How can I automatically convert all MP4 files to FLV with ffmpeg? - ffmpeg

How can I automatically convert all MP4 files to FLV in a specific folder?
ffmpeg -i VID00002.MP4 -ar 44100 test.flv
Is there a way to queue these tasks, assuming that I don't know the file names?
If I need to run any scripts (I'm familiar with Python), how can I do that?

You can do this fairly easy within the terminal, given you have ffmpeg installed. In your terminal, enter the following:
$>cd /your/path/to/videos
$>for i in *.mp4; do ffmpeg -i $i -ar 44100 $i.flv; done
The second command simply iterates through each mp4 file and assigns the filename to '$i'. You then call ffmpeg using $i as the input and output filename. For the output, you simply add the extension, in this case $i.flv. So, if your filename is 'video.mp4', it will output as 'video.mp4.flv'.
Hope this helps.

This will convert and rename the new files using the find and ffmpeg functions and suppressing output questions:
find /mymediapath (\ -name '*.mp4' \) -exec bash -c 'ffmpeg -y -i "$0" -strict -2 "${0/mp4/flv}"' {} \;

Related

Using find / for how do I remove the original file extension for the output file name?

When using find or for to run things on multiple files, how would I make something not keep the file extension?
For example if using ffmpeg on multiple files to convert from DTS to WAV I would run one of the following:
find . -name "*.dts" -exec ffmpeg -i "{}" -c:a pcm_s24le "{}.wav" \;
or
for f in ./*.dts; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -c:a pcm_s24le "$f.wav"; done
Both of these make files that end in .dts.wav rather than just .wav
My goal is to find out what I would add/change to make the "{}.wav" or "$f.wav" not include the .dts part for the output file name. (and several other examples with various extensions)
This happens automatically when using the cli version of flac, the output file automatically removes .wav and has .flac instead, when no output file is specified.
(Ex: flac -8 *.wav would create .flac files next to the .wav files, but they aren't .wav.flac, they're just .flac)
You might want to use GNU parallel for this, e.g.:
find . -name '*.dts' | parallel 'echo ffmpeg -i {} -c:a pcm_s24le {.}.wav'
Remove echo when you want to execute the commands. You can control how many jobs run simultaneously with -j N.
Example
mkdir a b
touch [ab]/infile.dts
Check file-structure:
find a b
Output:
a
a/infile.dts
b
b/infile.dts
Now with parallel:
find a b -name '*.dts' | parallel 'echo ffmpeg -i {} -c:a pcm_s24le {.}.wav'
Output:
ffmpeg -i a/infile.dts -c:a pcm_s24le a/infile.wav
ffmpeg -i b/infile.dts -c:a pcm_s24le b/infile.wav

FFMPEG Multiple task for converting video to image sequence for MacOS [duplicate]

How do you convert an entire directory/folder with ffmpeg via command line or with a batch script?
For Linux and macOS this can be done in one line, using parameter expansion to change the filename extension of the output file:
for i in *.avi; do ffmpeg -i "$i" "${i%.*}.mp4"; done
Previous answer will only create 1 output file called out.mov. To make a separate output file for each old movie, try this.
for i in *.avi;
do name=`echo "$i" | cut -d'.' -f1`
echo "$name"
ffmpeg -i "$i" "${name}.mov"
done
And on Windows:
FOR /F "tokens=*" %G IN ('dir /b *.flac') DO ffmpeg -i "%G" -acodec mp3 "%~nG.mp3"
For Windows:
Here I'm Converting all the (.mp4) files to (.mp3) files.
Just open cmd, goto the desired folder and type the command.
Shortcut: (optional)
1. Goto the folder where your (.mp4) files are present
2. Press Shift and Left click and Choose "Open PowerShell Window Here"
or "Open Command Prompt Window Here"
3. Type "cmd" [NOTE: Skip this step if it directly opens cmd instead of PowerShell]
4. Run the command
for %i in (*.mp4) do ffmpeg -i "%i" "%~ni.mp3"
If you want to put this into a batch file on Windows 10, you need to use %%i.
A one-line bash script would be easy to do - replace *.avi with your filetype:
for i in *.avi; do ffmpeg -i "$i" -qscale 0 "$(basename "$i" .avi)".mov ; done
To convert with subdirectories use e.g.
find . -exec ffmpeg -i {} {}.mp3 \;
#Linux
To convert a bunch, my one liner is this, as example
(.avi to .mkv) in same directory:
for f in *.avi; do ffmpeg -i "${f}" "${f%%.*}.mkv"; done
please observe the double "%%" in the output statement. It gives you not only the first word or the input filename, but everything before the last dot.
For anyone who wants to batch convert anything with ffmpeg but would like to have a convenient Windows interface, I developed this front-end:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/ffmpeg-batch
It adds to ffmpeg a window fashion interface, progress bars and time remaining info, features I always missed when using ffmpeg.
Of course, now PowerShell has come along, specifically designed to make something exactly like this extremely easy.
And, yes, PowerShell is also available on other operating systems other than just Windows, but it comes pre-installed on Windows, so this should be useful to everyone.
First, you'll want to list all of the files within the current directory, so, we'll start off with:
ls
You can also use ls -Recurse if you want to recursively convert all files in subdirectories too.
Then, we'll filter those down to only the type of file we want to convert - e.g. "avi".
ls | Where { $_.Extension -eq ".avi" }
After that, we'll pass that information to FFmpeg through a ForEach.
For FFmpeg's input, we will use the FullName - that's the entire path to the file. And for FFmpeg's output we will use the Name - but replacing the .avi at the end with .mp3. So, it will look something like this:
$_.Name.Replace(".avi", ".mp3")
So, let's put all of that together and this is the result:
ls | Where { $_.Extension -eq ".avi" } | ForEach { ffmpeg -i $_.FullName $_.Name.Replace(".avi", ".mp3") }
That will convert all ".avi" files into ".mp3" files through FFmpeg, just replace the three things in quotes to decide what type of conversion you want, and feel free to add any other arguments to FFmpeg within the ForEach.
You could take this a step further and add Remove-Item to the end to automatically delete the old files.
If ffmpeg isn't in your path, and it's actually in the directory you're currently in, write ./ffmpeg there instead of just ffmpeg.
Hope this helps anyone.
If you have GNU parallel you could convert all .avi files below vid_dir to mp4 in parallel, using all except one of your CPU cores with
find vid_dir -type f -name '*.avi' -not -empty -print0 |
parallel -0 -j -1 ffmpeg -loglevel fatal -i {} {.}.mp4
To convert from/to different formats, change '*.avi' or .mp4 as needed. GNU parallel is listed in most Linux distributions' repositories in a package which is usually called parallel.
Using multiple cores, this is the fastest way, (using parallel):
parallel "ffmpeg -i {1} {1.}.mp4" ::: *.avi
I know this might be redundant but I use this script to batch convert files.
old_extension=$1
new_extension=$2
for i in *."$old_extension";
do ffmpeg -i "$i" "${i%.*}.$new_extension";
done
It takes 2 arguments to make it more flexible :
the extension you want to convert from
the new extension you want to convert to
I create an alias for it but you can also use it manually like this:
sh batch_convert.sh mkv mp4
This would convert all the mkv files into mp4 files.
As you can see it slightly more versatile. As long as ffmpeg can convert it you can specify any two extensions.
The following script works well for me in a Bash on Windows (so it should work just as well on Linux and Mac). It addresses some problems I have had with some other solutions:
Processes files in subfolders
Replaces the source extension with the target extension instead of just appending it
Works with files with multiple spaces and multiple dots in the name
(See this answer for details.)
Can be run when the target file exists, prompting before overwriting
ffmpeg-batch-convert.sh:
sourceExtension=$1 # e.g. "mp3"
targetExtension=$2 # e.g. "wav"
IFS=$'\n'; set -f
for sourceFile in $(find . -iname "*.$sourceExtension")
do
targetFile="${sourceFile%.*}.$targetExtension"
ffmpeg -i "$sourceFile" "$targetFile"
done
unset IFS; set +f
Example call:
$ sh ffmpeg-batch-convert.sh mp3 wav
As a bonus, if you want the source files deleted, you can modify the script like this:
sourceExtension=$1 # e.g. "mp3"
targetExtension=$2 # e.g. "wav"
deleteSourceFile=$3 # "delete" or omitted
IFS=$'\n'; set -f
for sourceFile in $(find . -iname "*.$sourceExtension")
do
targetFile="${sourceFile%.*}.$targetExtension"
ffmpeg -i "$sourceFile" "$targetFile"
if [ "$deleteSourceFile" == "delete" ]; then
if [ -f "$targetFile" ]; then
rm "$sourceFile"
fi
fi
done
unset IFS; set +f
Example call:
$ sh ffmpeg-batch-convert.sh mp3 wav delete
I use this for add subtitle for Tvshows or Movies on Windows.
Just create "subbed" folder and bat file in the video and sub directory.Put code in bat file and run.
for /R %%f in (*.mov,*.mxf,*.mkv,*.webm) do (
ffmpeg.exe -i "%%~f" -i "%%~nf.srt" -map 0:v -map 0:a -map 1:s -metadata:s:a language=eng -metadata:s:s:1 language=tur -c copy ./subbed/"%%~nf.mkv"
)
Getting a bit like code golf here, but since nearly all the answers so far are bash (barring one lonely cmd one), here's a windows cross-platform command that uses powershell (because awesome):
ls *.avi|%{ ffmpeg -i $_ <ffmpeg options here> $_.name.replace($_.extension, ".mp4")}
You can change *.avi to whatever matches your source footage.
Also if you want same convertion in subfolders.
here is the recursive code.
for /R "folder_path" %%f in (*.mov,*.mxf,*.mkv,*.webm) do (
ffmpeg.exe -i "%%~f" "%%~f.mp4"
)
for i in *.flac;
do name=`echo "${i%.*}"`;
echo $name;
ffmpeg -i "${i}" -ab 320k -map_metadata 0 -id3v2_version 3 "${name}".mp3;
done
Batch process flac files into mp3 (safe for file names with spaces) using [1] [2]
windows:
#echo off
for /r %%d in (*.wav) do (
ffmpeg -i "%%~nd%%~xd" -codec:a libmp3lame -c:v copy -qscale:a 2 "%
%~nd.2.mp3"
)
this is variable bitrate of quality 2, you can set it to 0 if you want but unless you have a really good speaker system it's worthless imo
Only this one Worked for me, pls notice that you have to create "newfiles" folder manually where the ffmpeg.exe file is located.
Convert . files to .wav audio
Code:
for %%a in ("*.*") do ffmpeg.exe -i "%%a" "newfiles\%%~na.wav"
pause
i.e if you want to convert all .mp3 files to .wav change ("*.*") to ("*.mp3").
The author of this script is :
https://forum.videohelp.com/threads/356314-How-to-batch-convert-multiplex-any-files-with-ffmpeg
hope it helped 🙏.
For giggles, here's solution in fish-shell:
for i in *.avi; ffmpeg -i "$i" (string split -r -m1 . $i)[1]".mp4"; end
Bash is terrible to me, so under Linux/Mac, I prefer Ruby script:
( find all the files in a folder and then convert it from rmvb/rm format to mp4 format )
# filename: run.rb
Dir['*'].each{ |rm_file|
next if rm_file.split('.').last == 'rb'
command = "ffmpeg -i '#{rm_file}' -c:v h264 -c:a aac '#{rm_file.split('.')[0]}.mp4'"
puts "== command: #{command}"
`#{command}`
}
and you can run it with: ruby run.rb
Alternative approach using fd command (repository):
cd directory
fd -d 1 mp3 -x ffmpeg -i {} {.}.wav
-d means depth
-x means execute
{.} path without file extension
I developed a python package for this case.
https://github.com/developer0hye/BatchedFFmpeg
You can easily install and use it.
pip install batchedffmpeg
batchedffmpeg * -i folder * output_file
This will create mp4 video from all the jpg files from current directory.
echo exec("ffmpeg -framerate 1/5 -i photo%d.jpg -r 25 -pix_fmt yuv420p output.mp4");
I'm using this one-liner in linux to convert files (usually H265) into something I can play on Kodi without issues:
for f in *.mkv; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -c:v libx264 -crf 28 -c:a aac -b:a 128k output.mkv; mv -f output.mkv "$f"; done
This converts to a temporary file and then replaces the original so the names remain the same after conversion.
I needed all the videos to use the same codec for merging purposes
so this conversion is mp4 to mp4
it's in zsh but should easily be convertible to bash
for S (*.mp4) { ffmpeg -i $S -c:v libx264 -r 30 new$S }
If you want a graphical interface to batch process with ffmpegX, try Quick Batcher. It's free and will take your last ffmpegX settings to convert files you drop into it.
Note that you can't drag-drop folders onto Quick Batcher. So select files and then put them through Quick Batcher.
Another simple solution that hasn't been suggested yet would be to use xargs:
ls *.avi | xargs -i -n1 ffmpeg -i {} "{}.mp4"
One minor pitfall is the awkward naming of output files (e.g. input.avi.mp4). A possible workaround for this might be:
ls *.avi | xargs -i -n1 bash -c "i={}; ffmpeg -i {} "\${i%.*}.mp4""
And for Windows, this does not work
FOR /F "tokens=*" %G IN ('dir /b *.flac') DO ffmpeg -i "%G" -acodec mp3 "%~nG.mp3"
even if I do double those %.
I would even suggest:
-acodec ***libmp3lame***
also:
FOR /F "tokens=*" %G IN ('dir /b *.flac') DO ffmpeg -i "%G" -acodec libmp3lame "%~nG.mp3"
This is what I use to batch convert avi to 1280x mp4
FOR /F "tokens=*" %%G IN ('dir /b *.avi') DO "D:\Downloads\ffmpeg.exe" -hide_banner -i "%%G" -threads 8 -acodec mp3 -b:a 128k -ac 2 -strict -2 -c:v libx264 -crf 23 -filter:v "scale=1280:-2,unsharp=5:5:1.0:5:5:0.0" -sws_flags lanczos -b:v 1024k -profile:v main -preset medium -tune film -async 1 -vsync 1 "%%~nG.mp4"
Works well as a cmd file, run it, the loop finds all avi files in that folder.
calls MY (change for yours) ffmpeg, passes input name, the settings are for rescaling up with sharpening. I probs don't need CRF and "-b:v 1024k"...
Output file is input file minus the extension, with mp4 as new ext.

Batch .SRT Rip Using FFMPEG

I have this command using ffmpeg
root#ubuntu-4cpu-8gb-sg-sin1:/home/jaac/torrents/rtorrent/dots# ffmpeg -i Title.NF.WEB-DL.DDP2.0.x264-Ao.mkv -map 0:7 indo16.srt
That will rip 1 sub (Indonesia region)
How to rip it in batch? I have 17 files in dots folder
Thanks
Run these commands:
cd /home/jaac/torrents/rtorrent/dots
for f in *.mkv; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -map 0:s:m:language:ind "${f%.*}.srt"; done
Adapted from How do you convert an entire directory with ffmpeg?
What the -map option is doing: 0:s:m:language:ind is input #0: subtitles:metadata:language:indonesian. Which means it chooses all subtitle streams from the input that have Indonesian language metadata.
If you get error:
Stream map '0:s:m:language:ind' matches no streams.
To ignore this, add a trailing '?' to the map.
You can ignore it. Just a message telling you there is no subtitle stream with Indonesian language metadata in that particular input.
You can use a for loop:
for f in *.mkv; do ffmpeg -i $f -vf subtitles="${f%.mkv}".srt "${f%.mp4}"_sub.mkv; done
Subtitules files must have the same name as videos.
Thanks guys for helping me out.
I use this command to batch rip the subtitle:
#!/bin/bash
cd /home/jaac/torrents/rtorrent/dots || exit
for f in *.mkv; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -map 0:5:s:m:language:id "${f%.*}.srt"; done
I use Shellcheck
Thanks #llogan and #m8factorial

Ubuntu bash script - Searching all folders to run Video Conversion

I've recently gotten my hands on a Google Chromecast and realised that almost none of my current media will work "well" with it (most is mkv with ac3 audio)
I've been able to create a simple bash script to convert all files in a folder... but I have hundreds of folders so I'm looking to make this job recursive so I only need to run it once
Current script
for i in *.mkv; do
avconv -i "$i" -c:v copy -c:a aac -strict experimental "${i/.mkv/.mp4}"
done
What I want to do is add logic to this so that it can search through two sub folders, convert the found file, move the converted file to the root directory and remove the original file
ie
/Movies/convert.script
/Movies/Movie1/this_movie.mkv
/Movies/Movie2/that_movie.mkv
/Movies/Movie3/another_movie.mkv
becomes
/Movies/convert.script
/Movies/this_movie.mp4
/Movies/that_movie.mp4
/Movies/another_movie.mp4
To search through subfolders you can use find
find -name '*.mkv' -exec /path/to/convert-movie.sh {} \;
where /path/to/convert-movie.sh would be
#!/bin/bash
avconv -i "$1" -c:v copy -c:a aac -strict experimental "${1/.mkv/.mp4}"

Issue with overwriting file while using ffmpeg for converting

I'm using ffpmeg to convert all my videos to mp4:
ffmpeg -i InpuFile -vcodec h264 -acodec aac -strict -2 OutputFile.mp4
The problem is, if I'm overwriting the input file, i.e the output and input files are the same:
ffmpeg -i InpuFile -vcodec h264 -acodec aac -strict -2 InpuFile.mp4 -y
or
ffmpeg -i InpuFile -y -vcodec h264 -acodec aac -strict -2 InpuFile.mp4
the new file is not good. He lasts one second and his size is extremely small.
Any ideas?
I want to use this as a script in my server so the overwriting is the most convinient way for me, I prefer that way instead of creating temporary files then replacting the temporary with original.
I had this same (frustrating) problem, you may have noticed that this happens because ffmpeg is writing over the file that it's reading, you are corrupting the source before the process finish... ffmpeg doesn't put the file in some buffer, so you can't do this way, you will have to use a temporary file.
just in case
You cannot overwrite the input file while you are encoding. You must encode to an different output file.
Afterwards, you can replace the original file with the new encoded file.
As others have mentioned, there is no way to do this without creating a temp file. You mentioned that you wanted to compress all your videos, and for it to be convenient. Here is a bash one-liner I used to compress all MP4 & MOV inside a directory:
find * -type f \( -iname \*.mp4 -o -iname \*.mov \) -execdir ffmpeg -i {} -vcodec libx265 -crf 24 temp_{} \; -execdir mv temp_{} {} \;
The -crf param controls the video bitrate. It's value ranges from 18-24, lower value is higher bitrate.
If you just wanted to compress .mp4 for example then you'd change the command to:
find * -type f -iname "*.mp4" -execdir ffmpeg -i {} -vcodec libx265 -crf 24 temp_{} \; -execdir mv temp_{} {} \;
Hope this helps OP, or anyone looking to do something similar.
Neither is too annoying tmp file use. In one line:
input="InpuFile"; ffmpeg -i "$input" -y -vcodec h264 -acodec aac -strict -2 "/tmp/$input";rm "$input"; mv "/tmp/$input" .;

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