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Autres articles (16)

  • Utilisation et configuration du script

    19 janvier 2011, par

    Informations spécifiques à la distribution Debian
    Si vous utilisez cette distribution, vous devrez activer les dépôts "debian-multimedia" comme expliqué ici :
    Depuis la version 0.3.1 du script, le dépôt peut être automatiquement activé à la suite d’une question.
    Récupération du script
    Le script d’installation peut être récupéré de deux manières différentes.
    Via svn en utilisant la commande pour récupérer le code source à jour :
    svn co (...)

  • Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP automatically converts uploaded files to internet-compatible formats.
    Video files are encoded in MP4, Ogv and WebM (supported by HTML5) and MP4 (supported by Flash).
    Audio files are encoded in MP3 and Ogg (supported by HTML5) and MP3 (supported by Flash).
    Where possible, text is analyzed in order to retrieve the data needed for search engine detection, and then exported as a series of image files.
    All uploaded files are stored online in their original format, so you can (...)

  • List of compatible distributions

    26 avril 2011, par

    The table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
    If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...)

Sur d’autres sites (4643)

  • How/Where to place the FFMPEG `-legacy_icecast 1` option to only affect one of two Icecast outputs ? (using tee muxer option)

    4 juin 2020, par jzvi12

    I have an FFMPEG command which was able to send an RTMP live feed to 2 different icecast radio stations :

    



    command 1 (in prod ; 1 of 2 failing) :

    



    /home/ubuntu/encoder/bin/ffmpeg -i rtmp://127.0.0.1:1935/app/live -vn -c:a mp3 -ac 2 -b:a 64k -ar 44100 -f tee -map 0 "[f=mp3:onfail=ignore]icecast://source:password@liquidsoap:8000/live|[f=mp3:onfail=ignore]icecast://source:password@fluoz.zeno.fm:80/live"


    



    I would get the following FFMPEG error when running above command 1 :

    



    [tee @ 0x562fffd24bc0] Slave '[f=mp3:onfail=ignore]icecast://source:password@fluoz.zeno.fm:80/live': error opening: End of file
[tee @ 0x562fffd24bc0] Slave muxer #1 failed: End of file, continuing with 1/2 slaves.


    



    It was working fine until these days when one of them (fluoz.zeno.fm:80/live) stopped working and I think Zeno upgraded their Icecast servers from v1 (legacy) to v2. Why ? because when I was doing individual testing to the Zeno icecast server, I realized that it worked fine when I added the -legacy_icecast 1 option

    



    command 2 (testing to Zeno only w/ -legacy_icecast 1 option) :

    



    /home/ubuntu/encoder/bin/ffmpeg -i rtmp://127.0.0.1:1935/app/live -vn -c:a mp3 -ac 2 -b:a 64k -ar 44100 -legacy_icecast 1 -f mp3 icecast://source:password@fluoz.zeno.fm:80/live


    



    QUESTION :

    



    How can I use the command 1 above to still send to both icecast servers but having the -legacy_icecast 1 option to only affect the zeno icecast server and not the liquidsoap icecast server ? I want to avoid running 2 separate instances of ffmpeg at all cost in order to save system resources and bandwidth.

    



    The reason I ask this question is because I tried adding the -legacy_icecast 1 option to the command 1 (that one that sends to both) by placing it right before the ...-f tee... option, but it still didn't work to send to Zeno icecast server which failed (the liquidsoap icecast server kept running fine). It seems to only work fine when I use command 2 (above) when not using the tee muxer option.

    



    Is there a tricky way to place that -legacy_icecast 1 option within the tee muxer option ??

    


  • FFmpeg segmentation and transcoding missing frames

    15 décembre 2022, par Davidec0018

    I code videos for hobbies and have a decent understanding of ffmpeg and mkvmerge. I prefer to encode video when my computer is on for other things as well, so I recently looked for a way that I could resume encoding after the computer was turned off.

    


    I tried a virtual machine, saving the whole state and it seems to work very well, but the performance is very slow and with the same settings the encoding time is much longer than normal.

    


    I then tried to divide the starting video into several segments, so as to resume from the appropriate segment after restarting the computer.

    


    I tried to do this with ffmpeg :

    


    ffmpeg -i input -map 0:v:0 -c copy -f segment -segment_time 300 -reset_timestamps 1 segment%03d.mkv


    


    But also with the mkvtoolnix gui.

    


    Both operations provide an excellent result.Trying to merge the segments into one video, with ffconcat or mkvtoolnix the result is perfect.

    


    The problem arises when segments are encoded. I use a simple script based on slow preset for every segment in loop (I use both windows and linux) :

    


    ffmpeg -i input.mkv -threads 0 -map 0 -c:a copy -c:s copy -preset slow -pix_fmt yuv420p10le -c:v libx265 -x265-params crf=18:bframes=8:aq-mode=2:aq-strength=1.0 output.mkv


    


    Putting them together in the same way, the video also looks quite good, and with the naked eye you don't notice the passage of the various segments, but analyzing them with ffmpeg I notice that the individual segments have slightly shorter durations and a different number of frames, even 2 or 3 less. When putting together very long videos, you notice even 2 seconds of difference with the original, which also causes the audio and subtitles to go into desynch.

    


    I know the problem has to do with keyframes, timestamps and stuff like that. But I don't understand why. FFmpeg, as well as mkvmerge should split the video exactly where the keyframes are, about 300 seconds apart, so as not to mess up the video structure and allow for good encoding and reassembling.

    


    The problem is just encoding with ffmpeg that removes some frames from the original segments. Sometimes I noticed during the encoding of some segments the following error code, or maybe warning, because the encoding worked anyway :

    


    [hevc @ 0x55758bf92dc0] First slice in a frame missing.
    Last message repeated 6 times
[hevc @ 0x55758c2000c0] First slice in a frame missing.


    


    I've read every discussion about it on the net, I've tried to segment both with mp4 and mkv format, with and without audio, but the problem remains. Where am I doing wrong ?

    


  • aarch64 : vp9itxfm : Do separate functions for half/quarter idct16 and idct32

    22 novembre 2016, par Martin Storsjö
    aarch64 : vp9itxfm : Do separate functions for half/quarter idct16 and idct32
    

    This work is sponsored by, and copyright, Google.

    This avoids loading and calculating coefficients that we know will
    be zero, and avoids filling the temp buffer with zeros in places
    where we know the second pass won’t read.

    This gives a pretty substantial speedup for the smaller subpartitions.

    The code size increases from 14740 bytes to 24292 bytes.

    The idct16/32_end macros are moved above the individual functions ; the
    instructions themselves are unchanged, but since new functions are added
    at the same place where the code is moved from, the diff looks rather
    messy.

    Before :
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub1_add_neon : 236.7
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub2_add_neon : 1051.0
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub4_add_neon : 1051.0
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub8_add_neon : 1051.0
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub12_add_neon : 1387.4
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub16_add_neon : 1387.6
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub1_add_neon : 554.1
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub2_add_neon : 5198.5
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub4_add_neon : 5198.6
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub8_add_neon : 5196.3
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub12_add_neon : 6183.4
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub16_add_neon : 6174.3
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub20_add_neon : 7151.4
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub24_add_neon : 7145.3
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub28_add_neon : 8119.3
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub32_add_neon : 8118.7

    After :
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub1_add_neon : 236.7
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub2_add_neon : 640.8
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub4_add_neon : 639.0
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub8_add_neon : 842.0
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub12_add_neon : 1388.3
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_16x16_sub16_add_neon : 1389.3
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub1_add_neon : 554.1
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub2_add_neon : 3685.5
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub4_add_neon : 3685.1
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub8_add_neon : 3684.4
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub12_add_neon : 5312.2
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub16_add_neon : 5315.4
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub20_add_neon : 7154.9
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub24_add_neon : 7154.5
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub28_add_neon : 8126.6
    vp9_inv_dct_dct_32x32_sub32_add_neon : 8127.2

    Signed-off-by : Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>

    • [DBH] libavcodec/aarch64/vp9itxfm_neon.S