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I'm trying to convert some video file containing video, audio and subtitles streams into another format using FFMpeg. However, ffmpeg complains about the subtitles format - it cannot decode the stream. Since I don't need this subtitles stream, I'd like to know how can I disable subtitles stream decoding during conversion?

v_2e
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    removing subtitles is also useful to avoid multiplexing dash complaints. Though VLC shows some metadata as subtitles, to remove that with ffmpeg you'll need `-map_metadata -1` – Ray Foss Aug 21 '17 at 19:26

4 Answers4

73

I've finally found an answer.

There is such option as -sn which disables subtitles decoding from input stream. Also there are analogous options for audio and video decoding: -an and -vn respectively.

It also turned out that there is another way to achieve this. One may use the -map option to select which streams are to be decoded. So omitting the subtitles stream among the -map options does the job.

For example, if one has a movie file with 3 streams:

  • Stream 0: video
  • Stream 1: audio
  • Stream 2: subtitles

the converting command for FFmpeg may look as follows:

ffmpeg -i <input file> -sn -vcodec <video codec> -acodec <audio codec>  <output file>

or

ffmpeg -i <input file> -vcodec <video codec> -acodec <audio codec> -map 0:0 -map 0:1  <output file>

The former command line deselects the subtitles stream (probably all of them, if there are several) while the latter one selects only the necessary streams to decode.

v_2e
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    +1 The first approach (-sn option) totally works, thanks. (Tried it on an mkv file.) – Sabuncu Mar 28 '14 at 14:58
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    Works great! If you need to simply remove the subs from a video file without re-encoding it then this works very fast: `ffmpeg -i video.mkv -vcodec copy -acodec copy -sn video-no-subs.mkv` – cherouvim Apr 16 '15 at 07:26
14

To remove subtitle stream without re-encoding video and audio shortest command would be:

ffmpeg -i input.mkv -sn -c copy output.mkv

StefTN
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Use negative mapping to omit subtitles and keep everything else:

ffmpeg -i input.mkv -map 0 -map -0:s -c copy output.mkv
  • -map 0 selects all streams. This is recommended because the default stream selection behavior only chooses 1 stream per stream type.
  • -map -0:s is a negative mapping that deselects all subtitle streams.
  • -c copy enables stream copy mode which only re-muxes and avoids re-encoding.
llogan
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0

building off @llogan's comment.

You can use this to batch mode all .mkv files in the current folder. It will write output to temp file remove original and mv temp outfile to original filename's path.

find -name "*.mkv" -exec bash -c 'ffmpeg -y -i "{}" -map 0 -map -0:s -c copy "${0/.mkv}-nosubs.mkv" && rm "{}" && mv "${0/.mkv}-nosubs.mkv" "{}"' {} \;

Or specific folder of stuff

video_path=''
find "$video_path" -name "*.mkv" -exec bash -c 'ffmpeg -y -i "{}" -map 0 -map -0:s -c copy "${0/.mkv}-nosubs.mkv" && rm "{}" && mv "${0/.mkv}-nosubs.mkv" "{}"' {} \;
Mike R
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