Ogg Video Tools 0.6 (Default branch)


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News Ogg Video Tools 0.6 (Default branch)
# 1  
Old 01-06-2009
Ogg Video Tools 0.6 (Default branch)

The Ogg Video Tools is a toolbox for manipulating Ogg video files, which usually consist of a video stream (Theora) and an audio stream (Vorbis). It includes a number of handy command line tools for manipulating these video files, such as for splitting the different streams. License: GNU General Public License (GPL) Changes:
This release offers two new command line tools. The first is oggSlideshow, which creates a video slideshow from a number of given images, e.g. with the Ken Burns Effect. The second is oggThumb, which creates thumbnail images from a Theora video stream. There are additional changes like support for kate streams, handling of files beyond 4 GB in size, and some minor bugfixes. Image

Image

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread
Login or Register to Ask a Question
OGGDUMP(1)							   User Manuals 							OGGDUMP(1)

NAME
oggDump - prints out information of ogg video files (.ogv, .ogg or oga) SYNOPSIS
oggDump [options] outfile.ogv DESCRIPTION
OggDump gives detailed information about an ogg video file and prints these information with a given detail level. Ogg files consist of a number of streams (video and audio). From the Ogg-container perspective, the streams are devided into pages. These pages usually have nearly the same size. The pages can be printed out with the -g option. From the stream perspective, every stream consists of packets. These packets carry a bunch of compressed audio samples in case of a vorbis stream or one video frame in case of a theora video stream. These packets could be of variable length and are places into the ogg pages. To print the packets, use the -p option. OPTIONS
-g Dumps the stream pages of the file. -p Dumps the stream packets. -l <level>. Set the dump level (1-5). Default is 5, which means all information are printed. -s Prompt for the stream that should be dumped. All other streams are ignored and will not be printed. -o <file> Write the dump information to a file. AUTHOR
Joern Seger <yorn at gmx dot net> SEE ALSO
oggCut(1), oggJoin(1), oggSplit(1), oggTranscode^(1), oggSlideshow(1), oggThumb(1), oggSilence(1) Linux JAN 2010 OGGDUMP(1)