Using ffmpeg to change framerate
Solution 1
With re-encoding:
ffmpeg -y -i seeing_noaudio.mp4 -vf "setpts=1.25*PTS" -r 24 seeing.mp4
Without re-encoding:
First step - extract video to raw bitstream
ffmpeg -y -i seeing_noaudio.mp4 -c copy -f h264 seeing_noaudio.h264
Remux with new framerate
ffmpeg -y -r 24 -i seeing_noaudio.h264 -c copy seeing.mp4
Solution 2
You may consider using fps
filter. It won't change the video playback speed:
ffmpeg -i <input> -filter:v fps=fps=30 <output>
Worked nice for reducing fps from 59.6 to 30.
Solution 3
Simply specify the desired framerate in "-r " option before the input file:
ffmpeg -y -r 24 -i seeing_noaudio.mp4 seeing.mp4
Options affect the next file AFTER them. "-r" before an input file forces to reinterpret its header as if the video was encoded at the given framerate. No recompression is necessary. There was a small utility avifrate.exe to patch avi file headers directly to change the framerate. ffmpeg command above essentially does the same, but has to copy the entire file.
Solution 4
To the best of my knowledge you can't do this with ffmpeg
without re-encoding. I had a 24fps file I wanted at 25fps to match some other material I was working with. I used the command ffmpeg -i inputfile -r 25 outputfile
which worked perfectly with a webm,matroska input and resulted in an h264, matroska output utilizing encoder: Lavc56.60.100
You can accomplish the same thing at 6fps but as you noted the duration will not change (which in most cases is a good thing as otherwise you will lose audio sync). If this doesn't fit your requirements I suggest that you try this answer although my experience has been that it still re-encodes the output file.
For the best frame accuracy you are still better off decoding to raw streams as previously suggested. I use a script for this as reproduced below:
#!/bin/bash
#This script will decompress all files in the current directory, video to huffyuv and audio to PCM
#unsigned 8-bit and place the output #in an avi container to ease frame accurate editing.
for f in *
do
ffmpeg -i "$f" -c:v huffyuv -c:a pcm_u8 "$f".avi
done
Clearly this script expects all files in the current directory to be media files but can easily be changed to restrict processing to a specific extension of your choosing. Be aware that your file size will increase by a rather large factor when you decompress into raw streams.
Solution 5
In general, to set a video's FPS to 24, almost always you can do:
With Audio and without re-encoding:
# Extract video stream
ffmpeg -y -i input_video.mp4 -c copy -f h264 output_raw_bitstream.h264
# Extract audio stream
ffmpeg -y -i input_video.mp4 -vn -acodec copy output_audio.aac
# Remux with new FPS
ffmpeg -y -r 24 -i output_raw_bitstream.h264 -i output_audio.aac -c copy output.mp4
If you want to find the video format (H264 in this case), you can use FFprobe, like this
ffprobe -loglevel error -select_streams v -show_entries stream=codec_name -of default=nw=1:nk=1 input_video.mp4
which will output:
h264
Read more in How can I analyze file and detect if the file is in H.264 video format?
With re-encoding:
ffmpeg -y -i input_video.mp4 -vf -r 24 output.mp4
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J Brand
Updated on October 10, 2021Comments
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J Brand over 2 years
I am trying to convert a video clip (MP4, yuv420p) from 30 fps to 24 fps. The number of frames is correct so my output should change from 20 minutes at 30fps to 25 minutes at 24fps. Everything else should remain the same.
Try as I might everything I try with ffmpeg converts the frame rate but changes the number of frames to keep the same duration or changes the duration without altering the framerate.
So I have been typically trying things like;
ffmpeg -y -r 30 -i seeing_noaudio.mp4 -r 24 seeing.mp4
(I'm doing this on windows but normally would be on linux). That converts the framerate but drops frames so the total duration is unaltered.
Or I have tried
ffmpeg -y -i seeing_noaudio.mp4 -filter:v "setpts=1.25*PTS" seeing.mp4
Which changes the duration but not the framerate.
Surely I should be able to do this with a single ffmpeg command without having to reencode or even as some people suggested going back to the original raw frames.
Help please
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osullic almost 3 years
-y
flag indicates "Overwrite output files without asking". I had to go and find what that meant, to ensure I wasn't misunderstanding something here. I think it's immaterial to the question at hand, so should be removed to simplify things for everyone. -
osullic almost 3 yearsFor
-r
, documentation says, "As an input option, ignore any timestamps stored in the file and instead generate timestamps assuming constant frame ratefps
. As an output option, duplicate or drop input frames to achieve constant output frame ratefps
."
-
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J Brand almost 7 yearsThanks for that. The first of those worked but the second didn't returning an error message along the lines of "Could not write header for output file #0 (incorrect codec parameters ?): Invalid argument". I've no idea what that meant but the first one worked.
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Gyan almost 7 yearsLooks like the video codec is not H.264. Which is it?
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7vujy0f0hy almost 6 yearsNeither answer works for me with a VP8 WebM file (which I'm trying to slow down from 25 fps to 6fps without re-encoding). Output video is same as input.
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Elder Geek almost 6 yearsThis doesn't change the frame rate of the output file at all for me.
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zenw0lf over 5 yearsIf you do this your video will be cut off. You should specify the
-r
parameter before the input file. -
Mehran over 5 years
-filter:v fps
OR-r fps
. which one is preferred? -
Gyan over 5 yearsGenerally,
-r
. Use the filter when you need to change framerate before applying further filters. -
Kornel about 5 yearsIt looks promising, but I'm getting "Timestamps are unset in a packet for stream 0." and "pts has no value" warnings, and the resulting video is very choppy, as if it was playing two steps forward and one step back.
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lepe about 5 yearsNote about
setpts
: To double the speed of the video:setpts=0.5*PTS
, To slow down your video, you have to use a multiplier greater than 1:setpts=2.0*PTS
(half the speed) reference -
Freedo almost 5 yearsCan you add the PTS and -r values for other commons FPS like 23.976, 60, etc?
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Gyan almost 5 yearsIt depends on the input framerate. Basic formula for PTS coefficient is
(old rate)/(new rate)
.-r
is simply the new framerate. The exact values for23.976
,29.97
and59.94
are24000/1001
,3000/1001
and60000/1001
. -
Shayan over 4 years@zenw0lf cut off how? I tested this and it worked fine. It's documented on ffmpeg's website.
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ashrasmun over 4 yearsAfter using this option, my video was just stretched out from 5 minutes to 10.
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totymedli about 4 yearsIf you get this error: "The encoder 'aac' is experimental but experimental codecs are not enabled, add '-strict -2' if you want to use it." just add
-strict -2
beforeseeing.mp4
. -
Gyan about 4 yearsIf you get that error, upgrade ffmpeg. That flag is not required since 2016.
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PythonProgrammi about 4 yearsThis works to keep the audio in sync with the video, thanks
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Freedo about 4 yearsWhat about the audio? your no reencoding command creates a file without audio
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Gyan about 4 yearsAdd the original MP4 as 2nd input in the remux command.
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Ventolinmono over 3 yearsThis works for me reducing the frame rate but it puts the audio out of sync.
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leavittx over 3 yearsNice btw it turns out you can use this command to reduce OBS recordings size by a factor ~2 without sacrificing neither quality or smoothness (if using 60fps change to fps=fps=60). All other commands, including reencoding with best quality possible with x264/nvenc gave visible artifacts
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Sergey P. aka azure over 3 yearsI had video encoded in h265. Extracted video stream with
ffmpeg -y -i input_video.mp4 -c copy -f hevc output_raw_bitstream.h264
(hevc
instead ofh264
) Then remuxed that stream successfully with desired framerate. Thanks! -
Bram over 3 yearsWhen I do the remux, the resulting video is corrupted, smearing out artifacts all over the place. Also: "Timestamps are unset in a packet for stream 0"
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Gyan about 3 yearsIf the audio stream has timestamp gaps, your first set of commands will destroy those gaps. Also, the audio will be out of sync as it hasn't been retimed.
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Gyan about 3 yearsYour re-encoding command doesn't conform the video like the OP wants ("my output should change from 20 minutes at 30fps to 25 minutes at 24fps"), it will instead change the 'density' of frames per-second to 24. But the bigger issue is that the syntax is wrong - ffmpeg will abort with an error. You have added
-vf
but it has no argument so ffmpeg's parser will consume-r
as its arg and error out. -
ch271828n almost 3 yearswhy use fps=fps= specifying the keywords twice? thanks
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kelin almost 3 years@ch271828n, I took it from the example. Basically, the first
fps
is the name of the filter and the secondfps
is the input parameter, also looks like you can skip it. -
Georg almost 3 yearsShould probably add a note that the atempo="value" ; value is the rate at which the audio changes.
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jjisnow almost 3 yearsCan confirm the audio is completely messed up by running the above commands as the stream is not re-encoded at the correct timings.
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Coreus almost 3 yearsffmpeg -i <input-video> -filter:v fps=15 <output-video>
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Nitin Ashutosh over 2 yearsI have converted other videos it works for them. One video which I have saved from 5 fps stream but downloaded video show fps 5.01. I want to change fps with 5 fps but I am getting the following error
The encoder 'aac' is experimental but experimental codecs are not enabled, add '-strict -2' if you want to use it.
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Nitin Ashutosh over 2 yearsAdding '-strict -2` before the output file name , resolve the issue.
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Dev.Jaap over 2 yearsThis changes the speed of the film in my case