Recherche avancée

Médias (91)

Autres articles (95)

  • MediaSPIP 0.1 Beta version

    25 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP 0.1 beta is the first version of MediaSPIP proclaimed as "usable".
    The zip file provided here only contains the sources of MediaSPIP in its standalone version.
    To get a working installation, you must manually install all-software dependencies on the server.
    If you want to use this archive for an installation in "farm mode", you will also need to proceed to other manual (...)

  • 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 (8892)

  • How to run FFMPEG with —enable-libfontconfig on Amazon Lambda

    20 avril 2024, par Adrien Kaczmarek

    Problem

    


    I want to run FFmpeg on AWS Lambda (Amazon Linux 2) with the configuration --enable-libfontconfig enable.

    


    Situation

    


    I already have FFmpeg running on AWS Lambda without the configuration --enable-libfontconfig.

    


    Here is the step I took to run FFmpeg on AWS Lambda (see official guide) :

    


      

    • Connect to Amazon EC2 running on AL2 (environment used by Lambda for Python 3.11)
    • 


    • Download and package FFmpeg from John Van Sickle
    • 


    • Create a Lambda Layer with FFmpeg
    • 


    


    Unfortunately, the version built by John Van Sickle doesn't have the configuration --enable-libfontconfig enabled.

    


    Unsuccessful Trials

    


    I tried to rebuilt it from scratch following the installation guide but without success (and the guide doesn't install font related dependencies)

    


    I tried to install it with brew but the command brew install ffmpeg didn't succeed on AL2.

    


    I tried to install ffmpeg from ffmpeg-master-latest-linux64-gpl.tar.xz. Unfortunately, this build of ffmpeg doesn't run on AL2 :

    


    ffmpeg: /lib64/libm.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.27' not found (required by ffmpeg)
ffmpeg: /lib64/libpthread.so.0: version `GLIBC_2.28' not found (required by ffmpeg)
ffmpeg: /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.27' not found (required by ffmpeg)
ffmpeg: /lib64/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.28' not found (required by ffmpeg)


    


    Any help would be greatly appreciated,

    


    Please make sure your answer is up to date and tested. Too many answers out there are auto-generated, too generic, or simple redirect without context.

    


    Thank you

    


  • How to read remote video on Amazon S3 using ffmpeg

    9 septembre 2024, par virtualize

    I need to create poster frames from videos hosted on Amazon S3 via ffmpeg.

    



    So is there a way to use the remote video file directly in ffmpeg command line like this :
    
ffmpeg -i "http://bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/video.mp4" -ss 00:00:10 -vframes 1 -f image2 "image%03d.jpg"

    



    ffmpeg just returns :
    &#xA;http://bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/video.mp4: I/O error occurred<br />&#xA;Usually that means that input file is truncated and/or corrupted.

    &#xA;&#xA;

    I also tried forcing ffmpeg to use the videos mp4 container for reading :
    &#xA;ffmpeg -f mp4 -i "http://bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/video.mp4" ...
    &#xA;But no luck.

    &#xA;&#xA;

    Wget this video from S3 and processing it locally works fine of course,
    &#xA;as well as reading the file remotely from other 'standard' http servers.
    &#xA;So I know that ffmpeg supports remote file reading, but why not on S3 ?

    &#xA;

  • How to read remote video on Amazon S3 using ffmpeg

    19 septembre 2012, par virtualize

    I need to create poster frames from videos hosted on Amazon S3 via ffmpeg.

    So is there a way to use the remote video file directly in ffmpeg command line like this :
    ffmpeg -i "http://bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/video.mp4" -ss 00:00:10 -vframes 1 -f image2 "image%03d.jpg"

    ffmpeg just returns :

    http://bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/video.mp4: I/O error occurred<br />
    Usually that means that input file is truncated and/or corrupted.

    I also tried forcing ffmpeg to use the videos mp4 container for reading :
    ffmpeg -f mp4 -i "http://bucket.s3.amazonaws.com/video.mp4" ...
    But no luck.

    Wget this video from S3 and processing it locally works fine of course,
    as well as reading the file remotely from other 'standard' http servers.
    So I know that ffmpeg supports remote file reading, but why not on S3 ?