
Recherche avancée
Médias (91)
-
Valkaama DVD Cover Outside
4 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Image
-
Valkaama DVD Label
4 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Image
-
Valkaama DVD Cover Inside
4 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Image
-
1,000,000
27 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
Demon Seed
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
The Four of Us are Dying
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
Autres articles (62)
-
Gestion des droits de création et d’édition des objets
8 février 2011, parPar défaut, beaucoup de fonctionnalités sont limitées aux administrateurs mais restent configurables indépendamment pour modifier leur statut minimal d’utilisation notamment : la rédaction de contenus sur le site modifiables dans la gestion des templates de formulaires ; l’ajout de notes aux articles ; l’ajout de légendes et d’annotations sur les images ;
-
Keeping control of your media in your hands
13 avril 2011, parThe vocabulary used on this site and around MediaSPIP in general, aims to avoid reference to Web 2.0 and the companies that profit from media-sharing.
While using MediaSPIP, you are invited to avoid using words like "Brand", "Cloud" and "Market".
MediaSPIP is designed to facilitate the sharing of creative media online, while allowing authors to retain complete control of their work.
MediaSPIP aims to be accessible to as many people as possible and development is based on expanding the (...) -
Dépôt de média et thèmes par FTP
31 mai 2013, parL’outil MédiaSPIP traite aussi les média transférés par la voie FTP. Si vous préférez déposer par cette voie, récupérez les identifiants d’accès vers votre site MédiaSPIP et utilisez votre client FTP favori.
Vous trouverez dès le départ les dossiers suivants dans votre espace FTP : config/ : dossier de configuration du site IMG/ : dossier des média déjà traités et en ligne sur le site local/ : répertoire cache du site web themes/ : les thèmes ou les feuilles de style personnalisées tmp/ : dossier de travail (...)
Sur d’autres sites (12514)
-
net core and video transcoding on aws lambda
14 septembre 2022, par user1765862I'm looking for a solution to :


- 

- upload video to s3 bucket
- after video upload an aws lambda function will be triggered
- lambda function will use ffmpeg layer in order to transcode video (mainly cropping with other functionalities)
- save result (transcoded video into s3 bucket)










My language of choice inside lambda is c# and net core runtime.


I have found various resources for video manipulation with aws ffmpeg layer using lambda function but no examples in net core lambda.


My question is :




Can I use existing FFmpeg/FFprobe Lambda Layer for Amazon Linux such
as this one with lambda function written in c# and .net core ?




Another question :




Would you suggest Amazon Elastic Transcoder as a better choice with
lambda function .net core integration ?




-
Lambda/ffmpeg timelapse generation - output zero bytes, can't debug ffmpeg
25 août 2021, par GoOutsideI am attempting to use an AWS Lambda FFMPEG layer to build a timelapse of static images in an S3 bucket. To begin, I am basing my project off of the tutorial located here.


I can replicate the steps in the tutorial, so I know the FFMPEG layer is working in Lambda. I have replicated the FFMPEG commands on a standalone server, so I know they are correct.


Here is my setup : I have two S3 buckets,
lambda-source-bucket
andlambda-destination-bucket
. The contents oflambda-source-bucket
are :

1.jpg
2.jpg
3.jpg
4.jpg
5.jpg
6.jpg
7.jpg
files.txt



The
files.txt
contains this :

file 'https://lambda-source-bucket.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.jpg'
file 'https://lambda-source-bucket.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/2.jpg'
file 'https://lambda-source-bucket.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/3.jpg'
file 'https://lambda-source-bucket.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/4.jpg'
file 'https://lambda-source-bucket.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/5.jpg'
file 'https://lambda-source-bucket.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/6.jpg'
file 'https://lambda-source-bucket.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/7.jpg'



This is my Lambda function code (in Python) :


import json
import os
import subprocess
import shlex
import boto3

S3_DESTINATION_BUCKET = "lambda-destination-bucket"
SIGNED_URL_TIMEOUT = 60

def lambda_handler(event, context):

 s3_source_bucket = event['Records'][0]['s3']['bucket']['name']
 s3_source_key = event['Records'][0]['s3']['object']['key']

 s3_source_basename = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(s3_source_key))[0]
 s3_destination_filename = "timelapse.mp4"

 s3_client = boto3.client('s3')
 s3_source_signed_url = s3_client.generate_presigned_url('get_object',
 Params={'Bucket': s3_source_bucket, 'Key': s3_source_key},
 ExpiresIn=SIGNED_URL_TIMEOUT)

 ffmpeg_cmd = "/opt/bin/ffmpeg -y -r 24 -f concat -safe 0 -protocol_whitelist file,http,tcp,https,tls -I ""https://lambda-source-bucket.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/files.txt"" -c copy -s 1024x576 -vcodec libx264 -" 
command1 = shlex.split(ffmpeg_cmd)
 p1 = subprocess.run(command1, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)

 resp = s3_client.put_object(Body=p1.stdout, Bucket=S3_DESTINATION_BUCKET, Key=s3_destination_filename)

 return {
 'statusCode': 200,
 'body': json.dumps('Processing complete successfully')
 }



The trigger for the Lambda function is when a new
files.txt
file is added tolambda-source-bucket
.

So far I have been able to get the trigger to fire, the function supposedly runs without errors (in Cloudwatch), and the function creates a new
timelapse.mp4
in thelambda-destination-bucket
. But this file is0 bytes
. I see no FFMPEG errors in the Cloudwatch console, though I am not sure I know how to configure my Lambda function code to log FFMPEG errors.

Also : if I'm going about this in a totally wrong way, I'd love to hear feedback. I'm guessing that the
concat
andfiles.txt
method of looping throughhttps://
is not the most efficient way to do this, but it's the only way I can figure this out so far.

Any help is most sincerely and humbly appreciated.


-
Python Lambda function and ffmpeg command with stdout from jpg to ts file
28 juillet 2021, par SflaggI have a AWS Lambda Python function setup to process jpg and convert it to a ts file.


I followed these instructions https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/media/processing-user-generated-content-using-aws-lambda-and-ffmpeg/ but changed the command from vfr to cfr conversion to a jpg to ts conversion.


This is the command I am using


ffmpeg_cmd = "/opt/bin/ffmpeg -r 30000/1001 -loop 1 -i \"" + s3_source_signed_url + "\" -f lavfi -i anullsrc=channel_layout=stereo:sample_rate=48000 -t 30 -vcodec libx264 -crf 23 -s 1920x1080 -r 30000/1001 -g 150 -pix_fmt yuv420p -acodec aac -b:a 96k -ar 48000 -"


Everything else is basically the same from the AWS article besides having s3 triggers in my Lambda look for jpeg and jpg suffixes.


But this results in 0 byte ts file.


I have a hunch that I need to modify the command that has a seekable output format (e.g. mpegts) when writing to stdout ; currently my command is likely not working for stdout and that is why I get an empty ts file. But I am having trouble formatting the command correctly. Any help with this would be greatly appreciated !