.TH "RECORDMYDESKTOP" 1 "13/7/2006" "Linux" .SH NAME recordMyDesktop \- record desktop sessions to an Ogg\-Theora\-Vorbis file. .SH SYNOPSIS .B recordmydesktop [ .B Options ]^ .B filename .br .br .SH DESCRIPTION .PP recordMyDesktop produces a file(default out.ogg) that contains a video and audio recording .br of a linux desktop session. The default behavior of recording is to mark areas that have changed(through libxdamage) .br and update the frame. This behavior can be changed (option .B \-\-full\-shots ) to produce a more accurate result .br or capture windows that do not generate events on change(windows with 3d context or video display) .br but this will notably increase the workload. In this case, enabling the .B \-\-with\-shared option is recommended .br (by default this option is switched on or off at every frame, according to the size of the area to be aquired). .br .br recordMyDesktop doesn't have a commandline interface. .br After startup, it can be controled only through the following signals: .br .br .B SIGUSR1 causes the program to pause if it's currently recording, and vice-versa. .br .B SIGTERM causes normal termination of the recording. .br .B SIGINT also causes normal termination. .br .B SIGABRT terminates the program and removes the specified output file. .br .br .br A typical scenario of recording can be a command as simple as: .br .B ~$ recordmydesktop .br which will produce a fullscreen recording named out.ogg .br while a command like: .br .B ~$ recordmydesktop foo.ogg .br will write output to foo.ogg .br To specify a region for recording you can type this: .br .B ~$ recordmydesktop -x X_pos -y Y_pos -width WIDTH -height HEIGHT -o foo.ogg .br where X_pos and Y_pos specify the offset in pixels from the upper left .br corner of your screen and WIDTH and HEIGHT the size of the window to be recorded(again in pixels). .br If the area extends beyond your current resolution, you will be notified appropriately and nothing will happen. .br Notice also, that if any option is entered you have to specify the output file with the \-o switch. .br .br .B To normally end a recording you can press ctl-c. .br (which will send a .B SIGINT to the program). .br .br For further manipulation of the end result look at the .B OPTIONS and .B NOTES sections. .br .br .br .SH EXIT STATUS 0 is success .br Non-zero means an error occurred, which is printed in stderr. .br .br The following error codes indicate the nature of the error: .br 1 Error while parsing the arguments. .br 2 Initializing the encoder failed(either vorbis or theora). .br 3 Could not open/configure sound card. .br 4 Xdamage extension not present. .br 5 Shared memory extension not present. .br 6 Xfixes extension not present. .br 7 XInitThreads failed. .br 8 No $DISPLAY environment variable and none specified as argument. .br 9 Cannot connect to Xserver. .br 10 Color depth is not 24bpp. .br 11 Improper window specification. .br 12 Cannot attach shared memory to proccess. .br 13 Cannot open file for writting. .br .br .SH OPTIONS .PP .B Generic Options: .br .TP .B \-h or \-\-help Print help summary and exit. .br .TP .B \-\-version Print program version and exit. .br .PP .br .B Image Options: .br .TP .B \-windowid id_of_window id of window to be recorded. .br .TP .B \-display DISPLAY Display to connect to. .br .TP .B \-x X Offset in x direction. .br .TP .B \-y Y Offset in y direction. .br .TP .B \-width N Width of recorded window. .br .TP .B \-height N Height of recorded window. .br .TP .B .br .br .TP .B \-dummy\-cursor color Draw a dummy cursor, instead of the normal one.Value of color can be "black" or "white". .br .TP .B \-\-no\-cursor Disable drawing of the cursor. .br .TP .B \-\-with\-shared Enable usage of MIT\-shared memory extension at all times. .br .TP .B \-\-no\-cond\-shared Do not use the MIT\-shared memory extension when aquiring large areas. .br .TP .B \-shared\-threshold n Threshold over which shared memory is used(default 75). .br .TP .B \-\-full\-shots Take full screenshot at every frame(Not recomended!). .br .TP .B \-\-quick\-subsampling Do subsampling of the chroma planes by discarding extra pixels. .br .TP .B \-fps N(number>0.0) A positive number denoting desired framerate. .br .br .PP .B Sound Options: .br .TP .B \-channels N(number>0) A positive number denoting desired sound channels in recording. .br .TP .B \-freq N(number>0) A positive number denoting desired sound frequency. .br .TP .B \-device SOUND_DEVICE Sound device(default hw0:0). .br .TP .B \-\-nosound Do not record sound. .br .PP .br .B Encoding Options: .br .TP .B \-v_quality n A number from 0 to 63 for desired encoded video quality(default 63). .br .TP .B \-v_bitrate n A number from 45000 to 2000000 for desired encoded video bitrate(default 45000). .br .TP .B \-\-drop\-frames Allow theora encoder to drop frames(this can significantly lower proccessing times). .br .TP .B \-s_quality n Desired audio quality(\-1 to 10). .br .PP .br .B Misc Options: .br .TP .B \-delay n[H|h|M|m] Number of secs(default),minutes or hours before capture starts(number can be float). .br .TP .B \-\-scshot Take a bitmap screenshot(default rmdout.bmp) and exit. .br .TP .B \-scale\-shot N Factor by which screenshot is scaled down(1<=number<=64,power of 2). .br .TP .B \-o filename Name of recorded video(default out.ogg). .PP .br If no other option is specified, filename can be given without the \-o switch. .br .br .SH USAGE .TP .B recordmydesktop .br [\-h| \-\-help| \-\-version| \-delay n[H|h|M|m]| \-windowid id_of_window| .br \-display DISPLAY| \-x X| \-y Y|\-width N| \-height N| \-fps N(number>0)| .br \-v_quality n| \-s_quality n| \-v_bitrate n| \-\-no\-framedrop| \-dummy\-cursor color| .br \-\-no\-cursor| \-freq N(number>0)| \-channels N(number>0)| \-device SOUND_DEVICE| .br \-\-nosound| \-\-with\-shared| \-\-no\-cond\-shared| \-shared\-threshold n| \-\-full\-shots| .br \-\-quick\-subsampling| \-\-scshot| \-scale\-shot N| \-o filename]^filename .br .br .br .SH ENVIRONMENT .TP .B DISPLAY .br Display environment variable, specifying X server to connect to. .br .SH NOTES .br Recording a window using the \-windowid option, doesn't track the window itself, but the region that it covers. .br Also when using that option the \-x,\-y,\-width and \-height options are relative to the specified window area. .br An easy way to find out the id of a window, is by using the .B xwininfo program. .br Running a command like : .br .B xwininfo |grep "Window id:"|sed \-e "s/xwininfo\\:\\ Window id:\\ // ;s/\\ \.*//" .br will give you only the id of the window(which should look like this: 0x4800005) .br More conviniently you can put all that in the command that launches recordMyDesktop like this: .br .B ~$recordmydesktop -windowid $(xwininfo |grep "Window id:"|sed \-e "s/xwininfo\\:\\ Window id:\\ // ;s/\\ \.*//" ) .br .br Also, the lower quality you select on a video recording ( .B -v_quality option), the highest CPU-power that you will need. .br So it's always better to start with default values and manipulate the end\-result with another program. .br An excellent converter is .B ffmpeg2theora , which despite its name is also a theora to theora converter. .br Changing the quality of a recordng with it,can be as simple as : .br .B ffmpeg2theora infile.ogg -v 3 -a 4 -o outfile.ogg .br It can even perform resizing on the size of the recording, or change the overall duration. .br .br .SH BUGS Too resource intensive. .br .SH AUTHORS John Varouhakis(johnvarouhakis@gmail.com) .br .SH SEE ALSO .BR xwininfo(1) .br .BR ffmpeg2theora(1) .br