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Médias (1)
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The Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow
28 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Texte
Autres articles (53)
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Personnaliser les catégories
21 juin 2013, parFormulaire de création d’une catégorie
Pour ceux qui connaissent bien SPIP, une catégorie peut être assimilée à une rubrique.
Dans le cas d’un document de type catégorie, les champs proposés par défaut sont : Texte
On peut modifier ce formulaire dans la partie :
Administration > Configuration des masques de formulaire.
Dans le cas d’un document de type média, les champs non affichés par défaut sont : Descriptif rapide
Par ailleurs, c’est dans cette partie configuration qu’on peut indiquer le (...) -
Participer à sa documentation
10 avril 2011La documentation est un des travaux les plus importants et les plus contraignants lors de la réalisation d’un outil technique.
Tout apport extérieur à ce sujet est primordial : la critique de l’existant ; la participation à la rédaction d’articles orientés : utilisateur (administrateur de MediaSPIP ou simplement producteur de contenu) ; développeur ; la création de screencasts d’explication ; la traduction de la documentation dans une nouvelle langue ;
Pour ce faire, vous pouvez vous inscrire sur (...) -
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" (...)
Sur d’autres sites (9898)
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Conversion of .dav [Ubuntu]
3 juin 2018, par DauasI’ve installed ffmpeg on a Ubuntu Linux Amazon EC2 Server and have a Lorex FLIR NVR directly FTP transferring .DAV files to it. In this system a Java program would then tell the EC2 to convert the .dav to but this is where the problems begin, FFMPEG fails to convert the .dav file and to my surprise there is no Codec for .dav (Though I see mention of it once having been supported). I reach out for a solution to this File Format problem, unfortunately the .dav files are a given as the NVR I have is incapable of transfering any other data type over the web, but what is the best way to convert a .dav file on a linux machine ? My Java program has full access to the Shell. It would also be incredibly helpful if anybody were to know how to get their hands on a .dav codec I could test with ffmpeg. I very much value all of your time helping me on this issue.
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Live audio using ffmpeg, javascript and nodejs
8 novembre 2017, par klausI am new to this thing. Please don’t hang me for the poor grammar. I am trying to create a proof of concept application which I will later extend. It does the following : We have a html page which asks for permission to use the microphone. We capture the microphone input and send it via websocket to a node js app.
JS (Client) :
var bufferSize = 4096;
var socket = new WebSocket(URL);
var myPCMProcessingNode = context.createScriptProcessor(bufferSize, 1, 1);
myPCMProcessingNode.onaudioprocess = function(e) {
var input = e.inputBuffer.getChannelData(0);
socket.send(convertFloat32ToInt16(input));
}
function convertFloat32ToInt16(buffer) {
l = buffer.length;
buf = new Int16Array(l);
while (l--) {
buf[l] = Math.min(1, buffer[l])*0x7FFF;
}
return buf.buffer;
}
navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia({audio:true, video:false})
.then(function(stream){
var microphone = context.createMediaStreamSource(stream);
microphone.connect(myPCMProcessingNode);
myPCMProcessingNode.connect(context.destination);
})
.catch(function(e){});In the server we take each incoming buffer, run it through ffmpeg, and send what comes out of the std out to another device using the node js ’http’ POST. The device has a speaker. We are basically trying to create a 1 way audio link from the browser to the device.
Node JS (Server) :
var WebSocketServer = require('websocket').server;
var http = require('http');
var children = require('child_process');
wsServer.on('request', function(request) {
var connection = request.accept(null, request.origin);
connection.on('message', function(message) {
if (message.type === 'utf8') { /*NOP*/ }
else if (message.type === 'binary') {
ffm.stdin.write(message.binaryData);
}
});
connection.on('close', function(reasonCode, description) {});
connection.on('error', function(error) {});
});
var ffm = children.spawn(
'./ffmpeg.exe'
,'-stdin -f s16le -ar 48k -ac 2 -i pipe:0 -acodec pcm_u8 -ar 48000 -f aiff pipe:1'.split(' ')
);
ffm.on('exit',function(code,signal){});
ffm.stdout.on('data', (data) => {
req.write(data);
});
var options = {
host: 'xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx',
port: xxxx,
path: '/path/to/service/on/device',
method: 'POST',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/octet-stream',
'Content-Length': 0,
'Authorization' : 'xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx',
'Transfer-Encoding' : 'chunked',
'Connection': 'keep-alive'
}
};
var req = http.request(options, function(res) {});The device supports only continuous POST and only a couple of formats (ulaw, aiff, wav)
This solution doesn’t seem to work. In the device speaker we only hear something like white noise.
Also, I think I may have a problem with the buffer I am sending to the ffmpeg std in -> Tried to dump whatever comes out of the websocket to a .wav file then play it with VLC -> it plays everything in the record very fast -> 10 seconds of recording played in about 1 second.
I am new to audio processing and have searched for about 3 days now for solutions on how to improve this and found nothing.
I would ask from the community for 2 things :
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Is something wrong with my approach ? What more can I do to make this work ? I will post more details if required.
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If what I am doing is reinventing the wheel then I would like to know what other software / 3rd party service (like amazon or whatever) can accomplish the same thing.
Thank you.
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AWS Lambda making video thumbnails
9 décembre 2017, par JesusI want make thumbnails from videos uploaded to S3, I know how to make it with Node.js and ffmpeg.
According to this forum post I can add libraries :
ImageMagick is the only external library that is currently provided by
default, but you can include any additional dependencies in the zip
file you provide when you create a Lambda function. Note that if this
is a native library or executable, you will need to ensure that it
runs on Amazon Linux.But how can I put static ffmpeg binary on aws lambda ?
And how can I call from Node.js this static binary (ffmpeg) with AWS Lambda ?
I’m newbie with amazon AWS and Linux
Can anyone help me ?