

Even so, they may use them for sorting or displaying music in some edge cases, like where the player separates all the music files containing tag XYZ into a different album from all the files not containing that tag. I've also learned that some of the tags are pretty obscure, and many music players and tag editors don't show them. By "observed," I mean that music players seem to sort albums in a funny order, they split tracks in one physical directory into two albums, or they create other sorts of frustrating irritations. Over that time, I've used several different tools for ripping, and I have observed that each tool seems to have a different take on tagging, specifically, what metadata to save with the music data. I've been ripping CDs to my computer for a long time now. Response Output file is empty, nothing was encoded (check -ss / -t / -frames parameters if used)

Response SRT supports only a single subtitles stream.Ĭould not write header for output file #0 (incorrect codec parameters ?): Invalid argumentĬommand 2 ffmpeg -i -map 0:0 -f ffmetadata metadata.txt Anyone run into this before?Ĭommand 1 ffmpeg -hide_banner -y -i -map 0:0 out.srtĭuration: N/A, start: 4131.175211, bitrate: N/A My initial thought is I need to rebuild ffmpeg with some new codec/flag in place but not sure. I've tried a few ways below but have gotten some different errors. I'm having issues trying to demux subtitles from a HLS stream into a file.
