11

I have a video directly from the http body in a [] byte format:

//Parsing video
videoData, err := ioutil.ReadAll(r.Body)
if err != nil {
    w.WriteHeader(UPLOAD_ERROR)
    w.Write([]byte("Error uploading the file"))
    return
}

and I need a single frame of the video and convert it to a png. This is how someone would do it with a static and encoded file using ffmpeg:

        filename := "test.mp4"
        width := 640
        height := 360
        cmd := exec.Command("ffmpeg", "-i", filename, "-vframes", "1", "-s", fmt.Sprintf("%dx%d", width, height), "-f", "singlejpeg", "-")
        var buffer bytes.Buffer
        cmd.Stdout = &buffer
        if cmd.Run() != nil {
            panic("could not generate frame")
        }

How can I achieve the same with a raw video?

A user from reddit told me that I might achieve this with https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-protocols.html#pipe but I was unable to find any resources.

Any help is appreciated, thanks.

(EDIT: I tried to pipe the []byte array to ffmpeg now, but ffmpeg does not fill in my buffer:

width := 640
height := 360
log.Print("Size of the video: ", len(videoData))


cmd := exec.Command("ffmpeg", "-i", "pipe:0", "-vframes", "1", "-s", fmt.Sprintf("%dx%d", width, height), "-f", "singlejpeg", "-")
cmd.Stdin = bytes.NewReader(videoData)

var imageBuffer bytes.Buffer
cmd.Stdout = &imageBuffer
err := cmd.Run()

if err != nil {
    log.Panic("ERROR")
}

imageBytes := imageBuffer.Bytes()
log.Print("Size of the image: ", len(imageBytes))

But I get following error:

[mov,mp4,m4a,3gp,3g2,mj2 @ 0x7ff05d002600]stream 0, offset 0x5ded: partial file

pipe:0: Invalid data found when processing input

Finishing stream 0:0 without any data written to it.

frame= 0 fps=0.0 q=0.0 Lsize= 0kB time=-577014:32:22.77 bitrate= -0.0kbits/s speed=N/A video:0kB audio:0kB subtitle:0kB other streams:0kB global headers:0kB muxing overhead: unknown

Output file is empty, nothing was encoded (check -ss / -t / -frames parameters if used)

7
  • 3
    cmd.Stdin = bytes.NewReader(videoData), and replace filename with "pipe:0"
    – Peter
    Apr 12, 2018 at 15:47
  • This is a duplicate of your previous question, being a little more specific.
    – icza
    Apr 12, 2018 at 15:49
  • 1
    @icza No it's not. In this question I am specifically asking on how to push bytes to ffmpeg. Those two questions might be related, but the foundation is different.
    – thelearner
    Apr 12, 2018 at 16:45
  • 1
    To know how many bytes you need requires you to decoce the video, at which point you probably don't need ffmpeg anymore. But I would expect ffmpeg to stop reading after the first frame. You can tell how much ffmpeg reads by using an io.TeeReader. If it turns out that ffmpeg reads everything, an io.LimitReader might help.
    – Peter
    Apr 12, 2018 at 17:10
  • 3
    @Peter Or instead of io.LimitReader just slice the input data, e.g. bytes.NewReader(videoData[:limit]) (but don't forget to check slice length to avoid runtime panic).
    – icza
    Apr 12, 2018 at 17:24

2 Answers 2

3
+50

I need a single frame of the video and convert it to a png. This is how someone would do it with ffmpeg.

There is a popular go library that is exactly made for what you search for: https://github.com/bakape/thumbnailer

thumbnailDimensions := thumbnailer.Dims{Width: 320, Height: 130}

thumbnailOptions := thumbnailer.Options{JPEGQuality:100, MaxSourceDims:thumbnailer.Dims{}, ThumbDims:thumbnailDimensions, AcceptedMimeTypes: nil}

sourceData, thumbnail, err := thumbnailer.ProcessBuffer(videoData, thumbnailOptions)

imageBytes := thumbnail.Image.Data

They use ffmpeg under the hood, but removes the abstraction for you.

0

Please check this out, I wrote this to down sample mp3 files to 128k bitrate and it should work with you. Please change the command which suits you:

package main

import (
    "bytes"
    "io/ioutil"
    "log"
    "os"
    "os/exec"
)

func check(err error) {
    if err != nil {
        log.Fatalln(err)
    }
}

func main() {
    file, err := os.Open("test.mp3") // open file
    check(err)
    
    defer file.Close()
    buf, err := ioutil.ReadAll(file)
    check(err)

    cmd := exec.Command("ffmpeg", "-y", // Yes to all
        //"-hide_banner", "-loglevel", "panic", // Hide all logs
        "-i", "pipe:0", // take stdin as input
        "-map_metadata", "-1", // strip out all (mostly) metadata
        "-c:a", "libmp3lame", // use mp3 lame codec
        "-vsync", "2", // suppress "Frame rate very high for a muxer not efficiently supporting it"
        "-b:a", "128k", // Down sample audio birate to 128k
        "-f", "mp3", // using mp3 muxer (IMPORTANT, output data to pipe require manual muxer selecting)
        "pipe:1", // output to stdout
    )

    resultBuffer := bytes.NewBuffer(make([]byte, 5*1024*1024)) // pre allocate 5MiB buffer

    cmd.Stderr = os.Stderr // bind log stream to stderr
    cmd.Stdout = resultBuffer // stdout result will be written here

    stdin, err := cmd.StdinPipe() // Open stdin pipe
    check(err)

    err = cmd.Start() // Start a process on another goroutine
    check(err)

    _, err = stdin.Write(buf) // pump audio data to stdin pipe
    check(err)

    err = stdin.Close() // close the stdin, or ffmpeg will wait forever
    check(err)

    err = cmd.Wait() // wait until ffmpeg finish
    check(err)

    outputFile, err := os.Create("out.mp3") // create new file
    check(err)
    defer outputFile.Close()
    
    _, err = outputFile.Write(resultBuffer.Bytes()) // write result buffer to file
    check(err)
}

Reference: https://gist.github.com/aperture147/ad0f5b965912537d03b0e851bb95bd38

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.