Run an ffmpeg command with its progress yielded.
Contents:
- Python 3.9 or higher
- ffmpeg v3.1 or above from http://ffmpeg.org/ installed in your $PATH
pip3 install ffmpeg-progress-yield
Or download this repository, then run pip install .
.
In your Python project, import the helper class, instantiate a context manager, and run run_command_with_progress
.
For more information see the API documentation.
Example:
from ffmpeg_progress_yield import FfmpegProgress
cmd = [
"ffmpeg", "-i", "test/test.mp4", "-c:v", "libx264", "-vf", "scale=1920x1080", "-preset", "fast", "-f", "null", "/dev/null",
]
with FfmpegProgress(cmd) as ff:
for progress in ff.run_command_with_progress():
print(f"{progress}/100")
The command will yield the current progress in percent as a float number.
run_command_with_progress
takes a duration_override
argument where you can manually override the duration of the command in seconds. This is useful if your input doesn't have an implicit duration (e.g. if you use testsrc
).
If you have tqdm
installed, you can create a fancy progress bar:
from tqdm import tqdm
from ffmpeg_progress_yield import FfmpegProgress
cmd = [
"ffmpeg", "-i", "test/test.mp4", "-c:v", "libx264", "-vf", "scale=1920x1080", "-preset", "fast", "-f", "null", "/dev/null",
]
with FfmpegProgress(cmd) as ff:
with tqdm(total=100, position=1, desc="Test") as pbar:
for progress in ff.run_command_with_progress():
pbar.update(progress - pbar.n)
# get the output
print(ff.stderr)
You can also quit the command early on by calling .quit()
:
with FfmpegProgress(cmd) as ff:
for progress in ff.run_command_with_progress():
if progress > 50:
ff.quit()
break
This will send a hard quit to the ffmpeg process, and may not wait for it to finish. Your encoded file may have truncated data. To quit gracefully, use .quit_gracefully()
instead, which sends 'q' to the ffmpeg process, and waits for it to finish (e.g., wait for an encoder to flush its buffers).
This is probably most useful in asynchronous environments, where you can run the command in a separate thread, and quit it from the main thread (e.g. using a Condition Variable).
The library automatically handles process cleanup to prevent lingering ffmpeg processes. It provides multiple layers of safety:
- Automatic cleanup: Processes are automatically cleaned up even if exceptions occur during iteration
- Context manager support: Use
with
statements for guaranteed cleanup - Finalizer fallback: Processes are cleaned up during garbage collection as a last resort
Simply prefix your ffmpeg command with ffmpeg-progress-yield
:
ffmpeg-progress-yield ffmpeg -i input.mp4 output.mp4
It will show a progress bar, and once the command is done, show the ffmpeg stderr output.
Full usage notes:
usage: ffmpeg-progress-yield [-h] [-d DURATION] [-n] [-p] [-x] [-l LOG_FILE] ...
ffmpeg-progress-yield v0.12.0
positional arguments:
ffmpeg_command Any ffmpeg command. Do not quote this argument.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-d, --duration DURATION
Duration of the video in seconds (override). (default: None)
-n, --dry-run Print ffmpeg command and exit. (default: False)
-p, --progress-only Print progress only and do not print stderr at exit. (default: False)
-x, --exclude-progress
Exclude progress lines from ffmpeg log. (default: False)
-l, --log-file LOG_FILE
Send ffmpeg log output to specified file. (default: None)
If you want to manually override the duration to, say, 12.5 seconds (e.g. because your input doesn't have an implicit one):
ffmpeg-progress-yield --duration 12.5 ffmpeg -f lavfi -i testsrc -t 12.5 output.mp4
You can also redirect the output to a log file:
ffmpeg-progress-yield --exclude-progress --log-file log.txt ffmpeg -i input.mp4 output.mp4
This will exclude the progress bar from the output, and redirect it to a log file.
Currently, we do not differentiate between stderr
and stdout
. This means progress will be mixed with the ffmpeg log, unless you use --exclude-progress
(or exclude_progress
in the Python API).
You can also check out ffmpeg-progress
for a similar project with a different feature set.
Werner Robitza 💻 |
WyattBlue 💻 |
Kirill Konovalov 💻 |
Jason Nader 🐛 |
Launch Lee 💻 |
scufre 💻 |
|
|
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