I have an audio file with multiple channels. How can I create a new file which has multiple audio tracks instead?
Your question is a bit imprecise but I assume you mean, break out the channels into separate and distinct audio files that are then combined, end to end in a new file.
For example:
Take a 6 channel file and isolate Front Left, Centre and Front Right using map_channel.
ffmpeg -i 6_Channel_ID.wav -map_channel 0.0.0 F_left.wav
ffmpeg -i 6_Channel_ID.wav -map_channel 0.0.1 F_right.wav
ffmpeg -i 6_Channel_ID.wav -map_channel 0.0.2 Center.wav
Combine them using concat
ffmpeg -y -i F_left.wav -i Center.wav -i F_right.wav -filter_complex "[0][1][2]concat=n=3:v=0:a=1" LCR.wav
I'm sure there must be a way to roll this into a single filter_complex command, using something like the channelsplit command.
This worked for me:
ffmpeg -i in.wav -filter_complex '[a:0]channelsplit=channel_layout=5c[out0][out1][out2][out3][out4]' -ac 1 -map '[out0]' -map '[out1]' -map '[out2]' -map '[out3]' -map '[out4]' out.webm
Reference: https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-filters.html#Examples-21
I have the following problem.
In the folder there is video.mp4 file (contain 1 audio stream). There are also 3 different files audio1.wav, audio2.wav, audio3.wav. These files I need to 'attach' as multi stream to the video file - so the user can choose the audio language in VLC player or similar. Result must be one audio at the time - no mixing it all together.
Now, I've done it via Premiere Pro with multitrack (quicktime export to mov), and then I run a script to change audio stream names to correspond with the audio language (iso 639-2 ) and output the mp4 file. All works well, but I wonder if there is simple way to do everything via ffmpeg ( .bat script ). I have a working script for replacing audio in the video, but I need to add few additional .wav to the video file as separate audio tracks.
Any help will be appreciated!
To add a new audio track into an existing video with audio, use
the -i parameter to specify all the input files (original video and additional audios)
the -map option to manually select the tracks of each input (https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Map)
in your case,
-map 0 to copy all streams from the input #0 (video)
-map 1:a to include all audio streams from input#1 file (audio1)
-map 2:a to include all audio streams from input#2 file (audio2)
and so on
and
-shortest to crop the output to the shortest input
and additionally you may want to use
-c:v copy to copy the video stream without reencoding.
so, try this (line split for readability)
ffmpeg -i video.mp4 -i input1.mp3 -i input2.mp3
-map 0 -map 1:a -map 2:a
-c:v copy -shortest
output.mp4
and (addording to your comment) adding metadata for the audio tracks
ffmpeg -i video.mp4 -i input1.mp3 -i input2.mp3
map 0 -map 1:a -map 2:a
-metadata:s:a:0 language=eng
-metadata:s:a:1 language=ger
-metadata:s:a:2 language=fra
-disposition:a:0 default
-c:v copy -shortest
output.mp4
Hi newbie ffmpeg user here with ffmpeg v3.2.4 on a Win7 Ultimate x64 PC.
I have a number of .TS files which I'm trying to remux to .MP4. In addition to the video stream and the usual audio stream, some have two audio streams, where the first is a Narrative (NAR) stream and the second is the actual audio content I want. When remuxing using the command line
ffmpeg -i input.ts -c copy output.mp4
ffmpeg uses the NAR stream instead of the second audio stream. How do I get it to use the second audio stream instead please?
Many thanks
Alan
To copy all streams
ffmpeg -i input.ts -map 0 -c copy output.mp4
To copy all audio streams
ffmpeg -i input.ts -map 0:v -map 0:a -c copy output.mp4
To copy only 2nd audio stream
ffmpeg -i input.ts -map 0:v -map 0:a:1 -c copy output.mp4
I want to create, in a single command, a video from 3 sources:
a silent background video;
a smaller video to be overlayed (same length of 1), KEEPING its AUDIO;
a PNG logo to be overlayed
I can create the video but cannot get the audio track. I don't understand if -vf is supposed to work in this case. This is what I've tried to do :
ffmpeg.exe -y -i MASTER_SILENT_VIDEO.mp4 -vf "movie=SMALLER_VIDEO_WITH_AUDIO.flv, scale=320:-1[inner];movie=MY_LOGO.png[inner2]; [in][inner] overlay=800:480,amerge [step1]; [step1][inner2] overlay=30:30 [out]" completed.mp4
The "amerge" filter should do the audio merging job, but of course it doesn't work. I've found similar questions involving -map or filtergraph but they refer to mixing a video source and an audio source; I tried several filtergraph examples without success. Any idea?
overlay one video over other using audio from one input
Use -filter_complex, eliminate the movie source filters, and explicitly define output streams with -map:
ffmpeg -y -i main.mp4 -i overlay_with_audio.flv -i logo.png -filter_complex
"[1:v]scale=320:-1[scaled];
[0:v][scaled]overlay=800:480[bg];
[bg][2:v]overlay=30:30,format=yuv420p[video]"
-map "[video]" -map 1:a -movflags +faststart
output.mp4
You may have to provide additional options to the overlay filters depending on the length of the inputs and how you want overlay to react, but because you did not provide the complete console output from your command I had to make a generic, less efficient, and possibly incorrect example.
overlay one video over other merging audio from both inputs
ffmpeg -y -i main.mp4 -i overlay_with_audio.flv -i logo.png -filter_complex
"[1:v]scale=320:-1[scaled];
[0:v][scaled]overlay=800:480[bg];
[bg][2:v]overlay=30:30,format=yuv420p[video];
[0:a][1:a]amerge=inputs=2[audio]"
-map "[video]" -map "[audio]" -ac 2 -movflags +faststart
output.mp4
I'm assuming both inputs are stereo and that you want a stereo output. Also see FFmpeg Wiki: Audio channel Manipulation - 2 × stereo → stereo.
I used a command like:
ffmpeg -i video.avi -i audio.mp3 -vcodec codec -acodec codec output_video.avi -newaudio
in latest version for adding new audio track to video (not mix).
But I updated the ffmpeg to the newest version (ffmpeg version git-2012-06-16-809d71d) and now in this version the parameter -newaudio doesn't work.
Tell me please how I can add new audio to my video (not mix) using ffmpeg.
Replace audio
ffmpeg -i video.mp4 -i audio.wav -map 0:v -map 1:a -c:v copy -shortest output.mp4
The -map option allows you to manually select streams / tracks. See FFmpeg Wiki: Map for more info.
This example uses -c:v copy to stream copy (mux) the video. No re-encoding of the video occurs. Quality is preserved and the process is fast.
If your input audio format is compatible with the output format then change -c:v copy to -c copy to stream copy both the video and audio.
If you want to re-encode video and audio then remove -c:v copy / -c copy.
The -shortest option will make the output the same duration as the shortest input.
Add audio
ffmpeg -i video.mkv -i audio.mp3 -map 0 -map 1:a -c:v copy -shortest output.mkv
The -map option allows you to manually select streams / tracks. See FFmpeg Wiki: Map for more info.
This example uses -c:v copy to stream copy (mux) the video. No re-encoding of the video occurs. Quality is preserved and the process is fast.
If your input audio format is compatible with the output format then change -c:v copy to -c copy to stream copy both the video and audio.
If you want to re-encode video and audio then remove -c:v copy / -c copy.
The -shortest option will make the output the same duration as the shortest input.
Mixing/combining two audio inputs into one
Use video from video.mkv. Mix audio from video.mkv and audio.m4a using the amerge filter:
ffmpeg -i video.mkv -i audio.m4a -filter_complex "[0:a][1:a]amerge=inputs=2[a]" -map 0:v -map "[a]" -c:v copy -ac 2 -shortest output.mkv
See FFmpeg Wiki: Audio Channels for more info.
Generate silent audio
You can use the anullsrc filter to make a silent audio stream. The filter allows you to choose the desired channel layout (mono, stereo, 5.1, etc) and the sample rate.
ffmpeg -i video.mp4 -f lavfi -i anullsrc=channel_layout=stereo:sample_rate=44100 \
-c:v copy -shortest output.mp4
Also see
Combine two audio streams into one
FFmpeg Wiki: Audio Channel Manipulation
FFmpeg mux video and audio from another video
mp3 music to wav
ffmpeg -i music.mp3 music.wav
truncate to fit video
ffmpeg -i music.wav -ss 0 -t 37 musicshort.wav
mix music and video
ffmpeg -i musicshort.wav -i movie.avi final_video.avi
If the input video has multiple audio tracks and you need to add one more then use the following command:
ffmpeg -i input_video_with_audio.avi -i new_audio.ac3 -map 0 -map 1 -codec copy output_video.avi
-map 0 means to copy (include) all streams from the first input file (input_video_with_audio.avi) and -map 1 means to include all streams (in this case one) from the second input file (new_audio.ac3).
None of these solutions quite worked for me. My original audio was being overwritten, or I was getting an error like "failed to map memory" with the more complex 'amerge' example. It seems I needed -filter_complex amix.
ffmpeg -i videowithaudioyouwanttokeep.mp4 -i audiotooverlay.mp3 -vcodec copy -filter_complex amix -map 0:v -map 0:a -map 1:a -shortest -b:a 144k out.mkv
Nothing quite worked for me (I think it was because my input .mp4 video didn't had any audio) so I found this worked for me:
ffmpeg -i input_video.mp4 -i balipraiavid.wav -map 0:v:0 -map 1:a:0 output.mp4
This shows how to merge all audio tracks into one entire directory with ffmpeg:
ffmpeg -i video.mp4 -i audio.mp3 -map 0:v -map 1:a -c:v copy -shortest output.mp4
Here is how I did what the OP wanted.
My setup is I have two stream of media one video (with its own audio channel) & one audio. I am not converting from but I am restreaming live source by integrating it with an additional audio channel without replacing the old audio from the video stream.
Here is the code I used.
ffmpeg -i "Video stream with its own audio" -i "another audio stream" -map 0:v -map 0:a -map 1:a -shortest -f mpegts "multicast udp stream out put"
what the code does is, it maps each video and audio channels after it acquired the streams from the live source. -map 0:v is the video stream, -map 0:a is the audio that is coming from the video source (notice the 0s from the -map) and finally -map 1:a which is the audio stream from the second source.
then it just restreams it using mpegts through a multicast address. You can change this to a file, a unicast stream or any other supported output format.
Here is the code I am using.
ffmpeg -i "rtp://#231.0.0.208:1234" -i "rtp://#231.0.0.206:1234" -map 0:v -map 0:a -map 1:a -shortest -f mpegts "udp://#231.0.0.45:1234"
Hope this helps some one. Thanks!
If you are using an old version of FFMPEG and you cant upgrade you can do the following:
ffmpeg -i PATH/VIDEO_FILE_NAME.mp4 -i PATH/AUDIO_FILE_NAME.mp3 -vcodec copy -shortest DESTINATION_PATH/NEW_VIDEO_FILE_NAME.mp4
Notice that I used -vcodec
Code to add audio to video using ffmpeg.
If audio length is greater than video length it will cut the audio to video length.
If you want full audio in video remove -shortest from the cmd.
String[] cmd = new String[]{"-i", selectedVideoPath,"-i",audiopath,"-map","1:a","-map","0:v","-codec","copy", ,outputFile.getPath()};
private void execFFmpegBinaryShortest(final String[] command) {
final File outputFile = new File(Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory().getAbsolutePath()+"/videoaudiomerger/"+"Vid"+"output"+i1+".mp4");
String[] cmd = new String[]{"-i", selectedVideoPath,"-i",audiopath,"-map","1:a","-map","0:v","-codec","copy","-shortest",outputFile.getPath()};
try {
ffmpeg.execute(cmd, new ExecuteBinaryResponseHandler() {
#Override
public void onFailure(String s) {
System.out.println("on failure----"+s);
}
#Override
public void onSuccess(String s) {
System.out.println("on success-----"+s);
}
#Override
public void onProgress(String s) {
//Log.d(TAG, "Started command : ffmpeg "+command);
System.out.println("Started---"+s);
}
#Override
public void onStart() {
//Log.d(TAG, "Started command : ffmpeg " + command);
System.out.println("Start----");
}
#Override
public void onFinish() {
System.out.println("Finish-----");
}
});
} catch (FFmpegCommandAlreadyRunningException e) {
// do nothing for now
System.out.println("exceptio :::"+e.getMessage());
}
}
The marked answer does not set the audio track's language.
The following is an example that specifies German for the default audio track (the video's only audio channel) and English for the audio track that is added anew:
ffmpeg -i "/dir/video.mkv" -i "/dir2/audio.ac3" -map 0 -map 1:a -c:v copy -shortest -metadata:s:a:0 language=ger -metadata:s:a:0 title="GER" -metadata:s:a:1 language=eng -metadata:s:a:1 title="ENG" "/dir/output.mkv"
(The s:a:0 starts counting from 0, adjust that number as needed. If the audio track language is already specified, you don't need to set it and would only need to set it for the audio track that you add.)