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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 (...)

  • Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins

    27 avril 2010, par

    Mediaspip core
    autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs

  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
    Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir

Sur d’autres sites (13479)

  • Convert swf file to mp4 file using FFMPEG [migrated]

    24 septembre 2012, par user1624004

    I now want to show an html5 video on a html page.

    Now I have an sample.swf file, I want to convert it to .mp4 or .ogg or .webm file.

    I have tried : ffmpeg -i sample.swf sample.mp4

    But I got this error :

    [swf @ 0000000001feef40] Could not find codec parameters for stream 0 (Audio: pcm_s16le, 5512 Hz, 1 channels, 88 kb/s): unspecified sample format
    Consider increasing the value for the 'analyzeduration' and 'probesize' options
    [swf @ 0000000001feef40] Estimating duration from bitrate, this may be inaccurate
    Guessed Channel Layout for  Input Stream #0.0 : mono
    Input #0, swf, from 'sample.swf':
     Duration: N/A, bitrate: N/A
       Stream #0:0: Audio: pcm_s16le, 5512 Hz, mono, 88 kb/s
       Stream #0:1: Video: mjpeg, yuvj444p, 1024x768 [SAR 100:100 DAR 4:3], 16 fps, 16 tbr, 16 tbn
    File 'sample.mp4' already exists. Overwrite ? [y/N] y
    Invalid sample format '(null)'
    Error opening filters!
  • suggestions for using protocol to stream images

    10 décembre 2013, par Abdul Ali

    The target is that a user sends a stream of images to a server. The server should forward those to a media server for showing as a live continuous video to clients.

    following are the thought for implementing, kindly tell if they are ok.

    Use a lightweight rtmp server to accept stream of images from a user (please suggest if this is even possible via rtmp and if it cab be easiy and efficiently done otherwise)

    use ffmpeg to use the rtmp (or other) url as input and send those images to ffserver for streaming. (am also confused here, if ffserver is fed with images continuosly, can it show those images as video as long as the images are coming)

  • Working on images asynchronously

    15 décembre 2013, par Mikko Koppanen — Imagick, PHP stuff

    To get my quota on buzzwords for the day we are going to look at using ZeroMQ and Imagick to create a simple asynchronous image processing system. Why asynchronous ? First of all, separating the image handling from a interactive PHP scripts allows us to scale the image processing separately from the web heads. For example we could do the image processing on separate servers, which have SSDs attached and more memory. In this example making the images available to all worker nodes is left to the reader.

    Secondly, separating the image processing from a web script can provide more responsive experience to the user. This doesn’t necessarily mean faster, but let’s say in a multiple image upload scenario this method allows the user to do something else on the site while we process the images in the background. This can be beneficial especially in cases where users upload hundreds of images at a time. To achieve a simple distributed image processing infrastructure we are going to use ZeroMQ for communicating between different components and Imagick to work on the images.

    The first part we are going to create is a simple “Worker” -process skeleton. Naturally for a live environment you would like to have more error handling and possibly use pcntl for process control, but for the sake of brewity the example is barebones :

    1. < ?php
    2.  
    3. define (’THUMBNAIL_ADDR’, ’tcp ://127.0.0.1:5000’) ;
    4. define (’COLLECTOR_ADDR’, ’tcp ://127.0.0.1:5001’) ;
    5.  
    6. class Worker {
    7.  
    8.   private $in ;
    9.   private $out ;
    10.  
    11.   public function __construct ($in_addr, $out_addr)
    12.   {
    13.     $context = new ZMQContext () ;
    14.  
    15.     $this->in = new ZMQSocket ($context, ZMQ: :SOCKET_PULL) ;
    16.     $this->in->bind ($in_addr) ;
    17.  
    18.     $this->out = new ZMQSocket ($context, ZMQ: :SOCKET_PUSH) ;
    19.     $this->out->connect ($out_addr) ;
    20.   }
    21.  
    22.   public function work () {
    23.     while ($command = $this->in->recvMulti ()) {
    24.       if (isset ($this->commands [$command [0]])) {
    25.         echo "Received work" . PHP_EOL ;
    26.  
    27.         $callback = $this->commands [$command [0]] ;
    28.  
    29.         array_shift ($command) ;
    30.         $response = call_user_func_array ($callback, $command) ;
    31.  
    32.         if (is_array ($response))
    33.           $this->out->sendMulti ($response) ;
    34.         else
    35.           $this->out->send ($response) ;
    36.       }
    37.       else {
    38.         error_log ("There is no registered worker for $command [0]") ;
    39.       }
    40.     }
    41.   }
    42.  
    43.   public function register ($command, $callback)
    44.   {
    45.     $this->commands [$command] = $callback ;
    46.   }
    47. }
    48.  ?>

    The Worker class allows us to register commands with callbacks associated with them. In our case the Worker class doesn’t actually care or know about the parameters being passed to the actual callback, it just blindly passes them on. We are using two separate sockets in this example, one for incoming work requests and one for passing the results onwards. This allows us to create a simple pipeline by adding more workers in the mix. For example we could first have a watermark worker, which takes the original image and composites a watermark on it, passes the file onwards to thumbnail worker, which then creates different sizes of thumbnails and passes the final results to event collector.

    The next part we are going to create a is a simple worker script that does the actual thumbnailing of the images :

    1. < ?php
    2. include __DIR__ . ’/common.php’ ;
    3.  
    4. // Create worker class and bind the inbound address to ’THUMBNAIL_ADDR’ and connect outbound to ’COLLECTOR_ADDR’
    5. $worker = new Worker (THUMBNAIL_ADDR, COLLECTOR_ADDR) ;
    6.  
    7. // Register our thumbnail callback, nothing special here
    8. $worker->register (’thumbnail’, function ($filename, $width, $height) {
    9.                   $info = pathinfo ($filename) ;
    10.  
    11.                   $out = sprintf ("%s/%s_%dx%d.%s",
    12.                           $info [’dirname’],
    13.                           $info [’filename’],
    14.                           $width,
    15.                           $height,
    16.                           $info [’extension’]) ;
    17.  
    18.                   $status = 1 ;
    19.                   $message = ’’ ;
    20.  
    21.                   try {
    22.                     $im = new Imagick ($filename) ;
    23.                     $im->thumbnailImage ($width, $height) ;
    24.                     $im->writeImage ($out) ;
    25.                   }
    26.                   catch (Exception $e) {
    27.                     $status = 0 ;
    28.                     $message = $e->getMessage () ;
    29.                   }
    30.  
    31.                   return array (
    32.                         ’status’  => $status,
    33.                         ’filename’ => $filename,
    34.                         ’thumbnail’ => $out,
    35.                         ’message’ => $message,
    36.                     ) ;
    37.                 }) ;
    38.  
    39. // Run the worker, will block
    40. echo "Running thumbnail worker.." . PHP_EOL ;
    41. $worker->work () ;

    As you can see from the code the thumbnail worker registers a callback for ‘thumbnail’ command. The callback does the thumbnailing based on input and returns the status, original filename and the thumbnail filename. We have connected our Workers “outbound” socket to event collector, which will receive the results from the thumbnail worker and do something with them. What the “something” is depends on you. For example you could push the response into a websocket to show immediate feeedback to the user or store the results into a database.

    Our example event collector will just do a var_dump on every event it receives from the thumbnailer :

    1. < ?php
    2. include __DIR__ . ’/common.php’ ;
    3.  
    4. $socket = new ZMQSocket (new ZMQContext (), ZMQ: :SOCKET_PULL) ;
    5. $socket->bind (COLLECTOR_ADDR) ;
    6.  
    7. echo "Waiting for events.." . PHP_EOL ;
    8. while (($message = $socket->recvMulti ())) {
    9.   var_dump ($message) ;
    10. }
    11.  ?>

    The final piece of the puzzle is the client that pumps messages into the pipeline. The client connects to the thumbnail worker, passes on filename and desired dimensions :

    1. < ?php
    2. include __DIR__ . ’/common.php’ ;
    3.  
    4. $socket = new ZMQSocket (new ZMQContext (), ZMQ: :SOCKET_PUSH) ;
    5. $socket->connect (THUMBNAIL_ADDR) ;
    6.  
    7. $socket->sendMulti (
    8.       array (
    9.         ’thumbnail’,
    10.         realpath (’./test.jpg’),
    11.         50,
    12.         50,
    13.       )
    14. ) ;
    15. echo "Sent request" . PHP_EOL ;
    16.  ?>

    After this our processing pipeline will look like this :

    simple-pipeline

    Now, if we notice that thumbnail workers or the event collectors can’t keep up with the rate of images we are pushing through we can start scaling the pipeline by adding more processes on each layer. ZeroMQ PUSH socket will automatically round-robin between all connected nodes, which makes adding more workers and event collectors simple. After adding more workers our pipeline will look like this :

    scaling-pipeline

    Using ZeroMQ also allows us to create more flexible architectures by adding forwarding devices in the middle, adding request-reply workers etc. So, the last thing to do is to run our pipeline and see the results :

    Let’s create our test image first :

    $ convert magick:rose test.jpg
    

    From the command-line run the thumbnail script :

    $ php thumbnail.php 
    Running thumbnail worker..
    

    In a separate terminal window run the event collector :

    $ php collector.php 
    Waiting for events..
    

    And finally run the client to send the thumbnail request :

    $ php client.php 
    Sent request
    $
    

    If everything went according to the plan you should now see the following output in the event collector window :

    array(4) 
      [0]=>
      string(1) "1"
      [1]=>
      string(56) "/test.jpg"
      [2]=>
      string(62) "/test_50x50.jpg"
      [3]=>
      string(0) ""
    
    

    Happy hacking !