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    • T3P3Tonyundefined
      T3P3Tony administrators @stuartofmt
      last edited by

      @stuartofmt would you be able to look into submitting DuetLapse to the plugin repository as well?
      https://plugins.duet3d.com/

      www.duet3d.com

      stuartofmtundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • stuartofmtundefined
        stuartofmt @T3P3Tony
        last edited by

        @t3p3tony said in DuetLapse3:

        @stuartofmt would you be able to look into submitting DuetLapse to the plugin repository as well?
        https://plugins.duet3d.com/

        I will. I have not looked at the plugin requirements. DuetLapse is written in Python, so not sure if that is an impediment.

        T3P3Tonyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • T3P3Tonyundefined
          T3P3Tony administrators @stuartofmt
          last edited by

          @stuartofmt a DSF plugin can be written in python so that should be fine πŸ‘

          www.duet3d.com

          stuartofmtundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • stuartofmtundefined
            stuartofmt @T3P3Tony
            last edited by

            @t3p3tony
            Ok! So the UI presented by the plugin would be the same as the current browser ui (more-or-less)? In other words the intent of the plugin would be eliminate the use of a browser UI ?
            I'm trying to tease out the desired functionality. Might a simple iframe be just as effective ? Just probing here ...

            T3P3Tonyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • T3P3Tonyundefined
              T3P3Tony administrators @stuartofmt
              last edited by

              @stuartofmt Thanks for the questions, its forced me to articulate my ideas better!

              I visualised it as the "front end" UI elements are displayed as a plugin within DWC, similar to how other plugins are displayed. This would allow the setup of the time-lapse parameters in a GUI. As a bonus it would also display either a static image (last capture?) or a video feed of the camera (that could be something for a future version though)

              The back end elements would run as a DSF "plugin" to manage the captures. It could gather any information it needs from the object model/intercept gcode using the DSF API. It could use the DSF API to manage the printer during the capture (either directly by sending the gcode movement and dwell commands, or by calling the a macro).

              What do you think about the idea?

              www.duet3d.com

              stuartofmtundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • stuartofmtundefined
                stuartofmt @T3P3Tony
                last edited by

                @t3p3tony
                I'm wondering whether the main intent might be to use the plugin framework as a convenient means of installation?

                Given that DWC is browser based and the DuetLapse UI is also browser based (albeit ugly) - is there added utility having a UI within a UI compared to just having DuetLapse in a separate browser tab?. I'm not asking this to be difficult - just to better understand the ask.

                For example - in DWC --> Settings --> General --> Webcam if you put in the URL for DuetLapse. You will get the Duetlapse UI by clicking the Webcam link in DWC. Is this the general sort of behavior you envisage?

                Regarding the use of DSF API -- I do not know what the added benefit would be (remember - I've not looked yet). DuetLapse already interrogates the object model and sends gcode (using http). Maintaining and testing two different interfaces would need to be offset by some material advantage.

                I had not thought about Duetlapse displaying the last captured image. I usually use videostream to broker images and have a link to that in my DWC. There is certainly utility in incorporating an image display function into DuetLapse - it should be straightforward enough.

                T3P3Tonyundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • T3P3Tonyundefined
                  T3P3Tony administrators @stuartofmt
                  last edited by

                  @stuartofmt Yes they main point from the front end is it brings it into the structure of plugins which ease installation (and potentially discovery by users, once the plugin repository is more used). In addition alerting users to updates through the plugin system would be available once that feature is implemented.

                  The back end side of things could stay with the http API. In some ways that's more flexible as you could then run it on a Pi, without having a duet 3 in the mix. The biggest advantage of using what you have is of course that it already exists. In the long run using a DSF "plugin" for the backend instead will hopefully also ease installation and updating. It will potentially also allow for the plugin directly managing the gcode stream with nothing inserted form the slicer (using gcode interception to spot layer changes for example, carrying out some user defined functions, and then allowing the print to continue).

                  All that said, the most immediate benefit appears to be with a DWC plugin for the UI to ease installation and discovery.

                  www.duet3d.com

                  stuartofmtundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • stuartofmtundefined
                    stuartofmt @T3P3Tony
                    last edited by

                    @t3p3tony said in DuetLapse3:

                    @stuartofmt Yes they main point from the front end is it brings it into the structure of plugins ......

                    Can you point me to a "step by step" document / example? I've searched and searched but all I seem to find is descriptions of folder structures within a zip file, or git references that are just source code. I get that bit (more or less).

                    What's missing for me is a clear explanation of what goes in which folder, how those components need to be structured (internally) , and the structure (and switch meaning) for the main config file. Especially: what is the mechanism for linking to the http interface.

                    I've made some interim changes to my code to support the idea of its own configuration file (previously all cmd line). I need to understand what other changes may be needed.

                    Thx in advance.

                    chrishammundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • chrishammundefined
                      chrishamm administrators @stuartofmt
                      last edited by

                      @stuartofmt You can find current documentation about plugins here:

                      • for DSF: https://github.com/Duet3D/DuetSoftwareFramework/wiki/Third-Party-Plugins
                      • for DWC: https://github.com/Duet3D/DuetWebControl/wiki/Third-Party-Plugins
                        There is an automated build script for DWC plugins as well, it should be described in the second link, too.

                      DWC is being heavily changed at the moment but as a general starting point I suggest you read through these two articles and have a look at either the endstops plugin or the motion webcam server plugins. In both repos you can find a short README section explaining how they can be built.

                      Duet software engineer

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • osteracundefined
                        osterac
                        last edited by osterac

                        Hi
                        This is a great solution for timelapses. Thanks!
                        I was wondering how I can change the webcam capture resolution. I read through the documentation but some of it was a bit over my head. My camera is capable of 1440p but duetlapse3 records at 720p. I think 1080p would be a good resolution for my videos. I use this command to start duetlapse3:

                        sudo python3 /home/pi/ftp/files/DuetLapse/DuetLapse3.py -duet 192.168.1.8 -deletepics -seconds 20 -fps 30  -detect none -restart -camera1 web -weburl1 http://192.168.1.30/picture/2/current/ -extratime 3 -basedir /home/pi/ftp/files/DuetLapse -standby
                        

                        Thanks!

                        PS I think a great addition would be an option to set how long the video will be and automatically adjust settings so it always comes out that length. This way you don't get timelapses of short prints that are only a few seconds long, and really long prints won't be too long and slow. Octolapse has this feature.

                        stuartofmtundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • stuartofmtundefined
                          stuartofmt @osterac
                          last edited by

                          @osterac said in DuetLapse3:

                          Hi
                          This is a great solution for timelapses. Thanks!
                          I was wondering how I can change the webcam capture resolution.

                          PS I think a great addition would be an option to set how long the video will be and automatically adjust settings so it always comes out that length. .......
                          Octolapse has this feature.

                          DuetLapse uses ffmpeg to "stitch" together the individual frames. The primary resolution is set by the software controlling the camera. In your case, this is whatever is serving up images at http://192.168.1.30/picture/2/current/. That is where you will have the control over resolution.

                          I do have a companion program videostream which allows the resolution to be changed for most usb cameras (and Pi cameras).

                          https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/23759/videostream/12

                          On the question of video length. In a naïve way - x seconds of fixed length video would be easy to achieve. Number of images / fixed length = fps. Whether the results would be pleasing to the eye might be a value judgement. 😡
                          I'm guessing this is what Octolapse does?

                          osteracundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • osteracundefined
                            osterac @stuartofmt
                            last edited by

                            @stuartofmt
                            I dug up some old octolapse videos and they were all at different framerates so yes, it does work that way. I looked at my webcam (motioneye) settings and it was set to 1440p. I set it to 1080p and the video was still 720p. It also had problems, it started in the middle of the print and skipped forward and backward a couple of times. It was also at 10 FPS when I requested 30 FPS. Here's the media info:

                            Video 
                            ID : 1 
                            Format : AVC 
                            Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec 
                            Format profile : High@L3.1 
                            Format settings : CABAC / 4 Ref Frames 
                            Format settings, CABAC : Yes 
                            Format settings, Reference frames : 4 frames 
                            Codec ID : avc1 
                            Codec ID/Info : Advanced Video Coding 
                            Duration : 25 s 300 ms 
                            Bit rate : 1 975 kb/s 
                            Width : 1 280 pixels 
                            Height : 720 pixels 
                            Display aspect ratio : 16:9 
                            Frame rate mode : Constant 
                            Frame rate : 10.000 FPS 
                            Color space : YUV 
                            Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0 
                            Bit depth : 8 bits 
                            Scan type : Progressive 
                            Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.214 
                            Stream size : 5.96 MiB (100%) 
                            Writing library : x264 core 155 r2917 0a84d98 
                            Encoding settings : cabac=1 / ref=3 / deblock=1:0:0 / analyse=0x3:0x113 / me=hex / subme=7 / psy=1 / psy_rd=1.00:0.00 / mixed_ref=1 / me_range=16 / chroma_me=1 / trellis=1 / 8x8dct=1 / cqm=0 / deadzone=21,11 / fast_pskip=1 / chroma_qp_offset=-2 / threads=6 / lookahead_threads=1 / sliced_threads=0 / nr=0 / decimate=1 / interlaced=0 / bluray_compat=0 / constrained_intra=0 / bframes=3 / b_pyramid=2 / b_adapt=1 / b_bias=0 / direct=1 / weightb=1 / open_gop=0 / weightp=2 / keyint=250 / keyint_min=10 / scenecut=40 / intra_refresh=0 / rc_lookahead=40 / rc=crf / mbtree=1 / crf=23.0 / qcomp=0.60 / qpmin=0 / qpmax=69 / qpstep=4 / ip_ratio=1.40 / aq=1:1.00 
                            Color range : Full 
                            Codec configuration box : avcC 
                            
                            

                            I'll give videostream a try, do I install it on the webcam server or the pi running Duetlapse 3? I don't think I could install it on motioneye, because it's buildroot. You can install motioneye on top of a full linux distro though.

                            Here's a link to the faulty timelapse:
                            https://1drv.ms/v/s!ArZNmx9oeG5CzQKqBpTQqJG-LFmP?e=7BoTKS

                            Thanks

                            stuartofmtundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • stuartofmtundefined
                              stuartofmt @osterac
                              last edited by

                              @osterac said in DuetLapse3:

                              @stuartofmt
                              I dug up some old octolapse videos and they were all at different framerates so yes, it does work that way. I looked at my webcam (motioneye) settings and it was set to 1440p. I set it to 1080p and the video was still 720p. It also had problems, it started in the middle of the print and skipped forward and backward a couple of times. It was also at 10 FPS when I requested 30 FPS. Here's the media info:

                              Video 
                              ID : 1 
                              Format : AVC 
                              Format/Info : Advanced Video Codec 
                              Format profile : High@L3.1 
                              Format settings : CABAC / 4 Ref Frames 
                              Format settings, CABAC : Yes 
                              Format settings, Reference frames : 4 frames 
                              Codec ID : avc1 
                              Codec ID/Info : Advanced Video Coding 
                              Duration : 25 s 300 ms 
                              Bit rate : 1 975 kb/s 
                              Width : 1 280 pixels 
                              Height : 720 pixels 
                              Display aspect ratio : 16:9 
                              Frame rate mode : Constant 
                              Frame rate : 10.000 FPS 
                              Color space : YUV 
                              Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0 
                              Bit depth : 8 bits 
                              Scan type : Progressive 
                              Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.214 
                              Stream size : 5.96 MiB (100%) 
                              Writing library : x264 core 155 r2917 0a84d98 
                              Encoding settings : cabac=1 / ref=3 / deblock=1:0:0 / analyse=0x3:0x113 / me=hex / subme=7 / psy=1 / psy_rd=1.00:0.00 / mixed_ref=1 / me_range=16 / chroma_me=1 / trellis=1 / 8x8dct=1 / cqm=0 / deadzone=21,11 / fast_pskip=1 / chroma_qp_offset=-2 / threads=6 / lookahead_threads=1 / sliced_threads=0 / nr=0 / decimate=1 / interlaced=0 / bluray_compat=0 / constrained_intra=0 / bframes=3 / b_pyramid=2 / b_adapt=1 / b_bias=0 / direct=1 / weightb=1 / open_gop=0 / weightp=2 / keyint=250 / keyint_min=10 / scenecut=40 / intra_refresh=0 / rc_lookahead=40 / rc=crf / mbtree=1 / crf=23.0 / qcomp=0.60 / qpmin=0 / qpmax=69 / qpstep=4 / ip_ratio=1.40 / aq=1:1.00 
                              Color range : Full 
                              Codec configuration box : avcC 
                              
                              

                              I'll give videostream a try, do I install it on the webcam server or the pi running Duetlapse 3? I don't think I could install it on motioneye, because it's buildroot. You can install motioneye on top of a full linux distro though.

                              Here's a link to the faulty timelapse:
                              https://1drv.ms/v/s!ArZNmx9oeG5CzQKqBpTQqJG-LFmP?e=7BoTKS

                              Thanks

                              osteracundefined stuartofmtundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • osteracundefined
                                osterac @stuartofmt
                                last edited by

                                @stuartofmt
                                Did you mean to make a post with only a quote of me in it?

                                stuartofmtundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • stuartofmtundefined
                                  stuartofmt @stuartofmt
                                  last edited by

                                  @stuartofmt

                                  Hmm - let me ponder the resolution side of things.

                                  The frame-rate ought to follow the settings. I'm wondering if there is a problem with ffmpeg (would not be the first time). What version are you running ffmpeg -version will tell

                                  I've bever seen a video jump around like that. The -camera1 web setting uses wget to retrieve the images. Afterwards ffmpeg creates the video by taking the frames in sequence. I'm wondering if there is some sort of strange timing issue?

                                  As an experiment we can get the images using ffmpeg. This is my usual way, mainly because it exercises more of the code. What happens if you use this set of options?:
                                  -weburl1 http://192.168.1.30/picture/2/current/ -camera1 other -camparam1="'ffmpeg ' + ffmpegquiet + ' -y -i ' +weburl+ ' -vframes 1 ' +fn+debug"

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                                  • stuartofmtundefined
                                    stuartofmt @osterac
                                    last edited by stuartofmt

                                    @osterac said in DuetLapse3:

                                    @stuartofmt
                                    Did you mean to make a post with only a quote of me in it?

                                    Yes πŸ˜– See above

                                    osteracundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • osteracundefined
                                      osterac @stuartofmt
                                      last edited by osterac

                                      @stuartofmt
                                      ffmpeg-version didn't work, so I typed sudo apt install ffmpeg and it said it was already installed with this version:
                                      7:4.1.9-0+deb10u1+rpt1)
                                      I tried your settings (I took the liberty of adding the duet url) and the print stopped early both times I tried. There weren't enough frames captured to make a timelapse of at least 5 seconds. The printer told me that insufficient axes were homed.

                                      pi@octopi:~ $ sudo python3 /home/pi/ftp/files/DuetLapse/DuetLapse3.py -weburl1 h               ttp://192.168.1.30/picture/2/current/ -camera1 other -camparam1="'ffmpeg ' + ffm               pegquiet + ' -y -i ' +weburl+ ' -vframes 1 ' +fn+debug" -duet 192.168.1.8
                                      [sudo] password for pi:
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - ################### Options at start of this print job                 #####################
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - # Environment
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - duet                 192.168.1.8
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - basedir              /home/pi/ftp/files/DuetLapse
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - poll                 12
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - instances            single
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - logtype              both
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - nolog                False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - verbose              False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - host                 0.0.0.0
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - port                 0
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - keeplogs             False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - novideo              False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - deletepics           False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - maxffmpeg            2
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - keepfiles            False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - # Execution
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - dontwait             False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - seconds              0
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - detect               layer
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - pause                no
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - movehead             [0.0, 0.0]
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - rest                 1
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - standby              False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - restart              False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - # Camera
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread -  camera1             other
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - camera2
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - weburl1              http://192.168.1.30/picture/2/curr               ent/
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - weburl2
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - # Video
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - extratime            0
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - fps                  10
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - minvideo             5
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - # Overrides
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - camparam1            'ffmpeg ' + ffmpegquiet + ' -y -i                ' +weburl+ ' -vframes 1 ' +fn+debug
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - camparam2
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - vidparam1
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - vidparam2
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - # UI
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - hidebuttons          False
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - # Special Functions
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - execkey
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - -------------------------------------------------------               ----------------
                                      
                                      
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - #######################################################               ###
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - Will start capturing images on first layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - #######################################################               ###
                                      
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - #######################################################               ###
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - Video will be created when printing ends
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - or if requested from the browser interface or M117 Duet               Lapse3. message
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - #######################################################               ###
                                      
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - #######################################################               ###
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - If running from a console using the command line
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - Press Ctrl+C one time to stop the program and create a                video.
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - #######################################################               ###
                                      
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - #######################################################               ########
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - Connected to printer at 192.168.1.8
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - Using Duet version 3.4.1
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - Using  API interface rr_model
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - #######################################################               ########
                                      
                                      192.168.1.8 gcodeLoop - ###########################
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - Initiating with action set to start
                                      192.168.1.8 gcodeLoop - Starting gcode Listener
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - ++++++ start state requested ++++++
                                      192.168.1.8 gcodeLoop - ###########################
                                      
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - ****** Duet status changed to: Not yet determined ****               *
                                      192.168.1.8 MainThread - ++++++ Entering start state ++++++
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - ****** Print State changed to: Waiting *****
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - ****** Duet status changed to: idle *****
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - ****** Print State changed to: Capturing *****
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - ****** Duet status changed to: processing *****
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - ****** Print State changed to: Capturing *****
                                      192.168.1.8 gcodeLoop - M117 Command: DuetLapse3.start
                                      192.168.1.8 gcodeLoop - Already in start state
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 1 at layer 1 after la               yer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 2 at layer 2 after la               yer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 3 at layer 3 after la               yer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 4 at layer 4 after la               yer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 5 at layer 5 after la               yer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 6 at layer 7 after la               yer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 7 at layer 9 after la               yer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 8 at layer 11 after l               ayer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 9 at layer 13 after l               ayer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 10 at layer 15 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 11 at layer 17 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 12 at layer 20 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 13 at layer 22 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 14 at layer 24 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 15 at layer 26 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 16 at layer 29 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 17 at layer 32 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 18 at layer 34 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 19 at layer 37 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 20 at layer 40 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 21 at layer 42 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 22 at layer 45 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 23 at layer 48 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 24 at layer 50 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 25 at layer 52 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 26 at layer 55 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 27 at layer 57 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 28 at layer 59 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 29 at layer 61 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 30 at layer 63 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 31 at layer 66 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 32 at layer 68 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 33 at layer 70 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 34 at layer 72 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 35 at layer 73 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 36 at layer 74 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - Layer - Camera1: capturing frame 37 at layer 75 after                layer change
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - M117 Command: DuetLapse3.completed
                                      192.168.1.8 captureLoop - nextAction is available
                                      192.168.1.8 nextAction - ++++++ completed state requested ++++++
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - Terminating
                                      192.168.1.8 nextAction - ++++++ Entering terminate state ++++++
                                      192.168.1.8 makeVideo - Command Success : ffmpeg  -loglevel quiet -y -i http://1               92.168.1.30/picture/2/current/ -vframes 1 /home/pi/ftp/files/DuetLapse/octopi/19               2-168-1-8/19613_CE4_Cylindar_MORE_twisted2/Camera1_00000038.jpeg > /dev/null 2>&               1
                                      192.168.1.8 makeVideo - Create Video from /home/pi/ftp/files/DuetLapse/octopi/19               2-168-1-8/19613_CE4_Cylindar_MORE_twisted2
                                      192.168.1.8 makeVideo - Error: Camera1: Cannot create video of less than 5 secon               ds.
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - ********* Waiting for captureLoop to complete *********
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - ********* Waiting for captureLoop to complete *********
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - ********* Waiting for captureLoop to complete *********
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - ********* Waiting for captureLoop to complete *********
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - Exited captureLoop
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - nextAction is available
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - Wait for video to complete
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - makeVideo is not running
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - Cleaning up files for phase:  terminate
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - gcodeLoop is not running
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - Could not terminate http listener
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - name 'listener' is not defined
                                      192.168.1.8 terminate - Program Terminated
                                      Killed
                                      
                                      
                                      osteracundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • osteracundefined
                                        osterac @osterac
                                        last edited by

                                        @stuartofmt
                                        The stopping early thing was actually a problem with my end gcode.

                                        stuartofmtundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • stuartofmtundefined
                                          stuartofmt @osterac
                                          last edited by

                                          @osterac

                                          I'm using version 4.x of ffmpeg, only because I had to compile it some time ago for the Pi. With V7 you should 🀞 be OK.

                                          You should take a look at the captured images to see what resolution they are (with the alternate capture options I provided).

                                          I'll wait until you generate a video and we can take a look to see if anything changed.

                                          As an aside (and I will check), to the best of my knowledge the video creation command does not alter the resolution at all. I did check some of my captures (set to 800x600 in videostream) and the video resolution matches.

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                                          • osteracundefined
                                            osterac @stuartofmt
                                            last edited by

                                            @stuartofmt
                                            I managed to capture a time lapse with your settings on a longer print.
                                            https://1drv.ms/v/s!ArZNmx9oeG5CzQMVW0IGIgVbwagj?e=QrnVhR
                                            Don't know why my printer is making little poops, but whatever. That's a different issue.

                                            osteracundefined stuartofmtundefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
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