Hello everybody,
working on the subject of writing out filtergraph information obviously implies
the goal of being able to visualize that data in some way. While I do have
something for long, it's tailored for specific workflows and is hardly useful
for most.
Anyway, it shouldn't be required to use once another software for visualize the
output. This decimates the usability for any such feature by far.
Few days ago, I was thinking about ways for making this feature really useful
for everybody without needing to jump through any extra hoops. We have that
range of writers (now "text formatters"), and so I wondered whether there isn't
some text format that is meant to directly represent a graph for visualization,
which finally reminded me about
MERMAID
Had used it just twice or thrice on GitHub for simple things, and as I found
out later, it's by far less capable than I would have expected (more than a
decade of age, current version 11.x) --- but: it has a number of unique selling
points:
- The format is simple and transparent
- It's hand-editable and easily readable
- There's quite an ecosystem around it with many integrations and tools
available
The #1 for me though is:
- It goes hand-in-hand with Markdown
=> almost everywhere Markdown is supported, Mermaid diagrams are supported as
well
Practically, this means that you can paste a Mermaid diagram into any message
field on GitHub (for example; forgejo supports it as well as many others) - and
the diagram is rendered automatically with a kind of interactive viewer.
Enough reason to give it a try and I also had some quick success. Writing that
format fits rather well into the logic of the existing text formatters without
major changes.
That way I ended up with a new
avtextformatter_mermaid ("mermaidwriter" in old terminology)
Most of the mentioned deficiencies could be remedied by CSS styling (even
though it's been really tedious).
Now well - when viewing filtergraphs, you often want to know details about the
input and output streams. For that other tool I was parsing out this
information from the ffmpeg log lines describing the streams on startup. But
this work is happening right at the source of information, so I added
input/output files and streams to the filtergraph printing as well (just as
much detail as needed for graphing).
The unthankful effect: by that, it became apparent that something else is
missing: encoders and decoders - added those as well and eventually got
reasonable results.
Remained one last part:
Usability
Of course, it's still not a great experience when you need to copy/paste the
generated diagram code in some web portal. To solve that, I've created once
another textformatter(writer): mermaidhtml.
It's just an extension to the Mermaid formatter which wraps the diagram as an
html file for local viewing (yet not fully offline).
The final idea would be to simplify usage as much as possible, so that all you
need to do is adding a small option to the Ffmpeg command line, like -sg ('show
graph') which would cause Ffmpeg to create such mermaid html file on exit and
automatically launches the browser (if any) to view that file.
While working or trying a range of commands, after another, this will also
create a browser tab for each run, allowing for easy comparison between recent
commands.
Examples
I've created a Gist with some examples of the output here:
https://gist.github.com/softworkz/a196b2d0e9e2df49f766abd92f508551
(also includes a zip with html file examples)
Questions
I'm curious what you think about it!
- What's good, what's bad, what should be changed/improved?
- What about the displayed information, should something be added?
- I'm folding out the buffer source/sink filters to simplify the view, is that
ok?
Should the TRIM filters be excluded as well?
- Since it's no longer just about filter graphs - what do you think about the
term
"Ffmpeg Execution Graph"?
(other ideas welcome)
- Does anybody have some complex command lines for me to test?
(no need to include media files, I can try to replicate
something similar)
Thanks,
sw
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