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MKVToolNix 22.0.0

Table of contents

Introduction

Installation

Requirements Optional components Building libEBML and libMatroska Building MKVToolNix Getting and building a development snapshot Configuration and compilation Notes for compilation on (Open)Solaris Unit tests

Reporting bugs Test suite and continuous integration tests Code of Conduct

Included libraries and their licenses

avilib Boost's utf8_codecvt_facet libEBML libMatroska librmff nlohmann's JSON pugixml utf8-cpp

  1. Introduction

With these tools one can get information about (via mkvinfo) Matroska files, extract tracks/data from (via mkvextract) Matroska files and create (via mkvmerge) Matroska files from other media files. Matroska is a new multimedia file format aiming to become THE new container format for the future. You can find more information about it and its underlying technology, the Extensible Binary Meta Language (EBML), at

http://www.matroska.org/

The full documentation for each command is now maintained in its man page only. Type mkvmerge -h to get you started.

This code comes under the GPL v2 (see www.gnu.org or the file COPYING). Modify as needed.

The icons are based on the work of Alexandr Grigorcea and modified by Eduard Geier. They're licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

The newest version can always be found at https://mkvtoolnix.download/

Moritz Bunkus moritz@bunkus.org

  1. Installation

If you want to compile the tools yourself, you must first decide if you want to use a 'proper' release version or the current development version. As both Matroska and MKVToolNix are under heavy development, there might be features available in the git repository that are not available in the releases. On the other hand the git repository version might not even compile.

2.1. Requirements

In order to compile MKVToolNix, you need a couple of libraries. Most of them should be available pre-compiled for your distribution. The programs and libraries you absolutely need are:

A C++ compiler that supports several features of the C++11 and C++14 standards: initializer lists, range-based for loops, right angle brackets, the auto keyword, lambda functions, the nullptr keyword, tuples, alias declarations, std::make_unique(), digit separators, binary literals and generic lambdas. Others may be needed, too. For GCC this means at least v4.9.x; for clang v3.4 or later. libEBML v1.3.5 or later and libMatroska v1.4.8 or later for low-level access to Matroska files. Instructions on how to compile them are a bit further down in this file. libOgg and libVorbis for access to Ogg/OGM files and Vorbis support zlib — a compression library Boost — Several of Boost's libraries are used: format, RegEx, filesystem, system, math, Range, rational, variant. At least v1.49.0 is required. libxslt's xsltproc binary and DocBook XSL stylesheets — for creating man pages from XML documents

You also need the rake or drake build program. I suggest rake v10.0.0 or newer (this is included with Ruby 2.1) as it offers parallel builds out of the box. If you only have an earlier version of rake, you can install and use the drake gem for the same gain.

2.2. Optional components

Other libraries are optional and only limit the features that are built. These include:

Qt v5.3 or newer — a cross-platform GUI toolkit. You need this if you want to use the MKVToolNix GUI. cmark — the CommonMark parsing and rendering library in C is required when building the Qt GUIs. libFLAC for FLAC support (Free Lossless Audio Codec) lzo and bzip2 are compression libraries. These are the least important libraries as almost no application supports Matroska content that is compressed with either of these libs. The aforementioned zlib is what every program supports. libMagic from the "file" package for automatic content type detection po4a for building the translated man pages

2.3. Building libEBML and libMatroska

This is optional as MKVToolNix comes with its own set of the libraries. It will use them if no version is found on the system.

Start with the two libraries. Either download releases of libEBML v1.3.5 and libMatroska v1.4.8 or get a fresh copy from the git repository:

git clone https://github.com/Matroska-Org/libebml.git git clone https://github.com/Matroska-Org/libmatroska.git First change to libEBML's directory and run ./configure followed by make. Now install libEBML by running make install as root (e.g. via sudo). Change to libMatroska's directory and go through the same steps: first ./configure followed by make as a normal user and lastly make install as root.

2.4. Building MKVToolNix

Either download the current release from the MKVToolNix home page and unpack it or get a development snapshot from my Git repository.

2.4.1. Getting and building a development snapshot

You can ignore this subsection if you want to build from a release tarball.

All you need for Git repository access is to download a Git client from the Git homepage at http://git-scm.com/. There are clients for both Unix/Linux and Windows.

First clone my Git repository with this command:

git clone https://gitlab.com/mbunkus/mkvtoolnix.git Now change to the MKVToolNix directory with cd mkvtoolnix and run ./autogen.sh which will generate the "configure" script. You need the GNU "autoconf" utility for this step.

2.4.2. Configuration and compilation

If you have run make install for both libraries, then configure should automatically find the libraries' position. Otherwise you need to tell configure where the libEBML and libMatroska include and library files are:

./configure
--with-extra-includes=/where/i/put/libebml;/where/i/put/libmatroska
--with-extra-libs=/where/i/put/libebml/make/linux;/where/i/put/libmatroska/make/linux Now run rake and, as "root", rake install.

2.4.3. If things go wrong

By default the commands executed by the build system aren't output. You can change that by adding V=1 as an argument to the rake command.

If rake executes too many processes at once, then you've stumbled across a known bug in rake. In that case you should install the drake Ruby gem and use the command drake instead of rake. drake supports parallelism properly and doesn't try to execute all jobs at once.

2.5. Notes for compilation on (Open)Solaris

You can compile MKVToolNix with Sun's sunstudio compiler, but you need additional options for configure:

./configure --prefix=/usr
CXX="/opt/sunstudio12.1/bin/CC -library=stlport4"
CXXFLAGS="-D_POSIX_PTHREAD_SEMANTICS"
--with-extra-includes=/where/i/put/libebml;/where/i/put/libmatroska
--with-extra-libs=/where/i/put/libebml/make/linux;/where/i/put/libmatroska/make/linux

2.6. Unit tests

Building and running unit tests is completely optional. If you want to do this, you have to follow these steps:

Download the "googletest" framework from https://github.com/google/googletest/ (at the time of writing the file to download was "googletest-release-1.8.0.tar.gz") Extract the archive somewhere and create a symbolic link to its googletest-release-1.8.0/googletest/include/gtest sub-directory inside MKVToolNix' "lib" directory. Configure MKVToolNix normally.

Build the unit test executable and run it with

rake tests:unit

  1. Reporting bugs

If you're sure you've found a bug — e.g. if one of my programs crashes with an obscur error message, or if the resulting file is missing part of the original data, then by all means submit a bug report.

I use GitLab's issue system as my bug database. You can submit your bug reports there. Please be as verbose as possible — e.g. include the command line, if you use Windows or Linux etc.pp.

If at all possible, please include sample files as well so that I can reproduce the issue. If they are larger than 1 MB, please upload them somewhere and post a link in the issue. You can also upload them to my FTP server. Details on how to connect can be found in the MKVToolNix FAQ.

  1. Test suite and continuous integration tests

MKVToolNix contains a lot of test cases in order to detect regressions before they're released. Regressions include both compilation issues as well as changes from expected program behavior.

As mentioned in section 2.6., MKVToolNix comes with a set of unit tests based on the Google Test library in the tests/unit sub-directory that you can run yourself. These cover only a small amount of code, and any effort to extend them would be most welcome.

A second test suite exists that targets the program behavior, e.g. the output generated by mkvmerge when specific options are used with specific input files. These are the test cases in the tests directory itself. Unfortunately the files they run on often contain copyrighted material that I cannot distribute. Therefore you cannot run them yourself.

A third pillar of the testing effort is the continuous integration tests run on a Buildbot instance. These are run automatically for each commit made to the git repository. The tests include:

building of all the packages for Linux distributions that I normally provide for download myself in both 32-bit and 64-bit variants building of the Windows installer and portable packages in both 32-bit and 64-bit variants building with both g++ and clang++ building and running the unit tests building and running the test file test suite building with all optional features disabled

  1. Code of Conduct

Please note that this project is released with a Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.

  1. Included third-party components and their licenses

MKVToolNix includes and uses the following libraries & artwork:

6.1. avilib

Reading and writing AVI files. Originally part of the transcode package.

Copyright: 1999 Rainer Johanni Rainer@Johanni.de

License: GNU General Public License v2 or later URL: the transcode project doesn't seem to have a home page anymore Corresponding files: lib/avilib-0.6.10/*

6.2. Boost's utf8_codecvt_facet

A class, utf8_codecvt_facet, derived from std::codecvt<wchar_t, char>, which can be used to convert utf8 data in files into wchar_t strings in the application.

Copyright:

2001 Ronald Garcia, Indiana University (garcia@osl.iu.edu) Andrew Lumsdaine, Indiana University (lums@osl.iu.edu)

License: Boost Software License - Version 1.0 (see doc/licenses/Boost-1.0.txt) URL: http://www.boost.org

Corresponding files: lib/boost/*

6.3. libEBML

A C++ library to parse EBML files

Copyright: 2002-2010 Steve Lhomme et. al. License: GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1 or later (see doc/licenses/LGPL-2.1.txt) URL: http://www.matroska.org/

Corresponding files: lib/libebml/*

6.4. libMatroska

A C++ library to parse Matroska files

Copyright: 2002-2010 Steve Lhomme et. al. License: GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1 or later (see doc/licenses/LGPL-2.1.txt) URL: http://www.matroska.org/

Corresponding files: lib/libmatroska/*

6.5. librmff

librmff is short for 'RealMedia file format access library'. It aims at providing the programmer an easy way to read and write RealMedia files.

Copyright: Moritz Bunkus License: GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1 or later (see doc/licenses/LGPL-2.1.txt) URL: https://www.bunkus.org/videotools/librmff/index.html

Corresponding files: lib/librmff/*

6.6. nlohmann's JSON

JSON for Modern C++

Copyright: 2013-2016 Niels Lohmann License: MIT (see doc/licenses/nlohmann-json-MIT.txt) URL: https://github.com/nlohmann/json

Corresponding files: lib/nlohmann-json/*

6.7. pugixml

An XML processing library

Copyright: 20062017 by Arseny Kapoulkine arseny.kapoulkine@gmail.com

License: MIT (see doc/licenses/pugixml-MIT.txt) URL: http://pugixml.org/

Corresponding files: lib/pugixml/*

6.8. utf8-cpp

UTF-8 with C++ in a Portable Way

Copyright: 2006 Nemanja Trifunovic License: custom (see doc/licenses/utf8-cpp-custom.txt) URL: http://utfcpp.sourceforge.net/

Corresponding files: lib/utf8-cpp/*

6.9. Oxygen icons and sound files

Most of the icons included in this package originate from the Oxygen Project. These include all files in the share/icons sub-directory safe for those whose name starts with mkv.

The preferred form of modification are the SVG icons. These are not part of the binary distribution of MKVToolNix, but they are contained in the source code in the icons/scalable sub-directory. You can obtain the source code from the MKVToolNix website.

All of the sound files in the share/sounds sub-directory originate from the Oxygen project.

License: GNU Lesser General Public License v3 (see doc/licenses/LGPL-3.0.txt) URL: https://techbase.kde.org/Projects/Oxygen

Corresponding files:

share/icons/* (except for share/icons//mkv) share/sounds/*

6.10. MKVToolNix icons

Copyright:

2011 Alexandr Grigorcea cahr.gr@gmail.com

2012 Eduard Geier edu.g@online.de

2012 Ben Humpert ben@an3k.de

License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC BY 3.0) (see doc/licenses/CC-BY-3.0.txt) Corresponding files: share/icons//mkv

6.11. QtWaitingSpinner

A highly configurable, custom Qt widget for showing "waiting" or "loading" spinner icons in Qt applications

Copyright:

20122014 by Alexander Turkin 2014 by William Hallatt 2015 by Jacob Dawid

License: MIT (see doc/licenses/QtWaitingSpinner-MIT.txt) URL: https://github.com/snowwlex/QtWaitingSpinner

Corresponding files: src/mkvtoolnix-gui/util/waiting_spinning_widget.{h,cpp}

6.12. Fancy tab widget

A beefed-up tab widget class for Qt extracted from the Qt Creator project

Copyright: 2011 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). License: GNU General Public License v2 (see COPYING) Corresponding files: src/mkvtoolnix-gui/util/fancy_tab_widget.{h,cpp}