@chapter Metadata @c man begin METADATA FFmpeg is able to dump metadata from media files into a simple UTF-8-encoded INI-like text file and then load it back using the metadata muxer/demuxer. The file format is as follows: @enumerate @item A file consists of a header and a number of metadata tags divided into sections, each on its own line. @item The header is a @samp{;FFMETADATA} string, followed by a version number (now 1). @item Metadata tags are of the form @samp{key=value} @item Immediately after header follows global metadata @item After global metadata there may be sections with per-stream/per-chapter metadata. @item A section starts with the section name in uppercase (i.e. STREAM or CHAPTER) in brackets (@samp{[}, @samp{]}) and ends with next section or end of file. @item At the beginning of a chapter section there may be an optional timebase to be used for start/end values. It must be in form @samp{TIMEBASE=@var{num}/@var{den}}, where @var{num} and @var{den} are integers. If the timebase is missing then start/end times are assumed to be in nanoseconds. Next a chapter section must contain chapter start and end times in form @samp{START=@var{num}}, @samp{END=@var{num}}, where @var{num} is a positive integer. @item Empty lines and lines starting with @samp{;} or @samp{#} are ignored. @item Metadata keys or values containing special characters (@samp{=}, @samp{;}, @samp{#}, @samp{\} and a newline) must be escaped with a backslash @samp{\}. @item Note that whitespace in metadata (e.g. @samp{foo = bar}) is considered to be a part of the tag (in the example above key is @samp{foo }, value is @samp{ bar}). @end enumerate A ffmetadata file might look like this: @example ;FFMETADATA1 title=bike\\shed ;this is a comment artist=FFmpeg troll team [CHAPTER] TIMEBASE=1/1000 START=0 #chapter ends at 0:01:00 END=60000 title=chapter \#1 [STREAM] title=multi\ line @end example By using the ffmetadata muxer and demuxer it is possible to extract metadata from an input file to an ffmetadata file, and then transcode the file into an output file with the edited ffmetadata file. Extracting an ffmetadata file with @file{ffmpeg} goes as follows: @example ffmpeg -i INPUT -f ffmetadata FFMETADATAFILE @end example Reinserting edited metadata information from the FFMETADATAFILE file can be done as: @example ffmpeg -i INPUT -i FFMETADATAFILE -map_metadata 1 -codec copy OUTPUT @end example @c man end METADATA