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  • Les sons

    15 mai 2013, par
  • Automated installation script of MediaSPIP

    25 avril 2011, par

    To overcome the difficulties mainly due to the installation of server side software dependencies, an "all-in-one" installation script written in bash was created to facilitate this step on a server with a compatible Linux distribution.
    You must have access to your server via SSH and a root account to use it, which will install the dependencies. Contact your provider if you do not have that.
    The documentation of the use of this installation script is available here.
    The code of this (...)

  • MediaSPIP en mode privé (Intranet)

    17 septembre 2013, par

    À partir de la version 0.3, un canal de MediaSPIP peut devenir privé, bloqué à toute personne non identifiée grâce au plugin "Intranet/extranet".
    Le plugin Intranet/extranet, lorsqu’il est activé, permet de bloquer l’accès au canal à tout visiteur non identifié, l’empêchant d’accéder au contenu en le redirigeant systématiquement vers le formulaire d’identification.
    Ce système peut être particulièrement utile pour certaines utilisations comme : Atelier de travail avec des enfants dont le contenu ne doit pas (...)

Sur d’autres sites (11784)

  • how to pass arguments to existing process instance in c#

    28 octobre 2013, par Akash Langhani

    I am using ffmpeg and I have start a process and I want to pass an argument to same instance after its start, so how to do this in c sharp any resource. Basically I am using ffmpeg to recored desktop screen and ffmpeg recording can be stop with "q" word.

  • Realtime removal of carriage return in shell

    1er mai 2013, par Seth

    For context, I'm attempting to create a shell script that simplifies the realtime console output of ffmpeg, only displaying the current frame being encoded. My end goal is to use this information in some sort of progress indicator for batch processing.

    For those unfamiliar with ffmpeg's output, it outputs encoded video information to stdout and console information to stderr. Also, when it actually gets to displaying encode information, it uses carriage returns to keep the console screen from filling up. This makes it impossible to simply use grep and awk to capture the appropriate line and frame information.

    The first thing I've tried is replacing the carriage returns using tr :

    $ ffmpeg -i "ScreeningSchedule-1.mov" -y "test.mp4" 2>&1 | tr '\r' '\n'

    This works in that it displays realtime output to the console. However, if I then pipe that information to grep or awk or anything else, tr's output is buffered and is no longer realtime. For example : $ ffmpeg -i "ScreeningSchedule-1.mov" -y "test.mp4" 2>&1 | tr '\r' '\n'>log.txt results in a file that is immediately filled with some information, then 5-10 secs later, more lines get dropped into the log file.

    At first I thought sed would be great for this : $ # ffmpeg -i "ScreeningSchedule-1.mov" -y "test.mp4" 2>&1 | sed 's/\\r/\\n/', but it gets to the line with all the carriage returns and waits until the processing has finished before it attempts to do anything. I assume this is because sed works on a line-by-line basis and needs the whole line to have completed before it does anything else, and then it doesn't replace the carriage returns anyway. I've tried various different regex's for the carriage return and new line, and have yet to find a solution that replaces the carriage return. I'm running OSX 10.6.8, so I am using BSD sed, which might account for that.

    I have also attempted to write the information to a log file and use tail -f to read it back, but I still run into the issue of replacing carriage returns in realtime.

    I have seen that there are solutions for this in python and perl, however, I'm reluctant to go that route immediately. First, I don't know python or perl. Second, I have a completely functional batch processing shell application that I would need to either port or figure out how to integrate with python/perl. Probably not hard, but not what I want to get into unless I absolutely have to. So I'm looking for a shell solution, preferably bash, but any of the OSX shells would be fine.

    And if what I want is simply not doable, well I guess I'll cross that bridge when I get there.

  • ffmpeg How to get PCM floats from AVFrame with AV_SAMPLE_FMT_FLT

    26 novembre 2020, par cs guy

    I have an AVFrame obtained through a decoder that has a format of AVSampleFormat::AV_SAMPLE_FMT_FLT. My issue is I want to convert the data stored inside

    


    avFrame->data; // returns uint8_t *


    


    to Array of floats that are between [-1, +1]. I see that avFrame->data; returns uint8_t * how may I use this to obtain the float pcm data for each channel of the audio ?

    


    I tried the following :

    


    auto *floatArrPtr = (float *)(avResampledDecFrame->data[0]);

    for (int i = 0; i < avResampledDecFrame->nb_samples; i++) {
        // TODO: store interleaved floats somewhere
        floatArrPtr++;
    }


    


    but I am not sure if this is the right way to get data