Provided by: flac_1.4.3+ds-2.1ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       flac - Free Lossless Audio Codec

SYNOPSIS

       flac  [  OPTIONS  ]  [  infile.wav  | infile.rf64 | infile.aiff | infile.raw | infile.flac | infile.oga |
       infile.ogg | - ... ]

       flac [ -d | --decode | -t | --test | -a | --analyze ] [ OPTIONS ] [ infile.flac | infile.oga | infile.ogg
       | - ... ]

DESCRIPTION

       flac is a command-line tool for encoding, decoding, testing and analyzing FLAC streams.

GENERAL USAGE

       flac  supports  as  input  RIFF  WAVE,  Wave64,  RF64,  AIFF, FLAC or Ogg FLAC format, or raw interleaved
       samples.  The decoder currently can output to RIFF WAVE, Wave64, RF64, or AIFF format, or raw interleaved
       samples.   flac  only  supports  linear PCM samples (in other words, no A-LAW, uLAW, etc.), and the input
       must be between 4 and 32 bits per sample.

       flac assumes that files ending in “.wav” or that have the RIFF WAVE header present are WAVE files,  files
       ending  in “.w64” or have the Wave64 header present are Wave64 files, files ending in “.rf64” or have the
       RF64 header present are RF64 files, files ending in “.aif” or “.aiff” or have the AIFF header present are
       AIFF  files,  files  ending in “.flac” or have the FLAC header present are FLAC files and files ending in
       “.oga” or “.ogg” or have the Ogg FLAC header present are Ogg FLAC files.

       Other than this, flac makes no assumptions about file extensions, though  the  convention  is  that  FLAC
       files have the extension “.flac” (or “.fla” on ancient “8.3” file systems like FAT-16).

       Before  going  into  the  full command-line description, a few other things help to sort it out: 1.  flac
       encodes by default, so you must use -d to decode 2.  the options -0 ..  -8  (or  –fast  and  –best)  that
       control  the  compression  level  actually  are  just  synonyms for different groups of specific encoding
       options (described later) and you can get the same effect by  using  the  same  options.   When  specific
       options  are specified they take priority over the compression level no matter the order 3.  flac behaves
       similarly to gzip in the way it handles input and output  files  4.   the  order  in  which  options  are
       specified is generally not important

       Skip to the examples below for examples of some common tasks.

       flac  will  be  invoked  one  of  four ways, depending on whether you are encoding, decoding, testing, or
       analyzing.  Encoding is the default invocation, but can be switch to decoding with -d, analysis  with  -a
       or  testing  with  -t.  Depending on which way is chosen, encoding, decoding, analysis or testing options
       can be used, see section OPTIONS for details.  General options can be used for all.

       If only one inputfile is specified, it may be “-” for stdin.  When stdin is  used  as  input,  flac  will
       write to stdout.  Otherwise flac will perform the desired operation on each input file to similarly named
       output files (meaning for encoding, the extension will be replaced with “.flac”, or appended with “.flac”
       if  the  input  file has no extension, and for decoding, the extension will be “.wav” for WAVE output and
       “.raw” for raw output).  The original file is not deleted unless –delete-input-file is specified.

       If you are encoding/decoding from stdin to a file, you should use the -o option like so:

              flac [options] -o outputfile
              flac -d [options] -o outputfile

       which are better than:

              flac [options] > outputfile
              flac -d [options] > outputfile

       since the former allows flac to seek backwards to write the STREAMINFO or RIFF WAVE header contents  when
       necessary.

       Also, you can force output data to go to stdout using -c.

       To  encode  or  decode  files  that  start  with  a dash, use – to signal the end of options, to keep the
       filenames themselves from being treated as options:

              flac -V -- -01-filename.wav

       The encoding options affect the compression ratio and encoding speed.  The format  options  are  used  to
       tell  flac the arrangement of samples if the input file (or output file when decoding) is a raw file.  If
       it is a RIFF WAVE, Wave64, RF64, or AIFF file the format options are not needed since they are read  from
       the file’s header.

       In test mode, flac acts just like in decode mode, except no output file is written.  Both decode and test
       modes detect errors in the stream, but they also detect when the MD5 signature of the decoded audio  does
       not match the stored MD5 signature, even when the bitstream is valid.

       flac  can also re-encode FLAC files.  In other words, you can specify a FLAC or Ogg FLAC file as an input
       to the encoder and it will decoder it and re-encode it according to the options  you  specify.   It  will
       also  preserve  all  the  metadata  unless you override it with other options (e.g.  specifying new tags,
       seekpoints, cuesheet, padding, etc.).

       flac has been tuned so that the default settings yield a good speed vs.  compression  tradeoff  for  many
       kinds  of  input.   However, if you are looking to maximize the compression rate or speed, or want to use
       the full power of FLAC’s metadata system, see the page  titled  `About  the  FLAC  Format'  on  the  FLAC
       website.

EXAMPLES

       Some common encoding tasks using flac:

       flac abc.wav
              Encode abc.wav to abc.flac using the default compression setting.  abc.wav is not deleted.

       flac --delete-input-file abc.wav
              Like above, except abc.wav is deleted if there were no errors.

       flac --delete-input-file -w abc.wav
              Like above, except abc.wav is deleted if there were no errors or warnings.

       flac --best abc.wav
              Encode abc.wav to abc.flac using the highest compression setting.

       flac --verify abc.wav
              Encode abc.wav to abc.flac and internally decode abc.flac to make sure it matches abc.wav.

       flac -o my.flac abc.wav
              Encode abc.wav to my.flac.

       flac -T "TITLE=Bohemian Rhapsody" -T "ARTIST=Queen" abc.wav
              Encode abc.wav and add some tags at the same time to abc.flac.

       flac *.wav
              Encode all .wav files in the current directory.

       flac abc.aiff
              Encode abc.aiff to abc.flac.

       flac abc.rf64
              Encode abc.rf64 to abc.flac.

       flac abc.w64
              Encode abc.w64 to abc.flac.

       flac abc.flac --force
              This  one’s a little tricky: notice that flac is in encode mode by default (you have to specify -d
              to decode) so this command actually recompresses abc.flac back to abc.flac.  –force is  needed  to
              make  sure  you  really  want  to overwrite abc.flac with a new version.  Why would you want to do
              this?  It allows you to recompress an existing FLAC file with (usually) higher compression options
              or a newer version of FLAC and preserve all the metadata like tags too.

       Some common decoding tasks using flac:

       flac -d abc.flac
              Decode  abc.flac  to  abc.wav.   abc.flac  is  not  deleted.   NOTE: Without -d it means re-encode
              abc.flac to abc.flac (see above).

       flac -d --force-aiff-format abc.flac
       flac -d -o abc.aiff abc.flac : Two different  ways  of  decoding  abc.flac  to  abc.aiff  (AIFF  format).
       abc.flac is not deleted.

       flac -d --force-rf64-format abc.flac
       flac  -d  -o  abc.rf64  abc.flac  :  Two  different  ways of decoding abc.flac to abc.rf64 (RF64 format).
       abc.flac is not deleted.

       flac -d --force-wave64-format abc.flac
       flac -d -o abc.w64 abc.flac : Two different  ways  of  decoding  abc.flac  to  abc.w64  (Wave64  format).
       abc.flac is not deleted.

       flac -d -F abc.flac
              Decode  abc.flac  to abc.wav and don’t abort if errors are found (useful for recovering as much as
              possible from corrupted files).

OPTIONS

       A summary of options is included below.  For a complete description, see the HTML documentation.

   GENERAL OPTIONS
       -v, --version
              Show the flac version number

       -h, --help
              Show basic usage and a list of all options

       -H, --explain
              Show detailed explanation of usage and all options

       -d, --decode
              Decode (the default behavior is to encode)

       -t, --test
              Test a flac encoded file (same as -d except no decoded file is written)

       -a, --analyze
              Analyze a FLAC encoded file (same as -d except an analysis file is written)

       -c, --stdout
              Write output to stdout

       -s, --silent
              Silent mode (do not write runtime encode/decode statistics to stderr)

       --totally-silent
              Do not print anything of any kind, including warnings or errors.  The exit code will be  the  only
              way to determine successful completion.

       --no-utf8-convert
              Do  not convert tags from local charset to UTF-8.  This is useful for scripts, and setting tags in
              situations where the locale is wrong.  This option must appear before any tag options!

       -w, --warnings-as-errors
              Treat all warnings as errors (which cause flac to terminate with a non-zero exit code).

       -f, --force
              Force overwriting of output files.  By default, flac warns that the output file already exists and
              continues to the next file.

       -o filename, --output-name=filename
              Force  the  output  file  name  (usually  flac just changes the extension).  May only be used when
              encoding a single file.  May not be used in conjunction with --output-prefix.

       --output-prefix=string
              Prefix each output file name with the given string.  This can be useful for encoding  or  decoding
              files  to  a  different  directory.   Make  sure if your string is a path name that it ends with a
              trailing `/’ (slash).

       --delete-input-file
              Automatically delete the input file after a successful encode or decode.  If there  was  an  error
              (including a verify error) the input file is left intact.

       --preserve-modtime
              Output  files  have  their  timestamps/permissions  set  to  match  those of their inputs (this is
              default).  Use --no-preserve-modtime to make output  files  have  the  current  time  and  default
              permissions.

       --keep-foreign-metadata
              If encoding, save WAVE, RF64, or AIFF non-audio chunks in FLAC metadata.  If decoding, restore any
              saved non-audio chunks from FLAC metadata when writing the decoded file.  Foreign metadata  cannot
              be  transcoded,  e.g. WAVE  chunks  saved in a FLAC file cannot be restored when decoding to AIFF.
              Input and output must be regular files (not stdin or stdout).  With this option,  FLAC  will  pick
              the right output format on decoding.

       --keep-foreign-metadata-if-present
              Like --keep-foreign-metadata, but without throwing an error if foreign metadata cannot be found or
              restored, instead printing a warning.

       --skip={#|mm:ss.ss}
              Skip over the first number of samples of the input.  This works for both  encoding  and  decoding,
              but  not  testing.   The  alternative  form  mm:ss.ss can be used to specify minutes, seconds, and
              fractions of a second.

       --until={#|[+|-]mm:ss.ss}
              Stop at the given sample number for each input file.  This works for both encoding  and  decoding,
              but  not testing.  The given sample number is not included in the decoded output.  The alternative
              form mm:ss.ss can be used to specify minutes, seconds, and fractions of a second.  If a `+’ (plus)
              sign  is  at  the  beginning, the --until point is relative to the --skip point.  If a `-’ (minus)
              sign is at the beginning, the --until point is relative to end of the audio.

       --ogg  When encoding, generate Ogg FLAC output instead of native FLAC.  Ogg FLAC streams are FLAC streams
              wrapped  in  an  Ogg transport layer.  The resulting file should have an `.oga' extension and will
              still be decodable by flac.  When decoding, force the input to be treated as Ogg  FLAC.   This  is
              useful when piping input from stdin or when the filename does not end in `.oga' or `.ogg'.

       --serial-number=#
              When  used  with --ogg, specifies the serial number to use for the first Ogg FLAC stream, which is
              then incremented for each additional stream.  When encoding and no serial number  is  given,  flac
              uses  a  random  number for the first stream, then increments it for each additional stream.  When
              decoding and no number is given, flac uses the serial number of the first page.

   ANALYSIS OPTIONS
       --residual-text
              Includes the residual signal in the analysis file.  This will make the file very big, much  larger
              than even the decoded file.

       --residual-gnuplot
              Generates  a  gnuplot file for every subframe; each file will contain the residual distribution of
              the subframe.  This will create a lot of files.

   DECODING OPTIONS
       --cue=[#.#][-[#.#]]
              Set the beginning and ending cuepoints to decode.  The optional first #.# is the track  and  index
              point  at  which  decoding  will  start; the default is the beginning of the stream.  The optional
              second #.# is the track and index point at which decoding will end; the default is the end of  the
              stream.   If the cuepoint does not exist, the closest one before it (for the start point) or after
              it (for the end point) will be used.  If those don’t exist, the start of the stream (for the start
              point) or end of the stream (for the end point) will be used.  The cuepoints are merely translated
              into sample numbers then used as --skip and --until.  A CD  track  can  always  be  cued  by,  for
              example, --cue=9.1-10.1 for track 9, even if the CD has no 10th track.

       -F, --decode-through-errors
              By  default  flac  stops  decoding  with  an  error  and  removes the partially decoded file if it
              encounters a bitstream error.  With -F, errors are still printed but flac will  continue  decoding
              to  completion.   Note  that errors may cause the decoded audio to be missing some samples or have
              silent sections.

       --apply-replaygain-which-is-not-lossless[=<specification>]
              Applies ReplayGain values while decoding.  WARNING: THIS IS NOT LOSSLESS.  DECODED AUDIO WILL  NOT
              BE  IDENTICAL  TO  THE ORIGINAL WITH THIS OPTION. This option is useful for example in transcoding
              media servers, where the client does not support ReplayGain.  For  details  on  the  use  of  this
              option, see the section ReplayGain application specification.

   ENCODING OPTIONS
       -V, --verify
              Verify a correct encoding by decoding the output in parallel and comparing to the original

       --lax  Allow  encoder  to  generate  non-Subset  files.  The resulting FLAC file may not be streamable or
              might have trouble being played in all players (especially hardware devices), so you  should  only
              use this option in combination with custom encoding options meant for archival.

       --replay-gain
              Calculate ReplayGain values and store them as FLAC tags, similar to vorbisgain.  Title gains/peaks
              will be computed for each input file, and an album gain/peak will be computed for all files.   All
              input  files  must  have  the same resolution, sample rate, and number of channels.  Only mono and
              stereo files are allowed, and the sample rate must be 8, 11.025, 12, 16, 18.9, 22.05, 24, 28,  32,
              36,  37.8,  44.1, 48, 56, 64, 72, 75.6, 88.2, 96, 112, 128, 144, 151.2, 176.4, 192, 224, 256, 288,
              302.4, 352.8, 384, 448, 512, 576, or 604.8 kHz.  Also note that this option may leave a few  extra
              bytes in a PADDING block as the exact size of the tags is not known until all files are processed.
              Note that this option cannot be used when encoding to standard output (stdout).

       --cuesheet=filename
              Import the given cuesheet file and store it in a CUESHEET metadata block.  This option may only be
              used  when encoding a single file.  A seekpoint will be added for each index point in the cuesheet
              to the SEEKTABLE unless --no-cued-seekpoints is specified.

       --picture={FILENAME|SPECIFICATION}
              Import a picture and store it in a PICTURE metadata block.  More than one --picture option can  be
              specified.   Either  a  filename for the picture file or a more complete specification form can be
              used.  The SPECIFICATION is a string whose parts are separated by | (pipe) characters.  Some parts
              may  be  left empty to invoke default values.  FILENAME is just shorthand for “||||FILENAME”.  For
              the format of SPECIFICATION, see the section picture specification.

       --ignore-chunk-sizes
              When encoding to flac, ignore the file size headers in WAV and  AIFF  files  to  attempt  to  work
              around  problems  with over-sized or malformed files.  WAV and AIFF files both have an unsigned 32
              bit numbers in the file header which specifes the length of audio  data.   Since  this  number  is
              unsigned  32  bits,  that  limits  the size of a valid file to being just over 4 Gigabytes.  Files
              larger than this are mal-formed, but should be read correctly using this option.

       -S {#|X|#x|#s}, --seekpoint={#|X|#x|#s}
              Include a point or points in a SEEKTABLE.  Using #, a seek point at that sample number  is  added.
              Using  X,  a placeholder point is added at the end of a the table.  Using #x, # evenly spaced seek
              points will be added, the first being at sample 0.  Using #s, a seekpoint will be  added  every  #
              seconds  (#  does  not have to be a whole number; it can be, for example, 9.5, meaning a seekpoint
              every 9.5 seconds).  You may use many -S options; the resulting SEEKTABLE will be the unique-ified
              union  of all such values.  With no -S options, flac defaults to `-S 10s'.  Use --no-seektable for
              no SEEKTABLE.  Note: `-S #x' and `-S #s' will not work if the encoder can’t  determine  the  input
              size  before  starting.   Note:  if you use `-S #' and # is >= samples in the input, there will be
              either no seek point entered (if the input size is  determinable  before  encoding  starts)  or  a
              placeholder point (if input size is not determinable).

       -P #, --padding=#
              Tell  the  encoder  to  write  a  PADDING  metadata block of the given length (in bytes) after the
              STREAMINFO block.  This is useful if you plan to tag the file later  with  an  APPLICATION  block;
              instead  of  having  to  rewrite  the  entire  file later just to insert your block, you can write
              directly over the PADDING block.  Note that the total length of the PADDING block will be 4  bytes
              longer  than  the  length  given  because  of the 4 metadata block header bytes.  You can force no
              PADDING block at all to be written with --no-padding.  The encoder writes a PADDING block of  8192
              bytes by default (or 65536 bytes if the input audio stream is more that 20 minutes long).

       -T FIELD=VALUE, --tag=FIELD=VALUE
              Add  a  FLAC tag.  The comment must adhere to the Vorbis comment spec; i.e. the FIELD must contain
              only legal characters, terminated by an  `equals'  sign.   Make  sure  to  quote  the  comment  if
              necessary.  This option may appear more than once to add several comments.  NOTE: all tags will be
              added to all encoded files.

       --tag-from-file=FIELD=FILENAME
              Like --tag, except FILENAME is a file whose contents will be read verbatim to set the  tag  value.
              The  contents  will  be  converted  to  UTF-8 from the local charset.  This can be used to store a
              cuesheet in a tag (e.g. --tag-from-file=“CUESHEET=image.cue”).  Do not try to store binary data in
              tag fields!  Use APPLICATION blocks for that.

       -b #, --blocksize=#
              Specify  the  blocksize  in samples.  The default is 1152 for -l 0, else 4096.  For subset streams
              this must be <= 4608 if the samplerate <= 48kHz, for subset streams  with  higher  samplerates  it
              must be <= 16384.

       -m, --mid-side
              Try mid-side coding for each frame (stereo input only)

       -M, --adaptive-mid-side
              Adaptive mid-side coding for all frames (stereo input only)

       -0..-8, --compression-level-0..--compression-level-8
              Fastest compression..highest compression (default is -5).  These are synonyms for other options:

       -0, --compression-level-0
              Synonymous with -l 0 -b 1152 -r 3 --no-mid-side

       -1, --compression-level-1
              Synonymous with -l 0 -b 1152 -M -r 3

       -2, --compression-level-2
              Synonymous with -l 0 -b 1152 -m -r 3

       -3, --compression-level-3
              Synonymous with -l 6 -b 4096 -r 4 --no-mid-side

       -4, --compression-level-4
              Synonymous with -l 8 -b 4096 -M -r 4

       -5, --compression-level-5
              Synonymous with -l 8 -b 4096 -m -r 5

       -6, --compression-level-6
              Synonymous with -l 8 -b 4096 -m -r 6 -A subdivide_tukey(2)

       -7, --compression-level-7
              Synonymous with -l 12 -b 4096 -m -r 6 -A subdivide_tukey(2)

       -8, --compression-level-8
              Synonymous with -l 12 -b 4096 -m -r 6 -A subdivide_tukey(3)

       --fast Fastest compression.  Currently synonymous with -0.

       --best Highest compression.  Currently synonymous with -8.

       -e, --exhaustive-model-search
              Do exhaustive model search (expensive!)

       -A function, --apodization=function
              Window  audio  data  with  given  the apodization function.  See section Apodization functions for
              details.

       -l #, --max-lpc-order=#
              Specifies the maximum LPC order.  This number must be <= 32.  For subset streams, it must be  <=12
              if  the sample rate is <=48kHz.  If 0, the encoder will not attempt generic linear prediction, and
              use only fixed predictors.  Using fixed predictors is faster but usually results  in  files  being
              5-10% larger.

       -p, --qlp-coeff-precision-search
              Do  exhaustive  search of LP coefficient quantization (expensive!).  Overrides -q; does nothing if
              using -l 0

       -q #, --qlp-coeff-precision=#
              Precision of the quantized linear-predictor coefficients, 0 =>  let  encoder  decide  (min  is  5,
              default is 0)

       -r [#,]#, --rice-partition-order=[#,]#
              Set the [min,]max residual partition order (0..15).  min defaults to 0 if unspecified.  Default is
              -r 5.

   FORMAT OPTIONS
       --endian={big|little}
              Set the byte order for samples

       --channels=#
              Set number of channels.

       --bps=#
              Set bits per sample.

       --sample-rate=#
              Set sample rate (in Hz).

       --sign={signed|unsigned}
              Set the sign of samples.

       --input-size=#
              Specify the size of the raw input in bytes.  If you are encoding raw samples from stdin, you  must
              set this option in order to be able to use --skip, --until, --cuesheet, or other options that need
              to know the size of the input beforehand.  If the size given is greater than what is found in  the
              input  stream,  the  encoder  will complain about an unexpected end-of-file.  If the size given is
              less, samples will be truncated.

       --force-raw-format
              Force input (when encoding) or output (when decoding) to  be  treated  as  raw  samples  (even  if
              filename ends in .wav).

       --force-aiff-format
       --force-rf64-format
       --force-wave64-format : Force the decoder to output AIFF/RF64/WAVE64 format respectively.  This option is
       not needed if the output filename (as set by -o) ends with .aif or .aiff, .rf64  and  .w64  respectively.
       Also,  this  option has no effect when encoding since input is auto-detected.  When none of these options
       nor –keep-foreign-metadata are given and no output filename is set, the output format is WAV by default.

       --force-legacy-wave-format
       --force-extensible-wave-format : Instruct the decoder to output a  WAVE  file  with  WAVE_FORMAT_PCM  and
       WAVE_FORMAT_EXTENSIBLE respectively.  If none of these options nor –keep-foreign-metadata are given, FLAC
       outputs WAVE_FORMAT_PCM for mono or stereo with a bit depth of 8 or 16 bits,  and  WAVE_FORMAT_EXTENSIBLE
       for all other audio formats.

       --force-aiff-c-none-format
       --force-aiff-c-sowt-format  :  Instruct  the  decoder  to output an AIFF-C file with format NONE and sowt
       respectively.

   NEGATIVE OPTIONS
       --no-adaptive-mid-side
       --no-cued-seekpoints
       --no-decode-through-errors
       --no-delete-input-file
       --no-preserve-modtime
       --no-keep-foreign-metadata
       --no-exhaustive-model-search
       --no-force
       --no-lax
       --no-mid-side
       --no-ogg
       --no-padding
       --no-qlp-coeff-prec-search
       --no-replay-gain
       --no-residual-gnuplot
       --no-residual-text
       --no-seektable
       --no-silent
       --no-verify
       --no-warnings-as-errors

       These flags can be used to invert the sense of the corresponding normal option.

   ReplayGain application specification
       The option --apply-replaygain-which-is-not-lossless[=<specification>]  applies  ReplayGain  values  while
       decoding.   WARNING: THIS IS NOT LOSSLESS.  DECODED AUDIO WILL NOT BE IDENTICAL TO THE ORIGINAL WITH THIS
       OPTION.**  This option is useful for example in transcoding media servers,  where  the  client  does  not
       support ReplayGain.

       The equals sign and <specification> is optional.  If omitted, the default specification is 0aLn1.

       The  <specification>  is a shorthand notation for describing how to apply ReplayGain.  All components are
       optional but order is important.  `[]' means `optional'.  `|' means  `or'.   `{}'  means  required.   The
       format is:

       [<preamp>][a|t][l|L][n{0|1|2|3}]

       In which the following parameters are used:

       • preamp: A floating point number in dB.  This is added to the existing gain value.

       • a|t:  Specify  `a' to use the album gain, or `t' to use the track gain.  If tags for the preferred kind
         (album/track) do not exist but tags for the other (track/album) do, those will be used instead.

       • l|L: Specify `l' to peak-limit the output, so that the ReplayGain peak value  is  full-scale.   Specify
         `L' to use a 6dB hard limiter that kicks in when the signal approaches full-scale.

       • n{0|1|2|3}:  Specify  the amount of noise shaping.  ReplayGain synthesis happens in floating point; the
         result is dithered before converting back to integer.  This quantization  adds  noise.   Noise  shaping
         tries  to  move  the noise where you won’t hear it as much.  0 means no noise shaping, 1 means `low', 2
         means `medium', 3 means `high'.

       For example, the default of 0aLn1 means 0dB preamp, use album gain, 6dB hard limit,  low  noise  shaping.
       --apply-replaygain-which-is-not-lossless=3  means  3dB  preamp,  use  album  gain,  no limiting, no noise
       shaping.

       flac uses the ReplayGain tags for the calculation.  If a stream does not have the required tags  or  they
       can’t be parsed, decoding will continue with a warning, and no ReplayGain is applied to that stream.

   Picture specification
       This    described    the    specification    used    for    the    --picture    option.     [TYPE]|[MIME-
       TYPE]|[DESCRIPTION]|[WIDTHxHEIGHTxDEPTH[/COLORS]]|FILE

       TYPE is optional; it is a number from one of:

        0. Other

        1. 32x32 pixels `file icon' (PNG only)

        2. Other file icon

        3. Cover (front)

        4. Cover (back)

        5. Leaflet page

        6. Media (e.g. label side of 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 coloured fish

       18. Illustration

       19. Band/artist logotype

       20. Publisher/Studio logotype

       The default is 3 (front cover).  There may only be one picture each of type 1 and 2 in a file.

       MIME-TYPE is optional; if left blank, it will be detected from the file.   For  best  compatibility  with
       players, use pictures with MIME type image/jpeg or image/png.  The MIME type can also be --> to mean that
       FILE is actually a URL to an image, though this use is discouraged.

       DESCRIPTION is optional; the default is an empty string.

       The next part specifies the resolution and color information.  If the MIME-TYPE is image/jpeg, image/png,
       or  image/gif,  you  can usually leave this empty and they can be detected from the file.  Otherwise, you
       must specify the width in pixels, height in pixels, and color depth in bits-per-pixel.  If the image  has
       indexed  colors  you  should  also specify the number of colors used.  When manually specified, it is not
       checked against the file for accuracy.

       FILE is the path to the picture file to be imported, or the URL if MIME type is -->

       For example, “|image/jpeg|||../cover.jpg” will embed the JPEG file at ../cover.jpg, defaulting to type  3
       (front  cover)  and  an empty description.  The resolution and color info will be retrieved from the file
       itself.

       The specification “4|-->|CD|320x300x24/173|http://blah.blah/backcover.tiff” will  embed  the  given  URL,
       with  type 4 (back cover), description “CD”, and a manually specified resolution of 320x300, 24 bits-per-
       pixel, and 173 colors.  The file at the URL will not be fetched; the URL itself is stored in the  PICTURE
       metadata block.

   Apodization functions
       To  improve  LPC  analysis,  audio  data  is  windowed  .  The window can be selected with one or more -A
       options.  Possible functions are: bartlett, bartlett_hann, blackman, blackman_harris_4term_92db,  connes,
       flattop,   gauss(STDDEV),   hamming,   hann,   kaiser_bessel,  nuttall,  rectangle,  triangle,  tukey(P),
       partial_tukey(n[/ov[/P]]), punchout_tukey(n[/ov[/P]]), subdivide_tukey(n[/P]) welch.

       • For gauss(STDDEV), STDDEV is the standard deviation (0<STDDEV<=0.5).

       • For tukey(P), P specifies the fraction of the window that  is  tapered  (0<=P<=1;  P=0  corresponds  to
         “rectangle” and P=1 corresponds to “hann”).

       • For partial_tukey(n) and punchout_tukey(n), n apodization functions are added that span different parts
         of each block.  Values of 2 to 6 seem  to  yield  sane  results.   If  necessary,  an  overlap  can  be
         specified, as can be the taper parameter, for example partial_tukey(2/0.2) or partial_tukey(2/0.2/0.5).
         ov should be smaller than 1 and can be negative.  The use of this is that different parts  of  a  block
         are  ignored  as  the  might contain transients which are hard to predict anyway.  The encoder will try
         each different added apodization (each covering a different part of the block) to see  which  resulting
         predictor results in the smallest representation.

       • subdivide_tukey(n)  is  a  more  efficient  reimplementation  of partial_tukey and punchout_tukey taken
         together, recycling as much data as possible.  It combines all possible non-redundant  partial_tukey(n)
         and punchout_tukey(n) up to the n specified.  Specifying subdivide_tukey(3) is equivalent to specifying
         tukey,  partial_tukey(2),  partial_tukey(3)  and   punchout_tukey(3),   specifying   subdivide_tukey(5)
         equivalently  adds  partial_tukey(4), punchout_tukey(4), partial_tukey(5) and punchout_tukey(5).  To be
         able to reuse data as much as possible, the tukey taper is taken equal  for  all  windows,  and  the  P
         specified is applied for the smallest used window.  In other words, subdivide_tukey(2/0.5) results in a
         taper equal to that of tukey(0.25) and subdivide_tukey(5) in a taper equal to that of tukey(0.1).   The
         default P for subdivide_tukey when none is specified is 0.5.

       Note that P, STDDEV and ov are locale specific, so a comma as decimal separator might be required instead
       of a dot.  Use scientific notation  for  a  locale-independent  specification,  for  example  tukey(5e-1)
       instead of tukey(0.5) or tukey(0,5).

       More  than  one -A option (up to 32) may be used.  Any function that is specified erroneously is silently
       dropped.  The encoder chooses suitable defaults in the absence of any -A options; any -A option specified
       replaces the default(s).

       When  more  than  one  function  is  specified, then for every subframe the encoder will try each of them
       separately and choose the window that results in the smallest compressed  subframe.   Multiple  functions
       can greatly increase the encoding time.

SEE ALSO

       metaflac(1)

AUTHOR

       This manual page was initially written by Matt Zimmerman <mdz@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux system
       (but may be used by others).  It has been kept up-to-date by the Xiph.org Foundation.