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Autres articles (111)

  • Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins

    27 avril 2010, par

    Mediaspip core
    autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs

  • Script d’installation automatique de MediaSPIP

    25 avril 2011, par

    Afin de palier aux difficultés d’installation dues principalement aux dépendances logicielles coté serveur, un script d’installation "tout en un" en bash a été créé afin de faciliter cette étape sur un serveur doté d’une distribution Linux compatible.
    Vous devez bénéficier d’un accès SSH à votre serveur et d’un compte "root" afin de l’utiliser, ce qui permettra d’installer les dépendances. Contactez votre hébergeur si vous ne disposez pas de cela.
    La documentation de l’utilisation du script d’installation (...)

  • Support de tous types de médias

    10 avril 2011

    Contrairement à beaucoup de logiciels et autres plate-formes modernes de partage de documents, MediaSPIP a l’ambition de gérer un maximum de formats de documents différents qu’ils soient de type : images (png, gif, jpg, bmp et autres...) ; audio (MP3, Ogg, Wav et autres...) ; vidéo (Avi, MP4, Ogv, mpg, mov, wmv et autres...) ; contenu textuel, code ou autres (open office, microsoft office (tableur, présentation), web (html, css), LaTeX, Google Earth) (...)

Sur d’autres sites (10308)

  • avutil/lls : speed up performance of solve_lls

    24 novembre 2015, par Ganesh Ajjanagadde
    avutil/lls : speed up performance of solve_lls
    

    This is a trivial rewrite of the loops that results in better
    prefetching and associated cache efficiency. Essentially, the problem is
    that modern prefetching logic is based on finite state Markov memory, a reasonable
    assumption that is used elsewhere in CPU’s in for instance branch
    predictors.

    Surrounding loops all iterate forward through the array, making the
    predictor think of prefetching in the forward direction, but the
    intermediate loop is unnecessarily in the backward direction.

    Speedup is nontrivial. Benchmarks obtained by 10^6 iterations within
    solve_lls, with START/STOP_TIMER. File is tests/data/fate/flac-16-lpc-cholesky.err.
    Hardware : x86-64, Haswell, GNU/Linux.

    new :
    17291 decicycles in solve_lls, 2096706 runs, 446 skips
    17255 decicycles in solve_lls, 4193657 runs, 647 skips
    17231 decicycles in solve_lls, 8384997 runs, 3611 skips
    17189 decicycles in solve_lls,16771010 runs, 6206 skips
    17132 decicycles in solve_lls,33544757 runs, 9675 skips
    17092 decicycles in solve_lls,67092404 runs, 16460 skips
    17058 decicycles in solve_lls,134188213 runs, 29515 skips

    old :
    18009 decicycles in solve_lls, 2096665 runs, 487 skips
    17805 decicycles in solve_lls, 4193320 runs, 984 skips
    17779 decicycles in solve_lls, 8386855 runs, 1753 skips
    18289 decicycles in solve_lls,16774280 runs, 2936 skips
    18158 decicycles in solve_lls,33548104 runs, 6328 skips
    18420 decicycles in solve_lls,67091793 runs, 17071 skips
    18310 decicycles in solve_lls,134187219 runs, 30509 skips

    Reviewed-by : Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
    Signed-off-by : Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanagadde@gmail.com>

    • [DH] libavutil/lls.c
  • avfilter/af_afade : improve accuracy and speed of gain computation

    25 novembre 2015, par Ganesh Ajjanagadde
    avfilter/af_afade : improve accuracy and speed of gain computation
    

    Gain computation for various curves was being done in a needlessly
    inaccurate fashion. Of course these are all subjective curves, but when
    a curve is advertised to the user, it should be matched as closely as
    possible within the limitations of libm. In particular, the constants
    kept here were pretty inaccurate for double precision.

    Speed improvements are mainly due to the avoidance of pow, the most
    notorious of the libm functions in terms of performance. To be fair, it
    is the GNU libm that is among the worst, but it is not really GNU libm’s fault
    since others simply yield a higher error as measured in ULP.

    "Magic" constants are also accordingly documented, since they take at
    least a minute of thought for a casual reader.

    Reviewed-by : Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
    Signed-off-by : Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanagadde@gmail.com>

    • [DH] libavfilter/af_afade.c
  • How do I play back video on Android with custom playback speed ?

    13 novembre 2015, par guidow

    I want to play back a video in Android, rendering it to a SurfaceTexture or something else that is usable as an OpenGL ES texture, but I need very precise control over the playback speed of the video to synchronize it to a stream of external events. These events will happen at a roughly predictable speed, but the exact speed will depend on many small mechanical details, influenced by many small factors, including the weather (and possibly even the phase of the moon...).

    The android.media.MediaPlayer class provided by android allows rendering to a SurfaceTexture (and the 360Videos app from the Oculus Mobile SDK successfully uses that feature), but unfortunately does not seem to allow altering the playback speed, at least not as far as I could tell from the documentation here.

    I have tried pausing and resuming the playback using pause() and start() respectively, to influence the playback speed, but that leads to extremely choppy and slow playback. My idea here was to make the video have a higher framerate than would ever be needed, and to then manually retard every frame until it actually needs to be shown. From the messages in the log, it looks to me like the MediaPlayer class will release various needed resources on pause and rerequest them on resume, which obviously kills performance if you do that once per frame.

    Another option I am looking at is ffmpeg. This one seems like it will do what i want, it doesn’t do any timings itself, it just decodes frames whenever I tell it to to a buffer, leaving me to use it however I want, whenever I want. The obvious drawback is that ffmpeg, at least on android, doesn’t do hardware decoding and probably won’t be able to decode 4K media in realtime.

    Yet another thing I was looking at was OpenMAX AL. Unfortunately, OpenMax AL is pretty hard to get into. I haven’t found any good beginner’s documentation yet, only some old, maybe outdated, READMEs as well as the interface specification from Khronos. The latter is a very long and cumbersome read, though, and I couldn’t yet even figure out if OpenMAX AL will even allow me to do my own timings...