Command Flags
Flag | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
-codec:a |
libfaac, libfdk_aac, libvorbis | Audio Codec |
-quality |
best, good, realtime | Video Quality |
-b:a |
128k, 192k, 256k, 320k | Audio Bitrate |
-codec:v |
mpeg4, libx264, libvpx-vp9 | Video Codec |
Command Flags
Flag | Options | Description |
---|---|---|
-codec:a |
libfaac, libfdk_aac, libvorbis | Audio Codec |
-quality |
best, good, realtime | Video Quality |
-b:a |
128k, 192k, 256k, 320k | Audio Bitrate |
-codec:v |
mpeg4, libx264, libvpx-vp9 | Video Codec |
apt-get update | |
apt-get install linux-image-$(uname -r|sed 's,[^-]*-[^-]*-,,') linux-headers-$(uname -r|sed 's,[^-]*-[^-]*-,,') broadcom-sta-dkms | |
modprobe -r b44 b43 b43legacy ssb brcmsmac bcma | |
modprobe wl |
Generally, you will add a git remote for your Heroku app during the Heroku app creation process, i.e. heroku create
. However, if you are working on an existing app and want to add git remotes to enable manual deploys, the following commands may be useful.
Note that on Heroku, you must always use master
as the destination branch on the remote. If you want to deploy a different branch, you can use the syntax local_branch:destination_branch
seen below (in this example, we push the local staging
branch to the master
branch on heroku.
$ git remote add staging https://git.heroku.com/staging-app.git
# coding=utf8 | |
import PIL | |
from PIL import ImageFont | |
from PIL import Image | |
from PIL import ImageDraw | |
def text2png(text, fullpath, color = "#000", bgcolor = "#FFF", fontfullpath = None, fontsize = 13, leftpadding = 3, rightpadding = 3, width = 200): | |
REPLACEMENT_CHARACTER = u'\uFFFD' | |
NEWLINE_REPLACEMENT_STRING = ' ' + REPLACEMENT_CHARACTER + ' ' |