Provided by: opus-tools_0.2-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       opusenc - encode audio into the Opus format

SYNOPSIS

       opusenc  [  -h  ]  [  -V ] [ --help-picture ] [ --quiet ] [ --bitrate kbit/s ] [ --vbr ] [
       --cvbr ] [ --hard-cbr ] [ --music ] [ --speech ] [ --comp complexity ] [ --framesize  2.5,
       5,  10, 20, 40, 60 ] [ --expect-loss pct ] [ --downmix-mono ] [ --downmix-stereo ] [ --no-
       phase-inv ] [ --max-delay ms ] [ --title 'track title' ] [ --artist  author  ]  [  --album
       'album title' ] [ --tracknumber 'track number' ] [ --genre genre ] [ --date YYYY-MM-DD ] [
       --comment tag=value ] [ --picture filename|specification ] [ --padding n  ]  [  --discard-
       comments ] [ --discard-pictures ] [ --raw ] [ --raw-bits bits/sample ] [ --raw-rate Hz ] [
       --raw-chan N ] [ --raw-endianness flag ] [ --ignorelength ] [ --serial serial number  ]  [
       --save-range file ] [ --set-ctl-int ctl=value ] input.wav output.opus

DESCRIPTION

       opusenc  reads  audio data in Wave, AIFF, FLAC, Ogg/FLAC, or raw PCM format and encodes it
       into an Ogg Opus stream. If the  input  file  is  "-"  audio  data  is  read  from  stdin.
       Likewise, if the output file is "-" the Ogg Opus stream is written to stdout.

       Unless quieted opusenc displays fancy statistics about the encoding progress.

OPTIONS

   General options
       -h, --help
              Show command help

       -V, --version
              Show the version number

       --help-picture
              Show help on attaching album art

       --quiet
              Enable quiet mode. No messages are displayed.

   Encoding options
       --bitrate N.nnn
              Set target bitrate in kbit/s (6-256 per channel)

              In  VBR  mode this specifies the average rate for a large and diverse collection of
              audio. In CVBR and Hard-CBR mode it specifies the specific output bitrate.

              The default for input with a sample rate of 44.1 kHz or higher  is  64  kbit/s  per
              mono stream and 96 kbit/s per coupled pair.

       --vbr  Use variable bitrate encoding (default)

              In  VBR  mode  the  bitrate  may  go up and down freely depending on the content to
              achieve more consistent quality.

       --cvbr Use constrained variable bitrate encoding.

              Outputs to a specific bitrate. This mode is analogous to CBR  in  AAC/MP3  encoders
              and  managed  mode in Vorbis coders. This delivers less consistent quality than VBR
              mode but consistent bitrate.

       --hard-cbr
              Use hard constant bitrate encoding.

              With hard-cbr every frame will be exactly the same  size,  similar  to  how  speech
              codecs  work.  This  delivers  lower  overall  quality  but is useful where bitrate
              changes might leak data in encrypted channels or on synchronous transports.

       --music
              Override automatic detection and tune low bitrate encoding for music.  By  default,
              music is detected automatically and the classification may vary over time.

              Tuning  impacts  lower  bitrates  that involve tradeoffs between speech clarity and
              musical accuracy, and has no impact at bitrates typically  used  for  high  quality
              music encoding.

       --speech
              Override automatic detection and tune low bitrate encoding for speech.  By default,
              speech is detected automatically and the classification may vary over time.

              Tuning impacts lower bitrates that involve tradeoffs  between  speech  clarity  and
              musical  accuracy,  and  has  no impact at bitrates typically used for high quality
              music encoding.

       --comp N
              Set encoding computational complexity (0-10, default: 10). Zero gives  the  fastest
              encodes but lower quality, while 10 gives the highest quality but slower encoding.

       --framesize N
              Set maximum frame size in milliseconds (2.5, 5, 10, 20, 40, 60, default: 20)
              Smaller framesizes achieve lower latency but less quality at a given bitrate.
              Sizes greater than 20ms are only interesting at fairly low bitrates.

       --expect-loss N
              Set expected packet loss in percent (default: 0)

       --downmix-mono
              Downmix to mono

       --downmix-stereo
              Downmix to stereo (if >2 channels input)

       --no-phase-inv
              Disable  use  of  phase  inversion  for  intensity  stereo. This trades some stereo
              quality for a higher quality mono downmix, and is useful when encoding stereo audio
              that is likely to be downmixed to mono after decoding.

       --max-delay N
              Set maximum container delay in milliseconds (0-1000, default: 1000)

   Metadata options
       --title title
              Set the track title comment field to title

       --artist artist
              Set  the  artist  comment field to artist.  This may be used multiple times to list
              contributing artists individually.  Note  that  some  playback  software  does  not
              display multiple artists gracefully.

       --album album
              Set the album or collection title field to album

       --tracknumber N
              Set the track number comment field to N

       --date YYYY-MM-DD
              Set  the  date  comment  field  to YYYY-MM-DD.  This may be shortened to YYYY-MM or
              YYYY.

       --genre genre
              Set the genre comment field to genre.  This option may be specified multiple  times
              to tag a track with multiple overlapping genres.

       --comment tag=value
              Add  an extra comment.  This may be used multiple times.  The argument should be in
              the form "tag=value".  See the vorbis-comment  specification  for  well  known  tag
              names: https://www.xiph.org/vorbis/doc/v-comment.html

       --picture filename|specification
              Attach album art for the track.

              Either  a  filename  for  the  artwork or a more complete specification form can be
              used.  The picture is added to a METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE comment  field  similar  to
              what is used in FLAC.  The specification is a string whose parts are separated by |
              (pipe) characters.  Some parts may be left empty to invoke default values.  Passing
              a plain filename is just shorthand for the "||||filename" specification.

              The         format         of         specification        is        [type]|[media-
              type]|[description]|[widthxheightxdepth[/colors]]|filename

              type is an optional number describing the nature of the  picture.   Defined  values
              are from one of:

                0: Other
                1: 32x32 pixel 'file icon' (PNG only)
                2: Other file icon
                3: Cover (front)
                4: Cover (back)
                5: Leaflet page
                6: Media (e.g., label side of a CD)
                7: Lead artist/lead performer/soloist
                8: Artist/performer
                9: Conductor
               10: Band/Orchestra
               11: Composer
               12: Lyricist/text writer
               13: Recording location
               14: During recording
               15: During performance
               16: Movie/video screen capture
               17: A bright colored fish
               18: Illustration
               19: Band/artist logotype
               20: Publisher/studio logotype

              The default is 3 (front cover).  More than one --picture option can be specified to
              attach multiple pictures.  There may only be one picture each of type 1 and 2 in  a
              file.

              media-type is optional and is now ignored.

              description is optional. The default is an empty string.

              The next part specifies the resolution and color information, but is now ignored.

              filename is the path to the picture file to be imported.

       --padding n
              Reserve  n  extra  bytes  for  metadata  tags. This can make later tag editing more
              efficient. Defaults to 512.

       --discard-comments
              Don't propagate metadata tags from the input file.

       --discard-pictures
              Don't propagate pictures or art from the input file.

   Input options
       --raw  Interpret input as raw PCM data without headers

       --raw-bits N
              Set bits/sample for raw input (default: 16)

       --raw-rate N
              Set sampling rate for raw input (default: 48000)

       --raw-chan N
              Set number of channels for raw input (default: 2)

       --raw-endianness [0/1]
              Set the endianness for raw input: 1 for big endian, 0 for little (default: 0)

       --ignorelength
              Ignore the data length in Wave headers. Opusenc automatically  ignores  the  length
              when its implausible (very small or very large) but some STDIN usage may still need
              this option to avoid truncation.

   Diagnostic options
       --serial n
              Force use of a specific stream serial number, rather  than  one  that  is  randomly
              generated.   This  is used to make the encoder deterministic for testing and is not
              generally recommended.

       --save-range file
              Save check values for every frame to a file

       --set-ctl-int x=y
              Pass the encoder control x with value y (advanced).  Preface with s: to direct  the
              ctl to multistream s
              This may be used multiple times

EXAMPLES

       Simplest usage. Take input as input.wav and produce output as output.opus:
              opusenc input.wav output.opus

       Produce a very high quality encode with a target rate of 160 kbit/s:
              opusenc --bitrate 160 input.wav output.opus

       Record and send a live stream to an Icecast HTTP streaming server using oggfwd:
              arecord   -c   2   -r  48000  -twav  -  |  opusenc  --bitrate  96  -   -  |  oggfwd
              icecast.somewhere.org 8000 password /stream.opus

NOTES

       While it is possible to use opusenc for low latency streaming (e.g. with  --max-delay  set
       to  0  and  netcat  instead  of  Icecast)  it's  not really designed for this, and the Ogg
       container and TCP transport aren't the best tools for that  application.  Shell  pipelines
       themselves  will often have high buffering. The ability to set framesizes as low as 2.5 ms
       in opusenc mostly exists to try out the quality of the format with low  latency  settings,
       but not really for actual low latency usage.
       Interactive usage should use UDP/RTP directly.

AUTHORS

       Gregory Maxwell <greg@xiph.org>

SEE ALSO

       opusdec(1), opusinfo(1), oggfwd(1)