No configuration is required if you intend to run everything on a single machine, and if you acquired Ardour from <ahref="http://www.ardour.org"title="http://www.ardour.org">http://www.ardour.org</a>. Everything is pre-configured and included with the download/install.
If you compile Ardour from source, or have installed it from a 3rd party repository, three additional tools will need to be installed manually, which are used by Ardour to provide video features:
<li>xjadeo (the video monitor application): <ahref="http://xjadeo.sourceforge.net/"title="http://xjadeo.sourceforge.net/"rel="nofollow">http://xjadeo.sf.net</a></li>
<li>harvid (a video decoder used for the thumbnail timeline): <ahref="http://x42.github.io/harvid/"title="http://x42.github.io/harvid/"rel="nofollow">http://x42.github.com/harvid/</a></li>
<li>ffmpeg, ffprobe (used to import/export video, extract soundtracks and query video information): <ahref="http://ffmpeg.org"title="http://ffmpeg.org"rel="nofollow">http://ffmpeg.org</a></li>
The Ardour development team is in control of the first two applications. ffmpeg however can be a bit of a problem. To avoid conflicts with distribution packages, Ardour looks for <code>ffmpeg_harvid</code> and <code>ffprobe_harvid</code>.
Binary releases are available from ardour.org as well as an installer script: <ahref="https://github.com/Ardour/ardour/blob/master/tools/videotimeline/install_video_tools.sh"title="https://github.com/Ardour/ardour/blob/master/tools/videotimeline/install_video_tools.sh"rel="nofollow">install_video_tools.sh</a>.
Please read the info in the previous section to familiarize yourself with the tools involved first. Setting up a proper A/V post-production studio can be a complicated task. As much as we streamline and simplify the <em>single machine</em> setup, the <dfn>studio setup</dfn> is focused on modularity.
<li>Synchronization ardour → video-display-box should be accomplished by external means jack-transport(netjack), MTC, LTC (<abbrtitle="Open Sound Control—"postmodern MIDI"">OSC</abbr> and/or ssh-pipe work but introduce additional latency + jitter)</li>
<li>Ardour launches <code>XJREMOTE</code> (environment variable, default 'xjremote' which comes with xjadeo).</li>
<li>Either use a custom shell script that ssh'es into the remote box and launches/controls xjadeo there, selects the sync-source and passes though communication between ardour ⇔ xjadeo via ssh (xjadeo is launched stopped with the session).</li>
<li>..or override xjremote's behavior—instead of IPC with a local running xjadeo-process, using <abbrtitle="Open Sound Control—"postmodern MIDI"">OSC</abbr> for example. xjadeo would run permanently and Ardour will just tell it to load files and set offsets via <acronymtitle="Open Sound Control—"postmodern MIDI"">OSC</acronym>. see <ahref="http://xjadeo.git.sourceforge.net/git/gitweb.cgi?p=xjadeo/xjadeo;a=blob_plain;f=contrib/xjremote-osc"title="http://xjadeo.git.sourceforge.net/git/gitweb.cgi?p=xjadeo/xjadeo;a=blob_plain;f=contrib/xjremote-osc"rel="nofollow">xjremote-osc</a> example script.</li>
<li>If the video server runs remotely, Ardour needs to be configured in Ardour > Preference > Video (hostname of the video-server).</li>
<li>Ideally the machines have a common shared folder (NFS or similar). Ardour's import (audio-extract) and export (mux) functionality depends on having access to the video file. Also Ardour's video-import transcodes the file into a suitable proxy-format that allows reliable seeking to any frame…</li>