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Autres articles (35)

  • Installation en mode ferme

    4 février 2011, par

    Le mode ferme permet d’héberger plusieurs sites de type MediaSPIP en n’installant qu’une seule fois son noyau fonctionnel.
    C’est la méthode que nous utilisons sur cette même plateforme.
    L’utilisation en mode ferme nécessite de connaïtre un peu le mécanisme de SPIP contrairement à la version standalone qui ne nécessite pas réellement de connaissances spécifique puisque l’espace privé habituel de SPIP n’est plus utilisé.
    Dans un premier temps, vous devez avoir installé les mêmes fichiers que l’installation (...)

  • 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 (...)

  • La sauvegarde automatique de canaux SPIP

    1er avril 2010, par

    Dans le cadre de la mise en place d’une plateforme ouverte, il est important pour les hébergeurs de pouvoir disposer de sauvegardes assez régulières pour parer à tout problème éventuel.
    Pour réaliser cette tâche on se base sur deux plugins SPIP : Saveauto qui permet une sauvegarde régulière de la base de donnée sous la forme d’un dump mysql (utilisable dans phpmyadmin) mes_fichiers_2 qui permet de réaliser une archive au format zip des données importantes du site (les documents, les éléments (...)

Sur d’autres sites (7613)

  • fftools/ffmpeg_enc : Don't call frame_data twice

    22 mars 2024, par Andreas Rheinhardt
    fftools/ffmpeg_enc : Don't call frame_data twice
    

    Reviewed-by : Jan Ekström <jeebjp@gmail.com>
    Signed-off-by : Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>

    • [DH] fftools/ffmpeg_enc.c
  • Changelog : Add Support PacketTypeMetadata of PacketType in enhanced flv

    18 mars 2024, par Steven Liu
    Changelog : Add Support PacketTypeMetadata of PacketType in enhanced flv
    

    Reviewed-by : Jean-Baptiste Kempf <jb@videolan.org>
    Signed-off-by : Steven Liu <lq@chinaffmpeg.org>

    • [DH] Changelog
  • How to Simply Remove Duplicate Frames from a Video using ffmpeg

    29 janvier 2017, par Skeeve

    First of all, I’d preface this by saying I’m NO EXPERT with video manipulation,
    although I’ve been fiddling with ffmpeg for years (in a fairly limited way). Hence, I’m not too flash with all the language folk often use... and how it affects what I’m trying to do in my manipulations... but I’ll have a go with this anyway...

    I’ve checked a few links here, for example :
    ffmpeg - remove sequentially duplicate frames

    ...but the content didn’t really help me.

    I have some hundreds of video clips that have been created under both Windows and Linux using both ffmpeg and other similar applications. However, they have some problems with times in the video where the display is ’motionless’.

    As an example, let’s say we have some web site that streams a live video into, say, a Flash video player/plugin in a web browser. In this case, we’re talking about a traffic camera video stream, for example.

    There’s an instance of ffmpeg running that is capturing a region of the (Windows) desktop into a video file, viz :-

    ffmpeg -hide_banner -y -f dshow ^
         -i video="screen-capture-recorder" ^
         -vf "setpts=1.00*PTS,crop=448:336:620:360" ^
         -an -r 25 -vcodec libx264 -crf 0 -qp 0 ^
         -preset ultrafast SAMPLE.flv

    Let’s say the actual ’display’ that is being captured looks like this :-

    123456789 XXXXX 1234567 XXXXXXXXXXX 123456789 XXXXXXX
    ^---a---^ ^-P-^ ^--b--^ ^----Q----^ ^---c---^ ^--R--^

    ...where each character position represents a (sequence of) frame(s). Owing to a poor internet connection, a "single frame" can be displayed for an extended period (the ’X’ characters being an (almost) exact copy of the immediately previous frame). So this means we have segments of the captured video where the image doesn’t change at all (to the naked eye, anyway).

    How can we deal with the duplicate frames ?... and how does our approach change if the ’duplicates’ are NOT the same to ffmpeg but LOOK more-or-less the same to the viewer ?

    If we simply remove the duplicate frames, the ’pacing’ of the video is lost, and what used to take, maybe, 5 seconds to display, now takes a fraction of a second, giving a very jerky, unnatural motion, although there are no duplicate images in the video. This seems to be achievable using ffmpeg with an ’mp_decimate’ option, viz :-

        ffmpeg -i SAMPLE.flv ^                      ... (i)
           -r 25 ^
           -vf mpdecimate,setpts=N/FRAME_RATE/TB DEC_SAMPLE.mp4

    That reference I quoted uses a command that shows which frames ’mp_decimate’ will remove when it considers them to be ’the same’, viz :-

        ffmpeg -i SAMPLE.flv ^                      ... (ii)
           -vf mpdecimate ^
           -loglevel debug -f null -

    ...but knowing that (complicated formatted) information, how can we re-organize the video without executing multiple runs of ffmpeg to extract ’slices’ of video for re-combining later ?

    In that case, I’m guessing we’d have to run something like :-

    • user specifies a ’threshold duration’ for the duplicates
      (maybe run for 1 sec only)
    • determine & save main video information (fps, etc - assuming
      constant frame rate)
    • map the (frame/time where duplicates start)->no. of
      frames/duration of duplicates
    • if the duration of duplicates is less than the user threshold,
      don’t consider this period as a ’series of duplicate frames’
      and move on
    • extract the ’non-duplicate’ video segments (a, b & c in the
      diagram above)
    • create ’new video’ (empty) with original video’s specs
    • for each video segment
      extract the last frame of the segment
      create a short video clip with repeated frames of the frame
      just extracted (duration = user spec. = 1 sec)
      append (current video segment+short clip) to ’new video’
      and repeat

    ...but in my case, a lot of the captured videos might be 30 minutes long and have hundreds of 10 sec long pauses, so the ’rebuilding’ of the videos will take a long time using this method.

    This is why I’m hoping there’s some "reliable" and "more intelligent" way to use
    ffmepg (with/without the ’mp_decimate’ filter) to do the ’decimate’ function in only a couple of passes or so... Maybe there’s a way that the required segments could even be specified (in a text file, for example) and as ffmpeg runs it will
    stop/restart it’s transcoding at specified times/frame numbers ?

    Short of this, is there another application (for use on Windows or Linux) that could do what I’m looking for, without having to manually set start/stop points,
    extracting/combining video segments manually...?

    I’ve been trying to do all this with ffmpeg N-79824-gcaee88d under Win7-SP1 and (a different version I don’t currently remember) under Puppy Linux Slacko 5.6.4.

    Thanks a heap for any clues.