---
title: Rendering
description: "Render compositions to MP4, MOV, WebM, GIF, or PNG sequences locally or in Docker."
---
Render your Hyperframes [compositions](/concepts/compositions) to MP4, MOV, WebM, GIF, or PNG sequences with the [CLI](/packages/cli). The rendering pipeline is frame-by-frame and seek-driven — see [Deterministic Rendering](/concepts/determinism) for how this works under the hood.
## Getting Started
Run the diagnostics command to check for required dependencies:
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes doctor
```
Expected output:
```
✓ Node.js v22.x
✓ FFmpeg 7.x
✓ FFprobe 7.x
✓ Chrome (bundled)
✓ Docker available
```
Before rendering, preview your composition in the browser to verify it looks correct:
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes preview
```
Run the render command from your project directory:
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes render --output output.mp4
```
Expected output:
```
⠋ Rendering composition "root" (30fps, standard quality)
✓ Captured 240 frames in 8.2s
✓ Encoded to output.mp4 (8.0s, 1920x1080, 4.2MB)
```
## Rendering Modes
### Local Mode (default)
Uses Puppeteer (bundled Chromium) and your system's FFmpeg. Fast for iteration during development.
**Requires:** FFmpeg installed on your system. See [Troubleshooting](/guides/troubleshooting) if FFmpeg is not found.
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes render --output output.mp4
```
**Pros:**
- Fast startup, no container overhead
- Can use your system GPU for Chrome/WebGL capture by default
- Can use your system GPU for hardware-accelerated encoding (with `--gpu`)
- Best for iterative development
**Cons:**
- Output may vary across platforms due to font and Chrome version differences
- Not suitable for CI/CD pipelines that require reproducibility
### Docker Mode
[Deterministic](/concepts/determinism) output with an exact Chrome version and font set. Use this for production renders and CI pipelines.
**Requires:** Docker installed and running.
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes render --docker --output output.mp4
```
**Pros:**
- Identical output on every platform — same Chrome, same fonts, same FFmpeg
- The same pipeline used in production
- Ideal for CI/CD and automated workflows
**Cons:**
- Slower startup due to container initialization
- Browser capture stays on the deterministic software-GL path
- GPU encoding requires Docker host GPU passthrough and is not cross-platform on Docker Desktop
Docker mode uses `chrome-headless-shell` with [BeginFrame](/concepts/determinism#how-it-works) control for frame-perfect, deterministic capture.
## When to Use Each Mode
| Scenario | Recommended Mode |
|----------|-----------------|
| Local development and iteration | Local |
| CI/CD pipeline | Docker |
| Sharing renders with a team | Docker |
| Quick preview export | Local |
| AI agent-driven rendering | Docker |
| Benchmarking performance | Local |
## Options
| Flag | Values | Default | Description |
|------|--------|---------|-------------|
| `--output` | path | `renders/.mp4` | Output file path |
| `--format` | mp4, mov, webm, gif, png-sequence | mp4 | Output format (see [Transparent Video](#transparent-video) below) |
| `--fps` | 1-240 or rational (e.g. `30000/1001`) | 30 | Frames per second |
| `--gif-loop` | 0-65535 | 0 | GIF loop count. `0` loops forever |
| `--quality` | draft, standard, high | standard | Encoding quality preset |
| `--crf` | 0–51 | — | Override CRF (lower = higher quality). Cannot combine with `--video-bitrate` |
| `--video-bitrate` | e.g. `10M`, `5000k` | — | Target bitrate encoding. Cannot combine with `--crf` |
| `--video-frame-format` | auto, jpg, png | auto | Source video frame extraction format. Use `png` for UI recordings, screen captures, and color-sensitive source videos |
| `--workers` | 1-24 or `auto` | auto | Parallel render workers (see [Workers](#workers) below) |
| `--max-concurrent-renders` | 1-10 | 2 | Max simultaneous renders via the producer server (see [Concurrent Renders](#concurrent-renders) below) |
| `--batch` | path | — | JSON array of variable rows (or `{ "rows": [...] }`), rendering one output per row |
| `--batch-concurrency` | integer | 1 | Maximum batch rows to render at once |
| `--batch-fail-fast` | — | off | Stop launching new batch rows after the first row failure |
| `--gpu` | — | off | GPU encoding (NVENC, VideoToolbox, AMF, VAAPI, QSV) |
| `--browser-gpu` / `--no-browser-gpu` | — | on locally, off in Docker | Use or opt out of host GPU acceleration for local Chrome/WebGL capture |
| `--hdr` | — | off | Force HDR output even if no HDR sources are detected (MP4 only). See [HDR Rendering](/guides/hdr) |
| `--sdr` | — | off | Force SDR output even if HDR sources are detected |
| `--docker` | — | off | Use Docker for [deterministic rendering](/concepts/determinism) |
| `--quiet` | — | off | Suppress verbose output |
## Quality and Encoding
The `--quality` flag selects a preset that controls the H.264 CRF (Constant Rate Factor) and encoder speed:
| Preset | CRF | x264 Preset | Best For |
|--------|-----|-------------|----------|
| `draft` | 28 | ultrafast | Quick previews, iteration |
| `standard` | 18 | medium | General use — visually lossless at 1080p |
| `high` | 15 | slow | Final delivery, near-lossless quality |
For finer control, use `--crf` or `--video-bitrate` to override the preset:
```bash
# Near-lossless quality (CRF 15 = very high quality, large file)
npx hyperframes render --crf 15 --output pristine.mp4
# Target a specific bitrate (useful for size-constrained delivery)
npx hyperframes render --video-bitrate 10M --output controlled.mp4
```
**Tip**: The default `standard` preset (CRF 18) is visually lossless at 1080p — most people cannot distinguish it from the source. Use `--quality draft` for faster iteration, or `--quality high` / `--crf 10` when file size is no concern.
## Animated GIF
Use GIF when the output needs to autoplay inline in GitHub PRs, READMEs, issue reports, and docs pages:
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes render --format gif --fps 15 --gif-loop 0 --output demo.gif
```
GIF output uses a two-pass FFmpeg palette encode (`palettegen` with diff statistics, then `paletteuse` with Sierra dithering) for better gradients and text edges than a single-pass conversion. GIFs are still much larger than MP4/WebM at the same dimensions, so prefer short compositions. GIF renders are capped at 30fps; pass `--fps 15` for smaller files.
GIF does not carry audio and only has 1-bit transparency. For transparent overlays, use `--format webm`, `--format mov`, or `--format png-sequence` instead.
For UI recordings, screen captures, or other source videos where saturated interface colors matter, pass `--video-frame-format png` to extract source video layers as PNG before browser capture. The default `auto` mode preserves the historical behavior: alpha-capable sources use PNG, opaque sources use JPG.
## GPU Acceleration
Hyperframes has two separate GPU acceleration surfaces:
- `--gpu` uses a hardware video encoder in FFmpeg when one is available. Supported backends include VideoToolbox on macOS, NVENC on NVIDIA systems, AMD AMF on Windows, VAAPI on Linux, and Intel QSV on supported Windows/Linux hosts.
- Browser GPU uses the host GPU for local Chrome/WebGL capture. It is enabled automatically for local renders and disabled in Docker. Use `--no-browser-gpu` to opt out.
```bash Terminal
# Add hardware FFmpeg encoding to the default local browser-GPU render
npx hyperframes render --gpu --output encoded-fast.mp4
# Opt out of hardware Chrome/WebGL capture
npx hyperframes render --no-browser-gpu --output software-browser.mp4
# Use browser GPU plus hardware FFmpeg encoding
npx hyperframes render --gpu --output gpu.mp4
```
Browser GPU capture is local-mode only. It maps to platform-native Chrome GPU backends: Metal on macOS, D3D11 on Windows, and EGL on Linux. Use `--no-browser-gpu` or Docker mode when exact cross-machine reproducibility matters more than local render speed.
## Workers
Each render worker launches a **separate Chrome browser process** to capture frames in parallel. More workers can speed up rendering, but each one consumes ~256 MB of RAM and significant CPU.
### Default behavior
By default, Hyperframes uses **CPU cores minus 2** (reserving headroom for FFmpeg encoding and your other applications):
| Machine | CPU cores | Default workers |
|---------|-----------|----------------|
| MacBook Air (M1) | 8 | 6 |
| MacBook Pro (M3) | 12 | 10 |
| 4-core laptop | 4 | 2 |
| 2-core VM | 2 | 1 |
Each worker spawns its own Chrome process (~256 MB RAM), so the per-worker overhead is significant. The maximum is 24 workers (hard ceiling).
### Choosing a worker count
```bash Terminal
# Explicit worker count
npx hyperframes render --workers 1 --output output.mp4
# Let Hyperframes pick based on your CPU
npx hyperframes render --workers auto --output output.mp4
# Maximum parallelism (use with caution on laptops)
npx hyperframes render --workers 24 --output output.mp4
```
Start with the default. If renders feel slow and your system has headroom (check Activity Monitor / `htop`), try increasing `--workers`. If you see high memory pressure or fan noise, reduce it.
### When to use 1 worker
- Short compositions (under 2 seconds / 60 frames) — parallelism overhead exceeds the benefit
- Low-memory machines (4 GB or less)
- Running renders alongside other heavy processes (video editing, large builds)
### When to increase workers
- Long compositions (30+ seconds) on a machine with 8+ cores and 16+ GB RAM
- Dedicated render machines or CI runners
- Docker mode on a well-provisioned host
## Batch Rendering
Batch rendering runs the same composition once per variables row:
```json rows.json
[
{ "name": "Alice", "headline": "Welcome, Alice" },
{ "name": "Bob", "headline": "Welcome, Bob" }
]
```
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes render --batch rows.json --output "renders/{name}.mp4" --strict-variables
```
`--output` is a template. Use `{index}` or any scalar key from the row to make each path unique. Hyperframes preflights the full batch before rendering: malformed rows, missing placeholders, duplicate output paths, and strict variable mismatches fail before the first video starts. A `manifest.json` file is written next to the outputs with per-row status, output path, render time, duration when available, and error details.
Rows continue after failures by default so a bad data row does not discard the rest of the batch. Add `--batch-fail-fast` to stop launching new rows after the first failure, or `--json` to stream machine-readable progress events while the manifest is updated.
## Concurrent Renders
When multiple render requests hit the producer server simultaneously (common with AI agents), each render spawns its own set of Chrome worker processes. Too many concurrent renders can exhaust CPU and cause failures.
The producer server uses a **request-level semaphore** to queue renders. Only `maxConcurrentRenders` renders execute at a time — additional requests wait in a FIFO queue until a slot opens.
### Configuration
```bash Terminal
# CLI flag
npx hyperframes render --max-concurrent-renders 2 --output output.mp4
# Environment variable (for the producer server)
PRODUCER_MAX_CONCURRENT_RENDERS=2
```
The default is **2** concurrent renders, which works well on 8-core machines where each render uses 2-3 workers.
### Queue status
The producer server exposes a `GET /render/queue` endpoint that returns the current state:
```json
{
"maxConcurrentRenders": 2,
"activeRenders": 1,
"queuedRenders": 3
}
```
AI agents can poll this endpoint to decide whether to submit a render or wait.
### SSE queue events
When using the streaming endpoint (`POST /render/stream`), queued requests receive a `queued` event before rendering begins:
```json
{"type": "queued", "requestId": "...", "position": 2}
```
This lets agents report "waiting in queue" to users rather than appearing stuck.
### Choosing a concurrency limit
| Machine | CPU cores | Recommended limit |
|---------|-----------|------------------|
| 4-core VM | 4 | 1 |
| 8-core workstation | 8 | 2 |
| 16-core server | 16 | 3-4 |
| 32-core render box | 32 | 5-6 |
When in doubt, use 1. Renders will queue up and execute sequentially, but each one gets full CPU and finishes as fast as possible. This is better than 3 renders fighting for CPU and all finishing slowly — or failing.
## Transparent Video
Hyperframes supports rendering with a transparent background — useful for overlays, lower thirds, subscribe cards, and any element you want to composite over other footage in a video editor.
### Recommended format: MOV (ProRes 4444)
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes render --format mov --output overlay.mov
```
**MOV with ProRes 4444** is the industry standard for transparent video. It works in all major video editors:
- CapCut
- Final Cut Pro
- Adobe Premiere Pro
- DaVinci Resolve
- After Effects
ProRes MOV files are large (typically 5-40 MB for short clips) because ProRes is a high-quality intermediate codec optimized for editing, not delivery. This is expected — the same tradeoff Remotion and professional pipelines make.
### Format comparison
| Format | Codec | Transparency | Video editors | Browsers | File size |
|--------|-------|-------------|---------------|----------|-----------|
| **MOV** | ProRes 4444 | Yes | CapCut, Final Cut, Premiere, DaVinci, After Effects | No | Large |
| **WebM** | VP9 | Yes | None (shows black background) | Chrome, Firefox | Small |
| **PNG sequence** | RGBA PNGs (no encoding) | Yes (lossless) | After Effects, Nuke, Fusion (image-sequence import) | No | Largest |
| **MP4** | H.264 | No | All | All | Small |
**WebM VP9 alpha** is technically supported but all major video editors ignore the alpha channel and render transparent areas as black. Only Chromium-based browsers (Chrome, Arc, Brave, Edge) decode VP9 alpha correctly. Safari does not support it. Use MOV for editor workflows and WebM only for browser-based playback.
### PNG sequence (no encoding)
```bash Terminal
npx hyperframes render --format png-sequence --output frames/
```
`--format png-sequence` skips the encoder entirely. The captured RGBA frames are copied to `