ElasticTranscoder / Client / create_job
create_job#
- ElasticTranscoder.Client.create_job(**kwargs)#
When you create a job, Elastic Transcoder returns JSON data that includes the values that you specified plus information about the job that is created.
If you have specified more than one output for your jobs (for example, one output for the Kindle Fire and another output for the Apple iPhone 4s), you currently must use the Elastic Transcoder API to list the jobs (as opposed to the AWS Console).
See also: AWS API Documentation
Request Syntax
response = client.create_job( PipelineId='string', Input={ 'Key': 'string', 'FrameRate': 'string', 'Resolution': 'string', 'AspectRatio': 'string', 'Interlaced': 'string', 'Container': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'TimeSpan': { 'StartTime': 'string', 'Duration': 'string' }, 'InputCaptions': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'CaptionSources': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Language': 'string', 'TimeOffset': 'string', 'Label': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'DetectedProperties': { 'Width': 123, 'Height': 123, 'FrameRate': 'string', 'FileSize': 123, 'DurationMillis': 123 } }, Inputs=[ { 'Key': 'string', 'FrameRate': 'string', 'Resolution': 'string', 'AspectRatio': 'string', 'Interlaced': 'string', 'Container': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'TimeSpan': { 'StartTime': 'string', 'Duration': 'string' }, 'InputCaptions': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'CaptionSources': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Language': 'string', 'TimeOffset': 'string', 'Label': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'DetectedProperties': { 'Width': 123, 'Height': 123, 'FrameRate': 'string', 'FileSize': 123, 'DurationMillis': 123 } }, ], Output={ 'Key': 'string', 'ThumbnailPattern': 'string', 'ThumbnailEncryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'Rotate': 'string', 'PresetId': 'string', 'SegmentDuration': 'string', 'Watermarks': [ { 'PresetWatermarkId': 'string', 'InputKey': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], 'AlbumArt': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'Artwork': [ { 'InputKey': 'string', 'MaxWidth': 'string', 'MaxHeight': 'string', 'SizingPolicy': 'string', 'PaddingPolicy': 'string', 'AlbumArtFormat': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'Composition': [ { 'TimeSpan': { 'StartTime': 'string', 'Duration': 'string' } }, ], 'Captions': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'CaptionSources': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Language': 'string', 'TimeOffset': 'string', 'Label': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], 'CaptionFormats': [ { 'Format': 'string', 'Pattern': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, Outputs=[ { 'Key': 'string', 'ThumbnailPattern': 'string', 'ThumbnailEncryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'Rotate': 'string', 'PresetId': 'string', 'SegmentDuration': 'string', 'Watermarks': [ { 'PresetWatermarkId': 'string', 'InputKey': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], 'AlbumArt': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'Artwork': [ { 'InputKey': 'string', 'MaxWidth': 'string', 'MaxHeight': 'string', 'SizingPolicy': 'string', 'PaddingPolicy': 'string', 'AlbumArtFormat': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'Composition': [ { 'TimeSpan': { 'StartTime': 'string', 'Duration': 'string' } }, ], 'Captions': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'CaptionSources': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Language': 'string', 'TimeOffset': 'string', 'Label': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], 'CaptionFormats': [ { 'Format': 'string', 'Pattern': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], OutputKeyPrefix='string', Playlists=[ { 'Name': 'string', 'Format': 'string', 'OutputKeys': [ 'string', ], 'HlsContentProtection': { 'Method': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string', 'LicenseAcquisitionUrl': 'string', 'KeyStoragePolicy': 'string' }, 'PlayReadyDrm': { 'Format': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'KeyId': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string', 'LicenseAcquisitionUrl': 'string' } }, ], UserMetadata={ 'string': 'string' } )
- Parameters:
PipelineId (string) –
[REQUIRED]
The
Id
of the pipeline that you want Elastic Transcoder to use for transcoding. The pipeline determines several settings, including the Amazon S3 bucket from which Elastic Transcoder gets the files to transcode and the bucket into which Elastic Transcoder puts the transcoded files.Input (dict) –
A section of the request body that provides information about the file that is being transcoded.
Key (string) –
The name of the file to transcode. Elsewhere in the body of the JSON block is the the ID of the pipeline to use for processing the job. The
InputBucket
object in that pipeline tells Elastic Transcoder which Amazon S3 bucket to get the file from.If the file name includes a prefix, such as
cooking/lasagna.mpg
, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.FrameRate (string) –
The frame rate of the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the frame rate of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the frame rate for the input file, enter one of the following values:10
,15
,23.97
,24
,25
,29.97
,30
,60
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of the frame rate.Resolution (string) –
This value must be
auto
, which causes Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the resolution of the input file.AspectRatio (string) –
The aspect ratio of the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the aspect ratio of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the aspect ratio for the output file, enter one of the following values:1:1
,4:3
,3:2
,16:9
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of the aspect ratio.Interlaced (string) –
Whether the input file is interlaced. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect whether the input file is interlaced, specify
auto
. If you want to specify whether the input file is interlaced, enter one of the following values:true
,false
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of interlacing.Container (string) –
The container type for the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the container type of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the container type for the input file, enter one of the following values:3gp
,aac
,asf
,avi
,divx
,flv
,m4a
,mkv
,mov
,mp3
,mp4
,mpeg
,mpeg-ps
,mpeg-ts
,mxf
,ogg
,vob
,wav
,webm
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that are used for decrypting your input files. If your input file is encrypted, you must specify the mode that Elastic Transcoder uses to decrypt your file.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
TimeSpan (dict) –
Settings for clipping an input. Each input can have different clip settings.
StartTime (string) –
The place in the input file where you want a clip to start. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder starts at the beginning of the input file.
Duration (string) –
The duration of the clip. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder creates an output file from StartTime to the end of the file.
If you specify a value longer than the duration of the input file, Elastic Transcoder transcodes the file and returns a warning message.
InputCaptions (dict) –
You can configure Elastic Transcoder to transcode captions, or subtitles, from one format to another. All captions must be in UTF-8. Elastic Transcoder supports two types of captions:
Embedded: Embedded captions are included in the same file as the audio and video. Elastic Transcoder supports only one embedded caption per language, to a maximum of 300 embedded captions per file. Valid input values include:
CEA-608 (EIA-608
, first non-empty channel only),CEA-708 (EIA-708
, first non-empty channel only), andmov-text
Valid outputs include:mov-text
Elastic Transcoder supports a maximum of one embedded format per output.Sidecar: Sidecar captions are kept in a separate metadata file from the audio and video data. Sidecar captions require a player that is capable of understanding the relationship between the video file and the sidecar file. Elastic Transcoder supports only one sidecar caption per language, to a maximum of 20 sidecar captions per file. Valid input values include:
dfxp
(first div element only),ebu-tt
,scc
,smpt
,srt
,ttml
(first div element only), andwebvtt
Valid outputs include:dfxp
(first div element only),scc
,srt
, andwebvtt
.
If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
Elastic Transcoder does not support OCR (Optical Character Recognition), does not accept pictures as a valid input for captions, and is not available for audio-only transcoding. Elastic Transcoder does not preserve text formatting (for example, italics) during the transcoding process.
To remove captions or leave the captions empty, set
Captions
to null. To pass through existing captions unchanged, set theMergePolicy
toMergeRetain
, and pass in a nullCaptionSources
array.For more information on embedded files, see the Subtitles Wikipedia page.
For more information on sidecar files, see the Extensible Metadata Platform and Sidecar file Wikipedia pages.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple captions.
MergeOverride: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the sidecar captions and ignores the embedded captions for that language.
MergeRetain: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the embedded captions and ignores the sidecar captions for that language. If
CaptionSources
is empty, Elastic Transcoder omits all sidecar captions from the output files.Override: Elastic Transcoder transcodes only the sidecar captions that you specify in
CaptionSources
.
MergePolicy
cannot be null.CaptionSources (list) –
Source files for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process. To omit all sidecar captions, leave
CaptionSources
blank.(dict) –
A source file for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process.
Key (string) –
The name of the sidecar caption file that you want Elastic Transcoder to include in the output file.
Language (string) –
A string that specifies the language of the caption. If you specified multiple inputs with captions, the caption language must match in order to be included in the output. Specify this as one of:
2-character ISO 639-1 code
3-character ISO 639-2 code
For more information on ISO language codes and language names, see the List of ISO 639-1 codes.
TimeOffset (string) –
For clip generation or captions that do not start at the same time as the associated video file, the
TimeOffset
tells Elastic Transcoder how much of the video to encode before including captions.Specify the TimeOffset in the form [+-]SS.sss or [+-]HH:mm:SS.ss.
Label (string) –
The label of the caption shown in the player when choosing a language. We recommend that you put the caption language name here, in the language of the captions.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that Elastic Transcoder needs to decyrpt your caption sources, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption sources.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
DetectedProperties (dict) –
The detected properties of the input file.
Width (integer) –
The detected width of the input file, in pixels.
Height (integer) –
The detected height of the input file, in pixels.
FrameRate (string) –
The detected frame rate of the input file, in frames per second.
FileSize (integer) –
The detected file size of the input file, in bytes.
DurationMillis (integer) –
The detected duration of the input file, in milliseconds.
Inputs (list) –
A section of the request body that provides information about the files that are being transcoded.
(dict) –
Information about the file that you’re transcoding.
Key (string) –
The name of the file to transcode. Elsewhere in the body of the JSON block is the the ID of the pipeline to use for processing the job. The
InputBucket
object in that pipeline tells Elastic Transcoder which Amazon S3 bucket to get the file from.If the file name includes a prefix, such as
cooking/lasagna.mpg
, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.FrameRate (string) –
The frame rate of the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the frame rate of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the frame rate for the input file, enter one of the following values:10
,15
,23.97
,24
,25
,29.97
,30
,60
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of the frame rate.Resolution (string) –
This value must be
auto
, which causes Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the resolution of the input file.AspectRatio (string) –
The aspect ratio of the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the aspect ratio of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the aspect ratio for the output file, enter one of the following values:1:1
,4:3
,3:2
,16:9
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of the aspect ratio.Interlaced (string) –
Whether the input file is interlaced. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect whether the input file is interlaced, specify
auto
. If you want to specify whether the input file is interlaced, enter one of the following values:true
,false
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of interlacing.Container (string) –
The container type for the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the container type of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the container type for the input file, enter one of the following values:3gp
,aac
,asf
,avi
,divx
,flv
,m4a
,mkv
,mov
,mp3
,mp4
,mpeg
,mpeg-ps
,mpeg-ts
,mxf
,ogg
,vob
,wav
,webm
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that are used for decrypting your input files. If your input file is encrypted, you must specify the mode that Elastic Transcoder uses to decrypt your file.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
TimeSpan (dict) –
Settings for clipping an input. Each input can have different clip settings.
StartTime (string) –
The place in the input file where you want a clip to start. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder starts at the beginning of the input file.
Duration (string) –
The duration of the clip. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder creates an output file from StartTime to the end of the file.
If you specify a value longer than the duration of the input file, Elastic Transcoder transcodes the file and returns a warning message.
InputCaptions (dict) –
You can configure Elastic Transcoder to transcode captions, or subtitles, from one format to another. All captions must be in UTF-8. Elastic Transcoder supports two types of captions:
Embedded: Embedded captions are included in the same file as the audio and video. Elastic Transcoder supports only one embedded caption per language, to a maximum of 300 embedded captions per file. Valid input values include:
CEA-608 (EIA-608
, first non-empty channel only),CEA-708 (EIA-708
, first non-empty channel only), andmov-text
Valid outputs include:mov-text
Elastic Transcoder supports a maximum of one embedded format per output.Sidecar: Sidecar captions are kept in a separate metadata file from the audio and video data. Sidecar captions require a player that is capable of understanding the relationship between the video file and the sidecar file. Elastic Transcoder supports only one sidecar caption per language, to a maximum of 20 sidecar captions per file. Valid input values include:
dfxp
(first div element only),ebu-tt
,scc
,smpt
,srt
,ttml
(first div element only), andwebvtt
Valid outputs include:dfxp
(first div element only),scc
,srt
, andwebvtt
.
If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
Elastic Transcoder does not support OCR (Optical Character Recognition), does not accept pictures as a valid input for captions, and is not available for audio-only transcoding. Elastic Transcoder does not preserve text formatting (for example, italics) during the transcoding process.
To remove captions or leave the captions empty, set
Captions
to null. To pass through existing captions unchanged, set theMergePolicy
toMergeRetain
, and pass in a nullCaptionSources
array.For more information on embedded files, see the Subtitles Wikipedia page.
For more information on sidecar files, see the Extensible Metadata Platform and Sidecar file Wikipedia pages.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple captions.
MergeOverride: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the sidecar captions and ignores the embedded captions for that language.
MergeRetain: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the embedded captions and ignores the sidecar captions for that language. If
CaptionSources
is empty, Elastic Transcoder omits all sidecar captions from the output files.Override: Elastic Transcoder transcodes only the sidecar captions that you specify in
CaptionSources
.
MergePolicy
cannot be null.CaptionSources (list) –
Source files for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process. To omit all sidecar captions, leave
CaptionSources
blank.(dict) –
A source file for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process.
Key (string) –
The name of the sidecar caption file that you want Elastic Transcoder to include in the output file.
Language (string) –
A string that specifies the language of the caption. If you specified multiple inputs with captions, the caption language must match in order to be included in the output. Specify this as one of:
2-character ISO 639-1 code
3-character ISO 639-2 code
For more information on ISO language codes and language names, see the List of ISO 639-1 codes.
TimeOffset (string) –
For clip generation or captions that do not start at the same time as the associated video file, the
TimeOffset
tells Elastic Transcoder how much of the video to encode before including captions.Specify the TimeOffset in the form [+-]SS.sss or [+-]HH:mm:SS.ss.
Label (string) –
The label of the caption shown in the player when choosing a language. We recommend that you put the caption language name here, in the language of the captions.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that Elastic Transcoder needs to decyrpt your caption sources, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption sources.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
DetectedProperties (dict) –
The detected properties of the input file.
Width (integer) –
The detected width of the input file, in pixels.
Height (integer) –
The detected height of the input file, in pixels.
FrameRate (string) –
The detected frame rate of the input file, in frames per second.
FileSize (integer) –
The detected file size of the input file, in bytes.
DurationMillis (integer) –
The detected duration of the input file, in milliseconds.
Output (dict) –
A section of the request body that provides information about the transcoded (target) file. We strongly recommend that you use the
Outputs
syntax instead of theOutput
syntax.Key (string) –
The name to assign to the transcoded file. Elastic Transcoder saves the file in the Amazon S3 bucket specified by the
OutputBucket
object in the pipeline that is specified by the pipeline ID. If a file with the specified name already exists in the output bucket, the job fails.ThumbnailPattern (string) –
Whether you want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails for your videos and, if so, how you want Elastic Transcoder to name the files.
If you don’t want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails, specify “”.
If you do want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails, specify the information that you want to include in the file name for each thumbnail. You can specify the following values in any sequence:
{count}
(Required): If you want to create thumbnails, you must include{count}
in theThumbnailPattern
object. Wherever you specify{count}
, Elastic Transcoder adds a five-digit sequence number (beginning with 00001) to thumbnail file names. The number indicates where a given thumbnail appears in the sequence of thumbnails for a transcoded file.
Warning
If you specify a literal value and/or
{resolution}
but you omit{count}
, Elastic Transcoder returns a validation error and does not create the job.Literal values (Optional): You can specify literal values anywhere in the
ThumbnailPattern
object. For example, you can include them as a file name prefix or as a delimiter between{resolution}
and{count}
.{resolution}
(Optional): If you want Elastic Transcoder to include the resolution in the file name, include{resolution}
in theThumbnailPattern
object.
When creating thumbnails, Elastic Transcoder automatically saves the files in the format (.jpg or .png) that appears in the preset that you specified in the
PresetID
value ofCreateJobOutput
. Elastic Transcoder also appends the applicable file name extension.ThumbnailEncryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your thumbnail.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Rotate (string) –
The number of degrees clockwise by which you want Elastic Transcoder to rotate the output relative to the input. Enter one of the following values:
auto
,0
,90
,180
,270
. The valueauto
generally works only if the file that you’re transcoding contains rotation metadata.PresetId (string) –
The
Id
of the preset to use for this job. The preset determines the audio, video, and thumbnail settings that Elastic Transcoder uses for transcoding.SegmentDuration (string) –
Warning
(Outputs in Fragmented MP4 or MPEG-TS format only.
If you specify a preset in
PresetId
for which the value ofContainer
isfmp4
(Fragmented MP4) orts
(MPEG-TS),SegmentDuration
is the target maximum duration of each segment in seconds. ForHLSv3
format playlists, each media segment is stored in a separate.ts
file. ForHLSv4
andSmooth
playlists, all media segments for an output are stored in a single file. Each segment is approximately the length of theSegmentDuration
, though individual segments might be shorter or longer.The range of valid values is 1 to 60 seconds. If the duration of the video is not evenly divisible by
SegmentDuration
, the duration of the last segment is the remainder of total length/SegmentDuration.Elastic Transcoder creates an output-specific playlist for each output
HLS
output that you specify in OutputKeys. To add an output to the master playlist for this job, include it in theOutputKeys
of the associated playlist.Watermarks (list) –
Information about the watermarks that you want Elastic Transcoder to add to the video during transcoding. You can specify up to four watermarks for each output. Settings for each watermark must be defined in the preset for the current output.
(dict) –
Watermarks can be in .png or .jpg format. If you want to display a watermark that is not rectangular, use the .png format, which supports transparency.
PresetWatermarkId (string) –
The ID of the watermark settings that Elastic Transcoder uses to add watermarks to the video during transcoding. The settings are in the preset specified by Preset for the current output. In that preset, the value of Watermarks Id tells Elastic Transcoder which settings to use.
InputKey (string) –
The name of the .png or .jpg file that you want to use for the watermark. To determine which Amazon S3 bucket contains the specified file, Elastic Transcoder checks the pipeline specified by
Pipeline
; theInput Bucket
object in that pipeline identifies the bucket.If the file name includes a prefix, for example, logos/128x64.png, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your watermarks.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
AlbumArt (dict) –
Information about the album art that you want Elastic Transcoder to add to the file during transcoding. You can specify up to twenty album artworks for each output. Settings for each artwork must be defined in the job for the current output.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple album artwork files.
Replace:
The specified album art replaces any existing album art.Prepend:
The specified album art is placed in front of any existing album art.Append:
The specified album art is placed after any existing album art.Fallback:
If the original input file contains artwork, Elastic Transcoder uses that artwork for the output. If the original input does not contain artwork, Elastic Transcoder uses the specified album art file.
Artwork (list) –
The file to be used as album art. There can be multiple artworks associated with an audio file, to a maximum of 20. Valid formats are
.jpg
and.png
(dict) –
The file to be used as album art. There can be multiple artworks associated with an audio file, to a maximum of 20.
To remove artwork or leave the artwork empty, you can either set
Artwork
to null, or set theMerge Policy
to “Replace” and use an emptyArtwork
array.To pass through existing artwork unchanged, set the
Merge Policy
to “Prepend”, “Append”, or “Fallback”, and use an emptyArtwork
array.InputKey (string) –
The name of the file to be used as album art. To determine which Amazon S3 bucket contains the specified file, Elastic Transcoder checks the pipeline specified by
PipelineId
; theInputBucket
object in that pipeline identifies the bucket.If the file name includes a prefix, for example,
cooking/pie.jpg
, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.MaxWidth (string) –
The maximum width of the output album art in pixels. If you specify
auto
, Elastic Transcoder uses 600 as the default value. If you specify a numeric value, enter an even integer between 32 and 4096, inclusive.MaxHeight (string) –
The maximum height of the output album art in pixels. If you specify
auto
, Elastic Transcoder uses 600 as the default value. If you specify a numeric value, enter an even integer between 32 and 3072, inclusive.SizingPolicy (string) –
Specify one of the following values to control scaling of the output album art:
Fit:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art so it matches the value that you specified in eitherMaxWidth
orMaxHeight
without exceeding the other value.Fill:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art so it matches the value that you specified in eitherMaxWidth
orMaxHeight
and matches or exceeds the other value. Elastic Transcoder centers the output art and then crops it in the dimension (if any) that exceeds the maximum value.Stretch:
Elastic Transcoder stretches the output art to match the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
. If the relative proportions of the input art and the output art are different, the output art will be distorted.Keep:
Elastic Transcoder does not scale the output art. If either dimension of the input art exceeds the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
, Elastic Transcoder crops the output art.ShrinkToFit:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art down so that its dimensions match the values that you specified for at least one ofMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
without exceeding either value. If you specify this option, Elastic Transcoder does not scale the art up.ShrinkToFill
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art down so that its dimensions match the values that you specified for at least one ofMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
without dropping below either value. If you specify this option, Elastic Transcoder does not scale the art up.
PaddingPolicy (string) –
When you set
PaddingPolicy
toPad
, Elastic Transcoder may add white bars to the top and bottom and/or left and right sides of the output album art to make the total size of the output art match the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
.AlbumArtFormat (string) –
The format of album art, if any. Valid formats are
.jpg
and.png
.Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your artwork.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Composition (list) –
You can create an output file that contains an excerpt from the input file. This excerpt, called a clip, can come from the beginning, middle, or end of the file. The Composition object contains settings for the clips that make up an output file. For the current release, you can only specify settings for a single clip per output file. The Composition object cannot be null.
(dict) –
Settings for one clip in a composition. All jobs in a playlist must have the same clip settings.
TimeSpan (dict) –
Settings that determine when a clip begins and how long it lasts.
StartTime (string) –
The place in the input file where you want a clip to start. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder starts at the beginning of the input file.
Duration (string) –
The duration of the clip. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder creates an output file from StartTime to the end of the file.
If you specify a value longer than the duration of the input file, Elastic Transcoder transcodes the file and returns a warning message.
Captions (dict) –
You can configure Elastic Transcoder to transcode captions, or subtitles, from one format to another. All captions must be in UTF-8. Elastic Transcoder supports two types of captions:
Embedded: Embedded captions are included in the same file as the audio and video. Elastic Transcoder supports only one embedded caption per language, to a maximum of 300 embedded captions per file. Valid input values include:
CEA-608 (EIA-608
, first non-empty channel only),CEA-708 (EIA-708
, first non-empty channel only), andmov-text
Valid outputs include:mov-text
Elastic Transcoder supports a maximum of one embedded format per output.Sidecar: Sidecar captions are kept in a separate metadata file from the audio and video data. Sidecar captions require a player that is capable of understanding the relationship between the video file and the sidecar file. Elastic Transcoder supports only one sidecar caption per language, to a maximum of 20 sidecar captions per file. Valid input values include:
dfxp
(first div element only),ebu-tt
,scc
,smpt
,srt
,ttml
(first div element only), andwebvtt
Valid outputs include:dfxp
(first div element only),scc
,srt
, andwebvtt
.
If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
Elastic Transcoder does not support OCR (Optical Character Recognition), does not accept pictures as a valid input for captions, and is not available for audio-only transcoding. Elastic Transcoder does not preserve text formatting (for example, italics) during the transcoding process.
To remove captions or leave the captions empty, set
Captions
to null. To pass through existing captions unchanged, set theMergePolicy
toMergeRetain
, and pass in a nullCaptionSources
array.For more information on embedded files, see the Subtitles Wikipedia page.
For more information on sidecar files, see the Extensible Metadata Platform and Sidecar file Wikipedia pages.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple captions.
MergeOverride: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the sidecar captions and ignores the embedded captions for that language.
MergeRetain: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the embedded captions and ignores the sidecar captions for that language. If
CaptionSources
is empty, Elastic Transcoder omits all sidecar captions from the output files.Override: Elastic Transcoder transcodes only the sidecar captions that you specify in
CaptionSources
.
MergePolicy
cannot be null.CaptionSources (list) –
Source files for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process. To omit all sidecar captions, leave
CaptionSources
blank.(dict) –
A source file for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process.
Key (string) –
The name of the sidecar caption file that you want Elastic Transcoder to include in the output file.
Language (string) –
A string that specifies the language of the caption. If you specified multiple inputs with captions, the caption language must match in order to be included in the output. Specify this as one of:
2-character ISO 639-1 code
3-character ISO 639-2 code
For more information on ISO language codes and language names, see the List of ISO 639-1 codes.
TimeOffset (string) –
For clip generation or captions that do not start at the same time as the associated video file, the
TimeOffset
tells Elastic Transcoder how much of the video to encode before including captions.Specify the TimeOffset in the form [+-]SS.sss or [+-]HH:mm:SS.ss.
Label (string) –
The label of the caption shown in the player when choosing a language. We recommend that you put the caption language name here, in the language of the captions.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that Elastic Transcoder needs to decyrpt your caption sources, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption sources.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
CaptionFormats (list) –
The array of file formats for the output captions. If you leave this value blank, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
(dict) –
The file format of the output captions. If you leave this value blank, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
Format (string) –
The format you specify determines whether Elastic Transcoder generates an embedded or sidecar caption for this output.
Valid Embedded Caption Formats:
for FLAC: None
For MP3: None
For MP4: mov-text
For MPEG-TS: None
For ogg: None
For webm: None
Valid Sidecar Caption Formats: Elastic Transcoder supports dfxp (first div element only), scc, srt, and webvtt. If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
For FMP4: dfxp
Non-FMP4 outputs: All sidecar types
fmp4
captions have an extension of.ismt
Pattern (string) –
The prefix for caption filenames, in the form description-
{language}
, where:description is a description of the video.
{language}
is a literal value that Elastic Transcoder replaces with the two- or three-letter code for the language of the caption in the output file names.
If you don’t include
{language}
in the file name pattern, Elastic Transcoder automatically appends “{language}
” to the value that you specify for the description. In addition, Elastic Transcoder automatically appends the count to the end of the segment files.For example, suppose you’re transcoding into srt format. When you enter “Sydney-{language}-sunrise”, and the language of the captions is English (en), the name of the first caption file is be Sydney-en-sunrise00000.srt.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption formats.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Encryption (dict) –
You can specify encryption settings for any output files that you want to use for a transcoding job. This includes the output file and any watermarks, thumbnails, album art, or captions that you want to use. You must specify encryption settings for each file individually.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Outputs (list) –
A section of the request body that provides information about the transcoded (target) files. We recommend that you use the
Outputs
syntax instead of theOutput
syntax.(dict) –
The
CreateJobOutput
structure.Key (string) –
The name to assign to the transcoded file. Elastic Transcoder saves the file in the Amazon S3 bucket specified by the
OutputBucket
object in the pipeline that is specified by the pipeline ID. If a file with the specified name already exists in the output bucket, the job fails.ThumbnailPattern (string) –
Whether you want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails for your videos and, if so, how you want Elastic Transcoder to name the files.
If you don’t want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails, specify “”.
If you do want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails, specify the information that you want to include in the file name for each thumbnail. You can specify the following values in any sequence:
{count}
(Required): If you want to create thumbnails, you must include{count}
in theThumbnailPattern
object. Wherever you specify{count}
, Elastic Transcoder adds a five-digit sequence number (beginning with 00001) to thumbnail file names. The number indicates where a given thumbnail appears in the sequence of thumbnails for a transcoded file.
Warning
If you specify a literal value and/or
{resolution}
but you omit{count}
, Elastic Transcoder returns a validation error and does not create the job.Literal values (Optional): You can specify literal values anywhere in the
ThumbnailPattern
object. For example, you can include them as a file name prefix or as a delimiter between{resolution}
and{count}
.{resolution}
(Optional): If you want Elastic Transcoder to include the resolution in the file name, include{resolution}
in theThumbnailPattern
object.
When creating thumbnails, Elastic Transcoder automatically saves the files in the format (.jpg or .png) that appears in the preset that you specified in the
PresetID
value ofCreateJobOutput
. Elastic Transcoder also appends the applicable file name extension.ThumbnailEncryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your thumbnail.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Rotate (string) –
The number of degrees clockwise by which you want Elastic Transcoder to rotate the output relative to the input. Enter one of the following values:
auto
,0
,90
,180
,270
. The valueauto
generally works only if the file that you’re transcoding contains rotation metadata.PresetId (string) –
The
Id
of the preset to use for this job. The preset determines the audio, video, and thumbnail settings that Elastic Transcoder uses for transcoding.SegmentDuration (string) –
Warning
(Outputs in Fragmented MP4 or MPEG-TS format only.
If you specify a preset in
PresetId
for which the value ofContainer
isfmp4
(Fragmented MP4) orts
(MPEG-TS),SegmentDuration
is the target maximum duration of each segment in seconds. ForHLSv3
format playlists, each media segment is stored in a separate.ts
file. ForHLSv4
andSmooth
playlists, all media segments for an output are stored in a single file. Each segment is approximately the length of theSegmentDuration
, though individual segments might be shorter or longer.The range of valid values is 1 to 60 seconds. If the duration of the video is not evenly divisible by
SegmentDuration
, the duration of the last segment is the remainder of total length/SegmentDuration.Elastic Transcoder creates an output-specific playlist for each output
HLS
output that you specify in OutputKeys. To add an output to the master playlist for this job, include it in theOutputKeys
of the associated playlist.Watermarks (list) –
Information about the watermarks that you want Elastic Transcoder to add to the video during transcoding. You can specify up to four watermarks for each output. Settings for each watermark must be defined in the preset for the current output.
(dict) –
Watermarks can be in .png or .jpg format. If you want to display a watermark that is not rectangular, use the .png format, which supports transparency.
PresetWatermarkId (string) –
The ID of the watermark settings that Elastic Transcoder uses to add watermarks to the video during transcoding. The settings are in the preset specified by Preset for the current output. In that preset, the value of Watermarks Id tells Elastic Transcoder which settings to use.
InputKey (string) –
The name of the .png or .jpg file that you want to use for the watermark. To determine which Amazon S3 bucket contains the specified file, Elastic Transcoder checks the pipeline specified by
Pipeline
; theInput Bucket
object in that pipeline identifies the bucket.If the file name includes a prefix, for example, logos/128x64.png, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your watermarks.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
AlbumArt (dict) –
Information about the album art that you want Elastic Transcoder to add to the file during transcoding. You can specify up to twenty album artworks for each output. Settings for each artwork must be defined in the job for the current output.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple album artwork files.
Replace:
The specified album art replaces any existing album art.Prepend:
The specified album art is placed in front of any existing album art.Append:
The specified album art is placed after any existing album art.Fallback:
If the original input file contains artwork, Elastic Transcoder uses that artwork for the output. If the original input does not contain artwork, Elastic Transcoder uses the specified album art file.
Artwork (list) –
The file to be used as album art. There can be multiple artworks associated with an audio file, to a maximum of 20. Valid formats are
.jpg
and.png
(dict) –
The file to be used as album art. There can be multiple artworks associated with an audio file, to a maximum of 20.
To remove artwork or leave the artwork empty, you can either set
Artwork
to null, or set theMerge Policy
to “Replace” and use an emptyArtwork
array.To pass through existing artwork unchanged, set the
Merge Policy
to “Prepend”, “Append”, or “Fallback”, and use an emptyArtwork
array.InputKey (string) –
The name of the file to be used as album art. To determine which Amazon S3 bucket contains the specified file, Elastic Transcoder checks the pipeline specified by
PipelineId
; theInputBucket
object in that pipeline identifies the bucket.If the file name includes a prefix, for example,
cooking/pie.jpg
, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.MaxWidth (string) –
The maximum width of the output album art in pixels. If you specify
auto
, Elastic Transcoder uses 600 as the default value. If you specify a numeric value, enter an even integer between 32 and 4096, inclusive.MaxHeight (string) –
The maximum height of the output album art in pixels. If you specify
auto
, Elastic Transcoder uses 600 as the default value. If you specify a numeric value, enter an even integer between 32 and 3072, inclusive.SizingPolicy (string) –
Specify one of the following values to control scaling of the output album art:
Fit:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art so it matches the value that you specified in eitherMaxWidth
orMaxHeight
without exceeding the other value.Fill:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art so it matches the value that you specified in eitherMaxWidth
orMaxHeight
and matches or exceeds the other value. Elastic Transcoder centers the output art and then crops it in the dimension (if any) that exceeds the maximum value.Stretch:
Elastic Transcoder stretches the output art to match the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
. If the relative proportions of the input art and the output art are different, the output art will be distorted.Keep:
Elastic Transcoder does not scale the output art. If either dimension of the input art exceeds the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
, Elastic Transcoder crops the output art.ShrinkToFit:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art down so that its dimensions match the values that you specified for at least one ofMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
without exceeding either value. If you specify this option, Elastic Transcoder does not scale the art up.ShrinkToFill
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art down so that its dimensions match the values that you specified for at least one ofMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
without dropping below either value. If you specify this option, Elastic Transcoder does not scale the art up.
PaddingPolicy (string) –
When you set
PaddingPolicy
toPad
, Elastic Transcoder may add white bars to the top and bottom and/or left and right sides of the output album art to make the total size of the output art match the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
.AlbumArtFormat (string) –
The format of album art, if any. Valid formats are
.jpg
and.png
.Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your artwork.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Composition (list) –
You can create an output file that contains an excerpt from the input file. This excerpt, called a clip, can come from the beginning, middle, or end of the file. The Composition object contains settings for the clips that make up an output file. For the current release, you can only specify settings for a single clip per output file. The Composition object cannot be null.
(dict) –
Settings for one clip in a composition. All jobs in a playlist must have the same clip settings.
TimeSpan (dict) –
Settings that determine when a clip begins and how long it lasts.
StartTime (string) –
The place in the input file where you want a clip to start. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder starts at the beginning of the input file.
Duration (string) –
The duration of the clip. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder creates an output file from StartTime to the end of the file.
If you specify a value longer than the duration of the input file, Elastic Transcoder transcodes the file and returns a warning message.
Captions (dict) –
You can configure Elastic Transcoder to transcode captions, or subtitles, from one format to another. All captions must be in UTF-8. Elastic Transcoder supports two types of captions:
Embedded: Embedded captions are included in the same file as the audio and video. Elastic Transcoder supports only one embedded caption per language, to a maximum of 300 embedded captions per file. Valid input values include:
CEA-608 (EIA-608
, first non-empty channel only),CEA-708 (EIA-708
, first non-empty channel only), andmov-text
Valid outputs include:mov-text
Elastic Transcoder supports a maximum of one embedded format per output.Sidecar: Sidecar captions are kept in a separate metadata file from the audio and video data. Sidecar captions require a player that is capable of understanding the relationship between the video file and the sidecar file. Elastic Transcoder supports only one sidecar caption per language, to a maximum of 20 sidecar captions per file. Valid input values include:
dfxp
(first div element only),ebu-tt
,scc
,smpt
,srt
,ttml
(first div element only), andwebvtt
Valid outputs include:dfxp
(first div element only),scc
,srt
, andwebvtt
.
If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
Elastic Transcoder does not support OCR (Optical Character Recognition), does not accept pictures as a valid input for captions, and is not available for audio-only transcoding. Elastic Transcoder does not preserve text formatting (for example, italics) during the transcoding process.
To remove captions or leave the captions empty, set
Captions
to null. To pass through existing captions unchanged, set theMergePolicy
toMergeRetain
, and pass in a nullCaptionSources
array.For more information on embedded files, see the Subtitles Wikipedia page.
For more information on sidecar files, see the Extensible Metadata Platform and Sidecar file Wikipedia pages.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple captions.
MergeOverride: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the sidecar captions and ignores the embedded captions for that language.
MergeRetain: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the embedded captions and ignores the sidecar captions for that language. If
CaptionSources
is empty, Elastic Transcoder omits all sidecar captions from the output files.Override: Elastic Transcoder transcodes only the sidecar captions that you specify in
CaptionSources
.
MergePolicy
cannot be null.CaptionSources (list) –
Source files for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process. To omit all sidecar captions, leave
CaptionSources
blank.(dict) –
A source file for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process.
Key (string) –
The name of the sidecar caption file that you want Elastic Transcoder to include in the output file.
Language (string) –
A string that specifies the language of the caption. If you specified multiple inputs with captions, the caption language must match in order to be included in the output. Specify this as one of:
2-character ISO 639-1 code
3-character ISO 639-2 code
For more information on ISO language codes and language names, see the List of ISO 639-1 codes.
TimeOffset (string) –
For clip generation or captions that do not start at the same time as the associated video file, the
TimeOffset
tells Elastic Transcoder how much of the video to encode before including captions.Specify the TimeOffset in the form [+-]SS.sss or [+-]HH:mm:SS.ss.
Label (string) –
The label of the caption shown in the player when choosing a language. We recommend that you put the caption language name here, in the language of the captions.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that Elastic Transcoder needs to decyrpt your caption sources, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption sources.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
CaptionFormats (list) –
The array of file formats for the output captions. If you leave this value blank, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
(dict) –
The file format of the output captions. If you leave this value blank, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
Format (string) –
The format you specify determines whether Elastic Transcoder generates an embedded or sidecar caption for this output.
Valid Embedded Caption Formats:
for FLAC: None
For MP3: None
For MP4: mov-text
For MPEG-TS: None
For ogg: None
For webm: None
Valid Sidecar Caption Formats: Elastic Transcoder supports dfxp (first div element only), scc, srt, and webvtt. If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
For FMP4: dfxp
Non-FMP4 outputs: All sidecar types
fmp4
captions have an extension of.ismt
Pattern (string) –
The prefix for caption filenames, in the form description-
{language}
, where:description is a description of the video.
{language}
is a literal value that Elastic Transcoder replaces with the two- or three-letter code for the language of the caption in the output file names.
If you don’t include
{language}
in the file name pattern, Elastic Transcoder automatically appends “{language}
” to the value that you specify for the description. In addition, Elastic Transcoder automatically appends the count to the end of the segment files.For example, suppose you’re transcoding into srt format. When you enter “Sydney-{language}-sunrise”, and the language of the captions is English (en), the name of the first caption file is be Sydney-en-sunrise00000.srt.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption formats.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Encryption (dict) –
You can specify encryption settings for any output files that you want to use for a transcoding job. This includes the output file and any watermarks, thumbnails, album art, or captions that you want to use. You must specify encryption settings for each file individually.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
OutputKeyPrefix (string) – The value, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to prepend to the names of all files that this job creates, including output files, thumbnails, and playlists.
Playlists (list) –
If you specify a preset in
PresetId
for which the value ofContainer
is fmp4 (Fragmented MP4) or ts (MPEG-TS), Playlists contains information about the master playlists that you want Elastic Transcoder to create.The maximum number of master playlists in a job is 30.
(dict) –
Information about the master playlist.
Name (string) –
The name that you want Elastic Transcoder to assign to the master playlist, for example, nyc-vacation.m3u8. If the name includes a
/
character, the section of the name before the last/
must be identical for allName
objects. If you create more than one master playlist, the values of allName
objects must be unique.Note
Elastic Transcoder automatically appends the relevant file extension to the file name (
.m3u8
forHLSv3
andHLSv4
playlists, and.ism
and.ismc
forSmooth
playlists). If you include a file extension inName
, the file name will have two extensions.Format (string) –
The format of the output playlist. Valid formats include
HLSv3
,HLSv4
, andSmooth
.OutputKeys (list) –
For each output in this job that you want to include in a master playlist, the value of the
Outputs:Key
object.If your output is not
HLS
or does not have a segment duration set, the name of the output file is a concatenation ofOutputKeyPrefix
andOutputs:Key
: OutputKeyPrefixOutputs:Key
If your output is
HLSv3
and has a segment duration set, or is not included in a playlist, Elastic Transcoder creates an output playlist file with a file extension of.m3u8
, and a series of.ts
files that include a five-digit sequential counter beginning with 00000: OutputKeyPrefixOutputs:Key
.m3u8 OutputKeyPrefix ``Outputs:Key``00000.tsIf your output is
HLSv4
, has a segment duration set, and is included in anHLSv4
playlist, Elastic Transcoder creates an output playlist file with a file extension of_v4.m3u8
. If the output is video, Elastic Transcoder also creates an output file with an extension of_iframe.m3u8
: OutputKeyPrefixOutputs:Key``_v4.m3u8 OutputKeyPrefix ``Outputs:Key``_iframe.m3u8 OutputKeyPrefix ``Outputs:Key
.ts
Elastic Transcoder automatically appends the relevant file extension to the file name. If you include a file extension in Output Key, the file name will have two extensions.
If you include more than one output in a playlist, any segment duration settings, clip settings, or caption settings must be the same for all outputs in the playlist. For
Smooth
playlists, theAudio:Profile
,Video:Profile
, andVideo:FrameRate
toVideo:KeyframesMaxDist
ratio must be the same for all outputs.(string) –
HlsContentProtection (dict) –
The HLS content protection settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to the output files associated with this playlist.
Method (string) –
The content protection method for your output. The only valid value is:
aes-128
.This value is written into the method attribute of the
EXT-X-KEY
metadata tag in the output playlist.Key (string) –
If you want Elastic Transcoder to generate a key for you, leave this field blank.
If you choose to supply your own key, you must encrypt the key by using AWS KMS. The key must be base64-encoded, and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.KeyMd5 (string) –
If Elastic Transcoder is generating your key for you, you must leave this field blank.
The MD5 digest of the key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, and that you want Elastic Transcoder to use as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes before being base64- encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
If Elastic Transcoder is generating your key for you, you must leave this field blank.
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes before being base64-encoded.
LicenseAcquisitionUrl (string) –
The location of the license key required to decrypt your HLS playlist. The URL must be an absolute path, and is referenced in the URI attribute of the EXT-X-KEY metadata tag in the playlist file.
KeyStoragePolicy (string) –
Specify whether you want Elastic Transcoder to write your HLS license key to an Amazon S3 bucket. If you choose
WithVariantPlaylists
,LicenseAcquisitionUrl
must be left blank and Elastic Transcoder writes your data key into the same bucket as the associated playlist.
PlayReadyDrm (dict) –
The DRM settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to the output files associated with this playlist.
Format (string) –
The type of DRM, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to the output files associated with this playlist.
Key (string) –
The DRM key for your file, provided by your DRM license provider. The key must be base64-encoded, and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using AWS KMS.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key used for DRM on your file, and that you want Elastic Transcoder to use as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes before being base64-encoded.
KeyId (string) –
The ID for your DRM key, so that your DRM license provider knows which key to provide.
The key ID must be provided in big endian, and Elastic Transcoder converts it to little endian before inserting it into the PlayReady DRM headers. If you are unsure whether your license server provides your key ID in big or little endian, check with your DRM provider.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 8 bytes long before being base64-encoded. If no initialization vector is provided, Elastic Transcoder generates one for you.
LicenseAcquisitionUrl (string) –
The location of the license key required to play DRM content. The URL must be an absolute path, and is referenced by the PlayReady header. The PlayReady header is referenced in the protection header of the client manifest for Smooth Streaming outputs, and in the EXT-X-DXDRM and EXT-XDXDRMINFO metadata tags for HLS playlist outputs. An example URL looks like this:
https://www.example.com/exampleKey/
UserMetadata (dict) –
User-defined metadata that you want to associate with an Elastic Transcoder job. You specify metadata in
key/value
pairs, and you can add up to 10key/value
pairs per job. Elastic Transcoder does not guarantee thatkey/value
pairs are returned in the same order in which you specify them.(string) –
(string) –
- Return type:
dict
- Returns:
Response Syntax
{ 'Job': { 'Id': 'string', 'Arn': 'string', 'PipelineId': 'string', 'Input': { 'Key': 'string', 'FrameRate': 'string', 'Resolution': 'string', 'AspectRatio': 'string', 'Interlaced': 'string', 'Container': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'TimeSpan': { 'StartTime': 'string', 'Duration': 'string' }, 'InputCaptions': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'CaptionSources': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Language': 'string', 'TimeOffset': 'string', 'Label': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'DetectedProperties': { 'Width': 123, 'Height': 123, 'FrameRate': 'string', 'FileSize': 123, 'DurationMillis': 123 } }, 'Inputs': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'FrameRate': 'string', 'Resolution': 'string', 'AspectRatio': 'string', 'Interlaced': 'string', 'Container': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'TimeSpan': { 'StartTime': 'string', 'Duration': 'string' }, 'InputCaptions': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'CaptionSources': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Language': 'string', 'TimeOffset': 'string', 'Label': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'DetectedProperties': { 'Width': 123, 'Height': 123, 'FrameRate': 'string', 'FileSize': 123, 'DurationMillis': 123 } }, ], 'Output': { 'Id': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'ThumbnailPattern': 'string', 'ThumbnailEncryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'Rotate': 'string', 'PresetId': 'string', 'SegmentDuration': 'string', 'Status': 'string', 'StatusDetail': 'string', 'Duration': 123, 'Width': 123, 'Height': 123, 'FrameRate': 'string', 'FileSize': 123, 'DurationMillis': 123, 'Watermarks': [ { 'PresetWatermarkId': 'string', 'InputKey': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], 'AlbumArt': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'Artwork': [ { 'InputKey': 'string', 'MaxWidth': 'string', 'MaxHeight': 'string', 'SizingPolicy': 'string', 'PaddingPolicy': 'string', 'AlbumArtFormat': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'Composition': [ { 'TimeSpan': { 'StartTime': 'string', 'Duration': 'string' } }, ], 'Captions': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'CaptionSources': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Language': 'string', 'TimeOffset': 'string', 'Label': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], 'CaptionFormats': [ { 'Format': 'string', 'Pattern': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'AppliedColorSpaceConversion': 'string' }, 'Outputs': [ { 'Id': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'ThumbnailPattern': 'string', 'ThumbnailEncryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'Rotate': 'string', 'PresetId': 'string', 'SegmentDuration': 'string', 'Status': 'string', 'StatusDetail': 'string', 'Duration': 123, 'Width': 123, 'Height': 123, 'FrameRate': 'string', 'FileSize': 123, 'DurationMillis': 123, 'Watermarks': [ { 'PresetWatermarkId': 'string', 'InputKey': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], 'AlbumArt': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'Artwork': [ { 'InputKey': 'string', 'MaxWidth': 'string', 'MaxHeight': 'string', 'SizingPolicy': 'string', 'PaddingPolicy': 'string', 'AlbumArtFormat': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'Composition': [ { 'TimeSpan': { 'StartTime': 'string', 'Duration': 'string' } }, ], 'Captions': { 'MergePolicy': 'string', 'CaptionSources': [ { 'Key': 'string', 'Language': 'string', 'TimeOffset': 'string', 'Label': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ], 'CaptionFormats': [ { 'Format': 'string', 'Pattern': 'string', 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' } }, ] }, 'Encryption': { 'Mode': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string' }, 'AppliedColorSpaceConversion': 'string' }, ], 'OutputKeyPrefix': 'string', 'Playlists': [ { 'Name': 'string', 'Format': 'string', 'OutputKeys': [ 'string', ], 'HlsContentProtection': { 'Method': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string', 'LicenseAcquisitionUrl': 'string', 'KeyStoragePolicy': 'string' }, 'PlayReadyDrm': { 'Format': 'string', 'Key': 'string', 'KeyMd5': 'string', 'KeyId': 'string', 'InitializationVector': 'string', 'LicenseAcquisitionUrl': 'string' }, 'Status': 'string', 'StatusDetail': 'string' }, ], 'Status': 'string', 'UserMetadata': { 'string': 'string' }, 'Timing': { 'SubmitTimeMillis': 123, 'StartTimeMillis': 123, 'FinishTimeMillis': 123 } } }
Response Structure
(dict) –
The CreateJobResponse structure.
Job (dict) –
A section of the response body that provides information about the job that is created.
Id (string) –
The identifier that Elastic Transcoder assigned to the job. You use this value to get settings for the job or to delete the job.
Arn (string) –
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) for the job.
PipelineId (string) –
The
Id
of the pipeline that you want Elastic Transcoder to use for transcoding. The pipeline determines several settings, including the Amazon S3 bucket from which Elastic Transcoder gets the files to transcode and the bucket into which Elastic Transcoder puts the transcoded files.Input (dict) –
A section of the request or response body that provides information about the file that is being transcoded.
Key (string) –
The name of the file to transcode. Elsewhere in the body of the JSON block is the the ID of the pipeline to use for processing the job. The
InputBucket
object in that pipeline tells Elastic Transcoder which Amazon S3 bucket to get the file from.If the file name includes a prefix, such as
cooking/lasagna.mpg
, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.FrameRate (string) –
The frame rate of the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the frame rate of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the frame rate for the input file, enter one of the following values:10
,15
,23.97
,24
,25
,29.97
,30
,60
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of the frame rate.Resolution (string) –
This value must be
auto
, which causes Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the resolution of the input file.AspectRatio (string) –
The aspect ratio of the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the aspect ratio of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the aspect ratio for the output file, enter one of the following values:1:1
,4:3
,3:2
,16:9
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of the aspect ratio.Interlaced (string) –
Whether the input file is interlaced. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect whether the input file is interlaced, specify
auto
. If you want to specify whether the input file is interlaced, enter one of the following values:true
,false
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of interlacing.Container (string) –
The container type for the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the container type of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the container type for the input file, enter one of the following values:3gp
,aac
,asf
,avi
,divx
,flv
,m4a
,mkv
,mov
,mp3
,mp4
,mpeg
,mpeg-ps
,mpeg-ts
,mxf
,ogg
,vob
,wav
,webm
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that are used for decrypting your input files. If your input file is encrypted, you must specify the mode that Elastic Transcoder uses to decrypt your file.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
TimeSpan (dict) –
Settings for clipping an input. Each input can have different clip settings.
StartTime (string) –
The place in the input file where you want a clip to start. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder starts at the beginning of the input file.
Duration (string) –
The duration of the clip. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder creates an output file from StartTime to the end of the file.
If you specify a value longer than the duration of the input file, Elastic Transcoder transcodes the file and returns a warning message.
InputCaptions (dict) –
You can configure Elastic Transcoder to transcode captions, or subtitles, from one format to another. All captions must be in UTF-8. Elastic Transcoder supports two types of captions:
Embedded: Embedded captions are included in the same file as the audio and video. Elastic Transcoder supports only one embedded caption per language, to a maximum of 300 embedded captions per file. Valid input values include:
CEA-608 (EIA-608
, first non-empty channel only),CEA-708 (EIA-708
, first non-empty channel only), andmov-text
Valid outputs include:mov-text
Elastic Transcoder supports a maximum of one embedded format per output.Sidecar: Sidecar captions are kept in a separate metadata file from the audio and video data. Sidecar captions require a player that is capable of understanding the relationship between the video file and the sidecar file. Elastic Transcoder supports only one sidecar caption per language, to a maximum of 20 sidecar captions per file. Valid input values include:
dfxp
(first div element only),ebu-tt
,scc
,smpt
,srt
,ttml
(first div element only), andwebvtt
Valid outputs include:dfxp
(first div element only),scc
,srt
, andwebvtt
.
If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
Elastic Transcoder does not support OCR (Optical Character Recognition), does not accept pictures as a valid input for captions, and is not available for audio-only transcoding. Elastic Transcoder does not preserve text formatting (for example, italics) during the transcoding process.
To remove captions or leave the captions empty, set
Captions
to null. To pass through existing captions unchanged, set theMergePolicy
toMergeRetain
, and pass in a nullCaptionSources
array.For more information on embedded files, see the Subtitles Wikipedia page.
For more information on sidecar files, see the Extensible Metadata Platform and Sidecar file Wikipedia pages.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple captions.
MergeOverride: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the sidecar captions and ignores the embedded captions for that language.
MergeRetain: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the embedded captions and ignores the sidecar captions for that language. If
CaptionSources
is empty, Elastic Transcoder omits all sidecar captions from the output files.Override: Elastic Transcoder transcodes only the sidecar captions that you specify in
CaptionSources
.
MergePolicy
cannot be null.CaptionSources (list) –
Source files for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process. To omit all sidecar captions, leave
CaptionSources
blank.(dict) –
A source file for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process.
Key (string) –
The name of the sidecar caption file that you want Elastic Transcoder to include in the output file.
Language (string) –
A string that specifies the language of the caption. If you specified multiple inputs with captions, the caption language must match in order to be included in the output. Specify this as one of:
2-character ISO 639-1 code
3-character ISO 639-2 code
For more information on ISO language codes and language names, see the List of ISO 639-1 codes.
TimeOffset (string) –
For clip generation or captions that do not start at the same time as the associated video file, the
TimeOffset
tells Elastic Transcoder how much of the video to encode before including captions.Specify the TimeOffset in the form [+-]SS.sss or [+-]HH:mm:SS.ss.
Label (string) –
The label of the caption shown in the player when choosing a language. We recommend that you put the caption language name here, in the language of the captions.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that Elastic Transcoder needs to decyrpt your caption sources, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption sources.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
DetectedProperties (dict) –
The detected properties of the input file.
Width (integer) –
The detected width of the input file, in pixels.
Height (integer) –
The detected height of the input file, in pixels.
FrameRate (string) –
The detected frame rate of the input file, in frames per second.
FileSize (integer) –
The detected file size of the input file, in bytes.
DurationMillis (integer) –
The detected duration of the input file, in milliseconds.
Inputs (list) –
Information about the files that you’re transcoding. If you specified multiple files for this job, Elastic Transcoder stitches the files together to make one output.
(dict) –
Information about the file that you’re transcoding.
Key (string) –
The name of the file to transcode. Elsewhere in the body of the JSON block is the the ID of the pipeline to use for processing the job. The
InputBucket
object in that pipeline tells Elastic Transcoder which Amazon S3 bucket to get the file from.If the file name includes a prefix, such as
cooking/lasagna.mpg
, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.FrameRate (string) –
The frame rate of the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the frame rate of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the frame rate for the input file, enter one of the following values:10
,15
,23.97
,24
,25
,29.97
,30
,60
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of the frame rate.Resolution (string) –
This value must be
auto
, which causes Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the resolution of the input file.AspectRatio (string) –
The aspect ratio of the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the aspect ratio of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the aspect ratio for the output file, enter one of the following values:1:1
,4:3
,3:2
,16:9
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of the aspect ratio.Interlaced (string) –
Whether the input file is interlaced. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect whether the input file is interlaced, specify
auto
. If you want to specify whether the input file is interlaced, enter one of the following values:true
,false
If you specify a value other than
auto
, Elastic Transcoder disables automatic detection of interlacing.Container (string) –
The container type for the input file. If you want Elastic Transcoder to automatically detect the container type of the input file, specify
auto
. If you want to specify the container type for the input file, enter one of the following values:3gp
,aac
,asf
,avi
,divx
,flv
,m4a
,mkv
,mov
,mp3
,mp4
,mpeg
,mpeg-ps
,mpeg-ts
,mxf
,ogg
,vob
,wav
,webm
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that are used for decrypting your input files. If your input file is encrypted, you must specify the mode that Elastic Transcoder uses to decrypt your file.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
TimeSpan (dict) –
Settings for clipping an input. Each input can have different clip settings.
StartTime (string) –
The place in the input file where you want a clip to start. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder starts at the beginning of the input file.
Duration (string) –
The duration of the clip. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder creates an output file from StartTime to the end of the file.
If you specify a value longer than the duration of the input file, Elastic Transcoder transcodes the file and returns a warning message.
InputCaptions (dict) –
You can configure Elastic Transcoder to transcode captions, or subtitles, from one format to another. All captions must be in UTF-8. Elastic Transcoder supports two types of captions:
Embedded: Embedded captions are included in the same file as the audio and video. Elastic Transcoder supports only one embedded caption per language, to a maximum of 300 embedded captions per file. Valid input values include:
CEA-608 (EIA-608
, first non-empty channel only),CEA-708 (EIA-708
, first non-empty channel only), andmov-text
Valid outputs include:mov-text
Elastic Transcoder supports a maximum of one embedded format per output.Sidecar: Sidecar captions are kept in a separate metadata file from the audio and video data. Sidecar captions require a player that is capable of understanding the relationship between the video file and the sidecar file. Elastic Transcoder supports only one sidecar caption per language, to a maximum of 20 sidecar captions per file. Valid input values include:
dfxp
(first div element only),ebu-tt
,scc
,smpt
,srt
,ttml
(first div element only), andwebvtt
Valid outputs include:dfxp
(first div element only),scc
,srt
, andwebvtt
.
If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
Elastic Transcoder does not support OCR (Optical Character Recognition), does not accept pictures as a valid input for captions, and is not available for audio-only transcoding. Elastic Transcoder does not preserve text formatting (for example, italics) during the transcoding process.
To remove captions or leave the captions empty, set
Captions
to null. To pass through existing captions unchanged, set theMergePolicy
toMergeRetain
, and pass in a nullCaptionSources
array.For more information on embedded files, see the Subtitles Wikipedia page.
For more information on sidecar files, see the Extensible Metadata Platform and Sidecar file Wikipedia pages.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple captions.
MergeOverride: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the sidecar captions and ignores the embedded captions for that language.
MergeRetain: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the embedded captions and ignores the sidecar captions for that language. If
CaptionSources
is empty, Elastic Transcoder omits all sidecar captions from the output files.Override: Elastic Transcoder transcodes only the sidecar captions that you specify in
CaptionSources
.
MergePolicy
cannot be null.CaptionSources (list) –
Source files for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process. To omit all sidecar captions, leave
CaptionSources
blank.(dict) –
A source file for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process.
Key (string) –
The name of the sidecar caption file that you want Elastic Transcoder to include in the output file.
Language (string) –
A string that specifies the language of the caption. If you specified multiple inputs with captions, the caption language must match in order to be included in the output. Specify this as one of:
2-character ISO 639-1 code
3-character ISO 639-2 code
For more information on ISO language codes and language names, see the List of ISO 639-1 codes.
TimeOffset (string) –
For clip generation or captions that do not start at the same time as the associated video file, the
TimeOffset
tells Elastic Transcoder how much of the video to encode before including captions.Specify the TimeOffset in the form [+-]SS.sss or [+-]HH:mm:SS.ss.
Label (string) –
The label of the caption shown in the player when choosing a language. We recommend that you put the caption language name here, in the language of the captions.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that Elastic Transcoder needs to decyrpt your caption sources, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption sources.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
DetectedProperties (dict) –
The detected properties of the input file.
Width (integer) –
The detected width of the input file, in pixels.
Height (integer) –
The detected height of the input file, in pixels.
FrameRate (string) –
The detected frame rate of the input file, in frames per second.
FileSize (integer) –
The detected file size of the input file, in bytes.
DurationMillis (integer) –
The detected duration of the input file, in milliseconds.
Output (dict) –
If you specified one output for a job, information about that output. If you specified multiple outputs for a job, the Output object lists information about the first output. This duplicates the information that is listed for the first output in the Outputs object.
Warning
Outputs recommended instead.
A section of the request or response body that provides information about the transcoded (target) file.
Id (string) –
A sequential counter, starting with 1, that identifies an output among the outputs from the current job. In the Output syntax, this value is always 1.
Key (string) –
The name to assign to the transcoded file. Elastic Transcoder saves the file in the Amazon S3 bucket specified by the
OutputBucket
object in the pipeline that is specified by the pipeline ID.ThumbnailPattern (string) –
Whether you want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails for your videos and, if so, how you want Elastic Transcoder to name the files.
If you don’t want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails, specify “”.
If you do want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails, specify the information that you want to include in the file name for each thumbnail. You can specify the following values in any sequence:
{count}
(Required): If you want to create thumbnails, you must include{count}
in theThumbnailPattern
object. Wherever you specify{count}
, Elastic Transcoder adds a five-digit sequence number (beginning with 00001) to thumbnail file names. The number indicates where a given thumbnail appears in the sequence of thumbnails for a transcoded file.
Warning
If you specify a literal value and/or
{resolution}
but you omit{count}
, Elastic Transcoder returns a validation error and does not create the job.Literal values (Optional): You can specify literal values anywhere in the
ThumbnailPattern
object. For example, you can include them as a file name prefix or as a delimiter between{resolution}
and{count}
.{resolution}
(Optional): If you want Elastic Transcoder to include the resolution in the file name, include{resolution}
in theThumbnailPattern
object.
When creating thumbnails, Elastic Transcoder automatically saves the files in the format (.jpg or .png) that appears in the preset that you specified in the
PresetID
value ofCreateJobOutput
. Elastic Transcoder also appends the applicable file name extension.ThumbnailEncryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your thumbnail.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Rotate (string) –
The number of degrees clockwise by which you want Elastic Transcoder to rotate the output relative to the input. Enter one of the following values:
auto
,0
,90
,180
,270
The value
auto
generally works only if the file that you’re transcoding contains rotation metadata.PresetId (string) –
The value of the
Id
object for the preset that you want to use for this job. The preset determines the audio, video, and thumbnail settings that Elastic Transcoder uses for transcoding. To use a preset that you created, specify the preset ID that Elastic Transcoder returned in the response when you created the preset. You can also use the Elastic Transcoder system presets, which you can get withListPresets
.SegmentDuration (string) –
Warning
(Outputs in Fragmented MP4 or MPEG-TS format only.
If you specify a preset in
PresetId
for which the value ofContainer
isfmp4
(Fragmented MP4) orts
(MPEG-TS),SegmentDuration
is the target maximum duration of each segment in seconds. ForHLSv3
format playlists, each media segment is stored in a separate.ts
file. ForHLSv4
,MPEG-DASH
, andSmooth
playlists, all media segments for an output are stored in a single file. Each segment is approximately the length of theSegmentDuration
, though individual segments might be shorter or longer.The range of valid values is 1 to 60 seconds. If the duration of the video is not evenly divisible by
SegmentDuration
, the duration of the last segment is the remainder of total length/SegmentDuration.Elastic Transcoder creates an output-specific playlist for each output
HLS
output that you specify in OutputKeys. To add an output to the master playlist for this job, include it in theOutputKeys
of the associated playlist.Status (string) –
The status of one output in a job. If you specified only one output for the job,
Outputs:Status
is always the same asJob:Status
. If you specified more than one output:Job:Status
andOutputs:Status
for all of the outputs is Submitted until Elastic Transcoder starts to process the first output.When Elastic Transcoder starts to process the first output,
Outputs:Status
for that output andJob:Status
both change to Progressing. For each output, the value ofOutputs:Status
remains Submitted until Elastic Transcoder starts to process the output.Job:Status remains Progressing until all of the outputs reach a terminal status, either Complete or Error.
When all of the outputs reach a terminal status,
Job:Status
changes to Complete only ifOutputs:Status
for all of the outputs isComplete
. IfOutputs:Status
for one or more outputs isError
, the terminal status forJob:Status
is alsoError
.
The value of
Status
is one of the following:Submitted
,Progressing
,Complete
,Canceled
, orError
.StatusDetail (string) –
Information that further explains
Status
.Duration (integer) –
Duration of the output file, in seconds.
Width (integer) –
Specifies the width of the output file in pixels.
Height (integer) –
Height of the output file, in pixels.
FrameRate (string) –
Frame rate of the output file, in frames per second.
FileSize (integer) –
File size of the output file, in bytes.
DurationMillis (integer) –
Duration of the output file, in milliseconds.
Watermarks (list) –
Information about the watermarks that you want Elastic Transcoder to add to the video during transcoding. You can specify up to four watermarks for each output. Settings for each watermark must be defined in the preset that you specify in
Preset
for the current output.Watermarks are added to the output video in the sequence in which you list them in the job output—the first watermark in the list is added to the output video first, the second watermark in the list is added next, and so on. As a result, if the settings in a preset cause Elastic Transcoder to place all watermarks in the same location, the second watermark that you add covers the first one, the third one covers the second, and the fourth one covers the third.
(dict) –
Watermarks can be in .png or .jpg format. If you want to display a watermark that is not rectangular, use the .png format, which supports transparency.
PresetWatermarkId (string) –
The ID of the watermark settings that Elastic Transcoder uses to add watermarks to the video during transcoding. The settings are in the preset specified by Preset for the current output. In that preset, the value of Watermarks Id tells Elastic Transcoder which settings to use.
InputKey (string) –
The name of the .png or .jpg file that you want to use for the watermark. To determine which Amazon S3 bucket contains the specified file, Elastic Transcoder checks the pipeline specified by
Pipeline
; theInput Bucket
object in that pipeline identifies the bucket.If the file name includes a prefix, for example, logos/128x64.png, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your watermarks.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
AlbumArt (dict) –
The album art to be associated with the output file, if any.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple album artwork files.
Replace:
The specified album art replaces any existing album art.Prepend:
The specified album art is placed in front of any existing album art.Append:
The specified album art is placed after any existing album art.Fallback:
If the original input file contains artwork, Elastic Transcoder uses that artwork for the output. If the original input does not contain artwork, Elastic Transcoder uses the specified album art file.
Artwork (list) –
The file to be used as album art. There can be multiple artworks associated with an audio file, to a maximum of 20. Valid formats are
.jpg
and.png
(dict) –
The file to be used as album art. There can be multiple artworks associated with an audio file, to a maximum of 20.
To remove artwork or leave the artwork empty, you can either set
Artwork
to null, or set theMerge Policy
to “Replace” and use an emptyArtwork
array.To pass through existing artwork unchanged, set the
Merge Policy
to “Prepend”, “Append”, or “Fallback”, and use an emptyArtwork
array.InputKey (string) –
The name of the file to be used as album art. To determine which Amazon S3 bucket contains the specified file, Elastic Transcoder checks the pipeline specified by
PipelineId
; theInputBucket
object in that pipeline identifies the bucket.If the file name includes a prefix, for example,
cooking/pie.jpg
, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.MaxWidth (string) –
The maximum width of the output album art in pixels. If you specify
auto
, Elastic Transcoder uses 600 as the default value. If you specify a numeric value, enter an even integer between 32 and 4096, inclusive.MaxHeight (string) –
The maximum height of the output album art in pixels. If you specify
auto
, Elastic Transcoder uses 600 as the default value. If you specify a numeric value, enter an even integer between 32 and 3072, inclusive.SizingPolicy (string) –
Specify one of the following values to control scaling of the output album art:
Fit:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art so it matches the value that you specified in eitherMaxWidth
orMaxHeight
without exceeding the other value.Fill:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art so it matches the value that you specified in eitherMaxWidth
orMaxHeight
and matches or exceeds the other value. Elastic Transcoder centers the output art and then crops it in the dimension (if any) that exceeds the maximum value.Stretch:
Elastic Transcoder stretches the output art to match the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
. If the relative proportions of the input art and the output art are different, the output art will be distorted.Keep:
Elastic Transcoder does not scale the output art. If either dimension of the input art exceeds the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
, Elastic Transcoder crops the output art.ShrinkToFit:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art down so that its dimensions match the values that you specified for at least one ofMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
without exceeding either value. If you specify this option, Elastic Transcoder does not scale the art up.ShrinkToFill
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art down so that its dimensions match the values that you specified for at least one ofMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
without dropping below either value. If you specify this option, Elastic Transcoder does not scale the art up.
PaddingPolicy (string) –
When you set
PaddingPolicy
toPad
, Elastic Transcoder may add white bars to the top and bottom and/or left and right sides of the output album art to make the total size of the output art match the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
.AlbumArtFormat (string) –
The format of album art, if any. Valid formats are
.jpg
and.png
.Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your artwork.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Composition (list) –
You can create an output file that contains an excerpt from the input file. This excerpt, called a clip, can come from the beginning, middle, or end of the file. The Composition object contains settings for the clips that make up an output file. For the current release, you can only specify settings for a single clip per output file. The Composition object cannot be null.
(dict) –
Settings for one clip in a composition. All jobs in a playlist must have the same clip settings.
TimeSpan (dict) –
Settings that determine when a clip begins and how long it lasts.
StartTime (string) –
The place in the input file where you want a clip to start. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder starts at the beginning of the input file.
Duration (string) –
The duration of the clip. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder creates an output file from StartTime to the end of the file.
If you specify a value longer than the duration of the input file, Elastic Transcoder transcodes the file and returns a warning message.
Captions (dict) –
You can configure Elastic Transcoder to transcode captions, or subtitles, from one format to another. All captions must be in UTF-8. Elastic Transcoder supports two types of captions:
Embedded: Embedded captions are included in the same file as the audio and video. Elastic Transcoder supports only one embedded caption per language, to a maximum of 300 embedded captions per file. Valid input values include:
CEA-608 (EIA-608
, first non-empty channel only),CEA-708 (EIA-708
, first non-empty channel only), andmov-text
Valid outputs include:mov-text
Elastic Transcoder supports a maximum of one embedded format per output.Sidecar: Sidecar captions are kept in a separate metadata file from the audio and video data. Sidecar captions require a player that is capable of understanding the relationship between the video file and the sidecar file. Elastic Transcoder supports only one sidecar caption per language, to a maximum of 20 sidecar captions per file. Valid input values include:
dfxp
(first div element only),ebu-tt
,scc
,smpt
,srt
,ttml
(first div element only), andwebvtt
Valid outputs include:dfxp
(first div element only),scc
,srt
, andwebvtt
.
If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
Elastic Transcoder does not support OCR (Optical Character Recognition), does not accept pictures as a valid input for captions, and is not available for audio-only transcoding. Elastic Transcoder does not preserve text formatting (for example, italics) during the transcoding process.
To remove captions or leave the captions empty, set
Captions
to null. To pass through existing captions unchanged, set theMergePolicy
toMergeRetain
, and pass in a nullCaptionSources
array.For more information on embedded files, see the Subtitles Wikipedia page.
For more information on sidecar files, see the Extensible Metadata Platform and Sidecar file Wikipedia pages.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple captions.
MergeOverride: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the sidecar captions and ignores the embedded captions for that language.
MergeRetain: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the embedded captions and ignores the sidecar captions for that language. If
CaptionSources
is empty, Elastic Transcoder omits all sidecar captions from the output files.Override: Elastic Transcoder transcodes only the sidecar captions that you specify in
CaptionSources
.
MergePolicy
cannot be null.CaptionSources (list) –
Source files for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process. To omit all sidecar captions, leave
CaptionSources
blank.(dict) –
A source file for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process.
Key (string) –
The name of the sidecar caption file that you want Elastic Transcoder to include in the output file.
Language (string) –
A string that specifies the language of the caption. If you specified multiple inputs with captions, the caption language must match in order to be included in the output. Specify this as one of:
2-character ISO 639-1 code
3-character ISO 639-2 code
For more information on ISO language codes and language names, see the List of ISO 639-1 codes.
TimeOffset (string) –
For clip generation or captions that do not start at the same time as the associated video file, the
TimeOffset
tells Elastic Transcoder how much of the video to encode before including captions.Specify the TimeOffset in the form [+-]SS.sss or [+-]HH:mm:SS.ss.
Label (string) –
The label of the caption shown in the player when choosing a language. We recommend that you put the caption language name here, in the language of the captions.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that Elastic Transcoder needs to decyrpt your caption sources, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption sources.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
CaptionFormats (list) –
The array of file formats for the output captions. If you leave this value blank, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
(dict) –
The file format of the output captions. If you leave this value blank, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
Format (string) –
The format you specify determines whether Elastic Transcoder generates an embedded or sidecar caption for this output.
Valid Embedded Caption Formats:
for FLAC: None
For MP3: None
For MP4: mov-text
For MPEG-TS: None
For ogg: None
For webm: None
Valid Sidecar Caption Formats: Elastic Transcoder supports dfxp (first div element only), scc, srt, and webvtt. If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
For FMP4: dfxp
Non-FMP4 outputs: All sidecar types
fmp4
captions have an extension of.ismt
Pattern (string) –
The prefix for caption filenames, in the form description-
{language}
, where:description is a description of the video.
{language}
is a literal value that Elastic Transcoder replaces with the two- or three-letter code for the language of the caption in the output file names.
If you don’t include
{language}
in the file name pattern, Elastic Transcoder automatically appends “{language}
” to the value that you specify for the description. In addition, Elastic Transcoder automatically appends the count to the end of the segment files.For example, suppose you’re transcoding into srt format. When you enter “Sydney-{language}-sunrise”, and the language of the captions is English (en), the name of the first caption file is be Sydney-en-sunrise00000.srt.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption formats.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your output files. If you choose to use encryption, you must specify a mode to use. If you choose not to use encryption, Elastic Transcoder writes an unencrypted file to your Amazon S3 bucket.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
AppliedColorSpaceConversion (string) –
If Elastic Transcoder used a preset with a
ColorSpaceConversionMode
to transcode the output file, theAppliedColorSpaceConversion
parameter shows the conversion used. If noColorSpaceConversionMode
was defined in the preset, this parameter is not be included in the job response.
Outputs (list) –
Information about the output files. We recommend that you use the
Outputs
syntax for all jobs, even when you want Elastic Transcoder to transcode a file into only one format. Do not use both theOutputs
andOutput
syntaxes in the same request. You can create a maximum of 30 outputs per job.If you specify more than one output for a job, Elastic Transcoder creates the files for each output in the order in which you specify them in the job.
(dict) –
Warning
Outputs recommended instead.
If you specified one output for a job, information about that output. If you specified multiple outputs for a job, the
Output
object lists information about the first output. This duplicates the information that is listed for the first output in theOutputs
object.Id (string) –
A sequential counter, starting with 1, that identifies an output among the outputs from the current job. In the Output syntax, this value is always 1.
Key (string) –
The name to assign to the transcoded file. Elastic Transcoder saves the file in the Amazon S3 bucket specified by the
OutputBucket
object in the pipeline that is specified by the pipeline ID.ThumbnailPattern (string) –
Whether you want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails for your videos and, if so, how you want Elastic Transcoder to name the files.
If you don’t want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails, specify “”.
If you do want Elastic Transcoder to create thumbnails, specify the information that you want to include in the file name for each thumbnail. You can specify the following values in any sequence:
{count}
(Required): If you want to create thumbnails, you must include{count}
in theThumbnailPattern
object. Wherever you specify{count}
, Elastic Transcoder adds a five-digit sequence number (beginning with 00001) to thumbnail file names. The number indicates where a given thumbnail appears in the sequence of thumbnails for a transcoded file.
Warning
If you specify a literal value and/or
{resolution}
but you omit{count}
, Elastic Transcoder returns a validation error and does not create the job.Literal values (Optional): You can specify literal values anywhere in the
ThumbnailPattern
object. For example, you can include them as a file name prefix or as a delimiter between{resolution}
and{count}
.{resolution}
(Optional): If you want Elastic Transcoder to include the resolution in the file name, include{resolution}
in theThumbnailPattern
object.
When creating thumbnails, Elastic Transcoder automatically saves the files in the format (.jpg or .png) that appears in the preset that you specified in the
PresetID
value ofCreateJobOutput
. Elastic Transcoder also appends the applicable file name extension.ThumbnailEncryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your thumbnail.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Rotate (string) –
The number of degrees clockwise by which you want Elastic Transcoder to rotate the output relative to the input. Enter one of the following values:
auto
,0
,90
,180
,270
The value
auto
generally works only if the file that you’re transcoding contains rotation metadata.PresetId (string) –
The value of the
Id
object for the preset that you want to use for this job. The preset determines the audio, video, and thumbnail settings that Elastic Transcoder uses for transcoding. To use a preset that you created, specify the preset ID that Elastic Transcoder returned in the response when you created the preset. You can also use the Elastic Transcoder system presets, which you can get withListPresets
.SegmentDuration (string) –
Warning
(Outputs in Fragmented MP4 or MPEG-TS format only.
If you specify a preset in
PresetId
for which the value ofContainer
isfmp4
(Fragmented MP4) orts
(MPEG-TS),SegmentDuration
is the target maximum duration of each segment in seconds. ForHLSv3
format playlists, each media segment is stored in a separate.ts
file. ForHLSv4
,MPEG-DASH
, andSmooth
playlists, all media segments for an output are stored in a single file. Each segment is approximately the length of theSegmentDuration
, though individual segments might be shorter or longer.The range of valid values is 1 to 60 seconds. If the duration of the video is not evenly divisible by
SegmentDuration
, the duration of the last segment is the remainder of total length/SegmentDuration.Elastic Transcoder creates an output-specific playlist for each output
HLS
output that you specify in OutputKeys. To add an output to the master playlist for this job, include it in theOutputKeys
of the associated playlist.Status (string) –
The status of one output in a job. If you specified only one output for the job,
Outputs:Status
is always the same asJob:Status
. If you specified more than one output:Job:Status
andOutputs:Status
for all of the outputs is Submitted until Elastic Transcoder starts to process the first output.When Elastic Transcoder starts to process the first output,
Outputs:Status
for that output andJob:Status
both change to Progressing. For each output, the value ofOutputs:Status
remains Submitted until Elastic Transcoder starts to process the output.Job:Status remains Progressing until all of the outputs reach a terminal status, either Complete or Error.
When all of the outputs reach a terminal status,
Job:Status
changes to Complete only ifOutputs:Status
for all of the outputs isComplete
. IfOutputs:Status
for one or more outputs isError
, the terminal status forJob:Status
is alsoError
.
The value of
Status
is one of the following:Submitted
,Progressing
,Complete
,Canceled
, orError
.StatusDetail (string) –
Information that further explains
Status
.Duration (integer) –
Duration of the output file, in seconds.
Width (integer) –
Specifies the width of the output file in pixels.
Height (integer) –
Height of the output file, in pixels.
FrameRate (string) –
Frame rate of the output file, in frames per second.
FileSize (integer) –
File size of the output file, in bytes.
DurationMillis (integer) –
Duration of the output file, in milliseconds.
Watermarks (list) –
Information about the watermarks that you want Elastic Transcoder to add to the video during transcoding. You can specify up to four watermarks for each output. Settings for each watermark must be defined in the preset that you specify in
Preset
for the current output.Watermarks are added to the output video in the sequence in which you list them in the job output—the first watermark in the list is added to the output video first, the second watermark in the list is added next, and so on. As a result, if the settings in a preset cause Elastic Transcoder to place all watermarks in the same location, the second watermark that you add covers the first one, the third one covers the second, and the fourth one covers the third.
(dict) –
Watermarks can be in .png or .jpg format. If you want to display a watermark that is not rectangular, use the .png format, which supports transparency.
PresetWatermarkId (string) –
The ID of the watermark settings that Elastic Transcoder uses to add watermarks to the video during transcoding. The settings are in the preset specified by Preset for the current output. In that preset, the value of Watermarks Id tells Elastic Transcoder which settings to use.
InputKey (string) –
The name of the .png or .jpg file that you want to use for the watermark. To determine which Amazon S3 bucket contains the specified file, Elastic Transcoder checks the pipeline specified by
Pipeline
; theInput Bucket
object in that pipeline identifies the bucket.If the file name includes a prefix, for example, logos/128x64.png, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your watermarks.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
AlbumArt (dict) –
The album art to be associated with the output file, if any.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple album artwork files.
Replace:
The specified album art replaces any existing album art.Prepend:
The specified album art is placed in front of any existing album art.Append:
The specified album art is placed after any existing album art.Fallback:
If the original input file contains artwork, Elastic Transcoder uses that artwork for the output. If the original input does not contain artwork, Elastic Transcoder uses the specified album art file.
Artwork (list) –
The file to be used as album art. There can be multiple artworks associated with an audio file, to a maximum of 20. Valid formats are
.jpg
and.png
(dict) –
The file to be used as album art. There can be multiple artworks associated with an audio file, to a maximum of 20.
To remove artwork or leave the artwork empty, you can either set
Artwork
to null, or set theMerge Policy
to “Replace” and use an emptyArtwork
array.To pass through existing artwork unchanged, set the
Merge Policy
to “Prepend”, “Append”, or “Fallback”, and use an emptyArtwork
array.InputKey (string) –
The name of the file to be used as album art. To determine which Amazon S3 bucket contains the specified file, Elastic Transcoder checks the pipeline specified by
PipelineId
; theInputBucket
object in that pipeline identifies the bucket.If the file name includes a prefix, for example,
cooking/pie.jpg
, include the prefix in the key. If the file isn’t in the specified bucket, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.MaxWidth (string) –
The maximum width of the output album art in pixels. If you specify
auto
, Elastic Transcoder uses 600 as the default value. If you specify a numeric value, enter an even integer between 32 and 4096, inclusive.MaxHeight (string) –
The maximum height of the output album art in pixels. If you specify
auto
, Elastic Transcoder uses 600 as the default value. If you specify a numeric value, enter an even integer between 32 and 3072, inclusive.SizingPolicy (string) –
Specify one of the following values to control scaling of the output album art:
Fit:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art so it matches the value that you specified in eitherMaxWidth
orMaxHeight
without exceeding the other value.Fill:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art so it matches the value that you specified in eitherMaxWidth
orMaxHeight
and matches or exceeds the other value. Elastic Transcoder centers the output art and then crops it in the dimension (if any) that exceeds the maximum value.Stretch:
Elastic Transcoder stretches the output art to match the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
. If the relative proportions of the input art and the output art are different, the output art will be distorted.Keep:
Elastic Transcoder does not scale the output art. If either dimension of the input art exceeds the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
, Elastic Transcoder crops the output art.ShrinkToFit:
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art down so that its dimensions match the values that you specified for at least one ofMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
without exceeding either value. If you specify this option, Elastic Transcoder does not scale the art up.ShrinkToFill
Elastic Transcoder scales the output art down so that its dimensions match the values that you specified for at least one ofMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
without dropping below either value. If you specify this option, Elastic Transcoder does not scale the art up.
PaddingPolicy (string) –
When you set
PaddingPolicy
toPad
, Elastic Transcoder may add white bars to the top and bottom and/or left and right sides of the output album art to make the total size of the output art match the values that you specified forMaxWidth
andMaxHeight
.AlbumArtFormat (string) –
The format of album art, if any. Valid formats are
.jpg
and.png
.Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your artwork.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Composition (list) –
You can create an output file that contains an excerpt from the input file. This excerpt, called a clip, can come from the beginning, middle, or end of the file. The Composition object contains settings for the clips that make up an output file. For the current release, you can only specify settings for a single clip per output file. The Composition object cannot be null.
(dict) –
Settings for one clip in a composition. All jobs in a playlist must have the same clip settings.
TimeSpan (dict) –
Settings that determine when a clip begins and how long it lasts.
StartTime (string) –
The place in the input file where you want a clip to start. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder starts at the beginning of the input file.
Duration (string) –
The duration of the clip. The format can be either HH:mm:ss.SSS (maximum value: 23:59:59.999; SSS is thousandths of a second) or sssss.SSS (maximum value: 86399.999). If you don’t specify a value, Elastic Transcoder creates an output file from StartTime to the end of the file.
If you specify a value longer than the duration of the input file, Elastic Transcoder transcodes the file and returns a warning message.
Captions (dict) –
You can configure Elastic Transcoder to transcode captions, or subtitles, from one format to another. All captions must be in UTF-8. Elastic Transcoder supports two types of captions:
Embedded: Embedded captions are included in the same file as the audio and video. Elastic Transcoder supports only one embedded caption per language, to a maximum of 300 embedded captions per file. Valid input values include:
CEA-608 (EIA-608
, first non-empty channel only),CEA-708 (EIA-708
, first non-empty channel only), andmov-text
Valid outputs include:mov-text
Elastic Transcoder supports a maximum of one embedded format per output.Sidecar: Sidecar captions are kept in a separate metadata file from the audio and video data. Sidecar captions require a player that is capable of understanding the relationship between the video file and the sidecar file. Elastic Transcoder supports only one sidecar caption per language, to a maximum of 20 sidecar captions per file. Valid input values include:
dfxp
(first div element only),ebu-tt
,scc
,smpt
,srt
,ttml
(first div element only), andwebvtt
Valid outputs include:dfxp
(first div element only),scc
,srt
, andwebvtt
.
If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
Elastic Transcoder does not support OCR (Optical Character Recognition), does not accept pictures as a valid input for captions, and is not available for audio-only transcoding. Elastic Transcoder does not preserve text formatting (for example, italics) during the transcoding process.
To remove captions or leave the captions empty, set
Captions
to null. To pass through existing captions unchanged, set theMergePolicy
toMergeRetain
, and pass in a nullCaptionSources
array.For more information on embedded files, see the Subtitles Wikipedia page.
For more information on sidecar files, see the Extensible Metadata Platform and Sidecar file Wikipedia pages.
MergePolicy (string) –
A policy that determines how Elastic Transcoder handles the existence of multiple captions.
MergeOverride: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the sidecar captions and ignores the embedded captions for that language.
MergeRetain: Elastic Transcoder transcodes both embedded and sidecar captions into outputs. If captions for a language are embedded in the input file and also appear in a sidecar file, Elastic Transcoder uses the embedded captions and ignores the sidecar captions for that language. If
CaptionSources
is empty, Elastic Transcoder omits all sidecar captions from the output files.Override: Elastic Transcoder transcodes only the sidecar captions that you specify in
CaptionSources
.
MergePolicy
cannot be null.CaptionSources (list) –
Source files for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process. To omit all sidecar captions, leave
CaptionSources
blank.(dict) –
A source file for the input sidecar captions used during the transcoding process.
Key (string) –
The name of the sidecar caption file that you want Elastic Transcoder to include in the output file.
Language (string) –
A string that specifies the language of the caption. If you specified multiple inputs with captions, the caption language must match in order to be included in the output. Specify this as one of:
2-character ISO 639-1 code
3-character ISO 639-2 code
For more information on ISO language codes and language names, see the List of ISO 639-1 codes.
TimeOffset (string) –
For clip generation or captions that do not start at the same time as the associated video file, the
TimeOffset
tells Elastic Transcoder how much of the video to encode before including captions.Specify the TimeOffset in the form [+-]SS.sss or [+-]HH:mm:SS.ss.
Label (string) –
The label of the caption shown in the player when choosing a language. We recommend that you put the caption language name here, in the language of the captions.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that Elastic Transcoder needs to decyrpt your caption sources, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption sources.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
CaptionFormats (list) –
The array of file formats for the output captions. If you leave this value blank, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
(dict) –
The file format of the output captions. If you leave this value blank, Elastic Transcoder returns an error.
Format (string) –
The format you specify determines whether Elastic Transcoder generates an embedded or sidecar caption for this output.
Valid Embedded Caption Formats:
for FLAC: None
For MP3: None
For MP4: mov-text
For MPEG-TS: None
For ogg: None
For webm: None
Valid Sidecar Caption Formats: Elastic Transcoder supports dfxp (first div element only), scc, srt, and webvtt. If you want ttml or smpte-tt compatible captions, specify dfxp as your output format.
For FMP4: dfxp
Non-FMP4 outputs: All sidecar types
fmp4
captions have an extension of.ismt
Pattern (string) –
The prefix for caption filenames, in the form description-
{language}
, where:description is a description of the video.
{language}
is a literal value that Elastic Transcoder replaces with the two- or three-letter code for the language of the caption in the output file names.
If you don’t include
{language}
in the file name pattern, Elastic Transcoder automatically appends “{language}
” to the value that you specify for the description. In addition, Elastic Transcoder automatically appends the count to the end of the segment files.For example, suppose you’re transcoding into srt format. When you enter “Sydney-{language}-sunrise”, and the language of the captions is English (en), the name of the first caption file is be Sydney-en-sunrise00000.srt.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your caption formats.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
Encryption (dict) –
The encryption settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to your output files. If you choose to use encryption, you must specify a mode to use. If you choose not to use encryption, Elastic Transcoder writes an unencrypted file to your Amazon S3 bucket.
Mode (string) –
The specific server-side encryption mode that you want Elastic Transcoder to use when decrypting your input files or encrypting your output files. Elastic Transcoder supports the following options:
s3: Amazon S3 creates and manages the keys used for encrypting your files.
s3-aws-kms: Amazon S3 calls the Amazon Key Management Service, which creates and manages the keys that are used for encrypting your files. If you specify
s3-aws-kms
and you don’t want to use the default key, you must add the AWS-KMS key that you want to use to your pipeline.aes-cbc-pkcs7: A padded cipher-block mode of operation originally used for HLS files.
aes-ctr: AES Counter Mode.
aes-gcm: AES Galois Counter Mode, a mode of operation that is an authenticated encryption format, meaning that a file, key, or initialization vector that has been tampered with fails the decryption process.
For all three AES options, you must provide the following settings, which must be base64-encoded:
Key
Key MD5
Initialization Vector
Warning
For the AES modes, your private encryption keys and your unencrypted data are never stored by AWS; therefore, it is important that you safely manage your encryption keys. If you lose them, you won’t be able to unencrypt your data.
Key (string) –
The data encryption key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, or that was used to encrypt your input file. The key must be base64-encoded and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using the Amazon Key Management Service.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key that you used to encrypt your input file, or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file. Elastic Transcoder uses the key digest as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you used to encrypt your input files or that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes long before being base64-encoded.
AppliedColorSpaceConversion (string) –
If Elastic Transcoder used a preset with a
ColorSpaceConversionMode
to transcode the output file, theAppliedColorSpaceConversion
parameter shows the conversion used. If noColorSpaceConversionMode
was defined in the preset, this parameter is not be included in the job response.
OutputKeyPrefix (string) –
The value, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to prepend to the names of all files that this job creates, including output files, thumbnails, and playlists. We recommend that you add a / or some other delimiter to the end of the
OutputKeyPrefix
.Playlists (list) –
Warning
Outputs in Fragmented MP4 or MPEG-TS format only.
If you specify a preset in
PresetId
for which the value ofContainer
is fmp4 (Fragmented MP4) or ts (MPEG-TS),Playlists
contains information about the master playlists that you want Elastic Transcoder to create.The maximum number of master playlists in a job is 30.
(dict) –
Use Only for Fragmented MP4 or MPEG-TS Outputs. If you specify a preset for which the value of Container is
fmp4
(Fragmented MP4) orts
(MPEG-TS), Playlists contains information about the master playlists that you want Elastic Transcoder to create. We recommend that you create only one master playlist per output format. The maximum number of master playlists in a job is 30.Name (string) –
The name that you want Elastic Transcoder to assign to the master playlist, for example, nyc-vacation.m3u8. If the name includes a
/
character, the section of the name before the last/
must be identical for allName
objects. If you create more than one master playlist, the values of allName
objects must be unique.Note
Elastic Transcoder automatically appends the relevant file extension to the file name (
.m3u8
forHLSv3
andHLSv4
playlists, and.ism
and.ismc
forSmooth
playlists). If you include a file extension inName
, the file name will have two extensions.Format (string) –
The format of the output playlist. Valid formats include
HLSv3
,HLSv4
, andSmooth
.OutputKeys (list) –
For each output in this job that you want to include in a master playlist, the value of the Outputs:Key object.
If your output is not
HLS
or does not have a segment duration set, the name of the output file is a concatenation ofOutputKeyPrefix
andOutputs:Key
: OutputKeyPrefixOutputs:Key
If your output is
HLSv3
and has a segment duration set, or is not included in a playlist, Elastic Transcoder creates an output playlist file with a file extension of.m3u8
, and a series of.ts
files that include a five-digit sequential counter beginning with 00000: OutputKeyPrefixOutputs:Key
.m3u8 OutputKeyPrefix ``Outputs:Key``00000.tsIf your output is
HLSv4
, has a segment duration set, and is included in anHLSv4
playlist, Elastic Transcoder creates an output playlist file with a file extension of_v4.m3u8
. If the output is video, Elastic Transcoder also creates an output file with an extension of_iframe.m3u8
: OutputKeyPrefixOutputs:Key``_v4.m3u8 OutputKeyPrefix ``Outputs:Key``_iframe.m3u8 OutputKeyPrefix ``Outputs:Key
.ts
Elastic Transcoder automatically appends the relevant file extension to the file name. If you include a file extension in Output Key, the file name will have two extensions.
If you include more than one output in a playlist, any segment duration settings, clip settings, or caption settings must be the same for all outputs in the playlist. For
Smooth
playlists, theAudio:Profile
,Video:Profile
, andVideo:FrameRate
toVideo:KeyframesMaxDist
ratio must be the same for all outputs.(string) –
HlsContentProtection (dict) –
The HLS content protection settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to the output files associated with this playlist.
Method (string) –
The content protection method for your output. The only valid value is:
aes-128
.This value is written into the method attribute of the
EXT-X-KEY
metadata tag in the output playlist.Key (string) –
If you want Elastic Transcoder to generate a key for you, leave this field blank.
If you choose to supply your own key, you must encrypt the key by using AWS KMS. The key must be base64-encoded, and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.KeyMd5 (string) –
If Elastic Transcoder is generating your key for you, you must leave this field blank.
The MD5 digest of the key that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output file, and that you want Elastic Transcoder to use as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes before being base64- encoded.
InitializationVector (string) –
If Elastic Transcoder is generating your key for you, you must leave this field blank.
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your output files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes before being base64-encoded.
LicenseAcquisitionUrl (string) –
The location of the license key required to decrypt your HLS playlist. The URL must be an absolute path, and is referenced in the URI attribute of the EXT-X-KEY metadata tag in the playlist file.
KeyStoragePolicy (string) –
Specify whether you want Elastic Transcoder to write your HLS license key to an Amazon S3 bucket. If you choose
WithVariantPlaylists
,LicenseAcquisitionUrl
must be left blank and Elastic Transcoder writes your data key into the same bucket as the associated playlist.
PlayReadyDrm (dict) –
The DRM settings, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to the output files associated with this playlist.
Format (string) –
The type of DRM, if any, that you want Elastic Transcoder to apply to the output files associated with this playlist.
Key (string) –
The DRM key for your file, provided by your DRM license provider. The key must be base64-encoded, and it must be one of the following bit lengths before being base64-encoded:
128
,192
, or256
.The key must also be encrypted by using AWS KMS.
KeyMd5 (string) –
The MD5 digest of the key used for DRM on your file, and that you want Elastic Transcoder to use as a checksum to make sure your key was not corrupted in transit. The key MD5 must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 16 bytes before being base64-encoded.
KeyId (string) –
The ID for your DRM key, so that your DRM license provider knows which key to provide.
The key ID must be provided in big endian, and Elastic Transcoder converts it to little endian before inserting it into the PlayReady DRM headers. If you are unsure whether your license server provides your key ID in big or little endian, check with your DRM provider.
InitializationVector (string) –
The series of random bits created by a random bit generator, unique for every encryption operation, that you want Elastic Transcoder to use to encrypt your files. The initialization vector must be base64-encoded, and it must be exactly 8 bytes long before being base64-encoded. If no initialization vector is provided, Elastic Transcoder generates one for you.
LicenseAcquisitionUrl (string) –
The location of the license key required to play DRM content. The URL must be an absolute path, and is referenced by the PlayReady header. The PlayReady header is referenced in the protection header of the client manifest for Smooth Streaming outputs, and in the EXT-X-DXDRM and EXT-XDXDRMINFO metadata tags for HLS playlist outputs. An example URL looks like this:
https://www.example.com/exampleKey/
Status (string) –
The status of the job with which the playlist is associated.
StatusDetail (string) –
Information that further explains the status.
Status (string) –
The status of the job:
Submitted
,Progressing
,Complete
,Canceled
, orError
.UserMetadata (dict) –
User-defined metadata that you want to associate with an Elastic Transcoder job. You specify metadata in
key/value
pairs, and you can add up to 10key/value
pairs per job. Elastic Transcoder does not guarantee thatkey/value
pairs are returned in the same order in which you specify them.Metadata
keys
andvalues
must use characters from the following list:0-9
A-Z
anda-z
Space
The following symbols:
_.:/=+-%@
(string) –
(string) –
Timing (dict) –
Details about the timing of a job.
SubmitTimeMillis (integer) –
The time the job was submitted to Elastic Transcoder, in epoch milliseconds.
StartTimeMillis (integer) –
The time the job began transcoding, in epoch milliseconds.
FinishTimeMillis (integer) –
The time the job finished transcoding, in epoch milliseconds.
Exceptions