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FFMPEG(1)							     FFMPEG(1)

NAME
       ffmpeg -	ffmpeg media converter

SYNOPSIS
       ffmpeg [global_options] {[input_file_options] -i	input_url} ...
       {[output_file_options] output_url} ...

DESCRIPTION
       ffmpeg is a universal media converter. It can read a wide variety of
       inputs -	including live grabbing/recording devices - filter, and
       transcode them into a plethora of output	formats.

       ffmpeg reads from an arbitrary number of	input "files" (which can be
       regular files, pipes, network streams, grabbing devices,	etc.),
       specified by the	"-i" option, and writes	to an arbitrary	number of
       output "files", which are specified by a	plain output url. Anything
       found on	the command line which cannot be interpreted as	an option is
       considered to be	an output url.

       Each input or output url	can, in	principle, contain any number of
       streams of different types (video/audio/subtitle/attachment/data). The
       allowed number and/or types of streams may be limited by	the container
       format. Selecting which streams from which inputs will go into which
       output is either	done automatically or with the "-map" option (see the
       Stream selection	chapter).

       To refer	to input files in options, you must use	their indices
       (0-based). E.g.	the first input	file is	0, the second is 1, etc.
       Similarly, streams within a file	are referred to	by their indices. E.g.
       "2:3" refers to the fourth stream in the	third input file. Also see the
       Stream specifiers chapter.

       As a general rule, options are applied to the next specified file.
       Therefore, order	is important, and you can have the same	option on the
       command line multiple times. Each occurrence is then applied to the
       next input or output file.  Exceptions from this	rule are the global
       options (e.g. verbosity level), which should be specified first.

       Do not mix input	and output files -- first specify all input files,
       then all	output files. Also do not mix options which belong to
       different files.	All options apply ONLY to the next input or output
       file and	are reset between files.

       Some simple examples follow.

       o   Convert  an	input media file to a different	format,	by re-encoding
	   media streams:

		   ffmpeg -i input.avi output.mp4

       o   Set the video bitrate of the	output file to 64 kbit/s:

		   ffmpeg -i input.avi -b:v 64k	-bufsize 64k output.mp4

       o   Force the frame rate	of the output file to 24 fps:

		   ffmpeg -i input.avi -r 24 output.mp4

       o   Force the frame rate	of the input file (valid for raw formats only)
	   to 1	fps and	the frame rate of the output file to 24	fps:

		   ffmpeg -r 1 -i input.m2v -r 24 output.mp4

       The format option may be	needed for raw input files.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION
       The transcoding process in ffmpeg for each output can be	 described  by
       the following diagram:

		_______		     ______________
	       |       |	    |		   |
	       | input |  demuxer   | encoded data |   decoder
	       | file  | ---------> | packets	   | -----+
	       |_______|	    |______________|	  |
							  v
						      _________
						     |	       |
						     | decoded |
						     | frames  |
						     |_________|
		________	     ______________	  |
	       |	|	    |		   |	  |
	       | output	| <-------- | encoded data | <----+
	       | file	|   muxer   | packets	   |   encoder
	       |________|	    |______________|

       ffmpeg  calls  the  libavformat	library	 (containing demuxers) to read
       input files and get packets containing encoded  data  from  them.  When
       there  are multiple input files,	ffmpeg tries to	keep them synchronized
       by tracking lowest timestamp on any active input	stream.

       Encoded packets are then	passed to the decoder  (unless	streamcopy  is
       selected	 for  the  stream, see further for a description). The decoder
       produces	uncompressed frames (raw video/PCM  audio/...)	which  can  be
       processed further by filtering (see next	section). After	filtering, the
       frames  are  passed  to	the  encoder,  which  encodes them and outputs
       encoded packets.	Finally	those are passed to the	 muxer,	 which	writes
       the encoded packets to the output file.

   Filtering
       Before  encoding,  ffmpeg  can process raw audio	and video frames using
       filters from the	libavfilter library. Several chained  filters  form  a
       filter  graph.  ffmpeg distinguishes between two	types of filtergraphs:
       simple and complex.

       Simple filtergraphs

       Simple filtergraphs are those that have exactly one input  and  output,
       both  of	the same type. In the above diagram they can be	represented by
       simply inserting	an additional step between decoding and	encoding:

		_________			 ______________
	       |	 |			|	       |
	       | decoded |			| encoded data |
	       | frames	 |\		      _	| packets      |
	       |_________| \		      /||______________|
			    \	__________   /
		 simple	    _\||	  | /  encoder
		 filtergraph   | filtered |/
			       | frames	  |
			       |__________|

       Simple filtergraphs are configured with the per-stream  -filter	option
       (with  -vf and -af aliases for video and	audio respectively).  A	simple
       filtergraph for video can look for example like this:

		_______	       _____________	    _______	   ________
	       |       |      |		    |	   |	   |	  |	   |
	       | input | ---> |	deinterlace | ---> | scale | ---> | output |
	       |_______|      |_____________|	   |_______|	  |________|

       Note that some filters change frame properties but not frame  contents.
       E.g.  the  "fps"	 filter	in the example above changes number of frames,
       but does	not touch the frame contents. Another example is the  "setpts"
       filter,	which  only  sets  timestamps  and otherwise passes the	frames
       unchanged.

       Complex filtergraphs

       Complex filtergraphs are	those which cannot be described	 as  simply  a
       linear  processing  chain  applied to one stream. This is the case, for
       example,	when the graph has more	than one input and/or output, or  when
       output  stream  type  is	 different from	input. They can	be represented
       with the	following diagram:

		_________
	       |	 |
	       | input 0 |\		       __________
	       |_________| \		      |		 |
			    \	_________    /|	output 0 |
			     \ |	 |  / |__________|
		_________     \| complex | /
	       |	 |     |	 |/
	       | input 1 |---->| filter	 |\
	       |_________|     |	 | \   __________
			      /| graph	 |  \ |		 |
			     / |	 |   \|	output 1 |
		_________   /  |_________|    |__________|
	       |	 | /
	       | input 2 |/
	       |_________|

       Complex filtergraphs are	configured with	 the  -filter_complex  option.
       Note  that  this	 option	is global, since a complex filtergraph,	by its
       nature, cannot be unambiguously associated  with	 a  single  stream  or
       file.

       The -lavfi option is equivalent to -filter_complex.

       A  trivial  example  of	a complex filtergraph is the "overlay" filter,
       which has two video inputs and one video	output,	containing  one	 video
       overlaid	 on  top  of  the  other.  Its audio counterpart is the	"amix"
       filter.

   Stream copy
       Stream copy is a	mode selected by supplying the "copy" parameter	to the
       -codec option. It makes ffmpeg omit the decoding	and encoding step  for
       the specified stream, so	it does	only demuxing and muxing. It is	useful
       for   changing	the  container	format	or  modifying  container-level
       metadata. The diagram above will, in this case, simplify	to this:

		_______		     ______________	       ________
	       |       |	    |		   |	      |	       |
	       | input |  demuxer   | encoded data |  muxer   |	output |
	       | file  | ---------> | packets	   | -------> |	file   |
	       |_______|	    |______________|	      |________|

       Since there is no decoding or encoding, it is very fast and there is no
       quality loss. However, it might not work	in some	cases because of  many
       factors.	 Applying  filters is obviously	also impossible, since filters
       work on uncompressed data.

STREAM SELECTION
       ffmpeg  provides	 the  "-map"  option  for  manual  control  of	stream
       selection  in  each  output  file. Users	can skip "-map"	and let	ffmpeg
       perform automatic stream	selection as described below. The "-vn / -an /
       -sn / -dn" options can be used  to  skip	 inclusion  of	video,	audio,
       subtitle	 and  data  streams  respectively,  whether manually mapped or
       automatically selected, except for those	streams	which are  outputs  of
       complex filtergraphs.

   Description
       The  sub-sections  that	follow	describe  the  various	rules that are
       involved	in stream selection.  The examples that	follow next  show  how
       these rules are applied in practice.

       While  every  effort  is	made to	accurately reflect the behavior	of the
       program,	FFmpeg is under	continuous development and the code  may  have
       changed since the time of this writing.

       Automatic stream	selection

       In  the absence of any map options for a	particular output file,	ffmpeg
       inspects	the output format to  check  which  type  of  streams  can  be
       included	in it, viz. video, audio and/or	subtitles. For each acceptable
       stream  type,  ffmpeg  will pick	one stream, when available, from among
       all the inputs.

       It will select that stream based	upon the following criteria:

       o   for video, it is the	stream with the	highest	resolution,

       o   for audio, it is the	stream with the	most channels,

       o   for subtitles, it is	the first subtitle stream found	but there's  a
	   caveat.  The	output format's	default	subtitle encoder can be	either
	   text-based  or  image-based,	and only a subtitle stream of the same
	   type	will be	chosen.

       In the case where several streams of the	same type  rate	 equally,  the
       stream with the lowest index is chosen.

       Data  or	attachment streams are not automatically selected and can only
       be included using "-map".

       Manual stream selection

       When "-map" is used, only user-mapped  streams  are  included  in  that
       output  file,  with  one	 possible  exception  for  filtergraph outputs
       described below.

       Complex filtergraphs

       If there	are any	complex	 filtergraph  output  streams  with  unlabeled
       pads,  they will	be added to the	first output file. This	will lead to a
       fatal error if the stream type is not supported by the  output  format.
       In  the absence of the map option, the inclusion	of these streams leads
       to the automatic	stream selection of their types	being skipped. If  map
       options are present, these filtergraph streams are included in addition
       to the mapped streams.

       Complex	filtergraph  output  streams  with labeled pads	must be	mapped
       once and	exactly	once.

       Stream handling

       Stream handling is independent of stream	selection, with	 an  exception
       for  subtitles described	below. Stream handling is set via the "-codec"
       option  addressed  to  streams  within  a  specific  output  file.   In
       particular,  codec  options  are	 applied  by  ffmpeg  after the	stream
       selection process and thus do not influence the latter. If no  "-codec"
       option  is  specified for a stream type,	ffmpeg will select the default
       encoder registered by the output	file muxer.

       An exception exists for subtitles. If a subtitle	encoder	 is  specified
       for  an	output file, the first subtitle	stream found of	any type, text
       or image, will be included. ffmpeg does not validate if	the  specified
       encoder	can  convert the selected stream or if the converted stream is
       acceptable within the output format. This applies  generally  as	 well:
       when  the  user	sets an	encoder	manually, the stream selection process
       cannot check if the encoded stream can be muxed into the	 output	 file.
       If  it  cannot,	ffmpeg will abort and all output files will fail to be
       processed.

   Examples
       The following examples illustrate the behavior, quirks and  limitations
       of ffmpeg's stream selection methods.

       They assume the following three input files.

	       input file 'A.avi'
		     stream 0: video 640x360
		     stream 1: audio 2 channels

	       input file 'B.mp4'
		     stream 0: video 1920x1080
		     stream 1: audio 2 channels
		     stream 2: subtitles (text)
		     stream 3: audio 5.1 channels
		     stream 4: subtitles (text)

	       input file 'C.mkv'
		     stream 0: video 1280x720
		     stream 1: audio 2 channels
		     stream 2: subtitles (image)

       Example:	automatic stream selection

	       ffmpeg -i A.avi -i B.mp4	out1.mkv out2.wav -map 1:a -c:a	copy out3.mov

       There  are  three  output  files	 specified,  and for the first two, no
       "-map" options are set, so ffmpeg will select  streams  for  these  two
       files automatically.

       out1.mkv	 is  a	Matroska  container  file and accepts video, audio and
       subtitle	streams, so ffmpeg will	try to select  one  of	each  type.For
       video,  it  will	 select	 "stream  0" from B.mp4, which has the highest
       resolution among	all the	input video streams.For	audio, it will	select
       "stream 3" from B.mp4, since it has the greatest	number of channels.For
       subtitles,  it  will  select  "stream 2"	from B.mp4, which is the first
       subtitle	stream from among A.avi	and B.mp4.

       out2.wav	accepts	only audio streams, so only "stream 3" from  B.mp4  is
       selected.

       For  out3.mov,  since  a	 "-map"	 option	 is  set,  no automatic	stream
       selection will occur. The "-map	1:a"  option  will  select  all	 audio
       streams	from the second	input B.mp4. No	other streams will be included
       in this output file.

       For the first two outputs, all included streams will be transcoded. The
       encoders	chosen will be the default  ones  registered  by  each	output
       format, which may not match the codec of	the selected input streams.

       For  the	 third	output,	codec option for audio streams has been	set to
       "copy", so no decoding-filtering-encoding operations will occur,	or can
       occur.  Packets of selected streams shall be conveyed  from  the	 input
       file and	muxed within the output	file.

       Example:	automatic subtitles selection

	       ffmpeg -i C.mkv out1.mkv	-c:s dvdsub -an	out2.mkv

       Although	 out1.mkv  is a	Matroska container file	which accepts subtitle
       streams,	only a video and audio stream shall be selected. The  subtitle
       stream  of C.mkv	is image-based and the default subtitle	encoder	of the
       Matroska	 muxer	is  text-based,	 so  a	transcode  operation  for  the
       subtitles  is  expected	to  fail  and hence the	stream isn't selected.
       However,	in out2.mkv, a subtitle	encoder	is specified  in  the  command
       and  so,	 the  subtitle	stream	is  selected, in addition to the video
       stream. The presence of	"-an"  disables	 audio	stream	selection  for
       out2.mkv.

       Example:	unlabeled filtergraph outputs

	       ffmpeg -i A.avi -i C.mkv	-i B.mp4 -filter_complex "overlay" out1.mp4 out2.srt

       A  filtergraph  is  setup  here	using the "-filter_complex" option and
       consists	of a  single  video  filter.  The  "overlay"  filter  requires
       exactly	two  video  inputs,  but  none are specified, so the first two
       available video streams are used, those of A.avi	and C.mkv. The	output
       pad  of the filter has no label and so is sent to the first output file
       out1.mp4. Due to	this, automatic	 selection  of	the  video  stream  is
       skipped,	 which	would  have  selected  the  stream in B.mp4. The audio
       stream  with  most  channels  viz.  "stream  3"	in  B.mp4,  is	chosen
       automatically.  No  subtitle  stream  is	 chosen	however, since the MP4
       format has no default subtitle encoder registered, and the user	hasn't
       specified a subtitle encoder.

       The  2nd	 output	 file,	out2.srt,  only	 accepts  text-based  subtitle
       streams.	So, even though	the first subtitle stream available belongs to
       C.mkv, it is image-based	 and  hence  skipped.	The  selected  stream,
       "stream 2" in B.mp4, is the first text-based subtitle stream.

       Example:	labeled	filtergraph outputs

	       ffmpeg -i A.avi -i B.mp4	-i C.mkv -filter_complex "[1:v]hue=s=0[outv];overlay;aresample"	\
		      -map '[outv]' -an	       out1.mp4	\
					       out2.mkv	\
		      -map '[outv]' -map 1:a:0 out3.mkv

       The  above  command  will fail, as the output pad labelled "[outv]" has
       been mapped twice.  None	of the output files shall be processed.

	       ffmpeg -i A.avi -i B.mp4	-i C.mkv -filter_complex "[1:v]hue=s=0[outv];overlay;aresample"	\
		      -an	 out1.mp4 \
				 out2.mkv \
		      -map 1:a:0 out3.mkv

       This command above will also fail as the	hue filter output has a	label,
       "[outv]", and hasn't been mapped	anywhere.

       The command should be modified as follows,

	       ffmpeg -i A.avi -i B.mp4	-i C.mkv -filter_complex "[1:v]hue=s=0,split=2[outv1][outv2];overlay;aresample"	\
		       -map '[outv1]' -an	 out1.mp4 \
						 out2.mkv \
		       -map '[outv2]' -map 1:a:0 out3.mkv

       The video stream	from B.mp4 is sent to the hue filter, whose output  is
       cloned  once  using the split filter, and both outputs labelled.	Then a
       copy each is mapped to the first	and third output files.

       The overlay filter, requiring two video	inputs,	 uses  the  first  two
       unused  video  streams. Those are the streams from A.avi	and C.mkv. The
       overlay output isn't labelled, so it is sent to the first  output  file
       out1.mp4, regardless of the presence of the "-map" option.

       The  aresample  filter  is  sent	the first unused audio stream, that of
       A.avi. Since this filter	output is also unlabelled, it too is mapped to
       the first output	file. The presence of "-an" only suppresses  automatic
       or  manual  stream  selection  of  audio	streams, not outputs sent from
       filtergraphs. Both these	mapped streams shall  be  ordered  before  the
       mapped stream in	out1.mp4.

       The video, audio	and subtitle streams mapped to "out2.mkv" are entirely
       determined by automatic stream selection.

       out3.mkv	 consists  of  the cloned video	output from the	hue filter and
       the first audio stream from B.mp4.

OPTIONS
       All the numerical options, if not specified otherwise, accept a	string
       representing  a number as input,	which may be followed by one of	the SI
       unit prefixes, for example: 'K',	'M', or	'G'.

       If 'i' is appended to the SI unit prefix, the complete prefix  will  be
       interpreted  as	a unit prefix for binary multiples, which are based on
       powers of 1024 instead of powers	of 1000. Appending 'B' to the SI  unit
       prefix multiplies the value by 8. This allows using, for	example: 'KB',
       'MiB', 'G' and 'B' as number suffixes.

       Options	which  do  not take arguments are boolean options, and set the
       corresponding value to true. They can be	set to false by	prefixing  the
       option  name with "no". For example using "-nofoo" will set the boolean
       option with name	"foo" to false.

   Stream specifiers
       Some options are	applied	per-stream,  e.g.  bitrate  or	codec.	Stream
       specifiers are used to precisely	specify	which stream(s)	a given	option
       belongs to.

       A  stream  specifier  is	a string generally appended to the option name
       and separated from it by	a colon. E.g. "-codec:a:1  ac3"	 contains  the
       "a:1"   stream  specifier,  which  matches  the	second	audio  stream.
       Therefore, it would select the ac3 codec	for the	second audio stream.

       A stream	specifier can match several streams, so	 that  the  option  is
       applied	to  all	 of  them.  E.g.  the  stream specifier	in "-b:a 128k"
       matches all audio streams.

       An empty	stream specifier matches all  streams.	For  example,  "-codec
       copy" or	"-codec: copy" would copy all the streams without reencoding.

       Possible	forms of stream	specifiers are:

       stream_index
	   Matches  the	 stream	with this index. E.g. "-threads:1 4" would set
	   the thread count for	the second stream to  4.  If  stream_index  is
	   used	as an additional stream	specifier (see below), then it selects
	   stream  number  stream_index	 from  the  matching  streams.	Stream
	   numbering is	based on the order  of	the  streams  as  detected  by
	   libavformat	except	when  a	 program ID is also specified. In this
	   case	it is based on the ordering of the streams in the program.

       stream_type[:additional_stream_specifier]
	   stream_type is one of following: 'v'	or  'V'	 for  video,  'a'  for
	   audio, 's' for subtitle, 'd'	for data, and 't' for attachments. 'v'
	   matches all video streams, 'V' only matches video streams which are
	   not	 attached   pictures,  video  thumbnails  or  cover  arts.  If
	   additional_stream_specifier is used,	then it	matches	streams	 which
	   both	 have  this  type  and	match the additional_stream_specifier.
	   Otherwise, it matches all streams of	the specified type.

       p:program_id[:additional_stream_specifier]
	   Matches streams which are in	the program with the id	program_id. If
	   additional_stream_specifier is used,	then it	matches	streams	 which
	   both	    are	   part	   of	 the	program	   and	  match	   the
	   additional_stream_specifier.

       #stream_id or i:stream_id
	   Match the stream by stream id (e.g. PID in MPEG-TS container).

       m:key[:value]
	   Matches streams with	the metadata  tag  key	having	the  specified
	   value.  If  value  is  not  given, matches streams that contain the
	   given tag with any value.

       u   Matches streams  with  usable  configuration,  the  codec  must  be
	   defined  and	 the  essential	information such as video dimension or
	   audio sample	rate must be present.

	   Note	that in	ffmpeg,	matching by metadata will only	work  properly
	   for input files.

   Generic options
       These options are shared	amongst	the ff*	tools.

       -L  Show	license.

       -h, -?, -help, --help [arg]
	   Show	 help.	An  optional  parameter	may be specified to print help
	   about a specific item. If no	argument is specified, only basic (non
	   advanced) tool options are shown.

	   Possible values of arg are:

	   long
	       Print advanced tool options  in	addition  to  the  basic  tool
	       options.

	   full
	       Print  complete	list  of options, including shared and private
	       options for encoders, decoders, demuxers, muxers, filters, etc.

	   decoder=decoder_name
	       Print   detailed	  information	about	the   decoder	 named
	       decoder_name.  Use  the	-decoders  option to get a list	of all
	       decoders.

	   encoder=encoder_name
	       Print   detailed	  information	about	the   encoder	 named
	       encoder_name.  Use  the	-encoders  option to get a list	of all
	       encoders.

	   demuxer=demuxer_name
	       Print   detailed	  information	about	the   demuxer	 named
	       demuxer_name.  Use  the	-formats  option  to get a list	of all
	       demuxers	and muxers.

	   muxer=muxer_name
	       Print detailed information about	the  muxer  named  muxer_name.
	       Use  the	 -formats  option  to  get  a  list  of	all muxers and
	       demuxers.

	   filter=filter_name
	       Print detailed information about	the filter named  filter_name.
	       Use the -filters	option to get a	list of	all filters.

	   bsf=bitstream_filter_name
	       Print  detailed	information  about  the	bitstream filter named
	       bitstream_filter_name.  Use the -bsfs option to get a  list  of
	       all bitstream filters.

	   protocol=protocol_name
	       Print   detailed	  information	about	the   protocol	 named
	       protocol_name.  Use the -protocols option to get	a list of  all
	       protocols.

       -version
	   Show	version.

       -buildconf
	   Show	the build configuration, one option per	line.

       -formats
	   Show	available formats (including devices).

       -demuxers
	   Show	available demuxers.

       -muxers
	   Show	available muxers.

       -devices
	   Show	available devices.

       -codecs
	   Show	all codecs known to libavcodec.

	   Note	that the term 'codec' is used throughout this documentation as
	   a  shortcut	for  what  is  more correctly called a media bitstream
	   format.

       -decoders
	   Show	available decoders.

       -encoders
	   Show	all available encoders.

       -bsfs
	   Show	available bitstream filters.

       -protocols
	   Show	available protocols.

       -filters
	   Show	available libavfilter filters.

       -pix_fmts
	   Show	available pixel	formats.

       -sample_fmts
	   Show	available sample formats.

       -layouts
	   Show	channel	names and standard channel layouts.

       -dispositions
	   Show	stream dispositions.

       -colors
	   Show	recognized color names.

       -sources	device[,opt1=val1[,opt2=val2]...]
	   Show	autodetected sources of	the input device.   Some  devices  may
	   provide  system-dependent source names that cannot be autodetected.
	   The returned	list cannot be assumed to be always complete.

		   ffmpeg -sources pulse,server=192.168.0.4

       -sinks device[,opt1=val1[,opt2=val2]...]
	   Show	autodetected sinks of the output  device.   Some  devices  may
	   provide  system-dependent  sink  names that cannot be autodetected.
	   The returned	list cannot be assumed to be always complete.

		   ffmpeg -sinks pulse,server=192.168.0.4

       -loglevel [flags+]loglevel | -v [flags+]loglevel
	   Set logging level and flags used by the library.

	   The optional	flags prefix can consist of the	following values:

	   repeat
	       Indicates that repeated log output should not be	compressed  to
	       the  first  line	 and  the "Last	message	repeated n times" line
	       will be omitted.

	   level
	       Indicates that log output should	add a "[level]"	prefix to each
	       message line. This  can	be  used  as  an  alternative  to  log
	       coloring, e.g. when dumping the log to file.

	   Flags  can  also  be	 used  alone  by  adding  a  '+'/'-' prefix to
	   set/reset a single flag without affecting other flags  or  changing
	   loglevel.  When setting both	flags and loglevel, a '+' separator is
	   expected between the	last flags value and before loglevel.

	   loglevel is a string	or a number containing one  of	the  following
	   values:

	   quiet, -8
	       Show nothing at all; be silent.

	   panic, 0
	       Only  show  fatal errors	which could lead the process to	crash,
	       such as an assertion failure. This is not  currently  used  for
	       anything.

	   fatal, 8
	       Only  show  fatal  errors.  These  are  errors  after which the
	       process absolutely cannot continue.

	   error, 16
	       Show all	errors,	including ones which can be recovered from.

	   warning, 24
	       Show all	warnings and errors. Any message related  to  possibly
	       incorrect or unexpected events will be shown.

	   info, 32
	       Show   informative  messages  during  processing.  This	is  in
	       addition	to warnings and	errors.	This is	the default value.

	   verbose, 40
	       Same as "info", except more verbose.

	   debug, 48
	       Show everything,	including debugging information.

	   trace, 56

	   For example to enable repeated log output, add the "level"  prefix,
	   and set loglevel to "verbose":

		   ffmpeg -loglevel repeat+level+verbose -i input output

	   Another  example that enables repeated log output without affecting
	   current state of "level" prefix flag	or loglevel:

		   ffmpeg [...]	-loglevel +repeat

	   By default the program logs to stderr. If coloring is supported  by
	   the	terminal,  colors  are	used  to mark errors and warnings. Log
	   coloring  can  be  disabled	setting	  the	environment   variable
	   AV_LOG_FORCE_NOCOLOR,  or  can  be  forced  setting the environment
	   variable AV_LOG_FORCE_COLOR.

       -report
	   Dump	 full  command	line  and  log	output	 to   a	  file	 named
	   "program-YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS.log"  in the current directory.  This file
	   can be useful for bug reports.  It also implies "-loglevel debug".

	   Setting the environment variable FFREPORT to	any value has the same
	   effect. If the value	is a ':'-separated key=value  sequence,	 these
	   options  will  affect  the report; option values must be escaped if
	   they	contain	special	characters or the options delimiter  ':'  (see
	   the ``Quoting and escaping''	section	in the ffmpeg-utils manual).

	   The following options are recognized:

	   file
	       set  the	file name to use for the report; %p is expanded	to the
	       name of the program, %t is expanded to  a  timestamp,  "%%"  is
	       expanded	to a plain "%"

	   level
	       set  the	 log  verbosity	 level	using  a  numerical value (see
	       "-loglevel").

	   For example,	to output a report to a	file named ffreport.log	 using
	   a log level of 32 (alias for	log level "info"):

		   FFREPORT=file=ffreport.log:level=32 ffmpeg -i input output

	   Errors  in parsing the environment variable are not fatal, and will
	   not appear in the report.

       -hide_banner
	   Suppress printing banner.

	   All FFmpeg tools will  normally  show  a  copyright	notice,	 build
	   options  and	 library versions. This	option can be used to suppress
	   printing this information.

       -cpuflags flags (global)
	   Allows setting and clearing cpu flags. This option is intended  for
	   testing. Do not use it unless you know what you're doing.

		   ffmpeg -cpuflags -sse+mmx ...
		   ffmpeg -cpuflags mmx	...
		   ffmpeg -cpuflags 0 ...

	   Possible flags for this option are:

	   x86
	       mmx
	       mmxext
	       sse
	       sse2
	       sse2slow
	       sse3
	       sse3slow
	       ssse3
	       atom
	       sse4.1
	       sse4.2
	       avx
	       avx2
	       xop
	       fma3
	       fma4
	       3dnow
	       3dnowext
	       bmi1
	       bmi2
	       cmov
	   ARM
	       armv5te
	       armv6
	       armv6t2
	       vfp
	       vfpv3
	       neon
	       setend
	   AArch64
	       armv8
	       vfp
	       neon
	   PowerPC
	       altivec
	   Specific Processors
	       pentium2
	       pentium3
	       pentium4
	       k6
	       k62
	       athlon
	       athlonxp
	       k8
       -cpucount count (global)
	   Override  detection	of  CPU	 count.	 This  option  is intended for
	   testing. Do not use it unless you know what you're doing.

		   ffmpeg -cpucount 2

       -max_alloc bytes
	   Set the maximum size	limit for allocating a block on	 the  heap  by
	   ffmpeg's  family of malloc functions. Exercise extreme caution when
	   using this option. Don't use	if you	do  not	 understand  the  full
	   consequence of doing	so.  Default is	INT_MAX.

   AVOptions
       These options are provided directly by the libavformat, libavdevice and
       libavcodec  libraries.  To see the list of available AVOptions, use the
       -help option. They are separated	into two categories:

       generic
	   These options can be	 set  for  any	container,  codec  or  device.
	   Generic  options  are  listed  under	 AVFormatContext  options  for
	   containers/devices and under	AVCodecContext options for codecs.

       private
	   These options are specific to the given container, device or	codec.
	   Private   options   are   listed    under	their	 corresponding
	   containers/devices/codecs.

       For  example to write an	ID3v2.3	header instead of a default ID3v2.4 to
       an MP3 file, use	the id3v2_version private option of the	MP3 muxer:

	       ffmpeg -i input.flac -id3v2_version 3 out.mp3

       All codec AVOptions are per-stream, and thus a stream specifier	should
       be attached to them:

	       ffmpeg -i multichannel.mxf -map 0:v:0 -map 0:a:0	-map 0:a:0 -c:a:0 ac3 -b:a:0 640k -ac:a:1 2 -c:a:1 aac -b:2 128k out.mp4

       In  the	above example, a multichannel audio stream is mapped twice for
       output.	The first instance is encoded with codec ac3 and bitrate 640k.
       The second instance is downmixed	to 2 channels and encoded  with	 codec
       aac.  A bitrate of 128k is specified for	it using absolute index	of the
       output stream.

       Note: the -nooption syntax cannot be used for  boolean  AVOptions,  use
       -option 0/-option 1.

       Note:  the  old	undocumented way of specifying per-stream AVOptions by
       prepending v/a/s	to the options	name  is  now  obsolete	 and  will  be
       removed soon.

   Main	options
       -f fmt (input/output)
	   Force  input	 or  output  file  format. The format is normally auto
	   detected for	input files and	guessed	from the  file	extension  for
	   output files, so this option	is not needed in most cases.

       -i url (input)
	   input file url

       -y (global)
	   Overwrite output files without asking.

       -n (global)
	   Do  not overwrite output files, and exit immediately	if a specified
	   output file already exists.

       -stream_loop number (input)
	   Set number of times input stream shall be looped. Loop 0  means  no
	   loop, loop -1 means infinite	loop.

       -recast_media (global)
	   Allow  forcing  a  decoder  of  a different media type than the one
	   detected or designated by the demuxer. Useful  for  decoding	 media
	   data	muxed as data streams.

       -c[:stream_specifier] codec (input/output,per-stream)
       -codec[:stream_specifier] codec (input/output,per-stream)
	   Select  an  encoder	(when used before an output file) or a decoder
	   (when used before an	input file) for	one or more streams. codec  is
	   the	name  of  a  decoder/encoder or	a special value	"copy" (output
	   only) to indicate that the stream is	not to be re-encoded.

	   For example

		   ffmpeg -i INPUT -map	0 -c:v libx264 -c:a copy OUTPUT

	   encodes all	video  streams	with  libx264  and  copies  all	 audio
	   streams.

	   For each stream, the	last matching "c" option is applied, so

		   ffmpeg -i INPUT -map	0 -c copy -c:v:1 libx264 -c:a:137 libvorbis OUTPUT

	   will	 copy  all  the	streams	except the second video, which will be
	   encoded with	libx264, and the 138th audio, which  will  be  encoded
	   with	libvorbis.

       -t duration (input/output)
	   When	 used  as an input option (before "-i"), limit the duration of
	   data	read from the input file.

	   When	used as	an output option (before an output url), stop  writing
	   the output after its	duration reaches duration.

	   duration  must  be  a  time	duration  specification,  see the Time
	   duration section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual.

	   -to and -t are mutually exclusive and -t has	priority.

       -to position (input/output)
	   Stop	writing	the output or reading the input	at position.  position
	   must	be a  time  duration  specification,  see  the	Time  duration
	   section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual.

	   -to and -t are mutually exclusive and -t has	priority.

       -fs limit_size (output)
	   Set	the  file  size	limit, expressed in bytes. No further chunk of
	   bytes is written after the limit  is	 exceeded.  The	 size  of  the
	   output file is slightly more	than the requested file	size.

       -ss position (input/output)
	   When	 used  as  an  input option (before "-i"), seeks in this input
	   file	to position. Note that in most formats it is not  possible  to
	   seek	 exactly, so ffmpeg will seek to the closest seek point	before
	   position.  When transcoding	and  -accurate_seek  is	 enabled  (the
	   default),  this  extra  segment between the seek point and position
	   will	be decoded and discarded.  When	 doing	stream	copy  or  when
	   -noaccurate_seek is used, it	will be	preserved.

	   When	 used  as an output option (before an output url), decodes but
	   discards input until	the timestamps reach position.

	   position must be  a	time  duration	specification,	see  the  Time
	   duration section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual.

       -sseof position (input)
	   Like	 the  "-ss"  option but	relative to the	"end of	file". That is
	   negative values are earlier in the file, 0 is at EOF.

       -isync input_index (input)
	   Assign an input as a	sync source.

	   This	will take the difference between the start times of the	target
	   and reference inputs	and offset the timestamps of the  target  file
	   by  that difference.	The source timestamps of the two inputs	should
	   derive from the same	clock source for expected results. If "copyts"
	   is set then "start_at_zero" must also be  set.  If  either  of  the
	   inputs has no starting timestamp then no sync adjustment is made.

	   Acceptable  values  are  those  that	 refer to a valid ffmpeg input
	   index. If the sync reference	is the target index itself or -1, then
	   no adjustment is made to target timestamps. A  sync	reference  may
	   not itself be synced	to any other input.

	   Default value is -1.

       -itsoffset offset (input)
	   Set the input time offset.

	   offset must be a time duration specification, see the Time duration
	   section in the ffmpeg-utils(1) manual.

	   The	offset	is  added  to  the  timestamps	of  the	 input	files.
	   Specifying a	positive offset	means that the	corresponding  streams
	   are delayed by the time duration specified in offset.

       -itsscale scale (input,per-stream)
	   Rescale input timestamps. scale should be a floating	point number.

       -timestamp date (output)
	   Set the recording timestamp in the container.

	   date	 must  be  a  date  specification, see the Date	section	in the
	   ffmpeg-utils(1) manual.

       -metadata[:metadata_specifier] key=value	(output,per-metadata)
	   Set a metadata key/value pair.

	   An optional metadata_specifier may be  given	 to  set  metadata  on
	   streams,  chapters  or  programs. See "-map_metadata" documentation
	   for details.

	   This	option overrides metadata set with "-map_metadata". It is also
	   possible to delete metadata by using	an empty value.

	   For example,	for setting the	title in the output file:

		   ffmpeg -i in.avi -metadata title="my	title" out.flv

	   To set the language of the first audio stream:

		   ffmpeg -i INPUT -metadata:s:a:0 language=eng	OUTPUT

       -disposition[:stream_specifier] value (output,per-stream)
	   Sets	the disposition	for a stream.

	   By default, the disposition is copied from the input	stream,	unless
	   the output stream this option  applies  to  is  fed	by  a  complex
	   filtergraph - in that case the disposition is unset by default.

	   value  is  a	 sequence  of items separated by '+' or	'-'. The first
	   item	may also be prefixed with '+'  or  '-',	 in  which  case  this
	   option modifies the default value. Otherwise	(the first item	is not
	   prefixed)  this  options  overrides the default value. A '+'	prefix
	   adds	the given disposition, '-' removes it. It is also possible  to
	   clear the disposition by setting it to 0.

	   If  no  "-disposition"  options  were specified for an output file,
	   ffmpeg will automatically set  the  'default'  disposition  on  the
	   first  stream of each type, when there are multiple streams of this
	   type	in the output file and no  stream  of  that  type  is  already
	   marked as default.

	   The "-dispositions" option lists the	known dispositions.

	   For example,	to make	the second audio stream	the default stream:

		   ffmpeg -i in.mkv -c copy -disposition:a:1 default out.mkv

	   To  make  the  second subtitle stream the default stream and	remove
	   the default disposition from	the first subtitle stream:

		   ffmpeg -i in.mkv -c copy -disposition:s:0 0 -disposition:s:1	default	out.mkv

	   To add an embedded cover/thumbnail:

		   ffmpeg -i in.mp4 -i IMAGE -map 0 -map 1 -c copy -c:v:1 png -disposition:v:1 attached_pic out.mp4

	   Not all muxers support embedded thumbnails, and those who do,  only
	   support a few formats, like JPEG or PNG.

       -program
       [title=title:][program_num=program_num:]st=stream[:st=stream...]
       (output)
	   Creates  a  program	with the specified title, program_num and adds
	   the specified stream(s) to it.

       -target type (output)
	   Specify target file type ("vcd", "svcd", "dvd", "dv", "dv50"). type
	   may be  prefixed  with  "pal-",  "ntsc-"  or	 "film-"  to  use  the
	   corresponding  standard.  All  the format options (bitrate, codecs,
	   buffer sizes) are then set automatically. You can just type:

		   ffmpeg -i myfile.avi	-target	vcd /tmp/vcd.mpg

	   Nevertheless	you can	specify	additional options as long as you know
	   they	do not conflict	with the standard, as in:

		   ffmpeg -i myfile.avi	-target	vcd -bf	2 /tmp/vcd.mpg

	   The parameters set for each target are as follows.

	   VCD

		   <pal>:
		   -f vcd -muxrate 1411200 -muxpreload 0.44 -packetsize	2324
		   -s 352x288 -r 25
		   -codec:v mpeg1video -g 15 -b:v 1150k	-maxrate:v 1150k -minrate:v 1150k -bufsize:v 327680
		   -ar 44100 -ac 2
		   -codec:a mp2	-b:a 224k

		   <ntsc>:
		   -f vcd -muxrate 1411200 -muxpreload 0.44 -packetsize	2324
		   -s 352x240 -r 30000/1001
		   -codec:v mpeg1video -g 18 -b:v 1150k	-maxrate:v 1150k -minrate:v 1150k -bufsize:v 327680
		   -ar 44100 -ac 2
		   -codec:a mp2	-b:a 224k

		   <film>:
		   -f vcd -muxrate 1411200 -muxpreload 0.44 -packetsize	2324
		   -s 352x240 -r 24000/1001
		   -codec:v mpeg1video -g 18 -b:v 1150k	-maxrate:v 1150k -minrate:v 1150k -bufsize:v 327680
		   -ar 44100 -ac 2
		   -codec:a mp2	-b:a 224k

	   SVCD

		   <pal>:
		   -f svcd -packetsize 2324
		   -s 480x576 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 25
		   -codec:v mpeg2video -g 15 -b:v 2040k	-maxrate:v 2516k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 -scan_offset 1
		   -ar 44100
		   -codec:a mp2	-b:a 224k

		   <ntsc>:
		   -f svcd -packetsize 2324
		   -s 480x480 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 30000/1001
		   -codec:v mpeg2video -g 18 -b:v 2040k	-maxrate:v 2516k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 -scan_offset 1
		   -ar 44100
		   -codec:a mp2	-b:a 224k

		   <film>:
		   -f svcd -packetsize 2324
		   -s 480x480 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 24000/1001
		   -codec:v mpeg2video -g 18 -b:v 2040k	-maxrate:v 2516k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008 -scan_offset 1
		   -ar 44100
		   -codec:a mp2	-b:a 224k

	   DVD

		   <pal>:
		   -f dvd -muxrate 10080k -packetsize 2048
		   -s 720x576 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 25
		   -codec:v mpeg2video -g 15 -b:v 6000k	-maxrate:v 9000k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008
		   -ar 48000
		   -codec:a ac3	-b:a 448k

		   <ntsc>:
		   -f dvd -muxrate 10080k -packetsize 2048
		   -s 720x480 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 30000/1001
		   -codec:v mpeg2video -g 18 -b:v 6000k	-maxrate:v 9000k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008
		   -ar 48000
		   -codec:a ac3	-b:a 448k

		   <film>:
		   -f dvd -muxrate 10080k -packetsize 2048
		   -s 720x480 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 24000/1001
		   -codec:v mpeg2video -g 18 -b:v 6000k	-maxrate:v 9000k -minrate:v 0 -bufsize:v 1835008
		   -ar 48000
		   -codec:a ac3	-b:a 448k

	   DV

		   <pal>:
		   -f dv
		   -s 720x576 -pix_fmt yuv420p -r 25
		   -ar 48000 -ac 2

		   <ntsc>:
		   -f dv
		   -s 720x480 -pix_fmt yuv411p -r 30000/1001
		   -ar 48000 -ac 2

		   <film>:
		   -f dv
		   -s 720x480 -pix_fmt yuv411p -r 24000/1001
		   -ar 48000 -ac 2

	   The "dv50" target is	identical to the "dv" target except  that  the
	   pixel format	set is "yuv422p" for all three standards.

	   Any	user-set  value	for a parameter	above will override the	target
	   preset value. In that case, the output  may	not  comply  with  the
	   target standard.

       -dn (input/output)
	   As  an  input  option, blocks all data streams of a file from being
	   filtered or being automatically selected or mapped for any  output.
	   See "-discard" option to disable streams individually.

	   As  an  output  option,  disables  data  recording  i.e.  automatic
	   selection or	mapping	of any data stream. For	 full  manual  control
	   see the "-map" option.

       -dframes	number (output)
	   Set	the number of data frames to output. This is an	obsolete alias
	   for "-frames:d", which you should use instead.

       -frames[:stream_specifier] framecount (output,per-stream)
	   Stop	writing	to the stream after framecount frames.

       -q[:stream_specifier] q (output,per-stream)
       -qscale[:stream_specifier] q (output,per-stream)
	   Use fixed quality scale (VBR). The meaning of  q/qscale  is	codec-
	   dependent.	If  qscale  is used without a stream_specifier then it
	   applies only	to the video stream, this is to	maintain compatibility
	   with	previous behavior and as specifying the	 same  codec  specific
	   value  to  2	 different codecs that is audio	and video generally is
	   not what is intended	when no	stream_specifier is used.

       -filter[:stream_specifier] filtergraph (output,per-stream)
	   Create the filtergraph specified  by	 filtergraph  and  use	it  to
	   filter the stream.

	   filtergraph	is  a  description  of the filtergraph to apply	to the
	   stream, and must have a single input	and a  single  output  of  the
	   same	 type  of  the	stream.	 In  the  filtergraph,	the  input  is
	   associated to the label "in", and the output	to  the	 label	"out".
	   See	the  ffmpeg-filters  manual  for  more	information  about the
	   filtergraph syntax.

	   See the -filter_complex option if you want to  create  filtergraphs
	   with	multiple inputs	and/or outputs.

       -filter_script[:stream_specifier] filename (output,per-stream)
	   This	 option	is similar to -filter, the only	difference is that its
	   argument  is	 the  name  of	the  file  from	 which	a  filtergraph
	   description is to be	read.

       -reinit_filter[:stream_specifier] integer (input,per-stream)
	   This	 boolean option	determines if the filtergraph(s) to which this
	   stream is fed gets reinitialized when input frame parameters	change
	   mid-stream. This option is enabled by default as most video and all
	   audio filters cannot	handle deviation in  input  frame  properties.
	   Upon	reinitialization, existing filter state	is lost, like e.g. the
	   frame  count	 "n"  reference	 available in some filters. Any	frames
	   buffered at time of	reinitialization  are  lost.   The  properties
	   where  a  change  triggers  reinitialization	 are, for video, frame
	   resolution or pixel format; for audio, sample format, sample	 rate,
	   channel count or channel layout.

       -filter_threads nb_threads (global)
	   Defines  how	 many  threads	are used to process a filter pipeline.
	   Each	pipeline will produce a	thread pool  with  this	 many  threads
	   available  for  parallel  processing.  The default is the number of
	   available CPUs.

       -pre[:stream_specifier] preset_name (output,per-stream)
	   Specify the preset for matching stream(s).

       -stats (global)
	   Print  encoding  progress/statistics.  It  is  on  by  default,  to
	   explicitly disable it you need to specify "-nostats".

       -stats_period time (global)
	   Set	period	at  which  encoding  progress/statistics  are updated.
	   Default is 0.5 seconds.

       -progress url (global)
	   Send	program-friendly progress information to url.

	   Progress information	is written periodically	and at the end of  the
	   encoding  process. It is made of "key=value"	lines. key consists of
	   only	alphanumeric  characters.  The	last  key  of  a  sequence  of
	   progress information	is always "progress".

	   The update period is	set using "-stats_period".

       -stdin
	   Enable interaction on standard input. On by default unless standard
	   input  is  used  as an input. To explicitly disable interaction you
	   need	to specify "-nostdin".

	   Disabling interaction on standard input is useful, for example,  if
	   ffmpeg  is in the background	process	group. Roughly the same	result
	   can be achieved with	"ffmpeg	... < /dev/null"  but  it  requires  a
	   shell.

       -debug_ts (global)
	   Print  timestamp  information. It is	off by default.	This option is
	   mostly useful for testing and debugging purposes,  and  the	output
	   format  may change from one version to another, so it should	not be
	   employed by portable	scripts.

	   See also the	option "-fdebug	ts".

       -attach filename	(output)
	   Add an attachment to	the output file. This is supported  by	a  few
	   formats  like  Matroska for e.g. fonts used in rendering subtitles.
	   Attachments are implemented as a specific type of stream,  so  this
	   option  will	 add  a	new stream to the file.	It is then possible to
	   use per-stream options on this stream in the	usual way.  Attachment
	   streams  created  with  this	 option	 will be created after all the
	   other  streams  (i.e.  those	 created  with	"-map"	or   automatic
	   mappings).

	   Note	 that  for Matroska you	also have to set the mimetype metadata
	   tag:

		   ffmpeg -i INPUT -attach DejaVuSans.ttf -metadata:s:2	mimetype=application/x-truetype-font out.mkv

	   (assuming that the attachment stream	will be	third  in  the	output
	   file).

       -dump_attachment[:stream_specifier] filename (input,per-stream)
	   Extract  the	matching attachment stream into	a file named filename.
	   If filename is empty, then the value	of the "filename" metadata tag
	   will	be used.

	   E.g.	to extract the first attachment	to a file named	'out.ttf':

		   ffmpeg -dump_attachment:t:0 out.ttf -i INPUT

	   To extract all attachments to files determined  by  the  "filename"
	   tag:

		   ffmpeg -dump_attachment:t ""	-i INPUT

	   Technical  note  -- attachments are implemented as codec extradata,
	   so this option can actually be used to extract extradata  from  any
	   stream, not just attachments.

   Video Options
       -vframes	number (output)
	   Set the number of video frames to output. This is an	obsolete alias
	   for "-frames:v", which you should use instead.

       -r[:stream_specifier] fps (input/output,per-stream)
	   Set frame rate (Hz value, fraction or abbreviation).

	   As  an  input  option, ignore any timestamps	stored in the file and
	   instead generate timestamps assuming	constant frame rate fps.  This
	   is not the same as  the  -framerate	option	used  for  some	 input
	   formats  like  image2  or  v4l2  (it	 used  to be the same in older
	   versions of FFmpeg).	 If in doubt use  -framerate  instead  of  the
	   input option	-r.

	   As an output	option:

	   video encoding
	       Duplicate  or drop frames right before encoding them to achieve
	       constant	output frame rate fps.

	   video streamcopy
	       Indicate	to the muxer that fps is the  stream  frame  rate.  No
	       data  is	 dropped  or duplicated	in this	case. This may produce
	       invalid files if	fps does not match  the	 actual	 stream	 frame
	       rate  as	determined by packet timestamps.  See also the "setts"
	       bitstream filter.

       -fpsmax[:stream_specifier] fps (output,per-stream)
	   Set maximum frame rate (Hz value, fraction or abbreviation).

	   Clamps output frame rate when output	framerate is auto-set  and  is
	   higher  than	 this value.  Useful in	batch processing or when input
	   framerate is	wrongly	detected as  very  high.   It  cannot  be  set
	   together with "-r". It is ignored during streamcopy.

       -s[:stream_specifier] size (input/output,per-stream)
	   Set frame size.

	   As  an  input option, this is a shortcut for	the video_size private
	   option, recognized by some demuxers for which  the  frame  size  is
	   either  not stored in the file or is	configurable --	e.g. raw video
	   or video grabbers.

	   As an output	option,	this inserts the "scale" video filter  to  the
	   end of the corresponding filtergraph. Please	use the	"scale"	filter
	   directly to insert it at the	beginning or some other	place.

	   The format is wxh (default -	same as	source).

       -aspect[:stream_specifier] aspect (output,per-stream)
	   Set the video display aspect	ratio specified	by aspect.

	   aspect  can	be  a floating point number string, or a string	of the
	   form	num:den, where num and den are the numerator  and  denominator
	   of  the  aspect  ratio.  For	 example  "4:3", "16:9", "1.3333", and
	   "1.7777" are	valid argument values.

	   If used together with -vcodec copy, it will affect the aspect ratio
	   stored at container level, but  not	the  aspect  ratio  stored  in
	   encoded frames, if it exists.

       -display_rotation[:stream_specifier] rotation (input,per-stream)
	   Set video rotation metadata.

	   rotation  is	 a  decimal  number specifying the amount in degree by
	   which the video should be rotated  counter-clockwise	 before	 being
	   displayed.

	   This	 option	 overrides  the	 rotation/display  transform  metadata
	   stored in the file, if any. When  the  video	 is  being  transcoded
	   (rather  than  copied) and "-autorotate" is enabled,	the video will
	   be rotated at the filtering stage. Otherwise, the metadata will  be
	   written into	the output file	if the muxer supports it.

	   If  the "-display_hflip" and/or "-display_vflip" options are	given,
	   they	are applied after the rotation specified by this option.

       -display_hflip[:stream_specifier] (input,per-stream)
	   Set whether on display the image should be horizontally flipped.

	   See the "-display_rotation" option for more details.

       -display_vflip[:stream_specifier] (input,per-stream)
	   Set whether on display the image should be vertically flipped.

	   See the "-display_rotation" option for more details.

       -vn (input/output)
	   As an input option, blocks all video	streams	of a file  from	 being
	   filtered  or	being automatically selected or	mapped for any output.
	   See "-discard" option to disable streams individually.

	   As an  output  option,  disables  video  recording  i.e.  automatic
	   selection  or  mapping of any video stream. For full	manual control
	   see the "-map" option.

       -vcodec codec (output)
	   Set the video codec.	This is	an alias for "-codec:v".

       -pass[:stream_specifier]	n (output,per-stream)
	   Select the pass number (1 or	2). It is used to  do  two-pass	 video
	   encoding.  The  statistics  of  the video are recorded in the first
	   pass	into a log file	(see also the option -passlogfile), and	in the
	   second pass that log	file is	used to	 generate  the	video  at  the
	   exact  requested bitrate.  On pass 1, you may just deactivate audio
	   and set output to null, examples for	Windows	and Unix:

		   ffmpeg -i foo.mov -c:v libxvid -pass	1 -an -f rawvideo -y NUL
		   ffmpeg -i foo.mov -c:v libxvid -pass	1 -an -f rawvideo -y /dev/null

       -passlogfile[:stream_specifier] prefix (output,per-stream)
	   Set two-pass	log file name prefix to	prefix,	the default file  name
	   prefix   is	 ``ffmpeg2pass''.  The	complete  file	name  will  be
	   PREFIX-N.log, where N is a number specific to the output stream

       -vf filtergraph (output)
	   Create the filtergraph specified  by	 filtergraph  and  use	it  to
	   filter the stream.

	   This	is an alias for	"-filter:v", see the -filter option.

       -autorotate
	   Automatically  rotate the video according to	file metadata. Enabled
	   by default, use -noautorotate to disable it.

       -autoscale
	   Automatically scale the video according to the resolution of	 first
	   frame.   Enabled  by	 default, use -noautoscale to disable it. When
	   autoscale is	disabled, all output frames of filter graph might  not
	   be	in  the	 same  resolution  and	may  be	 inadequate  for  some
	   encoder/muxer. Therefore, it	 is  not  recommended  to  disable  it
	   unless  you	really	know what you are doing.  Disable autoscale at
	   your	own risk.

   Advanced Video options
       -pix_fmt[:stream_specifier] format (input/output,per-stream)
	   Set pixel format. Use "-pix_fmts" to	show all the  supported	 pixel
	   formats.   If the selected pixel format can not be selected,	ffmpeg
	   will	print a	warning	and select the best pixel format supported  by
	   the	encoder.   If  pix_fmt	is prefixed by a "+", ffmpeg will exit
	   with	an error if the	requested pixel	format can  not	 be  selected,
	   and	automatic  conversions	inside	filtergraphs are disabled.  If
	   pix_fmt is a	single "+", ffmpeg selects the same  pixel  format  as
	   the input (or graph output) and automatic conversions are disabled.

       -sws_flags flags	(input/output)
	   Set	default	flags for the libswscale library. These	flags are used
	   by automatically inserted "scale" filters and those	within	simple
	   filtergraphs, if not	overridden within the filtergraph definition.

	   See the ffmpeg-scaler manual	for a list of scaler options.

       -rc_override[:stream_specifier] override	(output,per-stream)
	   Rate	  control   override  for  specific  intervals,	 formatted  as
	   "int,int,int" list separated	with slashes. Two first	values are the
	   beginning and end frame numbers, last one is	quantizer  to  use  if
	   positive, or	quality	factor if negative.

       -psnr
	   Calculate  PSNR  of	compressed  frames. This option	is deprecated,
	   pass	the PSNR flag to the encoder instead, using "-flags +psnr".

       -vstats
	   Dump	video coding statistics	to vstats_HHMMSS.log. See  the	vstats
	   file	format section for the format description.

       -vstats_file file
	   Dump	 video	coding	statistics to file. See	the vstats file	format
	   section for the format description.

       -vstats_version file
	   Specify which version of the	vstats format to use.  Default	is  2.
	   See the vstats file format section for the format description.

       -vtag fourcc/tag	(output)
	   Force video tag/fourcc. This	is an alias for	"-tag:v".

       -vbsf bitstream_filter
	   Deprecated see -bsf

       -force_key_frames[:stream_specifier] time[,time...] (output,per-stream)
       -force_key_frames[:stream_specifier] expr:expr (output,per-stream)
       -force_key_frames[:stream_specifier] source (output,per-stream)
	   force_key_frames can	take arguments of the following	form:

	   time[,time...]
	       If  the	argument consists of timestamps, ffmpeg	will round the
	       specified times to the nearest  output  timestamp  as  per  the
	       encoder	time  base  and	 force	a  keyframe at the first frame
	       having timestamp	equal or greater than the computed  timestamp.
	       Note  that  if  the  encoder  time base is too coarse, then the
	       keyframes may be	forced on frames with  timestamps  lower  than
	       the  specified  time.   The  default  encoder  time base	is the
	       inverse of the output framerate but may be  set	otherwise  via
	       "-enc_time_base".

	       If one of the times is ""chapters"[delta]", it is expanded into
	       the  time of the	beginning of all chapters in the file, shifted
	       by delta, expressed as a	time in	seconds.  This option  can  be
	       useful to ensure	that a seek point is present at	a chapter mark
	       or any other designated place in	the output file.

	       For  example,  to  insert  a  key  frame	at 5 minutes, plus key
	       frames 0.1 second before	the beginning of every chapter:

		       -force_key_frames 0:05:00,chapters-0.1

	   expr:expr
	       If the argument is prefixed with	"expr:", the  string  expr  is
	       interpreted like	an expression and is evaluated for each	frame.
	       A key frame is forced in	case the evaluation is non-zero.

	       The expression in expr can contain the following	constants:

	       n   the number of current processed frame, starting from	0

	       n_forced
		   the number of forced	frames

	       prev_forced_n
		   the	number	of the previous	forced frame, it is "NAN" when
		   no keyframe was forced yet

	       prev_forced_t
		   the time of the previous forced frame, it is	"NAN" when  no
		   keyframe was	forced yet

	       t   the time of the current processed frame

	       For  example  to	 force	a  key	frame every 5 seconds, you can
	       specify:

		       -force_key_frames expr:gte(t,n_forced*5)

	       To force	a key frame 5 seconds  after  the  time	 of  the  last
	       forced one, starting from second	13:

		       -force_key_frames expr:if(isnan(prev_forced_t),gte(t,13),gte(t,prev_forced_t+5))

	   source
	       If  the	argument is "source", ffmpeg will force	a key frame if
	       the current frame being encoded is marked as a key frame	in its
	       source.	In cases where this particular source frame has	to  be
	       dropped,	enforce	the next available frame to become a key frame
	       instead.

	   Note	 that  forcing	too  many  keyframes  is  very harmful for the
	   lookahead algorithms	of certain encoders: using  fixed-GOP  options
	   or similar would be more efficient.

       -copyinkf[:stream_specifier] (output,per-stream)
	   When	 doing	stream	copy,  copy  also  non-key frames found	at the
	   beginning.

       -init_hw_device type[=name][:device[,key=value...]]
	   Initialise a	new hardware device of type type  called  name,	 using
	   the	given  device  parameters.   If	 no  name is specified it will
	   receive a default name of the form "type%d".

	   The meaning of device and the following arguments  depends  on  the
	   device type:

	   cuda
	       device is the number of the CUDA	device.

	       The following options are recognized:

	       primary_ctx
		   If  set  to	1,  uses the primary device context instead of
		   creating a new one.

	       Examples:

	       -init_hw_device cuda:1
		   Choose the second device on the system.

	       -init_hw_device cuda:0,primary_ctx=1
		   Choose the first device and use the primary device context.

	   dxva2
	       device is the number of the Direct3D 9 display adapter.

	   d3d11va
	       device is the number of the Direct3D 11 display adapter.

	   vaapi
	       device is either	an X11 display name, a DRM render  node	 or  a
	       DirectX	adapter	 index.	  If not specified, it will attempt to
	       open the	default	X11 display ($DISPLAY) and then	the first  DRM
	       render  node  (/dev/dri/renderD128),  or	 the  default  DirectX
	       adapter on Windows.

	   vdpau
	       device is an X11	display	 name.	 If  not  specified,  it  will
	       attempt to open the default X11 display ($DISPLAY).

	   qsv device selects a	value in MFX_IMPL_*. Allowed values are:

	       auto
	       sw
	       hw
	       auto_any
	       hw_any
	       hw2
	       hw3
	       hw4

	       If  not	specified,  auto_any  is  used.	  (Note	that it	may be
	       easier to achieve the desired result for	QSV  by	 creating  the
	       platform-appropriate  subdevice (dxva2 or d3d11va or vaapi) and
	       then deriving a QSV device from that.)

	       Alternatively,  child_device_type  helps	 to  choose  platform-
	       appropriate  subdevice  type.   On  Windows  d3d11va is used as
	       default subdevice type.

	       Examples:

	       -init_hw_device qsv:hw,child_device_type=d3d11va
		   Choose the GPU subdevice with type d3d11va and  create  QSV
		   device with MFX_IMPL_HARDWARE.

	       -init_hw_device qsv:hw,child_device_type=dxva2
		   Choose  the	GPU  subdevice	with type dxva2	and create QSV
		   device with MFX_IMPL_HARDWARE.

	   opencl
	       device	 selects    the	    platform	 and	 device	    as
	       platform_index.device_index.

	       The  set	 of  devices  can also be filtered using the key-value
	       pairs to	find only  devices  matching  particular  platform  or
	       device strings.

	       The strings usable as filters are:

	       platform_profile
	       platform_version
	       platform_name
	       platform_vendor
	       platform_extensions
	       device_name
	       device_vendor
	       driver_version
	       device_version
	       device_profile
	       device_extensions
	       device_type

	       The indices and filters must together uniquely select a device.

	       Examples:

	       -init_hw_device opencl:0.1
		   Choose the second device on the first platform.

	       -init_hw_device opencl:,device_name=Foo9000
		   Choose  the	device	with  a	 name  containing  the	string
		   Foo9000.

	       -init_hw_device
	       opencl:1,device_type=gpu,device_extensions=cl_khr_fp16
		   Choose the GPU device on the	second platform	supporting the
		   cl_khr_fp16 extension.

	   vulkan
	       If device is an integer,	it selects the device by its index  in
	       a  system-dependent  list  of  devices.	If device is any other
	       string, it selects the first device with	a name containing that
	       string as a substring.

	       The following options are recognized:

	       debug
		   If set to 1,	enables	the validation layer, if installed.

	       linear_images
		   If set to 1,	images allocated  by  the  hwcontext  will  be
		   linear and locally mappable.

	       instance_extensions
		   A  plus separated list of additional	instance extensions to
		   enable.

	       device_extensions
		   A plus separated list of additional	device	extensions  to
		   enable.

	       Examples:

	       -init_hw_device vulkan:1
		   Choose the second device on the system.

	       -init_hw_device vulkan:RADV
		   Choose  the	first device with a name containing the	string
		   RADV.

	       -init_hw_device
	       vulkan:0,instance_extensions=VK_KHR_wayland_surface+VK_KHR_xcb_surface
		   Choose the first device and	enable	the  Wayland  and  XCB
		   instance extensions.

       -init_hw_device type[=name]@source
	   Initialise a	new hardware device of type type called	name, deriving
	   it from the existing	device with the	name source.

       -init_hw_device list
	   List	all hardware device types supported in this build of ffmpeg.

       -filter_hw_device name
	   Pass	 the  hardware device called name to all filters in any	filter
	   graph.  This	can be used to set the device to upload	 to  with  the
	   "hwupload" filter, or the device to map to with the "hwmap" filter.
	   Other filters may also make use of this parameter when they require
	   a  hardware device.	Note that this is typically only required when
	   the input is	not already in hardware	frames - when it  is,  filters
	   will	 derive	the device they	require	from the context of the	frames
	   they	receive	as input.

	   This	is a global setting, so	all  filters  will  receive  the  same
	   device.

       -hwaccel[:stream_specifier] hwaccel (input,per-stream)
	   Use	hardware  acceleration	to  decode the matching	stream(s). The
	   allowed values of hwaccel are:

	   none
	       Do not use any hardware acceleration (the default).

	   auto
	       Automatically select the	hardware acceleration method.

	   vdpau
	       Use VDPAU (Video	Decode and Presentation	API for	Unix) hardware
	       acceleration.

	   dxva2
	       Use DXVA2 (DirectX Video	Acceleration) hardware acceleration.

	   d3d11va
	       Use D3D11VA (DirectX Video Acceleration)	hardware acceleration.

	   vaapi
	       Use VAAPI (Video	Acceleration API) hardware acceleration.

	   qsv Use  the	 Intel	QuickSync   Video   acceleration   for	 video
	       transcoding.

	       Unlike	most   other  values,  this  option  does  not	enable
	       accelerated decoding (that is used automatically	whenever a qsv
	       decoder is  selected),  but  accelerated	 transcoding,  without
	       copying the frames into the system memory.

	       For  it	to work, both the decoder and the encoder must support
	       QSV acceleration	and no filters must be used.

	   This	option has no effect if	the selected hwaccel is	not  available
	   or not supported by the chosen decoder.

	   Note	 that  most acceleration methods are intended for playback and
	   will	 not  be  faster  than	software  decoding  on	modern	 CPUs.
	   Additionally,  ffmpeg  will usually need to copy the	decoded	frames
	   from	the GPU	memory into the	system memory,	resulting  in  further
	   performance loss. This option is thus mainly	useful for testing.

       -hwaccel_device[:stream_specifier] hwaccel_device (input,per-stream)
	   Select a device to use for hardware acceleration.

	   This	 option	 only  makes  sense  when  the -hwaccel	option is also
	   specified.  It can either refer to an existing device created  with
	   -init_hw_device  by	name,  or  it  can  create  a new device as if
	   -init_hw_device type:hwaccel_device were called immediately before.

       -hwaccels
	   List	all hardware acceleration components enabled in	this build  of
	   ffmpeg.   Actual  runtime  availability depends on the hardware and
	   its suitable	driver being installed.

       -fix_sub_duration_heartbeat[:stream_specifier]
	   Set	a  specific  output  video  stream  as	the  heartbeat	stream
	   according  to which to split	and push through currently in-progress
	   subtitle upon receipt of a random access packet.

	   This	lowers the latency of subtitles	for which the  end  packet  or
	   the	following  subtitle  has not yet been received.	As a drawback,
	   this	will most likely lead to duplication  of  subtitle  events  in
	   order  to  cover  the full duration,	so when	dealing	with use cases
	   where latency of when the subtitle event is passed on to output  is
	   not relevant	this option should not be utilized.

	   Requires  -fix_sub_duration	to  be	set  for  the  relevant	 input
	   subtitle stream for this to have any	effect,	as  well  as  for  the
	   input  subtitle  stream  having  to	be directly mapped to the same
	   output in which the heartbeat stream	resides.

   Audio Options
       -aframes	number (output)
	   Set the number of audio frames to output. This is an	obsolete alias
	   for "-frames:a", which you should use instead.

       -ar[:stream_specifier] freq (input/output,per-stream)
	   Set the audio sampling frequency. For output	streams	it is  set  by
	   default  to	the  frequency	of the corresponding input stream. For
	   input streams this option  only  makes  sense  for  audio  grabbing
	   devices and raw demuxers and	is mapped to the corresponding demuxer
	   options.

       -aq q (output)
	   Set	the  audio quality (codec-specific, VBR). This is an alias for
	   -q:a.

       -ac[:stream_specifier] channels (input/output,per-stream)
	   Set the number of audio channels. For output	streams	it is  set  by
	   default  to	the  number of input audio channels. For input streams
	   this	option only makes sense	for audio  grabbing  devices  and  raw
	   demuxers and	is mapped to the corresponding demuxer options.

       -an (input/output)
	   As  an  input option, blocks	all audio streams of a file from being
	   filtered or being automatically selected or mapped for any  output.
	   See "-discard" option to disable streams individually.

	   As  an  output  option,  disables  audio  recording	i.e. automatic
	   selection or	mapping	of any audio stream. For full  manual  control
	   see the "-map" option.

       -acodec codec (input/output)
	   Set the audio codec.	This is	an alias for "-codec:a".

       -sample_fmt[:stream_specifier] sample_fmt (output,per-stream)
	   Set	the  audio  sample format. Use "-sample_fmts" to get a list of
	   supported sample formats.

       -af filtergraph (output)
	   Create the filtergraph specified  by	 filtergraph  and  use	it  to
	   filter the stream.

	   This	is an alias for	"-filter:a", see the -filter option.

   Advanced Audio options
       -atag fourcc/tag	(output)
	   Force audio tag/fourcc. This	is an alias for	"-tag:a".

       -absf bitstream_filter
	   Deprecated, see -bsf

       -guess_layout_max channels (input,per-stream)
	   If  some input channel layout is not	known, try to guess only if it
	   corresponds to at  most  the	 specified  number  of	channels.  For
	   example,  2	tells  to  ffmpeg to recognize 1 channel as mono and 2
	   channels as stereo but not 6	channels as 5.1.  The  default	is  to
	   always try to guess.	Use 0 to disable all guessing.

   Subtitle options
       -scodec codec (input/output)
	   Set the subtitle codec. This	is an alias for	"-codec:s".

       -sn (input/output)
	   As  an  input  option,  blocks  all subtitle	streams	of a file from
	   being filtered or being automatically selected or  mapped  for  any
	   output. See "-discard" option to disable streams individually.

	   As  an  output  option,  disables subtitle recording	i.e. automatic
	   selection or	mapping	 of  any  subtitle  stream.  For  full	manual
	   control see the "-map" option.

       -sbsf bitstream_filter
	   Deprecated, see -bsf

   Advanced Subtitle options
       -fix_sub_duration
	   Fix	subtitles  durations.  For  each  subtitle,  wait for the next
	   packet in the same stream and adjust	the duration of	the  first  to
	   avoid  overlap.  This  is  necessary	 with  some  subtitles codecs,
	   especially DVB subtitles, because  the  duration  in	 the  original
	   packet  is  only a rough estimate and the end is actually marked by
	   an empty subtitle frame. Failing to use this	option when  necessary
	   can	result in exaggerated durations	or muxing failures due to non-
	   monotonic timestamps.

	   Note	that this option will delay the	output of all data  until  the
	   next	subtitle packet	is decoded: it may increase memory consumption
	   and latency a lot.

       -canvas_size size
	   Set the size	of the canvas used to render subtitles.

   Advanced options
       -map [-]input_file_id[:stream_specifier][?] | [linklabel] (output)
	   Create  one or more streams in the output file. This	option has two
	   forms for specifying	the data source(s): the	first selects  one  or
	   more	streams	from some input	file (specified	with "-i"), the	second
	   takes  an  output  from  some  complex  filtergraph (specified with
	   "-filter_complex" or	"-filter_complex_script").

	   In the first	form, an output	stream is  created  for	 every	stream
	   from	  the	input	file   with   the   index   input_file_id.  If
	   stream_specifier is	given,	only  those  streams  that  match  the
	   specifier  are  used	 (see  the  Stream  specifiers section for the
	   stream_specifier syntax).

	   A "-" character before the stream identifier	creates	 a  "negative"
	   mapping.    It  disables  matching  streams	from  already  created
	   mappings.

	   A trailing "?" after	the stream index will  allow  the  map	to  be
	   optional:  if  the  map  matches no streams the map will be ignored
	   instead of failing. Note the	map will  still	 fail  if  an  invalid
	   input  file	index  is  used;  such	as if the map refers to	a non-
	   existent input.

	   An alternative [linklabel]  form  will  map	outputs	 from  complex
	   filter  graphs (see the -filter_complex option) to the output file.
	   linklabel must correspond to	a defined output  link	label  in  the
	   graph.

	   This	 option	 may  be  specified  multiple  times, each adding more
	   streams to the output file. Any given  input	 stream	 may  also  be
	   mapped  any	number	of  times  as  a  source  for different	output
	   streams, e.g. in order to use  different  encoding  options	and/or
	   filters. The	streams	are created in the output in the same order in
	   which the "-map" options are	given on the commandline.

	   Using  this	option	disables  the default mappings for this	output
	   file.

	   Examples:

	   map everything
	       To map ALL streams from the first input file to output

		       ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0 output

	   select specific stream
	       If you have two audio streams in	the first  input  file,	 these
	       streams	are  identified	 by 0:0	and 0:1. You can use "-map" to
	       select which streams to place in	an output file.	For example:

		       ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0:1	out.wav

	       will map	the second input  stream  in  INPUT  to	 the  (single)
	       output stream in	out.wav.

	   create multiple streams
	       To  select  the	stream	with  index  2	from  input file a.mov
	       (specified by the identifier 0:2), and stream with index	6 from
	       input b.mov (specified by the identifier	1:6), and copy them to
	       the output file out.mov:

		       ffmpeg -i a.mov -i b.mov	-c copy	-map 0:2 -map 1:6 out.mov

	   create multiple streams 2
	       To select all video and the third audio stream  from  an	 input
	       file:

		       ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0:v	-map 0:a:2 OUTPUT

	   negative map
	       To  map	all  the streams except	the second audio, use negative
	       mappings

		       ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0 -map -0:a:1 OUTPUT

	   optional map
	       To map the video	and audio streams from the  first  input,  and
	       using  the  trailing  "?", ignore the audio mapping if no audio
	       streams exist in	the first input:

		       ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0:v	-map 0:a? OUTPUT

	   map by language
	       To pick the English audio stream:

		       ffmpeg -i INPUT -map 0:m:language:eng OUTPUT

       -ignore_unknown
	   Ignore input	streams	 with  unknown	type  instead  of  failing  if
	   copying such	streams	is attempted.

       -copy_unknown
	   Allow  input	 streams  with	unknown	 type  to be copied instead of
	   failing if copying such streams is attempted.

       -map_channel
       [input_file_id.stream_specifier.channel_id|-1][?][:output_file_id.stream_specifier]
	   This	option is deprecated and will be removed. It can  be  replaced
	   by  the  pan	 filter.  In  some  cases it may be easier to use some
	   combination of the channelsplit, channelmap,	or amerge filters.

	   Map	an  audio  channel  from  a  given  input  to  an  output.  If
	   output_file_id.stream_specifier  is not set,	the audio channel will
	   be mapped on	all the	audio streams.

	   Using  "-1"	instead	 of  input_file_id.stream_specifier.channel_id
	   will	map a muted channel.

	   A  trailing	"?"  will allow	the map_channel	to be optional:	if the
	   map_channel matches no channel  the	map_channel  will  be  ignored
	   instead of failing.

	   For	example, assuming INPUT	is a stereo audio file,	you can	switch
	   the two audio channels with the following command:

		   ffmpeg -i INPUT -map_channel	0.0.1 -map_channel 0.0.0 OUTPUT

	   If you want to mute the first channel and keep the second:

		   ffmpeg -i INPUT -map_channel	-1 -map_channel	0.0.1 OUTPUT

	   The order of	the "-map_channel" option specifies the	order  of  the
	   channels in the output stream. The output channel layout is guessed
	   from	 the  number  of  channels mapped (mono	if one "-map_channel",
	   stereo if two, etc.). Using "-ac" in	combination of	"-map_channel"
	   makes  the  channel	gain  levels to	be updated if input and	output
	   channel  layouts  don't  match  (for	 instance  two	"-map_channel"
	   options and "-ac 6").

	   You	can also extract each channel of an input to specific outputs;
	   the following command extracts two  channels	 of  the  INPUT	 audio
	   stream  (file  0,  stream  0)  to  the  respective  OUTPUT_CH0  and
	   OUTPUT_CH1 outputs:

		   ffmpeg -i INPUT -map_channel	0.0.0 OUTPUT_CH0 -map_channel 0.0.1 OUTPUT_CH1

	   The following example splits	the channels of	a  stereo  input  into
	   two separate	streams, which are put into the	same output file:

		   ffmpeg -i stereo.wav	-map 0:0 -map 0:0 -map_channel 0.0.0:0.0 -map_channel 0.0.1:0.1	-y out.ogg

	   Note	 that  currently  each output stream can only contain channels
	   from	 a  single  input  stream;   you   can't   for	 example   use
	   "-map_channel"  to  pick multiple input audio channels contained in
	   different streams (from the same or different files)	and merge them
	   into	 a  single  output  stream.  It	 is  therefore	not  currently
	   possible,  for  example,  to	 turn two separate mono	streams	into a
	   single stereo stream. However splitting a stereo  stream  into  two
	   single channel mono streams is possible.

	   If  you  need  this	feature,  a  possible workaround is to use the
	   amerge filter. For example, if you need  to	merge  a  media	 (here
	   input.mkv) with 2 mono audio	streams	into one single	stereo channel
	   audio stream	(and keep the video stream), you can use the following
	   command:

		   ffmpeg -i input.mkv -filter_complex "[0:1] [0:2] amerge" -c:a pcm_s16le -c:v	copy output.mkv

	   To map the first two	audio channels from the	first input, and using
	   the	trailing  "?",	ignore	the audio channel mapping if the first
	   input is mono instead of stereo:

		   ffmpeg -i INPUT -map_channel	0.0.0 -map_channel 0.0.1? OUTPUT

       -map_metadata[:metadata_spec_out] infile[:metadata_spec_in]
       (output,per-metadata)
	   Set metadata	information of the next	output file from infile.  Note
	   that	 those are file	indices	(zero-based), not filenames.  Optional
	   metadata_spec_in/out	parameters specify, which metadata to copy.  A
	   metadata specifier can have the following forms:

	   g   global metadata,	i.e. metadata that applies to the whole	file

	   s[:stream_spec]
	       per-stream metadata.  stream_spec  is  a	 stream	 specifier  as
	       described  in  the  Stream  specifiers  chapter.	 In  an	 input
	       metadata	specifier, the first matching stream is	 copied	 from.
	       In  an  output  metadata	 specifier,  all  matching streams are
	       copied to.

	   c:chapter_index
	       per-chapter metadata. chapter_index is the  zero-based  chapter
	       index.

	   p:program_index
	       per-program  metadata.  program_index is	the zero-based program
	       index.

	   If metadata specifier is omitted, it	defaults to global.

	   By default, global metadata is copied from the  first  input	 file,
	   per-stream	and   per-chapter   metadata   is  copied  along  with
	   streams/chapters. These default mappings are	disabled  by  creating
	   any mapping of the relevant type. A negative	file index can be used
	   to create a dummy mapping that just disables	automatic copying.

	   For	example	 to  copy  metadata from the first stream of the input
	   file	to global metadata of the output file:

		   ffmpeg -i in.ogg -map_metadata 0:s:0	out.mp3

	   To do the reverse, i.e. copy	global metadata	to all audio streams:

		   ffmpeg -i in.mkv -map_metadata:s:a 0:g out.mkv

	   Note	that simple 0 would work as well in this example, since	global
	   metadata is assumed by default.

       -map_chapters input_file_index (output)
	   Copy	chapters from input file with index  input_file_index  to  the
	   next	output file. If	no chapter mapping is specified, then chapters
	   are copied from the first input file	with at	least one chapter. Use
	   a negative file index to disable any	chapter	copying.

       -benchmark (global)
	   Show	benchmarking information at the	end of an encode.  Shows real,
	   system  and user time used and maximum memory consumption.  Maximum
	   memory consumption is not supported on all systems, it will usually
	   display as 0	if not supported.

       -benchmark_all (global)
	   Show	benchmarking  information  during  the	encode.	  Shows	 real,
	   system   and	  user	 time	used  in  various  steps  (audio/video
	   encode/decode).

       -timelimit duration (global)
	   Exit	after ffmpeg has been running for duration seconds in CPU user
	   time.

       -dump (global)
	   Dump	each input packet to stderr.

       -hex (global)
	   When	dumping	packets, also dump the payload.

       -readrate speed (input)
	   Limit input read speed.

	   Its value is	a floating-point positive number which represents  the
	   maximum  duration  of media,	in seconds, that should	be ingested in
	   one second of wallclock time.  Default value	is zero	and represents
	   no imposed limitation on speed of ingestion.	  Value	 1  represents
	   real-time speed and is equivalent to	"-re".

	   Mainly used to simulate a capture device or live input stream (e.g.
	   when	 reading  from	a  file).  Should not be used with a low value
	   when	input is an actual capture device or live  stream  as  it  may
	   cause packet	loss.

	   It  is  useful  for when flow speed of output packets is important,
	   such	as live	streaming.

       -re (input)
	   Read	input at native	frame rate.  This  is  equivalent  to  setting
	   "-readrate 1".

       -readrate_initial_burst seconds
	   Set	 an   initial	read  burst  time,  in	seconds,  after	 which
	   -re/-readrate will be enforced.

       -vsync parameter	(global)
       -fps_mode[:stream_specifier] parameter (output,per-stream)
	   Set video sync method / framerate mode. vsync  is  applied  to  all
	   output  video streams but can be overridden for a stream by setting
	   fps_mode. vsync is deprecated and will be removed in	the future.

	   For compatibility reasons some of  the  values  for	vsync  can  be
	   specified as	numbers	(shown in parentheses in the following table).

	   passthrough (0)
	       Each frame is passed with its timestamp from the	demuxer	to the
	       muxer.

	   cfr (1)
	       Frames  will  be	 duplicated and	dropped	to achieve exactly the
	       requested constant frame	rate.

	   vfr (2)
	       Frames are passed through with their timestamp or dropped so as
	       to prevent 2 frames from	having the same	timestamp.

	   drop
	       As passthrough but destroys all timestamps,  making  the	 muxer
	       generate	fresh timestamps based on frame-rate.

	   auto	(-1)
	       Chooses	between	 cfr  and vfr depending	on muxer capabilities.
	       This is the default method.

	   Note	that the timestamps may	be  further  modified  by  the	muxer,
	   after  this.	  For  example,	 in  the  case	that the format	option
	   avoid_negative_ts is	enabled.

	   With	-map you can select from which stream the timestamps should be
	   taken. You can leave	either video or	audio unchanged	and  sync  the
	   remaining stream(s) to the unchanged	one.

       -frame_drop_threshold parameter
	   Frame  drop threshold, which	specifies how much behind video	frames
	   can be before they are dropped. In frame rate units,	so 1.0 is  one
	   frame.   The	 default  is  -1.1.  One  possible usecase is to avoid
	   framedrops in case of noisy timestamps or to	 increase  frame  drop
	   precision in	case of	exact timestamps.

       -apad parameters	(output,per-stream)
	   Pad	the  output audio stream(s). This is the same as applying "-af
	   apad".  Argument is a string	of filter parameters composed the same
	   as with the "apad" filter.  "-shortest" must	be set for this	output
	   for the option to take effect.

       -copyts
	   Do not process input	timestamps,  but  keep	their  values  without
	   trying  to  sanitize	them. In particular, do	not remove the initial
	   start time offset value.

	   Note	that, depending	on the	vsync  option  or  on  specific	 muxer
	   processing  (e.g.  in  case	the format option avoid_negative_ts is
	   enabled)  the  output  timestamps  may  mismatch  with  the	 input
	   timestamps even when	this option is selected.

       -start_at_zero
	   When	 used  with  copyts,  shift  input timestamps so they start at
	   zero.

	   This	means that using e.g. "-ss 50"	will  make  output  timestamps
	   start  at  50  seconds, regardless of what timestamp	the input file
	   started at.

       -copytb mode
	   Specify how to set the encoder timebase when	stream copying.	  mode
	   is  an  integer  numeric value, and can assume one of the following
	   values:

	   1   Use the demuxer timebase.

	       The time	 base  is  copied  to  the  output  encoder  from  the
	       corresponding  input  demuxer.  This  is	 sometimes required to
	       avoid non  monotonically	 increasing  timestamps	 when  copying
	       video streams with variable frame rate.

	   0   Use the decoder timebase.

	       The  time  base	is  copied  to	the  output  encoder  from the
	       corresponding input decoder.

	   -1  Try to make the choice automatically, in	order  to  generate  a
	       sane output.

	   Default value is -1.

       -enc_time_base[:stream_specifier] timebase (output,per-stream)
	   Set	the encoder timebase. timebase can assume one of the following
	   values:

	   0   Assign a	default	value according	to the media type.

	       For video - use 1/framerate, for	audio -	use 1/samplerate.

	   demux
	       Use the timebase	from the demuxer.

	   filter
	       Use the timebase	from the filtergraph.

	   a positive number
	       Use the provided	number as the timebase.

	       This field can be provided as a ratio  of  two  integers	 (e.g.
	       1:24, 1:48000) or as a decimal number (e.g. 0.04166, 2.0833e-5)

	   Default value is 0.

       -bitexact (input/output)
	   Enable bitexact mode	for (de)muxer and (de/en)coder

       -shortest (output)
	   Finish encoding when	the shortest output stream ends.

	   Note	  that	 this  option  may  require  buffering	frames,	 which
	   introduces extra latency. The maximum amount	of this	latency	may be
	   controlled with the "-shortest_buf_duration"	option.

       -shortest_buf_duration duration (output)
	   The "-shortest" option  may	require	 buffering  potentially	 large
	   amounts  of data when at least one of the streams is	"sparse" (i.e.
	   has large gaps between frames X this	 is  typically	the  case  for
	   subtitles).

	   This	 option	 controls  the	maximum	duration of buffered frames in
	   seconds.  Larger values may allow the "-shortest" option to produce
	   more	accurate results, but increase memory use and latency.

	   The default value is	10 seconds.

       -dts_delta_threshold threshold
	   Timestamp discontinuity delta threshold,  expressed	as  a  decimal
	   number of seconds.

	   The	timestamp  discontinuity  correction enabled by	this option is
	   only	applied	to input  formats  accepting  timestamp	 discontinuity
	   (for	 which the "AV_FMT_DISCONT" flag is enabled), e.g. MPEG-TS and
	   HLS,	and is automatically disabled when  employing  the  "-copy_ts"
	   option (unless wrapping is detected).

	   If  a  timestamp  discontinuity is detected whose absolute value is
	   greater than	threshold, ffmpeg will	remove	the  discontinuity  by
	   decreasing/increasing  the current DTS and PTS by the corresponding
	   delta value.

	   The default value is	10.

       -dts_error_threshold threshold
	   Timestamp error delta threshold, expressed as a decimal  number  of
	   seconds.

	   The	timestamp correction enabled by	this option is only applied to
	   input formats not accepting timestamp discontinuity (for which  the
	   "AV_FMT_DISCONT" flag is not	enabled).

	   If  a  timestamp  discontinuity is detected whose absolute value is
	   greater than	threshold, ffmpeg  will	 drop  the  PTS/DTS  timestamp
	   value.

	   The	default	 value	is  "3600*30" (30 hours), which	is arbitrarily
	   picked and quite conservative.

       -muxdelay seconds (output)
	   Set the maximum demux-decode	delay.

       -muxpreload seconds (output)
	   Set the initial demux-decode	delay.

       -streamid output-stream-index:new-value (output)
	   Assign a new	stream-id value	 to  an	 output	 stream.  This	option
	   should  be  specified  prior	 to  the  output  filename to which it
	   applies.  For the situation where multiple output  files  exist,  a
	   streamid may	be reassigned to a different value.

	   For	example, to set	the stream 0 PID to 33 and the stream 1	PID to
	   36 for an output mpegts file:

		   ffmpeg -i inurl -streamid 0:33 -streamid 1:36 out.ts

       -bsf[:stream_specifier] bitstream_filters (output,per-stream)
	   Set bitstream filters for matching streams. bitstream_filters is  a
	   comma-separated  list  of bitstream filters.	Use the	"-bsfs"	option
	   to get the list of bitstream	filters.

		   ffmpeg -i h264.mp4 -c:v copy	-bsf:v h264_mp4toannexb	-an out.h264

		   ffmpeg -i file.mov -an -vn -bsf:s mov2textsub -c:s copy -f rawvideo sub.txt

       -tag[:stream_specifier] codec_tag (input/output,per-stream)
	   Force a tag/fourcc for matching streams.

       -timecode hh:mm:ssSEPff
	   Specify Timecode for	writing. SEP is	':' for	non drop timecode  and
	   ';' (or '.')	for drop.

		   ffmpeg -i input.mpg -timecode 01:02:03.04 -r	30000/1001 -s ntsc output.mpg

       -filter_complex filtergraph (global)
	   Define  a  complex  filtergraph,  i.e. one with arbitrary number of
	   inputs and/or outputs. For simple graphs -- those  with  one	 input
	   and	one  output  of	 the  same  type  --  see the -filter options.
	   filtergraph is a description	of the filtergraph,  as	 described  in
	   the ``Filtergraph syntax'' section of the ffmpeg-filters manual.

	   Input   link	  labels   must	 refer	to  input  streams  using  the
	   "[file_index:stream_specifier]"  syntax  (i.e.  the	same  as  -map
	   uses).  If stream_specifier matches multiple	streams, the first one
	   will	be used. An unlabeled input will be  connected	to  the	 first
	   unused input	stream of the matching type.

	   Output link labels are referred to with -map. Unlabeled outputs are
	   added to the	first output file.

	   Note	that with this option it is possible to	use only lavfi sources
	   without normal input	files.

	   For example,	to overlay an image over video

		   ffmpeg -i video.mkv -i image.png -filter_complex '[0:v][1:v]overlay[out]' -map
		   '[out]' out.mkv

	   Here	 "[0:v]"  refers  to the first video stream in the first input
	   file, which is linked to the	first  (main)  input  of  the  overlay
	   filter.  Similarly  the  first  video stream	in the second input is
	   linked to the second	(overlay) input	of overlay.

	   Assuming there is only one video stream in each input file, we  can
	   omit	input labels, so the above is equivalent to

		   ffmpeg -i video.mkv -i image.png -filter_complex 'overlay[out]' -map
		   '[out]' out.mkv

	   Furthermore we can omit the output label and	the single output from
	   the filter graph will be added to the output	file automatically, so
	   we can simply write

		   ffmpeg -i video.mkv -i image.png -filter_complex 'overlay' out.mkv

	   As  a  special  exception,  you can use a bitmap subtitle stream as
	   input: it will be converted into a video with the same size as  the
	   largest  video in the file, or 720x576 if no	video is present. Note
	   that	this is	an experimental	and temporary  solution.  It  will  be
	   removed once	libavfilter has	proper support for subtitles.

	   For	example,  to  hardcode	subtitles  on top of a DVB-T recording
	   stored in MPEG-TS format, delaying the subtitles by 1 second:

		   ffmpeg -i input.ts -filter_complex \
		     '[#0x2ef] setpts=PTS+1/TB [sub] ; [#0x2d0]	[sub] overlay' \
		     -sn -map '#0x2dc' output.mkv

	   (0x2d0, 0x2dc and 0x2ef are the MPEG-TS PIDs	 of  respectively  the
	   video,  audio  and  subtitles  streams; 0:0,	0:3 and	0:7 would have
	   worked too)

	   To generate 5 seconds of pure red video using lavfi "color" source:

		   ffmpeg -filter_complex 'color=c=red'	-t 5 out.mkv

       -filter_complex_threads nb_threads (global)
	   Defines how many threads  are  used	to  process  a	filter_complex
	   graph.   Similar  to	 filter_threads	but used for "-filter_complex"
	   graphs only.	 The default is	the number of available	CPUs.

       -lavfi filtergraph (global)
	   Define a complex filtergraph, i.e. one  with	 arbitrary  number  of
	   inputs and/or outputs. Equivalent to	-filter_complex.

       -filter_complex_script filename (global)
	   This	 option	 is similar to -filter_complex,	the only difference is
	   that	its argument is	the name of the	 file  from  which  a  complex
	   filtergraph description is to be read.

       -accurate_seek (input)
	   This	 option	 enables  or  disables accurate	seeking	in input files
	   with	the -ss	option.	It  is	enabled	 by  default,  so  seeking  is
	   accurate  when  transcoding.	 Use  -noaccurate_seek	to disable it,
	   which may be	useful e.g. when copying some streams and  transcoding
	   the others.

       -seek_timestamp (input)
	   This	option enables or disables seeking by timestamp	in input files
	   with	 the  -ss  option.  It is disabled by default. If enabled, the
	   argument to the -ss option is considered an actual  timestamp,  and
	   is  not offset by the start time of the file. This matters only for
	   files which do not  start  from  timestamp  0,  such	 as  transport
	   streams.

       -thread_queue_size size (input/output)
	   For	input,	this  option sets the maximum number of	queued packets
	   when	reading	from the file or device. With low latency / high  rate
	   live	 streams,  packets  may	be discarded if	they are not read in a
	   timely manner; setting  this	 value	can  force  ffmpeg  to	use  a
	   separate  input  thread and read packets as soon as they arrive. By
	   default ffmpeg only does this if multiple inputs are	specified.

	   For output, this option specified the  maximum  number  of  packets
	   that	may be queued to each muxing thread.

       -sdp_file file (global)
	   Print  sdp  information  for	an output stream to file.  This	allows
	   dumping sdp information when	at  least  one	output	isn't  an  rtp
	   stream. (Requires at	least one of the output	formats	to be rtp).

       -discard	(input)
	   Allows  discarding  specific	 streams  or frames from streams.  Any
	   input stream	can be fully  discarded,  using	 value	"all"  whereas
	   selective  discarding of frames from	a stream occurs	at the demuxer
	   and is not supported	by all demuxers.

	   none
	       Discard no frame.

	   default
	       Default,	which discards no frames.

	   noref
	       Discard all non-reference frames.

	   bidir
	       Discard all bidirectional frames.

	   nokey
	       Discard all frames excepts keyframes.

	   all Discard all frames.

       -abort_on flags (global)
	   Stop	and abort on  various  conditions.  The	 following  flags  are
	   available:

	   empty_output
	       No packets were passed to the muxer, the	output is empty.

	   empty_output_stream
	       No  packets  were  passed  to  the  muxer in some of the	output
	       streams.

       -max_error_rate (global)
	   Set fraction	of decoding frame failures  across  all	 inputs	 which
	   when	 crossed  ffmpeg  will	return	exit  code  69.	 Crossing this
	   threshold does not terminate	processing. Range is a	floating-point
	   number between 0 to 1. Default is 2/3.

       -xerror (global)
	   Stop	and exit on error

       -max_muxing_queue_size packets (output,per-stream)
	   When	 transcoding audio and/or video	streams, ffmpeg	will not begin
	   writing into	the output until it  has  one  packet  for  each  such
	   stream. While waiting for that to happen, packets for other streams
	   are buffered. This option sets the size of this buffer, in packets,
	   for the matching output stream.

	   The	default	 value	of  this option	should be high enough for most
	   uses, so only touch this option if you are sure that	you need it.

       -muxing_queue_data_threshold bytes (output,per-stream)
	   This	is a minimum threshold until which the muxing  queue  size  is
	   not taken into account. Defaults to 50 megabytes per	stream,	and is
	   based on the	overall	size of	packets	passed to the muxer.

       -auto_conversion_filters	(global)
	   Enable  automatically  inserting  format  conversion	filters	in all
	   filter graphs, including those defined by -vf, -af, -filter_complex
	   and -lavfi. If filter format	negotiation requires a conversion, the
	   initialization of the filters will fail.  Conversions can still  be
	   performed  by  inserting  the  relevant  conversion	filter (scale,
	   aresample) in the graph.  On	by default, to explicitly  disable  it
	   you need to specify "-noauto_conversion_filters".

       -bits_per_raw_sample[:stream_specifier] value (output,per-stream)
	   Declare  the	 number	 of  bits  per	raw sample in the given	output
	   stream to be	value. Note that  this	option	sets  the  information
	   provided  to	 the  encoder/muxer,  it does not change the stream to
	   conform to this value. Setting values that do not match the	stream
	   properties may result in encoding failures or invalid output	files.

       -stats_enc_pre[:stream_specifier] path (output,per-stream)
       -stats_enc_post[:stream_specifier] path (output,per-stream)
       -stats_mux_pre[:stream_specifier] path (output,per-stream)
	   Write  per-frame  encoding  information  about the matching streams
	   into	the file given by path.

	   -stats_enc_pre writes information about raw video or	 audio	frames
	   right  before  they	are  sent  for encoding, while -stats_enc_post
	   writes information about encoded packets as they are	received  from
	   the	encoder.  -stats_mux_pre writes	information about packets just
	   as they are about to	be sent	to the muxer. Every  frame  or	packet
	   produces one	line in	the specified file. The	format of this line is
	   controlled	 by   -stats_enc_pre_fmt   /   -stats_enc_post_fmt   /
	   -stats_mux_pre_fmt.

	   When	stats for multiple streams are written into a single file, the
	   lines corresponding to different streams will be  interleaved.  The
	   precise  order  of  this  interleaving  is  not  specified  and not
	   guaranteed to remain	stable between different  invocations  of  the
	   program, even with the same options.

       -stats_enc_pre_fmt[:stream_specifier] format_spec (output,per-stream)
       -stats_enc_post_fmt[:stream_specifier] format_spec (output,per-stream)
       -stats_mux_pre_fmt[:stream_specifier] format_spec (output,per-stream)
	   Specify  the	 format	 for  the  lines written with -stats_enc_pre /
	   -stats_enc_post / -stats_mux_pre.

	   format_spec is a string that	may contain  directives	 of  the  form
	   {fmt}.  format_spec	is backslash-escaped --- use \{, \}, and \\ to
	   write a literal {, }, or \, respectively, into the output.

	   The directives given	with fmt may be	one of the following:

	   fidx
	       Index of	the output file.

	   sidx
	       Index of	the output stream in the file.

	   n   Frame number.  Pre-encoding:  number  of	 frames	 sent  to  the
	       encoder so far.	Post-encoding: number of packets received from
	       the encoder so far.  Muxing: number of packets submitted	to the
	       muxer for this stream so	far.

	   ni  Input  frame number. Index of the input frame (i.e. output by a
	       decoder)	that corresponds to this output	frame or packet. -1 if
	       unavailable.

	   tb  Timebase	in which this frame/packet's timestamps	are expressed,
	       as a rational number num/den. Note that encoder and  muxer  may
	       use different timebases.

	   tbi Timebase	for ptsi, as a rational	number num/den.	Available when
	       ptsi is available, 0/1 otherwise.

	   pts Presentation  timestamp	of the frame or	packet,	as an integer.
	       Should be multiplied by the timebase  to	 compute  presentation
	       time.

	   ptsi
	       Presentation  timestamp	of  the	 input	frame  (see ni), as an
	       integer.	Should be multiplied by	tbi  to	 compute  presentation
	       time.  Printed  as  (2^63  -  1 = 9223372036854775807) when not
	       available.

	   t   Presentation time of the	frame or packet, as a decimal  number.
	       Equal to	pts multiplied by tb.

	   ti  Presentation  time  of  the  input frame	(see ni), as a decimal
	       number. Equal to	ptsi multiplied	by tbi.	Printed	 as  inf  when
	       not available.

	   dts (packet)
	       Decoding	 timestamp  of	the  packet,  as an integer. Should be
	       multiplied by the timebase to compute presentation time.

	   dt (packet)
	       Decoding	time of	the frame or  packet,  as  a  decimal  number.
	       Equal to	dts multiplied by tb.

	   sn (frame,audio)
	       Number of audio samples sent to the encoder so far.

	   samp	(frame,audio)
	       Number of audio samples in the frame.

	   size	(packet)
	       Size of the encoded packet in bytes.

	   br (packet)
	       Current bitrate in bits per second. Post-encoding only.

	   abr (packet)
	       Average	bitrate	 for  the  whole  stream  so  far, in bits per
	       second, -1 if it	cannot be  determined  at  this	 point.	 Post-
	       encoding	only.

	   Directives	tagged	 with	packet	 may   only   be   used	  with
	   -stats_enc_post_fmt and -stats_mux_pre_fmt.

	   Directives	tagged	 with	frame	may   only   be	  used	  with
	   -stats_enc_pre_fmt.

	   Directives tagged with audio	may only be used with audio streams.

	   The default format strings are:

	   pre-encoding
	       {fidx} {sidx} {n} {t}

	   post-encoding
	       {fidx} {sidx} {n} {t}

	   In  the  future,  new  items	may be added to	the end	of the default
	   formatting strings. Users who depend	on the format staying  exactly
	   the same, should prescribe it manually.

	   Note	 that  stats  for different streams written into the same file
	   may have different formats.

   Preset files
       A preset	file contains a	sequence of option=value pairs,	one  for  each
       line,  specifying  a  sequence  of  options  which  would be awkward to
       specify on the  command	line.  Lines  starting	with  the  hash	 ('#')
       character  are  ignored	and  are  used	to provide comments. Check the
       presets directory in the	FFmpeg source tree for examples.

       There are two types of preset files: ffpreset and avpreset files.

       ffpreset	files

       ffpreset	files are specified  with  the	"vpre",	 "apre",  "spre",  and
       "fpre"  options.	 The  "fpre"  option  takes the	filename of the	preset
       instead of a preset name	as input and can  be  used  for	 any  kind  of
       codec.  For  the	 "vpre",  "apre",  and	"spre"	options,  the  options
       specified in a preset file are applied to the currently selected	 codec
       of the same type	as the preset option.

       The  argument  passed  to the "vpre", "apre", and "spre"	preset options
       identifies the preset file to use according to the following rules:

       First ffmpeg searches for a file	named arg.ffpreset in the  directories
       $FFMPEG_DATADIR (if set), and $HOME/.ffmpeg, and	in the datadir defined
       at  configuration  time (usually	PREFIX/share/ffmpeg) or	in a ffpresets
       folder along the	executable on win32, in	that order.  For  example,  if
       the   argument	is   "libvpx-1080p",  it  will	search	for  the  file
       libvpx-1080p.ffpreset.

       If no such file is found, then ffmpeg will  search  for	a  file	 named
       codec_name-arg.ffpreset	 in  the  above-mentioned  directories,	 where
       codec_name is the name of the codec to which the	 preset	 file  options
       will  be	 applied.  For	example,  if  you  select the video codec with
       "-vcodec	libvpx"	and use	"-vpre 1080p", then it	will  search  for  the
       file libvpx-1080p.ffpreset.

       avpreset	files

       avpreset	 files	are specified with the "pre" option. They work similar
       to ffpreset files, but  they  only  allow  encoder-  specific  options.
       Therefore, an option=value pair specifying an encoder cannot be used.

       When the	"pre" option is	specified, ffmpeg will look for	files with the
       suffix  .avpreset  in  the  directories	$AVCONV_DATADIR	 (if set), and
       $HOME/.avconv,  and  in	the  datadir  defined  at  configuration  time
       (usually	PREFIX/share/ffmpeg), in that order.

       First  ffmpeg  searches for a file named	codec_name-arg.avpreset	in the
       above-mentioned directories, where codec_name is	the name of the	 codec
       to  which  the preset file options will be applied. For example,	if you
       select the video	codec with "-vcodec libvpx" and	use "-pre 1080p", then
       it will search for the file libvpx-1080p.avpreset.

       If no such file is found, then ffmpeg will  search  for	a  file	 named
       arg.avpreset in the same	directories.

   vstats file format
       The  "-vstats"  and  "-vstats_file" options enable generation of	a file
       containing statistics about the generated video outputs.

       The  "-vstats_version"  option  controls	 the  format  version  of  the
       generated file.

       With version 1 the format is:

	       frame= <FRAME> q= <FRAME_QUALITY> PSNR= <PSNR> f_size= <FRAME_SIZE> s_size= <STREAM_SIZE>kB time= <TIMESTAMP> br= <BITRATE>kbits/s avg_br= <AVERAGE_BITRATE>kbits/s

       With version 2 the format is:

	       out= <OUT_FILE_INDEX> st= <OUT_FILE_STREAM_INDEX> frame=	<FRAME_NUMBER> q= <FRAME_QUALITY>f PSNR= <PSNR>	f_size=	<FRAME_SIZE> s_size= <STREAM_SIZE>kB time= <TIMESTAMP> br= <BITRATE>kbits/s avg_br= <AVERAGE_BITRATE>kbits/s

       The value corresponding to each key is described	below:

       avg_br
	   average bitrate expressed in	Kbits/s

       br  bitrate expressed in	Kbits/s

       frame
	   number of encoded frame

       out out file index

       PSNR
	   Peak	Signal to Noise	Ratio

       q   quality of the frame

       f_size
	   encoded packet size expressed as number of bytes

       s_size
	   stream size expressed in KiB

       st  out file stream index

       time
	   time	of the packet

       type
	   picture type

       See also	the -stats_enc options for an alternative way to show encoding
       statistics.

EXAMPLES
   Video and Audio grabbing
       If  you	specify	the input format and device then ffmpeg	can grab video
       and audio directly.

	       ffmpeg -f oss -i	/dev/dsp -f video4linux2 -i /dev/video0	/tmp/out.mpg

       Or with an ALSA audio source (mono input, card id 1) instead of OSS:

	       ffmpeg -f alsa -ac 1 -i hw:1 -f video4linux2 -i /dev/video0 /tmp/out.mpg

       Note that you must activate the right video source and  channel	before
       launching     ffmpeg	with	 any	 TV	viewer	   such	    as
       <http://linux.bytesex.org/xawtv/> by Gerd Knorr.	You also have  to  set
       the audio recording levels correctly with a standard mixer.

   X11 grabbing
       Grab the	X11 display with ffmpeg	via

	       ffmpeg -f x11grab -video_size cif -framerate 25 -i :0.0 /tmp/out.mpg

       0.0  is	display.screen	number of your X11 server, same	as the DISPLAY
       environment variable.

	       ffmpeg -f x11grab -video_size cif -framerate 25 -i :0.0+10,20 /tmp/out.mpg

       0.0 is display.screen number of your X11	server,	same  as  the  DISPLAY
       environment  variable.  10  is the x-offset and 20 the y-offset for the
       grabbing.

   Video and Audio file	format conversion
       Any supported file format and protocol can serve	as input to ffmpeg:

       Examples:

       o   You can use YUV files as input:

		   ffmpeg -i /tmp/test%d.Y /tmp/out.mpg

	   It will use the files:

		   /tmp/test0.Y, /tmp/test0.U, /tmp/test0.V,
		   /tmp/test1.Y, /tmp/test1.U, /tmp/test1.V, etc...

	   The Y files use twice the resolution	of the U and V files. They are
	   raw files, without header. They can	be  generated  by  all	decent
	   video  decoders. You	must specify the size of the image with	the -s
	   option if ffmpeg cannot guess it.

       o   You can input from a	raw YUV420P file:

		   ffmpeg -i /tmp/test.yuv /tmp/out.avi

	   test.yuv is a file containing raw YUV planar	data.  Each  frame  is
	   composed  of	 the  Y	 plane	followed by the	U and V	planes at half
	   vertical and	horizontal resolution.

       o   You can output to a raw YUV420P file:

		   ffmpeg -i mydivx.avi	hugefile.yuv

       o   You can set several input files and output files:

		   ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav	-s 640x480 -i /tmp/a.yuv /tmp/a.mpg

	   Converts the	audio file a.wav and the raw YUV video file  a.yuv  to
	   MPEG	file a.mpg.

       o   You can also	do audio and video conversions at the same time:

		   ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav	-ar 22050 /tmp/a.mp2

	   Converts a.wav to MPEG audio	at 22050 Hz sample rate.

       o   You	can  encode  to	 several formats at the	same time and define a
	   mapping from	input stream to	output streams:

		   ffmpeg -i /tmp/a.wav	-map 0:a -b:a 64k /tmp/a.mp2 -map 0:a -b:a 128k	/tmp/b.mp2

	   Converts a.wav to a.mp2 at 64 kbits and  to	b.mp2  at  128	kbits.
	   '-map  file:index'  specifies  which	 input stream is used for each
	   output stream, in the order of the definition of output streams.

       o   You can transcode decrypted VOBs:

		   ffmpeg -i snatch_1.vob -f avi -c:v mpeg4 -b:v 800k -g 300 -bf 2 -c:a	libmp3lame -b:a	128k snatch.avi

	   This	is a typical DVD ripping example; the input is a VOB file, the
	   output an AVI file with MPEG-4 video	and MP3	audio.	Note  that  in
	   this	 command  we  use  B-frames  so	 the  MPEG-4  stream  is DivX5
	   compatible, and GOP size is 300 which means one intra  frame	 every
	   10  seconds for 29.97fps input video. Furthermore, the audio	stream
	   is MP3-encoded so you  need	to  enable  LAME  support  by  passing
	   "--enable-libmp3lame"  to  configure.   The mapping is particularly
	   useful for DVD transcoding to get the desired audio language.

	   NOTE: To see	the supported input formats, use "ffmpeg -demuxers".

       o   You can extract images from a video,	or create a  video  from  many
	   images:

	   For extracting images from a	video:

		   ffmpeg -i foo.avi -r	1 -s WxH -f image2 foo-%03d.jpeg

	   This	 will  extract	one  video frame per second from the video and
	   will	output them in files named  foo-001.jpeg,  foo-002.jpeg,  etc.
	   Images will be rescaled to fit the new WxH values.

	   If you want to extract just a limited number	of frames, you can use
	   the	above  command	in  combination	 with  the "-frames:v" or "-t"
	   option, or in combination with  -ss	to  start  extracting  from  a
	   certain point in time.

	   For creating	a video	from many images:

		   ffmpeg -f image2 -framerate 12 -i foo-%03d.jpeg -s WxH foo.avi

	   The	syntax	"foo-%03d.jpeg"	 specifies  to	use  a	decimal	number
	   composed of three digits padded with	zeroes to express the sequence
	   number. It is the same syntax supported by the C  printf  function,
	   but only formats accepting a	normal integer are suitable.

	   When	importing an image sequence, -i	also supports expanding	shell-
	   like	 wildcard  patterns  (globbing)	 internally,  by selecting the
	   image2-specific "-pattern_type glob"	option.

	   For example,	for creating a video from filenames matching the  glob
	   pattern "foo-*.jpeg":

		   ffmpeg -f image2 -pattern_type glob -framerate 12 -i	'foo-*.jpeg' -s	WxH foo.avi

       o   You can put many streams of the same	type in	the output:

		   ffmpeg -i test1.avi -i test2.avi -map 1:1 -map 1:0 -map 0:1 -map 0:0	-c copy	-y test12.nut

	   The	resulting  output  file	test12.nut will	contain	the first four
	   streams from	the input files	in reverse order.

       o   To force CBR	video output:

		   ffmpeg -i myfile.avi	-b 4000k -minrate 4000k	-maxrate 4000k -bufsize	1835k out.m2v

       o   The four options lmin, lmax,	mblmin and mblmax use 'lambda'	units,
	   but	you  may use the QP2LAMBDA constant to easily convert from 'q'
	   units:

		   ffmpeg -i src.ext -lmax 21*QP2LAMBDA	dst.ext

SEE ALSO
       ffmpeg-all(1),	   ffplay(1),	    ffprobe(1),	      ffmpeg-utils(1),
       ffmpeg-scaler(1),	 ffmpeg-resampler(1),	     ffmpeg-codecs(1),
       ffmpeg-bitstream-filters(1),   ffmpeg-formats(1),    ffmpeg-devices(1),
       ffmpeg-protocols(1), ffmpeg-filters(1)

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(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | DETAILED DESCRIPTION | STREAM SELECTION | OPTIONS | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | AUTHORS

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