I want to use ffmpeg to copy all meta data not associated with core aspects of a video (frame rate, resolution) from one video to another. Is there a simple way to do this with a single command?
4 Answers
Use -map_metadata.
In this example the global and stream metadata will be copied from in0.mkv. The video and audio streams will be stream copied from in1.mkv:
ffmpeg -i in0.mkv -i in1.mkv -map 1 -c copy \
# copies all global metadata from in0.mkv to out.mkv
-map_metadata 0 \
# copies video stream metadata from in0.mkv to out.mkv
-map_metadata:s:v 0:s:v \
# copies audio stream metadata from in0.mkv to out.mkv
-map_metadata:s:a 0:s:a \
out.mkv
This will result in something like:
Output #0, matroska, to 'out.mkv':
Metadata:
title : Global Title
AUTHOR : Global Author
Stream #0:0: Video: h264
Metadata:
title : Stream 0 Title
Stream #0:1: Audio: vorbis
Metadata:
title : Stream 1 Title
By default global metadata is copied from the first input file, so -map_metadata 0 could probably be omitted.
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From the comment in the answer How to make Handbrake preserve capture time / creation time?
A full command line adding the option to copy special tags will be:
ffmpeg -i in.mp4 -i out.mp4 -map 1 -map_metadata 0 -c copy -movflags use_metadata_tags fixed.mp4
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For decoding Flac to AIFF whilst preserving metadata, this answer worked better for me: Covert FLAC to AIFF while saving tags/metadata
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When using ffmpeg at a file which has metadata (like a title) in its streams, you need to use -map_metadata again, as it will not hold those metadata in the new output
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