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transcode-1.1.7-23.1.mga7.tainted.i586.rpm

export_mp2 Documentation
========================

Last update 2004-08-03, Simone Karin Lehmann < simone at lisanet dot de >


General:
--------

Some time ago I spend a lot of time to convert short movie clips to
vcd compliant mpeg files. And with some of them I had the need to convert them
from NTSC 23.976 fps to PAL 25 fps. I decided to do it the same way as it's usualy
done with native film material, meaning the movie is just played faster. No
additional frames should be generated. So I began to hack the transcode sources and
wrote this module.

For more information on changing the speed of the video stream please take a
look at section - Changing video speed - at the end of this documentation.

I've coded a new audio export module instead of a filter plugin because it was
easier to implement this audio speed changing stuff by using pipes. And pipes are
easy to implement in export modules.

IMO this isn't a drawback, because most needs to change audio speed will be
in cases mentioned above where native film material (24 fps) should be converted
to PAL (25 fps) or from PAL to NTSC (23.976 fps, 29.97 pulldown) and be played
on hardware DVD players. Therefor MPEG 1 Layer 2 was choosen as audio codec.

This module processes audio streams only. There are no compile time
depencies. It uses the ffmpeg encoder to process audio and therefor it's very fast.
For speed changing issues you need the sox binary.


Depencies:
----------

At run time ffmpeg and sox must be present.


Usage:
------

To use this module just do

-y <video_module>,mp2

Additionaly, if you want to change the speed of the audio, you can append a factor
to the module. Use the module the following way

-y <video_module>,mp2=speed=N

where N is an unsigned float. N < 1.0 will slow down audio (meaning playing
time will increase) whereas N > 1.0 will speed up audio (meaning playing time
will decrease) The pitch of the audio is not corrected. E.g. to speed up
audio by 25/23.976 (this is used to convert NTSC film material to PAL) use

-y <video_module>,mp2=speed=1.0427093


Changing video speed:
---------------------

Well, the basic idea is to bypass the internal transcode calculations and settings
of the export frame rate. The bypass has to be done because otherwise transcode will
call some frame rate modifying filters to generated new frames or drop existing frames.

The -f option is used by transcode to overwrite the autoprobed value of the input stream.
The --export_fps, if not given on the command line, will be set to the same value as -f
and handed over to the export module and therefor to the encoder.
Now if you specify a --export_fps value which differs from -f (or autoprobe) transcode
just calls the fps filter plugin automaticly. This is the same as using transocde
with "-J fps" or the like. And this will generate or drop some frames.

But just remeber, we want to change the speed, meaning the total playing time, and not
the amount of frames.

With mpeg videos this can simply be done by setting a flag in headers of the output
video stream. For the ffmpeg and mpeg2enc export module this i decribed now.

export_ffmpeg:

Use somewhere in your ffmpeg.cfg (or ~/.ffmpeg.cfg) config file the option

fps_code = VALUE

where VALUE has the same range and meaning as transcode's frame rate code (-f 0,N)

VALUE   means
0       use transcodes fps settings, this is the default
1       23.976 fps
2       24
3       25
4       29.970
5       30
6       50
7       59.940
8       60

If this option is set, all transcode frame rate settings (-f, --export_fps or
autoprobed values) are ignored. The encoder frame rate is set to the
corresponding value shown above. This is useful, if you want to "convert" from
PAL to NTSC or vice versa by speeding up or slowing down the video. No frame
will be dropped or added, only the frame rate entries in the headers are set
to the new value.

To "convert" from 23.976 fps to 25 fps put
fps_code = 2

or from 25 to 23.976 fps
fps_code = 1


expot_mpeg2enc:

The mpeg2enc binyry which is driven by this modules know about an option called to
set the frame rate in the resulting output stream. You can specify this option by adding
a string to transcode's -F option. E.g. if you are using mpeg2enc to encode to standard
dvd compliant streams do

-y mpeg2enc,<audio_module> -F 8,"-F 1"

But please don't mix them up. -F 8 is recognized by the transcode export module and
"-F 1" is passed to the mpeg2enc binary itself. Just take a look at the manpages of
transcode and mpeg2enc.



... hope you enjoy.

Simone Karin Lehmann