DTV is a library that provides a simple interface for generating video files from a C++ application. It uses FFmpeg which means that it supports the same encoders and performance that you would get from something like OBS. Unlike OBS, however, it is not dependent on the input being delivered in real-time. This means that regardless of the input frequency to DTV, the output will always be at the frame rate that you select.
Check out the sample application that is provided with DTV. The interface is extremely minimalistic and is comprised of a handful of intuitive functions. The steps to write an entire video look like this:
- Start the encoder by calling the
encoder.run(...)
method. The encoder runs in its own thread and will wait for you to send video frames to it. - Call
encoder.newFrame(...)
to get a frame from the buffer to write to. This comes in blocking and non-blocking versions. By callingencoder.newFrame(true)
, DTV will wait for a frame to become available if the encoder is lagging behind the input. Changing the input tofalse
will cause the encoder to returnnullptr
if a frame is not available to write to. This can be useful if you'd prefer to miss frames over slowing down your application. - Fill the frame with whatever data you like by populating the
atg_dtv::Frame::m_rgb
array with 8-bit values. - Commit the frame by calling
encoder.submitFrame()
. - Repeat steps 2-4 until you have no frames left to write.
- Call
encoder.commit()
to inform the encoder that the video stream is over. - Call
encoder.stop()
which will wait until the encoder finishes encoding buffered frames and then for the encoder thread to exit.
You will need to have FFmpeg development libraries installed on your computer and the directory listed on your PATH. DTV has only been tested on Windows but in principle should build on other platforms. The cmake script that searches for FFmpeg libraries, however, is Windows specific and you'll have to modify cmake/FindFFmpeg.cmake
to work for other platforms. (If you do this, please create a pull-request!)
For FFmpeg pre-built binaries, see the OBS installation instructions page.
- Make sure you have the latest version of CMake installed
- Make sure you have FFmpeg binaries installed (see above)
- Clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/ange-yaghi/direct-to-video.git
cd direct-to-video
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
cmake --build .
- For MSVC users, check the build folder for a generated Visual Studio solution. You can use this solution like any other and will contain the DTV library as well as the demo application in separate projects.