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Médias (1)
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Video d’abeille en portrait
14 mai 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2012
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (25)
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Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP automatically converts uploaded files to internet-compatible formats.
Video files are encoded in MP4, Ogv and WebM (supported by HTML5) and MP4 (supported by Flash).
Audio files are encoded in MP3 and Ogg (supported by HTML5) and MP3 (supported by Flash).
Where possible, text is analyzed in order to retrieve the data needed for search engine detection, and then exported as a series of image files.
All uploaded files are stored online in their original format, so you can (...) -
Support de tous types de médias
10 avril 2011Contrairement à beaucoup de logiciels et autres plate-formes modernes de partage de documents, MediaSPIP a l’ambition de gérer un maximum de formats de documents différents qu’ils soient de type : images (png, gif, jpg, bmp et autres...) ; audio (MP3, Ogg, Wav et autres...) ; vidéo (Avi, MP4, Ogv, mpg, mov, wmv et autres...) ; contenu textuel, code ou autres (open office, microsoft office (tableur, présentation), web (html, css), LaTeX, Google Earth) (...)
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List of compatible distributions
26 avril 2011, parThe table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...)
Sur d’autres sites (6475)
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How to output a sequence of images in a loop with ffmpeg from rtsp stream
6 juillet 2017, par The DoctorI am reading an RTSP stream from a surveillance camera and want to use ffmpeg to create a snapshot of the camera as jpeg. Principally it works to create a snapshot.jpg using the -update 1 option, but if it happens (what it does very often) that the client application reads the file while ffmpeg writes to it, the image is displayed only partially.
Hence I want to use ffmpeg to capture more than 1 images in a kind of ring buffer, so I can access the image captured just before the current one and have also the last n images as short history.
Though ffmpeg allows to create a series of jpgs, this seems infinite. Is it possible to tell ffmpeg to create images in a file pattern like this :
pic1.jpg, pic2.jpg, pic3.jpg, pic4.jpg, pic5.jpg and after pic5.jpg to start over again using pic1.jpg etc. This way it could consume a stream continuously without filling up my drive. Unfortunately something like -update 5 seems not to work (ffmpeg simply exits).
Principally I can also let it run infinitely and clean up all files older than n seconds, but that would introduce additional overhead and is IMHO not really clean programming compared to ffmpeg using this kind of ring buffer approach.
Any help would be appreciated.
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Split a movie so that each GIF is under a certain file size
9 novembre 2014, par Terence EdenProblem
I want to convert a long movie into a series on animated GIFs.
Each GIF needs to be <5MB.
Is there any way to determine how large a GIF will be while it is being encoded ?
Progress So Far
I can split the movie into individual frames :
ffmpeg -i movie.ogv -r 25 frameTemp.%05d.gif
I can then use
convert
from ImageMagick to create GIFs. However, I can’t find a way to determine the likely file size before running the command.Alternatively, I can split the movie into chunks :
ffmpeg -i movie.ogv -vcodec copy -ss 00:00:00 -t 00:20:00 output1.ogv
But I’ve no way of knowing if, when I
convert
the file to a GIF it will be under 5MB.A 10 second scene with a lot of action may be over 5MB (bad !) and a static scene could be under 5MB (not a problem, but not very efficient).
Ideas
I think that what I want to do is convert the entire movie into a GIF, then find a way to split it by file size.
Looking at ImageMagick, I can split a GIF into frames, but I don’t see a way to split it into animated GIFs of a certain size / length.
So, is this possible ?
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Wildcard for sequential images
16 septembre 2013, par abalterI'm trying to animate a series of jpg files using avconv. Based on numerous examples, I'm trying using %d.jpg to specify the files. Or %05d.jpg. However, I'm getting :
avconv -i %d.jpg a.avi
avconv version 0.8.3-4:0.8.3-0ubuntu0.12.04.1, Copyright (c) 2000-2012 the Libav developers built on Jun 12 2012 16:37:58 with gcc 4.6.3
%d.jpg: No such file or directoryHere is a snip of my directory listing :
10380.jpg
10390.jpg
10400.jpg
1040.jpg
10410.jpg
10420.jpg
10430.jpg
10440.jpgThere are jpegs from 00000.jpg to 14400.jpg
I don't really understand that wildcard system, but that is what is in examples.
(note : I tagged it ffmpeg because a tag for avconv does not exist, and avconv supersedes ffmpeg)
Update
I'm updating the question based on the answer below by @av501.To begin with, I have a list of png files with sequential ordering by 10. They have text preceding a 5 digit integer. For example :
SkinMattekNutrient_py_00000.png
SkinMattekNutrient_py_00010.png
SkinMattekNutrient_py_00020.png
...
SkinMattekNutrient_py_10440.pngWhat would be the way to batch convert these to jpg ? I tried
convert ...
SkinMattekNutrient_py_%05d.png %05d.jpgand
convert ...
SkinMattekNutrient_py_%5d.png %5d.jpgBut I get :
convert SkinMattekNutrient_py_%05d.png %05d.jpg
convert: missing an image filename `%05d.jpg' @ error/convert.c/ConvertImageCommand/3011.