Provided by: tstools_1.13~git20151030-6_amd64
NAME
esreport — Report on the contents of an ES
SYNOPSIS
esmerge [-err stdout] [-err stderr] [-verbose | -v] [-quiet | -q] [-frames | -findfields | -afd | -es] [-framesize] [-frametype] [-x] [-max max-units | -m max_units] [-pes | -ts] [-pesreport] [-h264 | -avc | -h262 | -avs] in_file | -stdin
DESCRIPTION
Report on the content of an elementary stream containing H.264 (MPEG-4/AVC), H.262 (MPEG-2) or AVS video data. Files in_file is the Elementary Stream file (but see -stdin below) What to report The default is to report on H.262 items, AVS frames or H.264 NAL units. Other choices are: -frames Report by frames. The default for AVS. -findfields Report on any fields in the data. Ignored for AVS. -afd Report (just) on AFD changes in H.262. Ignored for the other types of file. -es Report on ES units. Reporting on frames may be modified by: -framesize Report on the sizes of frames (mean, etc.). -frametype Report on the numbers of different type of frame. (in fact, both of these imply -frame). Switches -err stdout Write error messages to standard output (the default) -err stderr Write error messages to standard error (Unix traditional) -stdin Input from standard input, instead of a file -v, -verbose For H.262 data, output information about the data in each MPEG-2 item. For ES units, output information about the data in each ES unit. Ignored for H.264 data. -q, -quiet Only output summary information (i.e., the number of entities in the file, statistics, etc.) -x Show details of each NAL unit as it is read. -stdin Take input from <stdin>, instead of a named file -max max_units, -m max_units Maximum number of NAL units/MPEG-2 items/AVS frames/ES units to read. If -frames, then the program will stop after that many frames. If reading 'frames', MPEG-2 and AVS will also count sequence headers and sequence end. -pes, -ts The input file is TS or PS, to be read via the PES to ES reading mechanisms -pesreport Report on PES headers. Implies -pes and -q. Stream type: If input is from a file, then the program will look at the start of the file to determine if the stream is H.264, H.262 or AVS data. This process may occasionally come to the wrong conclusion, in which case the user can override the choice using the following switches. If input is from standard input (via -stdin), then it is not possible for the program to make its own decision on the input stream type. Instead, it defaults to H.262, and relies on the user indicating if this is wrong. -h264, -avc Force the program to treat the input as MPEG-4/AVC. -h262 Force the program to treat the input as MPEG-2. -avs Force the program to treat the input as AVS.
SEE ALSO
esdots(1),