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13th May 2024, 21:38 | #1 | Link |
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ffmpeg versus x265 speed
Hi community.
Since 2 or 3 years i use a 2 pass ffmpeg script to encode my 1080p video in h265 700kbs. I use veryfast profile that give me really good result. Recently after some search over internet to found a cost effective cpu mainboard to buy to encode my films, i have read, that recent x265 build are more efficcient than ffmpeg. Can someone confirm that and can someone give me an example of a 2 pass x265 encoding script. Thanks. |
1st December 2024, 22:45 | #6 | Link |
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Yes, better than the veryfast profile, at least.
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11th December 2024, 18:43 | #7 | Link |
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At likely at least as fast. On reasonably modern mid-tier desktop hardware, there's rarely a material perf difference between veryfast and faster if there's decoding and preprocessing going on; the bottleneck will be in other elements.
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11th December 2024, 18:55 | #8 | Link |
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Thanks benwaggoner for your response (i've read a lot of your post). But for low bitrate and even on a 13th i5 proc, hardware encoding is still blocky.
i'm not expert enough in hardware encoding and vpp filter so i keep my 2 pass ffmpeg hevc 800k software script but it take very long time (even on xeon). The reality is that hardware encoders are made to fast transcoding at hight bitrate. Thanks all for your help and if i dont come here before the end of the year, merry christmas and an happy new year |
12th December 2024, 01:34 | #10 | Link | |
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[QUOTE=burnix;2011334]Thanks benwaggoner for your response (i've read a lot of your post). But for low bitrate and even on a 13th i5 proc, hardware encoding is still blocky.
i'm not expert enough in hardware encoding and vpp filter so i keep my 2 pass ffmpeg hevc 800k software script but it take very long time (even on xeon). Quote:
800 Kbps is way too low to expect good quality with typical film/video HEVC at any encoding speed. If you're willing to spend >10x encoding time you can make it less bad, but not good (unless is is clean animation or something easy to encode). |
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