To see a small preview of how the output will look, you could pass a -t 30 option, which means that only the first 30 seconds of the input video will be processed. The filesize of the output video remains the same as that of the input. (which is why this type of encoding will be very fast!) The only thing that changes is the container. Here, we passed the -c copy option which causes the original audio + video streams (with their codecs) to simply be copied.
Lets say you wish to encode an AVI into a MP4 file.įfmpeg -i inputFile.avi -c copy outputFile.mp4 Encoding a Video from 1 format to another: Copy Encoding/ Stream copy – Now that you have an idea of the basics of a Video file, lets go ahead and learn how we could encode video into a different format.ġ. Examples of some popular containers are OGG (.ogg), AVI (.avi), MPEG (.mpeg), Matroska (.mkv). The container is represented by a file extension. These components would be the video itself, the audio track(or even multiple audio tracks), the subtitles if any, meta-data and so on.
If you haven’t already installed FFmpeg, you can download and install it from here. FFmpeg has a lot of options/parameters and sometimes these can get quite convoluted, so we will go through the most common video tasks explaining in detail the options/parameters to be passed. FFmpeg is a powerful tool compatible with major Operating Systems (Linux, Mac, Windows). It can re-encode videos and join, merge or split videos at ones will. FFmpeg can be used to encode videos into difference formats.