*********************************************************************** ``scenedetect`` 🎬 Application *********************************************************************** ======================================================================= Quickstart ======================================================================= Split the input video wherever a new scene is detected: ``scenedetect -i video.mp4 detect-content split-video`` Print a table of detected scenes to the terminal, and save an image at the start, middle, and end frame of each scene: ``scenedetect -i video.mp4 detect-content list-scenes -n save-images`` Skip the first 10 seconds of the input video: ``scenedetect -i video.mp4 time -s 10s detect-content`` To show a summary of all options and commands: ``scenedetect help`` You can also type `help [command]` where `[command]` is a specific command or detection algorithm (e.g. `scenedetect help detect-content` or `scenedetect help split-video`). To show a complete help listing for every command: ``scenedetect help all`` ======================================================================= Overview ======================================================================= The PySceneDetect command-line interface is grouped into commands which can be combined together, each containing its own set of arguments: ``scenedetect [global options] [detectors] [commands]`` Where [command] is the name of the command, and ([options]) are the arguments/options associated with the command, if any. Global options (e.g. `--input`, `--framerate`) must be specified before any commands. The order of commands is not strict, but each command should only be specified once. ======================================================================= Global Options ======================================================================= The ``scenedetect`` command takes the following global options: -i, --input VIDEO [Required] Input video file. Also supports image sequences and URLs. -o, --output DIR Output directory for created files (stats file, output videos, images, etc...). If not set defaults to working directory. Some commands allow overriding this value. -f, --framerate FPS Force framerate, in frames/sec (e.g. -f 29.97). Disables check to ensure that all input videos have the same framerates. -d, --downscale N Integer factor to downscale frames by (e.g. 2, 3, 4...), where the frame is scaled to width/N x height/N (thus -d 1 implies no downscaling). Leave unset for automatic downscaling based on source resolution. -fs, --frame-skip N Skips N frames during processing (-fs 1 skips every other frame, processing 50% of the video, -fs 2 processes 33% of the frames, -fs 3 processes 25%, etc...). Reduces processing speed at expense of accuracy. [default: 0] -m, --min-scene-len TIMECODE Minimum length of any scene. TIMECODE can be specified as exact number of frames, a time in seconds followed by s, or a timecode in the format HH:MM:SS or HH:MM:SS.nnn. [default: 0.6s] --drop-short-scenes Drop scenes shorter than `min-scene-len` instead of combining them with neighbors. --merge-last-scene Merge last scene with previous if shorter than min-scene-len. -s, --stats CSV Path to stats file (.csv) for writing frame metrics to. If the file exists, any metrics will be processed, otherwise a new file will be created. Can be used to determine optimal values for various scene detector options, and to cache frame calculations in order to speed up multiple detection runs. -v, --verbosity LEVEL Level of debug/info/error information to show. Must be one of: debug, info, warning, error, none. Overrides `-q`/`--quiet`. Use `-v debug` for bug reports. [default: info] -l, --logfile LOG Path to log file for writing application logging information, mainly for debugging. Set `-v debug` as well if you are submitting a bug report. If verbosity is none, logfile is still be generated with info-level verbosity. -q, --quiet Suppresses all output of PySceneDetect to the terminal/stdout. Equivalent to `-v none`. -b, --backend BACKEND Name of backend to use for video input. Backends available on this system: dict_keys(['opencv', 'pyav']) [default: opencv] -c, --config FILE Path to config file. If not set, tries to load one from a location based on your operating system. Type `scenedetect help` and this option will show the correct path on your system.