FFmpeg
Installed version | 6.1.1 |
---|---|
Development status | Active |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows, Linux, MacOSX |
License | GNU LGPL 2.1 |
Website | ffmpeg.org |
FFmpeg is an open-source command-line tool to convert audio and video files.
Installation
Windows 10
- Download the latest ffmpeg-release-full build on https://ffmpeg.org/download.html
- Unpack the 7z/zip file anywhere you like
- Add ffmpeg to Windows' Environment Variables:
- Open the start menu and start typing "Environment Variables"
- Select "Edit the system environment variables"
- Click "Environment Variables"
- Select "Path" and click "Edit"
- Click "Browse" and go to the folder where you unpacked your FFmpeg files. Select the 'bin' folder inside (e.g. "C:\ffmpeg\bin")
- Click OK on all previously opened windows.
- To test, go to the command line (Windows+R -> cmd) and type
ffmpeg
. It should tell you the installed ffmpeg version.
Usage
FFmpeg needs to be run from the command line, but you can create batch scripts to automate the process for multiple files. There is also a plugin for Python (https://pypi.org/project/ffmpeg-python/), but it is fairly limited so we recommend using subprocess instead (see example below).
The following are examples of conversions that we commonly use.
Basic Format Conversion
ffmpeg -i input.mp4 output.avi
-i
specifies input file
The last argument is always the output file. Without specifying any codec or bit rate (see examples below), FFmpeg will encode the video using some arbitrary default settings.
Remove audio from video file
ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -vcodec copy -an output.mp4
-vcodec copy
means the video won't be re-encoded, preserving the quality.
-an
strips the audio
Extract single audio channel from video file
ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -af "pan=mono|c0=c0" output.wav
-af "pan=mono|c0=c0"
extracts a single channel from the file. Use c0=c0
for left channel, c0=c1
for right channel.
Add audio to video
ffmpeg -i inputvideo.mp4 -i inputaudio.wav -vcodec copy -map 0:v -map 1:a output.mp4
-i
is used twice here to add a seceond input file.
-map 0:v
tells FFmpeg to take video from the first input (count starts at 0)
-map 1:a
tells FFmpeg to take audio from the second input (1)
Trimming video
ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -ss 00:00:04 -to 00:00:06 -vcodec h264 -b:v 8M output.mp4
-ss 00:00:04
specifies the starting time, in this case 4 seconds (use format HH:MM:SS, or HH:MM:SS.MS)
-to 00:00:06
specifies end point, in this case 6 seconds (same formatting as above)
Alternatively, instead of -to
, you can use -t 00:00:02
to cut exactly 2 seconds from the starting time.
-vcodec h264
specifies video codec.
-b:v 8M
specifies video bit rate, in this case 8Mbit/s, which determines video quality.
Note: you can use -c copy
to trim without re-encoding, but FFmpeg can only cut to the nearest keyframe, so the output may not be exactly the same length as specified.
Batching
The following is a batch script (text file with .bat file extension) that converts all .mp4 files in the specified folder to .avi:
@echo off
setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
:: Set source video folder, as absolute path or relative to this script
set src="videos"
:: Set destination folder
set dst="videos/converted"
for /R %src% %%F in (*.mp4) do (
:: Put your FFmpeg command here
ffmpeg -i "%%F" -vcodec copy "%dst%\%%~nF.avi
)
pause
Python
import subprocess
inputFile = "input.mov"
outputFile = "output.mp4"
subprocess.run(f'ffmpeg -i "{inputFile}" -vcodec h264 -b:v 8M "{outputFile}"')
The command within subprocess.run()
is the same as you would type into the command line. You can use Python's string formatting to insert variables.