest |
|
stream in each segment (except the last one), and if necessary pad shorter |
|
audio streams with silence. |
|
|
|
For this filter to work correctly, all segments must start at timestamp 0. |
|
|
|
All corresponding streams must have the same parameters in all segments; the |
|
filtering system will automatically select a common pixel format for video |
|
streams, and a common sample format, sample rate and channel layout for |
|
audio streams, but other settings, such as resolution, must be converted |
|
explicitly by the user. |
|
|
|
Different frame rates are acceptable but will result in variable frame rate |
|
at output; be sure to configure the output file to handle it. |
|
|
|
Examples: |
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Concatenate an opening, an episode and an ending, all in bilingual version |
|
(video in stream 0, audio in streams 1 and 2): |
|
@example |
|
ffmpeg -i opening.mkv -i episode.mkv -i ending.mkv -filter_complex \ |
|
'[0:0] [0:1] [0:2] [1:0] [1:1] [1:2] [2:0] [2:1] [2:2] |
|
concat=n=3:v=1:a=2 [v] [a1] [a2]' \ |
|
-map '[v]' -map '[a1]' -map '[a2]' output.mkv |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Concatenate two parts, handling audio and video separately, using the |
|
(a)movie sources, and adjusting the resolution: |
|
@example |
|
movie=part1.mp4, scale=512:288 [v1] ; amovie=part1.mp4 [a1] ; |
|
movie=part2.mp4, scale=512:288 [v2] ; amovie=part2.mp4 [a2] ; |
|
[v1] [v2] concat [outv] ; [a1] [a2] concat=v=0:a=1 [outa] |
|
@end example |
|
Note that a desync will happen at the stitch if the audio and video streams |
|
do not have exactly the same duration in the first file. |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section showspectrum |
|
|
|
Convert input audio to a video output, representing the audio frequency |
|
spectrum. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item size, s |
|
Specify the video size for the output. Default value is @code{640x480}. |
|
@item slide |
|
Specify if the spectrum should slide along the window. Default value is |
|
@code{0}. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
The usage is very similar to the showwaves filter; see the examples in that |
|
section. |
|
|
|
@section showwaves |
|
|
|
Convert input audio to a video output, representing the samples waves. |
|
|
|
The filter accepts the following named parameters: |
|
@table @option |
|
@item mode |
|
Set display mode. |
|
|
|
Available values are: |
|
@table @samp |
|
@item point |
|
Draw a point for each sample. |
|
|
|
@item line |
|
Draw a vertical line for each sample. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Default value is @code{point}. |
|
|
|
@item n |
|
Set the number of samples which are printed on the same column. A |
|
larger value will decrease the frame rate. Must be a positive |
|
integer. This option can be set only if the value for @var{rate} |
|
is not explicitly specified. |
|
|
|
@item rate, r |
|
Set the (approximate) output frame rate. This is done by setting the |
|
option @var{n}. Default value is "25". |
|
|
|
@item size, s |
|
Specify the video size for the output. Default value is "600x240". |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
Some examples follow. |
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Output the input file audio and the corresponding video representation |
|
at the same time: |
|
@example |
|
amovie=a.mp3,asplit[out0],showwaves[out1] |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@item |
|
Create a synthetic signal and show it with showwaves, forcing a |
|
framerate of 30 frames per second: |
|
@example |
|
aevalsrc=sin(1*2*PI*t)*sin(880*2*PI*t):cos(2*PI*200*t),asplit[out0],showwaves=r=30[out1] |
|
@end example |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@c man end MULTIMEDIA FILTERS |
|
|
|
@chapter Multimedia Sources |
|
@c man begin MULTIMEDIA SOURCES |
|
|
|
Below is a description of the currently available multimedia sources. |
|
|
|
@section amovie |
|
|
|
This is the same as @ref{movie} source, except it selects an audio |
|
stream by default. |
|
|
|
@anchor{movie} |
|
@section movie |
|
|
|
Read audio and/or video stream(s) from a movie container. |
|
|
|
It accepts the syntax: @var{movie_name}[:@var{options}] where |
|
@var{movie_name} is the name of the resource to read (not necessarily |
|
a file but also a device or a stream accessed through some protocol), |
|
and @var{options} is an optional sequence of @var{key}=@var{value} |
|
pairs, separated by ":". |
|
|
|
The description of the accepted options follows. |
|
|
|
@table @option |
|
|
|
@item format_name, f |
|
Specifies the format assumed for the movie to read, and can be either |
|
the name of a container or an input device. If not specified the |
|
format is guessed from @var{movie_name} or by probing. |
|
|
|
@item seek_point, sp |
|
Specifies the seek point in seconds, the frames will be output |
|
starting from this seek point, the parameter is evaluated with |
|
@code{av_strtod} so the numerical value may be suffixed by an IS |
|
postfix. Default value is "0". |
|
|
|
@item streams, s |
|
Specifies the streams to read. Several streams can be specified, |
|
separated by "+". The source will then have as many outputs, in the |
|
same order. The syntax is explained in the ``Stream specifiers'' |
|
section in the ffmpeg manual. Two special names, "dv" and "da" specify |
|
respectively the default (best suited) video and audio stream. Default |
|
is "dv", or "da" if the filter is called as "amovie". |
|
|
|
@item stream_index, si |
|
Specifies the index of the video stream to read. If the value is -1, |
|
the best suited video stream will be automatically selected. Default |
|
value is "-1". Deprecated. If the filter is called "amovie", it will select |
|
audio instead of video. |
|
|
|
@item loop |
|
Specifies how many times to read the stream in sequence. |
|
If the value is less than 1, the stream will be read again and again. |
|
Default value is "1". |
|
|
|
Note that when the movie is looped the source timestamps are not |
|
changed, so it will generate non monotonically increasing timestamps. |
|
@end table |
|
|
|
This filter allows to overlay a second video on top of main input of |
|
a filtergraph as shown in this graph: |
|
@example |
|
input -----------> deltapts0 --> overlay --> output |
|
^ |
|
| |
|
movie --> scale--> deltapts1 -------+ |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
Some examples follow. |
|
|
|
@itemize |
|
@item |
|
Skip 3.2 seconds from the start of the avi file in.avi, and overlay it |
|
on top of the input labelled as "in": |
|
@example |
|
movie=in.avi:seek_point=3.2, scale=180:-1, setpts=PTS-STARTPTS [movie]; |
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[in] setpts=PTS-STARTPTS, [movie] overlay=16:16 [out] |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Read from a video4linux2 device, and overlay it on top of the input |
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labelled as "in": |
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@example |
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movie=/dev/video0:f=video4linux2, scale=180:-1, setpts=PTS-STARTPTS [movie]; |
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[in] setpts=PTS-STARTPTS, [movie] overlay=16:16 [out] |
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@end example |
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@item |
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Read the first video stream and the audio stream with id 0x81 from |
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dvd.vob; the video is connected to the pad named "video" and the audio is |
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connected to the pad named "audio": |
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@example |
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movie=dvd.vob:s=v:0+#0x81 [video] [audio] |
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@end example |
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@end itemize |
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@c man end MULTIMEDIA SOURCES
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