Solution: AEM’s DAM can create alternate renditions automatically. It just needs some configuration
Acknowledgement: Thanks to my colleague Ryan Jacobs for his assistance
His writeup contains more details and descriptions of this process.
Step 0: Get a test video to start with
It must be mp4, ogg, or flv. These are the only video formats AEM currently supports for this process.
Step 1: Install FFmpeg on the server hosting CQ
If this is on a development machine, then just grab latest the OS-specific binaries and install them locally:
FFmpeg.org Download Page
AEM has built-in FFmpeg support, but doesn’t actually include FFmpeg in its package. So it must be downloaded and installed independently.
Step 2: Add the ffmpeg\bin directory to the PATH variable
This step is probably not required for most installers. Windows’ recommended binary, however, does not come with any kind of installer. It’s just a zip file that needs to be extracted somewhere (e.g. \Program Files (x86)). For CQ to find and recognize the executable (ffmpeg.exe), its directory has to be added to the PATH environment variable. Once done, test that it works by opening a new console window and typing ffmpeg.
Step 3: Restart AEM
FFmpeg doesn’t get recognized until after a restart. If AEM is being loaded through the command line, be sure to close and reopen that console window.
Step 4: Test it
Upload a video to the DAM (here), then click that video. If FFmpeg is installed and recognized, then thumbnails will automatically be generated with no extra configuration. If FFmpeg is not installed, nothing but the original video will be shown.
Step 5: Open the Video Profiles folder from the Configuration Profiles Tool
Step 6: Create a New Video Profile Page
New...
New Page
Title: WebM
Name: webm
Video Profile
Create
Step 7: Open the New Page by double-clicking on it
Step 8: Edit the properties for FFmpeg
Edit
Click on the Basic Tab
Title: WebM
Description: WebM Video Format
Extension: webm
MIME-type: video/webm
HTML5 video type: video/webm; codecs="vp8, vorbis"
Click on the Video Tab
Codec: libvpx
Click on the Audio Tab
Codec: libvorbis
OK
Step 9: Test it
Upload Test Video
Select the original video
Scroll to the bottom and click on Output File Name: {file}.out.webm
Verify video plays in a modern browser like Chrome
Step 10: Modify The Update Asset Workflow
Navigate to the Update Asset workflow folder within the from the Configuration Profiles Tool
Double click DAM Update Asset to get here.
Double click the FFmpeg transcoding workflow item
Click on the Process tab
Within the arguments list, append ",profile:webm" (sans quotes)
OK
Step 11: Save the Workflow changes
Click Save at the top of the workflow
Step 12: Upload a video to the DAM and wait for the rendition to appear
Depending on the server specs and asset size, encoding can take a while.
Summary: With a little bit of configuration, video transcoding in AEM can be made easy and automatic. A little research on FFmpeg options can also allow much finer control of derived assets
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