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    24 juin 2013, par

    Explications des différents changements notables lors du passage de la version 0.1 de MediaSPIP à la version 0.3. Quelles sont les nouveautés
    Au niveau des dépendances logicielles Utilisation des dernières versions de FFMpeg (>= v1.2.1) ; Installation des dépendances pour Smush ; Installation de MediaInfo et FFprobe pour la récupération des métadonnées ; On n’utilise plus ffmpeg2theora ; On n’installe plus flvtool2 au profit de flvtool++ ; On n’installe plus ffmpeg-php qui n’est plus maintenu au (...)

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  • Submit bugs and patches

    13 avril 2011

    Unfortunately 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 (11074)

  • How To Install FFMPEG on Elastic Beanstalk

    13 avril 2017, par Nick Lynch

    This is not a duplicate, I have found one thread, and it is outdated and does not work :
    Install ffmpeg on elastic beanstalk using ebextensions config.

    I have been trying to install this for some time, nothing seems to work.
    Please share the config.yml that will make this work.

    I am using 64bit Amazon Linux 2016.03 v2.1.6 running PHP 7.0 on Elastic Beanstalk


    My current file is

    branch-defaults:
     default:
       environment: Default-Environment
     master:
       environment: Default-Environment
    global:
     application_name: "My First Elastic Beanstalk Application"
     default_ec2_keyname: ~
     default_platform: "64bit Amazon Linux 2016.03 v2.1.6 running PHP 7.0"
     default_region: us-east-1
     profile: eb-cli
     sc: git
    packages: ~
    yum:
     ImageMagick: []
     ImageMagick-devel: []
     commands:
       01-wget:
         command: "wget -O /tmp/ffmpeg.tar.gz http://ffmpeg.gusari.org/static/64bit/ffmpeg.static.64bit.2014-03-05.tar.gz"
       02-mkdir:
         command: "if [ ! -d /opt/ffmpeg ] ; then mkdir -p /opt/ffmpeg; fi"
       03-tar:
         command: "tar -xzf ffmpeg.tar.gz -C /opt/ffmpeg"
         cwd: /tmp
       04-ln:
         command: "if [[ ! -f /usr/bin/ffmpeg ]] ; then ln -s /opt/ffmpeg/ffmpeg /usr/bin/ffmpeg; fi"
       05-ln:
         command: "if [[ ! -f /usr/bin/ffprobe ]] ; then ln -s /opt/ffmpeg/ffprobe /usr/bin/ffprobe; fi"
       06-pecl:
         command: "if [ `pecl list | grep imagick` ] ; then pecl install -f imagick; fi"
  • How To Install FFMPEG on Elastic Beanstalk

    26 mars 2020, par Nick Lynch

    This is not a duplicate, I have found one thread, and it is outdated and does not work :
    Install ffmpeg on elastic beanstalk using ebextensions config.

    I have been trying to install this for some time, nothing seems to work.
    Please share the config.yml that will make this work.

    I am using 64bit Amazon Linux 2016.03 v2.1.6 running PHP 7.0 on Elastic Beanstalk


    My current file is

    branch-defaults:
     default:
       environment: Default-Environment
     master:
       environment: Default-Environment
    global:
     application_name: "My First Elastic Beanstalk Application"
     default_ec2_keyname: ~
     default_platform: "64bit Amazon Linux 2016.03 v2.1.6 running PHP 7.0"
     default_region: us-east-1
     profile: eb-cli
     sc: git
    packages: ~
    yum:
     ImageMagick: []
     ImageMagick-devel: []
     commands:
       01-wget:
         command: "wget -O /tmp/ffmpeg.tar.gz http://ffmpeg.gusari.org/static/64bit/ffmpeg.static.64bit.2014-03-05.tar.gz"
       02-mkdir:
         command: "if [ ! -d /opt/ffmpeg ] ; then mkdir -p /opt/ffmpeg; fi"
       03-tar:
         command: "tar -xzf ffmpeg.tar.gz -C /opt/ffmpeg"
         cwd: /tmp
       04-ln:
         command: "if [[ ! -f /usr/bin/ffmpeg ]] ; then ln -s /opt/ffmpeg/ffmpeg /usr/bin/ffmpeg; fi"
       05-ln:
         command: "if [[ ! -f /usr/bin/ffprobe ]] ; then ln -s /opt/ffmpeg/ffprobe /usr/bin/ffprobe; fi"
       06-pecl:
         command: "if [ `pecl list | grep imagick` ] ; then pecl install -f imagick; fi"
  • Remove Static Pixels from a Video to Mimic a Green Screen Effect [closed]

    2 août 2021, par nKrkan

    I have a video that's 50 seconds in length, resolution of 480x480 and 16 frames per second.

    


    There is a person talking in it, with the background being static I thought if there's a way
    
to remove those static pixels (background) and just extract the moving pixels (foreground)
    
and possibly mimic a green screen effect ?

    


    I was thinking on writing a picture-by-picture comparison tool to do such thing but I don't
    
believe I'm up to the task, or maybe It's laziness.

    


    And now I know, some of you will point out that the video has compression artifacts and that
    
might cause some problems but It doesn't have to be Studio quality stuff.

    


    I tried the ffmpeg command from this question : Remove random background from video using ffmpeg or Python
    
And it does mask the person, but... I couldn't quite get it to work, apparently putting the
    
reference image in the input makes that image burned into the video, thus having no way to
    
remove it, but it did mask the background as black and the person as greenish, so still not a
    
viable way to do it.

    


    Have also tried some Python projects I've found on the GitHub but none of them worked as
    
I expected.

    


    So, what I thought to do is simply compare the first and the second frame of the video, check
    
all the pixels by comparing them with the two sources, and change those that stay within a
    
certain range of the initial pixel value.

    


    I should point out I'm not very knowledgeable with mathematics and the majority of the
    
methods used in these type of things, but perhaps someone could point me to an interesting
    
source to read and learn, or by providing an alternative to the methods aforementioned above.