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  • XMP PHP

    13 mai 2011, par

    Dixit Wikipedia, XMP signifie :
    Extensible Metadata Platform ou XMP est un format de métadonnées basé sur XML utilisé dans les applications PDF, de photographie et de graphisme. Il a été lancé par Adobe Systems en avril 2001 en étant intégré à la version 5.0 d’Adobe Acrobat.
    Étant basé sur XML, il gère un ensemble de tags dynamiques pour l’utilisation dans le cadre du Web sémantique.
    XMP permet d’enregistrer sous forme d’un document XML des informations relatives à un fichier : titre, auteur, historique (...)

  • Use, discuss, criticize

    13 avril 2011, par

    Talk to people directly involved in MediaSPIP’s development, or to people around you who could use MediaSPIP to share, enhance or develop their creative projects.
    The bigger the community, the more MediaSPIP’s potential will be explored and the faster the software will evolve.
    A discussion list is available for all exchanges between users.

  • Installation en mode ferme

    4 février 2011, par

    Le mode ferme permet d’héberger plusieurs sites de type MediaSPIP en n’installant qu’une seule fois son noyau fonctionnel.
    C’est la méthode que nous utilisons sur cette même plateforme.
    L’utilisation en mode ferme nécessite de connaïtre un peu le mécanisme de SPIP contrairement à la version standalone qui ne nécessite pas réellement de connaissances spécifique puisque l’espace privé habituel de SPIP n’est plus utilisé.
    Dans un premier temps, vous devez avoir installé les mêmes fichiers que l’installation (...)

Sur d’autres sites (5672)

  • Returning a success or failure from ffmpeg

    16 mars 2014, par user3331834

    I have some code executed in PHP after meeting some criteria through if/then statements which looks something like this :

    if(in_array($ext,$video)&&($ext!=="mp4")){
       exec("ffmpeg -i ".$fileName.".".$ext." -s 640x360 ".$fileName.".mp4");
       /*
       if(successful){
           unlink($fileName.$ext);
           $status="Video entry approved. File converted.";
       }
       */
    }

    As you can see, the issue I'm having is trying to figure out what should go in place of if(successful). The point of this section of the code is to check the files extension against an array of known extensions that are in video format, and that aren't already in the mp4 format. If it passes this check, ffmpeg should run and convert to mp4.

    So a few questions here. Firstly, how can I return a status to tell me if it is converting, succeeded, or failed ? Secondly, how can this be run asynchronously ? That is, if I wanted to convert multiple files, would I be able to do so ? Would I be able to limit ffmpeg to ensure it does not take up all of my server's processing power and inadvertently bring the site to a grinding halt ?

    Or is there a better way to go about converting files than this ? I'm pretty sure my method must be crude.

    EDIT : In addition to this, how does one run ffmpeg in the background, so that the page can be closed, and/or another instance from the same page can be started up by the user for multiple simultaneous conversions ? Is it possible to include a real-time progress status of each conversion ?

  • Returning a success or failure from ffmpeg

    2 novembre 2017, par user3331834

    I have some code executed in PHP after meeting some criteria through if/then statements which looks something like this :

    if(in_array($ext,$video)&&($ext!=="mp4")){
       exec("ffmpeg -i ".$fileName.".".$ext." -s 640x360 ".$fileName.".mp4");
       /*
       if(successful){
           unlink($fileName.$ext);
           $status="Video entry approved. File converted.";
       }
       */
    }

    As you can see, the issue I’m having is trying to figure out what should go in place of if(successful). The point of this section of the code is to check the files extension against an array of known extensions that are in video format, and that aren’t already in the mp4 format. If it passes this check, ffmpeg should run and convert to mp4.

    So a few questions here. Firstly, how can I return a status to tell me if it is converting, succeeded, or failed ? Secondly, how can this be run asynchronously ? That is, if I wanted to convert multiple files, would I be able to do so ? Would I be able to limit ffmpeg to ensure it does not take up all of my server’s processing power and inadvertently bring the site to a grinding halt ?

    Or is there a better way to go about converting files than this ? I’m pretty sure my method must be crude.

    EDIT : In addition to this, how does one run ffmpeg in the background, so that the page can be closed, and/or another instance from the same page can be started up by the user for multiple simultaneous conversions ? Is it possible to include a real-time progress status of each conversion ?

  • FFMPEG cropping size is always wrong

    19 avril 2020, par Samsy

    I need a bunch of video to be EXACTLY 1024x512 ( power of 2 video ), not a pixel less, not a pixel more..

    



    I'm scaling them first to 1024 width

    



    Then cropping them to 1024x512

    



    Problem is..

    



    result always ends up with 1 pixel more or 2 less pixels in width etc...

    



    Source dimension : 1624 × 1080
Output dimension : 1022 × 512


    



    Source dimension : 1264 × 720
Output dimension : 1025 × 512


    



    rm -R ./output

mkdir output

cd input

for i in *.mp4;

  do name=`echo "$i" | cut -d'.' -f1`

  FILE="${name}"

  TMP="temp.mp4"

  INPUT="${FILE}.mp4"

  OUT_PUT="../output/${FILE}.mp4"

  JPEG_OUTPUT="../output/${FILE}.jpg"

  echo FILE

  echo INPUT

  ffmpeg -i $INPUT -filter:v scale=1024:-2 -c:a copy ${TMP}

  ffmpeg -i ${TMP} -filter:v "crop=1024:512:exact=1" -c:a copy ${OUT_PUT}

  # ffmpeg -loglevel panic -i $OUT_PUT -vframes 1 -f image2 $JPEG_OUTPUT

  rm ${TMP}

done