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  • Amélioration de la version de base

    13 septembre 2013

    Jolie sélection multiple
    Le plugin Chosen permet d’améliorer l’ergonomie des champs de sélection multiple. Voir les deux images suivantes pour comparer.
    Il suffit pour cela d’activer le plugin Chosen (Configuration générale du site > Gestion des plugins), puis de configurer le plugin (Les squelettes > Chosen) en activant l’utilisation de Chosen dans le site public et en spécifiant les éléments de formulaires à améliorer, par exemple select[multiple] pour les listes à sélection multiple (...)

  • Participer à sa traduction

    10 avril 2011

    Vous pouvez nous aider à améliorer les locutions utilisées dans le logiciel ou à traduire celui-ci dans n’importe qu’elle nouvelle langue permettant sa diffusion à de nouvelles communautés linguistiques.
    Pour ce faire, on utilise l’interface de traduction de SPIP où l’ensemble des modules de langue de MediaSPIP sont à disposition. ll vous suffit de vous inscrire sur la liste de discussion des traducteurs pour demander plus d’informations.
    Actuellement MediaSPIP n’est disponible qu’en français et (...)

  • List of compatible distributions

    26 avril 2011, par

    The table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
    If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...)

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  • OpenCV ffmpeg DLL not loaded when running app on Windows 7, works on 8 and 10

    2 novembre 2016, par David G.

    I need to maintain a desktop app written in C++, using Qt and OpenCV for some video processing. As far as I understood, the decoding part of OpenCV is delegated to ffmpeg in a separate DLL for licensing reasons.

    The development environment is on Windows 10, using QT Creator and MSVC12 64-bit as compiler. OpenCV version is 3.0, the official distribution. Here, everything runs fine, I am able to decode a video using VideoCapture::open().

    Issues arise when I try to run the application in a standalone fashion with all the required DLLs in the same folder as the .exe file. All cases below are 64-bit OSes.

    On a Windows 10 computer, not the same as the developement machine and no developer libraries present, the video decoding works fine. I have tested on a Windows 8 machine as well, no issues so far.

    On Windows 7, the things get tricky. The same video files that successfully load during the previous tests are not recognized by the app at all i.e. the isOpened call on VideoCapture returns false. For further testing, I stripped the opencv_ffmpeg300_64.dll file to narrow down the issue on Windows 10 and 8 ; as expected, without this DLL the app is no more able to open the same video files.

    It seems that the DLL is simply not recognized on Windows 7.

    Edit : Further investigation using Process Explorer clearly shows that the aforementioned DLL is not loaded when the app runs on Windows 7.

    • Is there something specific about how Windows 7 manages the DLL path resolution and eventual security measures ? Seems normal that the first search location is the same folder as the executable, which is the case here.

    I have tried to trace using WinApiOverride32, with no results.

  • OpenCV ffmpeg DLL not loaded when running app on Windows 7, works on 8 and 10

    4 avril 2018, par David G.

    I need to maintain a desktop app written in C++, using Qt and OpenCV for some video processing. As far as I understood, the decoding part of OpenCV is delegated to ffmpeg in a separate DLL for licensing reasons.

    The development environment is on Windows 10, using QT Creator and MSVC12 64-bit as compiler. OpenCV version is 3.0, the official distribution. Here, everything runs fine, I am able to decode a video using VideoCapture::open().

    Issues arise when I try to run the application in a standalone fashion with all the required DLLs in the same folder as the .exe file. All cases below are 64-bit OSes.

    On a Windows 10 computer, not the same as the developement machine and no developer libraries present, the video decoding works fine. I have tested on a Windows 8 machine as well, no issues so far.

    On Windows 7, the things get tricky. The same video files that successfully load during the previous tests are not recognized by the app at all i.e. the isOpened call on VideoCapture returns false. For further testing, I stripped the opencv_ffmpeg300_64.dll file to narrow down the issue on Windows 10 and 8 ; as expected, without this DLL the app is no more able to open the same video files.

    It seems that the DLL is simply not recognized on Windows 7.

    Edit : Further investigation using Process Explorer clearly shows that the aforementioned DLL is not loaded when the app runs on Windows 7.

    • Is there something specific about how Windows 7 manages the DLL path resolution and eventual security measures ? Seems normal that the first search location is the same folder as the executable, which is the case here.

    I have tried to trace using WinApiOverride32, with no results.