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  • Personnaliser en ajoutant son logo, sa bannière ou son image de fond

    5 septembre 2013, par

    Certains thèmes prennent en compte trois éléments de personnalisation : l’ajout d’un logo ; l’ajout d’une bannière l’ajout d’une image de fond ;

  • MediaSPIP v0.2

    21 juin 2013, par

    MediaSPIP 0.2 est la première version de MediaSPIP stable.
    Sa date de sortie officielle est le 21 juin 2013 et est annoncée ici.
    Le fichier zip ici présent contient uniquement les sources de MediaSPIP en version standalone.
    Comme pour la version précédente, 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 (...)

  • Mise à disposition des fichiers

    14 avril 2011, par

    Par défaut, lors de son initialisation, MediaSPIP ne permet pas aux visiteurs de télécharger les fichiers qu’ils soient originaux ou le résultat de leur transformation ou encodage. Il permet uniquement de les visualiser.
    Cependant, il est possible et facile d’autoriser les visiteurs à avoir accès à ces documents et ce sous différentes formes.
    Tout cela se passe dans la page de configuration du squelette. Il vous faut aller dans l’espace d’administration du canal, et choisir dans la navigation (...)

Sur d’autres sites (11249)

  • How to read frames of a video and write them on another video output using FFMPEG and nodejs

    29 décembre 2023, par Aviato

    I am working on a project where I need to process video frames one at a time in Node.js. I aim to avoid storing all frames in memory or the filesystem due to resource constraints. I plan to use the ffmpeg from child processes for video processing.
I tried reading a video file and then output frames of it in the filesystem first for testing purposes :-

    


    const ffmpegProcess = spawn('ffmpeg', [
  '-i', videoFile,
  'testfolder/%04d.png' // Output frames to stdout
]);


    


    and the above code works fine, it saves the video frames as png files in the filesystem. Now instead of saving them in the file system, I want to read the frames on at a time and use a image manipulation library and than write the final edited frames to another video as output

    


    I tried this :-

    


    const ffmpegProcess = spawn('ffmpeg', [
  '-i', videoFile,
  'pipe:1' // Output frames to stdout
]);

const ffmpegOutputProcess = spawn('ffmpeg', [
  '-i', '-',
  'outputFileName.mp4'
  ]);

ffmpegProcess.stdout.on('data', (data) => {
  // Process the frame data as needed
  console.log('Received frame data:');
  ffmpegOutputProcess.stdin.write(data)
});

ffmpegProcess.on('close', (code) => {
  if (code !== 0) {
    console.error(`ffmpeg process exited with code ${code}`);
  } else {
    console.log('ffmpeg process successfully completed');
    
  }
});

// Handle errors
ffmpegProcess.on('error', (err) => {
  console.error('Error while spawning ffmpeg:', err);
});


    


    But when I tried above code and also some other modifications in the input and output suffix in the command I got problems as below :-

    


      

    1. ffmpeg process exited with code 1
    2. 


    3. The final output video was corrupted when trying to initializing the filters for commands :-
    4. 


    


    
const ffmpegProcess = spawn('ffmpeg', [
 '-i', videoFile,
 '-f', 'rawvideo',
 '-pix_fmt', 'rgb24',
 'pipe:1' // Output frames to stdout
]);

const ffmpegOutputCommand = [
 '-f', 'rawvideo',
 '-pix_fmt', 'rgb24',
 '-s', '1920x1080',
 '-r', '30',
 '-i', '-',
 '-c:v', 'libx264',
 '-pix_fmt', 'yuv420p',
 outputFileName
];


    


    Thank you so much in advance :)

    


  • The 11th Hour RoQ Variation

    12 avril 2012, par Multimedia Mike — Game Hacking, dreamroq, Reverse Engineering, roq, Vector Quantization

    I have been looking at the RoQ file format almost as long as I have been doing practical multimedia hacking. However, I have never figured out how the RoQ format works on The 11th Hour, which was the game for which the RoQ format was initially developed. When I procured the game years ago, I remember finding what appeared to be RoQ files and shoving them through the open source decoders but not getting the right images out.

    I decided to dust off that old copy of The 11th Hour and have another go at it.



    Baseline
    The game consists of 4 CD-ROMs. Each disc has a media/ directory that has a series of files bearing the extension .gjd, likely the initials of one Graeme J. Devine. These are resource files which are merely headerless concatenations of other files. Thus, at first glance, one file might appear to be a single RoQ file. So that’s the source of some of the difficulty : Sending an apparent RoQ .gjd file through a RoQ player will often cause the program to complain when it encounters the header of another RoQ file.

    I have uploaded some samples to the usual place.

    However, even the frames that a player can decode (before encountering a file boundary within the resource file) look wrong.

    Investigating Codebooks Using dreamroq
    I wrote dreamroq last year– an independent RoQ playback library targeted towards embedded systems. I aimed it at a gjd file and quickly hit a codebook error.

    RoQ is a vector quantizer video codec that maintains a codebook of 256 2×2 pixel vectors. In the Quake III and later RoQ files, these are transported using a YUV 4:2:0 colorspace– 4 Y samples, a U sample, and a V sample to represent 4 pixels. This totals 6 bytes per vector. A RoQ codebook chunk contains a field that indicates the number of 2×2 vectors as well as the number of 4×4 vectors. The latter vectors are each comprised of 4 2×2 vectors.

    Thus, the total size of a codebook chunk ought to be (# of 2×2 vectors) * 6 + (# of 4×4 vectors) * 4.

    However, this is not the case with The 11th Hour RoQ files.

    Longer Codebooks And Mystery Colorspace
    Juggling the numbers for a few of the codebook chunks, I empirically determined that the 2×2 vectors are represented by 10 bytes instead of 6. Now I need to determine what exactly these 10 bytes represent.

    I should note that I suspect that everything else about these files lines up with successive generations of the format. For example if a file has 640×320 resolution, that amounts to 40×20 macroblocks. dreamroq iterates through 40×20 8×8 blocks and precisely exhausts the VQ bitstream. So that all looks valid. I’m just puzzled on the codebook format.

    Here is an example codebook dump :

    ID 0x1002, len = 0x0000014C, args = 0x1C0D
      0 : 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 80 80
      1 : 08 07 00 00 1F 5B 00 00 7E 81
      2 : 00 00 15 0F 00 00 40 3B 7F 84
      3 : 00 00 00 00 3A 5F 18 13 7E 84
      4 : 00 00 00 00 3B 63 1B 17 7E 85
      5 : 18 13 00 00 3C 63 00 00 7E 88
      6 : 00 00 00 00 00 00 59 3B 7F 81
      7 : 00 00 56 23 00 00 61 2B 80 80
      8 : 00 00 2F 13 00 00 79 63 81 83
      9 : 00 00 00 00 5E 3F AC 9B 7E 81
      10 : 1B 17 00 00 B6 EF 77 AB 7E 85
      11 : 2E 43 00 00 C1 F7 75 AF 7D 88
      12 : 6A AB 28 5F B6 B3 8C B3 80 8A
      13 : 86 BF 0A 03 D5 FF 3A 5F 7C 8C
      14 : 00 00 9E 6B AB 97 F5 EF 7F 80
      15 : 86 73 C8 CB B6 B7 B7 B7 85 8B
      16 : 31 17 84 6B E7 EF FF FF 7E 81
      17 : 79 AF 3B 5F FC FF E2 FF 7D 87
      18 : DC FF AE EF B3 B3 B8 B3 85 8B
      19 : EF FF F5 FF BA B7 B6 B7 88 8B
      20 : F8 FF F7 FF B3 B7 B7 B7 88 8B
      21 : FB FF FB FF B8 B3 B4 B3 85 88
      22 : F7 FF F7 FF B7 B7 B9 B7 87 8B
      23 : FD FF FE FF B9 B7 BB B7 85 8A
      24 : E4 FF B7 EF FF FF FF FF 7F 83
      25 : FF FF AC EB FF FF FC FF 7F 83
      26 : CC C7 F7 FF FF FF FF FF 7F 81
      27 : FF FF FE FF FF FF FF FF 80 80
    

    Note that 0x14C (the chunk size) = 332, 0x1C and 0x0D (the chunk arguments — count of 2×2 and 4×4 vectors, respectively) are 28 and 13. 28 * 10 + 13 * 4 = 332, so the numbers check out.

    Do you see any patterns in the codebook ? Here are some things I tried :

    • Treating the last 2 bytes as U & V and treating the first 4 as the 4 Y samples :


    • Treating the last 2 bytes as U & V and treating the first 8 as 4 16-bit little-endian Y samples :


    • Disregarding the final 2 bytes and treating the first 8 bytes as 4 RGB565 pixels (both little- and big-endian, respectively, shown here) :


    • Based on the type of data I’m seeing in these movies (which appears to be intended as overlays), I figured that some of these bits might indicate transparency ; here is 15-bit big-endian RGB which disregards the top bit of each pixel :


    These images are taken from the uploaded sample bdpuz.gjd, apparently a component of the puzzle represented in this screenshot.

    Unseen Types
    It has long been rumored that early RoQ files could contain JPEG images. I finally found one such specimen. One of the files bundled early in the uploaded fhpuz.gjd sample contains a JPEG frame. It’s a standard JFIF file and can easily be decoded after separating the bytes from the resource using ‘dd’. JPEGs serve as intraframes in the coding scheme, with successive RoQ frames moving objects on top.

    However, a new chunk type showed up as well, one identified by 0×1030. I have never encountered this type. Where could I possibly find data about this ? Fortunately, iD Games recently posted all of their open sourced games at Github. Reading through the code for their official RoQ decoder, I see that this is called a RoQ_PACKET. The name and the code behind it are both supremely unhelpful. The code is basically a no-op. The payloads of the various RoQ_PACKETs from one sample are observed to be either 8784, 14752, or 14760 bytes in length. It’s very likely that this serves the same purpose as the JPEG intraframes.

    Other Tidbits
    I read through the readme.txt on the first game disc and found this nugget :

            g)      Animations displayed normally or in SPOOKY MODE
    

    SPOOKY MODE is blue-tinted grayscale with color cursors, puzzle
    and game pieces. It is the preferred display setting of the
    developers at Trilobyte. Just for fun, try out the SPOOKY
    MODE.

    The MobyGames screenshot page has a number of screenshots labeled as being captured in spooky mode. Color tricks ?

    Meanwhile, another twist arose as I kept tweaking dreamroq to deal with more RoQ weirdness : After modifying my dreamroq code to handle these 10-byte vectors, it eventually chokes on another codebook. These codebooks happen to have 6-byte vectors again ! Fortunately, I was already working on a scheme to automatically detect which codebook is in play (plugging the numbers into a formula and seeing which vector size checks out).

  • Inconsistant rendering in mlt XML and C interface and 'hold' producer and avformat consumer

    14 octobre 2016, par Leif Andersen

    I am trying to create a short video that is just a single image. (I know its a bit silly, but its a test for something bigger).

    The code I have for rendering it is :

    #include <framework></framework>mlt.h>
    #include
    #include

    int main() {
     if(mlt_factory_init(NULL)) {
       mlt_profile p = mlt_profile_init(NULL);
       mlt_consumer target = mlt_factory_consumer(p, "avformat",
       mlt_producer source = mlt_factory_producer(p, "hold", "/Users/leif/logo.png");
       mlt_producer_set_in_and_out(source, 0, 10);
       mlt_consumer_connect(target, mlt_producer_service(source));
       mlt_consumer_start(target);

       sleep(5);
       mlt_consumer_stop(target);

       mlt_consumer_close(target);
       mlt_producer_close(source);
       mlt_factory_close();
     } else {
       printf("No\n");
     }

     return 0;
    }

    Where logo.png is this file.

    When I run this code and play output.mp4, the picture comes out all garbelled. There is a green line in the middle and the logo is superimposed on itself a lot.

    On the other hand, if I change the consumer to be SDL, the image plays just fine.

    And finally, if I change the consumer to be XML, and then use the melt command line application to render it :

    melt -consumer avformat:xmlout.mp4 output.xml

    and play the video, it also plays fine.

    Is there something I am missing in the avformat consumer that I should be setting ? Or something else that I am missing here ?

    Edit : For reference, the outputted xml file : output.xml is :

    &lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
    <mlt version="6.2.0" root="/Users/leif/src/video/private" title="Anonymous Submission" parent="producer0" in="0" out="10">
         <profile description="DV/DVD PAL" width="720" height="576" progressive="0" colorspace="601"></profile>
     <producer title="Anonymous Submission" in="0" out="10">
       <property>15000</property>
       <property>pause</property>
       <property>/Users/leif/logo.png</property>
       <property>1.06667</property>
       <property>0</property>
       <property>onefield</property>
       <property>hold</property>
       <property>1</property>
     </producer>
    </mlt>