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Médias (1)
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Richard Stallman et le logiciel libre
19 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
Type : Texte
Autres articles (64)
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Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins
27 avril 2010, parMediaspip core
autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs -
Emballe Médias : Mettre en ligne simplement des documents
29 octobre 2010, parLe plugin emballe médias a été développé principalement pour la distribution mediaSPIP mais est également utilisé dans d’autres projets proches comme géodiversité par exemple. Plugins nécessaires et compatibles
Pour fonctionner ce plugin nécessite que d’autres plugins soient installés : CFG Saisies SPIP Bonux Diogène swfupload jqueryui
D’autres plugins peuvent être utilisés en complément afin d’améliorer ses capacités : Ancres douces Légendes photo_infos spipmotion (...) -
MediaSPIP Init et Diogène : types de publications de MediaSPIP
11 novembre 2010, parÀ l’installation d’un site MediaSPIP, le plugin MediaSPIP Init réalise certaines opérations dont la principale consiste à créer quatre rubriques principales dans le site et de créer cinq templates de formulaire pour Diogène.
Ces quatre rubriques principales (aussi appelées secteurs) sont : Medias ; Sites ; Editos ; Actualités ;
Pour chacune de ces rubriques est créé un template de formulaire spécifique éponyme. Pour la rubrique "Medias" un second template "catégorie" est créé permettant d’ajouter (...)
Sur d’autres sites (10096)
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Displaying ffmpeg conversion progress
29 mars 2014, par HiigaranI'm trying to get an admin function made, in which I want to show a basic status of any file conversion(s) that may or may not be happening upon page load. I'm not entirely sure how to proceed with this, so here is what I have at the moment :
exec("ffprobe -v quiet -print_format json -show_format '".$fileNameIn.".".$ext."' > /var/www/resources/ffmpegFormat.log");
exec("/ffmpeg/ffmpeg -loglevel 'verbose' -i '".$fileNameIn.".".$ext."' '".$fileNameOut.".flac' null >/dev/null 2>/var/www/resources/ffmpeg.log &",$ffmpegOutput);My idea is to use ffprobe to output some information about the file to be converted, then use PHP in some way to read the output file (ffmpegFormat.log) for the total file duration. Once read, ffmpeg begins, while outputting to its own file (ffmpeg.log).
I'm not looking for anything fancy, like live updates on the progress, so I'm content with simply having a script read the current duration from the last line of the ffmpeg.log file, compare it to the total duration from the ffmpegFormat.log file, and display a percentage only after a page load/refresh.
I've placed a restriction on conversion to only one file at a time, for the sake of simplifying this progress indicator (and due to a lack of processing power on this computer).
Assuming there's no simpler way than my idea, how can I do this ?
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Video playing, how to play a video back a a rapid rate at random timestamp locations
10 avril 2020, par Zarc RowdenNote : this is a mildly general question that is looking more for pointers in the right direction and not exactly requiring a concise coded answer. I appreciate any and all input, thank you for lending your brain power to me for this moment :)



I have a script that receives midi messages in real time and triggers playback of a single video on various timestamps that are changed/selected regularly and randomly by a user. Currently this is working in the browser, however, I've realized that there is some noticeable latency between (i'm guessing the cause here so please correct me) the moment a request to play a video at a specific time is made(note : the video is not being requested over the wire, this action does not take place until a JS Blob Url is loaded into the player) and the moment where that request is fulfilled and delivered from storage to pixels on the screen.



My question is : Is it reasonable to assume that there is a tool out there, that given the correct video format and optimizations both in the code and in the file that could load an entire, say : 1 gb video into memory and play it back at random timestamps every 60 milliseconds at completely random, constantly changing timestamps.



If you're now all the way down here... Thanks for reading this far, or scanning ! Please let me know if this question makes any sense / could be improved, I'm happy to clarify further.


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Use ffmpeg Windows batch script on OS X
3 novembre 2015, par andiskI got an ffmpeg batch script written by someone. The script takes all video clips of a specific folder, cuts off first and last frame, converts the clips to ProRes and saves them in a new folder. I got it running under Windows (just have to double-click the *.bat file and it does what it’s supposed to do).
But now I need that same script running on a mac. I’ve installed ffmpeg over homebrew. Then I tried to make a Automator-Service, but with no success. Best thing would be if I could just right click on the folder with the videos, go to services and click on convert. I’m not really into coding and scripting, but the people who should use the script are happy when they find the power switch of the computer..
Can anyone help me with this ?
Cheers andiskEdit : Here’s the code
`@echo off
mkdir tmp
mkdir converted
set pathtofind=%~dp0
echo Searching for files in %pathtofind%%1\
setlocal enableextensions
setlocal ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION
for %%f in (%pathtofind%%1\*) do (
echo Handling file %%f
ffmpeg -y -loglevel quiet -i %%f tmp\%%d.png
set count=0
for %%x in (tmp\*) do set /a count +=1
echo Deleting frames 1 and !count!
del tmp\1.png
del tmp\!count!.png
echo Saving %%~nf.mov
ffmpeg -y -loglevel verbose -f image2 -r 24 -i tmp\%%d.png -vcodec prores -profile:v 1 -r 24 converted\%%~nf.mov
del /q tmp\*.*
echo ---------------------------
)
rd tmp`