gif2webp - Convert a GIF image to WebP
gif2webp [options] input_file.gif -o output_file.webp
This manual page documents the gif2webp command.
gif2webp converts a GIF image to a WebP image.
The basic
options are:
-o string
Specify the name of the output WebP file. If omitted, gif2webp will perform conversion but only report statistics. Using "-" as output name will direct output to ’stdout’.
-- string
Explicitly specify the input file. This option is useful if the input file starts with an ’-’ for instance. This option must appear last. Any other options afterward will be ignored. If the input file is "-", the data will be read from stdin instead of a file.
-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. |
-min_size
Encode image to achieve smallest size. This disables key frame insertion and picks the dispose method resulting in the smallest output for each frame. It uses lossless compression by default, but can be combined with -q, -m, -lossy or -mixed options.
-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 ’kmax’ value of 0 will turn off insertion of
key frames. A ’kmax’ value of 1 will result in
all frames being key frames. ’kmin’ value is not
taken into account in both these special cases. Typical
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 performance. 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). Specify the strength of the deblocking filter, between 0 (no filtering) 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. |
-loop_compatibility
If enabled, handle the loop information in a compatible fashion for Chrome version prior to M62 (inclusive) and Firefox.
-v |
Print extra information. |
|||
-quiet |
Do not print anything. |
Please report
all bugs to the issue tracker:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/webp
Patches welcome! See this page to get started:
https://www.webmproject.org/code/contribute/submitting-patches/
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
cat picture.gif | gif2webp -o - -- - > output.webp
gif2webp
is a part of libwebp and was written by the WebP team.
The latest source tree is available at
https://chromium.googlesource.com/webm/libwebp
This manual page was written by Urvang Joshi <urvang@google.com>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
cwebp(1),
dwebp(1), webpmux(1)
Please refer to https://developers.google.com/speed/webp/
for additional information.