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  • Les notifications de la ferme

    1er décembre 2010, par

    Afin d’assurer une gestion correcte de la ferme, il est nécessaire de notifier plusieurs choses lors d’actions spécifiques à la fois à l’utilisateur mais également à l’ensemble des administrateurs de la ferme.
    Les notifications de changement de statut
    Lors d’un changement de statut d’une instance, l’ensemble des administrateurs de la ferme doivent être notifiés de cette modification ainsi que l’utilisateur administrateur de l’instance.
    À la demande d’un canal
    Passage au statut "publie"
    Passage au (...)

  • D’autres logiciels intéressants

    12 avril 2011, par

    On ne revendique pas d’être les seuls à faire ce que l’on fait ... et on ne revendique surtout pas d’être les meilleurs non plus ... Ce que l’on fait, on essaie juste de le faire bien, et de mieux en mieux...
    La liste suivante correspond à des logiciels qui tendent peu ou prou à faire comme MediaSPIP ou que MediaSPIP tente peu ou prou à faire pareil, peu importe ...
    On ne les connais pas, on ne les a pas essayé, mais vous pouvez peut être y jeter un coup d’oeil.
    Videopress
    Site Internet : (...)

  • HTML5 audio and video support

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP uses HTML5 video and audio tags to play multimedia files, taking advantage of the latest W3C innovations supported by modern browsers.
    The MediaSPIP player used has been created specifically for MediaSPIP and can be easily adapted to fit in with a specific theme.
    For older browsers the Flowplayer flash fallback is used.
    MediaSPIP allows for media playback on major mobile platforms with the above (...)

Sur d’autres sites (11392)

  • How to make video from images using Java + x264 ; cross platform solution required

    19 octobre 2014, par Shashank Tulsyan

    I have made a software which records my entire day into a video.
    Example video : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITZYMMcubdw (Note : >16hrs compressed in 2mins, video speed too high, might cause epilepsy :P )

    The approach that I use right now is, Avisynth + x264 + Java.
    This is very very efficient. The video for entire day is created in 3-4mins, and reduced to a size of 40-50MB. This is perfect, the only issue is that this solution is not cross platform.
    Does anyone have a better idea ?

    I tried using java based x246 libraries but

    1. They are slow as hell
    2. The video output size is too big
    3. The video quality is not satisfactory.

    Some website suggest a command such as :

    x264.exe --crf 18 --fps 24 --input-res 1920x1080 --input-csp rgb -o "T:\crf18.mkv" "T:\___BBB\big_buck_bunny_%05d.png"

    There are 2 problems with this approach.

    1. As far as I know, x264 does accept image sequence as input, ffmpeg does
    2. The input images are not named in sequence such as image01.png , image02.png etc. They are named as timestamp_as_longinteger.png . So inorder to allow x264 to accept these images as input, I have to rename all of them ( i make a symbolic link for all images in a new folder ). This approach is again unsatisfactory, because I need more flexibility in selecting/unselecting files which would be converted to a video. Right now my approach is a hack.

    The best solution is x264. But not sure how I can send it an image sequence from Java. That too, images which are not named in sequential fashion.


    BTW The purpose of making video is going back in time, and finding out how time was spend/wasted.
    The software is aware of what the user is doing. So using this I can find out (visually) how a class evolved with time. How much time I spend on a particular class/package/module/project/customer. The granuality right now is upto the class level, I wish to take it to the function level. The software is called jitendriya.

    Here is a sample graph


    Here is 1 solution
    How does one encode a series of images into H264 using the x264 C API ?

    But this is for C. If I have to do the same in java, and in a cross plaform fashion, I will have to resort to JNA/JNI. JNA might have a significant performance hit. JNI would be more work.
    FFMpeg also looks like a nice alternative, but I am still not satisfied by any of these solutions looking at the pros and cons.


    Solution Adapted.

    package weeklyvideomaker;

    import java.awt.AWTException;
    import java.awt.Rectangle;
    import java.awt.Robot;
    import java.awt.Toolkit;
    import java.awt.image.BufferedImage;
    import java.io.File;
    import java.io.IOException;
    import java.io.OutputStream;
    import java.util.Calendar;
    import java.util.LinkedList;
    import java.util.logging.Level;
    import java.util.logging.Logger;
    import neembuu.release1.util.StreamGobbler;
    import org.shashaank.activitymonitor.ScreenCaptureHandler;
    import org.shashaank.jitendriya.JitendriyaParams;

    /**
    *
    * @author Shashank
    */
    public class DirectVideoScreenHandler implements ScreenCaptureHandler {
       private final JitendriyaParams  jp;

       private String extension="264";
       private boolean lossless=false;
       private String fps="24/1";

       private Process p = null;
       private Rectangle r1;
       private Robot r;

       private int currentDay;

       private static final String[]weeks={"sun","mon","tue","wed","thu","fri","sat"};

       public DirectVideoScreenHandler(JitendriyaParams jp) {
           this.jp = jp;
       }

       public String getExtension() {
           return extension;
       }

       public void setExtension(String extension) {
           this.extension = extension;
       }

       public boolean isLossless() {
           return lossless;
       }

       public void setLossless(boolean lossless) {
           this.lossless = lossless;
       }

       public String getFps() {
           return fps;
       }

       public void setFps(String fps) {
           this.fps = fps;
       }

       private static int getday(){
           return Calendar.getInstance().get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK) - 1;
       }

       public void make()throws IOException,AWTException{
           currentDay = getday();
           File week = jp.getWeekFolder();

           String destinationFile = week+"\\videos\\"+weeks[currentDay]+"_"+System.currentTimeMillis()+"_direct."+extension;

           r = new Robot();
           r1 = getScreenSize();

           ProcessBuilder pb = makeProcess(destinationFile, 0, r1.width, r1.height);

           p = pb.start();
           StreamGobbler out = new StreamGobbler(p.getInputStream(), "out");
           StreamGobbler err = new StreamGobbler(p.getErrorStream(), "err");
           out.start();err.start();
       }

       private static Rectangle getScreenSize(){
           return new Rectangle(Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getScreenSize());
       }

       private void screenShot(OutputStream os)throws IOException{        
           BufferedImage bi = r.createScreenCapture(r1);
           int[]intRawData = ((java.awt.image.DataBufferInt)
                   bi.getRaster().getDataBuffer()).getData();
           byte[]rawData = new byte[intRawData.length*3];
           for (int i = 0; i < intRawData.length; i++) {
               int rgb = intRawData[i];
               rawData[ i*3 + 0 ] = (byte) (rgb >> 16);
               rawData[ i*3 + 1 ] = (byte) (rgb >> 8);
               rawData[ i*3 + 2 ] = (byte) (rgb);
           }
           os.write(rawData);
       }

       private ProcessBuilder makeProcess(String destinationFile, int numberOfFrames,
               int width, int height){
           LinkedList<string> commands = new LinkedList&lt;>();
           commands.add("\""+encoderPath()+"\"");
           if(true){
               commands.add("-");
               if(lossless){
                   commands.add("--qp");
                   commands.add("0");
               }
               commands.add("--keyint");
               commands.add("240");
               commands.add("--sar");
               commands.add("1:1");
               commands.add("--output");
               commands.add("\""+destinationFile+"\"");
               if(numberOfFrames>0){
                   commands.add("--frames");
                   commands.add(String.valueOf(numberOfFrames));
               }else{
                   commands.add("--stitchable");
               }
               commands.add("--fps");
               commands.add(fps);
               commands.add("--input-res");
               commands.add(width+"x"+height);
               commands.add("--input-csp");
               commands.add("rgb");//i420
           }
           return new ProcessBuilder(commands);
       }

       private String encoderPath(){
           return jp.getToolsPath()+File.separatorChar+"x264_64.exe";
       }

       @Override public void run() {
           try {
               if(p==null){
                   make();
               }
               if(currentDay!=getday()){// day changed
                   destroy();
                   return;
               }
               if(!r1.equals(getScreenSize())){// screensize changed
                   destroy();
                   return;
               }
               screenShot(p.getOutputStream());
           } catch (Exception ex) {
               Logger.getLogger(DirectVideoScreenHandler.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
           }
       }

       private void destroy()throws Exception{
           p.getOutputStream().flush();
           p.getOutputStream().close();
           p.destroy();
           p = null;
       }

    }
    </string>

    package weeklyvideomaker;

    import org.shashaank.jitendriya.JitendriyaParams;

    /**
    *
    * @author Shashank
    */
    public class DirectVideoScreenHandlerTest {
       public static void main(String[] args)throws Exception {
           JitendriyaParams  jp = new JitendriyaParams.Builder()
                   .setToolsPath("F:\\GeneralProjects\\JReminder\\development_environment\\tools")
                   .setOsDependentDataFolderPath("J:\\jt_data")
                   .build();
           DirectVideoScreenHandler w = new DirectVideoScreenHandler(jp);
           w.setExtension("264");
           w.setFps("24/1");
           w.setLossless(false);
           w.make();

           for (int i = 0; ; i++) {
               w.run();
               Thread.sleep(1000);
           }
       }
    }
  • keep connection alive in ffserver

    17 août 2014, par Mohammadhzp

    I have a directory which contain some files,I loop around this files and stream them using ffmpeg to ffserver,the problem is when song is over,the client stop receiving the stream.VLC and jwplayer have this problem-which I tested-(although I can fix this problem in jwplayer by adding repeat : true option but I don’t think it’s such a good idea).

    what I need is an option or some trick in ffserver which keep connection alive(at least for a while) so that if a song is over,the next song start automatically(it take 1 second to switch songs),maybe ffserver have a timeout option ?

  • connection timeout between client and ffserver

    28 août 2014, par Mohammadhzp

    I have a directory which contain some files,I loop around this files and stream them using ffmpeg to ffserver,the problem is when song is over,the client stop receiving the stream.VLC and jwplayer have this problem-which I tested-(although I can fix this problem in jwplayer by adding repeat : true option but I don’t think it’s such a good idea).

    what I need is an option or some trick in ffserver which keep connection alive(at least for a while) so that if a song is over,the next song start automatically(it take 1 second to switch songs),maybe ffserver have a timeout option ?