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  • Le plugin : Gestion de la mutualisation

    2 mars 2010, par

    Le plugin de Gestion de mutualisation permet de gérer les différents canaux de mediaspip depuis un site maître. Il a pour but de fournir une solution pure SPIP afin de remplacer cette ancienne solution.
    Installation basique
    On installe les fichiers de SPIP sur le serveur.
    On ajoute ensuite le plugin "mutualisation" à la racine du site comme décrit ici.
    On customise le fichier mes_options.php central comme on le souhaite. Voilà pour l’exemple celui de la plateforme mediaspip.net :
    < ?php (...)

  • Gestion de la ferme

    2 mars 2010, par

    La ferme est gérée dans son ensemble par des "super admins".
    Certains réglages peuvent être fais afin de réguler les besoins des différents canaux.
    Dans un premier temps il utilise le plugin "Gestion de mutualisation"

  • La gestion des forums

    3 novembre 2011, par

    Si les forums sont activés sur le site, les administrateurs ont la possibilité de les gérer depuis l’interface d’administration ou depuis l’article même dans le bloc de modification de l’article qui se trouve dans la navigation de la page.
    Accès à l’interface de modération des messages
    Lorsqu’il est identifié sur le site, l’administrateur peut procéder de deux manières pour gérer les forums.
    S’il souhaite modifier (modérer, déclarer comme SPAM un message) les forums d’un article particulier, il a à sa (...)

Sur d’autres sites (13884)

  • Using lcov With FFmpeg/Libav

    21 novembre 2011, par Multimedia Mike — Programming, code coverage, ffmpeg, lcov, libav

    Last year, I delved into code coverage tools and their usage with FFmpeg. I learned about using GNU gcov, which is powerful but pretty raw about the details it provides to you. I wrote a script to help interpret its output and later found another script called gcovr to do the same, only much better.

    I later found another tool called lcov which is absolutely amazing for understanding code coverage of your software. I’ve been meaning to use it to further FATE test coverage for the multimedia projects.



    Click for larger image

    Basic Instructions
    Install the lcov tool, of course. In Ubuntu, 'apt-get install lcov' will do the trick.

    Build the project with code coverage support, i.e.,

    ./configure —enable-gpl —samples=/path/to/fate/samples \
     —extra-cflags="-fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage" \
     —extra-ldflags="-fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage"
    make
    

    Clear the coverage data :

    lcov —directory . —zerocounters
    

    Run the software (in this case, the FATE test suite) :

    make fate
    

    Let lcov work its magic :

    lcov —directory . —capture —output-file coverage.info
    mkdir html-output
    genhtml -o html-output coverage.info
    

    At this point, you can aim your web browser at html-output/index.html to learn everything you could possibly want to know about code coverage of the test suite. You can sort various columns in order to see which modules have the least code coverage. You can drill into individual source files and see highlighted markup demonstrating which lines have been executed.

    As you can see from the screenshot above, FFmpeg / Libav are not anywhere close to full coverage. But lcov provides an exquisite roadmap.

  • FFMPEG - How to transcode and segment to multiple bitrates ?

    25 juillet 2014, par ipegasus

    I would like to know how to use FFMPEG to transcode video (Prores codec) and segment videos to multiple bitrates. Is it possible to do it in one command ?

    Current working solution with X264 :

    1. Encode Videos Using X264.

      /home/ubuntu/bin/ffmpeg -y -i "$video_path" -threads 1 -f mpegts \
      -acodec libfaac -ab 64k -ar 44100 -vcodec libx264 -vprofile baseline -x264opts "fps=12:keyint=36:bitrate=200" -s 416x234 "$DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename"/p1.ts \
      -acodec libfaac -ab 64k -ar 44100 -vcodec libx264 -vprofile baseline -x264opts "fps=12:keyint=36:bitrate=400" -s 480x270 "$DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename"/p2.ts \
      -acodec libfaac -ab 64k -ar 44100 -vcodec libx264 -vprofile baseline -x264opts "fps=24:keyint=72:bitrate=600" -s 640x360 "$DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename"/p3.ts \
      -acodec libfaac -ab 64k -ar 44100 -vcodec libx264 -vprofile baseline -x264opts "fps=24:keyint=72:bitrate=1200" -s 640x360 "$DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename"/p4.ts \
      -acodec libfaac -ab 64k -ar 44100 -vcodec libx264 -vprofile main -x264opts "fps=24:keyint=72:bitrate=1800" -s 960x540 "$DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename"/p5.ts \
      -acodec libfaac -ab 64k -ar 44100 -vcodec libx264 -vprofile main -x264opts "fps=24:keyint=72:bitrate=2500" -s 960x540 "$DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename"/p6.ts \
      -acodec libfaac -ab 64k -ar 44100 -vcodec libx264 -vprofile main -x264opts "fps=24:keyint=72:bitrate=4500" -s 1280x720 "$DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename"/p7.ts

    2. Using an extrenal segmenter

      cd $DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename
      mkdir M3U8
      for p in p1 p2 p3 p4 p5 p6 p7 ; do mkdir $DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename/M3U8/$p.seg ; (cd M3U8 ; m3u8-segmenter —input $DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename/$p.ts —duration 7 —output-prefix $p.seg/$p —m3u8-file $p.m3u8 —url-prefix "") ; done

    3. And finally manualy the individual playlists are joined into one

      echo ’

      EXTM3U

      EXT-X-STREAM-INF:PROGRAM-ID=1,BANDWIDTH=264000,RESOLUTION=416x234

      p1.m3u8

      EXT-X-STREAM-INF:PROGRAM-ID=1,BANDWIDTH=464000,RESOLUTION=480x270

      p2.m3u8

      EXT-X-STREAM-INF:PROGRAM-ID=1,BANDWIDTH=664000,RESOLUTION=640x360

      p3.m3u8

      EXT-X-STREAM-INF:PROGRAM-ID=1,BANDWIDTH=1264000,RESOLUTION=640x360

      p4.m3u8

      EXT-X-STREAM-INF:PROGRAM-ID=1,BANDWIDTH=1864000,RESOLUTION=960x540

      p5.m3u8

      EXT-X-STREAM-INF:PROGRAM-ID=1,BANDWIDTH=2564000,RESOLUTION=960x540

      p6.m3u8

      EXT-X-STREAM-INF:PROGRAM-ID=1,BANDWIDTH=4564000,RESOLUTION=1280x720

      p7.m3u8’ >> $filename.m3u8
      cd "$DIR_VIDEO_OUTPUT/$filename"/
      sudo rm *.ts

  • FFMPEG screen grab of windows desktop and then exporting to multiple bandwidth ts and m3u8 files with master playlist

    26 juillet 2018, par Tank Daniels

    Forgive me as this is my first post as I’m really stuck and need help. My boss needs me to screen capture a windows desktop as input and be able to output at least four outputs dependent on bandwidth. Each output "Stream"(im guessing is the right terminology) must have its own .ts files and .m3u8 files, along with a master m3u8 playlist that lists the four individual m3u8 files.

    Every attempt ive made only produces a master m3u8 file with a single listing of an output stream. (Code enclosed below).

    The end result I need to produce is to have a master m3u8 that can go into a webpage that can stream mp4 hls of the users screen grab and that video output will be changed dependant upon the users bandwidth available. If you can please help me with any advice I will be eternally grateful as I need to impress my new boss in my new job, and I’ve been working on this for ages now with no joy.

    Example :
    This is what I need it to look like.

    What the M3U8 needs to look like

    Example :
    This is what it actually looks like now.

    What the current M3U8 actually looks like when i run my code

    Below is the code I am currently using. Please help.

    ffmpeg -f dshow -i video="UScreenCapture":audio="virtual-audio-capturer" -master_pl_name master.m3u8 -master_pl_publish_rate 30 -tune fastdecode -vf scale=w=640:h=360:force_original_aspect_ratio=decrease -c:a aac -ar 48000 -c:v h264 -crf 20 -sc_threshold 0 -g 48 -keyint_min 48 -hls_time 4 -hls_playlist_type vod  -b:v 800k -maxrate 856k -bufsize 1200k -b:a 96k -hls_segment_filename 360p_%03d.ts 360p.m3u8 -master_pl_name master.m3u8 -master_pl_publish_rate 30 -vf scale=w=842:h=480:force_original_aspect_ratio=decrease -c:a aac -ar 48000 -c:v h264 -crf 20 -sc_threshold 0 -g 48 -keyint_min 48 -hls_time 4 -hls_playlist_type vod -b:v 1400k -maxrate 1498k -bufsize 2100k -b:a 128k -hls_segment_filename 480p_%03d.ts 480p.m3u8 -master_pl_name master.m3u8 -master_pl_publish_rate 30 -vf scale=w=1280:h=720:force_original_aspect_ratio=decrease -c:a aac -ar 48000 -c:v h264 -crf 20 -sc_threshold 0 -g 48 -keyint_min 48 -hls_time 4 -hls_playlist_type vod -b:v 2800k -maxrate 2996k -bufsize 4200k -b:a 128k -hls_segment_filename 720p_%03d.ts 720p.m3u8 -master_pl_name master.m3u8 -master_pl_publish_rate 30 -vf scale=w=1920:h=1080:force_original_aspect_ratio=decrease -c:a aac -ar 48000 -c:v h264 -crf 20 -sc_threshold 0 -g 48 -keyint_min 48 -hls_time 4 -hls_playlist_type vod -b:v 5000k -maxrate 5350k -bufsize 7500k -b:a 192k -hls_segment_filename 1080p_%03d.ts 1080p.m3u8

    Many Thanks for looking. Chris.