
Recherche avancée
Médias (1)
-
Richard Stallman et le logiciel libre
19 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
Type : Texte
Autres articles (67)
-
Personnaliser en ajoutant son logo, sa bannière ou son image de fond
5 septembre 2013, parCertains thèmes prennent en compte trois éléments de personnalisation : l’ajout d’un logo ; l’ajout d’une bannière l’ajout d’une image de fond ;
-
Submit bugs and patches
13 avril 2011Unfortunately a software is never perfect.
If you think you have found a bug, report it using our ticket system. Please to help us to fix it by providing the following information : the browser you are using, including the exact version as precise an explanation as possible of the problem if possible, the steps taken resulting in the problem a link to the site / page in question
If you think you have solved the bug, fill in a ticket and attach to it a corrective patch.
You may also (...) -
Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-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 (8541)
-
Video length missing in FLV converted by ffmpeg-php
19 janvier 2013, par AndrewI'm converting MP4 videos to FLV using ffmpeg-php on my CentOS server (without intervention from flvtool2 because it's not installed).
The FLV videos are created, but no player is capable of retrieving the video duration, this creates serious issues when trying to seek the video. I'm using the player created by Moyea's Flash Video MX Pro, but the problem also happens with other FLV players as well, so I'm sure that ffmpeg-php is not createing the FLV with the proper length data.
My MP4 videos are compatible because ffmpeg-php CAN get the video length properly from then, yet it does not apply that length information into the FLV file. I assume flvtool2 is ONLY to retrieve meta-data and has nothing to do with the output FLV video length, let me know if this is correct.
This command I use for conversion :
$command = "ffmpeg -i myvideo.mp4 -ar 22050 -ab 64k -f flv -s 320x240 -y myvideo.flv";
$result = @shell_exec($command);This is my ffmpeg-php version :
FFmpeg version 0.5, Copyright (c) 2000-2009 Fabrice Bellard, et al.
configuration: --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib64 --shlibdir=/usr/lib64 --mandir=/usr/share/man --incdir=/usr/include --extra-cflags=-fPIC --enable-libamr-nb --enable-libamr-wb --enable-libdirac --enable-libfaac --enable-libfaad --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libtheora --enable-libx264 --enable-gpl --enable-nonfree --enable-postproc --enable-pthreads --enable-shared --enable-swscale --enable-x11grab
libavutil 49.15. 0 / 49.15. 0
libavcodec 52.20. 0 / 52.20. 0
libavformat 52.31. 0 / 52.31. 0
libavdevice 52. 1. 0 / 52. 1. 0
libswscale 0. 7. 1 / 0. 7. 1
libpostproc 51. 2. 0 / 51. 2. 0
built on Jul 24 2009 01:40:27, gcc: 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-44)Any help on this issue will be greatly appreciated.
-
What Every Programmer Should Know
24 décembre 2012, par Multimedia Mike — GeneralDuring my recent effort to force myself to understand Unicode and modern text encoding/processing, I was reminded that this is something that “every programmer should just know”, an idea that comes up every so often, usually in relation to a subject in which the speaker is already an expert. One of the most absurd examples I ever witnessed was a blog post along the lines of “What every working programmer ought to know about [some very specific niche of enterprise-level Java programming]“. I remember reading through the article and recognizing that I had almost no knowledge of the material. Disturbing, since I am demonstrably a “working programmer”.
For fun, I queried the googles on the matter of what ever programmer ought to know.
Specific Topics
Here is what every programmer should know about : Unicode, time, memory (simple), memory (extremely in-depth), regular expressions, search engine optimization, floating point, security, basic number theory, race conditions, managed C++, VIM commands, distributed systems, object-oriented design, latency numbers, rate monotonic algorithm, merging branches in Mercurial, classes of algorithms, and human names.Broader Topics
20 subjects every programmer should know, 97 things every programmer should know, 12 things every programmer should know, things every programmer should know (27 items), 10 papers every programmer should read at least twice, 10 things every programmer should know for their first job.Meanwhile, I remain fond of this xkcd comic whose mouseover text describes all that a person genuinely needs to know. Still, the new year is upon us, a time when people often make commitments to bettering themselves, and it couldn’t hurt (much) to at least skim some of the lists and find out what you never knew that you never knew.
What About Multimedia ?
Reading the foregoing (or the titles of the foregoing pieces), I naturally wonder if I should write something about what every programmer should know about multimedia. I think it would look something like a multimedia programming FAQ. These are some items that I can think of :- YUV : The other colorspace (since most programmers are only familiar with RGB and have no idea what to make of the YUV that comes out of most video decoding APIs)
- Why you can’t easily seek randomly to any specific frame in a video file (keyframe/interframe discussion and their implications)
- Understand your platform before endeavoring to implement multimedia software (modern platforms, particularly mobile platforms, probably provide everything you need in the native APIs and there is likely little reason to compile libavcodec for the platform)
- Difference between containers and codecs (longstanding item, but I would argue it’s less relevant these days due to standardization on the MPEG — MP4/H.264/AAC — stack)
- What counts as a multimedia standard in this day and age (comparing the foregoing MPEG stack with the WebM/VP8/Vorbis stack)
- Trade-offs to consider when engineering a multimedia solution
- Optimization doesn’t always work the way you think it does (not everything touted as a massive speed-up in the world of computing — whether it be multithreaded CPUs, GPGPUs, new SIMD instruction sets — will necessarily be applicable to multimedia processing)
- A practical guide to legal issues would not be amiss
- ???
What other items count as “something multimedia-related that every programmer should know” ?
-
ffmpeg error creating thumbnail different frame rate
18 décembre 2012, par KJSWhen using this at the command line I get very bad images with only grey or stripes in them.
It seems "the frame rate differs from container frame rate : 59.94 (60000/1001) -> 29.97 (30000/1001)".Is there any way I can fix this in the ffmpeg statement ?
ffmpeg -ss 00:00:10 -i FILENAME.mp4 -vframes 1 FILENAME.jpg
This is the output I get :
FFmpeg version 0.5.2, Copyright (c) 2000-2009 Fabrice Bellard, et al.
configuration: --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib64 --shlibdir=/usr/lib64 --mandir=/usr/share/man --incdir=/usr/include --disable-avisynth --extra-cflags=-O2 -g -pipe -Wall -Wp,-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 -fexceptions -fstack-protector --param=ssp-buffer-size=4 -m64 -mtune=generic -fPIC --enable-avfilter --enable-avfilter-lavf --enable-libdirac --enable-libfaac --enable-libfaad --enable-libfaadbin --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libopencore-amrnb --enable-libopencore-amrwb --enable-libtheora --enable-libx264 --enable-gpl --enable-nonfree --enable-postproc --enable-pthreads --enable-shared --enable-swscale --enable-vdpau --enable-version3 --enable-x11grab
libavutil 49.15. 0 / 49.15. 0
libavcodec 52.20. 1 / 52.20. 1
libavformat 52.31. 0 / 52.31. 0
libavdevice 52. 1. 0 / 52. 1. 0
libavfilter 0. 4. 0 / 0. 4. 0
libswscale 0. 7. 1 / 0. 7. 1
libpostproc 51. 2. 0 / 51. 2. 0
built on Jun 13 2010 23:44:18, gcc: 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-48)Seems stream 0 codec frame rate differs from container frame rate : 59.94 (60000/1001) -> 29.97 (30000/1001)
Input #0, mov,mp4,m4a,3gp,3g2,mj2, from 'FILENAME.mp4':
Duration: 00:03:36.36, start: 0.000000, bitrate: 1305 kb/s
Stream #0.0(eng): Video: h264, yuv420p, 640x428, 29.97 tbr, 29.97 tbn, 59.94 tbc
Stream #0.1(eng): Audio: aac, 48000 Hz, stereo, s16
Output #0, image2, to 'FILENAME.jpg':
Stream #0.0(eng): Video: mjpeg, yuvj420p, 640x428, q=2-31, 200 kb/s, 90k tbn, 29.97 tbc
Stream mapping:
Stream #0.0 -> #0.0
Press [q] to stop encoding
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]brainfart cropping not supported, this could look slightly wrong ...
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]AVC: Consumed only 14978 bytes instead of 14984
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]AVC: Consumed only 1147 bytes instead of 1153
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]Missing reference picture
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]AVC: Consumed only 1947 bytes instead of 1953
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]Missing reference picture
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]AVC: Consumed only 1870 bytes instead of 1876
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]Missing reference picture
Last message repeated 1 times
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]AVC: Consumed only 810 bytes instead of 816
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]Missing reference picture
Last message repeated 1 times
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]AVC: Consumed only 955 bytes instead of 961
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]Missing reference picture
Last message repeated 1 times
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]AVC: Consumed only 1036 bytes instead of 1042
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]Missing reference picture
Last message repeated 1 times
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]AVC: Consumed only 998 bytes instead of 1004
[h264 @ 0x307f6b0]Missing reference picture
frame= 1 fps= 0 q=3.3 Lsize= -0kB time=0.03 bitrate= -5.3kbits/s
video:14kB audio:0kB global headers:0kB muxing overhead -100.149568%