
Recherche avancée
Médias (1)
-
Revolution of Open-source and film making towards open film making
6 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Juillet 2013
Langue : English
Type : Texte
Autres articles (43)
-
Les vidéos
21 avril 2011, parComme les documents de type "audio", Mediaspip affiche dans la mesure du possible les vidéos grâce à la balise html5 .
Un des inconvénients de cette balise est qu’elle n’est pas reconnue correctement par certains navigateurs (Internet Explorer pour ne pas le nommer) et que chaque navigateur ne gère en natif que certains formats de vidéos.
Son avantage principal quant à lui est de bénéficier de la prise en charge native de vidéos dans les navigateur et donc de se passer de l’utilisation de Flash et (...) -
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 -
Websites made with MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parThis page lists some websites based on MediaSPIP.
Sur d’autres sites (6039)
-
sws_scale() does not convert image simply copying it from source to target
14 mars 2020, par SlavTrying to read arbitrary video as plain RGB24 pixels so convert frame with
sws_scale()
this way ://...
AVFrame* pic_out = av_frame_alloc();
pic_out->format = AV_PIX_FMT_RGB24;
pic_out->width = 1920;
pic_out->height = 1080;
av_frame_get_buffer( pic_out, 32 );
struct SwsContext * img_convert_ctx = sws_getContext(
1920, 1080, AV_PIX_FMT_YUV420P,
1920, 1080, AV_PIX_FMT_RGB24,
SWS_BICUBIC,
NULL, NULL, NULL
);
//...
sws_scale(
img_convert_ctx,
pic_src->data, //pic_src is from avcodec_receive_frame()
pic_src->linesize,
0,
1080,
pic_out->data,
pic_out->linesize
);Everything goes without any errors, but
pic_out
ends up having the same data aspic_src
.
What could be the problem ?Full minimal example is here (supposed to be RGB24 image is there as 2.bmp which looks like actually being YUV-something)
-
How to sum audio from two streams in ffmpeg
9 février 2021, par user3188445I have a video file with two audio streams, representing two people talking at different times. The two people never talk at the same time, so there is no danger of clipping by summing the audio. I would like to sum the audio into one stream without reducing the volume. The ffmpeg amix filter has an option that would seem to do what I want, but the option does not seem to work. Here are two minimal non-working examples (the audio tracks are [0:2] and [0:3]) :


ffmpeg -i input.mkv -map 0:0 -c:v copy \
 -filter_complex '[0:2][0:3]amix' \
 output.m4v

ffmpeg -i input.mkv -map 0:0 -c:v copy \
 -filter_complex '[0:2][0:3]amix=sum=sum' \
 output.m4v



The first example diminishes the audio volume. The second example is a syntax error. I tried other variants like
amix=sum
andamix=sum=1
, but despite the documentation I don't think the sum option exists any more.ffmpeg -h filter=amix
does not mention the sum option (ffmpeg version n4.3.1).

My questions :


- 

-
Can I sum two audio tracks with ffmpeg, without losing resolution. (I'd rather not cut the volume in half and scale it up, but if there's no other way I guess I'd accept and answer that sacrifices a bit.)


-
Is there an easy way to adjust the relative delay of one of the tracks by a few milliseconds ?








-
-
Create a mkv file with colored background and containing a given audio and subtitle stream
25 mai 2023, par rdrg109Table of contents


- 

- The context
- Minimal working example
- What I've tried

- 

- Create a mkv file with colored background and an audio stream
- Create a mkv file with colored background, an audio stream and a subtitles stream






- The question












The context


I have a
*.flac
file and a*.srt
file. I want to merge those files in a MKV file, but at the same time, I want to add a video stream. I want the video stream to show a green background the entire time.



Minimal working example


For our experimentation, let's create two sample files : one
*.flac
file and one*.srt
file.

The following command creates a
*.flac
file that lasts 60 seconds and contains a sine wave.

$ ffmpeg -y -f lavfi -i "sine=f=1000:d=60" input.flac



The following command creates a
*.srt
file. Note that our last subtitle lasts until the sixth second, this is intended.

$ cat << EOF > input.srt
1
00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:03,000
This is the first subtitle in a
SRT file.

2
00:00:03,000 --> 00:00:06,000
This is the second subtitle in a
SRT file.
EOF





What I've tried




Create a mkv file with colored background and an audio stream


I know how to create a MKV file containing a given audio stream and a colored background as the video stream.


The following command creates a MKV file containing
input.flac
as the audio stream and green background as the video stream. The MKV file have the same duration asinput.flac
.

$ ffmpeg \
 -y \
 -f lavfi \
 -i color=c=green:s=2x2 \
 -i input.flac \
 -c:v libx264 \
 -c:a copy \
 -shortest \
 output.mkv



The following command shows the duration of the streams in the resulting file.


$ ffprobe -v error -print_format json -show_entries stream=codec_type:stream_tags=duration output.mkv | jq -r ''



{
 "programs": [],
 "streams": [
 {
 "codec_type": "video",
 "tags": {
 "DURATION": "00:00:58.200000000"
 }
 },
 {
 "codec_type": "audio",
 "tags": {
 "DURATION": "00:01:00.000000000"
 }
 }
 ]
}





Create a mkv file with colored background, an audio stream and a subtitles stream


To add a subtitles stream, I just need to specify the
*.srt
file. However, when I do this, the duration of the video is set to the time of the last subtitle in the*.srt
file. This is expected because I have used-shortest
. I would get the result I'm looking for if it were possible to specify the stream that-shortest
gives top priority to. I haven't found this information on the Internet.

$ ffmpeg \
 -y \
 -f lavfi \
 -i color=c=green:s=2x2 \
 -i input.flac \
 -i input.srt \
 -c:v libx264 \
 -c:a copy \
 -shortest \
 output.mkv



The following command shows the duration of the streams in the resulting file. Note that the maximum duration of the resulting file is 6 seconds, while in the resulting file from the previous section it was 1 minute.


$ ffprobe -v error -print_format json -show_entries stream=codec_type:stream_tags=duration output.mkv | jq -r ''



{
 "programs": [],
 "streams": [
 {
 "codec_type": "video",
 "tags": {
 "DURATION": "00:00:01.160000000"
 }
 },
 {
 "codec_type": "audio",
 "tags": {
 "DURATION": "00:00:03.134000000"
 }
 },
 {
 "codec_type": "subtitle",
 "tags": {
 "DURATION": "00:00:06.000000000"
 }
 }
 ]
}





The question


Given a
*.flac
file and a*.srt
file. How to merge them in a*.mkv
file so that it has the*.flac
file as the audio stream, the*.srt
file as the subtitles stream and a green background as the video stream ?