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GetID3 - Bloc informations de fichiers
9 avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
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GetID3 - Boutons supplémentaires
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Mis à jour : Avril 2013
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Autres articles (110)
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Mise à jour de la version 0.1 vers 0.2
24 juin 2013, parExplications des différents changements notables lors du passage de la version 0.1 de MediaSPIP à la version 0.3. Quelles sont les nouveautés
Au niveau des dépendances logicielles Utilisation des dernières versions de FFMpeg (>= v1.2.1) ; Installation des dépendances pour Smush ; Installation de MediaInfo et FFprobe pour la récupération des métadonnées ; On n’utilise plus ffmpeg2theora ; On n’installe plus flvtool2 au profit de flvtool++ ; On n’installe plus ffmpeg-php qui n’est plus maintenu au (...) -
Amélioration de la version de base
13 septembre 2013Jolie sélection multiple
Le plugin Chosen permet d’améliorer l’ergonomie des champs de sélection multiple. Voir les deux images suivantes pour comparer.
Il suffit pour cela d’activer le plugin Chosen (Configuration générale du site > Gestion des plugins), puis de configurer le plugin (Les squelettes > Chosen) en activant l’utilisation de Chosen dans le site public et en spécifiant les éléments de formulaires à améliorer, par exemple select[multiple] pour les listes à sélection multiple (...) -
MediaSPIP 0.1 Beta version
25 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP 0.1 beta is the first version of MediaSPIP proclaimed as "usable".
The zip file provided here only contains the sources of MediaSPIP in its standalone version.
To get a working installation, you must manually install all-software dependencies on the server.
If you want to use this archive for an installation in "farm mode", you will also need to proceed to other manual (...)
Sur d’autres sites (9605)
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What's the best way to get video metadata from a MP4 file in ASP.Net MVC using C# ?
23 septembre 2019, par Maddhacker24I’ve been searching on Google and StackOverflow for a good couple of hours. There seems to be a lot of similar questions on StackOverflow but they are all about 3-5 years old.
Is using FFMPEG still the best way these days to pull metadata from a video file in a .NET web application ? And if so, what’s the best C# wrapper out there ?
I’ve tried MediaToolkit, MediaFile.dll without any luck. I saw ffmpeg-csharpe but that looks like it hasn’t been touched in a few years.
I haven’t found any current data on this subject. Is the ability to pull metadata from a video built into the latest version of .NET now ?
I’m basically looking for any direction at this point.
I should add that whatever I use could be invoked thousands of times per hour so it will need to be efficient.
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RTP Timestamps Are Not Monotonically increasing
25 août 2019, par Fr0styI am finding it a bit difficult trying to understand whether or not the hack around with FFmpeg and OpenCV really provided a RTP timestamp. My last post helped a little bit but got me stuck in trying to validate the timestamps obtained through this work around by modifying ffmpeg and opencv.
FFmpeg version : 4.1.0
OpenCV version : 3.4.1import cv2
import time
from datetime import datetime, date
uri = 'rtsp://admin:password@192.168.1.66:554/Streaming/Channels/101'
cap = cv2.VideoCapture(uri)
'''One is the offset between the two epochs. Unix uses an epoch located at 1/1/1970-00:00h (UTC) and NTP uses 1/1/1900-00:00h.
This leads to an offset equivalent to 70 years in seconds (there are 17 leap years between the two dates so the offset is'''
time_offset = 2208988800 # (70*365 + 17)*86400 = 2208988800 (in seconds)
# offset = 3775484294
days = 43697
pdat = "1900-01-01 00:00:00:00"
mdat = "2019-08-23 22:02:44:00" # str(datetime.now()) + str(datetime.now().time())
pdate = datetime.strptime(pdat, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S:%f").date()
mdate = datetime.strptime(mdat, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S:%f").date()
delta = (mdate - pdate).days
offset = delta * 86400
def time_delta(s):
return (s - time_offset)
while True:
frame_exists, curr_frame = cap.read()
if frame_exists:
seconds = cap.getRTPTimeStampSeconds()
fraction = cap.getRTPTimeStampFraction()
timestamp = cap.getRTPTimeStampTs()
unix_offset = seconds - time_offset
msec = int((int(fraction) / 0xFFFFFFFF) * 1000.0)
ts = float(str(unix_offset) + "." + str(msec))
# print("Timestamp per Frame:%i" % timestamp)
print((datetime.fromtimestamp(float(ts) + offset)))
cap.release()My Output :
On August 23, 2019 at 22:02
...
2019-08-23 13:59:52.781000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.726000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.671000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.616000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.561000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.506000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.451000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.396000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.342000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.287000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.232000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.177000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.122000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.067000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.012000
2019-08-23 13:59:53.570000
2019-08-23 13:59:53.020000
2019-08-23 13:59:53.847000
2019-08-23 13:59:53.792000I’ve noticed how the time increments weirdly (that’s not suppose to happen in the real, current time), such as the last two lines and a few others in between in the output. A bit flabbergasted as to what went wrong. Also trying this out on multiple IP cameras, with each showing a different timestamp probably related to when they were turned on.
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Having trouble obtaining the time from RTP Timestamps obtained through OpenCV
24 août 2019, par Fr0styI am finding it a bit difficult trying to understand whether or not the hack around with FFmpeg and OpenCV really provided a RTP timestamp. My last post helped a little bit but got me stuck in trying to validate the timestamps obtained through this work around by modifying ffmpeg and opencv.
FFmpeg version : 4.1.0
OpenCV version : 3.4.1import cv2
import time
from datetime import datetime, date
uri = 'rtsp://admin:password@192.168.1.66:554/Streaming/Channels/101'
cap = cv2.VideoCapture(uri)
'''One is the offset between the two epochs. Unix uses an epoch located at 1/1/1970-00:00h (UTC) and NTP uses 1/1/1900-00:00h.
This leads to an offset equivalent to 70 years in seconds (there are 17 leap years between the two dates so the offset is'''
time_offset = 2208988800 # (70*365 + 17)*86400 = 2208988800 (in seconds)
# offset = 3775484294
days = 43697
pdat = "1900-01-01 00:00:00:00"
mdat = "2019-08-23 22:02:44:00" # str(datetime.now()) + str(datetime.now().time())
pdate = datetime.strptime(pdat, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S:%f").date()
mdate = datetime.strptime(mdat, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S:%f").date()
delta = (mdate - pdate).days
offset = delta * 86400
def time_delta(s):
return (s - time_offset)
while True:
frame_exists, curr_frame = cap.read()
if frame_exists:
seconds = cap.getRTPTimeStampSeconds()
fraction = cap.getRTPTimeStampFraction()
timestamp = cap.getRTPTimeStampTs()
unix_offset = seconds - time_offset
msec = int((int(fraction) / 0xFFFFFFFF) * 1000.0)
ts = float(str(unix_offset) + "." + str(msec))
# print("Timestamp per Frame:%i" % timestamp)
print((datetime.fromtimestamp(float(ts) + offset)))
cap.release()My Output :
On August 23, 2019 at 22:02
...
2019-08-23 13:59:52.781000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.726000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.671000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.616000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.561000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.506000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.451000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.396000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.342000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.287000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.232000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.177000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.122000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.067000
2019-08-23 13:59:52.012000
2019-08-23 13:59:53.570000
2019-08-23 13:59:53.020000
2019-08-23 13:59:53.847000
2019-08-23 13:59:53.792000I’ve noticed how the time increments weirdly (that’s not suppose to happen in the real, current time), such as the last two lines and a few others in between in the output. A bit flabbergasted as to what went wrong. Also trying this out on multiple IP cameras, with each showing a different timestamp probably related to when they were turned on.