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wf-recorder

wf-recorder is a utility program for screen recording of wlroots-based compositors (more specifically, those that support wlr-screencopy-v1 and xdg-output). Its dependencies are ffmpeg, wayland-client and wayland-protocols.

installation

Arch Linux

Arch users can use wf-recorder-git from the AUR.

yay -S wf-recorder-git

or

aura -A wf-recorder-git

Artix Linux

Artix users can install wf-recorder from the official repos

pacman -S wf-recorder

Void Linux

Void users can install wf-recorder from the official repos

xbps-install -S wf-recorder

Fedora Linux

Fedora users can install from rpmfusion-free-updates. First enable rpmfusion and then

sudo dnf install wf-recorder

From Source

Install Dependencies

Ubuntu

sudo apt install libavutil-dev libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libswscale-dev libpulse-dev

Fedora

$ sudo dnf install wayland-devel wayland-protocols-devel ffmpeg-devel

Download & Build

git clone https://github.com/ammen99/wf-recorder.git && cd wf-recorder
meson build --prefix=/usr --buildtype=release
ninja -C build

Optionally configure with -Ddefault_codec='codec'. The default is libx264. Now you can just run ./build/wf-recorder or install it with sudo ninja -C build install.

Optionally install scdoc, a tool by ddevault, for building the manpage.

Usage

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.

Use -f <filename> to specify the output file. In case of multiple outputs, you'll first be prompted to select the output you want to record. If you know the output name beforehand, you can use the -o <output name> option.

To select a specific part of the screen you can either use -g <geometry>, or use 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 video codec, use the -c <codec> option. To modify codec parameters, use -p <option_name>=<option_value>.

You can also specify an audio codec, using -C <codec>. Alternatively, the long form --acodec can be used.

To set a specific output format, use the --muxer option. For example, to output to a video4linux2 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 or --force-yuv option in addition to the vaapi options to convert the data to yuv planar data before sending it to the GPU.

The -e option attempts to use OpenCL if wf-recorder was built with OpenCL support and -t or --force-yuv are specified, even without vaapi GPU encoding. Use -e# or --opencl=# to use a specific OpenCL device, where # is one of the devices listed.

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