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Médias (1)
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The Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow
28 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Texte
Autres articles (53)
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Dépôt de média et thèmes par FTP
31 mai 2013, parL’outil MédiaSPIP traite aussi les média transférés par la voie FTP. Si vous préférez déposer par cette voie, récupérez les identifiants d’accès vers votre site MédiaSPIP et utilisez votre client FTP favori.
Vous trouverez dès le départ les dossiers suivants dans votre espace FTP : config/ : dossier de configuration du site IMG/ : dossier des média déjà traités et en ligne sur le site local/ : répertoire cache du site web themes/ : les thèmes ou les feuilles de style personnalisées tmp/ : dossier de travail (...) -
Encodage et transformation en formats lisibles sur Internet
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP transforme et ré-encode les documents mis en ligne afin de les rendre lisibles sur Internet et automatiquement utilisables sans intervention du créateur de contenu.
Les vidéos sont automatiquement encodées dans les formats supportés par HTML5 : MP4, Ogv et WebM. La version "MP4" est également utilisée pour le lecteur flash de secours nécessaire aux anciens navigateurs.
Les documents audios sont également ré-encodés dans les deux formats utilisables par HTML5 :MP3 et Ogg. La version "MP3" (...) -
List of compatible distributions
26 avril 2011, parThe 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 (...)
Sur d’autres sites (8541)
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Processing Camera stream in Opencv, pushing it over RTMP (NGINX RTMP Module) using FFMPEG
19 avril 2016, par AsymptoteOutput video :
https://youtu.be/VxfoBQjoY6EExplanation :
I want to : Process camera stream in Opencv and push it over to RTMP server. I already have NGINX (RTMP module) set up and I have tested streaming videos with both RTMP (Flash Player) and HLS.
I am reading the frames in a loop and using ’subprocess’ in python to execute ffmpeg command. Here’s the command I am using :
command = [ffmpeg,
'-y',
'-f', 'rawvideo',
'-vcodec','rawvideo',
'-pix_fmt', 'bgr24',
'-s', dimension,
'-i', '-',
'-c:v', 'libx264',
'-pix_fmt', 'yuv420p',
'-preset', 'ultrafast',
'-f', 'flv',
'rtmp://10.10.10.80/live/mystream']
import subprocess as sp
...
proc = sp.Popen(command, stdin=sp.PIPE,shell=False)
...
proc.stdin.write(frame.tostring()) #frame is read using opencvProblem :
I can see the stream fine but it freezes and resumes frequently. Here’s the output of FFMPEG terminal log :
Stream mapping:
Stream #0:0 -> #0:0 (rawvideo (native) -> h264 (libx264))
frame= 117 fps= 16 q=22.0 size= 344kB time=00:00:04.04 bitrate= 697.8kbits/s speed=0.543xIt mentions speed at the end. I believe it should be close to 1x. I am not sure how to achieve that.
And I am on the same network as server, I can post my python code if required. Need some ffmpeg guru to give me some advise.
EDIT
My input fps is actually 3.
With'-use_wallclock_as_timestamps', '1'
I can see in the log that speed is close to 1x.
But HLS is not streaming live there’s 2 min delay, it halts and . Chris’s advise partially worked. I am not sure where exactly is the problem, I am starting to believe it has something to do with nginx-rtmp module.Here’s the final output, on left it’s flash and on right it’s hls. I am showing the ffmpeg options at the end.
https://youtu.be/jsm6XNFOUE4 -
FFmpeg NaCl module avformat_open_input (on rtsp stream) returns -5 : I/O error
8 janvier 2016, par Taimoor AlamI want to create an RTSP player in Chrome PNaCl.
I have successfully built the ffmpeg naclport including the following networking flags in the build.sh file for the ffmpeg NaCl port.
—enable network —enable-protocols —enable-demuxer=rtsp —enable-demux=rtp —enable-demuxer=sdp —enable-decoder=h264
Furthermore, I have successfully coded and the linked the ffmpeg NaCl port in my own PNaCl module. I have included the following network permissions in the manifest.json file :
"permissions": [
{
"socket": [
"tcp-listen:*:*",
"tcp-connect:*:*",
"resolve-host:*:*",
"udp-bind:*:*",
"udp-send-to:*:*"
],
}Now once I run the following code, in PNaCl, the avformat_open_input(...) returns -5 or I/O Error :
AVFormatContext* formatContext = avformat_alloc_context();
av_register_all();
avformat_network_init();
const char * stream_path = "rtsp://184.72.239.149/vod/mp4:BigBuckBunny_115k.mov";
int result = avformat_open_input(&formatContext, stream_path ,NULL,NULL);
if(result< 0){
PostMessage("input not opened, result: ");
PostMessage(result);
}else{
PostMessage(std::string("input successfully opened"));
}What am I possibly doing wrong, and why can’t the PNaCl module access the RTSP stream ?
PS. This is a similar question, but it gives no definitive answer.
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fluent-ffmpeg module : "end" event does not fire
6 décembre 2015, par nduggerI’m using the
fluent-ffmpeg
npm moduleI’ve POSTed a video from my client, and am using
new stream.Readable
to "read" the video Buffer.ffmpeg is converting and saving the file, and everything seems beautiful, but the "end" event never fires.
My code is as follows :
const videoStream = new stream.Readable({
read: function (n) {
this.push(myVideoBuffer);
}
});
ffmpeg(videoStream)
.on('progress', e => console.log(e))
.on('end', () => {
console.log('ended')
videoStream.destroy();
})
.on('error', e => console.error(e))
.save(`${process.cwd()}/media/videos/${Date.now()}.mp4`);I get a log on every progress event, and it does save the video, but the "end" event’s callback never gets called.
I assume this is a bug, since everything else works just fine.