gif2webp man page on Cygwin

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   22533 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
Cygwin logo
[printable version]

GIF2WEBP(1)							   GIF2WEBP(1)

NAME
       gif2webp - Convert a GIF image to WebP

SYNOPSIS
       gif2webp [options] input_file.gif -o output_file.webp

DESCRIPTION
       This manual page documents the gif2webp command.

       gif2webp converts a GIF image to a WebP image.

OPTIONS
       The basic options are:

       -o string
	      Specify  the  name of the output WebP file. If omitted, gif2webp
	      will perform conversion but only report statistics.

       -h, -help
	      Usage information.

       -version
	      Print the version number (as major.minor.revision) and exit.

       -lossy Encode the image using lossy compression.

       -mixed Mixed compression mode: optimize compression  of	the  image  by
	      picking  either  lossy  or  lossless  compression for each frame
	      heuristically.

       -q float
	      Specify the compression factor for RGB channels  between	0  and
	      100. The default is 75.
	      In  case	of  lossless  compression  (default),  a  small factor
	      enables faster compression speed, but produces  a	 larger	 file.
	      Maximum compression is achieved by using a value of 100.
	      In case of lossy compression (specified by the -lossy option), a
	      small factor produces a smaller file with	 lower	quality.  Best
	      quality is achieved by using a value of 100.

       -m int Specify  the  compression method to use. This parameter controls
	      the trade off between encoding speed  and	 the  compressed  file
	      size  and	 quality.   Possible values range from 0 to 6. Default
	      value is 4.  When higher values are used, the encoder will spend
	      more  time  inspecting  additional  encoding  possibilities  and
	      decide on the quality gain.  Lower value can  result  is	faster
	      processing  time	at  the	 expense of larger file size and lower
	      compression quality.

       -kmin int

       -kmax int
	      Specify the minimum and maximum distance between consecutive key
	      frames (independently decodable frames) in the output animation.
	      The tool will insert some key frames into the  output  animation
	      as needed so that this criteria is satisfied.
	      A 'kmin' value of 0 will turn off insertion of key frames.  Typ‐
	      ical values are in the range 3 to 30. Default values are kmin  =
	      9, kmax = 17 for lossless compression and kmin = 3, kmax = 5 for
	      lossy compression.
	      These two options are relevant only  for	animated  images  with
	      large number of frames (>50).
	      When lower values are used, more frames will be converted to key
	      frames. This may lead to smaller number of  frames  required  to
	      decode  a	 frame on average, thereby improving the decoding per‐
	      formance. But this may  lead  to	slightly  bigger  file	sizes.
	      Higher  values  may  lead	 to  worse  decoding  performance, but
	      smaller file sizes.
	      Some restrictions:
	      (i) kmin < kmax,
	      (ii) kmin >= kmax / 2 + 1 and
	      (iii) kmax - kmin <= 30.
	      If any of these restrictions are not met, they will be  enforced
	      automatically.

       -metadata string
	      A comma separated list of metadata to copy from the input to the
	      output if present.  Valid values:	 all,  none,  icc,  xmp.   The
	      default is xmp.

       -f int For  lossy encoding only (specified by the -lossy option). Spec‐
	      ify the strength of the deblocking filter, between 0 (no filter‐
	      ing)  and	 100  (maximum filtering).  A value of 0 will turn off
	      any filtering. Higher value will increase the  strength  of  the
	      filtering process applied after decoding the picture. The higher
	      the value the smoother the picture will appear.  Typical	values
	      are usually in the range of 20 to 50.

       -mt    Use  multi-threading  for	 encoding, if possible. This option is
	      only effective when using lossy compression.

       -v     Print extra information.

       -quiet Do not print anything.

BUGS
       Please	 report	    all	    bugs     to	    our	    issue     tracker:
       http://code.google.com/p/webp/issues
       Patches	welcome!  See  this  page  to get started: http://www.webmpro‐
       ject.org/code/contribute/submitting-patches/

EXAMPLES
       gif2webp picture.gif -o picture.webp
       gif2webp -q 70 picture.gif -o picture.webp
       gif2webp -lossy -m 3 picture.gif -o picture_lossy.webp
       gif2webp -lossy -f 50 picture.gif -o picture.webp
       gif2webp -q 70 -o picture.webp -- ---picture.gif

AUTHORS
       gif2webp was written by the WebP team.
       The latest source tree is available at http://www.webmproject.org/code

       This manual page was written by Urvang Joshi  <urvang@google.com>,  for
       the Debian project (and may be used by others).

SEE ALSO
       cwebp(1), dwebp(1), webpmux(1)
       Please refer to http://developers.google.com/speed/webp/ for additional
       information.

			       December 17, 2013		   GIF2WEBP(1)
[top]

List of man pages available for Cygwin

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net