Question

I want to be able to log FFMPEG processes because I am trying to work out how long a minute of video takes to convert to help with capacity planning of my video encoding server. How do I enable logging and where is the log file saved. I have FFMPEG installed on a CentOS LAMP machine.

Was it helpful?

Solution

FFmpeg does not write to a specific log file, but rather sends its output to standard error. To capture that, you need to either

  • capture and parse it as it is generated
  • redirect standard error to a file and read that afterward the process is finished

Example for std error redirection:

ffmpeg -i myinput.avi {a-bunch-of-important-params} out.flv 2> /path/to/out.txt

Once the process is done, you can inspect out.txt.

It's a bit trickier to do the first option, but it is possible. (I've done it myself. So have others. Have a look around SO and the net for details.)

OTHER TIPS

I found the below stuff in ffmpeg Docs. Hope this helps! :)

Reference: http://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg.html#toc-Generic-options

‘-report’ Dump full command line and console output to a file named program-YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS.log in the current directory. This file can be useful for bug reports. It also implies -loglevel verbose.

Note: setting the environment variable FFREPORT to any value has the same effect.

I find the answer. 1/First put in the presets, i have this example "Output format MPEG2 DVD HQ"

-vcodec mpeg2video -vstats_file MFRfile.txt -r 29.97 -s 352x480 -aspect 4:3 -b 4000k -mbd rd -trellis -mv0 -cmp 2 -subcmp 2 -acodec mp2 -ab 192k -ar 48000 -ac 2

If you want a report includes the commands -vstats_file MFRfile.txt into the presets like the example. this can make a report which it's ubicadet in the folder source of your file Source. you can put any name if you want , i solved my problem "i write many times in this forum" reading a complete .docx about mpeg properties. finally i can do my progress bar reading this txt file generated.

Regards.

appears that if you add this to the command line:

 -loglevel debug

or

 -loglevel verbose

You get more verbose debugging output to the command line.

ffmpeg logs to stderr, and can log to a file with a different log-level from stderr. The -report command-line option doesn't give you control of the log file name or the log level, so setting the environment variable is preferable.

(-v is a synonym for -loglevel. Run ffmpeg -v help to see the levels. Run ffmpeg -h full | less to see EVERYTHING. Or consult the online docs, or their wiki pages like the h.264 encode guide).

#!/bin/bash

of=out.mkv
FFREPORT="level=32:file=$of.log" ffmpeg -v verbose   -i src.mp4 -c:a copy -preset slower -c:v libx264 -crf 21 "$of"

That will trancode src.mp4 with x264, and set the log level for stderr to "verbose", and the log level for out.mkv.log to "status".

(AV_LOG_WARNING=24, AV_LOG_INFO=32, AV_LOG_VERBOSE=40, etc.). Support for this was added 2 years ago, so you need a non-ancient version of ffmpeg. (Always a good idea anyway, for security / bugfixes and speedups)


A few codecs, like -c:v libx265, write directly to stderr instead of using ffmpeg's logging infrastructure. So their log messages don't end up in the report file. I assume this is a bug / TODO-list item.

To log stderr, while still seeing it in a terminal, you can use tee(1).


If you use a log level that includes status line updates (the default -v info, or higher), they will be included in the log file, separated with ^M (carriage return aka \r). There's no log level that includes encoder stats (like SSIM) but not status-line updates, so the best option is probably to filter that stream.

If don't want to filter (e.g. so the fps / bitrate at each status-update interval is there in the file), you can use less -r to pass them through directly to your terminal so you can view the files cleanly. If you have .enc logs from several encodes that you want to flip through, less -r ++G *.enc works great. (++G means start at the end of the file, for all files). With single-key key bindings like . and , for next file and previous file, you can flip through some log files very nicely. (the default bindings are :n and :p).

If you do want to filter, sed 's/.*\r//' works perfectly for ffmpeg output. (In the general case, you need something like vt100.py, but not for just carriage returns). There are (at least) two ways to do this with tee + sed: tee to /dev/tty and pipe tee's output into sed, or use a process substitution to tee into a pipe to sed.

# pass stdout and stderr through to the terminal, 
## and log a filtered version to a file (with only the last status-line update).

of="$1-x265.mkv"
ffmpeg -v info -i "$1" -c:a copy -c:v libx265 ... "$of" |&    # pipe stdout and stderr
   tee /dev/tty | sed 's/.*\r//' >> "$of.enc"

## or with process substitution where tee's arg will be something like /dev/fd/123

ffmpeg -v info -i "$1" -c:a copy -c:v libx265 ... "$of" |&
  tee >(sed 's/.*\r//' >> "$of.enc")

For testing a few different encode parameters, you can make a function like this one that I used recently to test some stuff. I had it all on one line so I could easily up-arrow and edit it, but I'll un-obfuscate it here. (That's why there are ;s at the end of each line)

ffenc-testclip(){
  # v should be set by the caller, to a vertical resolution.  We scale to WxH, where W is a multiple of 8 (-vf scale=-8:$v)
  db=0;   # convenient to use shell vars to encode settings that you want to include in the filename and the ffmpeg cmdline
  of=25s@21.15.${v}p.x265$pre.mkv; 
  [[ -e "$of.enc" ]]&&echo "$of.enc exists"&&return;   # early-out if the file exists

  # encode 25 seconds starting at 21m15s (or the keyframe before that)
  nice -14 ffmpeg -ss $((21*60+15))  -i src.mp4 -t 25  -map 0 -metadata title= -color_primaries bt709 -color_trc bt709 -colorspace bt709 -sws_flags lanczos+print_info -c:a copy -c:v libx265 -b:v 1500k -vf scale=-8:$v  -preset $pre -ssim 1 -x265-params ssim=1:cu-stats=1:deblock=$db:aq-mode=1:lookahead-slices=0 "$of" |&
   tee /dev/tty | sed 's/.*\r//' >> "$of.enc";
}

# and use it with nested loops like this.
for pre in fast slow;  do for v in  360 480 648 792;do  ffenc-testclip ;done;done

less -r ++G *.enc       # -r is useful if you didn't use sed

Note that it tests for existence of the output video file to avoid spewing extra garbage into the log file if it already exists. Even so, I used and append (>>) redirect.

It would be "cleaner" to write a shell function that took args instead of looking at shell variables, but this was convenient and easy to write for my own use. That's also why I saved space by not properly quoting all my variable expansions. ($v instead of "$v")

You must declare the reportfile as variable for console.

Problem is all the Dokumentations you can find are not running so .. I was give 1 day of my live to find the right way ....

Example: for batch/console

cmd.exe /K set FFREPORT=file='C:\ffmpeg\proto\test.log':level=32 && C:\ffmpeg\bin\ffmpeg.exe -loglevel warning -report -i inputfile f outputfile

Exemple Javascript:

var reortlogfile = "cmd.exe /K set FFREPORT=file='C:\ffmpeg\proto\" + filename + ".log':level=32 && C:\ffmpeg\bin\ffmpeg.exe" .......;

You can change the dir and filename how ever you want.

Frank from Berlin

If you just want to know how long it takes for the command to execute, you may consider using the time command. You for example use time ffmpeg -i myvideoofoneminute.aformat out.anotherformat

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