Crates.io | metadata |
lib.rs | metadata |
version | |
source | src |
created_at | 2018-09-20 01:01:39.280679 |
updated_at | 2024-12-11 05:50:45.748775 |
description | Media file metadata for human consumption |
homepage | https://github.com/zmwangx/metadata#readme |
repository | https://github.com/zmwangx/metadata |
max_upload_size | |
id | 85566 |
Cargo.toml error: | TOML parse error at line 18, column 1 | 18 | autolib = false | ^^^^^^^ unknown field `autolib`, expected one of `name`, `version`, `edition`, `authors`, `description`, `readme`, `license`, `repository`, `homepage`, `documentation`, `build`, `resolver`, `links`, `default-run`, `default_dash_run`, `rust-version`, `rust_dash_version`, `rust_version`, `license-file`, `license_dash_file`, `license_file`, `licenseFile`, `license_capital_file`, `forced-target`, `forced_dash_target`, `autobins`, `autotests`, `autoexamples`, `autobenches`, `publish`, `metadata`, `keywords`, `categories`, `exclude`, `include` |
size | 0 |
metadata
is a media metadata parser and formatter designed for human consumption. Powered by FFmpeg.
Example:
$ metadata '20160907 Apple Special Event.m4v'
Title: Apple Special Event, September 2016 (1080p)
Filename: 20160907 Apple Special Event.m4v
File size: 6825755188 (6.83GB, 6.36GiB)
Container format: MPEG-4 Part 14 (M4V)
Duration: 01:59:15.88
Pixel dimensions: 1920x800
Sample aspect ratio: 1:1
Display aspect ratio: 12:5
Scan type: Progressive scan*
Frame rate: 29.97 fps
Bit rate: 7631 kb/s
#0: Video, H.264 (High Profile level 4), yuv420p, 1920x800 (SAR 1:1, DAR 12:5), 29.97 fps, 7500 kb/s
#1: Audio (und), AAC (LC), 48000 Hz, stereo, 125 kb/s
#2: Subtitle (eng), EIA-608 closed captions
Compare this to ffprobe
or mediainfo
(both great tools, just not so human-readable):
(mediainfo
prints so much, the output doesn't even fit on my screen with 85 lines. Now try using it in a 80x24 terminal.)
metadata
can print tags too if you want to, hopefully better organized:
$ metadata -t '20160907 Apple Special Event.m4v'
Title: Apple Special Event, September 2016 (1080p)
Filename: 20160907 Apple Special Event.m4v
File size: 6825755188 (6.83GB, 6.36GiB)
Container format: MPEG-4 Part 14 (M4V)
Duration: 01:59:15.88
Pixel dimensions: 1920x800
Sample aspect ratio: 1:1
Display aspect ratio: 12:5
Scan type: Progressive scan*
Frame rate: 29.97 fps
Bit rate: 7631 kb/s
Streams:
#0: Video, H.264 (High Profile level 4), yuv420p, 1920x800 (SAR 1:1, DAR 12:5), 29.97 fps, 7500 kb/s
#1: Audio (und), AAC (LC), 48000 Hz, stereo, 125 kb/s
#2: Subtitle (eng), EIA-608 closed captions
Tags:
title: Apple Special Event, September 2016 (1080p)
artist: Apple
album: Apple Keynotes (1080p)
compilation: 0
description: iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, AirPods, Apple Watch Series 2, Apple Watch Hermès and Apple Watch Nike+
podcast: 1
episode_uid: 104
synopsis: See Apple CEO Tim Cook and team introduce the iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, AirPods, Apple Watch Series 2, Apple Watch Hermès and Apple Watch Nike+.
genre: Podcast
gapless_playback: 0
date: 2016-09-09T12:00:00Z
rating: 0
season_number: 0
episode_sort: 0
media_type: 0
#2
rotate: 0
language: eng
You can also request all tags with -A, --all-tags
. Output not shown here for the sake of brevity (that ship has sailed, but still).
metadata
is a Rust port of the Python tool of the same name bundled in my storyboard project. I started the storyboard project to replicate the storyboard/thumbnail images generated by some proprietary media players, in order to facilitate media file sharing on online forums. While I long stopped sharing media files online (and hence stopped using storyboard
), I still love the command line metadata formatter that came out of the storyboard effort, and use it all the time in place of ffprobe
or mediainfo
. Years later, metadata
could use some decoupling and refresh, and I could learn myself some Rust, so I started this port.
Since this is my intro to Rust project, the code is guaranteed to be shitty.
On macOS, metadata
can be installed with Homebrew:
$ brew tap zmwangx/metadata https://github.com/zmwangx/metadata
$ brew install zmwangx/metadata/metadata
On Ubuntu 18.04 and 20.04, metadata
can be installed from ppa:zmwangx/metadata:
$ add-apt-repository ppa:zmwangx/metadata
$ apt update && apt install metadata
FFmpeg with development headers and the Rust toolchain are required. FFmpeg 3.4 and later are supported.
On macOS, the following command should satisfy the non-Rust dependencies:
$ brew install ffmpeg pkg-config
On Debian/Ubuntu, the following command should satisfy the non-Rust dependencies:
$ apt install -y build-essential clang libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libavutil-dev pkg-config
Similarly for other distros.
The basic build command to run once you have the dependencies is
$ make release
You should find metadata
and metadata.1
in dist/<version>/
.
$ metadata -h
metadata 0.1.4
Zhiming Wang <metadata@zhimingwang.org>
Media file metadata for human consumption.
USAGE:
metadata [FLAGS] <FILE>...
FLAGS:
-A, --all-tags Print all metadata tags
-c, --checksum Include file checksum(s)
-h, --help Prints help information
-s, --scan Decode frames to determine scan type (slower, but determines interlaced more accurately; see man
page for details)
-t, --tags Print metadata tags, except mundane ones
-V, --version Prints version information
ARGS:
<FILE>... Media file(s)
The man page has more details.
metadata
is fast (a vast improvement over the old Python tool). I tested a collection of ~1300 video files on one of my USB 3.0 media drives, and metadata
(with xargs
) managed to chew through all of them within 50 seconds, less than 40ms per file on average. It might be faster for files hosted on a native SSD. ffprobe
was actually slower in the test since it only accepts one file at a time.
https://github.com/zmwangx/metadata/issues.
Copyright (c) 2018-2020 Zhiming Wang metadata@zhimingwang.org. The MIT License.