Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

oggz-chop(1) [debian man page]

oggz-chop(1)						      General Commands Manual						      oggz-chop(1)

NAME
oggz-chop -- Extract the part of an Ogg file between given start and/or end times. SYNOPSIS
oggz-chop [-o filename | --output filename ] [-s start_time | --start start_time ] [-e end_time | --end end_time ] [-k | --no-skele- ton ] filename oggz-chop [-h | --help ] [-v | --version ] Description oggz-chop chops a section of an Ogg file. It correctly interprets the granulepos timestamps of Ogg CELT, CMML, Dirac, FLAC, Kate, PCM, Speex, Theora and Vorbis bitstreams. Run oggz-known-codecs(1) for a full list of codecs known by the installed version of oggz. The output file contains copies of the headers of the input file, and all the codec data required to correctly decode the content between the start and end times specified on the commandline. For codecs with data dependencies like video keyframes, the keyframe prior to the starting time will be included in the output. Note that oggz-chop operates by copying pages of Ogg data; it does not strip partial packets from the first or last data page included in the output. It does however ensure to set the end of stream flag on the last page of each logical bitstream. Skeleton handling: By default, the output will contain a Skeleton track specifying the start of the chop as presentation time. Options oggz-chop accepts the following options: Output options -o filename, --output filename Write output to the specified filename instead of printing it to standard output. -s start_time, --start start_time Specify the start time of the chopped section to output. -e end_time, --end end_time Specify the end time of the chopped section to output. -k , --no-skeleton Do NOT include a Skeleton bitstream in the output. -h, --help Display usage information and exit. -v, --version Output version information and exit. EXAMPLES
Extract the first minute of file.ogx: oggz chop -e 1:00 file.ogx Extract from the second to the fifth minute of file.ogx: oggz chop -s 2:00 -e 5:00 -o output.ogx file.ogx Extract, specifying SMPTE-25 frame offsets: oggz chop -s smpte-25:00:02:03::12 -e smpte-25:00:05:02::04 -o output.ogv file.ogv Server configuration The following configuration for Apache httpd will enable oggz-chop. As with most Apache directives, this may of course be restricted to particular Directories or Locations: ScriptAlias /oggz-chop /usr/bin/oggz-chop Action application/ogg /oggz-chop HTTP/1.1 Cacheability oggz-chop generates Last-Modified HTTP headers, and responds correctly to If-Modified-Since conditional GET requests. AUTHOR
Conrad Parker February 25, 2008; COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2008 Annodex Association SEE ALSO
oggz-validate(1), oggz-merge(1), oggz-dump(1), hogg(1) oggz-chop(1)

Check Out this Related Man Page

oggz-sort(1)						      General Commands Manual						      oggz-sort(1)

NAME
oggz-sort -- Sort the pages of an Ogg file in order of presentation time. SYNOPSIS
oggz-sort [-o filename | --output filename ] filename oggz-sort [-h | --help ] [-v | --version ] Description oggz-sort sorts an Ogg file, interleaving pages in order of presentation time. It correctly interprets the granulepos timestamps of Ogg CELT, CMML, Dirac, FLAC, Kate, PCM, Speex, Theora and Vorbis bitstreams. Run oggz-known-codecs(1) for a full list of codecs known by the installed version of oggz. Some encoders produce files with incorrect page ordering; for example, some audio and video pages may occur out of order. Although these files are usually playable, it can be difficult to accurately seek or scrub on them, increasing the likelihood of glitches during playback. Players may also need to use more memory in order to buffer the audio and video data for synchronized playback, which can be a problem when the files are viewed on low-memory devices. Some older Ogg encoders also produce pages which incorrectly have granulepos timestamps recorded that shouldn't be: pages which have no completed packets must have a granulepos of -1. oggz-sort will correct such granulepos during the process of sorting. The tool oggz-validate can be used to check the relative ordering of packets in a file, and also to detect incorrect granulepos on pages with no completed packets. If either of these errors are reported, or use oggz-sort to fix the problem. Options oggz-sort accepts the following options: Miscellaneous options -o filename, --output filename Write output to the specified filename instead of printing it to standard output. -h, --help Display usage information and exit. -v, --version Output version information and exit. EXAMPLES
Correct the page ordering in broken.ogv: oggz sort -o fixed.ogv broken.ogv AUTHOR
Conrad Parker January 25, 2008; COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2008 Annodex Association SEE ALSO
oggz-validate(1), oggz-merge(1), oggz-dump(1), oggz-diff(1), hogg(1) oggz-sort(1)
Man Page