To expand on what Fredrik said, there isn't enough information to give an answer.
With inertial frames in special relativity, it's sufficient to specify the relative velocity of the two observers and that's enough (with some assumptions about aligned axes) to specify the two frames.
In general relativity (or even accelerating frames in special relativity), you need more information, as you are free to choose just about any coordinate system you like.
Consider, for example, two coordinate systems (t,x) and (T,X) (in one space dimension only to keep it simple -- extend in the obvious way for more dimensions).
Then we can write, for a particle moving along a worldline with velocity v = dx / dt in the first frame,
\frac{dX}{d\tau} = \frac{\partial X}{\partial x} \frac{dx}{d\tau} + \frac{\partial X}{\partial t} \frac{dt}{d\tau} = \left( v \frac{\partial X}{\partial x} + \frac{\partial X}{\partial t} \right) \frac{dt}{d\tau} ...(1)
\frac{dT}{d\tau} = \frac{\partial T}{\partial x} \frac{dx}{d\tau} + \frac{\partial T}{\partial t} \frac{dt}{d\tau} = \left( v \frac{\partial T}{\partial x} + \frac{\partial T}{\partial t} \right) \frac{dt}{d\tau} ...(2)
You can then get the velocity in the second frame V = dX / dT by dividing (1) by (2). The answer you get will depend on what exactly the formulas are that express
T and
X as functions of
t and
x, assuming you can find such formulas for the problem in question.
In the case of inertial frames in special relativity, the formulas would be just the Lorentz transform. In the case of one frame accelerating relative to an inertial frame in special relativity, you would use the Rindler coordinate equations. In the the case of a hovering observer and a freefalling observer near a black-hole, you could use the Schwarzschild-to-Kruskal-Szekeres transformation (I think?).