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La conservation du net art au musée. Les stratégies à l’œuvre
26 mai 2011
Mis à jour : Juillet 2013
Langue : français
Type : Texte
Autres articles (41)
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List of compatible distributions
26 avril 2011, parThe 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 (...) -
Automated installation script of MediaSPIP
25 avril 2011, parTo 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 (...) -
Sélection de projets utilisant MediaSPIP
29 avril 2011, parLes exemples cités ci-dessous sont des éléments représentatifs d’usages spécifiques de MediaSPIP pour certains projets.
Vous pensez avoir un site "remarquable" réalisé avec MediaSPIP ? Faites le nous savoir ici.
Ferme MediaSPIP @ Infini
L’Association Infini développe des activités d’accueil, de point d’accès internet, de formation, de conduite de projets innovants dans le domaine des Technologies de l’Information et de la Communication, et l’hébergement de sites. Elle joue en la matière un rôle unique (...)
Sur d’autres sites (8735)
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I want to print HLS files using ffmpeg in aws lambda (python)
14 avril 2021, par 최우선I implemented it through the link(https://aws.amazon.com/ko/blogs/media/processing-user-generated-content-using-aws-lambda-and-ffmpeg/) here, and it works well.


s3_source_bucket = event['Records'][0]['s3']['bucket']['name']
s3_source_key = event['Records'][0]['s3']['object']['key']

s3_source_basename = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(s3_source_key))[0]
s3_destination_filename = s3_source_basename + ".m3u8"

s3_client = boto3.client('s3')
s3_source_signed_url = s3_client.generate_presigned_url('get_object',
 Params={'Bucket': s3_source_bucket, 'Key': s3_source_key},
 ExpiresIn=SIGNED_URL_TIMEOUT)


ffmpeg_cmd = "/opt/bin/ffmpeg -i \"" + s3_source_signed_url + "\" -codec: copy -start_number 0 -hls_time 10 -hls_list_size 0 -f hls -"
command1 = shlex.split(ffmpeg_cmd)
p1 = subprocess.run(command1, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)

resp = s3_client.put_object(Body=p1.stdout, Bucket=S3_DESTINATION_BUCKET, Key=s3_destination_filename)



However, the actual output through ffmpeg is multiple files. For example test.m3u8, test0.ts, test1.ts .....


But when I print p1.stdout, it looks like multiple files (test.m3u8,test0.ts....) are merged into one file.


Is there a way to get the actual output multiple files (test.m3u8,test0.ts......) from p1.stdout ? Please help.


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Live streaming of processed frames to AWS
22 avril 2021, par MinasChamI'm working on a project where i need to capture live video feed from an RTSP camera source, process the video frame-by-frame and stream the result to an AWS Service.


So far, my solution :


- 

- Captures frames from the RTSP camera source using
OpenCV
and performs some processing. - Feeds the processed frames to an
ffmpeg
pipe that packages the content for online streaming (HTTP Live Streaming - hls
) and saves it locally. - Transfers the media content to an Amazon Kinesis Video Stream using a
Gstreamer
pipeline element withkvssink
as a sink element.








My questions are :


- 

- Currently I'm saving the content both locally and on an Amazon Kinesis Video Stream. Is this efficient ?
- Is it possible to directly stream the frames to the Amazon kinesis Video Stream (perhaps by connecting the
ffmpeg
output with thegstreamer
pipeline element) ? - Is the file format suitable for this implementation or would it better to encode the media differently ?








- Captures frames from the RTSP camera source using
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AWS Lambda and Fluent FFMPEG error "cannot read property "isStream" of undefined"
29 mai 2021, par Travis Leeso here's the goal : convert a .webm file hosted in an S3 into a gif and upload that to a new bucket. This all works fine when run locally, but when trying to translate it into a lambda, fluent-ffmpeg throws errors when it runs the command.


Here's the code snippet :


ffmpeg(new URL(vid))
 .outputOptions("-vf", "scale=320:-1:flags=lanczos,fps=14")
 .on('progress', () => {
 console.log('progress');
 })
 .on('end', () => {
 //Do stuff with the result when it is done
 })
 .output(newKey)
 .run(newKey);



in this snippet, "vid" is a presigned GET url for an S3 bucket containing the .webm video file, and "newKey" is the name of the new bucket (and a temporary writeStream/File that is created in the lambda to store the new .gif file until we upload it to S3 - not super relevant to this issue).


What should happen (and does locally) is that a new output is created containing the converted .gif file


What happens when it is deployed in a lambda is that it reaches the .outputOptions call and throws a type error saying that it cannot read property isStream of undefined.


At first glance, this seems like I simply don't have FFMPEG installed in the lambda, but I do. I have tried with the prebuilt layer using NodeJS 10 found here : https://serverlessrepo.aws.amazon.com/applications/us-east-1/145266761615/ffmpeg-lambda-layer ,
with a NodeJS 12 layer that was built by some engineers here previously, and tried building a NodeJS 14 FFMPEG layer myself and using that. I tried for all three using no configuration and letting it call the PATH ffmpeg, using the FFMPEG_PATH and FFPROBE_PATH environment variables set to either what was specified in the previous layers, or what I made it in the newly built one, and even manually setting the path to the executables using the setFfmpegPath and setFfprobePath functions found on the fluent-ffmpeg object.


Lastly, I even tried bundling the executables in with the actual lambda code itself and uploading it through an S3, trying all three above methods of getting it to point to the correct paths once again to no avail.


I'm seriously in need of help if anyone else has encountered something similar or just might know what is going on. I'm at wit's end here trying to figure this out.