Skip to content

FFMediaToolkit is a cross-platform video decoder/encoder library for .NET that uses FFmpeg native libraries. It supports video frames extraction, reading stream metadata and creating videos from bitmaps in any format supported by FFmpeg.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

radek-k/FFMediaToolkit

Repository files navigation

FFMediaToolkit

Build status Nuget License

This library is not recommended for production use.

FFMediaToolkit is a .NET library for creating and reading multimedia files. It uses native FFmpeg libraries by the FFmpeg.Autogen bindings.

Features

  • Decoding/encoding audio-video files in many formats supported by FFmpeg.
  • Extracting audio data as floating point arrays.
  • Access to any video frame by timestamp.
  • Creating videos from images with metadata, pixel format, bitrate, CRF, FPS, GoP, dimensions and other codec settings.
  • Supports reading multimedia chapters and metadata.

Code samples

  • Extract all video frames as PNG files

    int i = 0;
    var file = MediaFile.Open(@"C:\videos\movie.mp4");
    while(file.Video.TryGetNextFrame(out var imageData))
    {
        imageData.ToBitmap().Save($@"C:\images\frame_{i++}.png");
        // See the #Usage details for example .ToBitmap() implementation
        // The .Save() method may be different depending on your graphics library
    }
  • Video decoding

    // Opens a multimedia file.
    // You can use the MediaOptions properties to set decoder options.
    var file = MediaFile.Open(@"C:\videos\movie.mp4");
    
     // Gets the frame at 5th second of the video.
    var frame5s = file.Video.GetFrame(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(5));
    
    // Print informations about the video stream.
    Console.WriteLine($"Bitrate: {file.Info.Bitrate / 1000.0} kb/s");
    var info = file.Video.Info;
    Console.WriteLine($"Duration: {info.Duration}");
    Console.WriteLine($"Frames count: {info.NumberOfFrames ?? "N/A"}");
    var frameRateInfo = info.IsVariableFrameRate ? "average" : "constant";
    Console.WriteLine($"Frame rate: {info.AvgFrameRate} fps ({frameRateInfo})");
    Console.WriteLine($"Frame size: {info.FrameSize}");
    Console.WriteLine($"Pixel format: {info.PixelFormat}");
    Console.WriteLine($"Codec: {info.CodecName}");
    Console.WriteLine($"Is interlaced: {info.IsInterlaced}");
  • Encode video from images.

    // You can set there codec, bitrate, frame rate and many other options.
    var settings = new VideoEncoderSettings(width: 1920, height: 1080, framerate: 30, codec: VideoCodec.H264);
    settings.EncoderPreset = EncoderPreset.Fast;
    settings.CRF = 17;
    using(var file = MediaBuilder.CreateContainer(@"C:\videos\example.mp4").WithVideo(settings).Create())
    {
        while(file.Video.FramesCount < 300)
        {
            file.Video.AddFrame(/*Your code*/);
        }
    }

Setup

Install the FFMediaToolkit package from NuGet.

dotnet add package FFMediaToolkit
PM> Install-Package FFMediaToolkit

FFmpeg libraries are not included in the package. To use FFMediaToolkit, you need the FFmpeg shared build binaries: avcodec, avformat, avutil, swresample, swscale.

  • Windows - You can download it from the BtbN/FFmpeg-Builds or gyan.dev. You only need *.dll files from the .\bin directory (not .\lib) of the ZIP package. Place the binaries in the .\ffmpeg\x86_64\(64bit) in the application output directory or set FFmpegLoader.FFmpegPath.
  • Linux - Download FFmpeg using your package manager.
  • macOS, iOS, Android - Not supported.

You need to set FFmpegLoader.FFmpegPath with a full path to FFmpeg libraries.

If you want to use 64-bit FFmpeg, you have to disable the Build -> Prefer 32-bit option in Visual Studio project properties.

Usage details

FFMediaToolkit uses the ref struct ImageData for bitmap images. The .Data property contains pixels data in a Span<byte>.

If you want to process or save the ImageData, you should convert it to another graphics object, using one of the following methods.

These methods are not included in the program to avoid additional dependencies and provide compatibility with many graphics libraries.

  • For ImageSharp library (.NET Standard/Core - cross-platform):

    using SixLabors.ImageSharp;
    using SixLabors.ImageSharp.PixelFormats;
    ...
    public static Image<Bgr24> ToBitmap(this ImageData imageData)
    {
        return Image.LoadPixelData<Bgr24>(imageData.Data, imageData.ImageSize.Width, imageData.ImageSize.Height);
    }
  • For .NET Framework System.Drawing.Bitmap (Windows only):

    // ImageData -> Bitmap (unsafe)
    public static unsafe Bitmap ToBitmap(this ImageData bitmap)
    {
        fixed(byte* p = bitmap.Data)
        {
            return new Bitmap(bitmap.ImageSize.Width, bitmap.ImageSize.Height, bitmap.Stride, PixelFormat.Format24bppRgb, new IntPtr(p));
        }
    }
    
    // Bitmap -> ImageData (safe)
    ...
        var rect = new Rectangle(Point.Empty, bitmap.Size);
        var bitLock = bitmap.LockBits(rect, ImageLockMode.ReadOnly, PixelFormat.Format24bppRgb);
        var bitmapData = ImageData.FromPointer(bitLock.Scan0, bitmap.Size, ImagePixelFormat.Bgr24);
        
        mediaFile.Video.AddFrame(bitmapData); // Encode the frame
        
        bitmap.UnlockBits(bitLock); // UnlockBits() must be called after encoding the frame
    ...
  • For .NET Framework/Core desktop apps with WPF UI. (Windows only):

    using System.Windows.Media.Imaging;
    ...
    // ImageData -> BitmapSource (unsafe)
    public static unsafe BitmapSource ToBitmap(this ImageData bitmapData)
    {
        fixed(byte* ptr = bitmapData.Data)
        {
            return BitmapSource.Create(bitmapData.ImageSize.Width, bitmapData.ImageSize.Height, 96, 96, PixelFormats.Bgr32, null, new IntPtr(ptr), bitmapData.Data.Length, bitmapData.Stride);
        }
    }
    
    // BitmapSource -> ImageData (safe)
    public static ImageData ToImageData(this BitmapSource bitmap)
    {
        var wb = new WriteableBitmap(bitmap);
        return ImageData.FromPointer(wb.BackBuffer, ImagePixelFormat.Bgra32, wb.PixelWidth, wb.PixelHeight);
    }
  • FFMediaToolkit will also work with any other graphics library that supports creating images from Span<byte>, byte array or memory pointer

Visual Basic usage

Writing decoded bitmap directly to the WPF WriteableBitmap buffer using the TryReadFrameToPointer method:

Dim file As FileStream = New FileStream("path to the video file", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read)
Dim media As MediaFile = MediaFile.Load(file)
Dim bmp As WriteableBimap = New WriteableBitmap(media.Video.Info.FrameSize.Width, media.Video.Info.FrameSize.Height, 96, 96, PixelFormats.Bgr24, Nothing)
bmp.Lock()
Dim decoded As Boolean = media.Video.TryGetFrame(TimeSpan.FromMinutes(1), bmp.BackBuffer, bmp.BackBufferStride)
If decoded Then
    bmp.AddDirtyRect(New Int32Rect(0, 0, media.Video.Info.FrameSize.Width, media.Video.Info.FrameSize.Height))
End If
bmp.Unlock()
imageBox.Source = bmp

Converting ImageData to a byte array:

Dim data() As Byte = media.Video.GetNextFrame().Data.ToArray()

Licensing

This project is licensed under the MIT license.

About

FFMediaToolkit is a cross-platform video decoder/encoder library for .NET that uses FFmpeg native libraries. It supports video frames extraction, reading stream metadata and creating videos from bitmaps in any format supported by FFmpeg.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published