Javicle - a JSON Video Composition Language
25'ten fazla konu seçemezsiniz Konular bir harf veya rakamla başlamalı, kısa çizgiler ('-') içerebilir ve en fazla 35 karakter uzunluğunda olabilir.

README.md 6.4 KiB

3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
3 yıl önce
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165
  1. # Javicle - a JSON Video Composition Language
  2. JVCL (pronounced "Javicle") is a JSON DSL for audio/video transformations.
  3. Under the hood, it's all shell commands: `ffmpeg`, `mediainfo`, `sox`, and so on.
  4. JVCL provides higher-level semantics for working with these lower level tools.
  5. # A Quick Example
  6. Say you want to split a portion of a video into ten-second chunks. With ffmpeg
  7. and bash, you might do something like this:
  8. ```shell script
  9. INCR=10
  10. for ((i=10;i<130;i=(i+INCR))); do
  11. ffmpeg -i /tmp/my/source.mp4 -ss ${i} -t $((i+INCR)) /tmp/my/slice_${i}_$((i+INCR)).mp4
  12. done
  13. ```
  14. With JVCL, you'd create this spec:
  15. ```json
  16. {
  17. "assets": [ {"name": "src", "path": "/tmp/my/source.mp4"} ],
  18. "operations": [{
  19. "operation": "split",
  20. "creates": "src_split_files",
  21. "split": "src",
  22. "interval": "10s",
  23. "start": "10s",
  24. "end": "130s"
  25. }]
  26. }
  27. ```
  28. Yes, the JVCL is longer, but I think many would agree it is easier to read and maintain.
  29. **As the number of input assets and operations grows, hand-crafted shell scripts with magical
  30. ffmpeg incantations become ever more inscrutable.**
  31. JVCL is designed for readability and maintainability. JVCL will continue to evolve towards greater
  32. coverage of the full capabilities of ffmpeg. We also plan to introduce "function" concepts
  33. to create reusable compound operations, further increasing reusability and lowering long-term
  34. maintenance.
  35. # Who is JVCL not for?
  36. If you like GUIs, JVCL is probably not for you.
  37. JVCL is not a replacement for Final Cut Pro or even iMovie.
  38. # Who is JVCL for?
  39. JVCL is for people who like CLIs and automation.
  40. JVCL is for people whose your video composition needs are relatively simple (for now),
  41. since the range of operations supported is limited.
  42. # Concepts
  43. In JVCL there are two main concepts: assets and operations.
  44. ## Assets
  45. Assets are the inputs: generally image, audio and video files. Assets have a name and a path.
  46. The path can be a file or a URL.
  47. Input assets are defined using the `assets` array of a JVCL JSON file.
  48. Operations produce one or more assets, as specified in the `creates` property of
  49. an operation JSON object.
  50. ### Asset Properties
  51. Assets expose properties that can be referenced in operations. The properties currently exposed are:
  52. * `duration`: duration of the audio/video in seconds
  53. * `width`: width of the video in pixels (video and image assets only)
  54. * `height`: width of the video in pixels (video and image assets only)
  55. ## Operations
  56. Operations are transformations to perform on the inputs.
  57. An operation can produce one or more new assets, which can then be referenced in
  58. later operations.
  59. Most of the operation settings can be JavaScript expressions, for example:
  60. "startTime": "someAsset.duration - 10"
  61. The above would set the `startTime` value to ten seconds less than the duration of `someAsset`.
  62. ### Supported Operations
  63. Today, JVCL supports these operations:
  64. ### split
  65. Split an audio/video asset into multiple assets
  66. ### concat
  67. Concatenate audio/video assets together into one asset
  68. ### trim
  69. Trim audio/video; crop a section of an asset, becomes a new asset
  70. ### overlay
  71. Overlay one audio or video file onto another
  72. ### ken-burns
  73. For transforming still images into video via a fade-pan (aka Ken Burns) effect
  74. ### letterbox
  75. Transform a video in one size to another size using black letterboxes on the sides or top/bottom. Handy for embedding mobile videos into other screen formats
  76. ### split-silence
  77. Split an audio file according to silence
  78. # Complex Example
  79. Here is a complex example using multiple assets and operations:
  80. ```json
  81. {
  82. "assets": [
  83. {"name": "vid1", "path": "/tmp/path/to/video1.mp4"},
  84. {"name": "vid2", "path": "/tmp/path/to/video2.mp4"}
  85. ],
  86. "operations": [
  87. {
  88. "operation": "split", // name of the operation,
  89. "creates": "vid1_split_%", // assets it creates, the '%' will be replaced with a counter
  90. "split": "vid1", // split this source asset
  91. "interval": "10s" // split every ten seconds
  92. },
  93. {
  94. "operation": "concat", // name of the operation,
  95. "creates": "recombined_vid1", // assets it creates, the '%' will be replaced with a counter
  96. "concat": ["vid1_split"] // recombine all split assets
  97. },
  98. {
  99. "operation": "concat", // name of the operation,
  100. "creates": "combined_vid", // asset it creates, can be referenced later
  101. "concat": ["vid1", "vid2"] // operation-specific: this says, concatenate these named assets
  102. },
  103. {
  104. "operation": "concat", // name of the operation,
  105. "creates": "combined_vid", // the asset it creates, can be referenced later
  106. "concat": ["vid1", "vid2"] // operation-specific: this says, concatenate these named assets
  107. },
  108. {
  109. "operation": "overlay", // name of the operation,
  110. "creates": {
  111. "name": "overlay1", // asset it creates
  112. "width": "1920", // output width in pixels. default is source width
  113. "height": "1024" // output height in pixes. default is source height
  114. },
  115. "main": "combined_vid1", // main video asset
  116. "startTime": "30", // when (on the main video timeline) to begin showing the overlay. default is 0 (beginning)
  117. "endTime": "60", // when (on the main video timeline) to stop showing the overlay. default is to play the entire overlay
  118. "overlay": {
  119. "source": "vid2", // overlay this video on the main video
  120. "startTime": "0", // when (on the overlay video timeline) to begin playback on the overlay. default is 0 (beginning)
  121. "endTime": "overlay.duration", // when (on the overlay video timeline) to end playback on the overlay. default is to play the entire overlay
  122. "width": "overlay.width / 2", // how wide the overlay will be, in pixels. default is the full overlay width, or maintain aspect ratio if height was set
  123. "height": "source.height", // how tall the overlay will be, in pixels. default is the full overlay height, or maintain aspect ratio if width was set
  124. "x": "source.width / 2", // horizontal overlay position on main video. default is 0
  125. "y": "source.height / 2" // vertical overlay position on main video. default is 0
  126. }
  127. }
  128. ]
  129. }
  130. ```
  131. ## What's up with the name?
  132. I dunno, a cross between a javelin and an icicle? does that have any positive connotations? ok then...