lav2wav can be used to extract the audio to stdout.
This output goes to stdout and can be saved as a wav file, or piped to an
other sound processing tool, that is able to handle wave.
This can be mp2enc and toolame for mpeg layer 2 audio,
or for example lame for mpeg layer 3 audio.
The input files may be any combination of AVI (.avi),
Quicktime (.qt) or editlist files so long as they are all lavtools-
readable (e.g. MJPEG-encoded AVI/Quicktime or DV type 2 AVI).
OPTIONS
lav2wav accepts the following options:
-s num
Start extracting at video frame (num)
-c num
Extract (num) frames of audio
-v num
Verbosity level (0, 1 or 2)
-I
Ignore unsupported bitrates/bits per sample
-R
If the file does not contain any sound. lav2wav will create silence with
44100kHz Sampelrate, 16 Bit audio bitsize and 2 Chanels
-r sr,bs,ch
If the file does not contain any sound. lav2wav will generate silence with the
values you supply the samplerate (sr), audio-bitsize (bs) and channel (ch).
BUGS
The "WAV" file format (technically: RIFF) is really very much less
than ideal for a tool intended to be used in pipelines as lav2wav is.
The Problem is that the header includes a field specifying the length
of the file. This can't be filled in except by seeking back to the
begining and over-writing. If the output is unseek-able (e.g. pipe
lav2wav simply writes a large length into the header and leaves it at
that). Most tools like sox(1) or mp2enc(1) either ignore the length
field anyway or only give a warning.
The audio length is inacurate calculated when lav2wav generates silence.
This happens only if you have NTSC framerate and than it creates for every
hour of video 1.1498sec too less of silence.
AUTHOR
This man page was written by Bernhard Praschinger.
If you have questions, remarks, problems or you just want to contact
the developers, the main mailing list for the MJPEG-tools is:
[email protected]