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    Jolie sélection multiple
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    4 février 2011, par

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  • Menus personnalisés

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Sur d’autres sites (5949)

  • aacenc_tns : clamp filter direction energy measurement

    8 février, par Lynne
    aacenc_tns : clamp filter direction energy measurement
    

    The issue is that :

    float en[2] ;
    ...
    tns->n_filt[w] = is8 ? 1 : order != TNS_MAX_ORDER ? 2 : 3 ;
    for (g = 0 ; g < tns->n_filt[w] ; g++)
    tns->direction[w][g] = slant != 2 ? slant : en[g] < en[!g] ;

    When using the AAC Main profile, n_filt = 3, and slant is by
    default 2 (normal long frames), g can go above 1.

    en is the evolution of energy in the frequency domain for every
    band at the given window. E.g. whether the energy is concentrated
    at the top of each band, or the bottom.

    For 2-pole filters, its straightforward.
    For 3-pole filters, we need more than 2 measurements.

    This commit properly implements support for 3-pole filters, by measuring
    the band energy across three areas.

    Do note that even xHE-AAC caps n_filt to 2, and only AAC Main allows
    n_filt == 3.

    Fixes https://trac.ffmpeg.org/ticket/11418

    • [DH] libavcodec/aacenc_tns.c
  • How can I build a custom version of opencv while enabling CUDA and opengl ? [closed]

    10 février, par Josh

    I have a hard requirement of python3.7 for certain libraries (aeneas & afaligner). I've been using the regular opencv-python and ffmpeg libraries in my program and they've been working find.

    &#xA;

    Recently I wanted to adjust my program to use h264 instead of mpeg4 and ran down a licensing rabbit hole of how opencv-python uses a build of ffmpeg with opengl codecs off to avoid licensing issues. x264 is apparently opengl, and is disabled in the opencv-python library.

    &#xA;

    In order to solve this issue, I built a custom build of opencv using another custom build of ffmpeg both with opengl enabled. This allowed me to use the x264 encoder with the VideoWriter in my python program.

    &#xA;

    Here's the dockerfile of how I've been running it :

    &#xA;&#xA;

    FROM python:3.7-slim&#xA;&#xA;# Set optimization flags and number of cores globally&#xA;ENV CFLAGS="-O3 -march=native -ffast-math -flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections" \&#xA;    CXXFLAGS="-O3 -march=native -ffast-math -flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections" \&#xA;    LDFLAGS="-flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -Wl,--gc-sections" \&#xA;    MAKEFLAGS="-j\$(nproc)"&#xA;&#xA;# Combine all system dependencies in a single layer&#xA;RUN apt-get update &amp;&amp; apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends \&#xA;    build-essential \&#xA;    cmake \&#xA;    git \&#xA;    wget \&#xA;    unzip \&#xA;    yasm \&#xA;    pkg-config \&#xA;    libsm6 \&#xA;    libxext6 \&#xA;    libxrender-dev \&#xA;    libglib2.0-0 \&#xA;    libavcodec-dev \&#xA;    libavformat-dev \&#xA;    libswscale-dev \&#xA;    libavutil-dev \&#xA;    libswresample-dev \&#xA;    nasm \&#xA;    mercurial \&#xA;    libnuma-dev \&#xA;    espeak \&#xA;    libespeak-dev \&#xA;    libtiff5-dev \&#xA;    libjpeg62-turbo-dev \&#xA;    libopenjp2-7-dev \&#xA;    zlib1g-dev \&#xA;    libfreetype6-dev \&#xA;    liblcms2-dev \&#xA;    libwebp-dev \&#xA;    tcl8.6-dev \&#xA;    tk8.6-dev \&#xA;    python3-tk \&#xA;    libharfbuzz-dev \&#xA;    libfribidi-dev \&#xA;    libxcb1-dev \&#xA;    python3-dev \&#xA;    python3-setuptools \&#xA;    libsndfile1 \&#xA;    libavdevice-dev \&#xA;    libavfilter-dev \&#xA;    libpostproc-dev \&#xA;    &amp;&amp; apt-get clean \&#xA;    &amp;&amp; rm -rf /var/lib/apt/lists/*&#xA;&#xA;# Build x264 with optimizations&#xA;RUN cd /tmp &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    wget https://code.videolan.org/videolan/x264/-/archive/master/x264-master.tar.bz2 &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    tar xjf x264-master.tar.bz2 &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    cd x264-master &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    ./configure \&#xA;        --enable-shared \&#xA;        --enable-pic \&#xA;        --enable-asm \&#xA;        --enable-lto \&#xA;        --enable-strip \&#xA;        --enable-optimizations \&#xA;        --bit-depth=8 \&#xA;        --disable-avs \&#xA;        --disable-swscale \&#xA;        --disable-lavf \&#xA;        --disable-ffms \&#xA;        --disable-gpac \&#xA;        --disable-lsmash \&#xA;        --extra-cflags="-O3 -march=native -ffast-math -fomit-frame-pointer -flto -fno-fat-lto-objects" \&#xA;        --extra-ldflags="-O3 -flto -fno-fat-lto-objects" &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    make &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    make install &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    cd /tmp &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    # Build FFmpeg with optimizations&#xA;    wget https://ffmpeg.org/releases/ffmpeg-7.1.tar.bz2 &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    tar xjf ffmpeg-7.1.tar.bz2 &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    cd ffmpeg-7.1 &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    ./configure \&#xA;        --enable-gpl \&#xA;        --enable-libx264 \&#xA;        --enable-shared \&#xA;        --enable-nonfree \&#xA;        --enable-pic \&#xA;        --enable-asm \&#xA;        --enable-optimizations \&#xA;        --enable-lto \&#xA;        --enable-pthreads \&#xA;        --disable-debug \&#xA;        --disable-static \&#xA;        --disable-doc \&#xA;        --disable-ffplay \&#xA;        --disable-ffprobe \&#xA;        --disable-filters \&#xA;        --disable-programs \&#xA;        --disable-postproc \&#xA;        --extra-cflags="-O3 -march=native -ffast-math -fomit-frame-pointer -flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections" \&#xA;        --extra-ldflags="-O3 -flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -Wl,--gc-sections" \&#xA;        --prefix=/usr/local &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    make &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    make install &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    ldconfig &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    rm -rf /tmp/*&#xA;&#xA;# Install Python dependencies first&#xA;RUN pip install --no-cache-dir --upgrade pip setuptools wheel &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    pip install --no-cache-dir numpy py-spy&#xA;&#xA;# Build OpenCV with optimized configuration&#xA;RUN cd /tmp &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    # Download specific OpenCV version archives&#xA;    wget -O opencv.zip https://github.com/opencv/opencv/archive/4.8.0.zip &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    wget -O opencv_contrib.zip https://github.com/opencv/opencv_contrib/archive/4.8.0.zip &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    unzip opencv.zip &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    unzip opencv_contrib.zip &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    mv opencv-4.8.0 opencv &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    mv opencv_contrib-4.8.0 opencv_contrib &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    rm opencv.zip opencv_contrib.zip &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    cd opencv &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    mkdir build &amp;&amp; cd build &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    cmake \&#xA;        -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RELEASE \&#xA;        -D CMAKE_C_FLAGS="-O3 -march=native -ffast-math -flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections" \&#xA;        -D CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS="-O3 -march=native -ffast-math -flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -ffunction-sections -fdata-sections -Wno-deprecated" \&#xA;        -D CMAKE_EXE_LINKER_FLAGS="-flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -Wl,--gc-sections" \&#xA;        -D CMAKE_SHARED_LINKER_FLAGS="-flto -fno-fat-lto-objects -Wl,--gc-sections" \&#xA;        -D CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local \&#xA;        -D ENABLE_FAST_MATH=ON \&#xA;        -D CPU_BASELINE_DETECT=ON \&#xA;        -D CPU_BASELINE=SSE3 \&#xA;        -D CPU_DISPATCH=SSE4_1,SSE4_2,AVX,AVX2,AVX512_SKX,FP16 \&#xA;        -D WITH_OPENMP=ON \&#xA;        -D OPENCV_ENABLE_NONFREE=ON \&#xA;        -D WITH_FFMPEG=ON \&#xA;        -D FFMPEG_ROOT=/usr/local \&#xA;        -D OPENCV_EXTRA_MODULES_PATH=/tmp/opencv_contrib/modules \&#xA;        -D PYTHON_EXECUTABLE=/usr/local/bin/python3.7 \&#xA;        -D PYTHON3_EXECUTABLE=/usr/local/bin/python3.7 \&#xA;        -D PYTHON3_INCLUDE_DIR=/usr/local/include/python3.7m \&#xA;        -D PYTHON3_LIBRARY=/usr/local/lib/libpython3.7m.so \&#xA;        -D PYTHON3_PACKAGES_PATH=/usr/local/lib/python3.7/site-packages \&#xA;        -D PYTHON3_NUMPY_INCLUDE_DIRS=/usr/local/lib/python3.7/site-packages/numpy/core/include \&#xA;        -D BUILD_opencv_python3=ON \&#xA;        -D INSTALL_PYTHON_EXAMPLES=OFF \&#xA;        -D BUILD_TESTS=OFF \&#xA;        -D BUILD_PERF_TESTS=OFF \&#xA;        -D BUILD_EXAMPLES=OFF \&#xA;        -D BUILD_DOCS=OFF \&#xA;        -D BUILD_opencv_apps=OFF \&#xA;        -D WITH_OPENCL=OFF \&#xA;        -D WITH_CUDA=OFF \&#xA;        -D WITH_IPP=OFF \&#xA;        -D WITH_TBB=OFF \&#xA;        -D WITH_V4L=OFF \&#xA;        -D WITH_QT=OFF \&#xA;        -D WITH_GTK=OFF \&#xA;        -D BUILD_LIST=core,imgproc,imgcodecs,videoio,python3 \&#xA;        .. &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    make &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    make install &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    ldconfig &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    rm -rf /tmp/*&#xA;&#xA;# Set working directory and copy application code&#xA;WORKDIR /app&#xA;&#xA;COPY requirements.txt .&#xA;&#xA;RUN apt-get update &amp;&amp; apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends ffmpeg&#xA;&#xA;RUN pip install --no-cache-dir aeneas afaligner &amp;&amp; \&#xA;    pip install --no-cache-dir -r requirements.txt&#xA;&#xA;COPY . .&#xA;&#xA;# Make entrypoint executable&#xA;RUN chmod &#x2B;x entrypoint.sh&#xA;ENTRYPOINT ["./entrypoint.sh"]&#xA;

    &#xA;

    My trouble now, is I've been considering running parts of my program on my GPU, it's creating graphics for a video after all. I have no idea how to edit my Dockerfile to make the opencv build run with CUDA enabled, every combination I try leads to issues.

    &#xA;

    How can I tell which version of CUDA, opencv and ffmpeg are compatible with python 3.7 ? I've tried so so many combinations and they all lead to different issues, I've asked various AI agents and they all flounder. Where can I find a reliable source of information about this ?

    &#xA;

  • Server Move For multimedia.cx

    1er août 2014, par Multimedia Mike — General

    I made a big change to multimedia.cx last week : I moved hosting from a shared web hosting plan that I had been using for 10 years to a dedicated virtual private server (VPS). In short, I now have no one to blame but myself for any server problems I experience from here on out.

    The tipping point occurred a few months ago when my game music search engine kept breaking regardless of what technology I was using. First, I had an admittedly odd C-based CGI solution which broke due to mysterious binary compatibility issues, the sort that are bound to occur when trying to make a Linux binary run on heterogeneous distributions. The second solution was an SQLite-based solution. Like the first solution, this worked great until it didn’t work anymore. Something else mysteriously broke vis-à-vis PHP and SQLite on my server. I started investigating a MySQL-based full text search solution but couldn’t make it work, and decided that I shouldn’t have to either.

    Ironically, just before I finished this entire move operation, I noticed that my SQLite-based FTS solution was working again on the old shared host. I’m not sure when that problem went away. No matter, I had already thrown the switch.

    How Hard Could It Be ?
    We all have thresholds for the type of chores we’re willing to put up with and which we’d rather pay someone else to perform. For the past 10 years, I felt that administering a website’s underlying software is something that I would rather pay someone else to worry about. To be fair, 10 years ago, I don’t think VPSs were a thing, or at least a viable thing in the consumer space, and I wouldn’t have been competent enough to properly administer one. Though I would have been a full-time Linux user for 5 years at that point, I was still the type to build all of my own packages from source (I may have still been running Linux From Scratch 10 years ago) which might not be the most tractable solution for server stability.

    These days, VPSs are a much more affordable option (easily competitive with shared web hosting). I also realized I know exactly how to install and configure all the software that runs the main components of the various multimedia.cx sites, having done it on local setups just to ensure that my automated backups would actually be useful in the event of catastrophe.

    All I needed was the will to do it.

    The Switchover Process
    Here’s the rough plan :

    • Investigate options for both VPS providers and mail hosts– I might be willing to run a web server but NOT a mail server
    • Start plotting several months in advance of my yearly shared hosting renewal date
    • Screw around for several months, playing video games and generally finding reasons to put off the move
    • Panic when realizing there are only a few days left before the yearly renewal comes due

    So that’s the planning phase. BTW, I chose Digital Ocean for VPS and Zoho for email hosting. Here’s the execution phase I did last week :

    • Register with Digital Ocean and set up DNS entries to point to the old shared host for the time being
    • Once the D-O DNS servers respond correctly using a manual ‘dig’ command, use their servers as the authoritative ones for multimedia.cx
    • Create a new Droplet (D-O VPS), install all the right software, move the databases, upload the files ; and exhaustively document each step, gotcha, and pitfall ; treat a VPS as necessarily disposable and have an eye towards iterating the process with a new VPS
    • Use /etc/hosts on a local machine to point DNS to the new server and verify that each site is working correctly
    • After everything looks all right, update the DNS records to point to the new server

    Finally, flip the switch on the MX record by pointing it to the new email provider.

    Improvements and Problems
    Hosting on Digital Ocean is quite amazing so far. Maybe it’s the SSDs. Whatever it is, all the sites are performing far better than on the old shared web host. People who edit the MultimediaWiki report that changes get saved in less than the 10 or so seconds required on the old server.

    Again, all problems are now my problems. A sore spot with the shared web host was general poor performance. The hosting company would sometimes complain that my sites were using too much CPU. I would have loved to try to optimize things. However, the cPanel interface found on many shared hosts don’t give you a great deal of data for debugging performance problems. However, same sites, same software, same load on the VPS is considerably more performant.

    Problem : I’ve already had the MySQL database die due to a spike in usage. I had to manually restart it. I was considering a cron-based solution to check if the server is running and restart it if not. In response to my analysis that my databases are mostly read and not often modified, so db crashes shouldn’t be too disastrous, a friend helpfully reminded me that, “You would not make a good sysadmin with attitudes like ‘an occasional crash is okay’.”

    To this end, I am planning to migrate the database server to a separate VPS. This is a strategy that even Digital Ocean recommends. I’m hoping that the MySQL server isn’t subject to such memory spikes, but I’ll continue to monitor it after I set it up.

    Overall, the server continues to get modest amounts of traffic. I predict it will remain that way unless Dark Shikari resurrects the x264dev blog. The biggest spike that multimedia.cx ever saw was when Steve Jobs linked to this WebM post.

    Dropped Sites
    There are a bunch of subdomains I dropped because I hadn’t done anything with them for years and I doubt anyone will notice they’re gone. One notable section that I decided to drop is the samples.mplayerhq.hu archive. It will live on, but it will be hosted by samples.ffmpeg.org, which had a full mirror anyway. The lower-end VPS instances don’t have the 53 GB necessary.

    Going Forward
    Here’s to another 10 years of multimedia.cx, even if multimedia isn’t as exciting as it was 10 years ago (personal opinion ; I’ll have another post on this later). But at least I can get working on some other projects now that this is done. For the past 4 months or so, whenever I think of doing some other project, I always remembered that this server move took priority over everything else.