Provided by: fuse-emulator-utils_1.4.0-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       fmfconv — Fuse Movie File converter

SYNOPSIS

       fmfconv [options] [infile [outfile [soundfile]]]

DESCRIPTION

       fmfconv  is  a  Fuse  Movie  File  converter.  It  can read .fmf files produced by Fuse ZX
       Spectrum emulator and write audio files, video files or sequences of images in  a  variety
       of  popular  formats. It can also stream data to external tools through a pipe, so you can
       get virtually any possible format (see EXAMPLES).

       fmfconv has built-in support for AIFF, AU  and  WAV  sound  formats,  PPM  and  SCR  image
       formats,  AVI  and YUV4MPEG2 video formats. Supports PNG and JPEG/MJPEG formats internally
       if libpng and libjpeg are available respectively.

OPTIONS

   General options:
       -h
       --help
              Give brief usage help, listing available options.

       --info
              Scan input file(s) and print information.

       -i filename
       --input filename
              Input file.

       -o filename
       --output filename
              Output file.

       -y
       --overwrite
              Force overwrite of existing output file(s).

       -g form
       --progress form
              Show progress, where `form' is one of `%', `bar', `frame' or `time'. frame and time
              are similar to bar and show movie seconds or frame number as well.

       -q
       --quiet
              Decrease the verbosity level by one.

       -v
       --verbose
              Increase the verbosity level by one.

       -V
       --version
              Print the version number and exit.

   Audio options:
       --aifc
              Force AIFF-C output if sound format is AIFF.

       -m
       --aiff
              Save sound to Apple Computer audio (aiff/aiff-c) file.

       -u
       --au
              Save sound to Sun Audio (au) file.

       --mono
              Convert sound to mono (by default sound is converted to stereo).

       --raw-sound
              Do  not  convert sound to 16-bit signed PCM and STEREO or MONO. This is an advanced
              option. If stereo/mono or audio encoding change through `fmf' file, your sound will
              be crappy.

       -s filename
       --sound filename
              Output sound file.

       --sound-only
              Process only the sound from an `fmf' file.

       -E rate
       --srate rate
              Resample  audio  to `rate' sampling rate where `rate' is `cd' for 44100 Hz or `dat'
              for 48000 Hz or a number (`cd' and `dat' set `stereo' as well).

       -w
       --wav
              Save sound to Waveform Audio (wav) file.

   Video/image options:
       --avi
              Save video as AVI format with built-in AVI encoder. If fmfconv supports jpeg files,
              encode  video as M-JPEG and audio as S16_LE PCM. If output is not a file (stdout or
              redirected) then fmfconv  encode  video  as  uncompressed  BGR24  DIB  frames  (see
              --avi-mjpeg and --avi-uncompr).

       -f timing
       --frate timing
              Set  output frame rate. `timing' is `pal', `ntsc', `movie' or a number with maximum
              3 digit after decimal point, or a #/# (e.g.: -f 29.97 or -f 30000/1001).
              For video output formats (AVI/MJPEG/YUV4MPEG2) fmfconv set frame  rate  to  25  fps
              (PAL timing). If you want to keep the original frame rate use `raw' timing.

       -C cut
       --out-cut cut
              Leave  out the comma delimited `cut' ranges e.g.: 100-200,300,500,1:11-2:22 cut the
              frames 100–200, 300, 500 and frames from 1 min 11 sec to 2 min 22 sec (in the given
              timing see: -f/--frate).

       -P
       --ppm
              Save video as PPM screenshots.

       -S
       --scr
              Save video as SCR screenshots.

       -Y
       --yuv
              Save video as yuv4mpeg2.

       --yuv-format frm
              Set  yuv4mpeg2  file  frame  format  to  `frm', where `frm' is one of `444', `422',
              `420j', `420m', `420' or `410'.

   The following options are available when PNG files are supported:
       --greyscale
              Save greyscale images.

       -G
       --png
              Save video frames as PNG screenshots.

       --png-compress level
              Set compression level from a range 0–9, or `none', `fast', `best'.

       --progressive
              Save progressive (interlaced) PNG files.

   The following options are available when JPEG files are supported:
       --avi-mjpeg
              Force the use of M-JPEG AVI frames (lossy).

       --avi-uncompr
              Force the use of uncompressed BGR24  AVI  frames.  This  format  does  not  produce
              compression  artifacts but the file size is bigger. It is a good choice if you want
              to process the video with an external tool.

       --greyscale
              Save greyscale images or convert video frames.

       -J
       --jpeg
              Save video frames as JPEG screenshots.

       --jpeg-fast
              Use faster, less accurate integer method for DCT compression.

       --jpeg-float
              Use floating-point method for DCT compression.

       --jpeg-optimize
              Compute optimal Huffman coding tables for the image.

       -Q
       --jpeg-quality q
              Set jpeg quality from a range 0–100.

       --jpeg-smooth factor
              Set jpeg smoothing factor from a range 0–100.

       -M
       --mjpeg
              Save video as raw M-JPEG file (abbreviated JPEG stream).

       --progressive
              Save progressive (interlaced) JPEG files.

EXAMPLES

       Some of the following examples use ffmpeg(1) as an  external  tool  for  doing  the  final
       conversion.  In  some  distributions  avconv(1)  is  available,  which  accepts  the  same
       parameters.

       Convert FMF to AVI:

              fmfconv input.fmf output.avi

       Convert FMF to a mpeg video with quality equivalent to YouTube:

              fmfconv input.fmf | ffmpeg -i - -vf scale=480:360 -r 25
                      -codec:v h264 -codec:a aac -f mov -b:a 128000
                      -b:v 600000 -pix_fmt yuv420p -strict -2 output.mov

       Convert FMF to a DVD video format:

              fmfconv input.fmf | ffmpeg -i - -aspect 4:3 -target pal-dvd
                      output.vob

       Convert FMF to SVCD video format:

              fmfconv input.fmf | ffmpeg -i - -aspect 4:3 -target pal-svcd
                      output.mpg

       Convert FMF to iPod video format:

              fmfconv input.fmf | ffmpeg -i - -vf scale=320:240 -r 30
                      -codec:v h264 -codec:a aac -f ipod -ar 44100 -b:a 128000
                      -b:v 256000 -pix_fmt yuv420p -strict -2 output.m4v

       Convert FMF to animated GIF (25 fps) using ImageMagick:

              fmfconv -f 25 input.fmf tmp.png
              convert -delay 4 -loop 0 -layers removeDups -layers Optimize
                      tmp*.png output.gif

       Extract audio (mono) from a FMF file:

              fmfconv --sound-only --mono input.fmf output.wav

BUGS

       None known.

SEE ALSO

       avconv(1), ffmpeg(1), fuse(1), fuse-utils(1), imagemagick(1).

       The Fuse Movie File specification, at
       http://sourceforge.net/p/fuse-emulator/wiki/FMF%20File%20Format/.

       The comp.sys.sinclair Spectrum FAQ, at
       http://www.worldofspectrum.org/faq/index.html.

AUTHOR

       Gergely Szasz.