1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
|
CMIF video tools
================
This directory contains Python and C programs to manipulate files
containing digitized video in the "CMIF video format".
History
-------
We started this in October 1991, when we had a large framegrabber
board on loan from SGI for a few weeks: we developed a movie recording
program (camcorder.py) and added numerous features, including still
frame capture and synchronous sound recording using a second machine
(the machine holding the framegrabber board didn't have audio).
During the following months, when we started using and processing the
recorded film fragments, the "CMIF video format" was revised several
times, and we eventually created an object-oriented interface for
reading and writing various incarnations of these files, called VFile.
(This module is also used by our flagship application, the CMIF
editor, not in this directory but in /ufs/guido/mm/.)
When we got our own Indigo entry-level video board (in June 1992) and
a version of the Irix video library that supported capturing PAL
format (in August 1992), Sjoerd added an interface to the video
library to Python (sv) and Guido wrote Vrec.py (based upon a
still frame grabber by Sjoerd, in turn based upon SGI demo code in C)
to record a movie using it. Vrec was soon followed by modernized
versions of the other programs (Vinfo, Vplay, Vtime) and an
interactive editor (Vedit). Finally, VFile was rewritten for more
modularity, functionality and robustness.
Guido van Rossum
Jack Jansen
Sjoerd Mullender
Overview of files
-----------------
cmif-film.ms description of the CMIF video file format
These are programs with a command line interface:
Vrec.py record video movies using the Indigo video library and
board
Vplay.py play video movies
Vinfo.py show statistics on movies
Vtime.py (unrelated to vtime!!!) Copy a video file,
manipulating the time codes (e.g. faster/slower, or
regenerate time codes, or drop frames too close apart)
Vedit.py interactive video editing program
Vsend.py unicast or multicast live video as UDP packets
Vreceive.py receive transmissions from Vsend
These modules are used by the above programs:
VFile.py classes that read and write CMIF video files
Viewer.py two viewer classes used by Vedit
LiveVideoIn.py live video input class, used by Vsend
LiveVideoOut.py live video output class, used by Vsend and Vreceive
The following are C programs, either for efficiency or because they
need to link with a C library:
squash.c make a movie smaller by averaging pixels
usage: squash factor [bits] <moviefile >newmoviefile
factor x and y compression factor
bits #bits left per sample in result (default 8)
squash2.c make a movie smaller by dropping pixels
usage: squash2 factor <moviefile >newmoviefile
factor x and y compression factor
tomono.c like squash2 but outputs a monochrome movie
v2i.c convert the first frame of a movie file to SGI .rgb format
link with -limage
i2v.c convert an rgb file to "lrectwrite" format (this was
used one time by the CMIF editor)
These programs are obsolete, but kept around for sentimental reasons.
Most either don't work any more because they don't use VFile and hence
haven't followed the frequent changes in the CMIF video file format;
or they are dependent upon hardware we don't have (SGI's previous
generation framegrabber). Except for cam.py / tv.py, their
functionality is present in the suite of programs whose name begins
with 'V' listed above.
cam.py network real-time tv broadcast; see tv.py
usage: cam [packfactor [host]]
specifying 'all' for host broadcasts
camcorder.py record video movies or make snapshots (in movie format)
usage: camcorder [-c] [-a audiohost [-s]] [-p pf] [moviefile]
-c color (equivalent to -p 0)
-a audiohost syncaudio is running on audiohost
-s start syncaudio (on audiohost)
-p packfactor packfactor (default 2; 0 records color)
moviefile (default film.video)
keyboard commands:
s stop grabbing (single step if already stopped)
c continuous grabbing
r start recording
p pause recording (record single frame if paused)
ESC quit
statit.py various statistics operations on movie files
syncaudio.py record audio synchronized with camcorder -a
usage: syncaudio videohost soundfile
soundfile format: 16 bits/sample, 16000 samples/sec, 1 channel
(actually, you'd better set the sampling rate to 16000
with the audio panel)
tv.py receiver for transmissions from cam.py
vcopy.py selectively write frames from one movie file to another
usage: vcopy infile outfile
commands: 'n' gets next frame; 'w' writes current frame
video.py player for movies recorded by camcorder.py
usage: video [-l] [-p pf] [-m mag] [-F]
[moviefile [soundfile [skipbytes]]]
-p pf override packfactor (to zoom)
-l looping -- restart movie when done
-m mag magnification
-F run at max speed
moviefile default is film.video
soundfile default is none (no sound)
skipbytes byte offset in soundfile where sound starts
vinfo.py print summary of movie file(s)
usage: vinfo [-d] moviefile ...
-d print delta times (default: print abs times)
vpregs.py definition of VP registers
vtime.py virtual time module imported by syncaudio.py and camcorder.py
colorsys.py color system conversions (now part of std python lib)
|