How to discard a part of a MP4 with ffmpeg












0















Is there a way to slice out a 5 minute portion of an MP4 file with ffmpeg?



My attempt at running the following gives me the section I want to remove in hateley2.mp4.



ffmpeg -ss 01:02:00.000 -i hateley.mp4 -t 00:05:00.000 -c copy hateley2.mp4



Is there a way I can turn hateley2.mp4 into hateley.mp4 without that 5 minute section from 1hr 2min that I wish to remove?










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  • What's your tolerance for keeping a part of the 5 minute portion at both ends or removing a bit extra?

    – Gyan
    Dec 19 '18 at 12:51
















0















Is there a way to slice out a 5 minute portion of an MP4 file with ffmpeg?



My attempt at running the following gives me the section I want to remove in hateley2.mp4.



ffmpeg -ss 01:02:00.000 -i hateley.mp4 -t 00:05:00.000 -c copy hateley2.mp4



Is there a way I can turn hateley2.mp4 into hateley.mp4 without that 5 minute section from 1hr 2min that I wish to remove?










share|improve this question























  • What's your tolerance for keeping a part of the 5 minute portion at both ends or removing a bit extra?

    – Gyan
    Dec 19 '18 at 12:51














0












0








0








Is there a way to slice out a 5 minute portion of an MP4 file with ffmpeg?



My attempt at running the following gives me the section I want to remove in hateley2.mp4.



ffmpeg -ss 01:02:00.000 -i hateley.mp4 -t 00:05:00.000 -c copy hateley2.mp4



Is there a way I can turn hateley2.mp4 into hateley.mp4 without that 5 minute section from 1hr 2min that I wish to remove?










share|improve this question














Is there a way to slice out a 5 minute portion of an MP4 file with ffmpeg?



My attempt at running the following gives me the section I want to remove in hateley2.mp4.



ffmpeg -ss 01:02:00.000 -i hateley.mp4 -t 00:05:00.000 -c copy hateley2.mp4



Is there a way I can turn hateley2.mp4 into hateley.mp4 without that 5 minute section from 1hr 2min that I wish to remove?







macos command-line video ffmpeg video-conversion






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asked Dec 19 '18 at 11:03









crmpiccocrmpicco

2003415




2003415













  • What's your tolerance for keeping a part of the 5 minute portion at both ends or removing a bit extra?

    – Gyan
    Dec 19 '18 at 12:51



















  • What's your tolerance for keeping a part of the 5 minute portion at both ends or removing a bit extra?

    – Gyan
    Dec 19 '18 at 12:51

















What's your tolerance for keeping a part of the 5 minute portion at both ends or removing a bit extra?

– Gyan
Dec 19 '18 at 12:51





What's your tolerance for keeping a part of the 5 minute portion at both ends or removing a bit extra?

– Gyan
Dec 19 '18 at 12:51










1 Answer
1






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oldest

votes


















0














There probably is a 1-step ffmpeg command to do this, but I always approach it like this:




  1. Perform an extract operation like you're doing, but extract from the original, starting at time 0:00 and up to 1:02:00.

  2. Perform another extract operation, starting at 1:07:00 thru the end of the film (I think you just leave the duration off to get thru the end).

  3. Merge the 2 pieces together like the following:


Merge example:



echo 1.mp4 > merge.txt
echo 2.mp4 >> merge.txt
ffmpeg -f concat -safe 0 -i merge.txt -c copy merged.mp4


If you have more than one audio track in the file(s), you might need a more complicated merge like:



ffmpeg -f concat -i merge.txt -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -map 0:2 -c copy merged.mp4





share|improve this answer
























  • @crmpicco, did this help?

    – jimtut
    Jan 3 at 16:56











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









0














There probably is a 1-step ffmpeg command to do this, but I always approach it like this:




  1. Perform an extract operation like you're doing, but extract from the original, starting at time 0:00 and up to 1:02:00.

  2. Perform another extract operation, starting at 1:07:00 thru the end of the film (I think you just leave the duration off to get thru the end).

  3. Merge the 2 pieces together like the following:


Merge example:



echo 1.mp4 > merge.txt
echo 2.mp4 >> merge.txt
ffmpeg -f concat -safe 0 -i merge.txt -c copy merged.mp4


If you have more than one audio track in the file(s), you might need a more complicated merge like:



ffmpeg -f concat -i merge.txt -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -map 0:2 -c copy merged.mp4





share|improve this answer
























  • @crmpicco, did this help?

    – jimtut
    Jan 3 at 16:56
















0














There probably is a 1-step ffmpeg command to do this, but I always approach it like this:




  1. Perform an extract operation like you're doing, but extract from the original, starting at time 0:00 and up to 1:02:00.

  2. Perform another extract operation, starting at 1:07:00 thru the end of the film (I think you just leave the duration off to get thru the end).

  3. Merge the 2 pieces together like the following:


Merge example:



echo 1.mp4 > merge.txt
echo 2.mp4 >> merge.txt
ffmpeg -f concat -safe 0 -i merge.txt -c copy merged.mp4


If you have more than one audio track in the file(s), you might need a more complicated merge like:



ffmpeg -f concat -i merge.txt -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -map 0:2 -c copy merged.mp4





share|improve this answer
























  • @crmpicco, did this help?

    – jimtut
    Jan 3 at 16:56














0












0








0







There probably is a 1-step ffmpeg command to do this, but I always approach it like this:




  1. Perform an extract operation like you're doing, but extract from the original, starting at time 0:00 and up to 1:02:00.

  2. Perform another extract operation, starting at 1:07:00 thru the end of the film (I think you just leave the duration off to get thru the end).

  3. Merge the 2 pieces together like the following:


Merge example:



echo 1.mp4 > merge.txt
echo 2.mp4 >> merge.txt
ffmpeg -f concat -safe 0 -i merge.txt -c copy merged.mp4


If you have more than one audio track in the file(s), you might need a more complicated merge like:



ffmpeg -f concat -i merge.txt -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -map 0:2 -c copy merged.mp4





share|improve this answer













There probably is a 1-step ffmpeg command to do this, but I always approach it like this:




  1. Perform an extract operation like you're doing, but extract from the original, starting at time 0:00 and up to 1:02:00.

  2. Perform another extract operation, starting at 1:07:00 thru the end of the film (I think you just leave the duration off to get thru the end).

  3. Merge the 2 pieces together like the following:


Merge example:



echo 1.mp4 > merge.txt
echo 2.mp4 >> merge.txt
ffmpeg -f concat -safe 0 -i merge.txt -c copy merged.mp4


If you have more than one audio track in the file(s), you might need a more complicated merge like:



ffmpeg -f concat -i merge.txt -map 0:0 -map 0:1 -map 0:2 -c copy merged.mp4






share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 20 '18 at 16:09









jimtutjimtut

658513




658513













  • @crmpicco, did this help?

    – jimtut
    Jan 3 at 16:56



















  • @crmpicco, did this help?

    – jimtut
    Jan 3 at 16:56

















@crmpicco, did this help?

– jimtut
Jan 3 at 16:56





@crmpicco, did this help?

– jimtut
Jan 3 at 16:56


















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