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Autres articles (52)
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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" (...) -
Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins
27 avril 2010, parMediaspip core
autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs -
Les tâches Cron régulières de la ferme
1er décembre 2010, parLa gestion de la ferme passe par l’exécution à intervalle régulier de plusieurs tâches répétitives dites Cron.
Le super Cron (gestion_mutu_super_cron)
Cette tâche, planifiée chaque minute, a pour simple effet d’appeler le Cron de l’ensemble des instances de la mutualisation régulièrement. Couplée avec un Cron système sur le site central de la mutualisation, cela permet de simplement générer des visites régulières sur les différents sites et éviter que les tâches des sites peu visités soient trop (...)
Sur d’autres sites (11151)
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bethsoftvid : synchronize video timestamps with audio sample rate
19 janvier 2012, par Justin Rugglesbethsoftvid : synchronize video timestamps with audio sample rate
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Theatrical quality ffmpeg/x264 encoding of a high-motion 1080p video
2 décembre 2011, par IanI've been struggling with encoding videos using FFMPEG and x264. The output stutters when played back in Quicktime, while in VLC it shows a lot of compression artifacts at the same places Quicktime stutters. So it seems like Quicktime is stuttering because it's trying to suppress the corruption/artifacts.
The videos have a lot of random motion in them, including frames where 75% of the pixels will change at a random interval (the video is software generated so it's truly pseudo-random). The compression seems to be choking in these places where it's likely detecting a "scene cut" incorrectly. It also seems to choke at regular intervals where I guess it's doing a keyframe.
I've based my encoding preset off of the x264-hq preset that comes with FFMPEG. I've tried turning off scene cut detection, and playing with the
keyint
/g
andkeyint_min
options. Settingg
to 1 makes it work, but blows out the filesize. I've tried the lossless presets, but they won't playback at all in Quicktime. Oddly, I haven't had any problems when working with a lower-resolution test video (1440x810).Here's the preset I have right now, which works, but yields a file that's approximately 60% larger than the (non-working) hq preset yields. Is there any way to improve upon this ? The filesize doesn't matter much, I just want something that will playback anywhere and be very high quality.
coder=1 flags=+loop cmp=+chroma partitions=+parti8x8+parti4x4+partp8x8+partp4x4+partb8x8 me_method=umh subq=8 me_range=16 g=1 keyint_min=1 sc_threshold=0 i_qfactor=0.71 b_strategy=1crf=20 qcomp=0.6 qmin=20 qmax=51 qdiff=4 bf=16 refs=4 trellis=1 flags2=+dct8x8+wpred+bpyramid+mixed_refs wpredp=2
Here's the command :
ffmpeg \ -r 60 -i "frame-%06d.tiff" \ -vcodec libx264 -vpre my_preset \ -threads 0 \ -r 60 -an -f out.mp4
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Theatrical quality ffmpeg/x264 encoding of a high-motion 1080p video
2 décembre 2011, par IanI've been struggling with encoding videos using FFMPEG and x264. The output stutters when played back in Quicktime, while in VLC it shows a lot of compression artifacts at the same places Quicktime stutters. So it seems like Quicktime is stuttering because it's trying to suppress the corruption/artifacts.
The videos have a lot of random motion in them, including frames where 75% of the pixels will change at a random interval (the video is software generated so it's truly pseudo-random). The compression seems to be choking in these places where it's likely detecting a "scene cut" incorrectly. It also seems to choke at regular intervals where I guess it's doing a keyframe.
I've based my encoding preset off of the x264-hq preset that comes with FFMPEG. I've tried turning off scene cut detection, and playing with the
keyint
/g
andkeyint_min
options. Settingg
to 1 makes it work, but blows out the filesize. I've tried the lossless presets, but they won't playback at all in Quicktime. Oddly, I haven't had any problems when working with a lower-resolution test video (1440x810).Here's the preset I have right now, which works, but yields a file that's approximately 60% larger than the (non-working) hq preset yields. Is there any way to improve upon this ? The filesize doesn't matter much, I just want something that will playback anywhere and be very high quality.
coder=1 flags=+loop cmp=+chroma partitions=+parti8x8+parti4x4+partp8x8+partp4x4+partb8x8 me_method=umh subq=8 me_range=16 g=1 keyint_min=1 sc_threshold=0 i_qfactor=0.71 b_strategy=1crf=20 qcomp=0.6 qmin=20 qmax=51 qdiff=4 bf=16 refs=4 trellis=1 flags2=+dct8x8+wpred+bpyramid+mixed_refs wpredp=2
Here's the command :
ffmpeg \ -r 60 -i "frame-%06d.tiff" \ -vcodec libx264 -vpre my_preset \ -threads 0 \ -r 60 -an -f out.mp4