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WARNING!

I am no longer using Kdenlive for my video work.

I'm using Olive instead: https://www.olivevideoeditor.org/

If you wonder why I decided to switch, watch this video: https://youtu.be/ym1brc2OcYQ

Becasue of that I am no longer insterested in developing this script. If anyone wants to take it over - let me know.

My advice - don't hurt yourself with Kdenlive and use Olive instead. You'll thank me later.

kdenlive-multirender

A Bash script enabling multi-threaded video rendering for Kdenlive.

The problem

Rendering videos from Kdenlive doesn't saturate 100% of my CPU power. I want to render faster. Blender has scripts like Pulverize to handle this, but I couldn't find anythng for Kdenlive - so I programmed it myself.

The solution

A solution to this is to render out multiplechunks of the project at once and concatenate them later. It's not the most memory or disk-efficient way, but it gets the job done faster, especially if you have lots of RAM and dozens of CPU cores to throw at the problem, and you don't want to wait 12 hours for your hourl-long FullHD video to render.

How to use this tool

  1. Create a Kdenlive render script

  2. Copy kdenlive-multirender.sh into the same directory

  3. Run it:

    $ bash ./kdenlive-multirender.sh Kdenlive-render-script.sh 16 4

The script will use the original Kdenlive rendering script to create multiple other scripts and run few of them in parallel. Then it will use ffmpeg to concatenate the partial files into single video file. The first parameter is the script filename, the second one is the amount of parts to split the job into, and the third parameter is the amount of threads you want to process in parallel.

On my Ryzen 7 1700 machine with 16 GB of RAM, a complex 45-minute video saturates my CPU at 6 threads. YMMV - do not try using a ridiculous amount of threads unless you have a ridiculous amount of RAM, or you can fill your RAM and SWAP and just kill your system. Also note that disk I/O might become a bottleneck at some point, because each thread reads different data and writes different data to disk.

Breakpoint mode by Intercode

When trying out this script for music videos I have found that while it is a wonderful time saver, the action of splitting in multiple small videos and sticking togheter after will create audible cuts in the music. For this reason I have added the breakpoints mode to the script. The breakpoints mode allows you to tell the script where to cut the video. Simply create a txt file with a list of frames where the video can be cut, 1 per line, dont put the frame 0 and the last frame, just the frame numbers where the video can be cut. Then simply replace the parts number (the second argument) by the name of the file where you put the list of breakpoints.

Example: bash ./kdenlive-multirender.sh jampack_001.sh jampack_breakpoints.txt 4

Final words

This is a quick-and dirty script, if you want to use it or improve it - feel free to do so, but don't blame me if it doens't work or it destroys your data. I made it, becasue I needed it and I wanted to share it with the world, becasue others might want it too. the script will leave all temporary files in place after it's done, so you'll have all your partial renders and scripts that made them still there. That's not a problem, they will be overwritten if you re-run the script.

Ultimately I hope this functionality will land in Kdenlive itself at some point.