Branch | Version | State | Compiler | Library | Build State |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
master | 2.8 | testing | gcc 10.2.1 | FFmpeg 4.3.2-0+deb11u2 | |
master | 2.8 | testing | clang 11.0.1 | FFmpeg 4.3.2-0+deb11u2 |
New in in 2.9 (2021-12-XX):
- Feature: Issue #97: Added options to chose different codecs. The audio codec can be selected with --audiocodec, for videos use --videocodec.
- Feature: Issue #109: Allow user defined file extensions for source files. By default, only standard extensions are accepted, i.e., mp4, ts, avi etc. Arbitrary file extensions can be defined now, e.g. using --extensions=xxx,abc,yxz,aaa to also convert files ending with .xxx, .abc and so on.
New in in 2.8 (2021-11-29):
- Bugfix: Issue #102: Not all SQL queries where case sensitive, causing cache confusion. Several database entries were created, but only one was updated. Made all queries case sensitive.
- Bugfix: Issue #91: Fixed HLS problems with cache causing garbled videos and hick-ups in audio.
- Enhancement: Issue #103: If requested HLS segment is less than X (adjustable) seconds away, discard seek request. Segment would be available very soon anyway, and that seek makes a re-transcode necessary. Can be set with --min_seek_time_diff. Defaults to 30 seconds.
- Feature: Issue #105: Added Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC) support. Activate with --desttype=FLAC.
- Feature: Issue #101: Sample format for audio files can be selected via command line with --audiosamplefmt. Possible values are 0 to use the predefined setting, 8, 16, 32, 64 for integer format, F16, F32, F64 for floating point. Not all formats are supported by all destination types, selecting an invalid format will be reported as error and a list of values printed. Defaults to 0 (Use same as source or the predefined format of the destination if source format is not possible).
- DASH support is on my list, but the format is complicated and I currently do no have the time for that.
- Currently I am preparing a Windows version, but this is going to take some time.
- Any ideas or wishes? Create an issue and let me know. Some great features started this way!
See HISTORY for details.
Find a rather extensive explanation in the INSTALL file.
Web site: https://nschlia.github.io/ffmpegfs/
FFmpegfs is a read-only FUSE filesystem which transcodes between audio and video formats on the fly when opened and read.
Currently supported output formats:
Format | Description | Video | Audio |
---|---|---|---|
AIFF | Audio Interchange File Format | PCM 16 bit BE | |
ALAC | Apple Lossless Audio Codec | ALAC | |
BMP | Video to frameset | BMP | |
FLAC | Free Lossless Audio | FLAC | |
HLS | HTTP Live Streaming | H264 | AAC |
JPG | Video to frameset | JPEG | |
MOV | QuickTime File Format | H264 | AAC |
MP3 | MPEG-2 Audio Layer III | MP3 | |
MP4 | MPEG-4 | H264 | AAC |
OGG | Theora | Vorbis | |
Opus | Opus | ||
PNG | Video to frameset | PNG | |
ProRes | Apple ProRes | ProRes | PCM 16 bit LE |
TS | MPEG Transport Stream | H264 | AAC |
WAV | Waveform Audio File Format | PCM 16 bit LE | |
WebM | VP9 | Opus |
This can let you use a multi media file collection with software and/or hardware which only understands one of the supported output formats, or transcode files through simple drag-and-drop in a file browser.
For live streaming select WebM or MP4 for best results. If video transcoding is not required MP3 will also do, but WebM and MP4 create better results. The OGG encoder is not fast enough for real-time recoding files.
When a destination JPG, PNG or BMP is chosen, all frames of a video source file will be presented in a virtual directory named after the source file. Audio will not be available.
Selecting HLS creates a directory with TS segments together with a M3U playlist (index_0_av.m3u8 and master.m3u8). There is also a hls.html that can be opened in a browser to play the segments.
Please note that the files must be on a web server because restrictions prevent most browsers from opening the files from disk. See FIXING PROBLEMS for details.
Tested with:
Distribution | FFmpeg Version | Remarks | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Daily build | N-99880-g8fbcc546b8 | OK | |
Debian 9 Stretch | 3.2.8-1~deb9u1 | OK | |
Debian 10 Buster | 4.1.6-1~deb10u1 | OK | |
Debian 11 Bullseye | 4.3.2-0+deb11u2 | OK | |
Raspbian 10 Buster | 4.1.6-1~deb10u1+rpt1 | OK | |
Raspbian 11 Bullseye | 4.3.2-0+rpt3+deb11u2 | OK | |
Ubuntu 16.04.3 LTS | .8.11-0ubuntu0.16.04.1 | OK | |
Ubuntu 17.10 | 3.3.4-2 | OK | |
Ubuntu 20.04 | 4.2.2-1ubuntu1 | OK | |
Suse 42 | 3.3.4 | See notes below | not OK |
Red Hat 7 | FFmpeg must be compiled from sources | OK | |
Funtoo 7.3.1 | 3.4.1 | FFmpeg needs to be installed with correct "USE flags", see install | OK |
Suse does not provide proprietary formats like AAC and H264, thus the distribution FFmpeg is crippled. FFmpegfs will not be able to encode to H264 and AAC. End of story.
See https://en.opensuse.org/Restricted_formats.
*Tips on other OSs and distributions like Mac or other nixes are welcome.
Mount your file system like this:
ffmpegfs [--audiobitrate bitrate] [--videobitrate bitrate] musicdir mountpoint [-o fuse_options]
For example, to run FFmpegfs as daemon and encode to MPEG-4:
ffmpegfs --audiobitrate=256K --videobitrate=1.5M /mnt/music /mnt/ffmpegfs -o allow_other,ro,desttype=mp4
This will run FFmpegfs in the foreground and print the log output to the screen:
ffmpegfs -f --log_stderr --audiobitrate=256K --videobitrate=1.5M --audiobitrate=256K --videobitrate=1.5M /mnt/music /mnt/ffmpegfs -o allow_other,ro,desttype=mp4
In recent versions of FUSE the same can be achieved with the following entry in /etc/fstab
:
ffmpegfs#/mnt/music /mnt/ffmpegfs fuse allow_other,ro,audiobitrate=256K,videobitrate=2000000,desttype=mp4 0 0
Another (more modern) form of this command:
/mnt/music /mnt/ffmpegfs fuse.ffmpegfs allow_other,ro,audiobitrate=256K,videobitrate=2000000,desttype=mp4 0 0
At this point files like /mnt/music/**.flac
and /mnt/music/**.ogg
will show up as /mnt/ffmpegfs/**.mp4
.
Audio bitrates will be reduced to 256 KBit, video to 1.5 MBit. If the source bitrate is less it will not be scaled up but rather left at the lower value.
Note that the "allow_other" option by default can only be used by root. You must either run FFmpegfs as root or better add a "user_allow_other" key to /etc/fuse.conf.
"allow_other" is required to allow any user access to the mount, by default this is only possible for the user who launched FFmpegfs.
Examples:
ffmpegfs -f $HOME/test/in $HOME/test/out --log_stderr --log_maxlevel=DEBUG -o allow_other,ro,desttype=mp4,cachepath=$HOME/test/cache
Run FFmpegfs transcoding files from /test/in to /test/out, logging up to a chatty TRACE level to stderr. The cache resides in test/cache. All directories are under the current user's home directory.
ffmpegfs -f $HOME/test/in $HOME/test/out --log_stderr --log_maxlevel=DEBUG -o allow_other,ro,desttype=mp4,cachepath=$HOME/test/cache,videowidth=640
Same as above, but also limit video with to 640 pixels. Larger videos will be scaled down, preserving the aspect ratio. Smaller videos will not be scaled up.
ffmpegfs -f $HOME/test/in $HOME/test/out --log_stderr --log_maxlevel=DEBUG -o allow_other,ro,desttype=mp4,cachepath=$HOME/test/cache,deinterlace
Enable deinterlacing for enhanced image quality.
The new hardware acceleration feature depends heavily on the hardware used. As this is a personal project, I cannot go, buy and test all possible devices. So I'll have to rely on you to report your issues so we can iron them out. Even different hardware supporting the same API may act different. Sometimes the format range is not the same, sometimes subfeatures are missing and so on.
Acceleration is done by specialised graphics adapters, the FFmpeg API can use several types using a range of APIs. As of today even cheapy on board chips can do hardware acceleration.
Here is an incomplete list.
Hardware acceleration using hardware buffered frames:
- VAAPI: Intel, AMD (Decoders: H.264, MPEG-2, MPEG-4 part 2, VC-1. H.265, H.265 10-bit on recent devices. Encoder: H.264, H.265, MPJEPG, MPEG-2, VP8/9, MPEG-4 part 2 can probably be enabled.)
- VDPAU: Nividia, AMD (H.264, MPEG-1/2/4 and VC-1)
- CUDA: Compute Unified Device Architecture (Decoders: VP9, H.264, MPEG-2, MPEG-4. Encoding: H.264, H.265), see https://developer.nvidia.com/ffmpeg and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUDA
- QSV: QuickSync, see https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Hardware/QuickSync
- OPENCL: Open Standard for Parallel Programming of Heterogeneous Systems, see https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/HWAccelIntro#OpenCL
- VULKAN: Low-overhead, cross-platform 3D graphics and computing API, requires Libavutil >= 56.30.100, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulkan_(API)
These use software frames:
- v4l2m2m: Intel (Encoders: H.263, H.264, H.265, MPEG-4, VP8). Decoders: H.263, H.264, H.265, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, VC-1, VP8, VP9.)
- OpenMAX: Encoding on Raspberry (H.264, MPEG-4. Requires key to unlock.)
- MMAL: Decoding on Raspberry (H.264, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, VC-1. Requires key to unlock.)
More details see: https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/HWAccelIntro
These APIs are implemented and tested. VAAPI mostly targets at Intel Hardware, but there are other hardware vendors that offer support now. MMAL and OpenMAX is supported by Raspberry PI boards.
API | Decode | Encode | Description | Details see |
---|---|---|---|---|
VAAPI | x | x | Video Acceleration API (VA-API), formerly Intel | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_Acceleration_API https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Hardware/VAAPI |
MMAL | x | Multimedia Abstraction Layer by Broadcom | https://github.com/techyian/MMALSharp/wiki/What-is-MMAL%3F http://www.jvcref.com/files/PI/documentation/html/ |
|
OMX | x | OpenMAX (Open Media Acceleration) | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenMAX |
System | CPU | GPU | APIs |
---|---|---|---|
Debian 10 | Intel Core i5-6500 CPU @ 3.20GHz | Intel HD Graphics 530 (rev 06) | VAAPI |
Debian 11 | Intel Core i5-8250U CPU @ 1.60GHz | Intel UHD Graphics 620 (rev 07) | VAAPI |
Debian 11 | Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-1065G7 CPU @ 1.30GHz | NVIDIA GP108M, GeForce MX330 | VAAPI |
Raspbian 10 Raspberry Pi 2 Model B Rev 1.1 Raspberry Pi 3 Model B Plus Rev 1.3 |
ARMv7 Processor rev 5 (v7l) ARMv7 Processor rev 4 (v7l) |
OpenMAX/MMAL |
There are several more APIs that could be added. Currently this is not possible due to lack of hardware.
API | Decode | Encode | Notes | Details see |
---|---|---|---|---|
CUDA | Compute Unified Device Architecture | https://docs.nvidia.com/cuda/cuda-installation-guide-linux/index.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUDA https://developer.nvidia.com/ffmpeg |
||
OPENCL | Open Standard for Parallel Programming of Heterogeneous Systems | https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/HWAccelIntro#OpenCL | ||
VDPAU | Video Decode and Presentation API for Unix | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VDPAU | ||
QSV | QuickSync | https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Hardware/QuickSync | ||
V4L2M2M | v4l2 mem to mem (Video4linux) | |||
VULKAN | Low-overhead, cross-platform 3D graphics and computing API, requires Libavutil >= 56.30.100 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulkan_(API) |
This version has been tested with VAAPI (Debian) and OpenMAX (Raspberry). It may be possible that other APIs work, but this has not been confirmed, yet.
To enable hardware support, use these parameters respectively (of course use only one):
-hwaccel_enc=VAAPI
-hwaccel_enc=OMX
If your system supports VAAPI:
- It could be possible that the rendering device on you system goes by a different name than the default "/dev/dri/renderD128". You can use the --hwaccel_enc_device parameter to set.
- Depending on what your renderer supports, setting a bitrate will fail. On my test system, for example, CQG (Constant Quantisation parameter) is the only valid rendering control mode. The driver ignores bitrate settings and accepts the qp option only.
As found in libavcodec/vaapi_encode.c:
Rate control mode selection:
- If the user has set a mode explicitly with the rc_mode option, use it and fail if it is not available.
- If an explicit QP option has been set, use CQP.
- If the codec is CQ-only, use CQP.
- If the QSCALE avcodec option is set, use CQP.
- If bitrate and quality are both set, try QVBR.
- If quality is set, try ICQ, then CQP.
- If bitrate and maxrate are set and have the same value, try CBR.
- If a bitrate is set, try AVBR, then VBR, then CBR.
- If no bitrate is set, try ICQ, then CQP.
At the moment this is hardwired in code. None of these values can be controlled now by command line. This is planned of course, but not implemented in the current version yet.
This version has been tested with VAAPI (Debian) and MMAL (Raspberry). It may be possible that other APIs work, but this has not been confirmed, yet.
To enable hardware support, use these parameters respectively (of course use only one):
-hwaccel_dec=VAAPI
-hwaccel_dec=MMAL
If your system supports VAAPI:
- It could be possible that the rendering device on you system goes by a different name than the default "/dev/dri/renderD128". You can use the --hwaccel_enc_device parameter to set.
On slow machines like the Raspberry this should give an extra kick and also relieve the CPU from load. On faster machines this impact may be smaller, yet noticeable.
The decoding part is a bit tricky, if encoding is set set to hardware, this hardware is there and capable of encoding, it will work. If decoding in hardware is possible depends on the source file, thus the file needs to be checked first and then decided if hardware acceleration can be used or fallback to software is required. FFmpeg requires that to be set via command line, but FFmpegfs must be able to decide that automatically.
Doing both de- and encoding in hardware can make costly transfers of frames between software and hardware memory unneccessary.
It is not clear, at the moment, if it is possible to keep the frames in hardware as FFmpegfs does some processing with the frames (for example, rescaling or deinterlacing) which probably cannot be done without transferring buffers from hardware to software memory and vice versa. We'll see.
Selecting a target bitrate turns out to be a bit tricky, see above. I'll have to work out a way to reach the desired bitrate in any case (no matter if the hardware supports CQP, VBR, CBR, ICQ or AVBR).
On the other hand everything seems to work and there are no show stoppers in sight. Sheesh, wiping the sweat off my chin :)
FFmpegfs supports HLS (HTTP Live Streaming). FFmpegfs will create transport stream (ts) segments and the required m3u8 playlists. For your convenience it will also offer a virtual test.html file that can playback the segments using the hls.js library (see https://github.com/video-dev/hls.js/).
To use the new HLS feature invoke FFmpegfs with:
ffmpegfs -f $HOME/test/in $HOME/test/out -o allow_other,ro,desttype=hls
Please note that this will only work over http, because most browsers refuse to load multimedia files from the local file system, so you need to publish the directory on a web server. Security restrictions prevent direct playback from disk. Simply navigate to the directory and open test.html.
Cue sheets, or cue sheet files, were first introduced for the CDRWIN CD/DVD burning software. Basically they are used to define a CD/DVD track layout. Today they are supported by a wide range of optical disc authoring applications, and moreover, media players.
When a media file is accompanied by a cue sheet, its contents are read and a virtual directory with separate tracks is created. The cue sheet file must have the same name, but the extension ".cue" instead. It can also be embedded into the media file.
The directory is named after the source media, with an additional ".tracks" extension. If several media files with different extensions exist, for example, different formats, several ".tracks" directories will be visible.
Example:
myfile.mp4
myfile.ogv
myfile.cue
If destination type is TS, the following files and directories will appear:
myfile.mp4
myfile.mp4.ts
myfile.ogv
myfile.ogv.ts
myfile.cue
myfile.mp4.tracks/
myfile.ogv.tracks/
Tracks defined in the cue sheet will show up in the *.tracks sub directories.
Some new codec combinations are now possible (the default codecs in bold):
Formats | Audio Codecs | Video Codecs |
---|---|---|
MP4 | AAC, MP3 | H264, H265, MPEG1, MPEG2 |
WebM | OPUS, VORBIS | VP9, VP8, AV1 |
MOV | AAC, AC3, MP3 | H264, H265, MPEG1, MPEG2 |
TS, HLS | AAC, AC3, MP3 | H264, H265, MPEG1, MPEG2 |
The audio codec can be selected with --audiocodec, for videos use --videocodec. Without these parameters, FFmpegfs will use the codecs as before (no change). Please note that hardware acceleration might not work, e.g., my hardware encoder supports H264 but not H265. So even though H265 creates much smaller files it takes 10 times longer to transcode.
FFmpegfs can run under Docker. To build a container for FFmpegfs a Dockerfile is provided. Change to the "docker" directory and run
docker build --build-arg -t nschlia/ffmpegfs .
Depending on the machine speed, this will take quite a while. After the command completed, the container can be started with
docker run --rm \
--name=ffmpegfs \
--device /dev/fuse \
--cap-add SYS_ADMIN \
--security-opt apparmor:unconfined \
-v /path/to/source:/src:ro \
-v /path/to/output:/dst:rshared \
nschlia/ffmpegfs \
-f --log_stderr --audiobitrate=256K -o allow_other,ro,desttype=mp3,log_maxlevel=INFO
Of course, /path/to/source must be changed to a directory with multi media files and /path/to/output to where the converted files should be visible. desttype may be changed to MP4 or whatever desired.
"Auto copy" performs intelligent stream copy, for example, if transcoding a transport stream that already represents a H264 video and/or AAC audio stream it is possible to simply repackage it to a mp4 container without recoding.
This is very efficient as it does not require as much computing as de- and encoding does, and it also will not degrade quality as the original file basically stays the same.
The function detects if the target format supports the source codec and simply remuxes the stream even if recoding from one format (for example TS) to another (for example MOV, MP4).
There are three options:
Option | Description |
---|---|
OFF | no auto copy |
LIMIT | only auto copy if target file will not become significantly larger |
ALWAYS | auto copy whenever possible even if the target file becomes larger |
Smart transcoding can create different output formats for video and audio files. For example, video files can be converted to ProRes and audio files to AIFF. Of course, combinations like MP4/MP3 or WebM/WAV are possible but do not make sense as MP4 or WebM work perfectly with audio only content.
To use the new feature, simply specify a video and audio file type, separated by a "+" sign. For example, --desttype=mov+aiff will convert video files to Apple Quicktime MOV and audio only files to AIFF. This can be handy if the results are consumed for example by some Apple Editing software which is very picky about the input format.
Notes
-
The first format must be a video codec, the second must be an audio codec. For example, --desttype=wav+mp4 is invalid, instead it should be --desttype=mp4+wav.
-
Smart transcoding currently simply determines the output format by taking the input format type into account, e.g., an MP3 would be recoded to AIFF, an MP4 to MOV even if the input MP4 does not contain a video stream.
The input format should be scanned for streams and the output selected appropriately: An MP4 with video should be transcoded to MOV, an MP4 with audio only to AIFF. See Issue #86.
To transcode a video to frame images, set the destination type to JPG, PNG or BMP. This will convert videos to virtual folders with one image for each frame.
$ ls /storage/videos
video1.mp4
video2.mov
$ ffmpegfs /storage/videos /mnt/ffmpegfs
$ find /mnt/ffmpegfs
/mnt/ffmpegfs/video1.mp4/00001.png
/mnt/ffmpegfs/video1.mp4/00002.png
...
/mnt/ffmpegfs/video1.mov/00001.png
/mnt/ffmpegfs/video1.mov/00002.png
Apple's ProRes is a so-called intermediate format, intended for post-production editing. It combines highest possible quality while still saving some disk space and not requiring high performance disk systems. On the other hand this means that ProRes encoded videos will become quite large - for example a 60 minute video may require up to 25 GB.
It is not for target audience use, and certainly not suitable for internet streaming.
Also please keep in mind that when using lossy source input formats the quality will not get better, but the files can be fed into software like Final Cut Pro which only accepts a small number of input formats.
The MP4 container has several derivative formats that are not compatible with all target audiences. To successfully feed the resulting files into, for example, MS Edge, the subformat must be different as for Firefox, unfortunately.
The --profile option allows to select the format:
Profile | OS | Target | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
NONE | all | VLC, Windows Media Player etc. | Playback (default) |
FF | Linux, Win10, Android | Firefox | OK: Playback while transcoding |
Win7 | Firefox | OK: Playback while transcoding | |
EDGE | Win10 | MS Edge, IE > 11 | OK: Playback while transcoding |
Win10 Mobile | OK: Playback while transcoding | ||
IE | Win10 | MS IE <= 11 | OK: Playback while transcoding |
Win7 | Must decode first (1) | ||
CHROME | all | Google Chrome | Must decode first (1) |
SAFARI | Win | Apple Safari | Must decode first (1) |
OPERA | All | Opera | Must decode first (1) |
MAXTHON | Win | Maxthon | Must decode first (1) |
(1)
- error message when opened while transcoding
- must start again when file was transcoded
- Plays fine when file comes directly from buffer
This all boils down to the fact than Firefox and Edge are the only browsers that support the necessary extensions to start playback while still transcoding.
In most cases files will not play if not properly optimised.
See TODO for details.
When a file is opened, the decoder and encoder are initialised and the file metadata is read. At this time the final filesize can be determined approximately. This works well for MP3, AIFF or WAV output files, but only fair to good for MP4 or WebM because the actual size heavily depends on the content encoded.
As the file is read, it is transcoded into an internal per-file buffer. This buffer continues to grow while the file is being read until the whole file is transcoded. Once decoded the file is kept in a disk buffer and can be accessed very fast.
Transcoding is done in an extra thread, so if other processes should access the same file they will share the same transcoded data, saving CPU time. If all processes close the file before its end, transcoding will continue for some time. If the file is accessed again before timeout, transcoding will continue, if not it stops and the chunk created so far discarded to save disk space.
Seeking within a file will cause the file to be transcoded up to the seek point (if not already done). This is not usually a problem since most programs will read a file from start to finish. Future enhancements may provide true random seeking (but if this is feasible is yet unclear due to restrictions to positioning inside compressed streams). This already works when HLS streaming is selected. FFmpegfs simply skips to the requested segment.
MP3: ID3 version 2.4 and 1.1 tags are created from the comments in the source file. They are located at the start and end of the file respectively.
MP4: Same applies to meta atoms in MP4 containers.
MP3 target only: A special optimisation is made so that applications which scan for id3v1 tags do not have to wait for the whole file to be transcoded before reading the tag. This dramatically speeds up such applications.
WAV: A pro format WAV header will be created with estimates of the WAV file size. This header will be replaced when the file is finished. It does not seem necessary, though, as most modern players obviously ignore this information and play the file anyway.
A few words to the supported output formats. There is not much to say about the MP3 output as these are regular constant bitrate (CBR) MP3 files with no strings attached. They should play well in any modern player.
MP4 files are special, though, as regular MP4s are not quite suited for live streaming. Reason being that the start block of an MP4 contains a field with the size of the compressed data section. Suffice to say that this field cannot be filled in until the size is known, which means compression must be completed first, a file seek done to the beginning, and the size atom updated.
For a continuous live stream, that size will never be known. For our transcoded files one would have to wait for the whole file to be recoded to get that value. If that was not enough some important pieces of information are located at the end of the file, including meta tags with artist, album, etc. Also, there is only one big data block, a fact that hampers random seek inside the contents without having the complete data section.
Subsequently many applications will go to the end of an MP4 to read important information before going back to the head of the file and start playing. This will break the whole transcode-on-demand idea of FFmpegfs.
To get around the restriction several extensions have been developed, one of which is called "faststart" that relocates the aforementioned meta data from the end to the beginning of the MP4. Additionally, the size field can be left empty (0). isml (smooth live streaming) is another extension.
For direct to stream transcoding several new features in MP4 need to be active (ISMV, faststart, separate_moof/empty_moov to name them) which are not implemented in older versions of FFmpeg (or if available, not working properly).
By default faststart files will be created with an empty size field so that the file can be started to be written out at once instead of encoding it as a whole before this is possible. Encoding it completely would mean it would take some time before playback can start.
The data part is divided into chunks of about 1 second length, each with its own header, thus it is possible to fill in the size fields early enough.
As a draw back not all players support the format, or play it with strange side effects. VLC plays the file, but updates the time display every few seconds only. When streamed over HTML5 video tags, sometimes there will be no total time shown, but that is OK, as long as the file plays. Playback cannot be positioned past the current playback position, only backwards.
But that's the price of starting playback fast.
Due to the nature in which FFmpegfs works, if anything goes wrong, it can only report a general error. That means, when there is a problem accessing a file, copying or opening it, you will get a "Invalid argument" or "Operation not permitted". Not really informative. There is no way to pass the original result code through the file system.
What you will have to do is refer to the syslog, system journal or to the FFmpeg log itself, optionally at a higher verbosity. If you are unable to resolve the problem yourself, feel free to create an issue, stating what you have done and what has happened. Do not forget to add logs (preferably at a higher verbosity) and if possible a description how to recreate the issue. A demo file that causes the error would be helpful as well.
See Building FFmpeg with optimisations
When accessed one a Samba drive, the pending read can lock the whole share, causing Windows Explorer and even KDE Dolphin to freeze. Any access from the same machine to that share is blocked, Even "ls" is not possible and blocks until the data was returned.
Seems others had the same problem:
Adding this to the [global] config in smb.conf fixes that:
oplocks = no
level2 oplocks = no
aio read size = 1
The "aio read size" parameter may be moved to the share config:
aio read size = 1
Some copy tools do not go along very well with dynamically generated files as in Issue #23: Partial transcode of some files.
Under Linux it is best to use (optionally with -r parameter)
cp -uv /path/to/source /path/to/target
This will copy all missing/changed files without missing parts. On the Windows side, Windows Explorer or copy/xcopy work. Tools like Beyond Compare may only copy the predicted size first and not respond to size changes.
Most browser prevent playback of files from disk. You may put them into a website directory, but sometimes even https must be used or playback will be blocked.
To enable disk playback in Firefox:
- Open about:config
- Set security.fileuri.strict_origin_policy to false
If songs do not play to the very end and you are using SAMBA or NFS you're in trouble.
Happens when the files are transcoded on the fly, but never when file comes from cache. This is because the result is never exactly what was predicted.
SAMBA fills files with zeros if the result is smaller, or cuts off the rest if the file ist larger than predicted.
NFS arbitrarily sends the correct file, or one that is cut or padded like SAMBA. This can be repeated as many times as one wants to - once the file is OK, once not.
As of yet there seems to be no way around that. Maybe NFS or SAMBA can be configured to cope with that, but how to is unknown to me.
FFmpegfs uses Git for revision control. You can obtain the full repository with:
git clone https://github.com/nschlia/ffmpegfs.git
FFmpegfs is written in a little bit of C and mostly C++11. It uses the following libraries:
FFmpeg library:
Please note that FFmpegfs is in active development, so the main branch may be unstable (but offer nice gimmicks, though). If you need a stable version please get one (preferrably the latest) release.
Feel free to clone this project and add your own features. If they are interesting for others they might be pushed back into this project. Same applies to bug fixes, if you discover a bug your welcome to fix it!
- Create a windows version
- and more, see TODO
HLS player and demo code see: https://github.com/video-dev/hls.js/
This fork with FFmpeg support is maintained by Norbert Schlia ([email protected]) since 2017 to date.
Based on work by K. Henriksson (from 2008 to 2017) and the original author David Collett (from 2006 to 2008).
Much thanks to them for the original work and giving me a good head start!
This program can be distributed under the terms of the GNU GPL version 3 or later. It can be found online or in the COPYING file.
This and other documentation may be distributed under the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) 1.3 or later with no invariant sections, or alternatively under the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 3 or later. The GFDL can be found online or in the COPYING.DOC file.
FFmpeg is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) version 2.1 or later. However, FFmpeg incorporates several optional parts and optimizations that are covered by the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2 or later. If those parts get used the GPL applies to all of FFmpeg.
See https://www.ffmpeg.org/legal.html for details.
This fork with FFmpeg support copyright (C) 2017-2022 Norbert Schlia ([email protected]).
Based on work Copyright (C) 2006-2008 David Collett, 2008-2013 K. Henriksson.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 3 or later.