Xvid is a free software MPEG-4 ASP
compliant video codec. Note that Xvid is not necessary to decode Xvid-encoded
video. libavcodec
is used by
default as it offers better speed.
Installing Xvid
Like most open source software, it is available in two flavors:
official releases
and the CVS version.
The CVS version is usually stable enough to use, as most of the time it
features fixes for bugs that exist in releases.
Here is what to do to make Xvid
CVS work with MEncoder:
cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.xvid.org:/xvid login
cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.xvid.org:/xvid co xvidcore
cd xvidcore/build/generic
./bootstrap.sh && ./configure
You may have to add some options (examine the output of ./configure --help).
make && make install
Recompile MPlayer.
x264
is a library for creating H.264 video.
MPlayer sources are updated whenever
an x264
API change
occurs, so it is always suggested to use
MPlayer from Subversion.
If you have a GIT client installed, the latest x264 sources can be gotten with this command:
git clone git://git.videolan.org/x264.git
Then build and install in the standard way:
./configure && make && make install
Now rerun ./configure for
MPlayer to pick up
x264
support.
An open source AAC decoder called FAAD2 is available from http://www.audiocoding.com/downloads.html. MPlayer includes a copy of it in its source tree. If you want to use the external library instead, install it and pass --enable-faad-external to ./configure.
FAAD2 binaries are not available from audiocoding.com, but you can (apt-)get Debian packages from Christian Marillat, Mandrake/Mandriva RPMs from the P.L.F and Fedora/CentOS/RHEL RPMs from RPMFusion.
If you choose to build from source, you do not need all of FAAD2 to decode AAC files, libfaad is enough. Build it like this:
cd faad2/ sh bootstrap ./configure cd libfaad make make install
Adaptive Multi-Rate speech codec is used in third generation (3G) mobile phones. Reference implementation is available from The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (free for private use). To enable support, download and install support libraries for AMR-NB and AMR-WB following the instructions on that page. Recompile MPlayer afterwards.
MPlayer can use XMMS input plugins to play many file formats. There are plugins for SNES game tunes, SID tunes (from Commodore 64), many Amiga formats, .xm, .it, VQF, Musepack, Bonk, shorten and many others. You can find them at the XMMS input plugin page.
For this feature you need to have XMMS and compile MPlayer with ./configure --enable-xmms.