Skip to content

nickkuk/ffmpeg-light

 
 

Repository files navigation

Minimal bindings to the FFmpeg library.

Stream frames from an encoded video, or stream frames to a video output file. To read the first frame from an h264-encoded file into a JuicyPixels Maybe DynamicImage,

import Codec.FFmpeg
import Codec.Picture
import Control.Applicative

go :: IO (Maybe DynamicImage)
go = do (getFrame, cleanup) <- imageReader "myVideo.mov"
        (fmap ImageRGB8 <$> getFrame) <* cleanup

A demonstration of creating an animation using the Rasterific library may be found in demo/Raster.hs. A weird animated variation of the Rasterific logo is the result:

Animated Rasterific Logo

Note that encoding an animation to a modern video codec like h264 can result in even smaller files. But those files can't be embedded in a README on github.

Tested on OS X 10.9.2 with FFmpeg 2.2.1 installed via homebrew.

Debian and Ubuntu users: Your package manager's ffmpeg package is actually a not-quite-compatible fork of the ffmpeg project. To use ffmpeg-light, run the included ffmpeg-ubuntu-compile.sh script as regular (non-root) user. This builds the ffmpeg libraries locally. Configure your projects that depend on ffmpeg-light with a modified PKG_CONFIG_PATH:

PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$HOME/ffmpeg_build/lib/pkgconfig" cabal configure --disable-shared my-project

There are signs that the next Ubuntu release will come with the original ffmpeg and development packages.

Build Status

About

Minimal Haskell bindings to the FFmpeg library

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Haskell 90.7%
  • Shell 4.7%
  • C 2.8%
  • C++ 1.8%