ENCODE(1) | General Commands Manual | ENCODE(1) |
encodedv - encode a series of images to a digital video stream
encodedv [ options ] video_pattern [ audio_input ]
encodedv takes a series of images in PPM/PGM/video format and optionally an audio stream and compiles them into a DV-encoded video stream. pattern specifies where the input data is located and may be either - for stdin, or a printf-style pattern taking one numeric argument that gets replaced by the current frame number. Like image%03d.ppm, which gets expanded to image000.ppm, image001.ppm, etc.
1) If you want to stream video frames (using video_pattern = "-") you have to make sure that there is no trailing garbage at the end of the pictures. This is ignored by most image manipulation programs!
2) If you are one of the poor persons with a buggy PCI bus-mastering board be sure to have a backup handy if you want to use video support. Some versions of the VIA board chipsets crash your machine and even your harddisk. Since encodedv uses full resolution capturing it is more likely to trigger these bugs than other programs. If you have a VIA board you definitely want to upgrade to Linux 2.4.3 or higher.
3) The encoded pictures must have the correct resolution. If they don't, you may want to try ppmqscale. The used video format is chosen by picture resolution. Use 720x576 for PAL and 720x480 for NTSC.
4) If you want to speed up things a little bit and you are generating the input pictures automatically you may want to try pgm's instead of ppm's since they are encoded somewhat faster. But keep in mind, that this pgm format is only optimal for PAL since NTSC averages the U and V values somewhat differently.
1 : for sharp DV pictures
2 : for somewhat noisy satelite television signal
If you want to add some more, go ahead ;-)
Help Options
See http://libdv.sourceforge.net/ for the latest version.
encodedv was written by James Bowman <jamesb@excamera.com> and Peter Schlaile <udbz@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de>.
This manual page is based on encodedv's help message and was written by Daniel Kobras <kobras@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). It was updated by Peter Schlaile <udbz@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de>.
April 2001 |