Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

yuvinactive(1) [suse man page]

yuvinactive(1)							MJPEG tools manual						    yuvinactive(1)

NAME
yuvinactive - Set a part of the video to a defined state SYNOPSIS
yuvinactive [options] </dev/stdin >/dev/stdout DESCRIPTION
yuvinactive operates with a area (rectangle) you define. By default is sets it to really black. But you can tell tell yuvinactive to darken the area, or fill it with a certain color. It can also make the content of the area unreadable, like extreme softening of the area. Or copy the surrounding area into the the specified area. You usually have to use the -i option which sets the area in which yuvinactive will work. If no additional option is given yuvinactive stet the area to black. But you can use the -d -s -a -c options to tell yuvinac- tive that it shall do something different with that area. You can only use one additional option. yuvinactive was built to remove unwanted things like a logo, from the movie. OPTIONS
lav2yuv accepts the following options: -h Some help output -iXxY+XOFF+YOFF Specifies the area yuvinactive shall work with. With this option the area is set to black. There are no restrictions because of inter- lacing. -d num How much darker the area should be compared to the original color. This is done by setting a lower value for the luma. The value is in percent from the original luma. -s num Here you specify a certain color in the yuv format. -a num With this option the program uses on pixel and averages the surrounding pixels with the same color to make the original less readable. The number tells the the program how much pixels around the original pixel should be overwritten with the same color. You have to use a even number here -c num Sets the number of surrounding pixels yuvinactive should use to copy them into the given area. You have to use a even number here. yuvinactive uses the lines above and below the specified area for copying them into the area. BUGS
Right, there are bugs hidden. The thing is not well tested, and not every option might work. yuvinactive is in the first state of becoming a useful program. AUTHOR
This man page was originally written by Bernhard Praschinger. If you have questions, remarks, problems or you just want to contact the developers, the main mailing list for the MJPEG-tools is: mjpeg-users@lists.sourceforge.net For more info, see our website at http://mjpeg.sourceforge.net SEE ALSO
mjpegtools(1), lav2yuv(1), mpeg2enc(1), yuvscaler(1), yuv2lav(1), yuvdenoise(1), yuvplay(1), yuvmedianfilter(1) MJPEG Linux Square 30 October 2003 yuvinactive(1)

Check Out this Related Man Page

yuv2lav(1)							MJPEG tools manual							yuv2lav(1)

NAME
yuv2lav - encodes lavtool's raw YUV frame streams into MJPEG files SYNOPSIS
yuv2lav [-f a|A|q|m] [-q num] [-b num] [-I num] [-m num] [-v num] [-w file] -o output-file DESCRIPTION
yuv2lav is a simple MJPEG encoder for raw YUV frame streams as they are emitted by lav2yuv(1) or lavpipe(1), for example. It reads its input from stdin and is capable of writing AVI and Quicktime. OPTIONS
The command line options allow to specify the output file name, JPEG encoding quality and the amount of memory that will be allocated for JPEG compressed data. -o output-file This (compulsorary) option sets the name of the file that yuv2lav will write its output to. If the output file contains a % (e.g. file%02d.avi), the output will be written to multiple files in case this is necessary (file00.avi, file01.avi and so on). -f a|A|q This sets the output file format, which has to be one of a - for AVI file output, A - for AVI with reversed fields, q - for Quicktime output or AVI with reversed field of course only makes sense if yuv2lav's feed is an interlaced video source and should only be needed if you experience frame reversal problems in your output. If you don't use that option yuv2lav will set the output format to AVI if the last 3 char are avi, or to Quicktime if you use mov. If you use the -f option it overides the setting in the filename -q num This option specifies the JPEG encoding quality as passed through to libjpeg. The default value is 80, num must lie within 24...100 inclusive (think of it as percentage values, although with a lossy compression algorithm like JPEG, keeping 100% of the original quality is of course not really possible). -b num This option specifies the size of the buffer (in kBytes) that yuv2lav allocates in order to store the compressed JPEG data in it. The default value (256k) is perfectly enough for 100% quality full sized PAL/NTSC, but if you want to compress Super-Mega-HDTV or if you are low on memory, you can use this option to suit your needs. -m num This is the maximum size (in MB) per file. Normally this depends on the output file type. -I num Force a specific interlacing type. 0 means no interlacing, 1 means top-field-first, 2 means bottom-field-first. -w file This is the WAV file containing audio data to be combined with the video stream into the output file. -v num Verbosity level. 0 means only print error messages, 2 prints full debug output. -? Display a synopsis of the command syntax. EXAMPLES
lav2yuv movie.avi | yuv2lav -fq -q 30 lowbitrate.qt would recompress movie.avi as a low bit rate Quicktime file. lavpipe input.pli | yuv2lav -q80 output.avi would save the movie assembled by lavpipe as a single AVI file. BUGS
If you experience any problems with this tool, please feel free to contact the developers (see below). AUTHOR
This man page was written by pHilipp Zabel. If you have questions, remarks, problems or you just want to contact the developers, the main mailing list for the MJPEG-tools is: mjpeg-users@lists.sourceforge.net For more info, see our website at http://mjpeg.sourceforge.net/ SEE ALSO
lav2yuv(1), lavpipe(1), lavplay(1), lavrec(1), mpeg2enc(1), yuvscaler(1) MJPEG Linux Square 2 June 2001 yuv2lav(1)
Man Page