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Autres articles (10)
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Les formats acceptés
28 janvier 2010, parLes commandes suivantes permettent d’avoir des informations sur les formats et codecs gérés par l’installation local de ffmpeg :
ffmpeg -codecs ffmpeg -formats
Les format videos acceptés en entrée
Cette liste est non exhaustive, elle met en exergue les principaux formats utilisés : h264 : H.264 / AVC / MPEG-4 AVC / MPEG-4 part 10 m4v : raw MPEG-4 video format flv : Flash Video (FLV) / Sorenson Spark / Sorenson H.263 Theora wmv :
Les formats vidéos de sortie possibles
Dans un premier temps on (...) -
Ajouter notes et légendes aux images
7 février 2011, parPour pouvoir ajouter notes et légendes aux images, la première étape est d’installer le plugin "Légendes".
Une fois le plugin activé, vous pouvez le configurer dans l’espace de configuration afin de modifier les droits de création / modification et de suppression des notes. Par défaut seuls les administrateurs du site peuvent ajouter des notes aux images.
Modification lors de l’ajout d’un média
Lors de l’ajout d’un média de type "image" un nouveau bouton apparait au dessus de la prévisualisation (...) -
HTML5 audio and video support
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP 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 (4149)
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ffmpeg empty video with low frame rate
27 avril 2013, par Marco GagliardiI've just downloaded ffmpeg since it seems to perfectly match my needs (make a video from a set of pictures). I'm currently playing around with some examples just to get started and there's something weird happening that I can't explain.
I'm trying this command (provided in the official documentation) :ffmpeg -f image2 -pattern_type glob -i 'foo-*.jpeg' -r 12 -s WxH foo.avi
on a data set of 10 jpg pictures (of course I changed the pattern with '*.jpg'). The video seems to be encoded correctly but it's simply too fast to be sure about that (anyway it stops on the last frame that corresponds to the last picture). In order to get a longer video i thought to low the frame rate from 12 to 1 (one sec each picture) or 0.5 (2 sec each one) and so on.. no way ! with low rate values even if the video is played the pictures are simply not displayed. The player (VLC in my case) just shows a blank/empty video for a few seconds.
Am I making something wrong or have I misunderstood the -r parameter ? Is it something related to codecs involved ? Finally.. How can i get each picture displayed for 1 or 2 seconds ?
Thank you !
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avcodec/tta : Limit decoder to 16 channels
28 juin 2019, par Michael Niedermayeravcodec/tta : Limit decoder to 16 channels
libtta 2.3 has a limit of 6 channels, so 16 is substantially above the "official" already
Fixes : OOM
Fixes : 15249/clusterfuzz-testcase-minimized-ffmpeg_AV_CODEC_ID_TTA_fuzzer-5643988125614080Found-by : continuous fuzzing process https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz/tree/master/projects/ffmpeg
Signed-off-by : Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc> -
ffmpeg use shell script to make video from multiple images and one audio with specific timestamps for each image [closed]
3 juin 2024, par TrojoshI have an audio file and I have 15 images. I would like to make a video from these 15 still images. Each image may appear for different number of seconds.
E.g. Image 1,2,3 will take 3 seconds each but image 4 may take 40 seconds because it is more complex.


How can I use a shell script that uses ffmpeg to specify timestamp for each image and add audio to the same.


Also note that the sum of timestamps of all images = running time of the audio.


I looked at this question and image2 filter option from the official documentation but no luck in producing such a video