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Autres articles (31)

  • Support audio et vidéo HTML5

    10 avril 2011

    MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
    Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
    Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
    Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...)

  • HTML5 audio and video support

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP uses HTML5 video and audio tags to play multimedia files, taking advantage of the latest W3C innovations supported by modern browsers.
    The MediaSPIP player used has been created specifically for MediaSPIP and can be easily adapted to fit in with a specific theme.
    For older browsers the Flowplayer flash fallback is used.
    MediaSPIP allows for media playback on major mobile platforms with the above (...)

  • De l’upload à la vidéo finale [version standalone]

    31 janvier 2010, par

    Le chemin d’un document audio ou vidéo dans SPIPMotion est divisé en trois étapes distinctes.
    Upload et récupération d’informations de la vidéo source
    Dans un premier temps, il est nécessaire de créer un article SPIP et de lui joindre le document vidéo "source".
    Au moment où ce document est joint à l’article, deux actions supplémentaires au comportement normal sont exécutées : La récupération des informations techniques des flux audio et video du fichier ; La génération d’une vignette : extraction d’une (...)

Sur d’autres sites (6522)

  • How do I combine mkv and mka file using fluent-ffmpeg ?

    17 mai 2020, par YaSh Chaudhary

    I have two Amazon S3 bucket file urls , one is for mkv file(video) and other one for mka(audio).

    



    I am trying to merge audio and video in one file and upload it to S3 but following function doesn't seems to get working. Not getting error also.

    



    client.request({ method: 'GET', uri: uri }).then((response) => {
      const mediaLocation = response.body.redirect_to
      media.push(mediaLocation)
      if(media.length > 1) {
     ffmpeg(media[0])
      .addInput(media[1])
      .output(`${recordingSid}.mkv`)
      .on('error', function (err) {
        console.log('An error occurred: ' + err.message)
      })
      .on('end', function () {
        console.log('Processing finished !')
        var params = {
          Body: fs.createReadStream(`${recordingSid}.mkv`),
          Bucket: config.aws.bucketname,
          Key: `${recordingSid}.mkv`,
        }
        s3.upload(params, function (err, data) {
          //handle error
          if (err) {
            console.log('Error', err)
          }

          //success
          if (data) {
            console.log('Uploaded in:', data.Location)
          }
        })
      })
      }
    })


    



    My ultimate goal is to upload this output to S3 bucket.

    


  • Is there any way that I can speed up the ffmpeg processing time

    20 mai 2020, par Ahmed Al-Rayan

    I am facing a problem with the processing process. I use a real joint server in a digital hosting package of $ 10 and use cloud service from Amazon s3. The problem is when uploading a video, whatever the size of the video, whether its size is 1 megabyte or 2 Giga. After the upload process, the processing process starts to upload, there is no problem But when the processing process takes a very long time so that I cannot complete it, what is the solution to that, is there a problem for me or is this process normal ?
 I use laravel-ffmpeg and through laravel queue I am cutting the video into several qualities I will attach the code to you below.

    



    public function handle()
{
    //180p
    $lowBitrate1 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(613);
    //270p
    $lowBitrate2 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(906);
    //360p
    $midBitrate1 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(1687);
    //540p
    $midBitrate2 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(2227);
    //720p
    $highBitrate1 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(4300);
    //1080
    $highBitrate2 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(7917);

FFMpeg::fromDisk('s3')
    ->open($this->movie->path)
    ->exportForHLS()
    ->onProgress(function ($percent) {
        $this->movie->update([
            'percent' => $percent
        ]);
    })
    ->setSegmentLength(10)// optional
    ->addFormat($lowBitrate1)
    ->addFormat($lowBitrate2)
    ->addFormat($midBitrate1)
    ->addFormat($midBitrate2)
    ->addFormat($highBitrate1)
    ->addFormat($highBitrate2)
    ->toDisk('s3')
    ->save("public/Movies/{$this->movie->id}/{$this->movie->id}.m3u8");
}//end of handle


    


  • Using ffmpeg to assemble images from S3 into a video

    10 juillet 2020, par Mass Dot Net

    I can easily assemble images from local disk into a video using ffmpeg and passing a %06d filespec. Here's what a typical (pseudocode) command would look like :

    


    ffmpeg.exe -hide_banner -y -r 60 -t 12 -i /JpgsToCombine/%06d.JPG <..etc..>


    


    However, I'm struggling to do the same with images stored in AWS S3, without using some third party software to mount a virtual drive (e.g. TNTDrive). The S3 folder containing our images is too large to download to the 20GB ephemeral storage provided for AWS containers, and we're trying to avoid EFS because we'd have to provision expensive bandwidth.

    


    Here's what the HTTP and S3 URLs to each of our JPGs looks like :

    


    # HTTP URL
https://massdotnet.s3.amazonaws.com/jpgs-to-combine/000000.JPG # frame 0
https://massdotnet.s3.amazonaws.com/jpgs-to-combine/000012.JPG # frame 12
https://massdotnet.s3.amazonaws.com/jpgs-to-combine/000123.JPG # frame 123
https://massdotnet.s3.amazonaws.com/jpgs-to-combine/456789.JPG # frame 456789

# S3 URL
s3://massdotnet/jpgs-to-combine/000000.JPG # frame 0
s3://massdotnet/jpgs-to-combine/000012.JPG # frame 12
s3://massdotnet/jpgs-to-combine/000123.JPG # frame 123
s3://massdotnet/jpgs-to-combine/456789.JPG # frame 456789


    


    Is there any way to get ffmpeg to assemble these ? We could generate a signed URL for each S3 file, and put several thousand of those URLs onto a command line with an FFMPEG concat filter. However, we'd run up into the command line input limit in Linux at some point using this approach. I'm hoping there's a better way...