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							- \input texinfo @c -*- texinfo -*-
 - 
 - @settitle Video Hook Documentation
 - @titlepage
 - @sp 7
 - @center @titlefont{Video Hook Documentation}
 - @sp 3
 - @end titlepage
 - 
 - 
 - @chapter Introduction
 - 
 - 
 - The video hook functionality is designed (mostly) for live video. It allows
 - the video to be modified or examined between the decoder and the encoder.
 - 
 - Any number of hook modules can be placed inline, and they are run in the
 - order that they were specified on the ffmpeg command line.
 - 
 - The video hook modules are provided for use as a base for your own modules,
 - and are described below.
 - 
 - Modules are loaded using the -vhook option to ffmpeg. The value of this parameter
 - is a space separated list of arguments. The first is the module name, and the rest
 - are passed as arguments to the Configure function of the module.
 - 
 - The modules are dynamic libraries: They have different suffixes (.so, .dll, .dylib)
 - depending on your platform. And your platform dictates if they need to be
 - somewhere in your PATH, or in your LD_LIBRARY_PATH. Otherwise you will need to
 - specify the full path of the vhook file that you are using.
 - 
 - @section null.c
 - 
 - This does nothing. Actually it converts the input image to RGB24 and then converts
 - it back again. This is meant as a sample that you can use to test your setup.
 - 
 - @section fish.c
 - 
 - This implements a 'fish detector'. Essentially it converts the image into HSV
 - space and tests whether more than a certain percentage of the pixels fall into
 - a specific HSV cuboid. If so, then the image is saved into a file for processing
 - by other bits of code.
 - 
 - Why use HSV? It turns out that HSV cuboids represent a more compact range of
 - colors than would an RGB cuboid.
 - 
 - @section imlib2.c
 - 
 - This module implements a text overlay for a video image. Currently it
 - supports a fixed overlay or reading the text from a file. The string
 - is passed through strftime() so that it is easy to imprint the date and
 - time onto the image.
 - 
 - This module depends on the external library imlib2, available on
 - Sourceforge, among other places, if it is not already installed on
 - your system.
 - 
 - You may also overlay an image (even semi-transparent) like TV stations do.
 - You may move either the text or the image around your video to create
 - scrolling credits, for example.
 - 
 - The font file used is looked for in a FONTPATH environment variable, and
 - prepended to the point size as a command line option and can be specified
 - with the full path to the font file, as in:
 - @example
 - -F /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/TTF/VeraBd.ttf/20
 - @end example
 - where 20 is the point size.
 - 
 - You can specify the filename to read RGB color names from. If none are
 - specified, these defaults are used: @file{/usr/share/X11/rgb.txt} and
 - @file{/usr/lib/X11/rgb.txt}
 - 
 - Options:
 - @multitable @columnfractions .2 .8
 - @item @option{-C <rgb.txt>}   @tab The filename to read RGB color names from
 - @item @option{-c <color>}     @tab The color of the text
 - @item @option{-F <fontname>}  @tab The font face and size
 - @item @option{-t <text>}      @tab The text
 - @item @option{-f <filename>}  @tab The filename to read text from
 - @item @option{-x <expression>}@tab x coordinate of text or image
 - @item @option{-y <expression>}@tab y coordinate of text or image
 - @item @option{-i <filename>}  @tab The filename to read a image from
 - @end multitable
 - 
 - Expressions are functions of these variables:
 - @multitable @columnfractions .2 .8
 - @item @var{N} @tab frame number (starting at zero)
 - @item @var{H} @tab frame height
 - @item @var{W} @tab frame width
 - @item @var{h} @tab image height
 - @item @var{w} @tab image width
 - @item @var{X} @tab previous x coordinate of text or image
 - @item @var{Y} @tab previous y coordinate of text or image
 - @end multitable
 - 
 - You may also use the constants @var{PI}, @var{E}, and the math functions available at the
 - FFmpeg formula evaluator at (@url{ffmpeg-doc.html#SEC13}), except @var{bits2qp(bits)}
 - and @var{qp2bits(qp)}.
 - 
 - Usage examples:
 - 
 - @example
 -    # Remember to set the path to your fonts
 -    FONTPATH="/cygdrive/c/WINDOWS/Fonts/"
 -    FONTPATH="$FONTPATH:/usr/share/imlib2/data/fonts/"
 -    FONTPATH="$FONTPATH:/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/TTF/"
 -    export FONTPATH
 - 
 -    # Bulb dancing in a Lissajous pattern
 -    ffmpeg -i input.avi -vhook \
 -      'vhook/imlib2.dll -x W*(0.5+0.25*sin(N/47*PI))-w/2 -y H*(0.5+0.50*cos(N/97*PI))-h/2 -i /usr/share/imlib2/data/images/bulb.png' \
 -      -acodec copy -sameq output.avi
 - 
 -    # Text scrolling
 -    ffmpeg -i input.avi -vhook \
 -      'vhook/imlib2.dll -c red -F Vera.ttf/20 -x 150+0.5*N -y 70+0.25*N -t Hello' \
 -      -acodec copy -sameq output.avi
 - 
 -    # Date and time stamp, security-camera style:
 -    ffmpeg -r 29.97 -s 320x256 -f video4linux -i /dev/video0 \
 -      -vhook 'vhook/imlib2.so -x 0 -y 0 -i black-260x20.png' \
 -      -vhook 'vhook/imlib2.so -c white -F VeraBd.ttf/12 -x 0 -y 0 -t %A-%D-%T' \
 -      output.avi
 - 
 -      In this example the video is captured from the first video capture card as a
 -      320x256 AVI, and a black 260 by 20 pixel PNG image is placed in the upper
 -      left corner, with the day, date and time overlaid on it in Vera Bold 12
 -      point font. A simple black PNG file 260 pixels wide and 20 pixels tall
 -      was created in the GIMP for this purpose.
 - 
 -    # Scrolling credits from a text file
 -    ffmpeg -i input.avi -vhook \
 -      'vhook/imlib2.so -c white -F VeraBd.ttf/16 -x 100 -y -1.0*N -f credits.txt' \
 -      -sameq output.avi
 - 
 -      In this example, the text is stored in a file, and is positioned 100
 -      pixels from the left hand edge of the video. The text is scrolled from the
 -      bottom up. Making the y factor positive will scroll from the top down.
 -      Increasing the magnitude of the y factor makes the text scroll faster,
 -      decreasing it makes it scroll slower. Hint: Blank lines containing only
 -      a newline are treated as end-of-file. To create blank lines, use lines
 -      that consist of space characters only.
 - 
 -    # Scrolling credits with custom color from a text file
 -    ffmpeg -i input.avi -vhook \
 -      'vhook/imlib2.so -C rgb.txt -c CustomColor1 -F VeraBd.ttf/16 -x 100 -y -1.0*N -f credits.txt' \
 -      -sameq output.avi
 - 
 -    This example does the same as the one above, but specifies an rgb.txt file
 -    to be used, which has a custom made color in it.
 - 
 -    # Variable colors
 -    ffmpeg -i input.avi -vhook \
 -      'vhook/imlib2.so -t Hello -R abs(255*sin(N/47*PI)) -G abs(255*sin(N/47*PI)) -B abs(255*sin(N/47*PI))' \
 -      -sameq output.avi
 - 
 -      In this example, the color for the text goes up and down from black to
 -      white.
 - 
 -    # Text fade-out
 -    ffmpeg -i input.avi -vhook \
 -      'vhook/imlib2.so -t Hello -A max(0,255-exp(N/47))' \
 -      -sameq output.avi
 - 
 -      In this example, the text fades out in about 10 seconds for a 25 fps input
 -      video file.
 - 
 -    # scrolling credits from a graphics file
 -    ffmpeg -sameq -i input.avi \
 -      -vhook 'vhook/imlib2.so -x 0 -y -1.0*N -i credits.png' output.avi
 - 
 -      In this example, a transparent PNG file the same width as the video
 -      (e.g. 320 pixels), but very long, (e.g. 3000 pixels), was created, and
 -      text, graphics, brushstrokes, etc, were added to the image. The image
 -      is then scrolled up, from the bottom of the frame.
 - 
 - @end example
 - 
 - @section ppm.c
 - 
 - It's basically a launch point for a PPM pipe, so you can use any
 - executable (or script) which consumes a PPM on stdin and produces a PPM
 - on stdout (and flushes each frame). The Netpbm utilities are a series of
 - such programs.
 - 
 - A list of them is here:
 - 
 - @url{http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/directory.html}
 - 
 - Usage example:
 - 
 - @example
 - ffmpeg -i input -vhook "/path/to/ppm.so some-ppm-filter args" output
 - @end example
 - 
 - @section drawtext.c
 - 
 - This module implements a text overlay for a video image. Currently it
 - supports a fixed overlay or reading the text from a file. The string
 - is passed through strftime() so that it is easy to imprint the date and
 - time onto the image.
 - 
 - Features:
 - @itemize @minus
 - @item TrueType, Type1 and others via the FreeType2 library
 - @item Font kerning (better output)
 - @item Line Wrap (put the text that doesn't fit one line on the next line)
 - @item Background box (currently in development)
 - @item Outline
 - @end itemize
 - 
 - Options:
 - @multitable @columnfractions .2 .8
 - @item @option{-c <color>}          @tab Foreground color of the text ('internet' way) <#RRGGBB> [default #FFFFFF]
 - @item @option{-C <color>}          @tab Background color of the text ('internet' way) <#RRGGBB> [default #000000]
 - @item @option{-f <font-filename>}  @tab font file to use
 - @item @option{-t <text>}           @tab text to display
 - @item @option{-T <filename>}       @tab file to read text from
 - @item @option{-x <pos>}            @tab x coordinate of the start of the text
 - @item @option{-y <pos>}            @tab y coordinate of the start of the text
 - @end multitable
 - 
 - Text fonts are being looked for in a FONTPATH environment variable.
 - If the FONTPATH environment variable is not available, or is not checked by
 - your target (i.e. Cygwin), then specify the full path to the font file as in:
 - @example
 - -f /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/TTF/VeraBd.ttf
 - @end example
 - 
 - Usage Example:
 - @example
 -    # Remember to set the path to your fonts
 -    FONTPATH="/cygdrive/c/WINDOWS/Fonts/"
 -    FONTPATH="$FONTPATH:/usr/share/imlib2/data/fonts/"
 -    FONTPATH="$FONTPATH:/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/TTF/"
 -    export FONTPATH
 - 
 -    # Time and date display
 -    ffmpeg -f video4linux2 -i /dev/video0 \
 -    -vhook 'vhook/drawtext.so -f VeraBd.ttf -t %A-%D-%T' movie.mpg
 - 
 -      This example grabs video from the first capture card and outputs it to an
 -      MPEG video, and places "Weekday-dd/mm/yy-hh:mm:ss" at the top left of the
 -      frame, updated every second, using the Vera Bold TrueType Font, which
 -      should exist in: /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/TTF/
 - @end example
 - 
 - Check the man page for strftime() for all the various ways you can format
 - the date and time.
 - 
 - @section watermark.c
 - 
 - Command Line options:
 - @multitable @columnfractions .2 .8
 - @item @option{-m [0|1]}            @tab Mode (default: 0, see below)
 - @item @option{-t 000000 - FFFFFF}  @tab Threshold, six digit hex number
 - @item @option{-f <filename>}       @tab Watermark image filename, must be specified!
 - @end multitable
 - 
 - MODE 0:
 -  The watermark picture works like this (assuming color intensities 0..0xFF):
 -  Per color do this:
 -  If mask color is 0x80, no change to the original frame.
 -  If mask color is < 0x80 the absolute difference is subtracted from the
 -  frame. If result < 0, result = 0.
 -  If mask color is > 0x80 the absolute difference is added to the
 -  frame. If result > 0xFF, result = 0xFF.
 - 
 -  You can override the 0x80 level with the -t flag. E.g. if threshold is
 -  000000 the color value of watermark is added to the destination.
 - 
 -  This way a mask that is visible both in light and dark pictures can be made
 -  (e.g. by using a picture generated by the Gimp and the bump map tool).
 - 
 -  An example watermark file is at:
 -  @url{http://engene.se/ffmpeg_watermark.gif}
 - 
 - MODE 1:
 -  Per color do this:
 -  If mask color > threshold color then the watermark pixel is used.
 - 
 - Example usage:
 - @example
 -    ffmpeg -i infile -vhook '/path/watermark.so -f wm.gif' -an out.mov
 -    ffmpeg -i infile -vhook '/path/watermark.so -f wm.gif -m 1 -t 222222' -an out.mov
 - @end example
 - 
 - @bye
 
 
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