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Autres articles (111)

  • Script d’installation automatique de MediaSPIP

    25 avril 2011, par

    Afin de palier aux difficultés d’installation dues principalement aux dépendances logicielles coté serveur, un script d’installation "tout en un" en bash a été créé afin de faciliter cette étape sur un serveur doté d’une distribution Linux compatible.
    Vous devez bénéficier d’un accès SSH à votre serveur et d’un compte "root" afin de l’utiliser, ce qui permettra d’installer les dépendances. Contactez votre hébergeur si vous ne disposez pas de cela.
    La documentation de l’utilisation du script d’installation (...)

  • Que fait exactement ce script ?

    18 janvier 2011, par

    Ce script est écrit en bash. Il est donc facilement utilisable sur n’importe quel serveur.
    Il n’est compatible qu’avec une liste de distributions précises (voir Liste des distributions compatibles).
    Installation de dépendances de MediaSPIP
    Son rôle principal est d’installer l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles nécessaires coté serveur à savoir :
    Les outils de base pour pouvoir installer le reste des dépendances Les outils de développements : build-essential (via APT depuis les dépôts officiels) ; (...)

  • 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 (...)

Sur d’autres sites (9055)

  • Mac Terminal (Bash) batch program to get multimedia file info using ffmpeg

    7 décembre 2013, par julesverne

    I have a Mac computer. Usually all my batch programming is done on my PC. So I tried to create what I assumed would be a simple equivalent using a Mac shell. Obviously as you all know that was foolish of me to think that. After 2 days of scowering the web I found the closest thing I could to what I was looking for. But no, this doesn't work either.

    All I'd like to do is throw a multimedia file onto the script, and have the terminal give me the ffmpeg info output. In my searching I did find this "$@" which as far as I can tell is the windows bat equivalent of %*. Meaning you can throw files on the script and the script refers to those files as variables which can be processed. So I believe what I want to do is possible.

    Again the code at the bottom is just to look through the current directory of all .mov files and run ffmpeg. It doesn't work. But.. if no one can help me figure out the actual thing I'd like to do then I'd settle with something like below that does actually work.

    #!/bin/bash
    FFMPEG=/Applications/ffmpeg
    FIND=/usr/bin/find
    FILES=$(${FIND} . -type f  -iname "*.mov")
    if [ "$FILES" == "" ]
    then
    echo "There are no *.mov file in $(pwd) directory"
    exit 1
    fi

    for f in *.mov
    do

    $FFMPEG -i "$f"

    done

    If someone can please help me figure this out I'd really appreciate it. Thank you in advance ! Jules

    I just found this solution from the "similar questions" sidebar, which is similar to the script above, so again, not completely what I wanted but.. didn't matter, didn't work for me. How to batch convert mp4 files to ogg with ffmpeg using a bash command or Ruby

  • Unable to identify syntax required to rename files in MacOS Terminal [closed]

    18 juin 2024, par Ben C

    This is a head scratcher.

    


    I need to move these three oddly-named files from an external 2.5" SSD to my desktop. The file names were intended to have variables replaced by date info, however, clearly it didn't work. So I'm left with these filenames that MacOS seems to want to interpret rather than treat as a string. I wish it was as easy as tossing in single quotes or escaping chars, but so far, that hasn't worked.

    


    Files: Test01-$(internal:date_y)-$(internal:date_m)-$(internal:date_d)-.mp4 Test01-$(internal:date_y)-$(internal:date_m)-$(internal:date_d)-0001.mp4 Test01-$(internal:date_y)-$(internal:date_m)-$(internal:date_d)-0002.mp4

    


    I'm on MacOS. In the Finder, the files are not visible. But they are not hidden files.

    


    In Terminal, however, when I navigate to "/Volumes/TestDrive", then run a quick "ls", I can see all three files no problem. Including permissions, size, owners, full filename, etc.

    


    However, when I attempt to move the files to my desktop, and rename in the process (even if I don't rename), Terminal tells me that "No such file or folder can be found" or something very close to that.

    


    I've tried using mv and cp commands to put the filename in single quotes so the filename is read literally. Yet, I'm still given feedback that the file cannot be transferred because it cannot be found or doesn't exist.

    


    mv 'Test01-$(internal:date_y)-$(internal:date_m)-$(internal:date_d)-.mp4' ~/Desktop/Test01-01.mp4' 'cp 'Test01-$(internal:date_y)-$(internal:date_m)-$(internal:date_d)-.mp4' ~/Desktop/Test01-01.mp4

    


    When I try to escape special characters instead of quotes, I am also told the file doesn't exist. But clearly it does when I list out the contents of the drive. And there's only 3x .mp4 files, two hiddne files .fseventsd and some spotlight file.

    


    mv Test01-\$\(internal\:date_y\)-\$\(internal\:date_m\)-\$\(internal\:date_d\)-.mp4 ~/Desktop/Test01-01.mp4

    


    I've tried copying by inode. No luck. I've tried pulling the videos into ffmpeg (CLI based media mgmt tool) to see if I can get some info on the files, and same thing, ffmpeg (or ffprobe) both will tell me the file doesn't exist...even though I can list the files and see that it does.

    


    I hope I'm missing something obvious, but but it seems all the obvious approaches are not yet working for me.

    


    So my question is, what do I need to do to make these files "exist" so that I can rename them and back them up ? Happy to go down any rabbit hole.

    


    Thanks in advance !

    


  • Broadcasting to YouTube Live via RTMP using VLC from terminal

    29 mars 2018, par devprashant

    When running :

    cvlc -vvv 'Bootstrap Tutorial.mp4' --sout '#rtp{dst=rtmp://a.rtmp.youtube.com/live2,name=pa1p-8c4m-zzvp-5j6t,mux=ts}'

    I get this debugging log.

    When additionally specifying the access method :

    cvlc -vvv 'Bootstrap Tutorial.mp4' --sout '#std{access=rtmp,dst=rtmp://a.rtmp.youtube.com/live2/pa1p-8c4m-zzvp-5j6t,mux=ts}'

    I get this debugging log.

    How do I stream live video and audio to YouTube using VLC from terminal ?

    Resources I looked into :

    1. https://blog.vucica.net/2015/08/streaming-to-youtube-live-with-vlc-and-ffmpeg.html
    2. https://forum.videolan.org/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=130520&p=436913&hilit=rtmp+youtube#p436913
    3. Problems Starting VLC HTTP Stream with Servlet
    4. https://forum.videolan.org/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=112221&p=380232&hilit=rtmp+youtube#p380232