
Recherche avancée
Médias (1)
-
The Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow
28 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Texte
Autres articles (19)
-
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 (...) -
Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-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 -
MediaSPIP Player : les contrôles
26 mai 2010, parLes contrôles à la souris du lecteur
En plus des actions au click sur les boutons visibles de l’interface du lecteur, il est également possible d’effectuer d’autres actions grâce à la souris : Click : en cliquant sur la vidéo ou sur le logo du son, celui ci se mettra en lecture ou en pause en fonction de son état actuel ; Molette (roulement) : en plaçant la souris sur l’espace utilisé par le média (hover), la molette de la souris n’exerce plus l’effet habituel de scroll de la page, mais diminue ou (...)
Sur d’autres sites (3768)
-
How to split ffmpeg output into multiple files ?
15 novembre 2020, par Genius BillionaireWhat I want to happen : the equivalent of this :
split -n 4 output.mp4
, which generates 4 files. Only the first file is "valid mp4" that you can play. The other 3 files rely on the previous file.

A similar request can be seen here : https://lists.ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-user/2013-May/015090.html


Why I want this to happen : running FFMPEG in the browser, which means 1) file size limit, 2) I don't have the Linux command
split
to help me out, just FFMPEG. If I can get FFMPEG to output files of X MB each, I can iteratively delete files as soon as I've read them.

EDIT : as a commenter asked, yes it is possible to run several ffmpeg commands if necessary.


The right solution is not using segments. The following example command generates several 4 valid mp4 files. That's not exactly what I want.

ffmpeg -i ../flv.flv -segment_time 5 -f segment -t 20 %d.mp4


This other solution also does not work (it's the same output as previous incorrect solution) :


ffmpeg -i ../flv.flv -ss 00:00:00 -t 5 1.mp4


ffmpeg -i ../flv.flv -ss 00:00:05 -t 5 2.mp4


-
ffmpeg : fast video split by encoding only missing keyframes and copying the rest
29 janvier 2023, par Eduardo PoçoI am splitting a video in many files, removing the silent periods. The script is ready to detect the voiced parts, split and concat.


At first, it thought copying the frames (-c copy) would be faster, but if a starting time of a part is not a keyframe, the video gets messed and some frames freeze until another keyframe appears. But reencoding each split file, although working, takes a long time.


So, I was wondering if it is possible to reencode only the moments whose frames lost its keyframe, while copying everything so on. Is there a ffmpeg option for suck a task, or is there a way to differentiate those frames and treat them differently when splitting the file ?


After reading some articles and documentation, that is how I understand what I am observing. Please, correct me if I misunderstood how ffmpeg works when splitting a file starting from a timestamp without a keyframe.


-
Is there an elegant way to split a file by chapter using ffmpeg ?
6 février 2017, par KatternIn this page, Albert Armea share a code to split videos by chapter using
ffmpeg
. The code is straight forward, but not quite good-looking.ffmpeg -i "$SOURCE.$EXT" 2>&1 | grep Chapter | sed -E "s/ *Chapter #([0-9]+.[0-9]+) : start ([0-9]+.[0-9]+), end ([0-9]+.[0-9]+)/-i \"$SOURCE.$EXT\" -vcodec copy -acodec copy -ss \2 -to \3 \"$SOURCE-\1.$EXT\"/" | xargs -n 11 ffmpeg
Is there an elegant way to do this job ?