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I'd like to be able to use FFmpeg to convert a video file from within my C# program. I know I can just call a shell command, but is there a better way?

The issue with invoking a command via the shell, is I'm not sure you could do things like a progress bar, etc... or could you?

If there isn't a way, can anyone suggest the best way to layout some framework for executing shell commands. Passing one big long string is very cumbersome atm.

i_am_jorf
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Dominic Bou-Samra
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5 Answers5

37

You can easily implement a progress bar if running ffmpeg. The output of ffmpeg while running is something like:

frame= 3366 fps=465 q=31.0 Lsize=    6474kB time=140.35 bitrate= 377.9kbits/s

And it is refreshed ~twice per second. You can parse that line and get the data you need to display the progress. When you run in the command line, you only see one line being updated all the time, but what ffmpeg does is to write the line followed by \r. That's why you don't see multiple lines. However, when using StreamReader.ReadLine() on the error output of the program, you get one line for every update.

Sample code to read the output follows. You would have to ignore any line that does not begins with 'frame', perhaps use BeginErrorReadLine()+ErrorDataReceived if you want reading lines to be asynchronous, etc., but you get the idea (I've actually tested it):

using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.IO;

class Test {
        static void Main (string [] args)
        {
                Process proc = new Process ();
                proc.StartInfo.FileName = "ffmpeg";
                proc.StartInfo.Arguments = "-i " + args [0] + " " + args [1];
                proc.StartInfo.RedirectStandardError = true;
                proc.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
                if (!proc.Start ()) {
                        Console.WriteLine ("Error starting");
                        return;
                }
                StreamReader reader = proc.StandardError;
                string line;
                while ((line = reader.ReadLine ()) != null) {
                        Console.WriteLine (line);
                }
                proc.Close ();
        }
}
Gonzalo
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  • Ahh... I've been trying to redirect to standardOutput... not error. It suddenly works :P – Dominic Bou-Samra Nov 14 '09 at 08:09
  • +1: I've done the same thing in Java and am very, very pleased with the results. There are a few catches, though: like the `time` value, can be something like 100000000 int the progress line output for the first update. My gut says it is an internal initialized value. – Stu Thompson Nov 14 '09 at 19:24
  • Probably yeah. Just use a predicate statement to eliminate values above a certain reasonable range. Dirty, but it'll work – Dominic Bou-Samra Nov 15 '09 at 00:24
5

There's a wrapper library over FFmpeg for .NET.

Darin Dimitrov
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  • "At present audio decoding and encoding are mature and video capabilities are in development (we currently have video decoding working but without synced audio yet)." I need audio working properly. – Dominic Bou-Samra Nov 10 '09 at 13:22
  • Unfortunately, the project has not been updated since the comments above from +2 years ago. And there is no binary distribution; you have to check out the code and build it yourself. – Jesse Webb Jul 03 '12 at 21:58
3

I have found this post few weeks ago when I was looking for answer for my problem. I tried to start ffmpeg process and pass arguments to it but it take sooo long to do everything. At this point I use Xabe.FFmpeg as it doing this out of the box and don't have to worry about ffmpeg executables because have feature to download latest version.

bool conversionResult = await new Conversion().SetInput(Resources.MkvWithAudio)
  .AddParameter(String.Format("-f image2pipe -i pipe:.bmp -maxrate {0}k -r {1} -an -y {2}",bitrate, fps, outputfilename))
  .Start();

There is documentation available here that shows how to get current percent of conversion.

fustysavanna
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2

I just found fflib at sourceforge. Looks pretty promising, haven't used it though.

Vinz
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1

How about writing a C++/CLI wrapper around ffmpeg's native interface and then calling your wrapper interface from your application?

Soo Wei Tan
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    The VC compiler does not support many C language constructs used in ffmpeg. The ffmpeg team is interested to see someone succeeds in porting the code to VC. – Sheng Jiang 蒋晟 Nov 18 '09 at 00:41