MEncoder
An overview of MEncoder, the video encoding/decoding tool provided by MPlayer as part of the mencoder package.
Basics
The basic syntax for a conversion is:
$ mencoder original_video.mpg -o new_video.avi -ovc output_video_codec -oac output_audio_codec
This is basically how one converts a video. However, there are MANY more options available.
For input formats, MEncoder can use any format that MPlayer can play, so to verify whether it will work with your video, just try playing it in MPlayer.
To list output video codecs, run:
$ mencoder -ovc help
Similarly, to list output audio codecs, run:
$ mencoder -oac help
This information can also be found here where it better explained, although non-specific.
Example
This approach allows one to make a .mkv file with an H.264-encoded video and any number of Vorbis-encoded audio tracks.
We will use mencoder for ripping and encoding and mkvmerge (part of mkvtoolnix-cli) for making the .mkv file itself.
Ripping and encoding the video
The H.264 encoder is usually used in two passes: the first reads information about the movie, the second uses that information to encode. We will not extract any audio for now.
Commands follow; remember to replace the variables with the proper values:
First pass: we are just collecting information, so the normal output is thrown away:
$ mencoder -dvd-device "$ISO" dvd://"$TITLE" -chapter "$CHAPTER" -o /dev/null -nosound -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts direct=auto:pass=1:turbo:bitrate=900:bframes=1:\ me=umh:partitions=all:trellis=1:qp_step=4:qcomp=0.7:direct_pred=auto:keyint=300 \ -vf scale=-1:-10,harddup
Second pass: here we compress the video track using the information from the first step:
$ mencoder -dvd-device "$ISO" dvd://"$TITLE" -chapter "$CHAPTER" -nosound -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts direct=auto:pass=2:bitrate=900:frameref=5:bframes=1:\ me=umh:partitions=all:trellis=1:qp_step=4:qcomp=0.7:direct_pred=auto:keyint=300 \ -vf scale=-1:-10,harddup -o video.avi
This will create a video.avi file containing the video. You can play with the -x264encopts options and the -vf filters to improve the quality or reduce the file size. For example, a movie with a black border should be cropped with -vf crop=$X:$Y,scale=-1:-10,harddup with the proper values instead of $X and $Y (see mencoder(1) § cropdetect_=limit:round_:reset__). You may want to scale down the movie with -vf scale=$WIDTH:-10,harddup the width of the movie will become $WIDTH (keep $WIDTH a multiple of 16: 640, 480, or 320 are usually fine), the height will be correctly calculated in order to keep the aspect ratio.
You can also use any other of the filters MEncoder has to offer, like pullup,softskip or you can change the frame rate using -ofps. (If you do so, remember to use the same frame rate everywhere including in the commands to rip audio.)
It is important that you use harddup as the last filter: it will force MEncoder to write every frame (even duplicate ones) in the output. Also, it is necessary to use scale=$WIDTH,-10} with $WIDTH as -1 to keep the original width or a new, usually smaller, width: it is necessary since the H.264 codec uses square pixels and DVDs instead use rectangular pixels.
Ripping and encoding the audio
You can extract audio tracks as needed. Here we compress with the Vorbis algorithm, but you may want to check the MEncoder manual in order to see alternatives.
The command follows (replace the variables with desired values) where we rip and compress the audio:
$ mencoder -dvd-device "$ISO" dvd://"$TITLE" -alang "$AUDIOLANG" -chapter "$CHAPTER" -ovc frameno \ -oac lavc -lavcopts acodec=vorbis:abitrate=224 -channels 2 -srate 48000 -o "$AUDIOLANG".avi
You should repeat the command for every audio track you want, so we will have .avi files with the audio track.
You may also want to use -channels 6 to exact all the channels of a 5.1 DVD or changing the bit rate. As with the video, you can use audio filters via -af but it is not necessary.
Making the final .mkv file
Putting it all together in a single file is simple. Add other audio tracks if needed:
$ mkvmerge -D audio.avi -A video.avi -o mymovie.mkv
The .mkv file will contain everything, so you can store your movie keeping all the audio track you want. Even if you are not interested in keeping multiple sound tracks, the H.264/Vorbis format pair should ensure great quality.
Encoding for Nokia 5800 XM and Nokia N97
In 2 passes with small bitrates (640kbps video vbitrate and 96kbps audio abitrate) yields pretty watchable video mp4 for Nokia 5800 xm and Nokia N97 phones' default video player.
mkv to mp4 (nokia 97, 5800 compatible)
- convert the mkv to mpg ; many mkv files do not directly get converted to mp4:
$ mencoder original_file.mkv -ovc lavc -lavcopts vcodec=mpeg1video -aid 0 -oac pcm -o delete_me.mpg
- convert the mpg file to mp4:
$ mencoder -of lavf -lavfopts format=mp4 -oac lavc -ovc lavc \ -lavcopts aglobal=1:vglobal=1:acodec=libfaac:vcodec=mpeg4:abitrate=128:vbitrate=640:keyint=250:mbd=1:vqmax=10:lmax=10:turbo \ -af lavcresample=44100 -vf harddup,scale=640:-3 "delete_me.mpg" -o "converted_file.mp4"
- delete the temporary huge sized mpg file:
$ rm "delete_me.mpg"
Here -aid 0 is the first audio track in the original mkv.
avi to mp4 (nokia 97, 5800 compatible) using multipass (2 passes)
- First pass:
$ mencoder -of lavf -lavfopts format=mp4 -oac lavc -ovc lavc \ -lavcopts aglobal=1:vglobal=1:acodec=libfaac:vcodec=mpeg4:abitrate=96:vbitrate=640:keyint=250:mbd=1:vqmax=10:lmax=10:vpass=1:turbo \ -af lavcresample=44100 -vf harddup,scale=640:-3 "video.avi" -o "video.mp4"
- Second pass:
$ mencoder -of lavf -lavfopts format=mp4 -oac lavc -ovc lavc \ -lavcopts aglobal=1:vglobal=1:acodec=libfaac:vcodec=mpeg4:abitrate=96:vbitrate=640:keyint=250:mbd=1:vqmax=10:lmax=10:vpass=2 \ -af lavcresample=44100 -vf harddup,scale=640:-3 "video.avi" -o "video.mp4"
Play around with abitrate, vbitrate, and scale values to get video quality and size of your liking.
scale=640:-3 will try to keep the video width to 640 and resize the video height accordingly. Do use the "original" aspect in Nokia's mp4 player Option > aspect for 16:9 and 4:3 aspect ratio videos.
Encoding a multi audio / multi language MKV video to an MP4 with different audio streams
To encode multi-audio file to mp4 we need to use the -aid audio_stream_number like -map 0:1 in ffmpeg.
- To extract video+audio stream1 (e.g. english) of mkv file:
$ mencoder -oac copy -ovc copy -aid 0 sample.mkv -o sample.mp4
- To extract video+audio stream2 (e.g. Hindi, French, etc.) of mkv file:
$ mencoder -oac copy -ovc copy -aid 1 sample.mkv -o sample.mp4
Adding SubRip subtitles to a file
The following output video codec (-ovc) options are suggested as very high-quality settings and should suffice for most transcoding, including the addition of subtitles to a stream.
Two-pass x264 (very high-quality)
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts pass=1:preset=veryslow:fast_pskip=0:tune=film:frameref=15:bitrate=3000:threads=auto \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o /dev/null
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts pass=2:preset=veryslow:fast_pskip=0:tune=film:frameref=15:bitrate=3000:threads=auto \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o output_video.avi
fast_pskip=0is a maximum qualityplacebopreset option.framerefis the only other major option undefined bypresetsettings.bitratevalues can be modified to suit desired file size and quality needs.tuneshould be set to match the type and content of the media being encoded.
Single-pass x264 (very high-quality)
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts preset=veryslow:tune=film:crf=15:frameref=15:fast_pskip=0:threads=auto \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o output_video.avi
- The following example uses the option
-of lavfto mux the output into a Matroska container which is autodetected from the output file extension .mkv:mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -of lavf -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts preset=veryslow:tune=film:crf=15:frameref=15:fast_pskip=0:global_header:threads=auto \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o output_video.mkv
global_headerwrites global video headers to extradata, or in front of keyframes and is typically required for .mp4 and .mkv containers.
Two-pass xvid (very high-quality)
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ovc xvid \ -xvidencopts pass=1:chroma_opt:vhq=4:max_bframes=1:quant_type=mpeg:threads=6 \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o /dev/null
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ovc xvid \ -xvidencopts pass=2:chroma_opt:vhq=4:max_bframes=1:quant_type=mpeg:bitrate=3000:threads=6 \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o output_video.avi
threads=nwhere n = physical, or CPU cores.- Recent versions of mencoder enable
bvhq=1as a default setting. - Xvid does not accept
bitratesettings on the first of multiple-pass encodings. subfont-text-scale 2-3helps with proper sizing with 16:9 format screens.max_bframes=0can be set so long as the bitrate is high enough.
Three-pass lavc (very high-quality mpeg4)
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ffourcc DX50 -ovc lavc \ -lavcopts vpass=1:mbd=2:mv0:trell:v4mv:cbp:predia=6:dia=6:precmp=6:cmp=6:subcmp=6:preme=2:qns=2:vbitrate=3000 \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o output_video.avi
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ffourcc DX50 -ovc lavc \ -lavcopts vpass=3:mbd=2:mv0:trell:v4mv:cbp:predia=6:dia=6:precmp=6:cmp=6:subcmp=6:preme=2:qns=2:vbitrate=3000 \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o output_video.avi
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ffourcc DX50 -ovc lavc \ -lavcopts vpass=3:mbd=2:mv0:trell:v4mv:cbp:predia=6:dia=6:precmp=6:cmp=6:subcmp=6:preme=2:qns=2:vbitrate=3000 \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o output_video.avi
- Introducing
threads=n(with n above 1) for-vcodec mpeg4may skew the effects of motion estimation and lead to reduced video quality and compression efficiency. predia=6:dia=6:precmp=6:cmp=6:subcmp=6topredia=3:dia=3:precmp=3:cmp=3:subcmp=3can reduce encoding times without incurring much loss in quality.vmax_b_framesnot included as referenced in the official mencoder documentation as the current default setting is to not to use B-frames at all.vb_strategynot included as referenced in the official mencoder documentation for the same reason as above. Elsevb_strategy=2.
Single-pass lavc (very high-quality mpeg-2)
$ mencoder -mc 0 -noskip -oac lavc -ovc lavc -of mpeg -mpegopts format=dvd:tsaf -vf scale=720:576,harddup -srate 48000 -af lavcresample=48000 \ -lavcopts vcodec=mpeg2video:vrc_buf_size=1835:vrc_maxrate=9800:vbitrate=5000:keyint=15:vstrict=0:acodec=mp2:abitrate=192:aspect=16/9 \ -sub-bg-alpha 100 -subpos 95 -subfont-text-scale 2.5 -subcp cp1250 -sub subFile.srt -o outFile.mpg inFile.mkv
-mc 0 -noskipto ensure A/V syncaspect- setting video aspect manually- subtitle background, subtitle encoding and subtitle scaling
There are as always many options that can be set, this combination ensures that picture looks almost the same as original with slightly smaller file size (great for converting FULL HD videos so that they are playable on older devices).
Adding VOBsub subtitles to a file
Two-pass x264 (very high-quality)
- Direct
-vobsubto thesubtitle_fileusing the full pathname of the file without extensions (.idx or .sub). - Select the second subtitle ID language (
-vobsubid 2) contained within the VOBsub files (.idx or .sub).
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts pass=1:preset=veryslow:fast_pskip=0:tune=film:frameref=15:bitrate=3000:threads=auto \ -vobsub subtitle_file -vobsubid 2 -o /dev/null
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts pass=2:preset=veryslow:fast_pskip=0:tune=film:frameref=15:bitrate=3000:threads=auto \ -vobsub subtitle_file -vobsubid 2 -o output_video.avi
Testing subtitle muxing results
Avoid passing resource intensive encoding options in order to verify desired results sooner rather than later.
Single-pass x264 (low quality)
$ mencoder original_video.avi -oac copy -ovc x264 \ -x264encopts preset=ultrafast:threads=auto \ -sub original_video.srt -subfont-text-scale 3 -o output_video.avi
mp2 vs. mp3lame vs. aac
- toolame is recommended over FFmpeg lavc (libavcodec) for mp2 encoding.
- mp3lame is recommended over FAAC (not fully developed) encoding at all bitrates.
Encoding AVI videos in Windows and Mac readable formats
Use these commands:
$ opt="vbitrate=2160000:mbd=2:keyint=132:vqblur=1.0:cmp=2:subcmp=2:dia=2:mv0:last_pred=3" $ mencoder -ovc lavc -lavcopts vcodec=msmpeg4v2:vpass=1:$opt -oac mp3lame -o /dev/null input.avi $ mencoder -ovc lavc -lavcopts vcodec=msmpeg4v2:vpass=2:$opt -oac mp3lame -o output.avi input.avi
input.avi is the AVI you made using Linux utilities, and "output.avi" is the AVI you want to make which will be readable by Windows and Mac users.
GUI frontends
The official MPlayer homepage has a comprehensive list of available front-ends here.
- OGMRip — An application and a set of libraries for ripping and encoding DVD into AVI, OGM, MP4, or Matroska files using a wide variety of codecs. It relies on mplayer, mencoder, ogmtools, mkvtoolnix, mp4box, oggenc, lame, and faac to perform its tasks.
- Hybrid — A multi platform (Linux/macOS/Windows) Qt based frontend for a bunch of other tools which can convert nearly every input to x264/Xvid/VP8 + ac3/ogg/mp3/aac/flac inside an avi/mp4/m2ts/mkv/webm container, a BluRay or an AVCHD structure.
- Hyper Video Converter — A frontend for various cli videoencoder tools I have made because I wanted something, that lets me quickly convert videos from konqueror without typing 3-line-commands in the console.
- jmencode — A simple java front-end for the free and very useful MPlayer software, for the purpose of encoding video. Initially the focus is on converting DVD into MPEG-4.