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Autres articles (53)

  • Multilang : améliorer l’interface pour les blocs multilingues

    18 février 2011, par

    Multilang est un plugin supplémentaire qui n’est pas activé par défaut lors de l’initialisation de MediaSPIP.
    Après son activation, une préconfiguration est mise en place automatiquement par MediaSPIP init permettant à la nouvelle fonctionnalité d’être automatiquement opérationnelle. Il n’est donc pas obligatoire de passer par une étape de configuration pour cela.

  • Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins

    27 avril 2010, par

    Mediaspip core
    autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs

  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
    Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir

Sur d’autres sites (10217)

  • Create MPEG-DASH Initialization segment

    5 janvier 2016, par Mahout

    I am looking to convert between HLS and MPEG Dash. I do not access to the original fully concatenated video file, only the individual HLS segments.

    In doing this transformation to MPEG Dash I need to supply an initialziation segment for the Dash manifest .mpd file.

    My questions are :

    1. What is the structure of a Dash video initialization segment ?
    2. How can I generate/create one without the need for the original full file ?

    Perhaps a solution would involve getting MP4Box to convert the ’.ts’ HLS segments to Dash ’.m4s’ segments which are self initializing, but I am unsure how to go about this this ?

    Any ideas are much appreciated.

    Many thanks.

    UPDATE :
    Snippet to stream using original hls segments. Video plays all the way through but is just black.

     <representation width="426" height="238" framerate="25" bandwidth="400000">
       <segmentlist timescale="25000" duration="112500">
              <segmenturl media="video_0_400000/hls/segment_0.ts"></segmenturl>
              <segmenturl media="video_0_400000/hls/segment_1.ts"></segmenturl>
             <segmenturl media="video_0_400000/hls/segment_2.ts"></segmenturl>
       </segmentlist>
      </representation>
  • How can I best utilize an AWS service to segment a video into smaller chunks and then combine them back to together ? [on hold]

    19 avril 2018, par Justin Malin

    I am trying to do processing on videos uploaded to AWS S3 using an AWS Lambda function in Python. However, FFmpeg and ffmpeg-python (as far as I am aware) are unable to process objects and must do processing on stored files. Lambda only allows for 500 MB of storage in the /tmp/ folder, thus limiting the size of video that I can do processing on.

    If there is an alternative to FFmpeg that allows me to work on object files that I am unaware of, that would be a reasonable solution because I can scale up the memory of the Lambda function (although there is still a limit).

    Alternatively, I have looked into segmenting the video using AWS Elastic Transcoder, but I do not think I can dynamically segment the video using that service. If there is a service similar to this that could segment the video into individual frames (and back), that would be even better.

    I have also considered using AWS EC2, but I would only be using the EC2 service to segment videos sporadically, so it would be a waste to constantly have a server that capable running. If I use the AWS Elastic Beanstalk, would it automatically start a more powerful instance of EC2 to do the video segmentation (and reformation) when that is called and revert back to a much smaller instance when dormant ?

    Essentially, I would like to know if there are any services (preferably within AWS) that allow me to segment a video into shorter videos or into each frame at-will.

  • bash : receive single frames from ffmpeg pipe

    30 août 2014, par manu

    I’m trying to achieve single-frame handling in a pipe where the the j2c encoder "kdu_compress" (Kakadu) only accepts single files. To save harddrive space. I didn’t manage to pipe frames directly, so I’m trying to handle them via a bash script, by creating each picture, process it, and overwrite it with the next.

    Here is my approach. Thanks for your advice, I really want to climb this mountain, though I’m a bit fresh here thanks.


    Is it possible to pipe an ffmpeg output to a bash script and save the individual frame,
    do further commands with the file before the next frame is handled ?

    Best result so far is, that ALL frames are added into the intermediate file, without recognizing the end of a frame.

    I used this ffmpeg setting to pipe, example with .ppm :

    ffmpeg -y  -i "/path/to/source.mov" -an -c:v ppm -updatefirst 1 -f image2 - \
    | /path/to/receiver.sh

    and this script as a receiver.sh

    #!/bin/bash  

    while read a;
    do
       cat /dev/null > "/path/to/tempfile.ppm"; #to empty the file first
       cat $a >> "/path/to/tempfile.ppm";        #to fill one picture

       kdu_compress -i /path/to/tempfile.ppm -otherparams   #to process this intermediate

    done
    exit;

    Thank you very much.