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&product;&date;DeveloperMoritzBunkusmoritz@bunkus.org&product;1&version;&date;MKVToolNixUser Commands&product;Print information about elements in &matroska; filesSynopsismkvinfooptionssource-filenameDescription
This program lists all elements contained in a &matroska;. The output can be limited to a list of tracks in the file including
information about the codecs used.
,
Start the GUI. This option is only available if mkvinfo was compiled with GUI support.
,
Calculates and display the Adler32 checksum for each frame. Useful for debugging only.
,
Only show a terse summary of what &mkvinfo; finds and not each element.
,
Show statistics for each track in verbose mode. Also sets verbosity to 1 if it was at level 0 before.
,
Show the first 16 bytes of each frame as a hex dump.
,
Show all bytes of each frame as a hex dump.
,
Show the size of each element including its header.
character-set
Sets the character set to convert strings given on the command line from. It defaults to the character set given by system's current
locale.
character-set
Sets the character set to which strings are converted that are to be output. It defaults to the character set given by system's
current locale.
, file-name
Writes all messages to the file file-name instead of to the console. While this can be done easily with
output redirection there are cases in which this option is needed: when the terminal reinterprets the output before writing it to a
file. The character set set with is honored.
code
Forces the translations for the language code to be used (e.g. 'de_DE' for the German
translations). It is preferable to use the environment variables LANG, LC_MESSAGES and
LC_ALL though. Entering 'list' as the code will cause &mkvinfo; to
output a list of available translations.
topic
Turn on debugging for a specific feature. This option is only useful for developers.
feature
Turn on experimental features. A list of available features can be requested with mkvinfo --engage list. These
features are not meant to be used in normal situations.
Turns on GUI mode. In this mode specially-formatted lines may be output that can tell a controlling GUI what's happening. These
messages follow the format '#GUI#message'. The message may be followed by key/value pairs as in
'#GUI#message#key1=value1#key2=value2…'. Neither the messages nor the keys are ever translated and always output
in English.
This switch has nothing to do with the parameter which causes mkvinfo to display its own GUI.,
Be more verbose. See the section about verbosity levels for a description which
information will be output at which level.
,
Show usage information and exit.
,
Show version information and exit.
Checks online for new releases by downloading the URL http://mkvtoolnix-releases.bunkus.org/latest-release.xml. Four
lines will be output in key=value style: the URL from where the information was retrieved (key
version_check_url), the currently running version (key running_version), the latest release's
version (key available_version) and the download URL (key download_url).
Afterwards the program exists with an exit code of 0 if no newer release is available, with 1 if a newer release is available and with
2 if an error occured (e.g. if the update information could not be retrieved).
This option is only available if the program was built with support for libcurl.
options-file
Reads additional command line arguments from the file options-file. Lines whose first non-whitespace
character is a hash mark ('#') are treated as comments and ignored. White spaces at the start and end of a line
will be stripped. Each line must contain exactly one option.
Several chars can be escaped, e.g. if you need to start a non-comment line with '#'. The rules are described in the section about escaping text.
The command line 'mkvinfo -v -v input.mkv --redirect-output info.txt' could be converted into the following
option file:
# Be more verbose
-v
-v
# Parse input.mkv
input.mkv
# and write the output to info.txt
--redirect-output
info.txtVerbosity levels
The option can be used to increase &mkvinfo;'s verbosity level
and print more information about the current file.
At level 0 &mkvinfo; will print only the track headers it finds and their types. &mkvinfo; will exit as soon as the headers are parsed
completely (more technical: as soon as the first cluster is encountered). In this level the seek head entries and the cues will not be
displayed -- even if they're located in front of the track information.
At level 1 &mkvinfo; will also print all &matroska; elements encountered for the complete file but the seek head entries and the cue
entries. If the summary mode is enabled then &mkvinfo; will output the frame position as well.
At level 2 &mkvinfo; will also print the seek head entries, the cue entries and the file position at which each &matroska; element can be
found at.
At level 3 and above &mkvinfo; will print some information that is not directly connected to a &matroska; element. All other elements
only print stuff about the elements that were just found. Level 3 adds meta information to ease debugging (read: it's intended for
developers only). All lines written by level 3 are enclosed in square brackets to make filtering them out easy.
Text files and character set conversions
For an in-depth discussion about how all tools in the MKVToolNix suite handle character set conversions, input/output encoding, command
line encoding and console encoding please see the identically-named section in the &mkvmerge; man page.
Exit codes
&mkvinfo; exits with one of three exit codes:
0 -- This exit codes means that the run has completed successfully.
1 -- In this case &mkvinfo; has output at least one warning, but the run did continue. A warning is
prefixed with the text 'Warning:'.
2 -- This exit code is used after an error occurred. &mkvinfo; aborts right after outputting the error message.
Error messages range from wrong command line arguments over read/write errors to broken files.
Escaping special chars in text
There are a few places in which special characters in text must or should be escaped. The rules for escaping are simple: each character
that needs escaping is replaced with a backslash followed by another character.
The rules are: ' ' (a space) becomes '\s', '"' (double quotes) becomes '\2', ':' becomes '\c', '#' becomes '\h' and '\' (a single backslash) itself becomes '\\'.
Environment variables
&mkvinfo; uses the default variables that determine the system's locale (e.g. LANG and the LC_*
family). Additional variables:
MKVTOOLNIX_DEBUG and its short form MTX_DEBUGThe content is treated as if it had been passed via the option.MKVTOOLNIX_ENGAGE and its short form MTX_ENGAGEThe content is treated as if it had been passed via the option.MKVTOOLNIX_OPTIONS and its short form MTX_OPTIONSThe content is split on white space. The resulting partial strings are treated as if it had been passed as command line
options. If you need to pass special characters (e.g. spaces) then you have to escape them (see the section about escaping special characters in text).See also
&mkvmerge;, &mkvextract;, &mkvpropedit;, &mmg;
WWW
The latest version can always be found at the MKVToolNix homepage.