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  • Mise à jour de la version 0.1 vers 0.2

    24 juin 2013, par

    Explications des différents changements notables lors du passage de la version 0.1 de MediaSPIP à la version 0.3. Quelles sont les nouveautés
    Au niveau des dépendances logicielles Utilisation des dernières versions de FFMpeg (>= v1.2.1) ; Installation des dépendances pour Smush ; Installation de MediaInfo et FFprobe pour la récupération des métadonnées ; On n’utilise plus ffmpeg2theora ; On n’installe plus flvtool2 au profit de flvtool++ ; On n’installe plus ffmpeg-php qui n’est plus maintenu au (...)

  • Personnaliser en ajoutant son logo, sa bannière ou son image de fond

    5 septembre 2013, par

    Certains 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 ;

  • Ecrire une actualité

    21 juin 2013, par

    Présentez les changements dans votre MédiaSPIP ou les actualités de vos projets sur votre MédiaSPIP grâce à la rubrique actualités.
    Dans le thème par défaut spipeo de MédiaSPIP, les actualités sont affichées en bas de la page principale sous les éditoriaux.
    Vous pouvez personnaliser le formulaire de création d’une actualité.
    Formulaire de création d’une actualité Dans le cas d’un document de type actualité, les champs proposés par défaut sont : Date de publication ( personnaliser la date de publication ) (...)

Sur d’autres sites (8263)

  • C++/CLI — 0xc000007b (INVALID_IMAGE_FORMAT) with /clr option on

    9 mars 2015, par OverMachoGrande

    I’m trying to build a C++/CLI executable to which I statically link ffmpeg (libavcodec, libavformat, libavutil & swscale). It works fine if I build it normally (without /clr, so no CLR support), it works. However, when I add CLR support, it won’t start up with a 0xc000007b. A "Hello World" C++/CLI app runs fine, though.

    Supposedly the same thing happens with Boost::Threads, but since ffmpeg is pure C, I doubt it’s using Boost.

    My config :

    • Visual Studio 2008 Professional SP1
    • Windows XP Pro SP3 (x86)
    • .NET Framework 3.5 SP1

    Thanks,
    Robert

  • Use FFMPEG to stream images from one client to another through IIS (or other) server

    20 avril 2012, par eselk

    I'm new to FFMPEG and maybe I should post this in their forums, but you guys here seem to know everything, so here goes. I have a client app that takes screen shots and saves them as images (256 color bitmaps currently, can change if needed), it does this at a rate of about 4 fps. I currently use my own socket code written in C# to push these to my socket server (also C#) running on a Windows 2008 server. That server then sends these images out to several clients that display them as they are received and also buffers them to allow for rewind, pause, etc, like a DVR. My current format requires approx 100KB per frame, and thus only works for a very small number of clients.

    I started looking at FFMPEG and the compression with MPEG1 and especially MPEG4 is amazing, and so is the quality. What I'm looking for is a basic guide, tutorial, or steps, to produce something similar to my current design, but using FFMPEG and actual video streaming. Ideally the player side could be something like Flash or anything that is easy to embed in a .NET WinForm (or a browser control I can host in the WinForm), and it would need to support buffering still so they can pause and rewind (about 5 or 10 mins, which seems like a lot, but remember this is only 4 fps and 256 color, about 1 or 2 MB per min in my testing).

    I see that FFMPEG, the command-line utility, and I assume the API, even has options for posting to a server via UDP or TCP, so maybe I'll use that instead of my own socket code. Ideally my app would feed images to FFMPEG library at a rate of 4fps as they come from the screen-shot unit, and it would send these up to my IIS server (or another server ?) which would then server them to client(s) that could use them similar to a YouTube video.

  • Catch if the Java proccess crashed

    17 janvier 2012, par VSheyanov

    I run java process to convert video using ffmpeg.exe.

    Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
    String cmd = FFMPEGFULLPATH + " -y -i " + '"' + mpeg4File + '"' + " -vcodec libx264 -vsync 2 " + '"' + H264file + '"';

    Process pr = rt.exec(cmd);

    ThreadedTranscoderIO errorHandler = new ThreadedTranscoderIO(pr.getErrorStream(), "Error Stream");
    errorHandler.start();
    ThreadedTranscoderIO inputHandler = new ThreadedTranscoderIO(pr.getInputStream(), "Output Stream");
    inputHandler.start();

    try {
         pr.waitFor();
    } catch (InterruptedException e) {
         LiveApplication.logger.info("Some shit happens during convertation 2 ");
         throw new IOException("UseTranscoderBlocking - Run_FFMPEG - process interrupted " + e);                  
    }

    But when the process started, sometimes especially with big files, but not always i get this windows message :

    enter image description here

    This happens only on Windows server 2008 and didn't happened on Windows 7.

    I have 2 questions :

    1. Why this process fails ?
    2. Can I catch this fail in Java, close
      this window and continue thread execution (maybe I'll restart this
      proccess).

    Thanks !