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Autres articles (100)
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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 -
Support audio et vidéo HTML5
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...) -
Librairies et logiciels spécifiques aux médias
10 décembre 2010, parPour un fonctionnement correct et optimal, plusieurs choses sont à prendre en considération.
Il est important, après avoir installé apache2, mysql et php5, d’installer d’autres logiciels nécessaires dont les installations sont décrites dans les liens afférants. Un ensemble de librairies multimedias (x264, libtheora, libvpx) utilisées pour l’encodage et le décodage des vidéos et sons afin de supporter le plus grand nombre de fichiers possibles. Cf. : ce tutoriel ; FFMpeg avec le maximum de décodeurs et (...)
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How To Install FFMPEG on Elastic Beanstalk
13 avril 2017, par Nick LynchThis is not a duplicate, I have found one thread, and it is outdated and does not work :
Install ffmpeg on elastic beanstalk using ebextensions config.I have been trying to install this for some time, nothing seems to work.
Please share the config.yml that will make this work.I am using 64bit Amazon Linux 2016.03 v2.1.6 running PHP 7.0 on Elastic Beanstalk
My current file is
branch-defaults:
default:
environment: Default-Environment
master:
environment: Default-Environment
global:
application_name: "My First Elastic Beanstalk Application"
default_ec2_keyname: ~
default_platform: "64bit Amazon Linux 2016.03 v2.1.6 running PHP 7.0"
default_region: us-east-1
profile: eb-cli
sc: git
packages: ~
yum:
ImageMagick: []
ImageMagick-devel: []
commands:
01-wget:
command: "wget -O /tmp/ffmpeg.tar.gz http://ffmpeg.gusari.org/static/64bit/ffmpeg.static.64bit.2014-03-05.tar.gz"
02-mkdir:
command: "if [ ! -d /opt/ffmpeg ] ; then mkdir -p /opt/ffmpeg; fi"
03-tar:
command: "tar -xzf ffmpeg.tar.gz -C /opt/ffmpeg"
cwd: /tmp
04-ln:
command: "if [[ ! -f /usr/bin/ffmpeg ]] ; then ln -s /opt/ffmpeg/ffmpeg /usr/bin/ffmpeg; fi"
05-ln:
command: "if [[ ! -f /usr/bin/ffprobe ]] ; then ln -s /opt/ffmpeg/ffprobe /usr/bin/ffprobe; fi"
06-pecl:
command: "if [ `pecl list | grep imagick` ] ; then pecl install -f imagick; fi" -
Ream-time watermarking with MPEG-DASH
14 juillet 2016, par Calvin W.In the system, I want to add a unique watermark (e.g. IP address of client and time stamp) into the video that he/she want to watch.
But when I handled it with OpenCV, it spent 25 minute with a 15-min video. And I need to transcode to mp4 with ffmpeg.
Now I’m trying the watermark function of ffmpeg, bit it still needs some time.
It it possible to send the video to client side with MPEG-DASH while transcoding it with ffmpeg ?
System spec :(Amazon EC2 c3.xlarge)
Intel Xeon E5-2680 v2 (Ivy Bridge) - 4 vCPU
7.5G RAM
40GB SSD
Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
OpenCV2.4.13
ffmpeg 3.1.1code :
import cv2
import sys
import time
from datetime import datetime as dt
# frame of input video
fps = float(sys.argv[4])
# encode to AVC
fourcc = cv2.cv.CV_FOURCC('A', 'V', 'C', '1')
# transparency of text
alpha = 0.1
beta = 1 - alpha
# input video
cap = cv2.VideoCapture(sys.argv[3])
# current frame index, start from 0
frameIndex = 0
# get input video's width/height
width = int(cap.get(cv2.cv.CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_WIDTH))
height = int(cap.get(cv2.cv.CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_HEIGHT))
# config output (error using .mp4)
out = cv2.VideoWriter('output.avi', fourcc, fps, (width, height))
# access time
timeStr = dt.fromtimestamp(time.time()).strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')
requestIP = sys.argv[1]
username = sys.argv[2]
text = "%s %s %s" % (requestIP, username, timeStr)
# start loading video
while(cap.isOpened()):
ret, frame = cap.read()
if ret:
# add text between 10s - 20s
if frameIndex > time10 and frameIndex < time20:
# clone a new frame to add text
overlay = frame.copy()
cv2.putText(overlay, text, (100, 100), cv2.FONT_HERSHEY_PLAIN, 0.5, (255, 255, 255))
# combine both frame and make text transparent
cv2.addWeighted(overlay, alpha, frame, beta, 0, frame)
# write frame to output
out.write(frame)
frameIndex += 1
# wait for next frame
if cap.get(cv2.cv.CV_CAP_PROP_POS_FRAMES) == cap.get(cv2.cv.CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_COUNT):
break
# End of video
# release
cap.release()
out.release() -
How to record (and process ?) a video that is streamable from Android
13 mai 2016, par afollestadMy company’s app relies heavily on video recording and playback of web-based videos. I use the
MediaRecorder
API to record videos, through this library designed by me : https://github.com/afollestad/material-camera.For playback, I use this library which is basically a wrapper around Google’s ExoPlayer library : https://github.com/brianwernick/ExoMedia.
It works fine for the most part with small videos, especially if I decrease bit rates for audio and video. However, larger and higher quality videos have many issues. Sometimes they seem to buffer forever, sometimes playback doesn’t even start successfully, etc. Again, these videos are being streamed over HTTP from Amazon S3.
I’ve read a little bit about FFMPEG, and how it can process MP4’s for "faststart", splitting the files into chunks for DASH, etc. However, FFMPEG solutions for Android seem a bit complex, so...
Is there anyway to record MP4’s from Android, with
MediaRecorder
,MediaCodec
, or some other API which results in a video file that is fast to stream ? It amazes me how well Snapchat has figured this out.