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Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-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 -
Configurer la prise en compte des langues
15 novembre 2010, parAccéder à la configuration et ajouter des langues prises en compte
Afin de configurer la prise en compte de nouvelles langues, il est nécessaire de se rendre dans la partie "Administrer" du site.
De là, dans le menu de navigation, vous pouvez accéder à une partie "Gestion des langues" permettant d’activer la prise en compte de nouvelles langues.
Chaque nouvelle langue ajoutée reste désactivable tant qu’aucun objet n’est créé dans cette langue. Dans ce cas, elle devient grisée dans la configuration et (...) -
HTML5 audio and video support
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP uses HTML5 video and audio tags to play multimedia files, taking advantage of the latest W3C innovations supported by modern browsers.
The MediaSPIP player used has been created specifically for MediaSPIP and can be easily adapted to fit in with a specific theme.
For older browsers the Flowplayer flash fallback is used.
MediaSPIP allows for media playback on major mobile platforms with the above (...)
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Introducing Matomo SEO Web Vitals
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Call system package with Go on App Engine Standard
8 novembre 2019, par reidreid46I’m trying to use FFmpeg in a Go application thats running on Google App Engine Standard. I can get this to run locally, when I point to a local instance of the FFmpeg binary using exec.Command()
cmd := exec.Command(
"/Users/justin/Desktop/conversion/ffmpeg", // this won't work on a remote server
"-i", "pipe:0",
"-ac", "1",
"-codec:a", "libmp3lame",
"-b:a", "48k",
"-ar", "24000",
"-f", "mp3",
"pipe:1",
)
cmd.Stdin = bytes.NewReader(synthResp.AudioContent)
var output bytes.Buffer
cmd.Stdout = &output
err = cmd.Run()Obviously, this won’t work when I deploy the application, so I need a way to point to a hosted version of the FFmpeg binary. It seems
ffmpeg
is a system package for the go1.11 App Engine Standard environment.What are "System packages" and how do I use them ?
When I look for documentation, I find a lot of documentation onapt-get
, and no documentation on how to use them, App Engine or otherwise. Do I need to install it, or should it already be part of the container(?) that App Engine is running ?Do I call it, like I’d call other executables ? If so, that I’d expect this to work, but it doesn’t
cmd := exec.Command(
"ffmpeg", // <------ what should this be?
"-i", "pipe:0",
"-ac", "1",
"-codec:a", "libmp3lame",
"-b:a", "48k",
"-ar", "24000",
"-f", "mp3",
"pipe:1",
)
cmd.Stdin = bytes.NewReader(synthResp.AudioContent)
var output bytes.Buffer
cmd.Stdout = &output
err = cmd.Run()Logging err, I see
exec: "ffmpeg": executable file not found in $PATH
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ffmpeg - convert image sequence to video with reversed order
8 avril 2017, par 0__Looking at the docs, it is not apparent to me whether ffmpeg would allow me to convert an image sequence to a video in reverse order, for example using this sequence :
frame-1000.jpg
frame-999.jpg
frame-998.jpg
...
frame-1.jpgIs it possible to give a "step direction" for the frame indices ?