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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 (...)

  • Contribute to translation

    13 avril 2011

    You can help us to improve the language used in the software interface to make MediaSPIP more accessible and user-friendly. You can also translate the interface into any language that allows it to spread to new linguistic communities.
    To do this, we use the translation interface of SPIP where the all the language modules of MediaSPIP are available. Just subscribe to the mailing list and request further informantion on translation.
    MediaSPIP is currently available in French and English (...)

  • Diogene : création de masques spécifiques de formulaires d’édition de contenus

    26 octobre 2010, par

    Diogene est un des plugins ? SPIP activé par défaut (extension) lors de l’initialisation de MediaSPIP.
    A quoi sert ce plugin
    Création de masques de formulaires
    Le plugin Diogène permet de créer des masques de formulaires spécifiques par secteur sur les trois objets spécifiques SPIP que sont : les articles ; les rubriques ; les sites
    Il permet ainsi de définir en fonction d’un secteur particulier, un masque de formulaire par objet, ajoutant ou enlevant ainsi des champs afin de rendre le formulaire (...)

Sur d’autres sites (5216)

  • How to make Matomo GDPR compliant in 12 steps

    3 avril 2018, par InnoCraft

    Important note : this blog post has been written by digital analysts, not lawyers. The purpose of this article is to briefly show you where Matomo is entering into play within the GDPR process. This work comes from our interpretation of the UK privacy commission : ICO. It cannot be considered as professional legal advice. So as GDPR, this information is subject to change. We strongly advise you to have a look at the different privacy authorities in order to have up to date information.

    The General Data Protection Regulation (EU) 2016/679, also referred to RGPD in French, Datenschutz-Grundverordnung, DS-GVO in German, is a regulation on data protection and privacy for all individuals within the European Union. It concerns organizations worldwide dealing with EU citizens and will come into force on the 25th May 2018.

    The GDPR applies to ‘personal data’ meaning any information relating to an identifiable person who can be directly or indirectly identified in particular by reference to an identifier. It includes cookies, IP addresses, User ID, location, and any other data you may have collected.

    We will list below the 12 steps recommended by the UK privacy commissioner in order to be GDPR compliant and what you need to do for each step.

    The 12 steps of GDPR compliance according to ICO and how it fit with Matomo

    As mentioned in one of our previous blog post about GDPR, if you are not collecting any personal data with Matomo, then you are not concerned about what is written below.

    If you are processing personal data in any way, here are the 12 steps to follow along with some recommendations on how to be GDPR compliant with Matomo :

    1 – Awareness

    Make sure that people within your organization know that you are using Matomo in order to analyze traffic on the website/app. If needed, send them the link to the “What is Matomo ?” page.

    2 – Information you hold

    List all the personal data you are processing with Matomo within your record of processing activities. We are personally using the template provided by ICO which is composed of a set of 30 questions you need to answer regarding your use of Matomo. We have published an article which walks you through the list of questions specifically in the use case of Matomo Analytics. Please be aware that personal data may be also tracked in non-obvious ways for example as part of page URLs or page titles.

    3 – Communicating privacy information

    a – Add a privacy notice

    Add a privacy notice wherever you are using Matomo in order to collect personal data. Please refer to the ICO documentation in order to learn how to write a privacy notice. You can learn more in our article about creating your privacy notice for Matomo Analytics. Make sure that a privacy policy link is always available on your website or app.

    b – Add Matomo to your privacy policy page

    Add Matomo to the list of technologies you are using on your privacy policy page and add all the necessary information to it as requested in the following checklist. To learn more check out our article about Privacy policy.

    4 – Individuals’ rights

    Make sure that your Matomo installation respects all the individuals’ rights. To make it short, you will need to know the features in Matomo that you need to use to respect user rights (right of access, right of rectification, right of erasure…). These features are available starting in Matomo 3.5.0 released on May 8th : GDPR tools for Matomo (User guide).

    5 – Subject access requests

    Make sure that you are able to answer an access request from a data subject for Matomo. For example, when a person would like to access her or his personal data that you have collected about her or him, then you will need to be you able to provide her or him with this information. We recommend you design a process for this like “Who is dealing with it ?” and check that it is working. If you can answer to the nightmare letter, then you are ready. The needed features for this in Matomo will be available soon.

    6 – Lawful basis for processing personal data

    There are different lawful basis you can use under GDPR. It can be either “Legitimate interest” or “Explicit consent”. Do not forget to mention it within your privacy policy page. Read more in our article about lawful basis.

    7 – Consent

    Users should be able to remove their consent at any time. By chance, Matomo is providing a feature in order to do just that : add the opt-out feature to your privacy policy page.
    We are also offering a tool that allows you optionally to require consent before any data is tracked. This will be useful if a person should be only tracked after she or he has given explicit consent to be tracked.

    8 – Children

    If your website or app is targeted for children and you are using Matomo, extra measures will need to be taken. For example you will need to write your privacy policy even more clear and moreover getting parents consent if the child is below 13. As it is a very specific case, we strongly recommend you to follow this link for further information.

    9 – Data breaches

    As you may be collecting personal data with Matomo, you should also check your “data breach procedure” to define if a leak may have consequences on the privacy of the data subject. Please consult ICO’s website for further information.

    10 – Data Protection by Design and Data Protection Impact Assessments

    Ask yourself if you really need to process personal data within Matomo. If the data you are processing within Matomo is sensitive, we strongly recommend you to make a Data Protection Impact Assessment. A software is available from the The open source PIA software helps to carry out data protection impact assessment, by French Privacy Commissioner : CNIL.

    11 – Data Protection Officers

    If you are reading this article and you are the Data Protection Officer (DPO), you will not be concerned by this step. If that’s not the case, your duty is to provide to the DPO (if your business has a DPO) our blog post in order for her or him to ask you questions regarding your use of Matomo. Note that your DPO can also be interested in the different data that Matomo can process : “What data does Matomo track ?” (FAQ).

    12 – International

    Matomo data is hosted wherever you want. So according to the location of the data, you will need to show specific safeguard except for EU. For example regarding the USA, you will have to check if your web hosting platform is registered to the Privacy Shield : privacyshield.gov/list
    Note : our Matomo cloud infrastructure is based in France.

    That’s the end of this blog post. As GDPR is a huge topic, we will release many more blog posts in the upcoming weeks. If there are any Matomo GDPR topic related posts you would like us to write, please feel free to contact us.

    The post How to make Matomo GDPR compliant in 12 steps appeared first on Analytics Platform - Matomo.

  • libswresample : Why does swr_init() change |in_ch_layout| order so it no longer matches my decoded AVFrames, causing resampling to fail ?

    20 novembre 2023, par CheekyChips

    I am trying to write some code that resamples an audio file to 16kHz and 1 channel and then encodes it to PCM, but I am having an issue with channel layouts.

    


    In a nutshell :

    


    My AVCodecContext and the frames I get from the stream via avcodec_receive_frame() have a channel layout order of AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_UNSPEC. But when I call swr_init() it changes the in_ch_layout order to AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_NATIVE. Then when I call swr_convert_frame() with my AVFrames, because the channel layout orders don't match, the resampling fails because it thinks the input changed.

    


    More details :

    


    I create an AVCodecContext from my audio stream's codec, and it has a channel layout of AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_UNSPEC with 2 channels, and any frames I decode from the stream via avcodec_receive_frame() also have a channel layout order of AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_UNSPEC.

    


    I set SwrContext's |in_ch_layout| to the sample channel layout from the codec context :

    


        AVChannelLayout in_ch_layout = in_codec_context->ch_layout,
    ...
    int ret = swr_alloc_set_opts2(&swr_ctx, ...
                      &in_ch_layout,
                      ...);


    


    But SwrContext->init() changes its internal in_ch_layout from AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_UNSPEC to AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_NATIVE meaning it fails the next time I call swr_convert_frame() because the input frame has a different channel layout to the SwrContext. When swr_init() is called (in my case indirectly by swr_convert_frame(), but also if I alternatively call it directly) the SwrContext->used_ch_layout and SwrContext->in_ch_layout are updated to have channel layout order of AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_NATIVE :

    


        // swresample.c
    av_cold int swr_init(struct SwrContext *s){
        ...
        if (!av_channel_layout_check(&s->used_ch_layout))       <-- This hits if I don't set anything for used_ch_layout
            av_channel_layout_default(&s->used_ch_layout, s->in.ch_count);      <-- default is AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_NATIVE
        ...
        if (s->used_ch_layout.order == AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_UNSPEC) <-- This hits if I do set used_ch_layout
            av_channel_layout_default(&s->used_ch_layout, s->used_ch_layout.nb_channels);   <-- default is AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_NATIVE


    


    Then when I next call swr_convert_frame(), because the frame has the same layout as the audio stream's codec (AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_UNSPEC), and this is different to SwrContext->in_ch_layout (AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_NATIVE), it early exits with ret |= AVERROR_INPUT_CHANGED.

    


    // swresample_frame.c
    int swr_convert_frame(SwrContext *s,
                      AVFrame *out, const AVFrame *in)
    {
        ...
        if ((ret = config_changed(s, out, in)))
            return ret;
        ...


    


        static int config_changed(SwrContext *s,
                            const AVFrame *out, const AVFrame *in)
    {
        ...
        if ((err = av_channel_layout_copy(&ch_layout, &in->ch_layout)) < 0)
            ...
        if (av_channel_layout_compare(&s->in_ch_layout, &ch_layout) || ...) {   <-- This hits the next time I call swr_convert_frame()
            ret |= AVERROR_INPUT_CHANGED;
        }


    


        // channel_layout.c
    int av_channel_layout_compare(const AVChannelLayout *chl, const AVChannelLayout *chl1)
    {
        ...
        // if only one is unspecified -> not equal
        if ((chl->order  == AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_UNSPEC) !=
            (chl1->order == AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_UNSPEC))
            return 1;


    


    If I hardcode the channel layout order of each input AVFrame to AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_NATIVE before resampling, then the resampling and subsequent encoding works, but this feels like a really bad idea and of course wouldn't work as soon as I resample an audio file with a different channel layout.

    


        avcodec_receive_frame(in_codec_context, input_frame);

    AVChannelLayout input_frame_ch_layout;
    av_channel_layout_default(&input_frame_ch_layout, 2 /* = nb_channels*/);
    input_frame->ch_layout = input_frame_ch_layout;
    // Bad idea - but "fixes" my issue!


    


    My questions

    


    What do I need to do to the resampler OR/AND the decoded audio frame to make sure they have the same channel layout order and the resampling works ?

    


    How can I make the channel order of the AVFrames that I get from avcodec_receive_frame() match the input channel order of SwrContext so the resampling works ? My understanding is that the decoded frames should be 'correct' already and I shouldn't need to change any of their values, only values of the output (resampled) frames that I create.

    


    Is there something I need to set on the AVFrame before I resample it ?

    


    Why does the SwrContext choose to change the channel order to AV_CHANNEL_ORDER_NATIVE ?

    


    Note :
A workaround could be to use swr_convert() with the raw data buffer instead of swr_convert_frame(), since it looks like it bypasses this check (since there are no frames involved). I haven't tried this but this shouldn't be necessary and I would like to use swr_convert_frame() as I am working with input and output frames.

    


    Unfortunately I can't find example code using swr_convert_frame() (not even the ffmpeg code seems to ever call it).

    


    My full c++ source code
(error handling omitted for readability) :

    


    std::string fileToUse = "/home/projects/audioFileProject/Audio files/14 Black Cadillacs.wma";
const std::string outputFilename = "out.wav";
const std::string PCMS16BE_encoder_name = "pcm_f32le";

int main()
{
    // Open audio file
    AVFormatContext* in_format_context = avformat_alloc_context();
    avformat_open_input(&in_format_context, fileToUse.c_str(), NULL, NULL);
    avformat_find_stream_info(in_format_context, NULL);
    
    // Get audio stream from file and corresponding decoder
    AVStream* in_stream = in_format_context->streams[0];
    AVCodecParameters* codec_params = in_stream->codecpar;
    const AVCodec* in_codec = avcodec_find_decoder(codec_params->codec_id);
    AVCodecContext *in_codec_context = avcodec_alloc_context3(in_codec);
    avcodec_parameters_to_context(in_codec_context, codec_params);
    avcodec_open2(in_codec_context, in_codec, NULL);

    // Prepare output stream and output encoder (PCM)
    AVFormatContext* out_format_context = nullptr;
    avformat_alloc_output_context2(&out_format_context, NULL, NULL, outputFilename.c_str());
    AVStream* out_stream = avformat_new_stream(out_format_context, NULL);
    const AVCodec* output_codec = avcodec_find_encoder_by_name(PCMS16BE_encoder_name.c_str());
    AVCodecContext* output_codec_context = avcodec_alloc_context3(output_codec);

    // -------------------------------
    
    AVChannelLayout output_ch_layout;
    av_channel_layout_default(&output_ch_layout, 1);    // AV_CHANNEL_LAYOUT_MONO
    output_codec_context->ch_layout = output_ch_layout;
    
    auto out_sample_rate = 16000;
    output_codec_context->sample_rate = out_sample_rate;
    output_codec_context->sample_fmt = output_codec->sample_fmts[0];
    //output_codec_context->bit_rate = output_codec_context->bit_rate;  // TODO Do we need to set the bit rate?
    output_codec_context->time_base = (AVRational){1, out_sample_rate};
    out_stream->time_base = output_codec_context->time_base;

    auto in_sample_rate = in_codec_context->sample_rate;
    AVChannelLayout in_ch_layout = in_codec_context->ch_layout,
                    out_ch_layout = output_ch_layout;   // AV_CHANNEL_LAYOUT_MONO;
    enum AVSampleFormat in_sample_fmt = in_codec_context->sample_fmt,
                        out_sample_fmt = in_codec_context->sample_fmt;

    SwrContext *swr_ctx = nullptr;
    int ret = swr_alloc_set_opts2(&swr_ctx,
                      &out_ch_layout,
                      out_sample_fmt,
                      out_sample_rate,
                      &in_ch_layout,
                      in_sample_fmt,
                      in_sample_rate,
                      0,                    // log_offset
                      NULL);                // log_ctx

    // Probably not necessary - documentation says "This option is
only used for special remapping."
    av_opt_set_chlayout(swr_ctx,    "used_chlayout",     &in_ch_layout, 0);

    // Open output file for writing
    avcodec_open2(output_codec_context, output_codec, NULL);
    avcodec_parameters_from_context(out_stream->codecpar, output_codec_context);
    
    if (out_format_context->oformat->flags & AVFMT_GLOBALHEADER)
        out_format_context->flags |= AV_CODEC_FLAG_GLOBAL_HEADER;

    avio_open(&out_format_context->pb, outputFilename.c_str(), AVIO_FLAG_WRITE);
    AVDictionary* muxer_opts = nullptr;
    avformat_write_header(out_format_context, &muxer_opts);

    AVFrame* input_frame = av_frame_alloc();
    AVPacket* in_packet = av_packet_alloc();

    // Loop through decoded input frames. Resample and get resulting samples in a new output frame.
    // I think PCM supports variable number of samples in frames so probably can immediately write out
    while (av_read_frame(in_format_context, in_packet) >= 0) {
        avcodec_send_packet(in_codec_context, in_packet);
        avcodec_receive_frame(in_codec_context, input_frame);

        // I don't want to do this, but it 'fixes' the error where channel layout of input frames
        // doesn't match what the resampler expects - hardcoded the number 2 to fit my sample audio file.
        AVChannelLayout input_frame_ch_layout;
        av_channel_layout_default(&input_frame_ch_layout, 2 /* = nb_channels*/);
        input_frame->ch_layout = input_frame_ch_layout;

        AVFrame* output_frame = av_frame_alloc();
        output_frame->sample_rate = out_sample_rate;
        output_frame->format = out_sample_fmt;
        output_frame->ch_layout = out_ch_layout;
        output_frame->nb_samples = output_codec_context->frame_size;
        
        // TODO Probably need to do maths to calculate new pts properly
        output_frame->pts = input_frame->pts;

        if (swr_convert_frame(swr_ctx, output_frame, input_frame))
            {   logging("Swr Convert failed");  return -1;   }          
            /// ^ Fails here, the second time (since the first time init() is called internally)

        AVPacket *output_packet = av_packet_alloc();
        int response = avcodec_send_frame(output_codec_context, output_frame);

        while (response >= 0) {
            response = avcodec_receive_packet(output_codec_context, output_packet);

            if (response == AVERROR(EAGAIN) || response == AVERROR_EOF) {
                break;
            }

            output_packet->stream_index = 0;
            av_packet_rescale_ts(output_packet, in_stream->time_base, out_stream->time_base);
            av_interleaved_write_frame(out_format_context, output_packet);
        }
        av_packet_unref(output_packet);
        av_packet_free(&output_packet);
        av_frame_unref(input_frame);    // Free references held by the frame before reading new data into it.
        av_frame_unref(output_frame);
    }
    // TODO write last output packet flushing the buffer

    avformat_close_input(&in_format_context);
    return 0;
}


    


  • Matomo Celebrates 15 Years of Building an Open-Source & Transparent Web Analytics Solution

    30 juin 2022, par Matthieu Aubry — About, Community
    &lt;script type=&quot;text/javascript&quot;&gt;<br />
           if ('function' === typeof window.playMatomoVideo){<br />
           window.playMatomoVideo(&quot;brand&quot;, &quot;#brand&quot;)<br />
           } else {<br />
           document.addEventListener(&quot;DOMContentLoaded&quot;, function() { window.playMatomoVideo(&quot;brand&quot;, &quot;#brand&quot;); });<br />
           }<br />
      &lt;/script&gt;

    Fifteen years ago, I realised that people (myself included) were increasingly integrating the internet into their everyday lives, and it was clear that it would only expand in the future. It was an exciting new world, but the amount of personal data shared online, level of tracking and lack of security was a growing concern. Google Analytics was just launched then and was already gaining huge traction – so data from millions of websites started flowing into Google’s database, creating what was then the biggest centralised database about people worldwide and their actions online.

    So as a young engineering student, I decided we needed to build an open source and transparent solution that could help make the internet more secure and private while still providing organisations with powerful insights. I aimed to create a win-win solution for businesses and their digital consumers.

    And in 2007, I started developing Matomo with the help from Scott Switzer and Jennifer Langdon (who offered me an internship and support).   

    All thanks to the Matomo Community

    We have reached significant milestones and made major changes over the last 15 years, but we wouldn’t be where we are today without the Matomo Community.

    So I would like to celebrate and thank the hundreds of volunteer developers who have donated their time to develop Matomo, the thousands of contributors who provided feedback to improve Matomo, the countless supportive forum members, our passionate team of 40 at Matomo, the numerous translators who have translated Matomo and the 1.5 million websites that choose Matomo as their analytics platform.

    Matomo's Birthday
    Team Meetup in Paris in 2012

    Matomo has been a community effort built on the shoulders of many, and we will continue to work for you. 

    So let’s look at some milestones we have achieved over the last 15 years.

    Looking back on milestones in our timeline

    2007

    • Birth of Matomo
    • First alpha version released

    2008

    • Release first public 0.1.0 version

    2009

    • 50,000 websites use Matomo

    2010

    • Matomo first stable 1.0.0 released
    • Mobile app launched

    2011

    • Released Ecommerce Analytics, Custom Variables, First Party Cookies

    • Released Privacy control features (first of many privacy features to come !)

    2012

    • Released Log Analytics feature
    • 1 Million Downloads !
    • 300,000 websites worldwide use Matomo

    2013

    • Matomo is now available in 50 languages !
    • Matomo brand redesign

    2016

    2017

    • Launched Matomo Cloud service 
    • Released Multi Channel Conversion Attribution Premium Feature, Custom Reports Premium Feature, Login Saml Premium Feature, WooCommerceAnalytics Premium Feature and Heatmap & Session Recording Premium Feature 

    2018

    2019

    2020

    2021

    • 1,000,000 websites worldwide use Matomo
    • including 30,000 active Matomo for WordPress installations
    • Released SEO Web Vitals, Advertising Conversion Export and Tracking Spam Prevention feature

    2022

    • Released WP Statistics to Matomo importer

    Our efforts continue

    While we’ve seen incredible growth over the years, our work doesn’t stop there. In fact, we’re only just getting started.

    Today over 55% of the internet continues to use privacy-threatening web analytics solutions, while 1.5% uses Matomo. So there are still great strides to be made to create a more private internet, and joining the Matomo Community is one way to support this movement.

    There are many ways to get involved too, such as :

    So what comes next for Matomo ?

    The future of Matomo is approachable, powerful and flexible. We’re strengthening the customers’ voice, expanding our resources internally (we’re continuously hiring !) and conducting rigorous customer research to craft a tool that balances usability and functionality.

    I look forward to the next 15 years and seeing what the future holds for Matomo and our community.