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1. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello, I was inquiring myself if it's possible to call ffmpeg in loop, an in each iteration, ffmpeg will pick one of the files in a directory and produce a new with a slightest different name. Can be as simple as a '*' in the beginning of the file name.
I know how to use ffmpeg to do the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: colt
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2. UNIX and Linux Applications
Hi, everyone!
I'm on a Debian 9.0 GNU/Linux machine. I'm not a very experienced user, but I do my best to learn.
So, I have a bunch of images PNG files. I'm trying to make a slideshow with these using the ffmpeg video converter. I also have an audio WAVE stereo file which I'd like to merge... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: worov
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3. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions
Hi,
Currently having some trouble with FFMPEG....
I have the following files:
0001_.gif
0002_.gif
.............
0584_.gif
0585_.gif
0586_.gif
0587_.gif
0588_.gif
0589_.gif
0590_.gif
0591_.gif
And am trying to use ffmpeg to join them to a video as follows: (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: pasc
7 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi, I hope I am posting in the right place.
I use to stream to justin tv using ffmpeg with that command
ffmpeg -re -i "path/to/input.avi" -vcodec libx264 -preset fast -crf 30 -acodec libfaac -ab 128k -ar 44100 -f flv rtmp://live.justin.tv/app/xxxxxxxxxxx
I would like to know if a bash... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: undercash
2 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Guys,
I'm new on Unix and I was hoping you could help me installing ffmpeg on Apple TV 1st Gen, which is a Unix based OS. This is the version of Unix.
Darwin AppleTV.local 8.8.2 Darwin Kernel Version 8.8.2: Mon Jan 29 18:57:29 PST 2007; root:xnu-792.94.18~1/RELEASE_I386 i386 i386
I was... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: ferrarih
6 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
I have successfully used ffmpeg.exe in windows. But i dont know how to use it in linux:confused:. When i tried running a java program in linux using ffmpeg, I am getting, the following error even after having that ffmpeg.exe in my classpath: "java.io.IOException: java.io.IOException:... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ananthi_ku
3 Replies
7. OS X (Apple)
Does anyone know how to grab video (screen) on Terminal using ffmpeg (not X11).
I have written a unix library and I'd like to make a short movie (demo) of it.
Tried: I already own SNapz Pro2 but it hangs the system (I have an old Powerbook 15" PPC). I guess my system is too slow for version... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: sentinel
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8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello.
i am new to unix, though have quite a substantial background of other systems.
i recently installed ffmpeg and mencoder on a unix server, which holds a website, in order to use these programs from the website.
after installation, i can activate both commands directly using putty,
no... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: noamon
1 Replies
pbs(1B) PBS pbs(1B)
NAME
pbs - general information on pbs
DESCRIPTION
PBS stands for Portable Batch System. It is a networked subsystem for submitting, monitoring, and controlling a work load of batch jobs on
one or more systems. More information about PBS is available in the PBS Users Guide.
Batch means that the job will be scheduled for execution at a time chosen by the subsystem according to a defined policy and the availabil-
ity of resources. For a normal batch job, the standard output and standard error of the job will be returned to files available to the
user when the job is complete. This differs from an interactive session where commands are executed when entered via the terminal and
output is returned directly to the terminal. PBS also supports an interactive batch mode where the input and output is connected to the
user's terminal, but the scheduling of the job is still under control of the batch system.
A job is typically a shell script and a set of attributes which provide resource and control information about the job. A job does not
have to be submitted on the system where it will run, tt can be submitted on any system with the PBS commands and access to the execution
system, see qsub(1B). Output will be returned to the system from which the job was submitted unless directed otherwise.
Attributes offer control over when a job is eligible to be run, what happens to the output when it is completed and how the user is noti-
fied when it completes. The attributes of the job may be specified on the command line or in the job script when the job is submitted.
For information about job attributes, see qsub(1B) and pbs_job_attributes(7B).
One important attribute is the resource list. The list specifies the amount and type of resources needed by the job in order to execute.
The list also implies a hard upper limit on usage of those resources. When the limit is reached, the job is terminated. The types of
resources available to a job vary with the system architecture. For a list of resources supported on the default system, see
pbs_resources(7B). There are man pages for other systems types as well, see pbs_resources_aix4(7B), pbs_resources_fujitsu(7B),
pbs_resources_irix5(7B), pbs_resources_solaris5(7B), pbs_resources_sp2(7B), pbs_resources_sunos4(7B), or pbs_resources_unicos8(7B).
Once a job has been submitted, it may be monitored by use of the qstat(1B) command. Two forms of output are available with the qstat com-
mand. The default form is the short display. Information about a job is limited to a single line. Complete information about the job
or jobs is available through qstat with the -f option. Information will be given about all jobs in the system, all jobs in specified
queues, or only specified jobs.
When displaying status of jobs, you will see in which queue the job resides. In PBS a queue is just a collection point for jobs, it does
not imply any execution ordering. That ordering is determined by a scheduling policy implemented by the system administration.
Other commands of interest which have man pages of their own are:
qalter Alter a job's attributes.
qdel Delete a job.
qhold Place a hold on a job to keep it from being scheduled for running.
qmove Move a job to a different queue or server.
qmsg Append a message to the output of an executing job.
qrerun Terminate an executing job and return it to a queue.
qrls Remove a hold from a job.
qselect Obtain a list of jobs that met certain criteria.
qsig Send a signal to an executing job.
SEE ALSO
qalter(1B), qdel(1B), qhold(1B), qmove(1B), qmsg(1B), qrerun(1B), qrls(1B), qselect(1B), qsig(1B), qsub(1B) and the PBS User Guide. Start-
ing with qsub(1B), you can find all other available PBS man pages by following references in the "See Also" section.
Local pbs(1B)