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  • Contribute to a better visual interface

    13 avril 2011

    MediaSPIP is based on a system of themes and templates. Templates define the placement of information on the page, and can be adapted to a wide range of uses. Themes define the overall graphic appearance of the site.
    Anyone can submit a new graphic theme or template and make it available to the MediaSPIP community.

  • Qu’est ce qu’un éditorial

    21 juin 2013, par

    Ecrivez votre de point de vue dans un article. Celui-ci sera rangé dans une rubrique prévue à cet effet.
    Un éditorial est un article de type texte uniquement. Il a pour objectif de ranger les points de vue dans une rubrique dédiée. Un seul éditorial est placé à la une en page d’accueil. Pour consulter les précédents, consultez la rubrique dédiée.
    Vous pouvez personnaliser le formulaire de création d’un éditorial.
    Formulaire de création d’un éditorial Dans le cas d’un document de type éditorial, les (...)

  • Que fait exactement ce script ?

    18 janvier 2011, par

    Ce script est écrit en bash. Il est donc facilement utilisable sur n’importe quel serveur.
    Il n’est compatible qu’avec une liste de distributions précises (voir Liste des distributions compatibles).
    Installation de dépendances de MediaSPIP
    Son rôle principal est d’installer l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles nécessaires coté serveur à savoir :
    Les outils de base pour pouvoir installer le reste des dépendances Les outils de développements : build-essential (via APT depuis les dépôts officiels) ; (...)

Sur d’autres sites (2118)

  • Create a gif of given duration from a set of images with ffmpeg

    7 septembre 2020, par LukeTheWalker

    At the moment I have a variable number of frame numerically ordered from gif-00000.png to the last frame named gif-xxxxx.png.

    


    I'd like to create a gif using ffmpeg of exactly 25 seconds, which means changing according to the numbers of frames, the framerate of the gif.

    


    Since I do not know the exact number of frames, is there an option to force the framerate to fit into a given duration ?

    


  • ffmpeg : video to images with pts in filename

    12 février 2016, par ntg

    I am trying to extract images of exact times (say every second) from a mp4 video of an experiment. There are a lot of methods to do that using ffmpeg out there, but surprisingly enough the time accuracy is off.

    To measure accuracy, I have first time-stamped the video using pts, e.g. :

    -vf "[in] scale=640:-2 , drawtext=fontcolor=white:fontsize=22:fontfile='times.ttf':timecode='22\:10\:55\:00:text='03/12/15__':r=23.976023976:x=0:y=0 [out]"

    And as a result I got a millisecond precision time-stamp on the video. I checked the video and it seems the time-stamps are very accurate. I then tried all the methods I could find out there including :

    -Using -ss [timestamp] to go to an exact time and -vframes 1 to get the first frame at that time : this method is extremely slow since it involves calling ffmpeg once for each second of the video. Furthermore, seems to work fine for the first minutes, but then gets out of sync.

    -Using fps=1 and using out_%05d.jpg as the output. This was probably the most inaccurate, as it went off by whole seconds, plus it never got exactly the 0th millisecond.

    -Using a fast fps, and then selecting only the ones I need, e.g. -vf "fps=10, framestep=10, select=not(mod(n\,40))" was promising for the first minutes, but also became inaccurate after that.

    -I tried writing the pts/date as metadata, but (do not know how to /cannot) write to the metadata of a .jpg from ffmpeg...

    The problem is that after some time, if we are using out_%05d.jpg, the numbers get completely out of sinc, while the -ss gets inaccurate, and takes forever.

    Ideally there should be a way to write the %pts or the date as part of the filename... Does anyone know a method to extract images from an .mp4 file with millisecond precision, preferably using ffmpeg (or its library ? I am using python and getting desperate...)

    [Edit : as explained in the comment by Mulvya, the pts is calculated by using the fps of the video, ffmpeg can give it to you. In my case some of the videos have 30 and others 24*(100/1001) fps. Bellow is an example, which was produced by :

    args = ['ffmpeg',
    '-i',
    'c:\\Temp\\scr_cam.mp4',
    '-y',
    '-vf',
    "[in] drawtext=fontcolor=black:fontsize=22:fontfile='times.ttf':timecode='17\\:00\\:29\\:00':text='09/02/16__':r=30.0:x=0:y=0, drawtext=fontcolor=black:fontsize=22:fontfile='times.ttf':timecode='00\\:00\\:00\\:00':text='':r=30.0 :x=0:y=30, drawtext=fontcolor=black:fontsize=22:fontfile='times.ttf':text='n\\: %{n}   pts\\:%{pts}':r=30.0:x=0:y=60 [out]",
    '-c:a',
    'copy',
    '-metadata',
    'creation_time=2016-02-09T17:00:29',
    '-preset',
    'ultrafast',
    '-threads',
    '3',
    'c:\\Temp\\stamped_scr_cam.mp4']
    subprocess.call(args)

    In it we see that indeed pts = n/30 (n is the frame no). I have tried many combinations of the params of the commands I talk in the beginning, so listing all my efforts would take too much space. As we see, the drawtext seems to be very accurate, so it does not seem to be a problem of incorrect fps.

    sample of drawtext

    To get the fps I am using :

    def get_frame_rate_and_duration(filename):
       if not os.path.exists(filename):
           sys.stderr.write("ERROR: filename %r was not found!" % (filename,))
           return -1
       args = ["ffprobe",filename,"-v","0","-select_streams","v","-print_format","flat"]
       args.extend(["-show_entries","stream=r_frame_rate"])
       args.extend(["-show_entries","format=duration"])
       out = subprocess.check_output(args).split("\n")
       rate = out[0].split('=')[1].strip()[1:-1].split('/')
       duration = pd.Timedelta("{0} sec".format(out[1].split('=')[1].strip()[1:-1]))
       if len(rate)==1:
           rate = float(rate[0])
       if len(rate)==2:
           rate =  float(rate[0])/float(rate[1])
       else:
           rate = -1
       return rate, duration
  • How to calculate byte/index ranges for mpeg-dash MPD file ?

    7 avril 2016, par TheSHEEEP

    I basically know how an .mpd file would have to be structured to support streaming from separate .mp4 (or webm) files.

    However, I would like to implement the "static" (aka "on-demand") method, thus only having one file per quality that I want to offer in the stream.

    In all samples, this is done by supplying the indexRange & range values within a Representation like this :

    <representation bandwidth="2073921" codecs="avc1.4d401f" height="720" mimetype="video/mp4" width="1280">
           <baseurl>car-20120827-88.mp4</baseurl>
           <segmentbase indexrange="708-1183">
             <initialization range="0-707"></initialization>
           </segmentbase>
    </representation>

    What I could not find out anywhere is how one would calculate the indexRange/range values here, using only ffmpeg (or ffprobe).
    What exactly would one have to do to get those numbers right for arbitrary (yet supported, of course) video files to create the .mpd file for them ?

    Or am I trying to figure out something in vain here and those values are just arbitrary ?