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Autres articles (55)
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La file d’attente de SPIPmotion
28 novembre 2010, parUne file d’attente stockée dans la base de donnée
Lors de son installation, SPIPmotion crée une nouvelle table dans la base de donnée intitulée spip_spipmotion_attentes.
Cette nouvelle table est constituée des champs suivants : id_spipmotion_attente, l’identifiant numérique unique de la tâche à traiter ; id_document, l’identifiant numérique du document original à encoder ; id_objet l’identifiant unique de l’objet auquel le document encodé devra être attaché automatiquement ; objet, le type d’objet auquel (...) -
Contribute to documentation
13 avril 2011Documentation is vital to the development of improved technical capabilities.
MediaSPIP welcomes documentation by users as well as developers - including : critique of existing features and functions articles contributed by developers, administrators, content producers and editors screenshots to illustrate the above translations of existing documentation into other languages
To contribute, register to the project users’ mailing (...) -
Submit bugs and patches
13 avril 2011Unfortunately a software is never perfect.
If you think you have found a bug, report it using our ticket system. Please to help us to fix it by providing the following information : the browser you are using, including the exact version as precise an explanation as possible of the problem if possible, the steps taken resulting in the problem a link to the site / page in question
If you think you have solved the bug, fill in a ticket and attach to it a corrective patch.
You may also (...)
Sur d’autres sites (1952)
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Playing H.264 video in an application through ffmpeg using DXVA2 acceleration
28 avril 2012, par cloudravenI am trying to output H.264 video in a Windows application. I am moderately familiar with FFMPEG and I have been successful at getting it to play H.264 in a SDL window without a problem. Still, I would really benefit from using Hardware Acceleration (probably through DXVA2)
I am reading raw H264 video, no container, no audio ... just raw video (and no B-frames, just I and P). Also, I know that all the systems that will use this applications have Nvidia GPUs supporting at least VP3.
Given that set of assumptions I was hoping to cut some corners, make it simple instead of general, just have it working for my particular scenario.So far I know that I need to set the hardware acceleration in the codec context by filling the hwaccel member through a call to ff_find_hwaccel. My plan is to look at Media Player Classic Home Cinema which does a pretty good job at supporting DXVA2 using FFMPEG when decoding H.264. However, the code is quite large and I am not exactly sure where to look. I can find the place where ff_find_hwaccel is called in h264.c, but I was wondering where else should I be looking at.
More specifically, I would like to know what is the minimum set of steps that I have to code to get DXVA2 through FFMPEG working ?
EDIT : I am open to look at VLC or anything else if someone knows where I can find the "important" piece of code that does the trick. I just mentioned MPC-HC because I think it is the easiest to get to compile in Windows.
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I have a log file with RTP packets : now what ?
9 mai 2012, par BrannonI have a log file with RTP packets coming off of a black box device. I also have a corresponding SDP file (RTSP DESCRIBE) for that. I need to convert this file into some kind of playable video file. Can I pass these two files to FFMpeg or VLC or something else and have it mux that data into something playable ?
As an alternate plan, I can loop through the individual packets in code and do something with each packet. However, it seems that there are existing libraries for parsing this data. And it seems to do it by hand would be asking for a large project. Is there some kind of video file format that is a pretty raw mix of SDP and RTP ? Thanks for your time.
Is there a way for FFmpeg or VLC to open an SDP file and then get their input packets through STDIN ?
I generally use C#, but I could use C if necessary.
Update 1 : Here is my unworking code. I'm trying to get some kind of output to play with ffplay, but I haven't had any luck yet. It gives me invalid data errors. It does go over all the data correctly as far as I can tell. My output is nearly as big as my input (at about 4MB).
public class RtpPacket2
{
public byte VersionPXCC;
public byte MPT;
public ushort Sequence; // length?
public uint Timestamp;
public uint Ssrc;
public int Version { get { return VersionPXCC >> 6; } }
public bool Padding { get { return (VersionPXCC & 32) > 0; } }
public bool Extension { get { return (VersionPXCC & 16) > 0; } }
public int CsrcCount { get { return VersionPXCC & 0xf; } } // ItemCount
public bool Marker { get { return (MPT & 0x80) > 0; } }
public int PayloadType { get { return MPT & 0x7f; } } // PacketType
}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
if (args.Length != 2)
{
Console.WriteLine("Usage: <input rtp="rtp" file="file" /> <output 3gp="3gp" file="file">");
return;
}
var inputFile = args[0];
var outputFile = args[1];
if(File.Exists(outputFile)) File.Delete(outputFile);
// FROM the SDP : fmtp 96 profile-level-id=4D0014;packetization-mode=0
var sps = Convert.FromBase64String("Z0LAHoiLUFge0IAAA4QAAK/IAQ=="); // BitConverter.ToString(sps) "67-42-C0-1E-88-8B-50-58-1E-D0-80-00-03-84-00-00-AF-C8-01" string
var pps = Convert.FromBase64String("aM44gA=="); // BitConverter.ToString(pps) "68-CE-38-80" string
var sep = new byte[] { 00, 00, 01 };
var packet = new RtpPacket2();
bool firstFrame = true;
using (var input = File.OpenRead(inputFile))
using (var reader = new BinaryReader(input))
using (var output = File.OpenWrite(outputFile))
{
//output.Write(header, 0, header.Length);
output.Write(sep, 0, sep.Length);
output.Write(sps, 0, sps.Length);
output.Write(sep, 0, sep.Length);
output.Write(pps, 0, pps.Length);
output.Write(sep, 0, sep.Length);
while (input.Position < input.Length)
{
var size = reader.ReadInt16();
packet.VersionPXCC = reader.ReadByte();
packet.MPT = reader.ReadByte();
packet.Sequence = reader.ReadUInt16();
packet.Timestamp = reader.ReadUInt32();
packet.Ssrc = reader.ReadUInt32();
if (packet.PayloadType == 96)
{
if (packet.CsrcCount > 0 || packet.Extension) throw new NotImplementedException();
var header0 = reader.ReadByte();
var header1 = reader.ReadByte();
var fragmentType = header0 & 0x1F; // should be 28 for video
if(fragmentType != 28) // 28 for video?
{
input.Position += size - 14;
continue;
}
var nalUnit = header0 & ~0x1F;
var nalType = header1 & 0x1F;
var start = (header1 & 0x80) > 0;
var end = (header1 & 0x40) > 0;
if(firstFrame)
{
output.Write(sep, 0, sep.Length);
output.WriteByte((byte)(nalUnit | fragmentType));
firstFrame = false;
}
for (int i = 0; i < size - 14; i++)
output.WriteByte(reader.ReadByte());
if (packet.Marker)
firstFrame = true;
}
else input.Position += size - 12;
}
}
}
</output> -
Evolution #2995 : Couleur du bouton "parcourir" sous IE9 presque invisible.
12 mai 2013, par Franck Dalotil y a des chances qu’il faudrait plutôt faire un changement, de la couleur d’arrière plan dans ce cas là, s’il devait y avoir modification.
Bon, cela dit, il n’y a pas mort d’homme non plus, mais cela faisait un moment que je voulais le dire, mais j’y pensais jamais :-DSuivant le navigateur, parfois le texte lui même change (parcourir/choisissez un fichier/choisir), par contre, là, je suppose que cela vient des navigateurs et non de spip.
J’ai fait des captures d’écran :
Chrome version 26.0.1410.64 m
Firefox 20.0.1
Opera 12.15cela m’a fait remarquer un autre truc (je vais faire un ticket pour ne pas tout mélanger)
Franck