3

I have a ton of video files that were downloaded from the internet. Most are ok, but some were not completely downloaded. Is there a program that will tell me if a video file is complete?

Either a command line program or something that can verify all videos in a directory structure.

1
  • Actually, that's a really slow flagging of me...
    – Thor
    Jan 1, 2014 at 13:35

2 Answers 2

0

I found this, I think it should do the trick.

How can I check the integrity of a video file (avi, mpeg, mp4...)?

2
  • Thanks. So I have ffmpeg and am generating output from it for the video files. What do I check? Mar 25, 2011 at 23:52
  • you would look for a file called "error.log" which probably would be placed in the same folder as the ffmpeg program.
    – CreeDorofl
    Mar 26, 2011 at 18:38
0

I find a tool that worked for me. Most of the files that I needed to check were mp4 files.

see link below

http://help.adobe.com/en_US/FlashMediaServer/3.5_AdminGuide/WS5b3ccc516d4fbf351e63e3d119f29261b7-7ffc.html#WS5b3ccc516d4fbf351e63e3d119f29261b7-7ff9

I created my own bat file with notepad with the following

p:\flvcheck -n * . *

Pause

all files with numbers are corrupt.

1
  • Welcome to Super User! Whilst this may theoretically answer the question, it would be preferable to include the essential parts of the answer here, and provide the link for reference.
    – Thor
    Jan 1, 2014 at 13:36

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .