16

I'm attempting to capture my screen as video and found VLC to probably be the best solution. What I have to do is capture a specific application using terminal and then stop the capture as well. Right now, I can capture using terminal with the following command:

/Applications/VLC.app/Contents/MacOS/VLC -I dummy screen:// --screen-fps=25 --quiet --sout "#transcode{vcodec=h264,vb072}:standard{access=file,mux=mp4,dst="Desktop/vlc-output-terminal.mp4"}"

That's great, it works. The question is, how do I quit the recording using terminal? Right now, I'm having to do Control+C on the terminal to quit it. I've seen vlc://quit online, but I'm not sure how to use that command.

Also, does anyone know if it's possible to capture a specific application using VLC or is the whole screen the only option?

6 Answers 6

17

How to NOT quit when recording

Ctrl+C kill process (in this case VLC) with signal SIGINT.

vlc://quit option will not work when you capture screen because stream is never-ending source.


Right way - RC (Remote Control)

You can connect to your VLC using a TCP socket or a UNIX socket.

  • TCP socket

    To be able to remote connect to your VLC using a TCP socket (telnet-like connetion), use --rc-host your_host:port. Then, by connecting (using telnet or netcat) to the host on the given port, you will get the command shell.

  • UNIX socket

    To use a UNIX socket (local socket, this does not work for Windows), use --rc-unix /path/to/socket. Commands can then be passed using this UNIX socket.

To enable remote control interface for VLC you will need to add options

--extraintf rc --rc-quiet


How to quit

  • TCP socket

    echo quit | nc your_host port

  • UNIX socket

    echo quit | nc -U /path/to/socket


    Example

    1. Execute VLC

      vlc \
      screen:// --one-instance \
      -I dummy --dummy-quiet \
      --extraintf rc \
      --rc-host localhost:8082 \
      --rc-quiet \
      --screen-follow-mouse \
      --screen-mouse-image="mouse_pointer.png" \
      --screen-left=0 --screen-top=0 --screen-width=800 --screen-height=600 \
      --no-video :screen-fps=15 :screen-caching=300 \
      --sout "#transcode{vcodec=h264,vb=800,fps=5,scale=1,acodec=none}:duplicate{dst=std{access=file,mux=mp4,dst='/Videos/screen.mp4'}}"
    2. Gracefully shutdown VLC

      echo quit | nc localhost 8082

      You can also use Python code below if you do not have nc (netcat) on your computer.

      import socket
      s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
      s.connect(('localhost', 8082))
      s.sendall('quit\n')
      s.shutdown(socket.SHUT_WR)


How to capture specific application

You can't select which application to record but you can specify coordinate, width and height of the subscreen.

Options

  • --screen-top integer The top edge coordinate of the subscreen. Default value: 0
  • --screen-left integer The left edge coordinate of the subscreen. Default value: 0
  • --screen-width integer The width of the subscreen. Default value: <full screen width>
  • --screen-height integer The height of the subscreen. Default value: <full screen height>
4
  • 1
    If you don't have nc (Windows) "vlc --one-instance vlc://quit" will also send a quit command to the remote control Jul 3, 2014 at 16:11
  • 1
    This answer seems to be outdated. I don't know how the quit command (delivered through the remote control interface) worked in 2014, but now (VLC media player 2.2.2 on my Ubuntu 16.04) you must send the stop and shutdown commands (quit simply disconnects from the RC interface). Besides, it seems that interrupting the screen-capturing VLC process with CTRL-C is handled by VLC gracefully (using the verb kill for CTRL-C is an overkill). Also, it should be noted that the --dummy-quiet and --rc-quiet options are Windows-specific.
    – Leon
    Mar 3, 2017 at 8:05
  • 1
    Vlc can handle the SIGINT and if it is written correctly, it closes the video stream on SIGINT correctly, not resulting a damaged video file.
    – peterh
    Dec 13, 2018 at 11:09
  • 1
    this example not work for vlc 3.0.8 on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. --extraintf rc has been replaced by --extraintf oldrc. and some other parameters (such as --dummy-quiet) isn't supported too. this videolan wiki shows that --screen-mouse-image is used only for windows. I can't find a solution for mouse pointer image. May 19, 2020 at 3:21
1

Screen capture on terminal or iterm on Mac OS 2019:

Add an alias to you .bashrc or .zshrc for VLC:

alias vlc='/Applications/VLC.app/Contents/MacOS/VLC'

Then add this function to your .bashrc or .zshrc:

screencapture(){
vlc \
-I dummy screen://\
--dummy-quiet \
--screen-follow-mouse \
--screen-mouse-image="/Users/YOUR_HOME_DIR/Desktop/awesome.jpg" \
--screen-left=0 --screen-top=0 --screen-width=1280 --screen-height=720 \
--no-video :screen-fps=15 :screen-caching=300 \
--sout "#transcode{vcodec=h264,vb=800,fps=5,scale=1,acodec=none}:duplicate{dst=std{access=file,mux=mp4,dst='/Users/YOUR_HOME_DIR/Desktop/Screencapture $(date +%Y-%m-%d) at $(date +%H.%M.%S).mp4'}}"
}

Open a new terminal session and do: screencapture

When done do CTRl + C to stop the function.

That's it find the files in your Desktop folder example:

Screencapture 2019-01-04 at 09.57.42.mp4

Videos will be 1280x720 but you can customize this function however you like.

6
  • Also works for Ubuntu but I cut out the two mouse lines because I wasn't sure what they did. Nov 8, 2019 at 19:44
  • Well --screen-follow-mouse flag will make the "camera" follow the mouse during the recording so to speak. And --screen-mouse-image="...image path..." uses an image as the mouse cursor. Nov 8, 2019 at 19:58
  • 1
    The whole screen is being recorded so nothing special needed for mouse. Sound doesn't record though (default output audio device) so I'm thinking something like this needs to be added: acodec=mp4a,ab=96,channels=2,samplerate=44100 but can't find an example to include sound. Nov 8, 2019 at 20:29
  • Exactly, the --screen-follow-mouse flag is only useful if --screen-width and --screen-height are set to be smaller than full screen otherwise there is nothing to follow. BTW: if you do find a solution for the audio please share I'm curious now. Nov 8, 2019 at 21:05
  • The sound issue is complicated. So far I've managed to route system output sounds into the microphone with pavucontrol which I think is a good first step. Nov 8, 2019 at 21:16
0

Important if you're on windows:

,... --rc-host localhost:8082

Doesn't work you'Ve to use local host ip otherwise it won't work. Use 127.0.0.1 instead:

,... --rc-host 127.0.0.1:8082
0

I had to change quit command on my machine (WIN 10):

import socket
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.connect(('127.0.0.1', 8082))
s.sendall('quit\n'.encode())
s.shutdown(socket.SHUT_WR)
0

Well there is a simple approach you don't need to deal with TCP sockets/Unix Sockets.

Step1: First open Vlc ->Tools ->Preferences Under Interface Tab make sure you check "Allow only one Instance".

If you don't find it using above method then search for instance in Advance Preference Tab Then check Allow only one instance.

This helps you to prevent starting new recording and it allows you to keep track the existing recording.

Step2: To start Recording use this command

vlc screen:// --qt-start-minimized :screen-fps=5 :run-time=30 :quiet :sout=#transcode{vcodec=h264,vb072}:standard{access=file,mux=mp4,dst="C:\Users\**admin**\Desktop\screencast.mp4"}

Step3: To save and Stop the existing record use

vlc://quit

Note: Make sure to check the path before you use this commands

0

To get audio on a Windows box

  • To record with sound:

vlc "dshow://" ":dshow-vdev=screen-capture-recorder" ":sout=#transcode{vcodec=mpgv,acodec=mpga}:file{dst=myscreencapture.mp4}"

  • To stop recording:

Press PAUSE followed by CONTROL-F4

  • Use "transform-type" filter to play, if it is inverted:

vlc --transform-type=vflip "myscreencapture.mp4"

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