Adjust levels of mp3 or ogg files by running normalize-audio(1), then re-encoding
normalize-mp3 [OPTION]... [FILE]... normalize-ogg [OPTION]... [FILE]...
Normalize volume of mp3 or ogg files by decoding, running normalize, and re-encoding. This requires as much extra disk space as the largest mp3 or ogg file, decoded. Note that for batch and mix mode, all files must be decoded, so there must be enough disk space for the decoded copies of all specified mp3 and ogg files.
--ogg
Convert files to OGG, regardless of original format
--mp3
Convert files to MP3, regardless of original format
--bitrate BR
Set bitrate of re-encoded file (default 128)
--tmpdir TMP
Put temporary WAV files in temp directory TMP
--notags
Do not copy ID3 or OGG tags to the output file
The following four options may be used to set the encoder and decoder commands for mp3 and ogg vorbis. %m is expanded to the name of the mp3 or vorbis file, %w expands to the name of the temporary WAV file, and %b expands to the bitrate, as specified by the --bitrate option. Run normalize-mp3 with no arguments to see the default values.
--mp3encode=X
mp3 encoder
--mp3decode=X
mp3 decoder
--oggencode=X
ogg vorbis encoder
--oggdecode=X
ogg vorbis decoder
-h
Display this help and exit.
-V
Display version information and exit.
These arguments are passed as arguments to normalize-audio.
Run "normalize-audio --help" for more info.
-a AMP
-g ADJ
-n
-T THR
-b
-m
-v
-q
Report bugs to <[email protected]>.
The normalize-audio(1) Man page
This page was provided by Eduardo Ma\[,c]an <[email protected]>