![]() Of course, FFmpeg has many, many other options available. Just open it up in your favorite media player and give a listen to make sure everything is as it should be. acodec copy – copies the audio track (instead of encoding to another format)īohemian_Rhapsody.m4a – name of the output fileĪfter typing the previous command, only a second or so should go by, and you should notice a new file on your Desktop, named Bohemian_Rhapsody.m4a, which will contain nothing but the original audio track from the original FLV file. vn – tells FFmpeg to ignore the video track i Bohemian_Rhapsody.flv – provides FFmpeg with the name of the input file Here’s what the different parts of the previous command do: ![]() Knowing this, all we need to do is type the following command: For extracting purposes, we’re most interested that the file has AAC audio. In order, it tells us that the stream is encoded using the AAC encoder, that it has a frequency of 44100 Hz (the correct sampling rate for burning to CD), that it is stereo, uses 16-bit samples, and has a bitrate of 107 kb/s. The above information tells us the following things. The part we’re interested in will look something like this: Because along with the error, it also gives us information about the file. When we hit Enter after the command, we haven’t told ffmpeg exactly what to do with the file, so it spits out an error. What we’ve actually told ffmpeg is that Bohemian_Rhapsody.flv is the input file. ![]() The above command is a bit of a hack, and you’ll get errors, but don’t worry. ![]() Note: if you’re trying this along with the tutorial, substitute the name of your file each time you see it used in the commands. ![]() Now that we’ve used cd to change directory to the Desktop, we need to type the following command: This is important because if you tell a program (like FFmpeg) to act on a file, only the file isn’t where the Terminal is “looking” then you will get errors. This moves the Terminal program into the same directory (the Desktop in this case), so all of our commands will be active there. In our example, the file is called Bohemian_Rhapsody.flv and it is located on the Desktop. To do that, open the Terminal (if it isn’t still open), and change to the directory where the FLV file is located. The first thing we need to do is find out exactly what codecs are used in our FLV file. ![]()
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