Normally, it’s a pain finding stream, codec or bitrate information for media files.
Some information can be discovered using
file [some_file].avi ffmpeg -i [some_file].avi
However, there is a better way of doing it using mediainfo[-gui] package available from this site.
mkdir -p ~/software/mediainfo cd ~/software/mediainfo echo "http://mediainfo.sourceforge.net/en/Download/Fedora#11.x86_64" > links.txt wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/mediainfo/mediainfo-gui-0.7.19-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/mediainfo/mediainfo-0.7.19-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/mediainfo/libmediainfo0-0.7.19-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/mediainfo/libmediainfo0-devel-0.7.19-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/zenlib/libzen0-0.4.3-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/zenlib/libzen0-devel-0.4.3-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/zenlib/libzen0-devel-0.4.3-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/zenlib/libzen0-devel-0.4.3-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/zenlib/libzen0-devel-0.4.3-1.x86_64.Fedora_11.rpm sudo yum localinstall --nogpgcheck *.rpm
Now, you are able to see all information in the command line mode with:
mediainfo [some_file].avi
Or launching
mediainfo-gui