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  • 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 (...)

  • Selection of projects using MediaSPIP

    2 mai 2011, par

    The examples below are representative elements of MediaSPIP specific uses for specific projects.
    MediaSPIP farm @ Infini
    The non profit organizationInfini develops hospitality activities, internet access point, training, realizing innovative projects in the field of information and communication technologies and Communication, and hosting of websites. It plays a unique and prominent role in the Brest (France) area, at the national level, among the half-dozen such association. Its members (...)

  • Automated installation script of MediaSPIP

    25 avril 2011, par

    To overcome the difficulties mainly due to the installation of server side software dependencies, an "all-in-one" installation script written in bash was created to facilitate this step on a server with a compatible Linux distribution.
    You must have access to your server via SSH and a root account to use it, which will install the dependencies. Contact your provider if you do not have that.
    The documentation of the use of this installation script is available here.
    The code of this (...)

Sur d’autres sites (9368)

  • Extracting frames from a video does not work correctly [closed]

    13 avril 2024, par Al Tilmidh

    Using the libraries (libav) and (ffmpeg), I try to extract frames as .jpg files from a video.mp4, the problem is that my program crashes when I use the CV_8UC3 parameter, but by changing this parameter to CV_8UC1, the extracted images end up without color (grayscale), I don't really know what I missed, here is a minimal code to reproduce the two situations :

    


    #include <opencv2></opencv2>opencv.hpp>&#xA;&#xA;extern "C"&#xA;{&#xA;#include <libavformat></libavformat>avformat.h>&#xA;#include <libavcodec></libavcodec>avcodec.h>&#xA;}&#xA;&#xA;int main()&#xA;{&#xA;    AVFormatContext *formatContext = nullptr;&#xA;&#xA;    if (avformat_open_input(&amp;formatContext, "video.mp4", nullptr, nullptr) != 0)&#xA;    {&#xA;        return -1;&#xA;    }&#xA;&#xA;    if (avformat_find_stream_info(formatContext, nullptr) &lt; 0)&#xA;    {&#xA;        return -1;&#xA;    }&#xA;&#xA;    AVPacket packet;&#xA;    const AVCodec *codec = nullptr;&#xA;    AVCodecContext *codecContext = nullptr;&#xA;&#xA;    int videoStreamIndex = av_find_best_stream(formatContext, AVMEDIA_TYPE_VIDEO, -1, -1, &amp;codec, 0);&#xA;    if (videoStreamIndex &lt; 0)&#xA;    {&#xA;        return -1;&#xA;    }&#xA;&#xA;    codecContext = avcodec_alloc_context3(codec);&#xA;    avcodec_parameters_to_context(codecContext, formatContext->streams[videoStreamIndex]->codecpar);&#xA;&#xA;    if (avcodec_open2(codecContext, codec, nullptr) &lt; 0)&#xA;    {&#xA;        return -1;&#xA;    }&#xA;&#xA;    AVFrame *frame = av_frame_alloc();&#xA;&#xA;    while (av_read_frame(formatContext, &amp;packet) >= 0)&#xA;    {&#xA;        if (packet.stream_index == videoStreamIndex)&#xA;        {&#xA;            int response = avcodec_send_packet(codecContext, &amp;packet);&#xA;            &#xA;            if (response &lt; 0)&#xA;            {&#xA;                break;&#xA;            }&#xA;&#xA;            while (response >= 0)&#xA;            {&#xA;                response = avcodec_receive_frame(codecContext, frame);&#xA;                if (response == AVERROR(EAGAIN))&#xA;                {&#xA;                    // NO FRAMES&#xA;                    break;&#xA;                }&#xA;&#xA;                else if (response == AVERROR_EOF)&#xA;                {&#xA;                    // END OF FILE&#xA;                    break;&#xA;                }&#xA;&#xA;                else if (response &lt; 0)&#xA;                {&#xA;                    break;&#xA;                }&#xA;&#xA;                //cv::Mat frameMat(frame->height, frame->width, CV_8UC3, frame->data[0]); // CV_8UC3 → THE PROGRAM CRASHES&#xA;                cv::Mat frameMat(frame->height, frame->width, CV_8UC1, frame->data[0]); // CV_8UC1 → WORK BUT IMAGES ARE IN GRAYSCALE&#xA;                cv::imwrite("frame_" &#x2B; std::to_string(frame->pts) &#x2B; ".jpg", frameMat);&#xA;            }&#xA;        }&#xA;&#xA;        av_packet_unref(&amp;packet);&#xA;    }&#xA;&#xA;    av_frame_free(&amp;frame);&#xA;    avcodec_free_context(&amp;codecContext);&#xA;    avformat_close_input(&amp;formatContext);&#xA;&#xA;    return 0;&#xA;}&#xA;

    &#xA;

  • How to extract motion vectors from h264 without a full decode on the CPU

    25 septembre 2020, par Adrian May

    I'm trying to use my nose as a pointing device. The plan is to encode the video stream from a webcam pointed at my face as h264 or the like, get the motion vectors, cook the numbers a bit and chuck them into /dev/uinput to make the mouse pointer move about. The uinput bit was easy.

    &#xA;

    This has to work with zero discernable latency. This, for instance :

    &#xA;

    #!/bin/bash&#xA;[ -p pipe.mkv ] || mkfifo pipe.mkv&#xA;ffmpeg -y -rtbufsize 1M -s 640x360 -vcodec mjpeg -i /dev/video0 -c h264_nvenc pipe.mkv &amp;&#xA;ffplay -flags2 &#x2B;export_mvs -vf codecview=mv=pf&#x2B;bf&#x2B;bb pipe.mkv&#xA;

    &#xA;

    shows that the vectors are there but with a latency of several seconds which is unusable in a mouse. I know that the first ffmpeg step is working very fast by using the GPU, so either the pipe or the h264 decode in the second step is introducing the latency.

    &#xA;

    I tried MV Tractus (same as mpegflow I think) in a similar pipe arrangement and it was also very slow. They do a full h264 decode on the CPU and I think that's the problem cos I can see them imposing a lot of load on one CPU. If the pipe had caused the delay by buffering badly then the CPU wouldn't have been loaded. I guess ffplay also did the decoding on the CPU and I couldn't persuade it not to, but it only wants to draw arrows which are no use to me.

    &#xA;

    I think there are several approaches, and I'd like advice on which would be best, or if there's something even better I don't know about. I could :

    &#xA;

      &#xA;
    • Decode in hardware and get the motion vectors. So far this has failed. I tried combining ffmpeg's extract_mvs.c and hw_decode.c samples but no motion vectors turn up. vdpau is the only decoder I got working on my linux box. I have a nvidia gpu.
    • &#xA;

    • Do a minimal parse of the h264 to fish out the motion vectors only, ignoring all the other data. I think this would mean putting some kind of "motion only" option in libav's parser, but I'm not at all familiar with that code.
    • &#xA;

    • Find some other h264 parsing library that has said option and also unpacks the container.
    • &#xA;

    • Forget about hardware accelerated encoding and use a stripped down encoder to make only the motion vectors on either CPU or GPU. I suspect this would be slow cos I think calculating the motion vectors is the hardest part of the algorithm.
    • &#xA;

    &#xA;

    I'm tending towards the second option but I need some help figuring out where in the libav code to do it.

    &#xA;

  • Playing RTSP in WPF application with low latency using FFMPEG / FFMediaElement (FFME)

    22 mars 2019, par Paboka

    I’m trying to use FFMediaElement (FFME, WPF MediaElement replacement based on FFmpeg) component to play RSTP live video in my WPF application.

    I have a good connection to my camera and I want to play it with minimum available latency.

    I’ve reduced the latency by changing ProbeSize to its minimal value :

    private void Media_OnMediaInitializing(object Sender, MediaInitializingRoutedEventArgs e)
    {
     e.Configuration.GlobalOptions.ProbeSize = 32;
    }

    But I still have about 1 second of latency since the very beginning of the stream. I mean, when I start playing, I have to wait for 1 second till the video appears and then I have 1s of latency.

    I’ve also tried to change following parameters :

    e.Configuration.GlobalOptions.EnableReducedBuffering = true;
    e.Configuration.GlobalOptions.FlagNoBuffer = true;
    e.Configuration.GlobalOptions.MaxAnalyzeDuration = TimeSpan.Zero;

    but it gave no result.

    I measured time-interval between FFmpeg output lines (the number in the first column is the time, elapsed from the previous line, ms)

    ----     OpenCommand: Entered
      39     FFInterop.Initialize: FFmpeg v4.0
       0     EVENT START: MediaInitializing
       0     EVENT DONE : MediaInitializing
     379     EVENT START: MediaOpening
       0     EVENT DONE : MediaOpening
       0     COMP VIDEO: Start Offset:      0,000; Duration:        N/A
      41     SYNC-BUFFER: Started.
     609     SYNC-BUFFER: Finished. Clock set to 1534932751,634
       0     EVENT START: MediaOpened
       0     EVENT DONE : MediaOpened
       0     EVENT START: BufferingStarted
       0     EVENT DONE : BufferingStarted
       0     OpenCommand: Completed
       0     V BLK: 1534932751,634 | CLK: 1534932751,634 | DFT:    0 | IX:   0 | PQ:     0,0k | TQ:     0,0k
       0     Command Queue (1 commands): Before ProcessNext
       0        Play - ID: 404 Canceled: False; Completed: False; Status: WaitingForActivation; State:
      94     V BLK: 1534932751,675 | CLK: 1534932751,699 | DFT:   24 | IX:   1 | PQ:     0,0k | TQ:     0,0k

    So, the most the process of "sync-buffering" takes the most of the time.

    Is there any parameter of FFmpeg which allows reducing a size of the buffer ?