[[mencoder]]

xvidenc (-xvidencopts)
       There are three modes available: constant bitrate (CBR), fixed quantiz-
       er and two pass.

       pass=<1|2>
              Specify the pass in two pass mode.

       turbo (two pass only)
              Dramatically speeds up pass one using faster algorithms and dis-
              abling CPU-intensive options.  This will probably reduce  global
              PSNR  a  little  bit and change individual frame type and PSNR a
              little bit more.

       bitrate=<value> (CBR or two pass mode)
              Sets the bitrate to be used in  kbits/second  if  <16000  or  in
              bits/second  if  >16000.   If <value> is negative, XviD will use
              its absolute value as the target size (in kBytes) of  the  video
              and  compute  the associated bitrate automagically (default: 687
              kbits/s).

       fixed_quant=<1-31>
              Switch to fixed quantizer mode and specify the quantizer  to  be
              used.

       zones=<zone0>[/<zone1>[/...]] (CBR or two pass mode)
              User  specified  quality  for  specific  parts (ending, credits,
              ...).  Each zone is  <start-frame>,<mode>,<value>  where  <mode>
              may be
                 q    Constant quantizer override, where value=<2.0-31.0> rep-
                      resents the quantizer value.
                 w    Ratecontrol  weight  override,  where  value=<0.01-2.00>
                      represents the quality correction in %.

              EXAMPLE:
                 zones=90000,q,20
                      Encodes all frames starting with frame 90000 at constant
                      quantizer 20.
                 zones=0,w,0.1/10001,w,1.0/90000,q,20
                      Encode frames 0-10000  at  10%  bitrate,  encode  frames
                      90000 up to the end at constant quantizer 20.  Note that
                      the second zone is needed to delimit the first zone,  as
                      without  it everything up until frame 89999 would be en-
                      coded at 10% bitrate.

       me_quality=<0-6>
              This option controls the motion estimation subsystem.  The high-
              er  the  value,  the  more precise the estimation should be (de-
              fault: 6).  The more precise the motion estimation is, the  more
              bits  can  be  saved.  Precision is gained at the expense of CPU
              time so decrease this setting if you need realtime encoding.

       (no)interlacing
              Encode the fields of interlaced video material.  Turn  this  op-
              tion on for interlaced content.
              NOTE: Should you rescale the video, you would need an interlace-
              aware   resizer,   which   you    can    activate    with    -vf
              scale=<width>:<height>:1.

       4mv
              Use  4  motion  vectors  per macroblock.  This might give better
              compression, but slows down encoding.
              WARNING: As of XviD-1.0.x, this option is  no  longer  available
              separately,  and its functionality is included in the me_quality
              option.  When me_quality > 4, 4mv is activated.

       rc_reaction_delay_factor=<value>
              This parameter controls the number of frames the CBR  rate  con-
              troller will wait before reacting to bitrate changes and compen-
              sating for them to obtain a constant bitrate over  an  averaging
              range of frames.

       rc_averaging_period=<value>
              Real  CBR  is hard to achieve.  Depending on the video material,
              bitrate can be variable, and hard to  predict.   Therefore  XviD
              uses  an averaging period for which it guarantees a given amount
              of bits (minus a small variation).  This settings expresses  the
              "number  of frames" for which XviD averages bitrate and tries to
              achieve CBR.

       rc_buffer=<value>
              size of the rate control buffer

       quant_range=<1-31>-<1-31>[/<1-31>-<1-31>]
              CBR mode: min & max quantizer for all frames (default: 2-31)
              two pass mode: min &  max  quantizer  for  I/P-frames  (default:
              2-31/2-31)
              WARNING:  As  of  XviD-1.0.x,  this  option  is  replaced by the
              [min|max]_[i|p|b]quant options.

       min_key_interval=<value> (two pass only)
              minimum interval between keyframes (default: 0)

       max_key_interval=<value>
              maximum interval between keyframes (default: 10*fps)

       mpeg_quant
              Use MPEG quantizers instead of H.263.  For  high  bitrates,  you
              will find that MPEG quantization preserves more detail.  For low
              bitrates, the smoothing of H.263 will give you less block noise.
              When using custom matrices, MPEG must be used.
              WARNING:  As  of  XviD-1.0.x,  this  option  is  replaced by the
              quant_type option.

       mod_quant
              Decide whether to use MPEG or H.263 quantizers  on  a  frame-by-
              frame basis (two pass mode only).
              WARNING: This will generate an illegal bitstream, and most like-
              ly not be decodable by any MPEG-4 decoder besides libavcodec  or
              XviD.
              WARNING: As of XviD-1.0.x, this option is no longer available.

       keyframe_boost=<0-1000> (two pass mode only)
              Shift  some  bits  from  the pool for other frame types to intra
              frames, thus improving keyframe quality.  This amount is an  ex-
              tra  percentage,  so  a value of 10 will give your keyframes 10%
              more bits than normal (default: 0).

       kfthreshold=<value> (two pass mode only)
              Works together with kfreduction.  Determines  the  minimum  dis-
              tance  below  which  you consider that two frames are considered
              consecutive and treated  differently  according  to  kfreduction
              (default: 10).

       kfreduction=<0-100> (two pass mode only)
              The  above  two  settings  can  be  used  to  adjust the size of
              keyframes that you consider too close to the first (in  a  row).
              kfthreshold  sets  the range in which keyframes are reduced, and
              kfreduction determines the bitrate reduction they get.  The last
              I-frame will get treated normally (default: 30).

       divx5bvop
              Generate DivX5 compatible B-frames (default: on).  This seems to
              be mandatory only for old versions of DivX's decoder.
              WARNING: As of  XviD-1.0.x,  this  option  is  replaced  by  the
              closed_gop option.

       (no)greyscale
              Make  XviD  discard  chroma  planes  so  the  encoded  video  is
              greyscale only.  Note that this does not speed up  encoding,  it
              just  prevents  chroma data from being written in the last stage
              of encoding.

       debug
              Save per-frame statistics in ./xvid.dbg. (This is  not  the  two
              pass control file.)


       The following options are only available with the latest stable releas-
       es of XviD 1.0.x (api4).

       (no)packed
              This option is meant to solve frame-order issues  when  encoding
              to container formats like AVI that cannot cope with out-of-order
              frames.  In practice, most decoders (both software and hardware)
              are  able  to deal with frame-order themselves, and may get con-
              fused when this option is turned on, so you can safely leave  if
              off, unless you really know what you are doing.
              WARNING:  This  will generate an illegal bitstream, and will not
              be decodable by ISO-MPEG-4 decoders except DivX/libavcodec/XviD.
              WARNING: This will also store a fake DivX version in the file so
              the bug autodetection of some decoders might be confused.

       max_bframes=<0-4>
              Maximum number of B-frames to put between  I/P-frames  (default:
              2).

       bquant_ratio=<0-1000>
              quantizer  ratio between B- and non-B-frames, 150=1.50 (default:
              150)

       bquant_offset=<-1000-1000>
              quantizer offset between B- and non-B-frames, 100=1.00 (default:
              100)

       bf_threshold=<-255-255>
              This setting allows you to specify what priority to place on the
              use of B-frames.  The higher the value, the higher the probabil-
              ity  of B-frames being used (default: 0).  Do not forget that B-
              frames usually have a higher quantizer, and therefore aggressive
              production of B-frames may cause worse visual quality.

       (no)closed_gop
              This  option  tells  XviD  to close every GOP (Group Of Pictures
              bounded by two I-frames), which makes GOPs independent from each
              other.   This just implies that the last frame of the GOP is ei-
              ther a P-frame or a N-frame but not a B-frame.  It is usually  a
              good idea to turn this option on (default: on).

       frame_drop_ratio=<0-100> (max_bframes=0 only)
              This  setting  allows  the  creation of variable framerate video
              streams.  The value of the setting specifies a  threshold  under
              which,  if the difference of the following frame to the previous
              frame is below or equal to this threshold, a frame gets not cod-
              ed  (a  so  called n-vop is placed in the stream).  On playback,
              when reaching an n-vop the previous frame will be displayed.
              WARNING: Playing with this setting may result in a jerky  video,
              so use it at your own risks!

       (no)qpel
              MPEG-4  uses a half pixel precision for its motion search by de-
              fault.  The standard proposes a mode where encoders are  allowed
              to  use quarter pixel precision.  This option usually results in
              a sharper image.  Unfortunately it has a great impact on bitrate
              and sometimes the higher bitrate use will prevent it from giving
              a better image quality at a fixed bitrate.  It is better to test
              with  and  without this option and see whether it is worth acti-
              vating.

       (no)gmc
              Enable Global Motion Compensation,  which  makes  XviD  generate
              special  frames (GMC-frames) which are well suited for Pan/Zoom/
              Rotating images.  Whether or not the use  of  this  option  will
              save bits is highly dependent on the source material.

       (no)trellis
              Trellis  Quantization  is a kind of adaptive quantization method
              that saves bits by modifying quantized coefficients to make them
              more compressible by the entropy encoder.  Its impact on quality
              is good, and if VHQ uses too much CPU for you, this setting  can
              be  a  good  alternative to save a few bits (and gain quality at
              fixed bitrate) at a lesser cost than with VHQ (default: on).

       (no)cartoon
              Activate this if your encoded sequence is an anime/cartoon.   It
              modifies  some XviD internal thresholds so XviD takes better de-
              cisions on frame types and motion vectors for flat looking  car-
              toons.

       quant_type=<h263|mpeg>
              Sets  the type of quantizer to use.  For high bitrates, you will
              find that MPEG quantization preserves more detail.  For low  bi-
              trates,  the  smoothing of H.263 will give you less block noise.
              When using custom matrices, MPEG quantization must be used.

       (no)chroma_me
              The usual motion estimation algorithm uses  only  the  luminance
              information  to  find  the best motion vector.  However for some
              video material, using the chroma planes  can  help  find  better
              vectors.   This setting toggles the use of chroma planes for mo-
              tion estimation (default: on).

       (no)chroma_opt
              Enable a chroma optimizer prefilter.  It will do some extra mag-
              ic on color information to minimize the stepped-stairs effect on
              edges.  It will improve quality at the cost of  encoding  speed.
              It  reduces PSNR by nature, as the mathematical deviation to the
              original picture will get bigger, but the subjective image qual-
              ity  will  raise.   Since  it  works with color information, you
              might want to turn it off when encoding in greyscale.

       (no)hq_ac
              Activates high-quality prediction of AC coefficients  for  intra
              frames from neighbor blocks (default: on).

       vhq=<0-4>
              The  motion  search  algorithm is based on a search in the usual
              color domain and tries to find a motion  vector  that  minimizes
              the  difference  between  the  reference  frame  and the encoded
              frame.  With this setting activated, XviD will also use the fre-
              quency domain (DCT) to search for a motion vector that minimizes
              not only the spatial difference but also the encoding length  of
              the block.  Fastest to slowest:
                 0    off
                 1    mode decision (inter/intra MB) (default)
                 2    limited search
                 3    medium search
                 4    wide search

       (no)lumi_mask
              Adaptive  quantization  allows the macroblock quantizers to vary
              inside each frame.  This is a 'psychosensory'  setting  that  is
              supposed to make use of the fact that the human eye tends to no-
              tice fewer details in very bright and very  dark  parts  of  the
              picture.   It  compresses  those areas more strongly than medium
              ones, which will save bits that can  be  spent  again  on  other
              frames, raising overall subjective quality and possibly reducing
              PSNR.

       min_iquant=<0-31>
              minimum I-frame quantizer (default: 2)

       max_iquant=<0-31>
              maximum I-frame quantizer (default: 31)

       min_pquant=<0-31>
              minimum P-frame quantizer (default: 2)

       max_pquant=<0-31>
              maximum P-frame quantizer (default: 31)

       min_bquant=<0-31>
              minimum B-frame quantizer (default: 2)

       max_bquant=<0-31>
              maximum B-frame quantizer (default: 31)

       quant_intra_matrix=<filename>
              Load a custom intra matrix file.  You can build such a file with
              xvid4conf's matrix editor.

       quant_inter_matrix=<filename>
              Load a custom inter matrix file.  You can build such a file with
              xvid4conf's matrix editor.

       curve_compression_high=<0-100>
              This setting allows XviD to take a certain  percentage  of  bits
              away  from  high  bitrate  scenes  and give them back to the bit
              reservoir.  You could also use this if you have a clip  with  so
              many  bits allocated to high-bitrate scenes that the low(er)-bi-
              trate scenes start to look bad (default: 0).

       curve_compression_low=<0-100>
              This setting allows XviD to give a certain percentage  of  extra
              bits  to  the low bitrate scenes, taking a few bits from the en-
              tire clip.  This might come in handy if you have a  few  low-bi-
              trate scenes that are still blocky (default: 0).

       overflow_control_strength=<0-100>
              During  pass one of two pass encoding, a scaled bitrate curve is
              computed.  The difference between that expected  curve  and  the
              result  obtained during encoding is called overflow.  Obviously,
              the two pass rate controller tries to compensate for that  over-
              flow,  distributing  it over the next frames.  This setting con-
              trols how much of the overflow is distributed every  time  there
              is  a  new  frame.   Low values allow lazy overflow control, big
              rate bursts are compensated for more slowly (could lead to  lack
              of  precision for small clips).  Higher values will make changes
              in bit redistribution more abrupt, possibly too  abrupt  if  you
              set it too high, creating artifacts (default: 5).
              NOTE:  This setting impacts quality a lot, play with it careful-
              ly!

       max_overflow_improvement=<0-100>
              During the frame bit allocation, overflow control  may  increase
              the frame size.  This parameter specifies the maximum percentage
              by which the overflow control is allowed to increase  the  frame
              size, compared to the ideal curve allocation (default: 5).

       max_overflow_degradation=<0-100>
              During  the  frame bit allocation, overflow control may decrease
              the frame size.  This parameter specifies the maximum percentage
              by  which  the overflow control is allowed to decrease the frame
              size, compared to the ideal curve allocation (default: 5).

       container_frame_overhead=<0...>
              Specifies a frame average overhead per frame, in bytes.  Most of
              the time users express their target bitrate for video w/o taking
              care of the video container overhead.  This small  but  (mostly)
              constant overhead can cause the target file size to be exceeded.
              XviD allows users to set the amount of overhead  per  frame  the
              container  generates  (give only an average per frame).  0 has a
              special meaning, it lets XviD use its own  default  values  (de-
              fault: 24 - AVI average overhead).

       profile=<profile_name>
              Restricts options and VBV (peak bitrate over a short period) ac-
              cording to the Simple, Advanced Simple and DivX  profiles.   The
              resulting videos should be playable on standalone players adher-
              ing to these profile specifications.
                 unrestricted
                      no restrictions (default)
                 sp0
                      simple profile at level 0
                 sp1
                      simple profile at level 1
                 sp2
                      simple profile at level 2
                 sp3
                      simple profile at level 3
                 asp0
                      advanced simple profile at level 0
                 asp1
                      advanced simple profile at level 1
                 asp2
                      advanced simple profile at level 2
                 asp3
                      advanced simple profile at level 3
                 asp4
                      advanced simple profile at level 4
                 asp5
                      advanced simple profile at level 5
                 dxnhandheld
                      DXN handheld profile
                 dxnportntsc
                      DXN portable NTSC profile
                 dxnportpal
                      DXN portable PAL profile
                 dxnhtntsc
                      DXN home theater NTSC profile
                 dxnhtpal
                      DXN home theater PAL profile
                 dxnhdtv
                      DXN HDTV profile
              NOTE: These profiles should be used in conjunction with  an  ap-
              propriate -ffourcc.  Generally DX50 is applicable, as some play-
              ers do not recognize XviD but most recognize DivX.

       par=<mode>
              Specifies the Pixel Aspect Ratio mode (not to be  confused  with
              DAR,  the  Display Aspect Ratio).  PAR is the ratio of the width
              and height of a single pixel.  So both are  related  like  this:
              DAR = PAR * (width/height).
              MPEG-4  defines 5 pixel aspect ratios and one extended one, giv-
              ing the opportunity to specify a specific pixel aspect ratio.  5
              standard modes can be specified:
                 vga11
                      It is the usual PAR for PC content.  Pixels are a square
                      unit.
                 pal43
                      PAL standard 4:3 PAR.  Pixels are rectangles.
                 pal169
                      same as above
                 ntsc43
                      same as above
                 ntsc169
                      same as above (Do not forget to give the exact ratio.)
                 ext
                      Allows you to specify your own pixel aspect  ratio  with
                      par_width and par_height.
              NOTE:  In  general,  setting  aspect  and  autoaspect options is
              enough.

       par_width=<1-255> (par=ext only)
              Specifies the width of the custom pixel aspect ratio.

       par_height=<1-255> (par=ext only)
              Specifies the height of the custom pixel aspect ratio.

       aspect=<x/y | f (float value)>
              Store movie aspect internally, just like MPEG files.  Much nicer
              solution  than  rescaling,  because  quality  is  not decreased.
              MPlayer and a few others players will play these files  correct-
              ly,  others will display them with the wrong aspect.  The aspect
              parameter can be given as a ratio or a floating point number.

       (no)autoaspect
              Same as the aspect option, but  automatically  computes  aspect,
              taking into account all the adjustments (crop/expand/scale/etc.)
              made in the filter chain.

       psnr
              Print the PSNR (peak signal to noise ratio) for the whole  video
              after  encoding  and  store  the per frame PSNR in a file with a
              name like 'psnr_hhmmss.log' in the current directory.   Returned
              values are in dB (decibel), the higher the better.


       The following option is only available in XviD 1.1.x.

       bvhq=<0|1>
              This  setting  allows  vector candidates for B-frames to be used
              for the encoding chosen using a rate distortion optimized opera-
              tor, which is what is done for P-frames by the vhq option.  This
              produces nicer-looking B-frames while incurring almost  no  per-
              formance penalty (default: 1).


       The following option is only available in the CVS version of XviD.

       threads=<0-n>
              Create n threads to run the motion estimation (default: 0).  The
              maximum number of threads that can be used is the picture height
              divided by 16.



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