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  • Le plugin : Podcasts.

    14 juillet 2010, par

    Le problème du podcasting est à nouveau un problème révélateur de la normalisation des transports de données sur Internet.
    Deux formats intéressants existent : Celui développé par Apple, très axé sur l’utilisation d’iTunes dont la SPEC est ici ; Le format "Media RSS Module" qui est plus "libre" notamment soutenu par Yahoo et le logiciel Miro ;
    Types de fichiers supportés dans les flux
    Le format d’Apple n’autorise que les formats suivants dans ses flux : .mp3 audio/mpeg .m4a audio/x-m4a .mp4 (...)

  • 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 (...)

  • Taille des images et des logos définissables

    9 février 2011, par

    Dans beaucoup d’endroits du site, logos et images sont redimensionnées pour correspondre aux emplacements définis par les thèmes. L’ensemble des ces tailles pouvant changer d’un thème à un autre peuvent être définies directement dans le thème et éviter ainsi à l’utilisateur de devoir les configurer manuellement après avoir changé l’apparence de son site.
    Ces tailles d’images sont également disponibles dans la configuration spécifique de MediaSPIP Core. La taille maximale du logo du site en pixels, on permet (...)

Sur d’autres sites (6297)

  • CD-R Read Speed Experiments

    21 mai 2011, par Multimedia Mike — Science Projects, Sega Dreamcast

    I want to know how fast I can really read data from a CD-R. Pursuant to my previous musings on this subject, I was informed that it is inadequate to profile reading just any file from a CD-R since data might be read faster or slower depending on whether the data is closer to the inside or the outside of the disc.

    Conclusion / Executive Summary
    It is 100% true that reading data from the outside of a CD-R is faster than reading data from the inside. Read on if you care to know the details of how I arrived at this conclusion, and to find out just how much speed advantage there is to reading from the outside rather than the inside.

    Science Project Outline

    • Create some sample CD-Rs with various properties
    • Get a variety of optical drives
    • Write a custom program that profiles the read speed

    Creating The Test Media
    It’s my understanding that not all CD-Rs are created equal. Fortunately, I have 3 spindles of media handy : Some plain-looking Memorex discs, some rather flamboyant Maxell discs, and those 80mm TDK discs :



    My approach for burning is to create a single file to be burned into a standard ISO-9660 filesystem. The size of the file will be the advertised length of the CD-R minus 1 megabyte for overhead— so, 699 MB for the 120mm discs, 209 MB for the 80mm disc. The file will contain a repeating sequence of 0..0xFF bytes.

    Profiling
    I don’t want to leave this to the vagaries of any filesystem handling layer so I will conduct this experiment at the sector level. Profiling program outline :

    • Read the CD-ROM TOC and get the number of sectors that comprise the data track
    • Profile reading the first 20 MB of sectors
    • Profile reading 20 MB of sectors in the middle of the track
    • Profile reading the last 20 MB of sectors

    Unfortunately, I couldn’t figure out the raw sector reading on modern Linux incarnations (which is annoying since I remember it being pretty straightforward years ago). So I left it to the filesystem after all. New algorithm :

    • Open the single, large file on the CD-R and query the file length
    • Profile reading the first 20 MB of data, 512 kbytes at a time
    • Profile reading 20 MB of sectors in the middle of the track (starting from filesize / 2 - 10 MB), 512 kbytes at a time
    • Profile reading the last 20 MB of sectors (starting from filesize - 20MB), 512 kbytes at a time

    Empirical Data
    I tested the program in Linux using an LG Slim external multi-drive (seen at the top of the pile in this post) and one of my Sega Dreamcast units. I gathered the median value of 3 runs for each area (inner, middle, and outer). I also conducted a buffer flush in between Linux runs (as root : 'sync; echo 3 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches').

    LG Slim external multi-drive (reading from inner, middle, and outer areas in kbytes/sec) :

    • TDK-80mm : 721, 897, 1048
    • Memorex-120mm : 1601, 2805, 3623
    • Maxell-120mm : 1660, 2806, 3624

    So the 120mm discs can range from about 10.5X all the way up to a full 24X on this drive. For whatever reason, the 80mm disc fares a bit worse — even at the inner track — with a range of 4.8X - 7X.

    Sega Dreamcast (reading from inner, middle, and outer areas in kbytes/sec) :

    • TDK-80mm : 502, 632, 749
    • Memorex-120mm : 499, 889, 1143
    • Maxell-120mm : 500, 890, 1156

    It’s interesting that the 80mm disc performed comparably to the 120mm discs in the Dreamcast, in contrast to the LG Slim drive. Also, the results are consistent with my previous profiling experiments, which largely only touched the inner area. The read speeds range from 3.3X - 7.7X. The middle of a 120mm disc reads at about 6X.

    Implications
    A few thoughts regarding these results :

    • Since the very definition of 1X is the minimum speed necessary to stream data from an audio CD, then presumably, original 1X CD-ROM drives would have needed to be capable of reading 1X from the inner area. I wonder what the max read speed at the outer edges was ? It’s unlikely I would be able to get a 1X drive working easily in this day and age since the earliest CD-ROM drives required custom controllers.
    • I think 24X is the max rated read speed for CD-Rs, at least for this drive. This implies that the marketing literature only cites the best possible numbers. I guess this is no surprise, similar to how monitors and TVs have always been measured by their diagonal dimension.
    • Given this data, how do you engineer an ISO-9660 filesystem image so that the timing-sensitive multimedia files live on the outermost track ? In the Dreamcast case, if you can guarantee your FMV files will live somewhere between the middle and the end of the disc, you should be able to count on a bitrate of at least 900 kbytes/sec.

    Source Code
    Here is the program I wrote for profiling. Note that the filename is hardcoded (#define FILENAME). Compiling for Linux is a simple 'gcc -Wall profile-cdr.c -o profile-cdr'. Compiling for Dreamcast is performed in the standard KallistiOS manner (people skilled in the art already know what they need to know) ; the only variation is to compile with the '-D_arch_dreamcast' flag, which the default KOS environment adds anyway.

    C :
    1. #ifdef _arch_dreamcast
    2.   #include <kos .h>
    3.  
    4.   /* map I/O functions to their KOS equivalents */
    5.   #define open fs_open
    6.   #define lseek fs_seek
    7.   #define read fs_read
    8.   #define close fs_close
    9.  
    10.   #define FILENAME "/cd/bigfile"
    11. #else
    12.   #include <stdio .h>
    13.   #include <sys /types.h>
    14.   #include </sys><sys /stat.h>
    15.   #include </sys><sys /time.h>
    16.   #include <fcntl .h>
    17.   #include <unistd .h>
    18.  
    19.   #define FILENAME "/media/Full disc/bigfile"
    20. #endif
    21.  
    22. /* Get a current absolute millisecond count ; it doesn’t have to be in
    23. * reference to anything special. */
    24. unsigned int get_current_milliseconds()
    25. {
    26. #ifdef _arch_dreamcast
    27.   return timer_ms_gettime64() ;
    28. #else
    29.   struct timeval tv ;
    30.   gettimeofday(&tv, NULL) ;
    31.   return tv.tv_sec * 1000 + tv.tv_usec / 1000 ;
    32. #endif
    33. }
    34.  
    35. #define READ_SIZE (20 * 1024 * 1024)
    36. #define READ_BUFFER_SIZE (512 * 1024)
    37.  
    38. int main()
    39. {
    40.   int i, j ;
    41.   int fd ;
    42.   char read_buffer[READ_BUFFER_SIZE] ;
    43.   off_t filesize ;
    44.   unsigned int start_time, end_time ;
    45.  
    46.   fd = open(FILENAME, O_RDONLY) ;
    47.   if (fd == -1)
    48.   {
    49.     printf("could not open %s\n", FILENAME) ;
    50.     return 1 ;
    51.   }
    52.   filesize = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_END) ;
    53.  
    54.   for (i = 0 ; i <3 ; i++)
    55.   {
    56.     if (i == 0)
    57.     {
    58.       printf("reading inner 20 MB...\n") ;
    59.       lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_SET) ;
    60.     }
    61.     else if (i == 1)
    62.     {
    63.       printf("reading middle 20 MB...\n") ;
    64.       lseek(fd, (filesize / 2) - (READ_SIZE / 2), SEEK_SET) ;
    65.     }
    66.     else
    67.     {
    68.       printf("reading outer 20 MB...\n") ;
    69.       lseek(fd, filesize - READ_SIZE, SEEK_SET) ;
    70.     }
    71.     /* read 20 MB ; 40 chunks of 1/2 MB */
    72.     start_time = get_current_milliseconds() ;
    73.     for (j = 0 ; j <(READ_SIZE / READ_BUFFER_SIZE) ; j++)
    74.       if (read(fd, read_buffer, READ_BUFFER_SIZE) != READ_BUFFER_SIZE)
    75.       {
    76.         printf("read error\n") ;
    77.         break ;
    78.       }
    79.     end_time = get_current_milliseconds() ;
    80.     printf("%d - %d = %d ms => %d kbytes/sec\n",
    81.       end_time, start_time, end_time - start_time,
    82.       READ_SIZE / (end_time - start_time)) ;
    83.   }
    84.  
    85.   close(fd) ;
    86.  
    87.   return 0 ;
    88. }
  • Adjust framerate MPG4 in ffMpeg

    15 décembre 2015, par Gilles

    I’m trying to create a MPG4 movie from a bunch of png’s. I want the movie to show one of the PNG-pictures every 1/5th second. So I tried the following command :

    ffmpeg -i ffmpeg_temp/%05d.png -r 5 video.mp4

    Now I get a movie of only 40 seconds, in which lot’s of frames completely disappear.

    I have around a 1000 pictures and want that to be a movie of around 3 minutes (5 fps).

  • Playing RTSP stream in Android

    9 décembre 2014, par Kamil

    I’m trying to play video stream on Android device. Unfortunatelly I still get the same problem with MediaPlayer/VideoView. I’m searching for a few days, but still haven’t found any working solution.
    For test purposes I’m using MediaPlayer app from API Demos (API Demos/Media/MediaPlayer/Play Streaming Video).
    Here is code snippet for playing stream

    mMediaPlayer = new MediaPlayer();
    mMediaPlayer.setDataSource(path);
    mMediaPlayer.setDisplay(holder);
    mMediaPlayer.prepare();
    mMediaPlayer.setOnBufferingUpdateListener(this);
    mMediaPlayer.setOnCompletionListener(this);
    mMediaPlayer.setOnPreparedListener(this);
    mMediaPlayer.setOnVideoSizeChangedListener(this);

    When I try to play stream I get this info from logcat
    http://pastebin.com/5Uib5CH5

    This is configuration of ffserver streaming the video

    Port 8090
    BindAddress 0.0.0.0

    RTSPPort 7654
    RTSPBindAddress 0.0.0.0

    MaxHTTPConnections 2000
    MaxClients 1000
    MaxBandwidth 10000

    CustomLog -
    NoDaemon
    &amp;lt;Feed feed1.ffm&amp;gt;

    File /tmp/feed1.ffm
    FileMaxSize 5M

    Launch ffmpeg -i mmsh://tempserv.cam/vid1

    ACL allow 127.0.0.1

    &amp;lt;/Feed&amp;gt;

    &amp;lt;Stream rat1.mpg&amp;gt;
    Feed feed1.ffm
    Format rtp
    NoAudio
    VideoBitRate 56k
    VideoBufferSize 40
    VideoFrameRate 12
    VideoSize 176x144
    VideoGopSize 12
    VideoCodec libx264
    AVPresetVideo baseline
    &amp;lt;/Stream&amp;gt;

    If anyone can advise me how to fix it, or at least indicate an mistake, I will be grateful.