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  1. \input texinfo @c -*- texinfo -*-
  2. @settitle Libav FAQ
  3. @titlepage
  4. @center @titlefont{Libav FAQ}
  5. @end titlepage
  6. @top
  7. @contents
  8. @chapter General Questions
  9. @section Why doesn't Libav support feature [xyz]?
  10. Because no one has taken on that task yet. Libav development is
  11. driven by the tasks that are important to the individual developers.
  12. If there is a feature that is important to you, the best way to get
  13. it implemented is to undertake the task yourself or sponsor a developer.
  14. @section Libav does not support codec XXX. Can you include a Windows DLL loader to support it?
  15. No. Windows DLLs are not portable, bloated and often slow.
  16. Moreover Libav strives to support all codecs natively.
  17. A DLL loader is not conducive to that goal.
  18. @section I cannot read this file although this format seems to be supported by avconv.
  19. Even if avconv can read the container format, it may not support all its
  20. codecs. Please consult the supported codec list in the avconv
  21. documentation.
  22. @section Which codecs are supported by Windows?
  23. Windows does not support standard formats like MPEG very well, unless you
  24. install some additional codecs.
  25. The following list of video codecs should work on most Windows systems:
  26. @table @option
  27. @item msmpeg4v2
  28. .avi/.asf
  29. @item msmpeg4
  30. .asf only
  31. @item wmv1
  32. .asf only
  33. @item wmv2
  34. .asf only
  35. @item mpeg4
  36. Only if you have some MPEG-4 codec like ffdshow or Xvid installed.
  37. @item mpeg1video
  38. .mpg only
  39. @end table
  40. Note, ASF files often have .wmv or .wma extensions in Windows. It should also
  41. be mentioned that Microsoft claims a patent on the ASF format, and may sue
  42. or threaten users who create ASF files with non-Microsoft software. It is
  43. strongly advised to avoid ASF where possible.
  44. The following list of audio codecs should work on most Windows systems:
  45. @table @option
  46. @item adpcm_ima_wav
  47. @item adpcm_ms
  48. @item pcm_s16le
  49. always
  50. @item libmp3lame
  51. If some MP3 codec like LAME is installed.
  52. @end table
  53. @chapter Compilation
  54. @section @code{error: can't find a register in class 'GENERAL_REGS' while reloading 'asm'}
  55. This is a bug in gcc. Do not report it to us. Instead, please report it to
  56. the gcc developers. Note that we will not add workarounds for gcc bugs.
  57. Also note that (some of) the gcc developers believe this is not a bug or
  58. not a bug they should fix:
  59. @url{http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11203}.
  60. Then again, some of them do not know the difference between an undecidable
  61. problem and an NP-hard problem...
  62. @chapter Usage
  63. @section How do I encode single pictures into movies?
  64. First, rename your pictures to follow a numerical sequence.
  65. For example, img1.jpg, img2.jpg, img3.jpg,...
  66. Then you may run:
  67. @example
  68. avconv -f image2 -i img%d.jpg /tmp/a.mpg
  69. @end example
  70. Notice that @samp{%d} is replaced by the image number.
  71. @file{img%03d.jpg} means the sequence @file{img001.jpg}, @file{img002.jpg}, etc...
  72. If you have large number of pictures to rename, you can use the
  73. following command to ease the burden. The command, using the bourne
  74. shell syntax, symbolically links all files in the current directory
  75. that match @code{*jpg} to the @file{/tmp} directory in the sequence of
  76. @file{img001.jpg}, @file{img002.jpg} and so on.
  77. @example
  78. x=1; for i in *jpg; do counter=$(printf %03d $x); ln -s "$i" /tmp/img"$counter".jpg; x=$(($x+1)); done
  79. @end example
  80. If you want to sequence them by oldest modified first, substitute
  81. @code{$(ls -r -t *jpg)} in place of @code{*jpg}.
  82. Then run:
  83. @example
  84. avconv -f image2 -i /tmp/img%03d.jpg /tmp/a.mpg
  85. @end example
  86. The same logic is used for any image format that avconv reads.
  87. @section How do I encode movie to single pictures?
  88. Use:
  89. @example
  90. avconv -i movie.mpg movie%d.jpg
  91. @end example
  92. The @file{movie.mpg} used as input will be converted to
  93. @file{movie1.jpg}, @file{movie2.jpg}, etc...
  94. Instead of relying on file format self-recognition, you may also use
  95. @table @option
  96. @item -c:v ppm
  97. @item -c:v png
  98. @item -c:v mjpeg
  99. @end table
  100. to force the encoding.
  101. Applying that to the previous example:
  102. @example
  103. avconv -i movie.mpg -f image2 -c:v mjpeg menu%d.jpg
  104. @end example
  105. Beware that there is no "jpeg" codec. Use "mjpeg" instead.
  106. @section Why do I see a slight quality degradation with multithreaded MPEG* encoding?
  107. For multithreaded MPEG* encoding, the encoded slices must be independent,
  108. otherwise thread n would practically have to wait for n-1 to finish, so it's
  109. quite logical that there is a small reduction of quality. This is not a bug.
  110. @section How can I read from the standard input or write to the standard output?
  111. Use @file{-} as file name.
  112. @section -f jpeg doesn't work.
  113. Try '-f image2 test%d.jpg'.
  114. @section Why can I not change the framerate?
  115. Some codecs, like MPEG-1/2, only allow a small number of fixed framerates.
  116. Choose a different codec with the -c:v command line option.
  117. @section How do I encode Xvid or DivX video with avconv?
  118. Both Xvid and DivX (version 4+) are implementations of the ISO MPEG-4
  119. standard (note that there are many other coding formats that use this
  120. same standard). Thus, use '-c:v mpeg4' to encode in these formats. The
  121. default fourcc stored in an MPEG-4-coded file will be 'FMP4'. If you want
  122. a different fourcc, use the '-vtag' option. E.g., '-vtag xvid' will
  123. force the fourcc 'xvid' to be stored as the video fourcc rather than the
  124. default.
  125. @section Which are good parameters for encoding high quality MPEG-4?
  126. '-mbd rd -flags +mv4+aic -trellis 2 -cmp 2 -subcmp 2 -g 300 -pass 1/2',
  127. things to try: '-bf 2', '-flags qprd', '-flags mv0', '-flags skiprd'.
  128. @section Which are good parameters for encoding high quality MPEG-1/MPEG-2?
  129. '-mbd rd -trellis 2 -cmp 2 -subcmp 2 -g 100 -pass 1/2'
  130. but beware the '-g 100' might cause problems with some decoders.
  131. Things to try: '-bf 2', '-flags qprd', '-flags mv0', '-flags skiprd.
  132. @section Interlaced video looks very bad when encoded with avconv, what is wrong?
  133. You should use '-flags +ilme+ildct' and maybe '-flags +alt' for interlaced
  134. material, and try '-top 0/1' if the result looks really messed-up.
  135. @section How can I read DirectShow files?
  136. If you have built Libav with @code{./configure --enable-avisynth}
  137. (only possible on MinGW/Cygwin platforms),
  138. then you may use any file that DirectShow can read as input.
  139. Just create an "input.avs" text file with this single line ...
  140. @example
  141. DirectShowSource("C:\path to your file\yourfile.asf")
  142. @end example
  143. ... and then feed that text file to avconv:
  144. @example
  145. avconv -i input.avs
  146. @end example
  147. For ANY other help on AviSynth, please visit the
  148. @uref{http://www.avisynth.org/, AviSynth homepage}.
  149. @section How can I join video files?
  150. A few multimedia containers (MPEG-1, MPEG-2 PS, DV) allow to join video files by
  151. merely concatenating them.
  152. Hence you may concatenate your multimedia files by first transcoding them to
  153. these privileged formats, then using the humble @code{cat} command (or the
  154. equally humble @code{copy} under Windows), and finally transcoding back to your
  155. format of choice.
  156. @example
  157. avconv -i input1.avi intermediate1.mpg
  158. avconv -i input2.avi intermediate2.mpg
  159. cat intermediate1.mpg intermediate2.mpg > intermediate_all.mpg
  160. avconv -i intermediate_all.mpg output.avi
  161. @end example
  162. Notice that you should set a reasonably high bitrate for your intermediate and
  163. output files, if you want to preserve video quality.
  164. Also notice that you may avoid the huge intermediate files by taking advantage
  165. of named pipes, should your platform support it:
  166. @example
  167. mkfifo intermediate1.mpg
  168. mkfifo intermediate2.mpg
  169. avconv -i input1.avi -y intermediate1.mpg < /dev/null &
  170. avconv -i input2.avi -y intermediate2.mpg < /dev/null &
  171. cat intermediate1.mpg intermediate2.mpg |\
  172. avconv -f mpeg -i - -c:v mpeg4 -c:a libmp3lame output.avi
  173. @end example
  174. Similarly, the yuv4mpegpipe format, and the raw video, raw audio codecs also
  175. allow concatenation, and the transcoding step is almost lossless.
  176. When using multiple yuv4mpegpipe(s), the first line needs to be discarded
  177. from all but the first stream. This can be accomplished by piping through
  178. @code{tail} as seen below. Note that when piping through @code{tail} you
  179. must use command grouping, @code{@{ ;@}}, to background properly.
  180. For example, let's say we want to join two FLV files into an output.flv file:
  181. @example
  182. mkfifo temp1.a
  183. mkfifo temp1.v
  184. mkfifo temp2.a
  185. mkfifo temp2.v
  186. mkfifo all.a
  187. mkfifo all.v
  188. avconv -i input1.flv -vn -f u16le -c:a pcm_s16le -ac 2 -ar 44100 - > temp1.a < /dev/null &
  189. avconv -i input2.flv -vn -f u16le -c:a pcm_s16le -ac 2 -ar 44100 - > temp2.a < /dev/null &
  190. avconv -i input1.flv -an -f yuv4mpegpipe - > temp1.v < /dev/null &
  191. @{ avconv -i input2.flv -an -f yuv4mpegpipe - < /dev/null | tail -n +2 > temp2.v ; @} &
  192. cat temp1.a temp2.a > all.a &
  193. cat temp1.v temp2.v > all.v &
  194. avconv -f u16le -c:a pcm_s16le -ac 2 -ar 44100 -i all.a \
  195. -f yuv4mpegpipe -i all.v \
  196. -y output.flv
  197. rm temp[12].[av] all.[av]
  198. @end example
  199. @section -profile option fails when encoding H.264 video with AAC audio
  200. @command{avconv} prints an error like
  201. @example
  202. Undefined constant or missing '(' in 'baseline'
  203. Unable to parse option value "baseline"
  204. Error setting option profile to value baseline.
  205. @end example
  206. Short answer: write @option{-profile:v} instead of @option{-profile}.
  207. Long answer: this happens because the @option{-profile} option can apply to both
  208. video and audio. Specifically the AAC encoder also defines some profiles, none
  209. of which are named @var{baseline}.
  210. The solution is to apply the @option{-profile} option to the video stream only
  211. by using @url{http://libav.org/avconv.html#Stream-specifiers-1, Stream specifiers}.
  212. Appending @code{:v} to it will do exactly that.
  213. @chapter Development
  214. @section Are there examples illustrating how to use the Libav libraries, particularly libavcodec and libavformat?
  215. Yes. Read the Developers Guide of the Libav documentation. Alternatively,
  216. examine the source code for one of the many open source projects that
  217. already incorporate Libav at (@url{projects.html}).
  218. @section Can you support my C compiler XXX?
  219. It depends. If your compiler is C99-compliant, then patches to support
  220. it are likely to be welcome if they do not pollute the source code
  221. with @code{#ifdef}s related to the compiler.
  222. @section Is Microsoft Visual C++ supported?
  223. Yes. Please see the @uref{platform.html, Microsoft Visual C++}
  224. section in the Libav documentation.
  225. @section Can you add automake, libtool or autoconf support?
  226. No. These tools are too bloated and they complicate the build.
  227. @section Why not rewrite Libav in object-oriented C++?
  228. Libav is already organized in a highly modular manner and does not need to
  229. be rewritten in a formal object language. Further, many of the developers
  230. favor straight C; it works for them. For more arguments on this matter,
  231. read @uref{http://www.tux.org/lkml/#s15, "Programming Religion"}.
  232. @section I do not like the LGPL, can I contribute code under the GPL instead?
  233. Yes, as long as the code is optional and can easily and cleanly be placed
  234. under #if CONFIG_GPL without breaking anything. So for example a new codec
  235. or filter would be OK under GPL while a bug fix to LGPL code would not.
  236. @section I'm using Libav from within my C++ application but the linker complains about missing symbols which seem to be available.
  237. Libav is a pure C project, so to use the libraries within your C++ application
  238. you need to explicitly state that you are using a C library. You can do this by
  239. encompassing your Libav includes using @code{extern "C"}.
  240. See @url{http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq-lite/mixing-c-and-cpp.html#faq-32.3}
  241. @section I'm using libavutil from within my C++ application but the compiler complains about 'UINT64_C' was not declared in this scope
  242. Libav is a pure C project using C99 math features, in order to enable C++
  243. to use them you have to append -D__STDC_CONSTANT_MACROS to your CXXFLAGS
  244. @section I have a file in memory / a API different from *open/*read/ libc how do I use it with libavformat?
  245. You have to create a custom AVIOContext using @code{avio_alloc_context},
  246. see @file{libavformat/aviobuf.c} in Libav and @file{libmpdemux/demux_lavf.c} in MPlayer2 sources.
  247. @section Why is @code{make fate} not running all tests?
  248. Make sure you have the fate-suite samples and the @code{SAMPLES} Make variable
  249. or @code{FATE_SAMPLES} environment variable or the @code{--samples}
  250. @command{configure} option is set to the right path.
  251. @section Why is @code{make fate} not finding the samples?
  252. Do you happen to have a @code{~} character in the samples path to indicate a
  253. home directory? The value is used in ways where the shell cannot expand it,
  254. causing FATE to not find files. Just replace @code{~} by the full path.
  255. @bye