node-transcoding is a library for enabling both offline and real-time media transcoding. In addition to enabling the manipulation of the input media, utilities are provided to ease serving of the output.
Currently supported features:
- Nothing!
Coming soon (maybe):
- Everything!
npm install transcoding
node
> var transcoding = require('transcoding');
> transcoding.process('input.flv', 'output.m4v',
transcoding.profiles.APPLE_TV_2, function(err, sourceInfo, targetInfo) {
console.log('completed!');
});
With npm:
npm install transcoding
From source:
cd ~
git clone https://[email protected]/benvanik/node-transcoding.git
npm link node-transcoding/
node-transcoding requires ffmpeg
and its libraries avformat
and avcodec
.
Make sure it's installed and on your path. It must be compiled with libx264 to
support most output - note that some distributions don't include this and you
may have to compile it yourself. Annoying, I know.
./configure \
--enable-gpl --enable-nonfree --enable-pthreads \
--enable-libfaac --enable-libfaad --enable-libmp3lame \
--enable-libx264
sudo make install
The easiest way to get ffmpeg is via MacPorts. Install it if needed and run the following from the command line:
sudo port install ffmpeg +gpl +lame +x264 +xvid
You may also need to add the MacPorts paths to your ~./profile
:
export C_INCLUDE_PATH=$C_INCLUDE_PATH:/opt/local/include/
export CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH=$CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH:/opt/local/include/
export LIBRARY_PATH=$LIBRARY_PATH:/opt/local/lib/
sudo pkg_add ffmpeg
# HAHA YEAH RIGHT GOOD LUCK >_>
sudo apt-get install ffmpeg
All APIs take a source and target. Sources can be either strings representing file paths or Node readable streams. Targets can be either strings representing file paths or Node writable streams. Note that if possible you should use file paths, as it enables much faster access to the underlying data (~2x speed increase).
Whenever 'info' is used, it refers to a MediaInfo object that looks something like this:
{
container: 'flv',
duration: 126, // seconds
start: 0, // seconds
bitrate: 818000, // bits/sec
streams: [
{
type: 'video',
codec: 'h264',
profile: 'Main',
profileId: 77,
profileLevel: 30,
resolution: { width: 640, height: 360 },
bitrate: 686000,
fps: 29.97
}, {
type: 'audio',
language: 'eng',
codec: 'aac',
sampleRate: 44100, // Hz
channels: 2,
bitrate: 131000
}
]
}
Note that many of these fields are optional, such as bitrate, language, profile information, and even fps/duration. Don't go using the values without checking for undefined first.
To quickly query media information (duration, codecs used, etc) use the
queryInfo
API:
var transcoding = require('transcoding');
transcoding.queryInfo(source, function(err, info) {
// Completed
});
Transcoding requires a ton of parameters to get the best results. It's a pain in the ass. So what's exposed right now is a profile set that tries to set the best options for you. Pick your profile and pass it into the transcoding APIs.
var transcoding = require('transcoding');
for (var profileName in transcoding.profiles) {
var profile = transcoding.profiles[profileName];
console.log(profileName + ':' + util.inspect(profile));
}
If you are doing simple offline transcoding (no need for streaming, extra
options, progress updates, etc) then you can use the process
API:
var transcoding = require('transcoding');
transcoding.process(source, target, transcoding.profiles.APPLE_TV_2, {}, function(err, sourceInfo, targetInfo) {
// Completed
});
Note that this effectively just wraps the advanced API, without the need to track events.
var transcoding = require('transcoding');
var task = transcoding.createTask(source, target, transcoding.profiles.APPLE_TV_2);
task.on('begin', function(sourceInfo, targetInfo) {
// Transcoding beginning, info available
console.log('transcoding beginning...');
console.log('source:');
console.log(util.inspect(sourceInfo));
console.log('target:');
console.log(util.inspect(targetInfo));
});
task.on('progress', function(progress) {
// New progress made, currrently at timestamp out of duration
// progress = {
// timestamp: 0, // current seconds timestamp in the media
// duration: 0, // total seconds in the media
// timeElapsed: 0, // seconds elapsed so far
// timeEstimated: 0, // seconds estimated for total task
// timeRemaining: 0, // seconds remaining until done
// timeMultiplier: 2 // multiples of real time the transcoding is
// // occuring in (2 = 2x media time)
// }
console.log(util.inspect(progress));
console.log('progress ' + (progress.timestamp / progress.duration) + '%');
});
task.on('error', function(err) {
// Error occurred, transcoding ending
console.log('error: ' + err);
});
task.on('end', function() {
// Transcoding has completed
console.log('finished');
});
// Start transcoding
task.start();
// At any time, abort transcoding
task.stop();
If you are targeting devices that support HTTP Live Streaming (like iOS), you can have the transcoder build the output in realtime as it processes. This enables playback while the transcoding is occuring, as well as some other fancy things such as client-side stream switching (changing audio channels/etc).
var task = transcoding.createTask(source, null, profile, {
liveStreaming: {
path: '/some/path/',
name: 'base_name',
segmentDuration: 10,
allowCaching: true
}
});
This will result in a playlist file and the MPEGTS segments being placed under
/some/path/
with the name base_name.m3u8
. The playlist file will be
automatically updated as new segments are generated, and files can be assumed to
be static once they are available.