Can ffmpeg show a progress bar?

FfmpegProgress Bar

Ffmpeg Problem Overview


I am converting a .avi file to .flv file using ffmpeg. As it takes a long time to convert a file I would like to display a progress bar. Can someone please guide me on how to go about the same.

I know that ffmpeg somehow has to output the progress in a text file and I have to read it using ajax calls. But how do I get ffmpeg to output the progress to the text file?

Ffmpeg Solutions


Solution 1 - Ffmpeg

I've been playing around with this for a few days. That "ffmpegprogress" thing helped, but it was very hard to get to work with my set up, and hard to read the code.

In order to show the progress of ffmpeg you need to do the following:

  1. run the ffmpeg command from php without it waiting for a response (for me, this was the hardest part)
  2. tell ffmpeg to send it's output to a file
  3. from the front end (AJAX, Flash, whatever) hit either that file directly or a php file that can pull out the progress from ffmpeg's output.

Here's how I solved each part:

I got the following idea from "ffmpegprogress". This is what he did: one PHP file calls another through an http socket. The 2nd one actually runs the "exec" and the first file just hangs up on it. For me his implementation was too complex. He was using "fsockopen". I like CURL. So here's what I did:

$url = "http://".$_SERVER["HTTP_HOST"]."/path/to/exec/exec.php";
curl_setopt($curlH, CURLOPT_URL, $url);
$postData = "&cmd=".urlencode($cmd);
$postData .= "&outFile=".urlencode("path/to/output.txt");
curl_setopt($curlH, CURLOPT_POST, TRUE);
curl_setopt($curlH, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, $postData);

curl_setopt($curlH, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, TRUE);

// # this is the key!
curl_setopt($curlH, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 1);
$result = curl_exec($curlH);

Setting CURLOPT_TIMEOUT to 1 means it will wait 1 second for a response. Preferably that would be lower. There is also the CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS which takes milliseconds, but it didn't work for me.

After 1 second, CURL hangs up, but the exec command still runs. Part 1 solved.

BTW - A few people were suggesting using the "nohup" command for this. But that didn't seem to work for me.

*ALSO! Having a php file on your server that can execute code directly on the command line is an obvious security risk. You should have a password, or encode the post data in some way.

The "exec.php" script above must also tell ffmpeg to output to a file. Here's code for that:

exec("ffmpeg -i path/to/input.mov path/to/output.flv 1> path/to/output.txt 2>&1");

Note the "1> path/to/output.txt 2>&1". I'm no command line expert, but from what I can tell this line says "send normal output to this file, AND send errors to the same place". Check out this url for more info: http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/io-redirection.html

From the front end call a php script giving it the location of the output.txt file. That php file will then pull out the progress from the text file. Here's how I did that:

// # get duration of source
preg_match("/Duration: (.*?), start:/", $content, $matches);

$rawDuration = $matches[1];

// # rawDuration is in 00:00:00.00 format. This converts it to seconds.
$ar = array_reverse(explode(":", $rawDuration));
$duration = floatval($ar[0]);
if (!empty($ar[1])) $duration += intval($ar[1]) * 60;
if (!empty($ar[2])) $duration += intval($ar[2]) * 60 * 60;


// # get the current time
preg_match_all("/time=(.*?) bitrate/", $content, $matches); 

$last = array_pop($matches);
// # this is needed if there is more than one match
if (is_array($last)) {
	$last = array_pop($last);
}

$curTime = floatval($last);


// # finally, progress is easy
$progress = $curTime/$duration;

Hope this helps someone.

Solution 2 - Ffmpeg

There is an article in Russian which describes how to solve your problem.

The point is to catch Duration value before encoding and to catch time=... values during encoding.

--skipped--
Duration: 00:00:24.9, start: 0.000000, bitrate: 331 kb/s
--skipped--
frame=   41 q=7.0 size=     116kB time=1.6 bitrate= 579.7kbits/s
frame=   78 q=12.0 size=     189kB time=3.1 bitrate= 497.2kbits/s
frame=  115 q=13.0 size=     254kB time=4.6 bitrate= 452.3kbits/s
--skipped--

Solution 3 - Ffmpeg

It’s very simple if you use the pipeview command. To do this, transform

ffmpeg -i input.avi {arguments}

to

pv input.avi | ffmpeg -i pipe:0 -v warning {arguments}

No need to get into coding!

Solution 4 - Ffmpeg

FFmpeg uses stdout for outputing media data and stderr for logging/progress information. You just have to redirect stderr to a file or to stdin of a process able to handle it.

With a unix shell this is something like:

ffmpeg {ffmpeg arguments} 2> logFile

or

ffmpeg {ffmpeg arguments} 2| processFFmpegLog

Anyway, you have to run ffmpeg as a separate thread or process.

Solution 5 - Ffmpeg

You can do it with ffmpeg's -progress argument and nc

WATCHER_PORT=9998

DURATION= $(ffprobe -select_streams v:0 -show_entries "stream=duration" \
    -of compact $INPUT_FILE | sed 's!.*=\(.*\)!\1!g')

nc -l $WATCHER_PORT | while read; do
    sed -n 's/out_time=\(.*\)/\1 of $DURATION/p')
done &

ffmpeg -y -i $INPUT_FILE -progress localhost:$WATCHER_PORT $OUTPUT_ARGS

Solution 6 - Ffmpeg

Sadly, ffmpeg itself still cannot show a progress bar – also, many of the aforementioned bash- or python-based stop-gap solutions have become dated and nonfunctional.

Thus, i recommend giving the brand-new ffmpeg-progressbar-cli a try:

ffmpeg-progressbar-cli screencast

It's a wrapper for the ffmpeg executable, showing a colored, centered progress bar and the remaining time.

Also, it's open-source, based on Node.js and actively developed, handling most of the mentioned quirks (full disclosure: i'm its current lead developer).

Solution 7 - Ffmpeg

If you just need hide all info and show default progress like ffmpeg in last line, you can use -stats option:

ffmpeg -v warning -hide_banner -stats ${your_params}

Solution 8 - Ffmpeg

javascript should tell php to start converting [1] and then do [2] ...


[1] php: start conversion and write status to file (see above):

exec("ffmpeg -i path/to/input.mov path/to/output.flv 1>path/to/output.txt 2>&1");

For the second part we need just javascript to read the file. The following example uses dojo.request for AJAX, but you could use jQuery or vanilla or whatever as well :

[2] js: grab the progress from the file:

var _progress = function(i){
    i++;
    // THIS MUST BE THE PATH OF THE .txt FILE SPECIFIED IN [1] : 
    var logfile = 'path/to/output.txt';

/* (example requires dojo) */

request.post(logfile).then( function(content){
// AJAX success
	var duration = 0, time = 0, progress = 0;
	var resArr = [];

	// get duration of source
	var matches = (content) ? content.match(/Duration: (.*?), start:/) : [];
	if( matches.length>0 ){
		var rawDuration = matches[1];
		// convert rawDuration from 00:00:00.00 to seconds.
		var ar = rawDuration.split(":").reverse();
		duration = parseFloat(ar[0]);
		if (ar[1]) duration += parseInt(ar[1]) * 60;
		if (ar[2]) duration += parseInt(ar[2]) * 60 * 60;
		
		// get the time 
		matches = content.match(/time=(.*?) bitrate/g);
		console.log( matches );
		
		if( matches.length>0 ){
			var rawTime = matches.pop();
			// needed if there is more than one match
			if (lang.isArray(rawTime)){ 
				rawTime = rawTime.pop().replace('time=','').replace(' bitrate',''); 
			} else {
				rawTime = rawTime.replace('time=','').replace(' bitrate','');
			}
		
			// convert rawTime from 00:00:00.00 to seconds.
			ar = rawTime.split(":").reverse();
			time = parseFloat(ar[0]);
			if (ar[1]) time += parseInt(ar[1]) * 60;
			if (ar[2]) time += parseInt(ar[2]) * 60 * 60;
			
			//calculate the progress
			progress = Math.round((time/duration) * 100);
		}
		
		resArr['status'] = 200;
		resArr['duration'] = duration;
		resArr['current']  = time;
		resArr['progress'] = progress;
		
		console.log(resArr);

        /* UPDATE YOUR PROGRESSBAR HERE with above values ... */

		if(progress==0 && i>20){
			// TODO err - giving up after 8 sec. no progress - handle progress errors here
			console.log('{"status":-400, "error":"there is no progress while we tried to encode the video" }');	
			return;
		} else if(progress<100){ 
			setTimeout(function(){ _progress(i); }, 400);
		}
	} else if( content.indexOf('Permission denied') > -1) {
		// TODO - err - ffmpeg is not executable ...
		console.log('{"status":-400, "error":"ffmpeg : Permission denied, either for ffmpeg or upload location ..." }');	
	} 
},
function(err){
// AJAX error
    if(i<20){
        // retry
        setTimeout(function(){ _progress(0); }, 400);
    } else {
        console.log('{"status":-400, "error":"there is no progress while we tried to encode the video" }');
        console.log( err );	
    }
    return;	
});

}
setTimeout(function(){ _progress(0); }, 800);

Solution 9 - Ffmpeg

I found ffpb Python package (pip install ffpb) that passes arguments transparently to FFmpeg. Due to it's robustness, it doesn't need much maintenance. The last release is from Apr 29, 2019.

https://github.com/althonos/ffpb

Solution 10 - Ffmpeg

Calling php's system function blocks that thread, so you'll need to spawn off 1 HTTP request for performing the conversion, and another polling one for reading the txt file, that's being generated.

Or, better yet, clients submit the video for conversion and then another process is made responsible for performing the conversion. That way the client's connection won't timeout while waiting for the system call to terminate. Polling is done in the same way as above.

Solution 11 - Ffmpeg

Had problems with the second php part. So I am using this instead:

$log = @file_get_contents($txt);
preg_match("/Duration:([^,]+)/", $log, $matches);
list($hours,$minutes,$seconds,$mili) = split(":",$matches[1]);
$seconds = (($hours * 3600) + ($minutes * 60) + $seconds);
$seconds = round($seconds);

$page = join("",file("$txt"));
$kw = explode("time=", $page);
$last = array_pop($kw);
$values = explode(' ', $last);
$curTime = round($values[0]);
$percent_extracted = round((($curTime * 100)/($seconds)));

Outputs perfectly.

Would like to see something for multiple uploads for another progress bar. This passing for the current file for one percentage. Then an overall progress bar. Almost there.

Also, if people are having a hard time getting:

exec("ffmpeg -i path/to/input.mov path/to/output.flv 1> path/to/output.txt 2>&1");

To work.

Try:

exec("ffmpeg -i path/to/input.mov path/to/output.flv 1>path/to/output.txt 2>&1");

"1> path" to "1>path" OR "2> path" to "2>path"

Took me awhile to figure it out. FFMPEG kept failing. Worked when I changed to no space.

Solution 12 - Ffmpeg

This is my solution:

I use ffpb and python subprocess to tracking ffmpeg progress. Then I push status to a database (ex: Redis) for display a progress bar on website.

import subprocess

cmd = 'ffpb -i 400MB.mp4 400MB.avi'

process = subprocess.Popen(
    cmd,
    stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
    stderr=subprocess.STDOUT,
    shell=True,
    encoding='utf-8',
    errors='replace'
)

while True:
    realtime_output = process.stdout.readline()

    if realtime_output == '' and process.poll() is not None:
        break

    if realtime_output:
        print(realtime_output.strip(), flush=True)
        print('Push status to Redis...')

Solution 13 - Ffmpeg

These answers that use multiple tools/consoles are complicating things too much.
pv is a good option but has the noted drawbacks of missing non-senquential data.
Just use the progress utility: Run ffmpeg as normal then in another console monitor with progress -m -c ffmpeg

Solution 14 - Ffmpeg

By taking the progress bar from this link, I create a simple script that shows the actual frame of the video being encoded and shows a progress bar at the bottom of it... at the same time that ffmpeg encodes the video, of course.

enter image description here

First, we have to get duration, width and height from the video, to create the bar. But, as color filter can't get this information from the file, we have to get them first with ffprobe. Then, we use them with ffmpeg.

#!/bin/bash

video_duration=`ffprobe -v quiet -show_entries format=duration -of default=noprint_wrappers=1:nokey=1 "$1"`
video_width=`ffprobe -v quiet -select_streams v -show_entries stream=width    -of csv=p=0:s=x "$1"`
video_height=`ffprobe -v quiet -select_streams v -show_entries stream=height   -of csv=p=0:s=x "$1"`
five_percent=`expr $video_height / 20`

#echo $video_duration
#echo $video_width
#echo $video_height
#echo $five_percent

ffmpeg -i "$1" -filter_complex "color=c=red:s='$video_width'x$five_percent[bar];[0][bar]overlay=-w+(w/$video_duration)*t:H-h:shortest=1[bar]" "$2" -map [bar] -f xv display

Then, use script as:

sh encode_with_bar.sh video_in.mkv video_out.mp4

Performance: the filter used is very simple... but everything added consumes additional CPU. Testing a 10MB video file in my computer, this is the difference:

  • Without script: 14.46 seconds
  • With script: 17.05 seconds (18% more)

Yes, almost 20% more. For short videos, it's nice. For larger files, probably it's not a good idea 路.

Attributions

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