ppmtompeg

Ppmtompeg User Manual(0)			      Ppmtompeg User Manual(0)



NAME
       ppmtompeg - encode an MPEG-1 bitstream


SYNOPSIS
       ppmtompeg [options] parameter-file


DESCRIPTION
       This program is part of Netpbm(1).

       ppmtompeg  produces  an MPEG-1 video stream.  MPEG-1 is the first great
       video compression method, and is what is used in Video CDs (VCD).  ppm-
       tompeg  originated  in the year 1995.  DVD uses a more advanced method,
       MPEG-2.	There is an even newer method  called  MPEG-4  which  is  also
       called Divx.  I don’t know where one finds that used.

       There’s technically a difference between a compression method for video
       and an actual file (stream) format for a movie, and I don’t know if  it
       can be validly said that the format of the stream ppmtompeg produces is
       MPEG-1.

       Mencoder from the Mplayer package  is probably superior for most	 video
       format  generation  needs,  if for no other reason than that it is more
       popular.

       The programming library PM2V  generates MPEG-2 streams.

       Use Mplayer  (not part of Netpbm) to do the reverse conversion: to cre-
       ate a series of PNM files from an MPEG stream.

       param_file is a parameter file which includes a list of input files and
       other parameters.  The file is described in detail below.

       To understand this program, you need to understand something about  the
       complex	MPEG-1	format.	 One source of information about this standard
       format is the section Introduction to MPEG in the Compression FAQ .


OPTIONS
       The -gop, -combine_gops, -frames, and -combine_frames options  are  all
       exclusive.



       -stat stat_file
	      This  option  causes  ppmtompeg to append the statistics that it
	      write to Standard Output to the file  stat_file  as  well.   The
	      statistics  use  the  following  abbreviations:  bits  per block
	      (bpb), bits per frame (bpf), seconds per frame (spf),  and  bits
	      per second (bps).

	      These statistics include how many I, P, and B frames there were,
	      and information about compression and quality.



       -quiet num_seconds
	       causes ppmtompeg not to report remaining time more  often  than
	      every num_seconds seconds (unless the time estimate rises, which
	      will happen near the beginning of the run).   A  negative	 value
	      tells ppmtompeg not to report at all.  0 is the default (reports
	      once after each frame).  Note that  the  time  remaining	is  an
	      estimate	and does not take into account time to read in frames.


       -realquiet
	       causes ppmtompeg to run silently, with the only	screen	output
	      being  errors.   Particularly  useful  when  reading  input from
	      stdin.



       -no_frame_summary
	       This option prevents ppmtompeg from printing a summary line for
	      each frame


       -float_dct
	       forces  ppmtompeg to use a more accurate, yet more computation-
	      ally expensive version of the DCT.


       -gop gop_num
	      causes ppmtompeg to encode only the numbered GOP (first  GOP  is
	      0).   The	 parameter  file is the same as for normal usage.  The
	      output file will be the  normal  output  file  with  the	suffix
	      .gop.gop_num.   ppmtompeg	 does not output any sequence informa-
	      tion.


       -combine_gops
	       causes ppmtompeg simply to combine some GOP files into a single
	      MPEG  output  stream.   ppmtompeg	 inserts a sequence header and
	      trailer.	In this case, the parameter file needs only to contain
	      the  SIZE value, an output file, and perhaps a list of input GOP
	      files (see below).

	      If you don’t supply a list of input GOP files is used, then ppm-
	      tompeg  assumes  you’re  using  the same parameter file you used
	      when you created the input (with the -gop option) and calculates
	      the  corresponding  gop  filenames  itself.   If this is not the
	      case, you can specify input GOP files in the same manner as nor-
	      mal input files -- except instead of using INPUT_DIR, INPUT, and
	      END_INPUT, use GOP_INPUT_DIR, GOP_INPUT, and GOP_END_INPUT.   If
	      no input GOP files are specified, then the default is to use the
	      output file name with suffix .gop.gop_num, with gop_num starting
	      from 0, as the input files.

	      Thus, unless you’re mixing and matching GOP files from different
	      sources, you can simply use the same parameter file for creating
	      the  GOP	files  (-gop)  and for later turning them into an MPEG
	      stream (-combine_gops).



       -frames first_frame last_frame
	      This option causes ppmtompeg to encode only the frames  numbered
	      first_frame to last_frame, inclusive.  The parameter file is the
	      same as for normal usage.	 The output will be placed in separate
	      files,  one per frame, with the file names being the normal out-
	      put file name with the suffix .frame.frame_num.  No  GOP	header
	      information  is  output.	 (Thus,	 the  parameter	 file need not
	      include the GOP_SIZE value)

	      Use ppmtompeg -combine_frames to combine these frames later into
	      an MPEG stream.



       -combine_frames
	       This  option causes ppmtompeg simply to combine some individual
	      MPEG frames (such as you might have created with an earlier  run
	      of  ppmtompeg  -frames) into a single MPEG stream.  Sequence and
	      GOP headers are  inserted	 appropriately.	  In  this  case,  the
	      parameter	 file  needs  to  contain  only	 the  SIZE  value, the
	      GOP_SIZE value, an output file, and  perhaps  a  list  of	 frame
	      files (see below).

	      The  parameter  file  may	 specify input frame files in the same
	      manner  as  normal  input	 files	--  except  instead  of	 using
	      INPUT_DIR,    INPUT,   and   END_INPUT,	use   FRAME_INPUT_DIR,
	      FRAME_INPUT, and FRAME_END_INPUT. If no input  frame  files  are
	      specified,  then the default is to use the output file name with
	      suffix .frame.frame_num, with frame_num starting from 0, as  the
	      input files.




       -nice  This  option  causes  ppmtompeg  to  run	any  remote  processes
	      "nicely," i.e.  at low priority.	(This is relevant only if  you
	      are running ppmtompeg in parallel mode.  Otherwise, there are no
	      remote processes).  See ’man nice.’


       -max_machines num_machines
	      This option causes ppmtompeg to use no  more  than  num_machines
	      machines as slaves for use in parallel encoding.


       -snr   This  option  causes  ppmtompeg  to  include the signal-to-noise
	      ratio in the reported statistics.	 Prints SNR (Y U V)  and  peak
	      SNR  (Y  U  V)  for  each frame.	In summary, prints averages of
	      luminance only (Y).  SNR is defined as 10*log(variance of origi-
	      nal/variance    of    error).	Peak   SNR   is	  defined   as
	      20*log(255/RMSE).	 Note that ppmtompeg runs a little slower when
	      you use this option.


       -mse   This  option  causes  ppmtompeg to report the mean squared error
	      per block.  It also automatically reports	 the  quality  of  the
	      images, so there is no need to specify -snr then.


       -bit_rate_info rate_file
	       This option makes ppmtompeg write bit rate information into the
	      file rate_file.  Bit rate information is	bits  per  frame,  and
	      also bits per I-frame-to-I-frame.


       -mv_histogram
	       This option causes ppmtompeg to print a histogram of the motion
	      vectors as part of statistics.  There are	 three	histograms  --
	      one for P frame, one for forward B frame, and one for backward B
	      frame motion vectors.

	      The output is in the form of a matrix, each entry	 corresponding
	      to  one  motion  vector  in the search window. The center of the
	      matrix represents (0,0) motion vectors.


       -debug_sockets
	      This option causes ppmtompeg to print to	Standard  Output  mes-
	      sages  that  narrate the communication between the machines when
	      you run ppmtompeg in parallel mode .


       -debug_machines
	      This option causes ppmtompeg to print to	Standard  Output  mes-
	      sages that narrate the progress of the conversion on the various
	      machines when you run ppmtompeg in parallel mode .




PARAMETER FILE
       The parameter file must contain the following lines (except when	 using
       the -combine_gops or -combine_frames options):




       PATTERN pattern
	      This  statement  specifies the pattern (sequence) of I frames, P
	      frames, and B frames.  pattern is just a sequence of the letters
	      I, P, and B with nothing between.	 Example:

		  PATTERN IBBPBBPBBPBBPBB

	      See I Frames, P Frames, B Frames .


       OUTPUT output file
	      This names the file where the output MPEG stream goes.


       INPUT_DIR directory
	      This  statement tells where the input images (frames) come from.
	      If each frame is in a separate file, directory is the  directory
	      where  they  all	are.   You  may	 use . to refer to the current
	      directory.  A null directory refers to the root directory of the
	      system file tree.

	      To  have	ppmtompeg  read	 all the frames serially from Standard
	      Input, specify
		INPUT_DIR stdin


       INPUT  This line must be followed by a list of the input files (in dis-
	      play order) and then the line END_INPUT.

	      There  are  three	 types	of  lines between INPUT and END_INPUT.
	      First, a line may simply be the name of an input file.   Second,
	      the  line	 may  be  of  the  form	 single_star_expr [x-y].  sin-
	      gle_star_expr can have a single * in it.	It is replaced by  all
	      the  numbers  between  x	and y inclusive.  So, for example, the
	      line tennis*.ppm [12-15] refers to the files tennis12.ppm,  ten-
	      nis13.ppm, tennis14.ppm, tennis15.ppm.

	      Uniform  zero-padding  occurs,  as  well.	 For example, the line
	      football.*.ppm [001-130] refers to the  files  football.001.ppm,
	      football.002.ppm,	 ..., football.009.ppm, football.010.ppm, ...,
	      football.130.ppm.

	      The third type of line is: single_star_expr [x-y+s],  where  the
	      line  is	treated	 exactly  as  above, except that we skip by s.
	      Thus, the line football.*.ppm [001-130+4] refers	to  the	 files
	      football.001.ppm,	  football.005.ppm,   football.009.ppm,	 foot-
	      ball.013.ppm, etc.

	      Furthermore, a line may specify a shell command  to  execute  to
	      generate lines to be interpreted as described above, as if those
	      lines were in the parameter file instead.	 Use back ticks,  like
	      in the Bourne Shell, like this:

		‘cat myfilelist‘

	      If  input	 is from Standard Input (per the INPUT_DIR statement),
	      ppmtompeg ignores the INPUT/END_INPUT block, but it  still  must
	      be present.


       BASE_FILE_FORMAT {PPM | PNM | YUV |
		   JPEG	 |  JMOVIE}  ppmtompeg must convert all input files to
	      one of the following formats as a first step of processing: PNM,
	      YUV,  JPEG(v4),  or  JMOVIE.   (The conversion may be trivial if
	      your input files are already in one  of  these  formats).	  This
	      line  specifies  which  of  the four formats.  PPM is actually a
	      subset of PNM.  The separate specification is allowed for	 back-
	      ward compatibility.  Use PNM instead of PPM in new applications.


       INPUT_CONVERT conversion_command
	      You must specify how to convert a file to the base file  format.
	      If no conversion is necessary, then you would just say:

		   INPUT_CONVERT *

	      Otherwise,  conversion_command is a shell command that causes an
	      image in the format your specified with BASE_FILE_FORMAT	to  be
	      written to Standard Output.  ppmtompeg executes the command once
	      for each line between INPUT and END_INPUT	 (which	 is  normally,
	      but  not	necessarily, a file name).  In the conversion command,
	      ppmtompeg replaces each ’*’ with the contents of that line.

		   If you had a bunch of gif files, you might say:
		   INPUT_CONVERT giftopnm *

		   If you have a bunch of separate a.Y,	 a.U,  and  a.V	 files
	      (where
		   the	U  and V have already been subsampled), then you might
	      say:

		   INPUT_CONVERT cat *.Y *.U *.V

	      Input conversion is not allowed with input from stdin, so use

		   INPUT_CONVERT *

	      as described above.


       SIZE widthxheight

	      width and height are the width and height of each frame in  pix-
	      els.

	      When  ppmtompeg  can  get	 this information from the input image
	      files, it ignores the SIZE parameter and you may omit it.

	      When the image files are in YUV format, the files don’t  contain
	      dimension information, so SIZE is required.

	      When  ppmtompeg is running in parallel mode, not all of the pro-
	      cesses in the network have access to the image files, so SIZE is
	      required	and  must  give the same dimensions as the input image
	      files.


       YUV_SIZE widthxheight
	      This is an obsolete synonym of SIZE.


       YUV_FORMAT {ABEKAS | PHILLIPS | UCB |
				    EYUV | pattern} This  is  meaningful  only
	      when  BASE_FILE_FORMAT  specifies	 YUV  format,  and  then it is
	      required.	 It specifies the sub-format of the YUV class.



       GOP_SIZE n
	      n is the number of frames in a Group of Pictures.	  Except  that
	      because  a GOP must start with an I frame, ppmtompeg makes a GOP
	      as much longer than n as it has to to make the  next  GOP	 start
	      with an I frame.

	      Normally,	 it  makes  sense  to make your GOP size a multiple of
	      your pattern length (the latter is  determined  by  the  PATTERN
	      parameter file statement).

	      See Group Of Pictures .


       SLICES_PER_FRAME n
	      n is roughly the number of slices per frame.  Note, at least one
	      MPEG player may complain if slices do not start at the left side
	      of an image.  To ensure this does not happen, make sure the num-
	      ber of rows is divisible by SLICES_PER_FRAME.


       PIXEL {FULL | HALF}
	      use half-pixel motion vectors, or just  full-pixel  ones	It  is
	      usually  important  that	you  use  half-pixel  motion  vectors,
	      because it results in both better quality	 and  better  compres-
	      sion.



       RANGE n
	      Use  a  search  range of n pixels in each of the four directions
	      from a subject pixel.  (So the search window  is	a  square  n*2
	      pixels on a side).


       PSEARCH_ALG {EXHAUSTIVE | TWOLEVEL |
		   SUBSAMPLE  |	 LOGARITHMIC}  This  statement tells ppmtompeg
	      what kind of search
		  technique (algorithm) to use for P frames.  You  select  the
	      desired
		  combination of speed and compression.	 EXHAUSTIVE gives the
		  best compression, but LOGARITHMIC is the fastest.
		  TWOLEVEL is an exhaustive full-pixel search, followed by a
		  local	 half-	pixel search around the best full-pixel vector
	      (the
		  PIXEL option is ignored for this search technique).


       BSEARCH_ALG {SIMPLE | CROSS2 | EXHAUSTIVE}
	      This statement tells ppmtompeg what kind of search
		  technique (algorithm) to use for B frames.  SIMPLE means
		  find best forward and backward vectors, then interpolate.
		  CROSS2 means find those two vectors, then see what backward
		  vector best matches the best forward vector, and vice versa.
		  EXHAUSTIVE does an n-squared search and is
		  extremely slow in relation to the others (CROSS2
		  is about half as fast as SIMPLE).


       IQSCALE n
	      Use n as the qscale for I frames.
		   See Qscale .


       PQSCALE n
	      Use n as the qscale for P frames.
		   See Qscale .


       BQSCALE n
	      Use n as the qscale for B frames.
		   See Qscale .


       REFERENCE_FRAME {ORIGINAL | DECODED}
	      This  statement  determines  whether ppmtompeg uses the original
	      images or the decoded  images  when  computing  motion  vectors.
	      Using  decoded  images  is more accurate and should increase the
	      playback quality of the output, but it makes the	encoding  take
	      longer and seems to give worse compression.  It also causes some
	      complications with parallel encoding. (see the section on paral-
	      lel  encoding).	One  thing you can do as a trade-off is select
	      ORIGINAL here, and lower the qscale (see QSCALE if  the  quality
	      is not good enough.

	      Original or Decoded? (Normalized)

	      --------------------------------------------------------------------
	      Reference	  Compression	Speed	Quality I   Quality P	Quality B
		Decoded	     1000	1000	  1000	       969	   919
	       Original	      885	1373	  1000	       912	   884






       The following lines are optional:




       FORCE_ENCODE_LAST_FRAME
	      This statement is obsolete.  It does nothing.

	      Before  Netpbm 10.26 (January 2005), ppmtompeg would drop trail-
	      ing B frames from your movie, since a movie can’t end with  a  B
	      frame.   (See  I Frames, P Frames, B Frames .  You would have to
	      specify FORCE_ENCODE_LAST_FRAME to stop that from happening  and
	      get the same function that ppmtompeg has today.



       NIQTABLE
	      This  statement specifies a custom non-intra quantization table.
	      If you don’t specify this statement, ppmtompeg  uses  a  default
	      non-intra quantization table.

	      The 8 lines immediately following NIQTABLE specify the quantiza-
	      tion table.  Each line defines a table row  and  consists	 of  8
	      integers,	 whitespace-delimited, which define the table columns.


       IQTABLE
	      This is analogous to NIQTABLE, but for  the  intra  quantization
	      table.


       ASPECT_RATIO ratio
	      This statement specifies the aspect ratio for ppmtompeg to spec-
	      ify in the MPEG output.  I’m not sure what this is used for.

	      ratio must be  1.0,  0.6735,  0.7031,  0.7615,  0.8055,  0.8437,
	      0.8935,  0.9157,	0.9815,	 1.0255,  1.0695,  1.0950,  1.1575, or
	      1.2015.


       FRAME_RATE rate
	      This specifies the frame rate for ppmtompeg to  specify  in  the
	      MPEG output.  Some players use this value to determine the play-
	      back rate.

	      rate must be 23.976, 24, 25, 29.97, 30, 50, 59.94, or 60.


       BIT_RATE rate
	      This specifies the bit rate for Constant Bit Rate	 (CBR)	encod-
	      ing.

	      rate must be an integer.


       BUFFER_SIZE size
	      This  specifies  the  value  ppmtompeg is to specify in the MPEG
	      output for the Video Buffering Verifier (VBV) buffer size needed
	      to decode the sequence.

	      A	 Video	Verifying  Buffer is a buffer in which a decoder keeps
	      the decoded bits in order to  match  the	uneven	speed  of  the
	      decoding with the required constant playback speed.

	      As  ppmtompeg  encodes the image, it simulates the decoding pro-
	      cess in terms of how many bits would be in the VBV as each frame
	      gets decoded, assuming a VBV of the size you indicate.

	      If  you  specify	the  WARN_VBV_UNDERFLOW	 statement,  ppmtompeg
	      issues a warning each time the simulation underflows the buffer,
	      which  suggests that an underflow would occur on playback, which
	      suggests the buffer is too small.

	      If you specify the WARN_VBV_OVERFLOW statement, ppmtompeg issues
	      a	 warning  each time the simulation overflows the buffer, which
	      suggests that an overflow would occur on	playback,  which  sug-
	      gests the buffer is too small.


       WARN_VBV_UNDERFLOW

       WARN_VBV_OVERFLOW
	      See BUFFER_SIZE.

	      These  options  were new in Netpbm 10.26 (January 2005).	Before
	      that, ppmtompeg issued the warnings always.




	      The following statements apply only to parallel operation:




       PARALLEL
	      This statement, paired with END PARALLEL, is what causes ppmtom-
	      peg to operate in parallel mode.	See Parallel Operation .


       END PARALLEL
	      This goes with PARALLEL.


       PARALLEL_TEST_FRAMES n
	      The  master starts off by measuring each slave’s speed.  It does
	      this by giving each slave n frames to encode and noting how long
	      the  slave  takes	 to  finish.   These are not just test frames,
	      though -- they’re real frames and the results become part of the
	      output.	ppmtompeg  is  old and measures time in undivided sec-
	      onds, so to get useful timings, specify enough  frames  that  it
	      will  take  at  least 5 seconds to process them.	The default is
	      10.

	      If you specify FORCE_I_ALIGN, ppmtompeg will increase  the  test
	      frames value enough to maintain the alignment.

	      If  there aren’t enough frames for every slave to have the indi-
	      cated number of test frames, ppmtompeg  will  give  some	slaves
	      fewer.



       PARALLEL_TIME_CHUNKS t
	      When  you	 specify  this	statement, the master attempts to feed
	      work to the slaves in chunks that take t seconds to process.  It
	      uses  the speed measurement it made when it started up (see PAR-
	      ALLEL_TEST_FRAMES) to decide how	many  frames  to  put  in  the
	      chunk.   This statement obviously doesn’t affect the first batch
	      of work sent to each slave, which is the one used to measure the
	      slave’s speed.

	      Smaller  values  of  t  increase communication, but improve load
	      balancing.  The default is 30 seconds.

	      You  may	specify	 only  one  of	PARALLEL_TIME_CHUNKS,	PARAL-
	      LEL_CHUNK_TAPER,	and PARALLEL_PERFECT.  PARALLEL_CHUNK_TAPER is
	      usually best.


       PARALLEL_CHUNK_TAPER
	      When you specify this statement,	the  master  distributes  work
	      like  with  PARALLEL_TIME_CHUNKS, except that the master chooses
	      the number of seconds for the chunks.  It starts	with  a	 large
	      number  and, as it gets closer to finishing the job, reduces it.
	      That way, it reduces scheduling overhead when precise scheduling
	      isn’t  helpful,  but still prevents a slave from finishing early
	      after all the work has already been  handed  out	to  the	 other
	      slaves, and then sitting idle while there’s still work to do.

	      You   may	 specify  only	one  of	 PARALLEL_TIME_CHUNKS,	PARAL-
	      LEL_CHUNK_TAPER, and PARALLEL_PERFECT.  PARALLEL_CHUNK_TAPER  is
	      usually best.



       PARALLEL_PERFECT
	      If this statement is present, ppmtompeg schedules on the assump-
	      tion that each machine is about the same speed.  The master will
	      simply  divide  up  the frames evenly between the slaves -- each
	      slave gets the same number of frames.  If some slaves are faster
	      than  others,  they  will finish first and remain idle while the
	      slower slaves continue.

	      This has the advantage of minimal	 scheduling  overhead.	 Where
	      slaves  have  different speeds, though, it makes inefficient use
	      of the fast ones.	 Where slaves are the same speed, it also  has
	      the  disadvantage that they all finish at the same time and feed
	      their output to the single Combine  Server  in  a	 burst,	 which
	      makes  less  efficient  use  of  the Combine Server and thus can
	      increase the total elapsed time.

	      You  may	specify	 only  one  of	PARALLEL_TIME_CHUNKS,	PARAL-
	      LEL_CHUNK_TAPER,	and PARALLEL_PERFECT.  PARALLEL_CHUNK_TAPER is
	      usually best.


       RSH remote_shell_command
	      ppmtompeg executes the  shell  command  remote_shell_command  to
	      start a process on another machine.  The default command is rsh,
	      and whatever command you specify must have compatible semantics.
	      ssh  is  usually	compatible.  The command ppmtompeg uses is one
	      like this: ssh remote.host.com -l username shellcommand.

	      Be sure to set up .rhosts files or SSH key authorizations	 where
	      needed.  Otherwise, you’ll have to type in passwords.

	      On  some	HP machines, rsh is the restricted shell, and you want
	      to specify remsh.


       FORCE_I_ALIGN
	      This statement forces each slave to encode  a  chunk  of	frames
	      which  is a multiple of the pattern length (see PATTERN).	 Since
	      the first frame in any pattern is an I frame, this  forces  each
	      chunk encoded by a slave to begin with an I frame.

	      This document used to say there was an argument to FORCE_I_ALIGN
	      which was the number of frames  ppmtompeg	 would	use  (and  was
	      required to be a multiple of the pattern length).	 But ppmtompeg
	      has apparently always ignored that argument, and it does now.


       KEEP_TEMP_FILES
	      This statement causes ppmtompeg  not  to	delete	the  temporary
	      files  it uses to transmit encoded frames to the combine server.
	      This means you will be left with a file for each frame, the same
	      as you would get with the -frames option.

	      This is mostly useful for debugging.

	      This  works only if you’re using a shared filesystem to communi-
	      cate between the servers.

	      This option was new in Netpbm 10.26 (January 2005).





   Parameter File Notes
	If you use the -combine_gops option, then you need to specify only the
       SIZE and OUTPUT values in the parameter file.  In addition, the parame-
       ter file may specify input GOP files in the same manner as normal input
       files  --  except instead of using INPUT_DIR, INPUT, and END_INPUT, use
       GOP_INPUT_DIR, GOP_INPUT, and GOP_END_INPUT.  If you specify  no	 input
       GOP  files,  then  ppmtompeg  uses by default the output file name with
       suffix .gop.gop_num, with gop_num starting from 0, as the input	files.

       If  you	use  the -combine_frames option, then you need to specify only
       the SIZE, GOP_SIZE, and OUTPUT values in the parameter file.  In	 addi-
       tion, the parameter file may specify input frame files in the same man-
       ner as normal input files -- except instead of using INPUT_DIR,	INPUT,
       and  END_INPUT,	use FRAME_INPUT_DIR, FRAME_INPUT, and FRAME_END_INPUT.
       If no input frame files are specified, then the default is to  use  the
       output  file name with suffix .frame.frame_num, with frame_num starting
       from 0, as the input files.

       Any number of spaces and tabs may come between each option  and	value.
       Lines beginning with # are ignored.  Any other lines are ignored except
       for those between INPUT and END_INPUT.  This allows you to use the same
       parameter  file	for  normal  usage  and	 for  -combine_gops  and -com-
       bine_frames.

       The file format is case-sensitive so all keywords should	 be  in	 upper
       case.

       The  statements may appear in any order, except that the order within a
       block statement (such as INPUT ... END INPUT) is significant.

       ppmtompeg is prepared to handle up to 16	 B  frames  between  reference
       frames  when encoding with input from stdin.  (To build a modified ppm-
       tompeg with a higher limit, change the constant B_FRAME_RUN in  frame.c
       and recompile).


GENERAL USAGE INFORMATION
   Qscale
       The quantization scale values (qscale) give a trade-off between quality
       and compression.	 Using different Qscale values has very little	effect
       on  speed.   The	 qscale	 values	 can be set separately for I, P, and B
       frames.

       You select the qscale values with  the  IQSCALE,	 PQSCALE,  and	BSCALE
       parameter file statements.

       A  qscale value is an integer from 1 to 31.  Larger numbers give better
       compression, but worse quality.	In the following, the quality  numbers
       are  peak  signal-to-noise  ratio,  defined as: signal-to-noise formula
       where MSE is the mean squared error.


       Flower garden tests:

       Qscale vs Quality

       ----------------------------------------
       Qscale	I Frames   P Frames   B Frames
	    1	    43.2       46.3	  46.5
	    6	    32.6       34.6	  34.3
	   11	    28.6       29.5	  30.0
	   16	    26.3       26.8	  28.6
	   21	    24.7       25.0	  27.9
	   26	    23.5       23.9	  27.5
	   31	    22.6       23.0	  27.3

       Qscale vs Compression

       ----------------------------------------
       Qscale	I Frames   P Frames   B Frames
	    1	       2	  2	     2
	    6	       7	 10	    15
	   11	      11	 18	    43

	   16	      15	 29	    97
	   21	      19	 41	   173
	   26	      24	 56	   256
	   31	      28	 73	   330



   Search Techniques
       There are several different motion vector search techniques  available.
       There are different techniques available for P frame search and B frame
       search. Using different search techniques present little difference  in
       quality, but a large difference in compression and speed.


       There  are  4 types of P frame search: Exhaustive, TwoLevel, SubSample,
       and Logarithmic.


       There are 3 types of B frame search: Exhaustive, Cross2, and Simple.

       The recommended search techniques are TwoLevel and  Logarithmic	for  P
       frame  search,  and Cross2 and Simple for B frame search. Here are some
       numbers comparing the different search methods:

       P frame Motion Vector Search (Normalized)

       --------------------------------------------------
	 Technique   Compression 1   Speed 2   Quality 3
	Exhaustive	 1000	      1000	 1000
	 SubSample	 1008	      2456	 1000
	  TwoLevel	 1009	      3237	 1000
       Logarithmic	 1085	      8229	  998

       B frame Motion Vector Search (Normalized)

       -------------------------------------------------
	Technique   Compression 1   Speed 2   Quality 3
       Exhaustive	1000	     1000	1000
	   Cross2	 975	     1000	 996
	   Simple	 938	     1765	 991

       1Smaller numbers are better compression.

       2Larger numbers mean faster execution.

       3Larger numbers mean better quality.

       For some reason, Simple	seems  to  give	 better	 compression,  but  it
       depends on the image sequence.

       Select  the  search  techniques	with  the  PSEARCH_ALG and BSEARCH_ALG
       parameter file statements.



   Group Of Pictures (GOP)
       A Group of Pictures (GOP) is a roughly independently decodable sequence
       of frames.  An MPEG video stream is made of one or more GOP’s.  You may
       specify how many frames should be in each GOP with the GOP_SIZE parame-
       ter file statement.  A GOP always starts with an I frame.

       Instead	of  encoding  an entire sequence, you can encode a single GOP.
       To do this, use the -gop	 command  option.   You	 can  later  join  the
       resulting  GOP  files  at  any time by running ppmtompeg with the -com-
       bine_gops command option.



   Slices
       A slice is an independently decodable unit in a frame.  It  can	be  as
       small as one macroblock, or it can be as big as the entire frame.  Bar-
       ring transmission error, adding	slices	does  not  change  quality  or
       speed;  the only effect is slightly worse compression.  More slices are
       used for noisy transmission so that errors are more recoverable.	 Since
       usually	errors	are  not such a problem, we usually just use one slice
       per frame.


       Control the slice size with the SLICES_PER_FRAME parameter file	state-
       ment.

       Some  MPEG  playback  systems  require that each slice consist of whole
       rows of macroblocks.  If you are encoding for this kind of  player,  if
       the  height  of	the  image  is	H  pixels,  then  you  should  set the
       SLICES_PER_FRAME to some number which divides H/16.   For  example,  if
       the image is 240 pixels (15 macroblocks) high, then you should use only
       15, 5, 3, or 1 slices per frame.


       Note: these MPEG playback systems are  really  wrong,  since  the  MPEG
       standard says this doesn’t have to be so.




   Search Window
       The  search window is the window in which ppmtompeg searches for motion
       vectors.	 The window is a square.  You can  specify  the	 size  of  the
       square, and whether to allow half-pixel motion vectors or not, with the
       RANGE and PIXEL parameter file statements.


   I Frames, P Frames, B Frames
       In MPEG-1, a movie is represented as a sequence of MPEG frames, each of
       which  is  an  I	 Frame,	 a  P Frame, or a B Frame.  Each represents an
       actual frame of the movie (don’t get confused by the dual  use  of  the
       word  "frame."  A movie frame is a graphical image.  An MPEG frame is a
       set of data that describes a movie frame).

       An I frame ("intra" frame) describes a  movie  frame  in	 isolation  --
       without	respect	 to any other frame in the movie.  A P frame ("predic-
       tive" frame) describes a movie frame by describing how it differs  from
       the  movie  frame described by the latest preceding I  or P frame.  A B
       frame ("bidirectional" frame) describes a movie frame by describing how
       it  differs  from  the the movie frames described by the nearest I or P
       frame before and after it.

       Note that the first frame of a movie must be described by  an  I	 frame
       (because	 there	is  no	previous movie frame) and the last movie frame
       must be described by an I or P frame (because there  is	no  subsequent
       movie frame).

       Beyond  that,  you  can	choose	which  frames are represented by which
       types.  You specify a pattern,  such  as	 IBPBP	and  ppmtompeg	simply
       repeats	it  over  and  over throughout the movie.  The pattern affects
       speed, quality, and stream size.	 Here is a chart which shows  some  of
       the trade-offs:

       Comparison of I/P/B Frames (Normalized)

       ------------------------------------
       Frame Type   Size   Speed   Quality
	 I frames   1000   1000	    1000

	 P frames   409	    609	     969
	 B frames    72	    260	     919

       (this is with constant qscale)


       A standard sequence is IBBPBBPBBPBBPBB.


       Select the sequence with the PATTERN parameter file statement.

       Since  the last MPEG frame cannot be a B frame (see above), if the pat-
       tern you specify indicates B frames for the last movie frames,  ppmtom-
       peg makes it an I frame instead.

       Before  Netpbm 10.26 (January 2005), ppmtompeg instead drops the trail-
       ing B frames by	default,  and  you  need  the  FORCE_ENCODE_LAST_FRAME
       parameter file statement to make it do this.

       The  MPEG  frames  don’t	 appear in the MPEG-1 stream in the same order
       that the corresponding movie frames appear in the movie -- the B frames
       come after the I and P frames on which they are based.  For example, if
       the movie is 4 frames that you will represent with  the	pattern	 IBBP,
       the  MPEG-1 stream will start with an I frame describing movie frame 0.
       The next frame in the MPEG-1 stream is a P frame describing movie frame
       3.   The	 last  two frames in the MPEG-1 stream are B frames describing
       movie frames 1 and 2, respectively.



   Specifying Input and Output Files
       Specify the input frame images with the	INPUT_DIR,  INPUT,  END_INPUT,
       BASE_FILE_FORMAT,  SIZE,	 YUV_FORMAT  and  INPUT_CONVERT parameter file
       statements.

       Specify the output file with the OUTPUT parameter file statement.



   Statistics
       ppmtompeg can generate a variety of statistics about the encoding.  See
       the   -stat,   -snr,   -mv_histogram,  -quiet,  -no_frame_summary,  and
       -bit_rate_info options.



PARALLEL OPERATION
       You can run ppmtompeg on multiple machines at once, encoding  the  same
       MPEG  stream.   When you do, the machines are used as shown in the fol-
       lowing diagram.	We call this ’parallel mode.’

       ppmtompeg-par.gif

       To do parallel processing, put the statement

	   PARALLEL

       in the parameter file, followed by  a  listing  of  the	machines,  one
       machine per line, then

	   END_PARALLEL

       Each  of the machine lines must be in one of two forms.	If the machine
       has filesystem access to the input files, then the line is:

       machine user executable

       The executable is normally ppmtompeg (you may need to give the complete
       path if you’ve built for different architectures).  If the machine does
       not have filesystem access to the input files, the line is:

       REMOTE machine user executable parameter file

       The -max_machines command option limits the number of machines  ppmtom-
       peg  will use.  If you specify more machines in the parameter file than
       -max_machines allows, ppmtompeg uses only the  machines	listed	first.
       This  is handy if you want to experiment with different amounts of par-
       allelism.

       In general, you should use full path file names	when  describing  exe-
       cutables	 and  parameter files.	This includes the parameter file argu-
       ment on the original invocation of ppmtompeg.

       All file names must be the same on all systems (so if e.g. you’re using
       an  NFS filesystem, you must make sure it is mounted at the same mount-
       point on all systems).

       Because not all of the processes involved in  parallel  operation  have
       easy  access  to	 the  input files, you must specify the SIZE parameter
       file statement when you do parallel operation.

       The machine on which you originally  invoke  ppmtompeg  is  the	master
       machine.	 It hosts a ’combine server,’, a ’decode server,’ and a number
       of ’i/o servers,’ all as separate processes.  The other machines in the
       network	(listed in the parameter file) are slave machines.  Each hosts
       a single process that continuously requests work from  the  master  and
       does it.	 The slave process does the computation to encode MPEG frames.
       It processes frames in batches identified by the master.

       The master uses a remote shell command to start a process  on  a	 slave
       machine.	 By default, it uses an rsh shell command to do this.  But use
       the RSH parameter file statement to control this.   The	shell  command
       the master executes remotely is ppmtompeg, but with options to indicate
       that it is to perform slave functions.

       The various machines talk to each other	over  TCP  connections.	  Each
       machine	finds  and binds to a free TCP port number and tells its part-
       ners the port number.  These port numbers are at least 2048.

       Use the PARALLEL_TEST_FRAMES, PARALLEL_TIME_CHUNKS,  and	 PARALLEL_PER-
       FECT parameter file statements to control the way the master divides up
       work among the slaves.

       Use the -nice command option  to	 cause	all  slave  processes  to  run
       "nicely,"  i.e.	as low priority processes.  That way, this substantial
       and long-running CPU load will have minimal impact on  other,  possibly
       interactive, users of the systems.


SPEED
       Here is a look at ppmtompeg speed, in single-node (not parallel) opera-
       tion:

       Compression Speed

       ---------------------------------------
       Machine Type   Macroblocks per second1
	HP 9000/755		280
       DEC 3000/400		247
	HP 9000/750		191
	   Sparc 10		104
	   DEC 5000		68
       1A macroblock is a 16x16 pixel square

       The measurements in the table are with inputs and outputs via a conven-
       tional  locally	attached  filesystem.	If  you	 are  using  a network
       filesystem over a single 10 MB/s Ethernet, that constrains  your	 speed
       more  than  your	 CPU  speed.  In that case, don’t expect to get better
       than 4 or 5 frames per second no matter how fast your CPUs are.

       Network speed is even more of a bottleneck when the slaves do not  have
       filesystem access to the input files -- i.e. you declare them REMOTE.

       Where  I/O  is  the bottleneck, size of the input frames can make a big
       difference.  So YUV input is better than PPM, and JPEG is  better  than
       both.

       When  you’re  first trying to get parallel mode working, be sure to use
       the -debug_machines option so you  can  see  what’s  going  on.	 Also,
       -debug_sockets can help you diagnose communication problems.



AUTHORS
       ·      Kevin   Gong   -	 University   of  California,  Berkeley,  kev-
	      ing@cs.berkeley.edu


       ·      Ketan  Patel  -  University  of	California,   Berkeley,	  kpa-
	      tel@cs.berkeley.edu


       ·      Dan   Wallach   -	 University  of	 California,  Berkeley,	 dwal-
	      lach@cs.berkeley.edu


       ·      Darryl  Brown  -	University  of	California,   Berkeley,	  dar-
	      ryl@cs.berkeley.edu


       ·      Eugene	Hung	-    University	  of   California,   Berkeley,
	      eyhung@cs.berkeley.edu


       ·      Steve   Smoot   -	  University	of    California,    Berkeley,
	      smoot@cs.berkeley.edu



netpbm documentation		 23 July 2006	      Ppmtompeg User Manual(0)

Personal Tools