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Médias (17)
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Matmos - Action at a Distance
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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DJ Dolores - Oslodum 2004 (includes (cc) sample of “Oslodum” by Gilberto Gil)
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Danger Mouse & Jemini - What U Sittin’ On ? (starring Cee Lo and Tha Alkaholiks)
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Cornelius - Wataridori 2
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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The Rapture - Sister Saviour (Blackstrobe Remix)
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Chuck D with Fine Arts Militia - No Meaning No
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
Autres articles (62)
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Des sites réalisés avec MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parCette page présente quelques-uns des sites fonctionnant sous MediaSPIP.
Vous pouvez bien entendu ajouter le votre grâce au formulaire en bas de page. -
Les tâches Cron régulières de la ferme
1er décembre 2010, parLa gestion de la ferme passe par l’exécution à intervalle régulier de plusieurs tâches répétitives dites Cron.
Le super Cron (gestion_mutu_super_cron)
Cette tâche, planifiée chaque minute, a pour simple effet d’appeler le Cron de l’ensemble des instances de la mutualisation régulièrement. Couplée avec un Cron système sur le site central de la mutualisation, cela permet de simplement générer des visites régulières sur les différents sites et éviter que les tâches des sites peu visités soient trop (...) -
Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-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
Sur d’autres sites (8703)
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What's the best FFMPEG method for frequent, automated compilation of timelapse videos ?
5 août 2020, par GoOutsideI have a web application running on a not-particularly beefy Ubuntu Amazon Lightsail instance that uses FFMPEG to build a timelapse video generated from downloaded .jpg webcam photos taken every 2 minutes throughout the day (720 total images each day, which grows throughout the day as new images are downloaded).


The code I'm running every 20 minutes is this :


ffmpeg -y -r 24 -pattern_type glob -I 'picturefolder/*.jpg' -s 1024x576 -vcodec libx264 picturefolder/timelapse.mp4


This mostly works, but it is often quite slow, taking 30-60 seconds to run and getting slower as the day goes on, of course.


Recently, I tried to use
concat
instead ofglob
bing the entire folder over and over. I did not see a noticeable performance improvement, ass it appears theconcat
processes the entire video in order to add even just a few frames to the end of it.

My question for any FFMPEG experts out there : what is the most efficient way to handle this kind of automated timelapse creation, given my setup ? Is there a flag I'm missing ? Perhaps a different, more efficient method ? Or maybe a way to have the FFMPEG process just crawl through this at a more 'slow and steady' pace instead of big bursts of CPU usage.


Or am I stuck with this and should just deal with it ? My ultimate goal would be to continue using my current tier (2 GB RAM, 1 vCPU) without the expense of upgrading. Thank you very kindly for your help !


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Using ffmpeg to assemble images from S3 into a video
10 juillet 2020, par Mass Dot NetI can easily assemble images from local disk into a video using ffmpeg and passing a
%06d
filespec. Here's what a typical (pseudocode) command would look like :

ffmpeg.exe -hide_banner -y -r 60 -t 12 -i /JpgsToCombine/%06d.JPG <..etc..>



However, I'm struggling to do the same with images stored in AWS S3, without using some third party software to mount a virtual drive (e.g. TNTDrive). The S3 folder containing our images is too large to download to the 20GB ephemeral storage provided for AWS containers, and we're trying to avoid EFS because we'd have to provision expensive bandwidth.


Here's what the HTTP and S3 URLs to each of our JPGs looks like :


# HTTP URL
https://massdotnet.s3.amazonaws.com/jpgs-to-combine/000000.JPG # frame 0
https://massdotnet.s3.amazonaws.com/jpgs-to-combine/000012.JPG # frame 12
https://massdotnet.s3.amazonaws.com/jpgs-to-combine/000123.JPG # frame 123
https://massdotnet.s3.amazonaws.com/jpgs-to-combine/456789.JPG # frame 456789

# S3 URL
s3://massdotnet/jpgs-to-combine/000000.JPG # frame 0
s3://massdotnet/jpgs-to-combine/000012.JPG # frame 12
s3://massdotnet/jpgs-to-combine/000123.JPG # frame 123
s3://massdotnet/jpgs-to-combine/456789.JPG # frame 456789



Is there any way to get ffmpeg to assemble these ? We could generate a signed URL for each S3 file, and put several thousand of those URLs onto a command line with an FFMPEG concat filter. However, we'd run up into the command line input limit in Linux at some point using this approach. I'm hoping there's a better way...


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Is there any way that I can speed up the ffmpeg processing time
20 mai 2020, par Ahmed Al-RayanI am facing a problem with the processing process. I use a real joint server in a digital hosting package of $ 10 and use cloud service from Amazon s3. The problem is when uploading a video, whatever the size of the video, whether its size is 1 megabyte or 2 Giga. After the upload process, the processing process starts to upload, there is no problem But when the processing process takes a very long time so that I cannot complete it, what is the solution to that, is there a problem for me or is this process normal ?
 I use laravel-ffmpeg and through laravel queue I am cutting the video into several qualities I will attach the code to you below.



public function handle()
{
 //180p
 $lowBitrate1 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(613);
 //270p
 $lowBitrate2 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(906);
 //360p
 $midBitrate1 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(1687);
 //540p
 $midBitrate2 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(2227);
 //720p
 $highBitrate1 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(4300);
 //1080
 $highBitrate2 = (new X264('aac'))->setKiloBitrate(7917);

FFMpeg::fromDisk('s3')
 ->open($this->movie->path)
 ->exportForHLS()
 ->onProgress(function ($percent) {
 $this->movie->update([
 'percent' => $percent
 ]);
 })
 ->setSegmentLength(10)// optional
 ->addFormat($lowBitrate1)
 ->addFormat($lowBitrate2)
 ->addFormat($midBitrate1)
 ->addFormat($midBitrate2)
 ->addFormat($highBitrate1)
 ->addFormat($highBitrate2)
 ->toDisk('s3')
 ->save("public/Movies/{$this->movie->id}/{$this->movie->id}.m3u8");
}//end of handle