Provided by: mpgtx_1.3.1-6build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       mpgtx, mpgsplit, mpgcat, mpgjoin, mpginfo, mpgdemux - manipulate mpeg files

SYNOPSIS

       mpgtx command [ options ] file [ range | file ] ...

DESCRIPTION

       mpgtx  can  split  and  join  MPEG files in various ways. Three file types are currently handled (more to
       come): MPEG 1 Video files, MPEG 1/2 Audio files (mp1, mp2, and mp3), MPEG 1 System files (audio and video
       files),  MPEG  2  Program files (Experimental), MPEG 2 Transport files (demultiplex and info modes only).
       mpgtx is a GOP (Group of Pictures) based editor. This means that mpgtx cuts MPEG  files  on  a  Group  Of
       Picture  basis,  not  on  a  frame-by-frame  basis.  A  typical GOP duration is about 0.5 sec (approx. 15
       frames), limiting the maximum accuracy of mpgtx.

COMMANDS

       -i     prints information about files, such as duration, dimention, bitrate, etc.

       -j     joins files (ranges may be specified, see the RANGES section).

       -s     splits files according to the specified ranges (see the RANGES section).

       -d     demultiplexes composite mpeg file.

       -T     manipulates ID3v1 tags from mp3 files (see tagmp3(1)).

       -h     prints a (not so) short help message.

       -v     prints version and exit.

       -#     where # is a number, splits the given files in # parts.

       --force
              enables joining of incompatible files (some players are very robust)

       --no-parachute
              prevents mpgtx to try to catch SIGSEGV signal. This is usefull for debugging.

       In addition, when invoked with the names mpgjoin, mpgcat, mpgsplit, mpgdemux, tagmp3  or  mpginfo,  mpgtx
       will modify its behaviour in the following ways:
       mpginfo behaves as mpgtx -i
       mpgsplit behaves as mpgtx -s
       mpgjoin behaves as mpgtx -j
       mpgcat behaves as mpgtx -j -o -
       mpgdemux behaves as mpgtx -d
       tagmp3 behaves as mpgtx -T

OPTIONS

       -f     force overwriting of files, never ask.

       -Ax    Change aspect ratio of mpeg. Valid are 1,2,3,4 for 1:1, 4:3, 16:9, 2.2:1

       -P     Keep junk or unusual headers in splits

       -X     Desperate  mode,  search  the  whole  movie for a valid PACK. In addition with Option -N no search
              infos will be displayed, only end summary.

       -N     Suppress progress output to the console. Speeds up operation a little on most Systems and much  on
              Macintosh OS9.
              Suppress time line check in mpginfo mode.

       -b NAME
              each output file will have the basename NAME

       -o FILE
              FILE  will  be used as the output file (used with the join command). if FILE is -, standard output
              will be used.

RANGES

       Each range must follow a filename or another range.  A range in an MPEG file can be specified  using  one
       of this three notations: Note for OSX Users: Ranges must be enclosed in single or double Quotes!

       [a-b]  from  value  a inclusive to value b inclusive. If you want half opened ranges, you may want to use
              ]a-b], [a-b[ or ]a-b[.

       [n/ntot]
              the n th part out of ntot.  [1/4] would result in the first quarter of the specified file.

       {a-b-...}
              with a , b , ...  in ascending order. Split specified file at given  boundaries.  {55M}  therefore
              means from beginnig of file to 55Megs and from 55Megs to the end of file.

VALID VALUES

       Values of ranges can be specified in seconds or as a byte offset.

       Time Format
              HH:MM:SS.SS where the HH: part can be omited

       Offset Format
              a number optionally followed by M for Megabytes k for kilobytes

       Omitted Values
              An empty value is valid and is equivalent to the corresponding file boundary:
              [-10M] are the first 10 Megabytes of the file.
              [1:10:04-] from 1 hour 10 minutes 4 seconds to the end of file.

RETURN VALUE

       All programs return 0 upon successful completion and 1 on failure.

EXAMPLES

       mpgjoin movie1.mpg [-0:32] [45M-75M] movie2.mpg -o joined.mpg
              joined.mpg  will  contain  the  first  32  seconds of movie1.mpg followed by 30 Megs of movie1.mpg
              starting at 45 Megs followed by the whole file movie2.mpg

       mpgtx -124 myfile.mpg -b output
              will split myfile.mpg in 124 parts with names output-001.mpg to output-124.mpg

       mpgtx -i Wazzup.mp3
              will print infos about given file such as duration, bitrate, but also album, track, song  name  if
              this file has an ID3 tag.

       mpgcat myfile.mpg [2/2] | lpr
              will  redirect the second half of myfile.mpg to your printer, emptying it from toner and paper and
              make you be fired by your boss... Use carefully.

BUGS

       Plenty of them :)
       GOP (Group of Picture) based: well this is not  a  bug  but  it's  a  limitation.  As  explained  in  the
       DESCRIPTION section, this limits the accuracy of mpgtx on joins and splits to approximately 15 frames, or
       0.5 seconds.
       Some artifacts can be seen with bad MPEG players playing joined files.  These  players  don't  take  into
       account  the  broken  link flag used to discard the first B frames they encounter. This is a bug in their
       MPEG decoding engine, not mpgtx.

AUTHOR

       Laurent Alacoque <laureck@users.sourceforge.net> CopyLeft 2001.
       Modified by Chris Danis <danish@debian.org>, copyleft 2001.
       Philipp Biermann <philipp@biermann.org>, copyleft 2002.
       Erik Schanze <schanzi_@gmx.de>, copyleft 2004.
       Get new releases and information from, and send patches, bugs, girls, money etc. to:
       http://mpgtx.sourceforge.net/

THANKS

       for your attention. Have a good day.
       Godmar Back and Brent Phillips helped me to tune the command line interface.
       Volker Moell patiently teach me how to build rpms. Danke Volker.
       Jean Fransisco Sytem (alias Nicolas Schieli) helped me correct some nasty bugs.
       Thank you guys.