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Subprocess Call Ffmpeg (command Line)

I have been incorporating subprocess calls in my program. I have had no issues with subprocess calls for other commands, but I am having trouble getting the command line input ffmp

Solution 1:

When you use subprocess, your command must either be a string that looks exactly like what you would type on the command line (and you set shell=True), or a list where each command is an item in the list (and you take the default shell=False). In either case, you have to deal with the variable part of the string. For instance, the operating system has no idea what "%03d" is, you have to fill it in.

I can't tell from your question exactly what the parameters are, but lets assume you want to convert frame 3, it would look something like this in a string:

my_frame = 3
subprocess.call(
    'ffmpeg -r 10 -i frame%03d.png -r ntsc movie%03d.mpg' % (my_frame, my_frame),
    shell=True)

Its kinda subtle in this example, but that's risky. Suppose these things were in a directory whose name name had spaces (e.g., ./My Movies/Scary Movie). The shell would be confused by those spaces.

So, you can put it into a list and avoid the problem

my_frame = 3
subprocess.call([
    'ffmpeg',
    '-r', '10',
    '-i', 'frame%03d.png' % my_frame,
    '-r', 'ntsc',
    'movie%03d.mpg' % my_frame,
])

More typing, but safer.


Solution 2:

I found this alternative, simple, answer to also work.

subprocess.call('ffmpeg -r 10 -i frame%03d.png -r ntsc '+str(out_movie), shell=True)

Solution 3:

import shlex
import pipes
from subprocess import check_call

command = 'ffmpeg -r 10 -i frame%03d.png -r ntsc ' + pipes.quote(out_movie)
check_call(shlex.split(command))

Solution 4:

'ffmpeg -r 10 -i frame%03d.png -r ntsc movie.mpg' should be fine. OTOH, If you don't need the power of frame%03d.png, frame*.png is a bit simpler.

If you want to "see the syntax for it if I replace 'movie.mpg' with a variable name", it looks something like this:

cmd = 'ffmpeg -r 10 -i "frame%%03d.png" -r ntsc "%s"' % moviename

We need to escape the % with an extra % to hide it from Python's % substitution machinery. I've also added double quotes " , to cope with the issues that tdelaney mentioned.


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