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    13 juin 2013

    Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
    Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir

  • Supporting all media types

    13 avril 2011, par

    Unlike most software and media-sharing platforms, MediaSPIP aims to manage as many different media types as possible. The following are just a few examples from an ever-expanding list of supported formats : images : png, gif, jpg, bmp and more audio : MP3, Ogg, Wav and more video : AVI, MP4, OGV, mpg, mov, wmv and more text, code and other data : OpenOffice, Microsoft Office (Word, PowerPoint, Excel), web (html, CSS), LaTeX, Google Earth and (...)

  • Keeping control of your media in your hands

    13 avril 2011, par

    The vocabulary used on this site and around MediaSPIP in general, aims to avoid reference to Web 2.0 and the companies that profit from media-sharing.
    While using MediaSPIP, you are invited to avoid using words like "Brand", "Cloud" and "Market".
    MediaSPIP is designed to facilitate the sharing of creative media online, while allowing authors to retain complete control of their work.
    MediaSPIP aims to be accessible to as many people as possible and development is based on expanding the (...)

Sur d’autres sites (8159)

  • Integrating FFMPEG using cmake : dlopen failed : library "libavutil.so.56" not found

    26 novembre 2018, par Hamed Momeni

    This question is a subsequent thread following this other question of mine.

    After finally managing to successfully building the apk file using gradle and cmake to integrate FFMPEG into an Android project I am facing a new exception which is thrown when calling System.loadLibrary.

    java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: dlopen failed: library "libavutil.so.56" not found
           at java.lang.Runtime.loadLibrary0(Runtime.java:1016)
           at java.lang.System.loadLibrary(System.java:1657)
           at com.hmomeni.canto.activities.EditActivity.<init>(EditActivity.kt:26)
           at java.lang.Class.newInstance(Native Method)
           at android.app.Instrumentation.newActivity(Instrumentation.java:1174)
           at android.app.ActivityThread.performLaunchActivity(ActivityThread.java:2669)
           at android.app.ActivityThread.handleLaunchActivity(ActivityThread.java:2856)
           at android.app.ActivityThread.-wrap11(Unknown Source:0)
           at android.app.ActivityThread$H.handleMessage(ActivityThread.java:1589)
           at android.os.Handler.dispatchMessage(Handler.java:106)
           at android.os.Looper.loop(Looper.java:164)
           at android.app.ActivityThread.main(ActivityThread.java:6494)
           at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Native Method)
           at com.android.internal.os.RuntimeInit$MethodAndArgsCaller.run(RuntimeInit.java:438)
           at com.android.internal.os.ZygoteInit.main(ZygoteInit.java:807)
    </init>

    This is the part of code which is causing the error :

    class EditActivity : AppCompatActivity(), View.OnClickListener {

       init {
           System.loadLibrary("Canto")
       }
    ...
    }

    I tried moving the .so files inside the PROJECT/app/jniLibs and then adding the following line to build.gradle file to no avail.

    sourceSets.main.jniLibs.srcDirs = ['./jniLibs/']
  • App engine php flex env exec("ffmpeg...") - Unable to open logfile : /dev/stderr

    15 octobre 2018, par dan

    I’m trying to run FFMPEG on the app engine flex env for php.

    I’ve whitelisted the exec() function in my app.yaml and installed FFMPEG using the docker file - so far so good.

    When I’m running a exec("usr/bin/ffmpeg [args]...") I get an error that ffmpeg can’t access the dev/stderr and the function shuts down. see ref :

    WARNING : [pool app] child 44 said into stderr : "NOTICE : PHP message : ALERT - Unable to open logfile : /dev/stderr (attacker ’’, file ’/app/index.php’, line 49)"

    WARNING : [pool app] child 44 said into stderr : "NOTICE : PHP message : PHP Warning : exec() has been disabled for security reasons in /app/index.php on line 49"

    My configuration files are as follows :

    APP.YAML :

    runtime: custom
    env: flex
    runtime_config:
     document_root: .

    COMPOSER.JSON :

    {
       "require": {
           "php": "5.6.*",
           "google/cloud-storage": "^1.0",
       }
    }

    DOCKERFILE :

    FROM gcr.io/google-appengine/php:latest
    ENV DOCUMENT_ROOT /app
    RUN apt-get -y update &amp;&amp; apt-get install -y ffmpeg

    INDEX.PHP :

    &lt;?php
    //downloaded images into /tmp folder
    $cmd = "/usr/bin/ffmpeg -r 24 -i /tmp/frame_%05d.png -r 24 -vcodec libx264 -pix_fmt yuv420p -b 50M -s 1920x1080 -y /tmp/export.mp4";
    exec($cmd);
    ?>

    I’ve tried using all the other shell function - system(), exec_shell(),proc_open()
    With the same result.

    Any help ?

    Thank you

  • How to configure proc_open "pipes" for ffmpeg stdin/stderr on Windows ?

    10 septembre 2018, par GDP

    Firstly, I’ve spent the week googling and trying variations of dozens and dozens of answers for Unix, but it’s been a complete bust, I need an answer for Windows, so this is not a duplicate question of the Unix equivalents.

    We’re trying to create a scheduled task that will process a queue of tasks in PHP, and maintain an array of up to 10 ffmpeg instances at a time. I’ve tried exec, shell_exec and proc_open , coupled with/without start /B without any "complete" luck.
    I’m also quite certain that it has to do with setting up the descriptorspec and pipes (which I’m completely unfamiliar with), and here’s why :

    Per https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/PHP,

    The part that says ">/dev/null" will redirect the standard OUTPUT
    (stdout) of the ffmpeg instance to /dev/null (effectively ignoring the
    output) and "2>/dev/null" will redirect the standard ERROR (stderr) to
    /dev/null (effectively ignoring any error log messages). These two can
    be combined into a shorter representation : ">/dev/null 2>&1". If you
    like, you can ?read more about I/O Redirection.

    An important note should be mentioned here. The ffmpeg command-line
    tool uses stderr for output of error log messages and stdout is
    reserved for possible use of pipes (to redirect the output media
    stream generated from ffmpeg to some other command line tool). That
    being said, if you run your ffmpeg in the background, you’ll most
    probably want to redirect the stderr to a log file, to be able to
    check it later.

    One more thing to take care about is the standard INPUT (stdin).
    Command-line ffmpeg tool is designed as an interactive utility that
    accepts user’s input (usually from keyboard) and reports the error log
    on the user’s current screen/terminal. When we run ffmpeg in the
    background, we want to tell ffmpeg that no input should be accepted
    (nor waited for) from the stdin. We can tell this to ffmpeg, using I/O
    redirection again "

    echo "Starting ffmpeg...\n\n";
    echo shell_exec("ffmpeg -y -i input.avi output.avi null >/dev/null 2>/var/log/ffmpeg.log &amp;");
    echo "Done.\n";

    This example actually uses shell_exec, though we want to use proc_open so that we can use a loop to check if the process has completed or not.

    Here’s a basic sample loop of what I’ve tried. The problem in executing this is that the actual ffmpeg processing completes, but the process is hung "waiting for something". When I use debugging, and step out of the loop and terminate the process after a few minutes, the ffmpeg output is written and the script carries on. (From the command line, ffmpeg takes less than a minute to complete)

    $descriptorspec = array(
       array('pipe', 'r'),
       array('pipe', 'w'),
       array('pipe', 'w'),
    );
    $pipes = null;
    $cwd = null;
    $env = null;
    $process = proc_open('start /B ffmpeg.exe -i input.mov output.mp4 -nostdin', $descriptorspec, $pipes, $cwd, $env);
    $status = proc_get_status($process);
    while($status['running']) {
       sleep (60);
       $status = proc_get_status($process);
    }
    proc_terminate($process);

    Also, as documented at ffmpeg Main-options :

    Enable interaction on standard input. On by default unless standard
    input is used as an input. To explicitly disable interaction you need
    to specify -nostdin.

    The -nostdin option seems to indicate that it addresses my problem, but it has no apparent affect. In all solutions for Unix that I’ve found, it appears to still require some form of this this unix added : null or 2>&amp;1.

    So, with that somewhat exhaustive prologue, can someone explain how to properly configure the proc_open function to satisfy how ffmpeg.exe interacts with I/O ? If there is a better or more appropriate approach, I’m happy to do that, but the important thing is to be able to loop thru an array of processes to check if they’re complete, so that other faster processes can complete in the meantime.

    UPDATE
    After exhaustive R&D, it seems that the I/O is not the issue in making this happen (the -nostdin option seems to work as advertised). The premise of my design was to use proc_get_status() to determine when ffmpeg was finished. The flaw in that approach is that apparently that does NOT return the actual PID of the ffmpeg process...it returns the parent PID. So, when proc_get_status() returned that the video conversion was complete, it was in fact still running, not hung. This was further complicated by testing on larger video files. The larger the video, the longer the "residual" time was that it took to actually finish — the I/O wasn’t the issue - watching the Parent PID instead of the child PID was the problem. So, without getting into much lower level system internals with Windows, this doesn’t appear to be possible with PHP directly. I’ve decided to abandon this approach, but hopefully this discovery will save someone else some time and trouble.