It looks like the options have changed slightly in recent versions.
To use the filter input sources, you have to:
- Set the input format to the libavfilter virtual device using:
-f lavfi
- Set the filter input source using the
-i
flag (not -vf
)
- Provide arguments as complete key-value pairs, like:
color=color=red
This works for ffplay
, too, to test your filtergraph: ffplay -f lavfi -i color
Examples
In these examples I've added -t 30
to specify that I only want 30 seconds of output.
Color (Red)
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i color=color=red -t 30 red.mp4
^ ^ ^
| | |
filter key value
The key can be shortened to its abbreviated form: -i color=c=red
SMPTE Color Bars Pattern
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i smptebars -t 30 smpte.mp4
Test Source Pattern
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i testsrc -t 30 -pix_fmt yuv420p testsrc.mp4
In order for this to playback reliably, you might need to set the pixel format with: -pix_fmt yuv420p
By default, ffmpeg will use yuv444p (x264, High 4:4:4 Predictive), which some players aren't yet able to decode.
For instance, the video it creates is crashing VLC 2.0.7 and is just 30 seconds of black in QuickTime Player 10.2 (Mac OS X 10.8.4).
More info on test source here.
RGB Test Source
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i rgbtestsrc -pix_fmt yuv420p -t 30 rgbtestsrc.mp4
As with the last example, this might not work for you unless you set the pixel format to yuv420p as shown.
For posterity, here's the version I'm using:
ffmpeg version 1.2.1
libavutil 52. 18.100 / 52. 18.100
libavcodec 54. 92.100 / 54. 92.100
libavformat 54. 63.104 / 54. 63.104
libavdevice 54. 3.103 / 54. 3.103
libavfilter 3. 42.103 / 3. 42.103
libswscale 2. 2.100 / 2. 2.100
libswresample 0. 17.102 / 0. 17.102
libpostproc 52. 2.100 / 52. 2.100