Provided by: wavpack_5.8.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       wavpack — encode audio files to wavpack

SYNOPSIS

       wavpack [-options] [-o output] file ...

DESCRIPTION

       wavpack  encodes  the specified source files into WavPack files.  The source files may be any of the file
       format types listed below, and the audio data may be either uncompressed PCM or  DSD,  depending  on  the
       format.  Raw audio may also be specified (see --raw-pcm).

       Unless  overridden  with the -o option, the output filename will be the source filename with the filename
       extension replaced by “.wv”.  Multiple input files may be specified, resulting in multiple WavPack files,
       and in that case -o may be used to specify an alternate target directory.  A filename  of  “-”  specifies
       stdin or stdout.

       When  transcoding  from  existing WavPack files, all tags are copied, and may be modified with additional
       args; unless an alternate output file or directory is specified, the source files are safely overwritten.

       On multicore machines wavpack will attempt to use several  threads  to  speed  up  the  operation,  often
       significantly.   This  does  not  apply  to  the  hybrid mode (except with multichannel files).  To force
       single-threaded operation use the --no-threads option, or use  the  --threads  option  to  fine-tune  the
       number of threads utilized.

   INPUT FORMATS
          Microsoft RIFF, extension “.wav”, including BWF and RF64 variants
          WavPack, extension “.wv”, transcode operation, tags copied
          Apple AIFF, extension “.aif”
          Apple Core Audio, extension “.caf”
          Sony Wave64, extension “.w64”
          Philips DSDIFF, extension “.dff”
          Sony DSD Stream, extension “.dsf”

   OPTIONS
       -a      Adobe Audition (CoolEdit) mode for 32-bit floats

       --allow-huge-tags
               Allow tag data up to 16 MB.  Embedding > 1 MB is not recommended for portable devices and may not
               work with some programs, including older WavPack versions.

       -bn     Enable  hybrid  compression,  n = 2.0 to 23.9 bits/sample, or n = 24-9600 kbits/second (kbps). If
               this option is specified without the -c option, then the operation is lossy.  The hybrid mode  is
               not applicable to DSD audio (only PCM).

       --blocksize=n
               specify block size in samples (max = 131072 and min = 16 with --merge-blocks, otherwise 128)

       -c      Create  correction  file  (.wvc)  for  hybrid mode resulting in 2-file lossless compression.  The
               bitrate is specified with the -bn option.

       -cc     maximum hybrid compression (hurts lossy quality & decode speed)

       -cn     Enable hybrid lossless (i.e., 2-file) compression, n = 2.0 to 23.9 bits/sample, or  n  =  24-9600
               kbits/second (kbps). This is a shortcut combining the -bn and -c options.  The hybrid mode is not
               applicable to DSD audio (only PCM).

       --channel-order=list
               Specify   comma   separated   channel   order   if   not   the   Microsoft   standard,  which  is
               FL,FR,FC,LFE,BL,BR,FLC,FRC,BC,SL,SR,TC,TFL,TFC,TFR,TBL,TBC,TBR; specify “...”  to  indicate  that
               channels are not assigned to specific speakers, or terminate list with “...” to indicate that any
               channels beyond those specified are unassigned.

       --cross-decorr
               Use  cross-channel  correlation  in hybrid mode.  On by default in lossless mode and with the -cc
               option.

       -d      delete source file if successful; use with caution!

       -f      fast mode; introduces a compromise in compression ratio

       --force-even-byte-depth
               Round the bit depth specified in the source file up to the  next  whole  byte  (e.g.,  20-bit  is
               rounded  up  to  24-bit)  to handle cases where the value specified is not correct (i.e., padding
               bits are non-zero).

       -g      general/normal mode, cancels previously specified -f and -h options

       -h      high quality; better compression ratio, but slightly slower

       -hh     very high quality; best compression, but slowest; not recommended on vintage playback devices

       --help  display extended help

       -i      Ignore length in wav header and allow WAV files greater than 4 GB.  This will attempt to fix  the
               WAV header stored in the WavPack file; combine with -r to create a fresh header instead.

       --import-id3
               import  applicable  tag  items from an ID3v2.3 or ID3v2.4 tag present in DSF and other files into
               the APEv2 tag.  If there are > 1 MB cover images present, add --allow-huge-tags to include  them,
               and  -r  if  you do not want large images appearing twice in the WavPack file, although this will
               remove the entire original ID3v2 tag.

       -jn     joint-stereo override (0 = left/right, 1 = mid/side)

       -m      compute & store MD5 signature of raw audio data

       --merge-blocks
               merge consecutive blocks with equal redundancy (used with --blocksize option and  is  useful  for
               files generated by the lossyWAV program or decoded HDCD files)

       -n      calculate average and peak quantization noise (hybrid only, reference fullscale sine)

       --no-overwrite
               Never  overwrite, nor ask to overwrite, an existing file.  This is handy for resuming a cancelled
               batch operation and obviously cannot be mixed with the -y option.

       --no-threads
               force single-threaded operation, equivalent to --threads=1

       --no-utf8-convert
               Don't recode passed tags from local encoding to UTF-8, assume they are in UTF-8 already.

       -o outfile
               Specify an output filename for a single source file or a target directory  (must  already  exist)
               for multiple files.

       --optimize-int32
               New  optimization  targeting  32-bit integer audio files that were originally sourced from 32-bit
               float audio.  Can improve  compression  by  10%,  but  is  only  applicable  in  lossless  modes.
               Resulting  files  will  only  decode  with 24-bit resolution on older decoders (i.e., technically
               lossy).

       --pair-unassigned-chans
               encode unassigned channels into stereo pairs

       --pre-quantize=bits
               pre-quantize samples to bits depth BEFORE encoding and  MD5  calculation  (common  use  would  be
               --pre-quantize=20 for 24-bit or float material recorded with typical converters)

       -q      quiet (keep console output to a minimum)

       -r      parse  headers to determine audio format and length but do not store the headers in the resulting
               WavPack file (a minimum header will be generated by wvunpack, but some non-audio  metadata  might
               be lost)

       --raw-pcm
               input data is raw pcm (44,100 Hz, 16-bit, 2-channels)

       --raw-pcm=sr,bits[f|s|u],chans,[le|be]
               Input  data is raw pcm with specified sample-rate, bit-depth (float, unsigned, signed), number of
               channels, and endianness.  Defaulted parameters may be omitted, specify bits=1 for DSD.

       --raw-pcm-skip=begin[,end]
               skip begin bytes before encoding raw PCM (header) and skip end bytes at the EOF (trailer)

       -sn     Override default hybrid mode noise shaping where n  is  a  float  value  between  -1.0  and  1.0.
               Negative values move noise lower in freq, positive values move noise higher in freq; use 0 for no
               shaping (white noise).

       -t      Copy input file's time stamp to output files.

       --threads=n
               Enable  (or  disable)  multithreaded  operation  with  n=1  (no threading) to n=12 (max threads).
               Significantly improves the speed of lossless compression on multicore CPUs.  In the hybrid modes,
               only multichannel files can utilize  multithreading.   Omitting  the  parameter  will  select  an
               optimum number of threads.

       --use-dns
               force use of dynamic noise shaping (hybrid mode only)

       -v      verify output file integrity after write (not for piped output)

       --version
               write program version to stdout

       -w -Encoder
               write encoder metadata to APEv2 tag (e.g., “Encoder=WavPack 5.8.0”)

       -w -Settings
               write user settings metadata to APEv2 tag (e.g., “Settings=-hb384cx3”)

       -wField=Value”
               write the specified text metadata to APEv2 tag

       -wField=@file.ext”
               Write  specified  text  metadata from file to APEv2 tag; normally used for embedded cuesheets and
               logs (field names “Cuesheet” and “Log”).

       --write-binary-tagField=@file.ext”
               Write the specified binary metadata file to APEv2 tag; normally used for cover art with the field
               name “Cover Art (Front)”.

       -x[n]   extra encode processing, n = 0 to 6, default=1; -x0 for no extra processing, -x1 to -x3 to choose
               best of predefined filters, -x4 to -x6 to generate custom filters (very slow!)

       -y      yes to all warnings; use with caution!

       -z[n]   don't set (n=0 or omitted) or set (n=1) console  title  to  indicate  progress  (leaves  "WavPack
               Completed")

SEE ALSO

       wvgain(1), wvtag(1), wvunpack(1), www.wavpack.com

AUTHORS

       David Bryant <david@wavpack.com>
       Sebastian Dröge <slomo@debian.org>
       Jan Starý <hans@stare.cz>

Debian                                          February 9, 2024                                      WAVPACK(1)