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  • La sauvegarde automatique de canaux SPIP

    1er avril 2010, par

    Dans le cadre de la mise en place d’une plateforme ouverte, il est important pour les hébergeurs de pouvoir disposer de sauvegardes assez régulières pour parer à tout problème éventuel.
    Pour réaliser cette tâche on se base sur deux plugins SPIP : Saveauto qui permet une sauvegarde régulière de la base de donnée sous la forme d’un dump mysql (utilisable dans phpmyadmin) mes_fichiers_2 qui permet de réaliser une archive au format zip des données importantes du site (les documents, les éléments (...)

  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-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

  • HTML5 audio and video support

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP uses HTML5 video and audio tags to play multimedia files, taking advantage of the latest W3C innovations supported by modern browsers.
    The MediaSPIP player used has been created specifically for MediaSPIP and can be easily adapted to fit in with a specific theme.
    For older browsers the Flowplayer flash fallback is used.
    MediaSPIP allows for media playback on major mobile platforms with the above (...)

Sur d’autres sites (10194)

  • Cron job using database results

    9 mars 2013, par Fibericon

    I need help in creating a cron job script. Basically, I want to grab the next scheduled item and run it through ffmpeg to stream. This would be the mysql query (I'm using PHP variables to indicate what should go there - I don't actually know how variables work in cron jobs) :

    SELECT show.file FROM show, schedule
    WHERE channel = 1 AND start_time <= $current_time;

    This would be the ffmpeg command :

    ffmpeg -re -i $file http://127.0.0.1:8090/feed.ffm

    How would I create a cron job to execute these commands ?

  • How to get audio track assignment in ffmpeg

    16 février 2012, par David542

    Is there a way to get the audio track assignment in ffmpeg ? For example, if you are in QuickTime, you can view info (Command - I), and see the track assignment. It looks something like this :

    Apple ProRes 422 (HQ), 1,920 x 1,080
    Linear PCM, 24 bit little-endian signed integer, 48000 Hz, **Left**
    Linear PCM, 24 bit little-endian signed integer, 48000 Hz, **Right**
    Linear PCM, 24 bit little-endian signed integer, 48000 Hz, **Center**
    Linear PCM, 24 bit little-endian signed integer, 48000 Hz, **LFE Screen**
    etc...

    When I do $ ffmpeg -i, it does not show the track assignments —

    Stream #0:12(eng): Audio: pcm_s24le (in24 / 0x34326E69), 48000 Hz, 1 channels, s32, 1152 kb/s
    Metadata:
     creation_time   : 2010-09-16 02:23:49
     handler_name    : ?Apple Alias Data Handler
    Stream #0:13(eng): Audio: pcm_s24le (in24 / 0x34326E69), 48000 Hz, 1 channels, s32, 1152 kb/s
    Metadata:
     creation_time   : 2010-09-16 02:23:49
     handler_name    : ?Apple Alias Data Handler
    Stream #0:14(eng): Audio: pcm_s24le (in24 / 0x34326E69), 48000 Hz, 1 channels, s32, 1152 kb/s
    Metadata:
     creation_time   : 2010-09-16 02:23:49
     handler_name    : ?Apple Alias Data Handler
    Stream #0:15(eng): Audio: pcm_s24le (in24 / 0x34326E69), 48000 Hz, stereo, s32, 2304 kb/s
    Metadata:
     creation_time   : 2010-09-16 02:23:49
     handler_name    : ?Apple Alias Data Handler
    Stream #0:16(eng): Audio: pcm_s24le (in24 / 0x34326E69), 48000 Hz, stereo, s32, 2304 kb/s

    Is there a way to get the track assignments in ffmpeg or another program ?

  • Feeding a series of images to ffmpeg as each image is created [closed]

    5 février 2013, par Mark Schneider

    I'm trying to use ffmpeg to build a 1280x720 slide-show from a sequence of pictures and videos, but I have concerns about potential disk I/O bottleneck.

    I expect a typical slide-show to have about 50 pictures and 2-3 videos (10-15 seconds each at 30 fps). I would like to show each picture for 3-4 seconds (possibly with a
    Ken Burns effect) with a smooth 2 second crossfade between each set of pictures (or for pictures adjacent to videos - between the picture and the first/last frame of the video).

    Given about 50 pictures, the crossfades alone would amount to about 3,000 images (50 transitions x 2 secs/transition x 30 fps). And I suppose if I implement a Ken Burns effect during each picture's 3-4 second showing, I'd have to provide ffmpeg with individual images for each of those frames. (I'm writing a script in Ruby that will pull a list of images from a database and in turn call ImageMagick to create the individual images for each frame. As I understand it, the RMagick library interfaces with ImageMagick such that the output images come back as in-memory objects without needing to write to disk. FWIW, I'm developing in Windows 8 and will deploy to Heroku.)

    All of the slideshow examples I've found online feed ffmpeg a set of images which have already been created. However, in an effort to avoid waiting on considerable disk I/O, I'd like to feed each image to ffmpeg as the image is created rather than create them all in advance.

    Is there a way to send each image file to ffmpeg on the fly as the file is created in memory ?