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Revolution of Open-source and film making towards open film making
6 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Juillet 2013
Langue : English
Type : Texte
Autres articles (112)
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Script d’installation automatique de MediaSPIP
25 avril 2011, parAfin 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 (...) -
Other interesting software
13 avril 2011, parWe don’t claim to be the only ones doing what we do ... and especially not to assert claims to be the best either ... What we do, we just try to do it well and getting better ...
The following list represents softwares that tend to be more or less as MediaSPIP or that MediaSPIP tries more or less to do the same, whatever ...
We don’t know them, we didn’t try them, but you can take a peek.
Videopress
Website : http://videopress.com/
License : GNU/GPL v2
Source code : (...) -
Support audio et vidéo HTML5
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...)
Sur d’autres sites (8674)
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Superimposing two videos onto a static image ?
15 décembre 2014, par ArchagonI have two videos that I’d like to combine into a single video, in which both videos would sit on top of a static background image. (Think something like this.) My requirements are that the software I use is free, that it runs on OSX, and that I don’t have to re-encode my videos an excessive number of times. I’d also like to be able to perform this operation from the command line or via script, since I’ll be doing it a lot. (But this isn’t strictly necessary.)
I tried fiddling with ffmpeg for a couple of hours, but it just doesn’t seem very well suited for post-processing. I could potentially hack something together via the overlay feature, but so far I haven’t figured out how to do it, aside from pain-stakingly converting the image to a video (which takes 2x as long as the length of my videos !) and then superimposing the two videos onto it in another rendering step.
Any tips ? Thank you !
Update :
Thanks to LordNeckbeard’s help, I was able to achieve my desired result with a single ffmpeg call ! Unfortunately, encoding is quite slow, taking 6 seconds to encode 1 second of video. I believe this is caused by the background image. Any tips on speeding up encoding ? Here’s the ffmpeg log :
MacBook-Pro:Video archagon$ ffmpeg -loop 1 -i underlay.png -i test-slide-video-short.flv -i test-speaker-video-short.flv -filter_complex "[1:0]scale=400:-1[a];[2:0]scale=320:-1[b];[0:0][a]overlay=0:0[c];[c][b]overlay=0:0" -shortest -t 5 -an output.mp4
ffmpeg version 1.0 Copyright (c) 2000-2012 the FFmpeg developers
built on Nov 14 2012 16:18:58 with Apple clang version 4.0 (tags/Apple/clang-421.0.60) (based on LLVM 3.1svn)
configuration: --prefix=/opt/local --enable-swscale --enable-avfilter --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libvorbis --enable-libopus --enable-libtheora --enable-libschroedinger --enable-libopenjpeg --enable-libmodplug --enable-libvpx --enable-libspeex --mandir=/opt/local/share/man --enable-shared --enable-pthreads --cc=/usr/bin/clang --arch=x86_64 --enable-yasm --enable-gpl --enable-postproc --enable-libx264 --enable-libxvid
libavutil 51. 73.101 / 51. 73.101
libavcodec 54. 59.100 / 54. 59.100
libavformat 54. 29.104 / 54. 29.104
libavdevice 54. 2.101 / 54. 2.101
libavfilter 3. 17.100 / 3. 17.100
libswscale 2. 1.101 / 2. 1.101
libswresample 0. 15.100 / 0. 15.100
libpostproc 52. 0.100 / 52. 0.100
Input #0, image2, from 'underlay.png':
Duration: 00:00:00.04, start: 0.000000, bitrate: N/A
Stream #0:0: Video: png, rgb24, 1024x768, 25 fps, 25 tbr, 25 tbn, 25 tbc
Input #1, flv, from 'test-slide-video-short.flv':
Metadata:
author :
copyright :
description :
keywords :
rating :
title :
presetname : Custom
videodevice : VGA2USB Pro V3U30343
videokeyframe_frequency: 5
canSeekToEnd : false
createdby : FMS 3.5
creationdate : Mon Aug 16 16:35:34 2010
encoder : Lavf54.29.104
Duration: 00:50:32.75, start: 0.000000, bitrate: 90 kb/s
Stream #1:0: Video: vp6f, yuv420p, 640x480, 153 kb/s, 8 tbr, 1k tbn, 1k tbc
Input #2, flv, from 'test-speaker-video-short.flv':
Metadata:
author :
copyright :
description :
keywords :
rating :
title :
presetname : Custom
videodevice : Microsoft DV Camera and VCR
videokeyframe_frequency: 5
audiodevice : Microsoft DV Camera and VCR
audiochannels : 1
audioinputvolume: 75
canSeekToEnd : false
createdby : FMS 3.5
creationdate : Mon Aug 16 16:35:34 2010
encoder : Lavf54.29.104
Duration: 00:50:38.05, start: 0.000000, bitrate: 238 kb/s
Stream #2:0: Video: vp6f, yuv420p, 320x240, 204 kb/s, 25 tbr, 1k tbn, 1k tbc
Stream #2:1: Audio: mp3, 22050 Hz, mono, s16, 32 kb/s
File 'output.mp4' already exists. Overwrite ? [y/N] y
using cpu capabilities: none!
[libx264 @ 0x7fa84c02f200] profile High, level 3.1
[libx264 @ 0x7fa84c02f200] 264 - core 119 - H.264/MPEG-4 AVC codec - Copyleft 2003-2011 - http://www.videolan.org/x264.html - options: cabac=1 ref=3 deblock=1:0:0 analyse=0x3:0x113 me=hex subme=7 psy=1 psy_rd=1.00:0.00 mixed_ref=1 me_range=16 chroma_me=1 trellis=1 8x8dct=1 cqm=0 deadzone=21,11 fast_pskip=1 chroma_qp_offset=-2 threads=3 sliced_threads=0 nr=0 decimate=1 interlaced=0 bluray_compat=0 constrained_intra=0 bframes=3 b_pyramid=2 b_adapt=1 b_bias=0 direct=1 weightb=1 open_gop=0 weightp=2 keyint=250 keyint_min=25 scenecut=40 intra_refresh=0 rc_lookahead=40 rc=crf mbtree=1 crf=23.0 qcomp=0.60 qpmin=0 qpmax=69 qpstep=4 ip_ratio=1.40 aq=1:1.00
Output #0, mp4, to 'output.mp4':
Metadata:
encoder : Lavf54.29.104
Stream #0:0: Video: h264 ([33][0][0][0] / 0x0021), yuv420p, 1024x768, q=-1--1, 25 tbn, 25 tbc
Stream mapping:
Stream #0:0 (png) -> overlay:main
Stream #1:0 (vp6f) -> scale
Stream #2:0 (vp6f) -> scale
overlay -> Stream #0:0 (libx264)
Press [q] to stop, [?] for help
Update 2 :
It works ! One important tweak was to move the underlay.png input to the end of the input list. This increased performance substantially. Here’s my final ffmpeg call. (The maps at the end aren’t required for this particular arrangement, but I sometimes have a few extra audio inputs that I want to map to my output.)
ffmpeg
-i VideoOne.flv
-i VideoTwo.flv
-loop 1 -i Underlay.png
-filter_complex "[2:0] [0:0] overlay=20:main_h/2-overlay_h/2 [overlay];[overlay] [1:0] overlay=main_w-overlay_w-20:main_h/2-overlay_h/2 [output]"
-map [output]:v
-map 0:a
OutputVideo.m4v -
lavfi/overlay : cleanup unused shorthand.
11 avril 2013, par Clément Bœschlavfi/overlay : cleanup unused shorthand.
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lavfi/smartblur : cleanup unused shorthand and doc.
11 avril 2013, par Clément Bœschlavfi/smartblur : cleanup unused shorthand and doc.