table of contents
WF-RECORDER(1) | General Commands Manual | WF-RECORDER(1) |
NAME¶
wf-recorder
—
simple screen recording program for wlroots-based
compositors
SYNOPSIS¶
wf-recorder |
[-abcdDefghlmoptvx ] [-a ,
--audio [DEVICE]]
[-b, --bframes
max_b_frames] [-c,
--codec output_codec]
[-d, --device
encoding_device] [-D,
--no-damage ] [-f
filename.ext] [-F
filter_string] [-g,
--geometry geometry]
[-h, --help ]
[-l, --log ]
[-m, --muxer
muxer] [-o,
--output output]
[-p, --codec-param
[option_param=option_value]]
[-t, --force-yuv ]
[-v, --version ]
[-x, --pixel-format ] |
DESCRIPTION¶
wf-recorder
is a tool built to record your
screen on Wayland compositors. It makes use of
wlr-screencopy
for capturing video and ffmpeg(1) for encoding it.
In its simplest form, run wf-recorder
to
start recording and use ‘Ctrl+C
’ to
stop. This will create a file called
‘recording.mp4
’ in the current working
directory using the default codec.
The options are as follows:
-a
,--audio
[DEVICE]- Starts recording the screen with audio.
DEVICE argument is optional. In case you want to specify the PulseAudio device which will capture the audio, you can run this command with the name of that device. You can find your device by running
$ pactl list sources | grep Name -b
,--bframes
max_b_frames- Sets the maximum number of B-Frames to use.
-c
,--codec
- output_codec Specifies the codec of the video.
Supports GIF output as well.
To modify codec parameters, use
-p
option_name=option_value -d
,--device
encoding_device- Selects the device to use when encoding the video.
Some drivers report support for ‘
rgb0
’ data for vaapi input but really only support yuv. Use the-t
,--force-yuv
option in addition to the vaapi options to convert the data in software, before sending it to the GPU. -D
,--no-damage
- By default, wf-recorder will request a new frame from the compositor only when the screen updates. This results in a much smaller output file, which however has a variable refresh rate. When this option is on, wf-recorder does not use this optimization and continuously records new frames, even if there are no updates on the screen.
-f
filename.ext- By using the
-f
option, the output file will have the name filename.ext and the file format will be determined by the provided extension. If the extension is not recognized by your ffmpeg(1) muxers, the command will fail.You can check the muxers that your ffmpeg(1) installation supports by running
$ ffmpeg -muxers
-F
,--filter
filter_string- Set the ffmpeg filter to use. VAAPI requires `hwupload,scale_vaapi=nv12` to work.
-g
,--geometry
screen_geometry- Selects a specific part of the screen. The format is "x,y WxH".
-h
,--help
- Prints the help screen.
-l
,--log
- Generates a log on the current terminal. For debug purposes.
-m
,--muxer
muxer- Set the output format to a specific muxer instead of detecting it from the filename.
-o
,--output
- Specify the output where the video is to be recorded.
-p
,--codec-param
[option_name=option_value]- Change the codec parameters.
-t
,--force-yuv
- Use this option in addition to the vaapi options to convert the data in software, before sending it to the GPU.
-v
,--version
- Print the version of wf-recorder.
-x
,--pixel-format
pixel_format- Set the output pixel format.
List available formats using
$ ffmpeg -pix_fmts
EXAMPLES¶
To select a specific part of the screen you can either use
--g
geometry or use
https://github.com/emersion/slurp for interactive selection of the screen
area that will be recorded:
$ wf-recorder -g
$(slurp)
You can record screen and sound simultaneously with
$ wf-recorder --audio
--file=recording_with_audio.mp4
To specify a codec use the
-c
codec option. To modify
codec parameters, -p
option_name=option_value.
To set a specific output format, use the
-m
-muxer
option. For
example, to output to a v
ideo4linux2
loopback you might use:
$ wf-recorder --muxer=v4l2
--codec=rawvideo --file=/dev/video2
To use GPU encoding, use a VAAPI codec (for ex.
‘h264_vaapi
’ ) and specify a GPU
device to use with the -d
option:
$ wf-recorder -f test-vaapi.mkv -c
h264_vaapi -d /dev/dri/renderD128
Some drivers report support for
‘rgb0
’ data for
‘vaapi
’ input but really only support
yuv planar formats. In this case, use the -t
,
--force-yuv
option in addition to the
‘vaapi
’ options to convert the data to
yuv planar data before sending it to the GPU.
SEE ALSO¶
December 31, 2020 | Debian |