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The pirate bay depuis la Belgique
1er avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
Autres articles (72)
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Menus personnalisés
14 novembre 2010, parMediaSPIP utilise le plugin Menus pour gérer plusieurs menus configurables pour la navigation.
Cela permet de laisser aux administrateurs de canaux la possibilité de configurer finement ces menus.
Menus créés à l’initialisation du site
Par défaut trois menus sont créés automatiquement à l’initialisation du site : Le menu principal ; Identifiant : barrenav ; Ce menu s’insère en général en haut de la page après le bloc d’entête, son identifiant le rend compatible avec les squelettes basés sur Zpip ; (...) -
Que fait exactement ce script ?
18 janvier 2011, parCe script est écrit en bash. Il est donc facilement utilisable sur n’importe quel serveur.
Il n’est compatible qu’avec une liste de distributions précises (voir Liste des distributions compatibles).
Installation de dépendances de MediaSPIP
Son rôle principal est d’installer l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles nécessaires coté serveur à savoir :
Les outils de base pour pouvoir installer le reste des dépendances Les outils de développements : build-essential (via APT depuis les dépôts officiels) ; (...) -
Automated installation script of MediaSPIP
25 avril 2011, parTo overcome the difficulties mainly due to the installation of server side software dependencies, an "all-in-one" installation script written in bash was created to facilitate this step on a server with a compatible Linux distribution.
You must have access to your server via SSH and a root account to use it, which will install the dependencies. Contact your provider if you do not have that.
The documentation of the use of this installation script is available here.
The code of this (...)
Sur d’autres sites (10621)
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Is it possible to determine if a subtitle track is imaged based or text based with ffprobe
21 février 2021, par ShexI'm writing a script that burns subtitles into video files to prepare them for a personal stream I'm hosting. I'm having a hard time finding which type of subtitle is used in the file. I use ffprobe to get the files' information, and I can get stuff like the codec type, but I was wondering if there is a way to determine if a subtitle track is image based or text based. I can only think of getting a list of all possible codecs and match the codec type with this list but it would be very useful to have an info somewhere that can tell me "OK this is an image-based subtitle track", as when I burn I cannot use the same filters with ffmpeg to burn image vs. text subtitles.


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Revision fa0f418523 : Added row based extend borders Required for frame-based multithreading Change-
21 août 2012, par Scott LaVarnwayChanged Paths : Modify /vp8/decoder/decodframe.c Added row based extend borders Required for frame-based multithreading Change-Id : I361ec468b5bda7836116c5f0bf3a83f60c214a73
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looking for gui based HLS downloader based on ffmpeg & or better download code [closed]
26 mai 2020, par wahiduzzaman sagarcurrently using ffmpeg for downloading HLS video (m3u8). the code i am using is



ffmpeg -i "www.videoURL.com" -c copy "name name".mp4




its works fine but the problem is it takes a bit more time since I also have to give each video a name where other downloader (video downloadhelper) can automatically get a name from URL. video downloadhelper crashing/stopping a lot so not using it now. also it cant boost speed so i have to run 10-12 simultaneous ffmpeg download with command prompt open to keep the bandwidth use high. which is cluttering the screen and being hard to keep track of.
so is there any better code for faster download or maybe GUI downloader with some feature like auto naming, multi download, etc