Ffmpeg: compile
Compile FFmpeg on Ubuntu, Debian, or Mint
Contents
Get the Dependencies Compilation & Installation Conclusion Updating FFmpeg Reverting Changes Made by This Guide If You Need Help Also See
This guide for supported releases of Ubuntu, Debian, and Linux Mint will provide a local install of the latest FFmpeg tools and libraries including several external encoding and decoding libraries (codecs). This will not interfere with repository packages.
You may also refer to the Generic FFmpeg Compilation Guide for additional information.
Recent static builds are also available for lazy people or those who are unable to compile.
Instalasi aplikasi pendukung
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get -y install autoconf automake build-essential libass-dev libfreetype6-dev \ libgpac-dev libsdl1.2-dev libtheora-dev libtool libva-dev libvdpau-dev \ libvorbis-dev libx11-dev libxext-dev libxfixes-dev pkg-config texi2html zlib1g-dev
mkdir ~/ffmpeg_sources
Notes:
Server users can omit the ffplay and x11 dependencies: libsdl1.2-dev libva-dev libvdpau-dev libx11-dev libxext-dev libxfixes-dev. Lucid lacks the package libva-dev. This can be ignored.
Compilation & Installation
You can compile ffmpeg to your liking. If you do not require certain encoders you may skip the relevant section and then remove the appropriate ./configure option in FFmpeg. For example, if libopus is not needed, then skip that section and then remove --enable-libopus from the Install FFmpeg section.
This guide is designed to be non-intrusive and will create several directories in your home directory:
ffmpeg_sources – Where the source files will be downloaded. ffmpeg_build – Where the files will be built and libraries installed. bin – Where the resulting binaries (ffmpeg, ffplay, ffserver, x264, and yasm) will be installed.
You can easily undo any of this as shown in Reverting Changes Made by This Guide.
Yasm
An assembler for x86 optimizations used by x264 and FFmpeg. Highly recommended or your resulting build may be very slow.
If your repository offers a yasm package ≥ 1.3.0 then you can install that instead of compiling:
sudo apt-get install yasm
Otherwise you can compile:
cd ~/ffmpeg_sources wget http://www.tortall.net/projects/yasm/releases/yasm-1.3.0.tar.gz tar xzvf yasm-1.3.0.tar.gz cd yasm-1.3.0 ./configure --prefix="$HOME/ffmpeg_build" --bindir="$HOME/bin" make make install make distclean
libx264
H.264 video encoder. See the H.264 Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples.
Requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-gpl --enable-libx264.
If your repository offers a libx264-dev package ≥ 0.118 then you can install that instead of compiling:
sudo apt-get install libx264-dev
Otherwise you can compile:
cd ~/ffmpeg_sources wget http://download.videolan.org/pub/x264/snapshots/last_x264.tar.bz2 tar xjvf last_x264.tar.bz2 cd x264-snapshot* PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" ./configure --prefix="$HOME/ffmpeg_build" --bindir="$HOME/bin" --enable-static PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" make make install make distclean
libfdk-aac
AAC audio encoder. See the AAC Audio Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples.
Requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-libfdk_aac (and --enable-nonfree if you also included --enable-gpl).
sudo apt-get install unzip cd ~/ffmpeg_sources wget -O fdk-aac.zip https://github.com/mstorsjo/fdk-aac/zipball/master unzip fdk-aac.zip cd mstorsjo-fdk-aac* autoreconf -fiv ./configure --prefix="$HOME/ffmpeg_build" --disable-shared make make install make distclean
libmp3lame
MP3 audio encoder.
Requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-libmp3lame.
If your repository offers a libmp3lame-dev package ≥ 3.98.3 then you can install that instead of compiling:
sudo apt-get install libmp3lame-dev
Otherwise you can compile:
sudo apt-get install nasm cd ~/ffmpeg_sources wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/lame/lame/3.99/lame-3.99.5.tar.gz tar xzvf lame-3.99.5.tar.gz cd lame-3.99.5 ./configure --prefix="$HOME/ffmpeg_build" --enable-nasm --disable-shared make make install make distclean
libopus
Opus audio decoder and encoder.
Requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-libopus.
If your repository offers a libopus-dev package ≥ 1.1 then you can install that instead of compiling:
sudo apt-get install libopus-dev
Otherwise you can compile:
cd ~/ffmpeg_sources wget http://downloads.xiph.org/releases/opus/opus-1.1.tar.gz tar xzvf opus-1.1.tar.gz cd opus-1.1 ./configure --prefix="$HOME/ffmpeg_build" --disable-shared make make install make distclean
libvpx
VP8/VP9 video encoder and decoder. See the VP8 Video Encoding Guide for more information and usage examples.
Requires ffmpeg to be configured with --enable-libvpx.
cd ~/ffmpeg_sources wget http://webm.googlecode.com/files/libvpx-v1.3.0.tar.bz2 tar xjvf libvpx-v1.3.0.tar.bz2 cd libvpx-v1.3.0 PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" ./configure --prefix="$HOME/ffmpeg_build" --disable-examples PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" make make install make clean
ffmpeg
Note: Server users can omit --enable-x11grab (this option is for x11 screen grabbing).
cd ~/ffmpeg_sources wget http://ffmpeg.org/releases/ffmpeg-snapshot.tar.bz2 tar xjvf ffmpeg-snapshot.tar.bz2 cd ffmpeg PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$HOME/ffmpeg_build/lib/pkgconfig" ./configure \ --prefix="$HOME/ffmpeg_build" \ --extra-cflags="-I$HOME/ffmpeg_build/include" \ --extra-ldflags="-L$HOME/ffmpeg_build/lib" \ --bindir="$HOME/bin" \ --enable-gpl \ --enable-libass \ --enable-libfdk-aac \ --enable-libfreetype \ --enable-libmp3lame \ --enable-libopus \ --enable-libtheora \ --enable-libvorbis \ --enable-libvpx \ --enable-libx264 \ --enable-nonfree \ --enable-x11grab PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH" make make install make distclean hash -r
Conclusion
Installation is now complete and ffmpeg is now ready for use. Your newly compiled FFmpeg programs are in ~/bin. To use it:
- Navigate to ~/bin and execute the binary:
cd ~/bin && ./ffmpeg -i ~/input.mp4 ~/videos/output.mkv (notice the ./)
- Or you can use the full path to the binary:
/home/yourusername/bin/ffmpeg -i ../input.mp4 ../videos/output.mkv
Or if you simply want to just issue the ffmpeg command and have your shell use your compiled binary see the Persistent Environment Variables section below.
Persistent Environment Variables
You can tell your shell (assuming you're using Bash) to persistently use your new ffmpeg in ~/bin. The first command will allow you to simply run man ffmpeg to get the FFmpeg man pages. The second command will source ~/.profile which will add ~/bin to your $PATH. In short, the following commands will allow you to simply type ffmpeg and man ffmpeg in your terminal and they will "just work":
echo "MANPATH_MAP $HOME/bin $HOME/ffmpeg_build/share/man" >> ~/.manpath . ~/.profile
Note:
This may reset custom variables in the current shell session. This assumes you are using the default ~/.profile (and therefore ~/.bashrc). This assumes you are using Bash shell. Sourcing the default ~/.profile will also source ~/.bashrc. You may have to log out and then log in for man ffmpeg to work. Don't worry: you can undo any of this as shown in Reverting Changes Made by This Guide.
See Ubuntu Wiki: Persistent Environment Variables for more info. Additional Notes
See the H.264 Encoding Guide for some encoding examples. If you do not see FFmpeg developers in your ffmpeg console output then something went wrong and you're probably using the fake "ffmpeg" from the repository. HTML formatted documentation is available in ~/ffmpeg_build/share/doc/ffmpeg. You can keep the ffmpeg_sources directory if you plan on updating later. See Updating FFmpeg below for more details followed by instructions for reverting all changes made by this guide.
Updating FFmpeg
Development of FFmpeg is active and an occasional update can give you new features and bug fixes. First you need to delete (or move) the old files:
rm -rf ~/ffmpeg_build ~/ffmpeg_sources \ ~/bin/{ffmpeg,ffprobe,ffserver,vsyasm,x264,yasm,ytasm}
Now just follow the guide from the beginning. Reverting Changes Made by This Guide
rm -rf ~/ffmpeg_build ~/ffmpeg_sources \ ~/bin/{ffmpeg,ffprobe,ffserver,vsyasm,x264,yasm,ytasm}
sudo apt-get autoremove autoconf automake build-essential libass-dev \ libfreetype6-dev libgpac-dev libmp3lame-dev libopus-dev libsdl1.2-dev \ libtheora-dev libtool libva-dev libvdpau-dev libvorbis-dev libvpx-dev \ libx11-dev libx264-dev libxext-dev libxfixes-dev texi2html zlib1g-dev sed -i '/ffmpeg_build/c\' ~/.manpath hash -r
If You Need Help
Feel free to ask questions at the #ffmpeg IRC channel or the ffmpeg-user mailing list. Also See
Generic FFmpeg Compilation Guide H.264 Video Encoding Guide AAC Audio Encoding Guide