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  • La file d’attente de SPIPmotion

    28 novembre 2010, par

    Une file d’attente stockée dans la base de donnée
    Lors de son installation, SPIPmotion crée une nouvelle table dans la base de donnée intitulée spip_spipmotion_attentes.
    Cette nouvelle table est constituée des champs suivants : id_spipmotion_attente, l’identifiant numérique unique de la tâche à traiter ; id_document, l’identifiant numérique du document original à encoder ; id_objet l’identifiant unique de l’objet auquel le document encodé devra être attaché automatiquement ; objet, le type d’objet auquel (...)

  • List of compatible distributions

    26 avril 2011, par

    The table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
    If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...)

  • Contribute to documentation

    13 avril 2011

    Documentation is vital to the development of improved technical capabilities.
    MediaSPIP welcomes documentation by users as well as developers - including : critique of existing features and functions articles contributed by developers, administrators, content producers and editors screenshots to illustrate the above translations of existing documentation into other languages
    To contribute, register to the project users’ mailing (...)

Sur d’autres sites (5361)

  • How To Install FFMPEG on Elastic Beanstalk

    26 mars 2020, par Nick Lynch

    This is not a duplicate, I have found one thread, and it is outdated and does not work :
    Install ffmpeg on elastic beanstalk using ebextensions config.

    I have been trying to install this for some time, nothing seems to work.
    Please share the config.yml that will make this work.

    I am using 64bit Amazon Linux 2016.03 v2.1.6 running PHP 7.0 on Elastic Beanstalk


    My current file is

    branch-defaults:
     default:
       environment: Default-Environment
     master:
       environment: Default-Environment
    global:
     application_name: "My First Elastic Beanstalk Application"
     default_ec2_keyname: ~
     default_platform: "64bit Amazon Linux 2016.03 v2.1.6 running PHP 7.0"
     default_region: us-east-1
     profile: eb-cli
     sc: git
    packages: ~
    yum:
     ImageMagick: []
     ImageMagick-devel: []
     commands:
       01-wget:
         command: "wget -O /tmp/ffmpeg.tar.gz http://ffmpeg.gusari.org/static/64bit/ffmpeg.static.64bit.2014-03-05.tar.gz"
       02-mkdir:
         command: "if [ ! -d /opt/ffmpeg ] ; then mkdir -p /opt/ffmpeg; fi"
       03-tar:
         command: "tar -xzf ffmpeg.tar.gz -C /opt/ffmpeg"
         cwd: /tmp
       04-ln:
         command: "if [[ ! -f /usr/bin/ffmpeg ]] ; then ln -s /opt/ffmpeg/ffmpeg /usr/bin/ffmpeg; fi"
       05-ln:
         command: "if [[ ! -f /usr/bin/ffprobe ]] ; then ln -s /opt/ffmpeg/ffprobe /usr/bin/ffprobe; fi"
       06-pecl:
         command: "if [ `pecl list | grep imagick` ] ; then pecl install -f imagick; fi"
  • "Invalid or unexpected token" error when trying to execute ffmpeg build on lambda

    4 janvier 2019, par almarc

    I have a node.js script that uses ffmpeg to convert mp4 downloaded from YT to mp3 and save to Amazon S3. Uploading using the serverless framework. The "ffmpeg" file is included in the main directory (with .yml), downloaded from here :
    https://johnvansickle.com/ffmpeg/

    The code :

    'use strict'
    process.env.PATH = process.env.PATH + ':/tmp/'
    process.env['FFMPEG_PATH'] = '/tmp/ffmpeg';
    const BIN_PATH = process.env['LAMBDA_TASK_ROOT']
    process.env['PATH'] = process.env['PATH'] + ':' + BIN_PATH;

    module.exports.download_mp3 = function (event, context, callback)
    {
     require('child_process').exec('cp /var/task/ffmpeg /tmp/.; chmod 755
     /tmp/ffmpeg;', function (error, stdout, stderr) {
     if (error)
     {
       console.log('An error occured', error);
       callback(null, null)
     }
     else
     {
       var ffmpeg = require('ffmpeg');
       const aws = require('aws-sdk')
       const s3 = new aws.S3()
       const ytdl = require('ytdl-core');

       function uploadFromStream(s3) {
         const stream = require('stream')
         var pass = new stream.PassThrough();

         var params = {Bucket: "some-bucket", Key: "some-key", Body: pass};
         s3.upload(params, function(err, data) {
           console.log(err, data);
         });
         console.log("Should be finished")
         callback(null)
       }

       let stream = ytdl("some-video-id", {
         quality: 'highestaudio',
         filter: 'audioonly'
       });

       ffmpeg(stream)
         .audioBitrate(128)
         .format('mp3')
         .on('error', (err) => console.error(err))
         .pipe(uploadFromStream(s3), {
           end: true
       });
     }})
    }

    When triggered, the function writes an error in logs :

    2019-01-04T14:50:54.525Z    21da4d49-1030-11e9-b901-0dc32b691a16    
    /var/task/ffmpeg:1
    (function (exports, require, module, __filename, __dirname) { ELF
    ^

    SyntaxError: Invalid or unexpected token
    at createScript (vm.js:80:10)
    at Object.runInThisContext (vm.js:139:10)
    at Module._compile (module.js:616:28)
    at Object.Module._extensions..js (module.js:663:10)
    at Module.load (module.js:565:32)
    at tryModuleLoad (module.js:505:12)
    at Function.Module._load (module.js:497:3)
    at Module.require (module.js:596:17)
    at require (internal/module.js:11:18)
    at /var/task/download.js:17:18

    It’s, most definetely, an error in the "ffmpeg" file I’ve mentioned above (link provided). But I don’t know what’s the exact issue, I followed the first answer here : https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47882810/lambda-not-connecting-to-ffmpeg to include the ffmpeg build.

  • ffmpeg not working with filenames that have whitespace

    18 mai 2021, par cmw

    I'm using FFMPEG to measure the duration of videos stored in an Amazon S3 Bucket.

    


    I've read the FFMPEG docs, and they explicitly state that all whitespace and special characters need to be escaped, in order for FFMPEG to handle them properly :

    


    See docs 2.1 and 2.1.1 : https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-utils.html

    


    However, when dealing with files whose filenames contain whitespace, ffmpeg fails to render a result.

    


    I've tried the following, with no success

    


    ffmpeg -i "http://s3.mybucketname.com/videos/my\ video\ file.mov" 2>&1 | grep Duration | awk '{print $2}' | tr -d
ffmpeg -i "http://s3.mybucketname.com/videos/my video file.mov" 2>&1 | grep Duration | awk '{print $2}' | tr -d
ffmpeg -i "http://s3.mybucketname.com/videos/my'\' video'\' file.mov" 2>&1 | grep Duration | awk '{print $2}' | tr -d
ffmpeg -i "http://s3.mybucketname.com/videos/my\ video\ file.mov" 2>&1 | grep Duration | awk '{print $2}' | tr -d


    


    However, if I strip out the whitespace in the filename – all is well, and the duration of the video is returned.