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  • MediaSPIP v0.2

    21 juin 2013, par

    MediaSPIP 0.2 est la première version de MediaSPIP stable.
    Sa date de sortie officielle est le 21 juin 2013 et est annoncée ici.
    Le fichier zip ici présent contient uniquement les sources de MediaSPIP en version standalone.
    Comme pour la version précédente, il est nécessaire d’installer manuellement l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles sur le serveur.
    Si vous souhaitez utiliser cette archive pour une installation en mode ferme, il vous faudra également procéder à d’autres modifications (...)

  • MediaSPIP version 0.1 Beta

    16 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP 0.1 beta est la première version de MediaSPIP décrétée comme "utilisable".
    Le fichier zip ici présent contient uniquement les sources de MediaSPIP en version standalone.
    Pour avoir une installation fonctionnelle, il est nécessaire d’installer manuellement l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles sur le serveur.
    Si vous souhaitez utiliser cette archive pour une installation en mode ferme, il vous faudra également procéder à d’autres modifications (...)

  • Gestion générale des documents

    13 mai 2011, par

    MédiaSPIP ne modifie jamais le document original mis en ligne.
    Pour chaque document mis en ligne il effectue deux opérations successives : la création d’une version supplémentaire qui peut être facilement consultée en ligne tout en laissant l’original téléchargeable dans le cas où le document original ne peut être lu dans un navigateur Internet ; la récupération des métadonnées du document original pour illustrer textuellement le fichier ;
    Les tableaux ci-dessous expliquent ce que peut faire MédiaSPIP (...)

Sur d’autres sites (13911)

  • Is it possible to force I_PCM mode in x264 ?

    10 octobre 2012, par cloudraven

    I need to use I_PCM mode in all blocks for some of I frames in video being compressed using x264. I know those frames will take a huge amount of space, but it is a requirement to keep them as faithful to the source as possible and to make them very fast to encode / decode (I_PCM should be super fast and lossless). Is there a way to force x264 to programatically do this.
    I am using libx264 to do this, but I haven't found a way to specify custom macroblock type within a given frame. If it is not supported, how hard would it be to modify the library to do so and where should I look at first ?

  • Pointer peril

    18 octobre 2011, par Mans — Bugs, Optimisation

    Use of pointers in the C programming language is subject to a number of constraints, violation of which results in the dreaded undefined behaviour. If a situation with undefined behaviour occurs, anything is permitted to happen. The program may produce unexpected results, crash, or demons may fly out of the user’s nose.

    Some of these rules concern pointer arithmetic, addition and subtraction in which one or both operands are pointers. The C99 specification spells it out in section 6.5.6 :

    When an expression that has integer type is added to or subtracted from a pointer, the result has the type of the pointer operand. […] If both the pointer operand and the result point to elements of the same array object, or one past the last element of the array object, the evaluation shall not produce an overflow ; otherwise, the behavior is undefined. […]

    When two pointers are subtracted, both shall point to elements of the same array object, or one past the last element of the array object ; the result is the difference of the subscripts of the two array elements.

    In simpler, if less accurate, terms, operands and results of pointer arithmetic must be within the same array object. If not, anything can happen.

    To see some of this undefined behaviour in action, consider the following example.

    #include <stdio.h>
    

    int foo(void)

    int a, b ;
    int d = &b - &a ; /* undefined */
    int *p = &a ;
    b = 0 ;
    p[d] = 1 ; /* undefined */
    return b ;

    int main(void)

    printf("%d\n", foo()) ;
    return 0 ;

    This program breaks the above rules twice. Firstly, the &a - &b calculation is undefined because the pointers being subtracted do not point to elements of the same array. Most compilers will nonetheless evaluate this to the distance between the two variables on the stack. Secondly, accessing p[d] is undefined because p and p + d do not point to elements of the same array (unless the result of the first undefined expression happened to be zero).

    It might be tempting to assume that on a modern system with a single, flat address space, these operations would result in the intuitively obvious outcomes, ultimately setting b to the value 1 and returning this same value. However, undefined is undefined, and the compiler is free to do whatever it wants :

    $ gcc -O undef.c
    $ ./a.out
    0

    Even on a perfectly normal system, compiled with optimisation enabled the program behaves as though the write to p[d] were ignored. In fact, this is exactly what happened, as this test shows :

    $ gcc -O -fno-tree-pta undef.c
    $ ./a.out
    1

    Disabling the tree-pta optimisation in gcc gives us back the intuitive behaviour. PTA stands for points-to analysis, which means the compiler analyses which objects any pointers can validly access. In the example, the pointer p, having been set to &a cannot be used in a valid access to the variable b, a and b not being part of the same array. Between the assignment b = 0 and the return statement, no valid access to b takes place, whence the return value is derived to be zero. The entire function is, in fact, reduced to the assembly equivalent of a simple return 0 statement, all because we decided to violate a couple of language rules.

    While this example is obviously contrived for clarity, bugs rooted in these rules occur in real programs from time to time. My most recent encounter with one was in PARI/GP, where a somewhat more complicated incarnation of the example above can be found. Unfortunately, the maintainers of this program are not responsive to reports of such bad practices in their code :

    Undefined according to what rule ? The code is only requiring the adress space to be flat which is true on all supported platforms.

    The rule in question is, of course, the one quoted above. Since the standard makes no exception for flat address spaces, no such exception exists. Although the behaviour could be logically defined in this case, it is not, and all programs must still follow the rules. Filing bug reports against the compiler will not make them go away. As of this writing, the issue remains unresolved.

  • Is it possible to force I_PCM mode in x264 ?

    10 octobre 2012, par cloudraven

    I need to use I_PCM mode in all blocks for some of I frames in video being compressed using x264. I know those frames will take a huge amount of space, but it is a requirement to keep them as faithful to the source as possible and to make them very fast to encode / decode (I_PCM should be super fast and lossless). Is there a way to force x264 to programatically do this.
    I am using libx264 to do this, but I haven't found a way to specify custom macroblock type within a given frame. If it is not supported, how hard would it be to modify the library to do so and where should I look at first ?