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FFMPEG-PROTOCOLS(1)					   FFMPEG-PROTOCOLS(1)

NAME
       ffmpeg-protocols	- FFmpeg protocols

DESCRIPTION
       This document describes the input and output protocols provided by the
       libavformat library.

PROTOCOL OPTIONS
       The libavformat library provides	some generic global options, which can
       be set on all the protocols. In addition	each protocol may support so-
       called private options, which are specific for that component.

       Options may be set by specifying	-option	value in the FFmpeg tools, or
       by setting the value explicitly in the "AVFormatContext"	options	or
       using the libavutil/opt.h API for programmatic use.

       The list	of supported options follows:

       protocol_whitelist list (input)
	   Set	a  ","-separated  list of allowed protocols. "ALL" matches all
	   protocols. Protocols	prefixed by "-"	are disabled.	All  protocols
	   are	allowed	 by  default but protocols used	by an another protocol
	   (nested protocols) are restricted to	a per protocol subset.

PROTOCOLS
       Protocols are configured	elements  in  FFmpeg  that  enable  access  to
       resources that require specific protocols.

       When  you  configure your FFmpeg	build, all the supported protocols are
       enabled by default. You can list	all available ones using the configure
       option "--list-protocols".

       You  can	 disable  all  the  protocols  using  the   configure	option
       "--disable-protocols",  and  selectively	 enable	 a  protocol using the
       option "--enable-protocol=PROTOCOL", or you can	disable	 a  particular
       protocol	using the option "--disable-protocol=PROTOCOL".

       The  option  "-protocols"  of  the  ff*	tools will display the list of
       supported protocols.

       All protocols accept the	following options:

       rw_timeout
	   Maximum  time  to  wait  for	 (network)  read/write	operations  to
	   complete, in	microseconds.

       A description of	the currently available	protocols follows.

   amqp
       Advanced	 Message  Queueing  Protocol  (AMQP) version 0-9-1 is a	broker
       based publish-subscribe communication protocol.

       FFmpeg must be compiled with --enable-librabbitmq to  support  AMQP.  A
       separate	 AMQP  broker  must  also  be run. An example open-source AMQP
       broker is RabbitMQ.

       After starting the broker, an FFmpeg client  may	 stream	 data  to  the
       broker using the	command:

	       ffmpeg -re -i input -f mpegts amqp://[[user]:[password]@]hostname[:port][/vhost]

       Where hostname and port (default	is 5672) is the	address	of the broker.
       The client may also set a user/password for authentication. The default
       for  both  fields is "guest". Name of virtual host on broker can	be set
       with vhost. The default value is	"/".

       Muliple subscribers may stream from the broker using the	command:

	       ffplay amqp://[[user]:[password]@]hostname[:port][/vhost]

       In RabbitMQ all data published to the broker flows through  a  specific
       exchange,  and  each  subscribing  client has an	assigned queue/buffer.
       When a packet arrives at	an exchange, it	may be copied  to  a  client's
       queue depending on the exchange and routing_key fields.

       The following options are supported:

       exchange
	   Sets	 the  exchange	to  use	 on  the  broker. RabbitMQ has several
	   predefined exchanges: "amq.direct" is the default  exchange,	 where
	   the	publisher  and	subscriber  must  have a matching routing_key;
	   "amq.fanout"	is the same as a broadcast operation (i.e. the data is
	   forwarded to	all queues on the fanout exchange independent  of  the
	   routing_key);  and  "amq.topic"  is	similar	 to  "amq.direct", but
	   allows for more complex pattern matching  (refer  to	 the  RabbitMQ
	   documentation).

       routing_key
	   Sets	 the routing key. The default value is "amqp". The routing key
	   is used on the "amq.direct" and  "amq.topic"	 exchanges  to	decide
	   whether packets are written to the queue of a subscriber.

       pkt_size
	   Maximum size	of each	packet sent/received to	the broker. Default is
	   131072.   Minimum is	4096 and max is	any large value	(representable
	   by an int). When receiving packets, this sets  an  internal	buffer
	   size	 in  FFmpeg. It	should be equal	to or greater than the size of
	   the published packets to the	broker.	Otherwise the received message
	   may be truncated causing decoding errors.

       connection_timeout
	   The timeout in seconds during the initial connection	to the broker.
	   The default value is	rw_timeout, or 5 seconds if rw_timeout is  not
	   set.

       delivery_mode mode
	   Sets	 the  delivery	mode  of  each	message	 sent  to broker.  The
	   following values are	accepted:

	   persistent
	       Delivery	mode set to "persistent"  (2).	This  is  the  default
	       value.	Messages may be	written	to the broker's	disk depending
	       on its setup.

	   non-persistent
	       Delivery	mode set to "non-persistent" (1).  Messages will  stay
	       in broker's memory unless the broker is under memory pressure.

   async
       Asynchronous data filling wrapper for input stream.

       Fill  data in a background thread, to decouple I/O operation from demux
       thread.

	       async:<URL>
	       async:http://host/resource
	       async:cache:http://host/resource

   bluray
       Read BluRay playlist.

       The accepted options are:

       angle
	   BluRay angle

       chapter
	   Start chapter (1...N)

       playlist
	   Playlist to read (BDMV/PLAYLIST/?????.mpls)

       Examples:

       Read longest playlist from BluRay mounted to /mnt/bluray:

	       bluray:/mnt/bluray

       Read angle 2 of playlist	4 from BluRay mounted  to  /mnt/bluray,	 start
       from chapter 2:

	       -playlist 4 -angle 2 -chapter 2 bluray:/mnt/bluray

   cache
       Caching wrapper for input stream.

       Cache  the input	stream to temporary file. It brings seeking capability
       to live streams.

       The accepted options are:

       read_ahead_limit
	   Amount  in  bytes  that  may	 be  read  ahead  when	seeking	 isn't
	   supported.  Range  is  -1 to	INT_MAX.  -1 for unlimited. Default is
	   65536.

       URL Syntax is

	       cache:<URL>

   concat
       Physical	concatenation protocol.

       Read and	seek from many resources in sequence as	if they	were a	unique
       resource.

       A URL accepted by this protocol has the syntax:

	       concat:<URL1>|<URL2>|...|<URLN>

       where  URL1,  URL2,  ...,  URLN	are  the  urls	of  the	resource to be
       concatenated, each one possibly specifying a distinct protocol.

       For example to read  a  sequence	 of  files  split1.mpeg,  split2.mpeg,
       split3.mpeg with	ffplay use the command:

	       ffplay concat:split1.mpeg\|split2.mpeg\|split3.mpeg

       Note that you may need to escape	the character "|" which	is special for
       many shells.

   concatf
       Physical	 concatenation	protocol  using	a line break delimited list of
       resources.

       Read and	seek from many resources in sequence as	if they	were a	unique
       resource.

       A URL accepted by this protocol has the syntax:

	       concatf:<URL>

       where  URL  is  the  url	 containing  a	line  break  delimited list of
       resources to be concatenated, each one possibly specifying  a  distinct
       protocol.  Special  characters must be escaped with backslash or	single
       quotes. See the "Quoting	and escaping" section in  the  ffmpeg-utils(1)
       manual.

       For  example  to	 read  a  sequence  of files split1.mpeg, split2.mpeg,
       split3.mpeg listed in separate  lines  within  a	 file  split.txt  with
       ffplay use the command:

	       ffplay concatf:split.txt

       Where split.txt contains	the lines:

	       split1.mpeg
	       split2.mpeg
	       split3.mpeg

   crypto
       AES-encrypted stream reading protocol.

       The accepted options are:

       key Set	the  AES  decryption  key  binary block	from given hexadecimal
	   representation.

       iv  Set the AES decryption  initialization  vector  binary  block  from
	   given hexadecimal representation.

       Accepted	URL formats:

	       crypto:<URL>
	       crypto+<URL>

   data
       Data	     in-line	      in	  the	      URI.	   See
       <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_URI_scheme>.

       For example, to convert a GIF file given	inline with ffmpeg:

	       ffmpeg -i "data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODdhCAAIAMIEAAAAAAAA//8AAP//AP///////////////ywAAAAACAAIAAADF0gEDLojDgdGiJdJqUX02iB4E8Q9jUMkADs=" smiley.png

   fd
       File descriptor access protocol.

       The accepted syntax is:

	       fd: -fd <file_descriptor>

       If fd is	not specified, by default the stdout file descriptor  will  be
       used  for  writing,  stdin  for	reading.  Unlike the pipe protocol, fd
       protocol	has seek support if it corresponding to	 a  regular  file.  fd
       protocol	doesn't	support	pass file descriptor via URL for security.

       This protocol accepts the following options:

       blocksize
	   Set	I/O  operation	maximum	block size, in bytes. Default value is
	   "INT_MAX", which results in not limiting the	requested block	 size.
	   Setting this	value reasonably low improves user termination request
	   reaction time, which	is valuable if data transmission is slow.

       fd  Set file descriptor.

   file
       File access protocol.

       Read from or write to a file.

       A file URL can have the form:

	       file:<filename>

       where filename is the path of the file to read.

       An  URL	that  does  not	have a protocol	prefix will be assumed to be a
       file URL. Depending on the build, an URL	that looks like	a Windows path
       with the	drive letter at	the beginning will also	be  assumed  to	 be  a
       file URL	(usually not the case in builds	for unix-like systems).

       For example to read from	a file input.mpeg with ffmpeg use the command:

	       ffmpeg -i file:input.mpeg output.mpeg

       This protocol accepts the following options:

       truncate
	   Truncate  existing  files  on  write,  if  set  to  1. A value of 0
	   prevents truncating.	Default	value is 1.

       blocksize
	   Set I/O operation maximum block size, in bytes.  Default  value  is
	   "INT_MAX",  which results in	not limiting the requested block size.
	   Setting this	value reasonably low improves user termination request
	   reaction time, which	is valuable for	files on slow medium.

       follow
	   If set to 1,	the protocol will retry	reading	 at  the  end  of  the
	   file, allowing reading files	that still are being written. In order
	   for	this  to  terminate,  you  either  need	 to use	the rw_timeout
	   option, or use the interrupt	callback (for API users).

       seekable
	   Controls if seekability is advertised on the	 file.	0  means  non-
	   seekable,  -1  means	 auto (seekable	for normal files, non-seekable
	   for named pipes).

	   Many	 demuxers   handle   seekable	and   non-seekable   resources
	   differently,	 overriding  this might	speed up opening certain files
	   at the cost of losing some features (e.g. accurate seeking).

   ftp
       FTP (File Transfer Protocol).

       Read from or write to remote resources using FTP	protocol.

       Following syntax	is required.

	       ftp://[user[:password]@]server[:port]/path/to/remote/resource.mpeg

       This protocol accepts the following options.

       timeout
	   Set timeout in microseconds of socket I/O operations	 used  by  the
	   underlying  low  level operation. By	default	it is set to -1, which
	   means that the timeout is not specified.

       ftp-user
	   Set a user to be used for authenticating to the FTP server. This is
	   overridden by the user in the FTP URL.

       ftp-password
	   Set a password to be	used for authenticating	 to  the  FTP  server.
	   This	 is  overridden	 by  the  password  in the FTP URL, or by ftp-
	   anonymous-password if no user is set.

       ftp-anonymous-password
	   Password used when login as anonymous  user.	 Typically  an	e-mail
	   address should be used.

       ftp-write-seekable
	   Control  seekability	of connection during encoding. If set to 1 the
	   resource is supposed	to be seekable,	if set to 0 it is assumed  not
	   to be seekable. Default value is 0.

       NOTE:  Protocol	can be used as output, but it is recommended to	not do
       it,  unless  special  care   is	 taken	 (tests,   customized	server
       configuration  etc.).  Different	 FTP  servers  behave in different way
       during seek operation. ff* tools	may produce incomplete content due  to
       server limitations.

   gopher
       Gopher protocol.

   gophers
       Gophers protocol.

       The Gopher protocol with	TLS encapsulation.

   hls
       Read  Apple HTTP	Live Streaming compliant segmented stream as a uniform
       one. The	M3U8 playlists describing the  segments	 can  be  remote  HTTP
       resources  or  local  files, accessed using the standard	file protocol.
       The nested protocol is declared by specifying "+proto"  after  the  hls
       URI scheme name,	where proto is either "file" or	"http".

	       hls+http://host/path/to/remote/resource.m3u8
	       hls+file://path/to/local/resource.m3u8

       Using  this  protocol is	discouraged - the hls demuxer should work just
       as well (if not,	please report the issues) and is  more	complete.   To
       use  the	 hls  demuxer  instead,	simply use the direct URLs to the m3u8
       files.

   http
       HTTP (Hyper Text	Transfer Protocol).

       This protocol accepts the following options:

       seekable
	   Control seekability of connection. If set  to  1  the  resource  is
	   supposed  to	 be  seekable,	if  set	 to  0 it is assumed not to be
	   seekable, if	set to -1 it will try to autodetect if it is seekable.
	   Default value is -1.

       chunked_post
	   If set to 1 use chunked Transfer-Encoding for posts,	default	is 1.

       content_type
	   Set a specific content type for the POST  messages  or  for	listen
	   mode.

       http_proxy
	   set HTTP proxy to tunnel through e.g. http://example.com:1234

       headers
	   Set custom HTTP headers, can	override built in default headers. The
	   value must be a string encoding the headers.

       multiple_requests
	   Use persistent connections if set to	1, default is 0.

       post_data
	   Set custom HTTP post	data.

       referer
	   Set	the  Referer  header.  Include	'Referer:  URL'	header in HTTP
	   request.

       user_agent
	   Override the	User-Agent header. If not specified the	protocol  will
	   use a string	describing the libavformat build. ("Lavf/<version>")

       reconnect_at_eof
	   If  set  then eof is	treated	like an	error and causes reconnection,
	   this	is useful for live / endless streams.

       reconnect_streamed
	   If set then even streamed/non seekable streams will be  reconnected
	   on errors.

       reconnect_on_network_error
	   Reconnect automatically in case of TCP/TLS errors during connect.

       reconnect_on_http_error
	   A  comma  separated	list of	HTTP status codes to reconnect on. The
	   list	can include specific status codes (e.g.	'503') or the  strings
	   '4xx' / '5xx'.

       reconnect_delay_max
	   Sets	  the  maximum	delay  in  seconds  after  which  to  give  up
	   reconnecting

       mime_type
	   Export the MIME type.

       http_version
	   Exports the HTTP response version number. Usually "1.0" or "1.1".

       icy If set to 1 request ICY (SHOUTcast) metadata	from  the  server.  If
	   the	server	supports this, the metadata has	to be retrieved	by the
	   application	  by	reading	   the	  icy_metadata_headers	   and
	   icy_metadata_packet options.	 The default is	1.

       icy_metadata_headers
	   If the server supports ICY metadata,	this contains the ICY-specific
	   HTTP	reply headers, separated by newline characters.

       icy_metadata_packet
	   If  the  server  supports  ICY metadata, and	icy was	set to 1, this
	   contains the	last non-empty metadata	packet sent by the server.  It
	   should be polled in regular intervals by applications interested in
	   mid-stream metadata updates.

       cookies
	   Set	the  cookies to	be sent	in future requests. The	format of each
	   cookie is the same as the  value  of	 a  Set-Cookie	HTTP  response
	   field. Multiple cookies can be delimited by a newline character.

       offset
	   Set initial byte offset.

       end_offset
	   Try to limit	the request to bytes preceding this offset.

       method
	   When	 used  as  a  client  option  it  sets the HTTP	method for the
	   request.

	   When	used as	a server option	it sets	the HTTP method	that is	 going
	   to  be  expected  from  the	client(s).   If	 the  expected and the
	   received HTTP method	do not match the client	will be	 given	a  Bad
	   Request  response.	When  unset the	HTTP method is not checked for
	   now.	This will be replaced by autodetection in the future.

       listen
	   If set to 1 enables experimental HTTP server. This can be  used  to
	   send	data when used as an output option, or read data from a	client
	   with	 HTTP  POST when used as an input option.  If set to 2 enables
	   experimental	multi-client HTTP server. This is not yet  implemented
	   in ffmpeg.c and thus	must not be used as a command line option.

		   # Server side (sending):
		   ffmpeg -i somefile.ogg -c copy -listen 1 -f ogg http://<server>:<port>

		   # Client side (receiving):
		   ffmpeg -i http://<server>:<port> -c copy somefile.ogg

		   # Client can	also be	done with wget:
		   wget	http://<server>:<port> -O somefile.ogg

		   # Server side (receiving):
		   ffmpeg -listen 1 -i http://<server>:<port> -c copy somefile.ogg

		   # Client side (sending):
		   ffmpeg -i somefile.ogg -chunked_post	0 -c copy -f ogg http://<server>:<port>

		   # Client can	also be	done with wget:
		   wget	--post-file=somefile.ogg http://<server>:<port>

       send_expect_100
	   Send	 an  Expect: 100-continue header for POST. If set to 1 it will
	   send, if set	to 0 it	won't, if set to -1 it will try	to send	if  it
	   is applicable. Default value	is -1.

       auth_type
	   Set	HTTP  authentication  type.  No	 option	for Digest, since this
	   method requires getting nonce parameters from the server first  and
	   can't be used straight away like Basic.

	   none
	       Choose  the HTTP	authentication type automatically. This	is the
	       default.

	   basic
	       Choose the HTTP basic authentication.

	       Basic  authentication  sends  a	Base64-encoded	 string	  that
	       contains	a user name and	password for the client. Base64	is not
	       a  form	of  encryption	and  should  be	considered the same as
	       sending the user	name and password in clear text	(Base64	 is  a
	       reversible  encoding).	If  a  resource	needs to be protected,
	       strongly	consider using an  authentication  scheme  other  than
	       basic  authentication.  HTTPS/TLS  should  be  used  with basic
	       authentication.	   Without    these    additional     security
	       enhancements,  basic  authentication  should  not  be  used  to
	       protect sensitive or valuable information.

       HTTP Cookies

       Some HTTP requests will be denied unless	cookie values  are  passed  in
       with  the  request.  The	 cookies  option  allows  these	 cookies to be
       specified. At the very least, each cookie must specify  a  value	 along
       with  a	path and domain.  HTTP requests	that match both	the domain and
       path will automatically include the cookie value	 in  the  HTTP	Cookie
       header field. Multiple cookies can be delimited by a newline.

       The required syntax to play a stream specifying a cookie	is:

	       ffplay -cookies "nlqptid=nltid=tsn; path=/; domain=somedomain.com;" http://somedomain.com/somestream.m3u8

   Icecast
       Icecast protocol	(stream	to Icecast servers)

       This protocol accepts the following options:

       ice_genre
	   Set the stream genre.

       ice_name
	   Set the stream name.

       ice_description
	   Set the stream description.

       ice_url
	   Set the stream website URL.

       ice_public
	   Set if the stream should be public.	The default is 0 (not public).

       user_agent
	   Override  the  User-Agent  header. If not specified a string	of the
	   form	"Lavf/<version>" will be used.

       password
	   Set the Icecast mountpoint password.

       content_type
	   Set the stream content type.	This must be set if  it	 is  different
	   from	audio/mpeg.

       legacy_icecast
	   This	 enables  support  for	Icecast	 versions < 2.4.0, that	do not
	   support the HTTP PUT	method but the SOURCE method.

       tls Establish a TLS (HTTPS) connection to Icecast.

	       icecast://[<username>[:<password>]@]<server>:<port>/<mountpoint>

   ipfs
       InterPlanetary File System (IPFS)  protocol  support.  One  can	access
       files  stored on	the IPFS network through so-called gateways. These are
       http(s) endpoints.  This	 protocol  wraps  the  IPFS  native  protocols
       (ipfs://	 and  ipns://)	to  be	sent to	such a gateway.	Users can (and
       should) host their own node which means this protocol  will  use	 one's
       local gateway to	access files on	the IPFS network.

       This protocol accepts the following options:

       gateway
	   Defines  the	 gateway to use. When not set, the protocol will first
	   try	locating  the  local  gateway  by  looking  at	$IPFS_GATEWAY,
	   $IPFS_PATH and "$HOME/.ipfs/", in that order.

       One can use this	protocol in 2 ways. Using IPFS:

	       ffplay ipfs://<hash>

       Or the IPNS protocol (IPNS is mutable IPFS):

	       ffplay ipns://<hash>

   mmst
       MMS (Microsoft Media Server) protocol over TCP.

   mmsh
       MMS (Microsoft Media Server) protocol over HTTP.

       The required syntax is:

	       mmsh://<server>[:<port>][/<app>][/<playpath>]

   md5
       MD5 output protocol.

       Computes	 the  MD5  hash	of the data to be written, and on close	writes
       this to the designated output or	stdout if none is specified. It	can be
       used to test muxers without writing an actual file.

       Some examples follow.

	       # Write the MD5 hash of the encoded AVI file to the file	output.avi.md5.
	       ffmpeg -i input.flv -f avi -y md5:output.avi.md5

	       # Write the MD5 hash of the encoded AVI file to stdout.
	       ffmpeg -i input.flv -f avi -y md5:

       Note that some formats (typically MOV) require the output  protocol  to
       be seekable, so they will fail with the MD5 output protocol.

   pipe
       UNIX pipe access	protocol.

       Read and	write from UNIX	pipes.

       The accepted syntax is:

	       pipe:[<number>]

       If  fd  isn't specified,	number is the number corresponding to the file
       descriptor of the pipe (e.g. 0 for stdin, 1 for stdout, 2 for  stderr).
       If  number is not specified, by default the stdout file descriptor will
       be used for writing, stdin for reading.

       For example to read from	stdin with ffmpeg:

	       cat test.wav | ffmpeg -i	pipe:0
	       # ...this is the	same as...
	       cat test.wav | ffmpeg -i	pipe:

       For writing to stdout with ffmpeg:

	       ffmpeg -i test.wav -f avi pipe:1	| cat >	test.avi
	       # ...this is the	same as...
	       ffmpeg -i test.wav -f avi pipe: | cat > test.avi

       This protocol accepts the following options:

       blocksize
	   Set I/O operation maximum block size, in bytes.  Default  value  is
	   "INT_MAX",  which results in	not limiting the requested block size.
	   Setting this	value reasonably low improves user termination request
	   reaction time, which	is valuable if data transmission is slow.

       fd  Set file descriptor.

       Note that some formats (typically MOV), require the output protocol  to
       be seekable, so they will fail with the pipe output protocol.

   prompeg
       Pro-MPEG	Code of	Practice #3 Release 2 FEC protocol.

       The  Pro-MPEG  CoP#3  FEC is a 2D parity-check forward error correction
       mechanism for MPEG-2 Transport Streams sent over	RTP.

       This protocol must be used in conjunction with the  "rtp_mpegts"	 muxer
       and the "rtp" protocol.

       The required syntax is:

	       -f rtp_mpegts -fec prompeg=<option>=<val>... rtp://<hostname>:<port>

       The  destination	UDP ports are "port + 2" for the column	FEC stream and
       "port + 4" for the row FEC stream.

       This protocol accepts the following options:

       l=n The number of columns (4-20,	LxD <= 100)

       d=n The number of rows (4-20, LxD <= 100)

       Example usage:

	       -f rtp_mpegts -fec prompeg=l=8:d=4 rtp://<hostname>:<port>

   rist
       Reliable	Internet Streaming Transport protocol

       The accepted options are:

       rist_profile
	   Supported values:

	   simple
	   main
	       This one	is default.

	   advanced
       buffer_size
	   Set internal	RIST buffer size in milliseconds for retransmission of
	   data.  Default value	is 0 which means the librist default (1	 sec).
	   Maximum value is 30 seconds.

       fifo_size
	   Size	of the librist receiver	output fifo in number of packets. This
	   must	 be a power of 2.  Defaults to 8192 (vs	the librist default of
	   1024).

       overrun_nonfatal=1|0
	   Survive in case of librist fifo buffer overrun. Default value is 0.

       pkt_size
	   Set maximum packet size for sending data. 1316 by default.

       log_level
	   Set loglevel	for RIST logging messages. You only need to  set  this
	   if  you  explicitly	want  to enable	debug level messages or	packet
	   loss	simulation, otherwise the regular loglevel is respected.

       secret
	   Set override	of encryption secret, by default is unset.

       encryption
	   Set encryption type,	by default is disabled.	 Acceptable values are
	   128 and 256.

   rtmp
       Real-Time Messaging Protocol.

       The  Real-Time  Messaging  Protocol  (RTMP)  is	used   for   streaming
       multimedia content across a TCP/IP network.

       The required syntax is:

	       rtmp://[<username>:<password>@]<server>[:<port>][/<app>][/<instance>][/<playpath>]

       The accepted parameters are:

       username
	   An optional username	(mostly	for publishing).

       password
	   An optional password	(mostly	for publishing).

       server
	   The address of the RTMP server.

       port
	   The number of the TCP port to use (by default is 1935).

       app It is the name of the application to	access.	It usually corresponds
	   to  the  path where the application is installed on the RTMP	server
	   (e.g. /ondemand/, /flash/live/, etc.). You can override  the	 value
	   parsed from the URI through the "rtmp_app" option, too.

       playpath
	   It  is  the	path or	name of	the resource to	play with reference to
	   the application specified in	app, may be prefixed  by  "mp4:".  You
	   can	 override   the	  value	  parsed  from	the  URI  through  the
	   "rtmp_playpath" option, too.

       listen
	   Act as a server, listening for an incoming connection.

       timeout
	   Maximum time	to wait	for the	incoming connection. Implies listen.

       Additionally, the following parameters can  be  set  via	 command  line
       options (or in code via "AVOption"s):

       rtmp_app
	   Name	 of  application  to  connect  on the RTMP server. This	option
	   overrides the parameter specified in	the URI.

       rtmp_buffer
	   Set the client buffer time in milliseconds. The default is 3000.

       rtmp_conn
	   Extra arbitrary AMF connection parameters, parsed  from  a  string,
	   e.g.	 like  "B:1  S:authMe  O:1 NN:code:1.23	NS:flag:ok O:0".  Each
	   value is prefixed by	a single character denoting the	 type,	B  for
	   Boolean,  N	for number, S for string, O for	object,	or Z for null,
	   followed by a colon.	For Booleans the data must be either  0	 or  1
	   for	FALSE  or  TRUE,  respectively.	 Likewise for Objects the data
	   must	be 0 or	1 to end or begin an object, respectively. Data	 items
	   in  subobjects  may	be  named,  by prefixing the type with 'N' and
	   specifying the name before the  value  (i.e.	 "NB:myFlag:1").  This
	   option  may	be  used  multiple  times  to  construct arbitrary AMF
	   sequences.

       rtmp_enhanced_codecs
	   Specify the list of codecs the client advertises to support	in  an
	   enhanced  RTMP  stream.  This  option  should  be  set  to  a comma
	   separated list of fourcc values, like "hvc1,av01,vp09" for multiple
	   codecs or "hvc1" for	only one codec.	The  specified	list  will  be
	   presented  in  the  "fourCcLive"  property  of  the Connect Command
	   Message.

       rtmp_flashver
	   Version of the Flash	plugin used to run the SWF player. The default
	   is  LNX  9,0,124,2.	(When  publishing,  the	 default  is  FMLE/3.0
	   (compatible;	<libavformat version>).)

       rtmp_flush_interval
	   Number  of  packets	flushed	 in the	same request (RTMPT only). The
	   default is 10.

       rtmp_live
	   Specify that	the media is a live stream. No resuming	or seeking  in
	   live	 streams  is possible. The default value is "any", which means
	   the subscriber first	tries to play the live stream specified	in the
	   playpath. If	a live stream of that name is not found, it plays  the
	   recorded   stream.	The  other  possible  values  are  "live"  and
	   "recorded".

       rtmp_pageurl
	   URL of the web page in which	the media was embedded.	By default  no
	   value will be sent.

       rtmp_playpath
	   Stream  identifier to play or to publish. This option overrides the
	   parameter specified in the URI.

       rtmp_subscribe
	   Name	of live	stream to subscribe to.	By default no  value  will  be
	   sent.   It  is only sent if the option is specified or if rtmp_live
	   is set to live.

       rtmp_swfhash
	   SHA256 hash of the decompressed SWF file (32	bytes).

       rtmp_swfsize
	   Size	of the decompressed SWF	file, required for SWFVerification.

       rtmp_swfurl
	   URL of the SWF player for the media.	By default no  value  will  be
	   sent.

       rtmp_swfverify
	   URL to player swf file, compute hash/size automatically.

       rtmp_tcurl
	   URL of the target stream. Defaults to proto://host[:port]/app.

       tcp_nodelay=1|0
	   Set TCP_NODELAY to disable Nagle's algorithm. Default value is 0.

	   Remark:  Writing  to	 the  socket  is  currently  not  optimized to
	   minimize system calls  and  reduces	the  efficiency	 /  effect  of
	   TCP_NODELAY.

       For  example  to	 read with ffplay a multimedia resource	named "sample"
       from the	application "vod" from an RTMP server "myserver":

	       ffplay rtmp://myserver/vod/sample

       To publish to a password	protected server, passing the playpath and app
       names separately:

	       ffmpeg -re -i <input> -f	flv -rtmp_playpath some/long/path -rtmp_app long/app/name rtmp://username:password@myserver/

   rtmpe
       Encrypted Real-Time Messaging Protocol.

       The  Encrypted  Real-Time  Messaging  Protocol  (RTMPE)	is  used   for
       streaming  multimedia content within standard cryptographic primitives,
       consisting of Diffie-Hellman key	exchange and HMACSHA256, generating  a
       pair of RC4 keys.

   rtmps
       Real-Time Messaging Protocol over a secure SSL connection.

       The   Real-Time	Messaging  Protocol  (RTMPS)  is  used	for  streaming
       multimedia content across an encrypted connection.

   rtmpt
       Real-Time Messaging Protocol tunneled through HTTP.

       The Real-Time Messaging Protocol	tunneled through HTTP (RTMPT) is  used
       for  streaming  multimedia  content  within  HTTP  requests to traverse
       firewalls.

   rtmpte
       Encrypted Real-Time Messaging Protocol tunneled through HTTP.

       The  Encrypted  Real-Time  Messaging  Protocol  tunneled	 through  HTTP
       (RTMPTE)	 is used for streaming multimedia content within HTTP requests
       to traverse firewalls.

   rtmpts
       Real-Time Messaging Protocol tunneled through HTTPS.

       The Real-Time Messaging Protocol	tunneled  through  HTTPS  (RTMPTS)  is
       used for	streaming multimedia content within HTTPS requests to traverse
       firewalls.

   libsmbclient
       libsmbclient permits one	to manipulate CIFS/SMB network resources.

       Following syntax	is required.

	       smb://[[domain:]user[:password@]]server[/share[/path[/file]]]

       This protocol accepts the following options.

       timeout
	   Set	timeout	 in  milliseconds of socket I/O	operations used	by the
	   underlying low level	operation. By default it is set	to  -1,	 which
	   means that the timeout is not specified.

       truncate
	   Truncate  existing  files  on  write,  if  set  to  1. A value of 0
	   prevents truncating.	Default	value is 1.

       workgroup
	   Set the workgroup used for making connections. By default workgroup
	   is not specified.

       For more	information see: <http://www.samba.org/>.

   libssh
       Secure File Transfer Protocol via libssh

       Read from or write to remote resources using SFTP protocol.

       Following syntax	is required.

	       sftp://[user[:password]@]server[:port]/path/to/remote/resource.mpeg

       This protocol accepts the following options.

       timeout
	   Set timeout of socket I/O operations	used  by  the  underlying  low
	   level  operation.  By default it is set to -1, which	means that the
	   timeout is not specified.

       truncate
	   Truncate existing files on write,  if  set  to  1.  A  value	 of  0
	   prevents truncating.	Default	value is 1.

       private_key
	   Specify  the	 path of the file containing private key to use	during
	   authorization.  By default libssh searches for keys in the  ~/.ssh/
	   directory.

       Example:	Play a file stored on remote server.

	       ffplay sftp://user:password@server_address:22/home/user/resource.mpeg

   librtmp rtmp, rtmpe,	rtmps, rtmpt, rtmpte
       Real-Time   Messaging  Protocol	and  its  variants  supported  through
       librtmp.

       Requires	the  presence  of  the	librtmp	 headers  and  library	during
       configuration.	You  need  to  explicitly  configure  the  build  with
       "--enable-librtmp". If  enabled	this  will  replace  the  native  RTMP
       protocol.

       This protocol provides most client functions and	a few server functions
       needed  to  support RTMP, RTMP tunneled in HTTP (RTMPT),	encrypted RTMP
       (RTMPE),	RTMP over SSL/TLS  (RTMPS)  and	 tunneled  variants  of	 these
       encrypted types (RTMPTE,	RTMPTS).

       The required syntax is:

	       <rtmp_proto>://<server>[:<port>][/<app>][/<playpath>] <options>

       where  rtmp_proto  is  one  of  the  strings  "rtmp", "rtmpt", "rtmpe",
       "rtmps",	"rtmpte", "rtmpts" corresponding to  each  RTMP	 variant,  and
       server,	port,  app and playpath	have the same meaning as specified for
       the RTMP	native protocol.  options contains a list  of  space-separated
       options of the form key=val.

       See the librtmp manual page (man	3 librtmp) for more information.

       For  example,  to  stream  a  file in real-time to an RTMP server using
       ffmpeg:

	       ffmpeg -re -i myfile -f flv rtmp://myserver/live/mystream

       To play the same	stream using ffplay:

	       ffplay "rtmp://myserver/live/mystream live=1"

   rtp
       Real-time Transport Protocol.

       The     required	    syntax	for	 an	 RTP	  URL	   is:
       rtp://hostname[:port][?option=val...]

       port specifies the RTP port to use.

       The following URL options are supported:

       ttl=n
	   Set the TTL (Time-To-Live) value (for multicast only).

       rtcpport=n
	   Set the remote RTCP port to n.

       localrtpport=n
	   Set the local RTP port to n.

       localrtcpport=n'
	   Set the local RTCP port to n.

       pkt_size=n
	   Set max packet size (in bytes) to n.

       buffer_size=size
	   Set the maximum UDP socket buffer size in bytes.

       connect=0|1
	   Do  a "connect()" on	the UDP	socket (if set to 1) or	not (if	set to
	   0).

       sources=ip[,ip]
	   List	allowed	source IP addresses.

       block=ip[,ip]
	   List	disallowed (blocked) source IP addresses.

       write_to_source=0|1
	   Send	packets	to the source address of the  latest  received	packet
	   (if set to 1) or to a default remote	address	(if set	to 0).

       localport=n
	   Set the local RTP port to n.

       localaddr=addr
	   Local IP address of a network interface used	for sending packets or
	   joining multicast groups.

       timeout=n
	   Set timeout (in microseconds) of socket I/O operations to n.

	   This	is a deprecated	option.	Instead, localrtpport should be	used.

       Important notes:

       1.  If  rtcpport	 is  not set the RTCP port will	be set to the RTP port
	   value plus 1.

       2.  If localrtpport (the	local RTP port)	is not set any available  port
	   will	be used	for the	local RTP and RTCP ports.

       3.  If localrtcpport (the local RTCP port) is not set it	will be	set to
	   the local RTP port value plus 1.

   rtsp
       Real-Time Streaming Protocol.

       RTSP  is	 not  technically  a  protocol handler in libavformat, it is a
       demuxer and muxer. The demuxer supports both  normal  RTSP  (with  data
       transferred  over  RTP;	this  is used by e.g. Apple and	Microsoft) and
       Real-RTSP (with data transferred	over RDT).

       The muxer can be	used to	send a stream using RTSP ANNOUNCE to a	server
       supporting   it	 (currently   Darwin   Streaming   Server  and	Mischa
       Spiegelmock's <https://github.com/revmischa/rtsp-server>).

       The required syntax for a RTSP url is:

	       rtsp://<hostname>[:<port>]/<path>

       Options can be set on the ffmpeg/ffplay command line, or	 set  in  code
       via "AVOption"s or in "avformat_open_input".

       Muxer

       The following options are supported.

       rtsp_transport
	   Set RTSP transport protocols.

	   It accepts the following values:

	   udp Use UDP as lower	transport protocol.

	   tcp Use TCP (interleaving within the	RTSP control channel) as lower
	       transport protocol.

	   Default value is 0.

       rtsp_flags
	   Set RTSP flags.

	   The following values	are accepted:

	   latm
	       Use MP4A-LATM packetization instead of MPEG4-GENERIC for	AAC.

	   rfc2190
	       Use RFC 2190 packetization instead of RFC 4629 for H.263.

	   skip_rtcp
	       Don't send RTCP sender reports.

	   h264_mode0
	       Use mode	0 for H.264 in RTP.

	   send_bye
	       Send RTCP BYE packets when finishing.

	   Default value is 0.

       min_port
	   Set minimum local UDP port. Default value is	5000.

       max_port
	   Set maximum local UDP port. Default value is	65000.

       buffer_size
	   Set the maximum socket buffer size in bytes.

       pkt_size
	   Set max send	packet size (in	bytes).	Default	value is 1472.

       Demuxer

       The following options are supported.

       initial_pause
	   Do  not  start  playing the stream immediately if set to 1. Default
	   value is 0.

       rtsp_transport
	   Set RTSP transport protocols.

	   It accepts the following values:

	   udp Use UDP as lower	transport protocol.

	   tcp Use TCP (interleaving within the	RTSP control channel) as lower
	       transport protocol.

	   udp_multicast
	       Use UDP multicast as lower transport protocol.

	   http
	       Use HTTP	tunneling as lower transport protocol, which is	useful
	       for passing proxies.

	   https
	       Use HTTPs tunneling  as	lower  transport  protocol,  which  is
	       useful  for  passing  proxies  and  widely  used	 for  security
	       consideration.

	   Multiple lower transport protocols may be specified,	in  that  case
	   they	 are  tried one	at a time (if the setup	of one fails, the next
	   one is tried).  For the muxer, only the tcp	and  udp  options  are
	   supported.

       rtsp_flags
	   Set RTSP flags.

	   The following values	are accepted:

	   filter_src
	       Accept packets only from	negotiated peer	address	and port.

	   listen
	       Act as a	server,	listening for an incoming connection.

	   prefer_tcp
	       Try  TCP	 for  RTP transport first, if TCP is available as RTSP
	       RTP transport.

	   satip_raw
	       Export raw MPEG-TS stream instead of demuxing.  The  flag  will
	       simply write out	the raw	stream,	with the original PAT/PMT/PIDs
	       intact.

	   Default value is none.

       allowed_media_types
	   Set media types to accept from the server.

	   The following flags are accepted:

	   video
	   audio
	   data
	   subtitle

	   By default it accepts all media types.

       min_port
	   Set minimum local UDP port. Default value is	5000.

       max_port
	   Set maximum local UDP port. Default value is	65000.

       listen_timeout
	   Set	 maximum   timeout   (in  seconds)  to	establish  an  initial
	   connection. Setting listen_timeout >	0 sets rtsp_flags  to  listen.
	   Default  is	-1 which means an infinite timeout when	listen mode is
	   set.

       reorder_queue_size
	   Set number of packets to buffer for handling	of reordered packets.

       timeout
	   Set socket TCP I/O timeout in microseconds.

       user_agent
	   Override User-Agent header. If not specified, it  defaults  to  the
	   libavformat identifier string.

       buffer_size
	   Set the maximum socket buffer size in bytes.

       When  receiving	data  over  UDP, the demuxer tries to reorder received
       packets (since they may arrive out of order, or packets	may  get  lost
       totally). This can be disabled by setting the maximum demuxing delay to
       zero (via the "max_delay" field of AVFormatContext).

       When  watching multi-bitrate Real-RTSP streams with ffplay, the streams
       to display can be chosen	with "-vst" n and "-ast" n for video and audio
       respectively, and can be	switched on the	fly by pressing	"v" and	"a".

       Examples

       The following examples all make use of the ffplay and ffmpeg tools.

          Watch a stream over	UDP,  with  a  max  reordering	delay  of  0.5
	   seconds:

		   ffplay -max_delay 500000 -rtsp_transport udp	rtsp://server/video.mp4

          Watch a stream tunneled over	HTTP:

		   ffplay -rtsp_transport http rtsp://server/video.mp4

          Send	a stream in realtime to	a RTSP server, for others to watch:

		   ffmpeg -re -i <input> -f rtsp -muxdelay 0.1 rtsp://server/live.sdp

          Receive a stream in realtime:

		   ffmpeg -rtsp_flags listen -i	rtsp://ownaddress/live.sdp <output>

   sap
       Session	Announcement  Protocol	(RFC  2974). This is not technically a
       protocol	handler	in libavformat,	it is a	muxer and demuxer.  It is used
       for signalling of RTP streams, by announcing the	SDP  for  the  streams
       regularly on a separate port.

       Muxer

       The syntax for a	SAP url	given to the muxer is:

	       sap://<destination>[:<port>][?<options>]

       The  RTP	 packets are sent to destination on port port, or to port 5004
       if no  port  is	specified.   options  is  a  "&"-separated  list.  The
       following options are supported:

       announce_addr=address
	   Specify  the	 destination  IP address for sending the announcements
	   to.	If omitted, the	announcements are sent to  the	commonly  used
	   SAP	announcement  multicast	address	224.2.127.254 (sap.mcast.net),
	   or ff0e::2:7ffe if destination is an	IPv6 address.

       announce_port=port
	   Specify the port to send the	announcements on, defaults to 9875  if
	   not specified.

       ttl=ttl
	   Specify  the	 time  to  live	 value	for  the announcements and RTP
	   packets, defaults to	255.

       same_port=0|1
	   If set to 1,	send all RTP streams on	the same port  pair.  If  zero
	   (the	 default),  all	 streams  are  sent on unique ports, with each
	   stream on a port 2 numbers higher than the  previous.   VLC/Live555
	   requires  this  to  be  set to 1, to	be able	to receive the stream.
	   The RTP stack in libavformat	for receiving requires all streams  to
	   be sent on unique ports.

       Example command lines follow.

       To broadcast a stream on	the local subnet, for watching in VLC:

	       ffmpeg -re -i <input> -f	sap sap://224.0.0.255?same_port=1

       Similarly, for watching in ffplay:

	       ffmpeg -re -i <input> -f	sap sap://224.0.0.255

       And for watching	in ffplay, over	IPv6:

	       ffmpeg -re -i <input> -f	sap sap://[ff0e::1:2:3:4]

       Demuxer

       The syntax for a	SAP url	given to the demuxer is:

	       sap://[<address>][:<port>]

       address	is  the	 multicast  address to listen for announcements	on, if
       omitted,	the default 224.2.127.254 (sap.mcast.net) is used. port	is the
       port that is listened on, 9875 if omitted.

       The demuxers listens for	announcements on the given address  and	 port.
       Once  an	 announcement is received, it tries to receive that particular
       stream.

       Example command lines follow.

       To play back the	first stream announced on  the	normal	SAP  multicast
       address:

	       ffplay sap://

       To  play	 back  the  first stream announced on one the default IPv6 SAP
       multicast address:

	       ffplay sap://[ff0e::2:7ffe]

   sctp
       Stream Control Transmission Protocol.

       The accepted URL	syntax is:

	       sctp://<host>:<port>[?<options>]

       The protocol accepts the	following options:

       listen
	   If set to any value,	listen for an  incoming	 connection.  Outgoing
	   connection is done by default.

       max_streams
	   Set the maximum number of streams. By default no limit is set.

   srt
       Haivision Secure	Reliable Transport Protocol via	libsrt.

       The supported syntax for	a SRT URL is:

	       srt://<hostname>:<port>[?<options>]

       options contains	a list of &-separated options of the form key=val.

       or

	       <options> srt://<hostname>:<port>

       options contains	a list of '-key	val' options.

       This protocol accepts the following options.

       connect_timeout=milliseconds
	   Connection  timeout;	 SRT  cannot  connect  for  RTT	> 1500 msec (2
	   handshake exchanges)	with the default connect timeout of 3 seconds.
	   This	option applies to the caller and rendezvous connection	modes.
	   The	connect	 timeout  is 10	times the value	set for	the rendezvous
	   mode	(which can be used as a	workaround for this connection problem
	   with	earlier	versions).

       ffs=bytes
	   Flight Flag Size (Window  Size),  in	 bytes.	 FFS  is  actually  an
	   internal  parameter	and  you  should  set  it  to  not  less  than
	   recv_buffer_size and	mss. The default value	is  relatively	large,
	   therefore  unless  you set a	very large receiver buffer, you	do not
	   need	to change this option. Default value is	25600.

       inputbw=bytes/seconds
	   Sender nominal input	rate, in bytes per seconds.  Used  along  with
	   oheadbw,  when  maxbw  is set to relative (0), to calculate maximum
	   sending rate	when recovery packets are sent	along  with  the  main
	   media stream: inputbw * (100	+ oheadbw) / 100 if inputbw is not set
	   while  maxbw	 is  set  to  relative	(0),  the actual input rate is
	   evaluated inside the	library. Default value is 0.

       iptos=tos
	   IP Type of Service. Applies to sender only. Default value is	0xB8.

       ipttl=ttl
	   IP Time To Live. Applies to sender only. Default value is 64.

       latency=microseconds
	   Timestamp-based Packet Delivery Delay.  Used	to  absorb  bursts  of
	   missed  packet retransmissions.  This flag sets both	rcvlatency and
	   peerlatency to the same value. Note that  prior  to	version	 1.3.0
	   this	 is  the  only	flag  to  set  the  latency,  however  this is
	   effectively equivalent to setting peerlatency, when side is	sender
	   and	rcvlatency when	side is	receiver, and the bidirectional	stream
	   sending is not supported.

       listen_timeout=microseconds
	   Set socket listen timeout.

       maxbw=bytes/seconds
	   Maximum sending bandwidth,  in  bytes  per  seconds.	  -1  infinite
	   (CSRTCC  limit is 30mbps) 0 relative	to input rate (see inputbw) >0
	   absolute limit value	Default	value is 0 (relative)

       mode=caller|listener|rendezvous
	   Connection mode.  caller opens client connection.  listener	starts
	   server  to listen for incoming connections.	rendezvous use Rendez-
	   Vous	connection mode.  Default value	is caller.

       mss=bytes
	   Maximum Segment Size, in bytes. Used	for buffer allocation and rate
	   calculation using a packet counter assuming fully  filled  packets.
	   The smallest	MSS between the	peers is used. This is 1500 by default
	   in  the  overall  internet.	 This  is  the maximum size of the UDP
	   packet and can be only decreased,  unless  you  have	 some  unusual
	   dedicated network settings. Default value is	1500.

       nakreport=1|0
	   If	set  to	 1,  Receiver  will  send  `UMSG_LOSSREPORT`  messages
	   periodically	until a	lost packet is retransmitted or	 intentionally
	   dropped. Default value is 1.

       oheadbw=percents
	   Recovery  bandwidth	overhead  above	 input rate, in	percents.  See
	   inputbw. Default value is 25%.

       passphrase=string
	   HaiCrypt Encryption/Decryption Passphrase string, length from 10 to
	   79 characters. The passphrase is  the  shared  secret  between  the
	   sender  and the receiver. It	is used	to generate the	Key Encrypting
	   Key using PBKDF2 (Password-Based Key	Derivation  Function).	It  is
	   used	 only if pbkeylen is non-zero. It is used on the receiver only
	   if the received  data  is  encrypted.   The	configured  passphrase
	   cannot be recovered (write-only).

       enforced_encryption=1|0
	   If  true,  both  connection parties must have the same password set
	   (including empty, that is, with no  encryption).  If	 the  password
	   doesn't  match  or  only one	side is	unencrypted, the connection is
	   rejected. Default is	true.

       kmrefreshrate=packets
	   The number of packets to be transmitted after which the  encryption
	   key	is  switched  to  a  new  key.	Default	 is -1.	 -1 means auto
	   (0x1000000 in srt library). The range for this option  is  integers
	   in the 0 - "INT_MAX".

       kmpreannounce=packets
	   The	interval  between  when	 a new encryption key is sent and when
	   switchover occurs.  This  value  also  applies  to  the  subsequent
	   interval between when switchover occurs and when the	old encryption
	   key is decommissioned. Default is -1.  -1 means auto	(0x1000	in srt
	   library).  The  range  for  this  option  is	 integers  in  the 0 -
	   "INT_MAX".

       snddropdelay=microseconds
	   The sender's	extra delay before dropping  packets.  This  delay  is
	   added to the	default	drop delay time	interval value.

	   Special value -1: Do	not drop packets on the	sender at all.

       payload_size=bytes
	   Sets	 the  maximum declared size of a packet	transferred during the
	   single call to the sending function in Live mode.  Use  0  if  this
	   value  isn't	 used  (which is default in file mode).	 Default is -1
	   (automatic),	which typically	means MPEG-TS; if you are going	to use
	   SRT to send any different kind of payload, such  as,	 for  example,
	   wrapping  a	live  stream  in very small frames, then you can use a
	   bigger maximum frame	size, though not greater than 1456 bytes.

       pkt_size=bytes
	   Alias for payload_size.

       peerlatency=microseconds
	   The latency value (as described in rcvlatency) that is set  by  the
	   sender side as a minimum value for the receiver.

       pbkeylen=bytes
	   Sender  encryption key length, in bytes.  Only can be set to	0, 16,
	   24 and 32.  Enable sender encryption	if not	0.   Not  required  on
	   receiver  (set  to  0),  key	 size obtained from sender in HaiCrypt
	   handshake.  Default value is	0.

       rcvlatency=microseconds
	   The time that should	elapse since the moment	when  the  packet  was
	   sent	and the	moment when it's delivered to the receiver application
	   in the receiving function.  This time should	be a buffer time large
	   enough  to  cover the time spent for	sending, unexpectedly extended
	   RTT time, and the time needed to retransmit the  lost  UDP  packet.
	   The	effective  latency  value will be the maximum of this options'
	   value and the value of peerlatency set by  the  peer	 side.	Before
	   version 1.3.0 this option is	only available as latency.

       recv_buffer_size=bytes
	   Set UDP receive buffer size,	expressed in bytes.

       send_buffer_size=bytes
	   Set UDP send	buffer size, expressed in bytes.

       timeout=microseconds
	   Set	raise  error  timeouts for read, write and connect operations.
	   Note	that the SRT  library  has  internal  timeouts	which  can  be
	   controlled separately, the value set	here is	only a cap on those.

       tlpktdrop=1|0
	   Too-late  Packet  Drop.  When enabled on receiver, it skips missing
	   packets that	have not been  delivered  in  time  and	 delivers  the
	   following  packets  to  the application when	their time-to-play has
	   come. It also sends a fake ACK  to  the  sender.  When  enabled  on
	   sender  and	enabled	 on  the  receiving peer, the sender drops the
	   older packets that have no chance of	being delivered	 in  time.  It
	   was	automatically  enabled	in the sender if the receiver supports
	   it.

       sndbuf=bytes
	   Set send buffer size, expressed in bytes.

       rcvbuf=bytes
	   Set receive buffer size, expressed in bytes.

	   Receive buffer must not be greater than ffs.

       lossmaxttl=packets
	   The value up	to which the Reorder Tolerance may grow. When  Reorder
	   Tolerance  is  >  0,	 then packet loss report is delayed until that
	   number of packets come in. Reorder Tolerance	increases every	time a
	   "belated" packet has	come, but  it  wasn't  due  to	retransmission
	   (that  is,  when  UDP  packets tend to come out of order), with the
	   difference between the latest sequence and this packet's  sequence,
	   and	not  more  than	 the  value of this option. By default it's 0,
	   which means that this mechanism is turned off, and the loss	report
	   is always sent immediately upon experiencing	a "gap"	in sequences.

       minversion
	   The	minimum	 SRT  version  that  is	 required  from	 the  peer.  A
	   connection to a peer	that does  not	satisfy	 the  minimum  version
	   requirement will be rejected.

	   The	version	 format	in hex is 0xXXYYZZ for x.y.z in	human readable
	   form.

       streamid=string
	   A string limited to 512 characters that can be set  on  the	socket
	   prior to connecting.	This stream ID will be able to be retrieved by
	   the	listener side from the socket that is returned from srt_accept
	   and was connected by	a socket with that set stream ID. SRT does not
	   enforce any special interpretation of the contents of this  string.
	   This	option doesnXt make sense in Rendezvous	connection; the	result
	   might  be  that  simply  one	 side will override the	value from the
	   other side and itXs the matter of luck which	one would win

       srt_streamid=string
	   Alias for streamid to  avoid	 conflict  with	 ffmpeg	 command  line
	   option.

       smoother=live|file
	   The	type  of  Smoother  used for the transmission for that socket,
	   which is responsible	for the	transmission and  congestion  control.
	   The	Smoother  type	must  be  exactly  the same on both connecting
	   parties, otherwise the connection is	rejected.

       messageapi=1|0
	   When	set, this socket uses  the  Message  API,  otherwise  it  uses
	   Buffer  API.	 Note  that  in	live mode (see transtype) thereXs only
	   message API available. In File mode you can chose to	use one	of two
	   modes:

	   Stream API (default,	when this option is false). In this  mode  you
	   may	send as	many data as you wish with one sending instruction, or
	   even	use dedicated functions	that read directly from	 a  file.  The
	   internal  facility  will  take  care	 of  any  speed	and congestion
	   control. When receiving, you	can  also  receive  as	many  data  as
	   desired,  the data not extracted will be waiting for	the next call.
	   There is no boundary	between	data portions in the Stream mode.

	   Message API.	In this	mode your single  sending  instruction	passes
	   exactly one piece of	data that has boundaries (a message). Contrary
	   to Live mode, this message may span across multiple UDP packets and
	   the	only  size  limitation	is that	it shall fit as	a whole	in the
	   sending buffer. The receiver	shall use as large buffer as necessary
	   to receive the message, otherwise the message will not be given up.
	   When	the message is not complete (not all packets received or there
	   was a packet	loss) it will not be given up.

       transtype=live|file
	   Sets	the transmission type for the socket, in  particular,  setting
	   this	 option	sets multiple other parameters to their	default	values
	   as required for a particular	transmission type.

	   live: Set options as	for  live  transmission.  In  this  mode,  you
	   should  send	 by one	sending	instruction only so many data that fit
	   in one UDP packet, and  limited  to	the  value  defined  first  in
	   payload_size	 (1316	is  default  in	 this mode). There is no speed
	   control in this mode, only the bandwidth control, if	configured, in
	   order to not	exceed the bandwidth with  the	overhead  transmission
	   (retransmitted and control packets).

	   file:  Set options as for non-live transmission. See	messageapi for
	   further explanations

       linger=seconds
	   The number of seconds that the socket waits for  unsent  data  when
	   closing.   Default is -1. -1	means auto (off	with 0 seconds in live
	   mode, on with 180 seconds in	file mode). The	range for this	option
	   is integers in the 0	- "INT_MAX".

       tsbpd=1|0
	   When	 true,	use  Timestamp-based Packet Delivery mode. The default
	   behavior depends on the transmission	type: enabled  in  live	 mode,
	   disabled in file mode.

       For more	information see: <https://github.com/Haivision/srt>.

   srtp
       Secure Real-time	Transport Protocol.

       The accepted options are:

       srtp_in_suite
       srtp_out_suite
	   Select input	and output encoding suites.

	   Supported values:

	   AES_CM_128_HMAC_SHA1_80
	   SRTP_AES128_CM_HMAC_SHA1_80
	   AES_CM_128_HMAC_SHA1_32
	   SRTP_AES128_CM_HMAC_SHA1_32
       srtp_in_params
       srtp_out_params
	   Set	input and output encoding parameters, which are	expressed by a
	   base64-encoded representation of a binary block. The	first 16 bytes
	   of this binary block	are used as master key,	the following 14 bytes
	   are used as master salt.

   subfile
       Virtually  extract  a  segment  of  a  file  or	another	 stream.   The
       underlying stream must be seekable.

       Accepted	options:

       start
	   Start offset	of the extracted segment, in bytes.

       end End	offset	of  the	 extracted  segment,  in  bytes.  If set to 0,
	   extract till	end of file.

       Examples:

       Extract a chapter from a	DVD VOB	file (start and	end  sectors  obtained
       externally and multiplied by 2048):

	       subfile,,start,153391104,end,268142592,,:/media/dvd/VIDEO_TS/VTS_08_1.VOB

       Play an AVI file	directly from a	TAR archive:

	       subfile,,start,183241728,end,366490624,,:archive.tar

       Play a MPEG-TS file from	start offset till end:

	       subfile,,start,32815239,end,0,,:video.ts

   tee
       Writes  the  output  to	multiple protocols. The	individual outputs are
       separated by |

	       tee:file://path/to/local/this.avi|file://path/to/local/that.avi

   tcp
       Transmission Control Protocol.

       The required syntax for a TCP url is:

	       tcp://<hostname>:<port>[?<options>]

       options contains	a list of &-separated options of the form key=val.

       The list	of supported options follows.

       listen=2|1|0
	   Listen for an incoming connection. 0	 disables  listen,  1  enables
	   listen  in  single  client  mode,  2	enables	listen in multi-client
	   mode. Default value is 0.

       local_addr=addr
	   Local IP address  of	 a  network  interface	used  for  tcp	socket
	   connect.

       local_port=port
	   Local port used for tcp socket connect.

       timeout=microseconds
	   Set raise error timeout, expressed in microseconds.

	   This	 option	 is  only relevant in read mode: if no data arrived in
	   more	than this time interval, raise error.

       listen_timeout=milliseconds
	   Set listen timeout, expressed in milliseconds.

       recv_buffer_size=bytes
	   Set receive buffer size, expressed bytes.

       send_buffer_size=bytes
	   Set send buffer size, expressed bytes.

       tcp_nodelay=1|0
	   Set TCP_NODELAY to disable Nagle's algorithm. Default value is 0.

	   Remark: Writing  to	the  socket  is	 currently  not	 optimized  to
	   minimize  system  calls  and	 reduces  the  efficiency  / effect of
	   TCP_NODELAY.

       tcp_mss=bytes
	   Set maximum segment size for	outgoing  TCP  packets,	 expressed  in
	   bytes.

       The  following  example	shows  how to setup a listening	TCP connection
       with ffmpeg, which is then accessed with	ffplay:

	       ffmpeg -i <input> -f <format> tcp://<hostname>:<port>?listen
	       ffplay tcp://<hostname>:<port>

   tls
       Transport Layer Security	(TLS) /	Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)

       The required syntax for a TLS/SSL url is:

	       tls://<hostname>:<port>[?<options>]

       The following parameters	can be set via command	line  options  (or  in
       code via	"AVOption"s):

       ca_file,	cafile=filename
	   A  file  containing certificate authority (CA) root certificates to
	   treat as trusted. If	the linked TLS library contains	a default this
	   might not need to be	specified for verification to  work,  but  not
	   all	libraries and setups have defaults built in.  The file must be
	   in OpenSSL PEM format.

       tls_verify=1|0
	   If enabled, try to verify the peer that we are communicating	 with.
	   Note,  if  using  OpenSSL,  this currently only makes sure that the
	   peer	certificate is signed by one of	the root certificates  in  the
	   CA database,	but it does not	validate that the certificate actually
	   matches  the	 host  name  we	 are trying to connect to. (With other
	   backends, the host name is validated	as well.)

	   This	is disabled by default since it	requires a CA database	to  be
	   provided by the caller in many cases.

       cert_file, cert=filename
	   A  file  containing	a certificate to use in	the handshake with the
	   peer.  (When	operating as server, in	 listen	 mode,	this  is  more
	   often  required  by	the  peer,  while client certificates only are
	   mandated in certain setups.)

       key_file, key=filename
	   A file containing the private key for the certificate.

       listen=1|0
	   If enabled, listen for connections on the provided port, and	assume
	   the server role in the handshake instead of the client role.

       http_proxy
	   The HTTP proxy to tunnel through,  e.g.  "http://example.com:1234".
	   The proxy must support the CONNECT method.

       Example command lines:

       To create a TLS/SSL server that serves an input stream.

	       ffmpeg -i <input> -f <format> tls://<hostname>:<port>?listen&cert=<server.crt>&key=<server.key>

       To play back a stream from the TLS/SSL server using ffplay:

	       ffplay tls://<hostname>:<port>

   udp
       User Datagram Protocol.

       The required syntax for an UDP URL is:

	       udp://<hostname>:<port>[?<options>]

       options contains	a list of &-separated options of the form key=val.

       In  case	 threading is enabled on the system, a circular	buffer is used
       to store	the incoming data, which allows	one to reduce loss of data due
       to UDP socket  buffer  overruns.	 The  fifo_size	 and  overrun_nonfatal
       options are related to this buffer.

       The list	of supported options follows.

       buffer_size=size
	   Set	the  UDP  maximum socket buffer	size in	bytes. This is used to
	   set either the receive or send buffer size, depending on  what  the
	   socket is used for.	Default	is 32 KB for output, 384 KB for	input.
	   See also fifo_size.

       bitrate=bitrate
	   If  set  to	nonzero,  the  output will have	the specified constant
	   bitrate if the input	has enough packets to sustain it.

       burst_bits=bits
	   When	using bitrate this specifies the maximum  number  of  bits  in
	   packet bursts.

       localport=port
	   Override the	local UDP port to bind with.

       localaddr=addr
	   Local IP address of a network interface used	for sending packets or
	   joining multicast groups.

       pkt_size=size
	   Set the size	in bytes of UDP	packets.

       reuse=1|0
	   Explicitly allow or disallow	reusing	UDP sockets.

       ttl=ttl
	   Set the time	to live	value (for multicast only).

       connect=1|0
	   Initialize  the  UDP	 socket	 with  "connect()".  In	this case, the
	   destination address can't  be  changed  with	 ff_udp_set_remote_url
	   later.   If	the destination	address	isn't known at the start, this
	   option can be specified in ff_udp_set_remote_url, too.  This	allows
	   finding out the source address for the  packets  with  getsockname,
	   and	makes writes return with AVERROR(ECONNREFUSED) if "destination
	   unreachable"	is received.  For receiving, this gives	the benefit of
	   only	receiving packets from the specified peer address/port.

       sources=address[,address]
	   Only	receive	packets	sent from the specified	addresses. In case  of
	   multicast,  also  subscribe	to multicast traffic coming from these
	   addresses only.

       block=address[,address]
	   Ignore packets sent	from  the  specified  addresses.  In  case  of
	   multicast,  also  exclude  the  source  addresses  in the multicast
	   subscription.

       fifo_size=units
	   Set the UDP receiving circular buffer size, expressed as  a	number
	   of  packets	with  size  of 188 bytes. If not specified defaults to
	   7*4096.

       overrun_nonfatal=1|0
	   Survive in case of UDP receiving circular buffer  overrun.  Default
	   value is 0.

       timeout=microseconds
	   Set raise error timeout, expressed in microseconds.

	   This	 option	 is  only relevant in read mode: if no data arrived in
	   more	than this time interval, raise error.

       broadcast=1|0
	   Explicitly allow or disallow	UDP broadcasting.

	   Note	that broadcasting may not work properly	on networks  having  a
	   broadcast storm protection.

       Examples

          Use ffmpeg to stream	over UDP to a remote endpoint:

		   ffmpeg -i <input> -f	<format> udp://<hostname>:<port>

          Use	ffmpeg to stream in mpegts format over UDP using 188 sized UDP
	   packets, using a large input	buffer:

		   ffmpeg -i <input> -f	mpegts udp://<hostname>:<port>?pkt_size=188&buffer_size=65535

          Use ffmpeg to receive over UDP from a remote	endpoint:

		   ffmpeg -i udp://[<multicast-address>]:<port>	...

   unix
       Unix local socket

       The required syntax for a Unix socket URL is:

	       unix://<filepath>

       The following parameters	can be set via command	line  options  (or  in
       code via	"AVOption"s):

       timeout
	   Timeout in ms.

       listen
	   Create the Unix socket in listening mode.

   zmq
       ZeroMQ asynchronous messaging using the libzmq library.

       This  library  supports	unicast	 streaming to multiple clients without
       relying on an external server.

       The required syntax for streaming or connecting to a stream is:

	       zmq:tcp://ip-address:port

       Example:	Create a localhost stream on port 5555:

	       ffmpeg -re -i input -f mpegts zmq:tcp://127.0.0.1:5555

       Multiple	clients	may connect to the stream using:

	       ffplay zmq:tcp://127.0.0.1:5555

       Streaming to multiple clients is	implemented  using  a  ZeroMQ  Pub-Sub
       pattern.	  The  server side binds to a port and publishes data. Clients
       connect to the server  (via  IP	address/port)  and  subscribe  to  the
       stream.	The  order in which the	server and client start	generally does
       not matter.

       ffmpeg must be compiled with the	--enable-libzmq	option to support this
       protocol.

       Options can be set on the ffmpeg/ffplay	command	 line.	The  following
       options are supported:

       pkt_size
	   Forces  the	maximum	 packet	 size  for sending/receiving data. The
	   default value is 131,072 bytes. On the server side, this  sets  the
	   maximum size	of sent	packets	via ZeroMQ. On the clients, it sets an
	   internal  buffer  size for receiving	packets. Note that pkt_size on
	   the clients should be equal to or  greater  than  pkt_size  on  the
	   server.  Otherwise  the  received  message may be truncated causing
	   decoding errors.

SEE ALSO
       ffmpeg(1), ffplay(1), ffprobe(1), libavformat(3)

AUTHORS
       The FFmpeg developers.

       For details about the authorship, see the Git history  of  the  project
       (https://git.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg),	 e.g. by typing	the command git	log in
       the FFmpeg source directory,  or	 browsing  the	online	repository  at
       <https://git.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg>.

       Maintainers  for	 the  specific	components  are	 listed	 in  the  file
       MAINTAINERS in the source code tree.

							   FFMPEG-PROTOCOLS(1)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=ffmpeg-protocols&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+14.3.quarterly>

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