This is probably a simple question. I couldn't find another question that worked with my particular code. The code below resizes images to 320x180 but when it goes to replace it ask me to type Y/N.
for %f in ("*.jpg") do (ffmpeg -i "%f" -filter:v scale="320:180:force_original_aspect_ratio=increase,crop=320:180" "%f")
I tried to add the -Y to automatically select yes, but it was not working out. Any idea how to auto-overwrite with this code?
Related
I've been trying to convert multiple videos into image stacks using ffmpeg. I would like to convert multiple videos at once, and export all the images from one video into a new folder, named after the video.
I've found the following code from a previous question, but I can't get it to work on my computer (I'm using a mac).
#echo off for %%i in (*.mp4) do (if not exist "%%~ni\" MD "%%~ni" ffmpeg -i "%%i" -vf fps=1/1800 "%%~ni\%%~ni_%%d.jpeg")
I keep getting the error
parse error near %%i`
I think this is probably a syntax error, but I'm relatively new to using ffmpeg and working in the terminal.
I tried searching everywhere for a possible solution but I really can't find it. Hope someone can help me out here.
I have written a batch file to use FFMPEG to compress and sharpen JPGs in a folder.
FOR %%a in (*.jpg) DO (ffmpeg -i "%%a" -q:v 8 -vf unsharp=5:5:1.0:5:5:0.0 "2022 01 22 %%~na".jpg)
PAUSE
The new file comes out smaller in size, but is missing all the EXIF information that the original photo has.
I tried to add in the command "-metadata" but apparently it works for MP4 only. I have an existing solution with imageMagick but I'm hoping to solve this via FFMPEG. or is there a way to integrate exiftool into the batch file?
Thank you and I really appreciate any help here.
I have been doing some work remastering some videos by converting them to image sequences, editing them, then converting them back to videos. To do the last step, I have been just using the command prompt with ffmpeg. My goal is to create a batch file that I can just put into the folder with my image sequence and run it rather than needing to do it through the command prompt manually.
Here is the command I've been running:
"C:\Program Files (x86)\ffmpeg\bin\ffmpeg.exe" -framerate 23.97 -i "%06d.png" -c:v copy "B:\output.mkv"
ffmpeg is located on my C drive, the image sequences are on my Z drive, but I generally move to that folder to run the command, and the images are always named with 6 digits (000000.png-######.png). The output file is created on the B drive.
I assumed that I could just add that command to a .bat file
"C:\Program Files (x86)\RipBot264v1.25.1\Tools\ffmpeg\bin\ffmpeg.exe" -framerate 23.97 -i "%06d.png" -c:v copy "B:\output.mkv"
pause
but I have not been able to get it to work. When I try to run it, I get an error that seems to be related to the name of the batch file itself:
Z:\S09E19"Z:\S09E19_Output.bat6d.png -c:v copy B:\output.mkv: Invalid argument
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated.
I have an mp4 which I want to convert from color to black and white using the terminal.
How?
EDIT: My question is NOT a duplicate because I want to do this with an mp4 (video, not image).
If you install ffmpeg (cross-platform video converter), you can do it with a one line command by filtering the saturation to 0.
ffmpeg -i <inputfile> -vf hue=s=0 -acodec copy <outputfile>
Maybe overkill but GStreamer could probably achieve that. It's mainly for streaming media but you can use it to manipulate local files also.
https://gstreamer.freedesktop.org/
It can either be executed as a command taking your mp4 as argument along with a long series of other arguments directly from the terminal or the framework can be imported in a project. Takes some time to get the hang of it tho and it's probably an easier way.
I found this screenshot which shows that you can add a cover image to an mkv file in a way that it is displayed as the icon of the file in the Windows explorer using Shark007+icaros.
But these tools are messing with the system in a really bad way. A lot of people are having problems with it and I too very much regret that I've installed it. I'm really glad I got my Windows to boot again...
Anyway, how could I programmatically add a cover image to an mkv file?
And would I need to change something in the registry to make Windows display them?
I'm not neccessarely looking for code, I'm more looking for something like the format the cover needs to have and the byte at which I have to inject/insert/attach the image file and maybe a registry entry that would cause the tagged images to be displayed etc.
You can use the FFmpeg multimedia framework to attach an image as MKV metadata. More Windows builds can be found at Zeranoe.
Example CLI usage:
ffmpeg -i input.mkv -c copy -attach image.jpg -metadata:s:t \
mimetype=image/jpeg output.mkv
-c copy copy all streams in the source file without re-encoding
-attach image.jpg attach a JPEG image
-metadata:s:t mimetype=image/jpeg set the attachement MIME type
On *nix the same can be accomplished with MKVToolNix.
Ubuntu demo:
Programmatic approach:
use the ffmpeg C libraries to attach or replace the cover art
write a custom Shell Extension to read the MKV format and display the image attachement as thumbnail.