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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

  • Déploiements possibles

    31 janvier 2010, par

    Deux types de déploiements sont envisageable dépendant de deux aspects : La méthode d’installation envisagée (en standalone ou en ferme) ; Le nombre d’encodages journaliers et la fréquentation envisagés ;
    L’encodage de vidéos est un processus lourd consommant énormément de ressources système (CPU et RAM), il est nécessaire de prendre tout cela en considération. Ce système n’est donc possible que sur un ou plusieurs serveurs dédiés.
    Version mono serveur
    La version mono serveur consiste à n’utiliser qu’une (...)

  • MediaSPIP version 0.1 Beta

    16 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP 0.1 beta est la première version de MediaSPIP décrétée comme "utilisable".
    Le fichier zip ici présent contient uniquement les sources de MediaSPIP en version standalone.
    Pour avoir une installation fonctionnelle, il est nécessaire d’installer manuellement l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles sur le serveur.
    Si vous souhaitez utiliser cette archive pour une installation en mode ferme, il vous faudra également procéder à d’autres modifications (...)

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  • How to create a widget – Introducing the Piwik Platform

    4 septembre 2014, par Thomas Steur — Development

    This is the next post of our blog series where we introduce the capabilities of the Piwik platform (our previous post was How to create a scheduled task in Piwik). This time you’ll learn how to create a new widget. For this tutorial you will need to have basic knowledge of PHP.

    What is a widget in Piwik ?

    Widgets can be added to your dashboards or exported via a URL to embed it on any page. Most widgets in Piwik represent a report but a widget can display anything. For instance a RSS feed of your corporate news. If you prefer to have most of your business relevant data in one dashboard why not display the number of offline sales, the latest stock price, or other key metrics together with your analytics data ?

    Getting started

    In this series of posts, we assume that you have already set up your development environment. If not, visit the Piwik Developer Zone where you’ll find the tutorial Setting up Piwik.

    To summarize the things you have to do to get setup :

    • Install Piwik (for instance via git).
    • Activate the developer mode : ./console development:enable --full.
    • Generate a plugin : ./console generate:plugin --name="MyWidgetPlugin". There should now be a folder plugins/MyWidgetPlugin.
    • And activate the created plugin under Settings => Plugins.

    Let’s start creating a widget

    We start by using the Piwik Console to create a widget template :

    ./console generate:widget

    The command will ask you to enter the name of the plugin the widget should belong to. I will simply use the above chosen plugin name “MyWidgetPlugin”. It will ask you for a widget category as well. You can select any existing category, for instance “Visitors”, “Live !” or “Actions”, or you can define a new category, for instance your company name. There should now be a file plugins/MyWidgetPlugin/Widgets.php which contains already some examples to get you started easily :

    1. class Widgets extends \Piwik\Plugin\Widgets
    2. {
    3.     /**
    4.      * Here you can define the category the widget belongs to. You can reuse any existing widget category or define your own category.
    5.      * @var string
    6.      */
    7.     protected $category = 'ExampleCompany';
    8.  
    9.     /**
    10.      * Here you can add one or multiple widgets. You can add a widget by calling the method "addWidget()" and pass the name of the widget as well as a method name that should be called to render the widget. The method can be defined either directly here in this widget class or in the controller in case you want to reuse the same action for instance in the menu etc.
    11.      */
    12.     protected function init()
    13.     {
    14.         $this->addWidget('Example Widget Name', $method = 'myExampleWidget');
    15.         $this->addWidget('Example Widget 2',    $method = 'myExampleWidget', $params = array('myparam' => 'myvalue'));
    16.     }
    17.  
    18.     /**
    19.      * This method renders a widget as defined in "init()". It's on you how to generate the content of the widget. As long as you return a string everything is fine. You can use for instance a "Piwik\View" to render a twig template. In such a case don't forget to create a twig template (eg. myViewTemplate.twig) in the "templates" directory of your plugin.
    20.      *
    21.      * @return string
    22.      */
    23.     public function myExampleWidget()
    24.     {
    25.         $view = new View('@MyWidgetPlugin/myViewTemplate');
    26.         return $view->render();
    27.     }
    28. }

    Télécharger

    As you might have noticed in the generated template we put emphasis on adding comments to explain you directly how to continue and where to get more information. Ideally this saves you some time and you don’t even have to search for more information on our developer pages. The category is defined in the property $category and can be changed at any time. Starting from Piwik 2.6.0 the generator will directly create a translation key if necessary to make it easy to translate the category into any language. Translations will be a topic in one of our future posts until then you can explore this feature on our Internationalization guide.

    A simple example

    We can define one or multiple widgets in the init method by calling addWidget($widgetName, $methodName). To do so we define the name of a widget which will be seen by your users as well as the name of the method that shall render the widget.

    protected $category = 'Example Company';

    public function init()
    {
       // Registers a widget named 'News' under the category 'Example Company'.
       // The method 'myCorporateNews' will be used to render the widget.
       $this->addWidget('News', $method = 'myCorporateNews');
    }

    public function myCorporateNews()
    {
       return file_get_contents('http://example.com/news');
    }

    This example would display the content of the specified URL within the widget as defined in the method myCorporateNews. It’s on you how to generate the content of the widget. Any string returned by this method will be displayed within the widget. You can use for example a View to render a Twig template. For simplification we are fetching the content from another site. A more complex version would cache this content for faster performance. Caching and views will be covered in one of our future posts as well.

    Example Widget

    Did you know ? To make your life as a developer as stress-free as possible the platform checks whether the registered method actually exists and whether the method is public. If not, Piwik will display a notification in the UI and advice you with the next step.

    Checking permissions

    Often you do not want to have the content of a widget visible to everyone. You can check for permissions by using one of our many convenient methods which all start with \Piwik\Piwik::checkUser*. Just to introduce some of them :

    // Make sure the current user has super user access
    \Piwik\Piwik::checkUserHasSuperUserAccess();

    // Make sure the current user is logged in and not anonymous
    \Piwik\Piwik::checkUserIsNotAnonymous();

    And here is an example how you can use it within your widget :

    public function myCorporateNews()
    {
       // Make sure there is an idSite URL parameter
       $idSite = Common::getRequestVar('idSite', null, 'int');

       // Make sure the user has at least view access for the specified site. This is useful if you want to display data that is related to the specified site.
       Piwik::checkUserHasViewAccess($idSite);

       $siteUrl = \Piwik\Site::getMainUrlFor($idSite);

       return file_get_contents($siteUrl . '/news');
    }

    In case any condition is not met an exception will be thrown and an error message will be presented to the user explaining that he does not have enough permissions. You’ll find the documentation for those methods in the Piwik class reference.

    How to test a widget

    After you have created your widgets you are surely wondering how to test it. First, you should write a unit or integration test which we will cover in one of our future blog posts. Just one hint : You can use the command ./console generate:test to create a test. To manually test a widget you can add a widget to a dashboard or export it.

    Publishing your Plugin on the Marketplace

    In case you want to share your widgets with other Piwik users you can do this by pushing your plugin to a public GitHub repository and creating a tag. Easy as that. Read more about how to distribute a plugin.

    Advanced features

    Isn’t it easy to create a widget ? We never even created a file ! Of course, based on our API design principle “The complexity of our API should never exceed the complexity of your use case.” you can accomplish more if you want : You can clarify parameters that will be passed to your widget, you can create a method in the Controller instead of the Widget class to make the same method also reusable for adding it to the menu, you can assign different categories to different widgets, you can remove any widgets that were added by the Piwik core or other plugins and more.

    Would you like to know more about widgets ? Go to our Widgets class reference in the Piwik Developer Zone.

    If you have any feedback regarding our APIs or our guides in the Developer Zone feel free to send it to us.

  • avcodec/h2645_sei : loosen up min luminance requirements

    25 mai 2024, par Niklas Haas
    avcodec/h2645_sei : loosen up min luminance requirements
    

    The H.265 specification is quite clear on this case :

    > When min_display_mastering_luminance is not in the range of 1 to
    > 50000, the nominal maximum display luminance of the mastering display
    > is unknown or unspecified or specified by other means not specified in
    > this Specification.

    And so the current code is correct in marking luminance data as invalid
    if min luminance is set to 0. However, this breaks playback of at least
    several real-world Blu-ray releases, for example La La Land, Planet of
    the Apes, and quite possibly a lot more. These come with ostensibly
    valid max_luminance tags (1000 nits), but min_luminance set to 0.

    Loosen up this requirement by guarding it behind FF_COMPLIANCE_STRICT.
    We still reject blatantly invalid metadata (wrong value range on
    luminance, max set to 0, max below min, min above 50 nits etc.), so this
    shouldn't cause any unintended regressions.

    Fixes : https://github.com/mpv-player/mpv/issues/14177

    • [DH] libavcodec/h2645_sei.c
  • fate/ffprobe : Fix test requirements

    30 mars 2024, par Andreas Rheinhardt
    fate/ffprobe : Fix test requirements
    

    The ffprobe-test file is generated via ffmpeg and several filters ;
    the requirements for them were missing.
    Also deduplicate this while just at it.

    Signed-off-by : Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>

    • [DH] tests/Makefile
    • [DH] tests/fate/ffprobe.mak