Pack is a simple yet powerful CLI video compressor.
It reduces file sizes by up to 60% while maintaining high quality, using FFmpeg under the hood. Compress individual videos or entire folders with ease.
You might be sure that you have installed Python 3.10+ and FFmpeg. The CLI app uses FFmpeg under the hood, so make sure you have it installed and added to your PATH.
pip install -U vidpackPrerequisites
```console
# MacOS
brew install ffmpeg
# Ubuntu
sudo apt install ffmpeg
# ArchLinux
sudo pacman -S ffmpeg
# Fedora
sudo dnf install ffmpeg
```
To compress a video or multiple videos, you will use the pack command, followed by the required input argument (a file or a directory).
pack INPUT [OPTIONS]Note
INPUT: This is the file or directory you want to process. If you provide a directory, all videos within it will be compressed.
Tip
For additional help or to see all available options, you can use the command:
pack --helpPack offers several options to customize the compression process:
--output,-o: Specifies the output file to save the compressed video.--quality,-q: Defines the video quality level (0-100). Default value: 75.--overwrite,-w: Overwrites the output file if it already exists.--delete-original,-d: Deletes the original video after successful compression.--codec,-c: Specifies the video codec to use for compression(h264,libx265). Default ish264.
Important
The H265 (libx265) codec offers superior compression quality and produces smaller file sizes compared to H264. However, encoding with H265 is more time-consuming and requires significantly more processing power. If you have a modern GPU and enough time for encoding, H265 is an excellent choice for reducing file sizes without sacrificing quality.
To compress a video named video.mp4, simply run:
pack video.mp4This command will compress video.mp4 with default settings(quality: 75) and save the result as video_compressed.mp4 in the same directory.
Show more examples
If you want to specify the name or location of the compressed file:
pack video.mp4 --output compressed/small_video.mp4This command will compress video.mp4 and save the result as small_video.mp4 in the compressed directory.
To compress a video with a specific quality (e.g., 60):
pack video.mp4 -q 60This will compress the video with lower quality, resulting in a smaller file size.
To compress all videos in a directory:
pack /path/to/my/videosThis command will compress all videos in the specified directory and save the results in the same directory.
If you want to overwrite existing compressed files:
pack video.mp4 --output output.mp4 --overwriteThis will overwrite the file output.mp4 if it already exists.
To delete the original video file after successful compression:
pack video.mp4 --delete-originalThe original video.mp4 will be deleted after compression.
To compress a video with a specific video codec (e.g., libx265):
pack video.mp4 --codec libx265This will compress the video with the libx265 codec, resulting in a smaller file size. Currently, only h264 and libx265 codecs are supported.
You can combine multiple options in a single command:
pack video.mp4 -o compressed.mp4 -q 80 -w -dThis command will compress video.mp4 with a quality of 80, save the result as compressed.mp4, overwrite if the file exists, delete the original, and display detailed information during the process.
- The quality option (
-q) affects both visual quality and file size. A lower value will result in a smaller file but lower visual quality, while a higher value will maintain better quality but with a larger file size. - It's always recommended to backup your original videos before using the delete option (
-d).
Tip
If you are a Windows user, you can install ffmpeg and python manually or using package managers like Scoop.
Once you have installed a package manager, you can just run something like scoop install python ffmpeg.
Tip
Windows user can watch a tutorial video on YouTube about the installation process [Here].

