Reputation: 4690
I'm trying to read the frames of an .mov file using OpenCV 3.2 (from the menpo conda channel). I'm using Python 3.5.3 through Anaconda on an Ubuntu 16.04 64-bit setup.
Problem is, I get the following error message from OpenCV when it hits the cap.read()
call, and the loop immediately breaks and catches the if num == 0
conditional.
Here's the entirety of the code I'm running:
import cv2
import numpy as np
import sys
f = sys.argv[1]
cap = cv2.VideoCapture(f)
frames = []
num = 0
while cap.isOpened():
ret, frame = cap.read()
if not ret: break
gframe = cv2.cvtColor(frame, cv2.COLOR_BGR2GRAY)
frames.append(gframe)
num += 1
if num % 100 == 0:
frames.append(gframe)
if num % 1000 == 0:
print(num)
if num == 0:
print("Something went wrong: no frames found.")
exit(0)
cap.release()
user@ubuntu:/data$ python read.py movie.mov
Unable to stop the stream: Inappropriate ioctl for device
Something went wrong: no frames found.
user@ubuntu:/data$
I've found a couple of other StackOverflow questions on this topic, but they don't quite translate to my exact circumstance:
To that third point--there are quite a few other questions here that have the quote inappropriate ioctl for device
but it's hard to see if any of them is directly relevant to this problem.
As a partial aside: I've installed this exact same opencv3 conda package on my macOS machine, and the code I've pasted here works just fine and on exactly the same .mov file I've tried on the Ubuntu machine.
Any ideas?
Upvotes: 8
Views: 10889
Reputation: 1
I faced the same problem with Anaconda private env & Python 3.5 on Ubuntu 16.04 .
Initially installed Opencv3 using
conda install -c menpo opencv3
Solution:
Remove Opencv3 conda remove opencv3
Install Opencv3 using pip install opencv-contrib-python
If the problem still persists:
sudo apt-get install ffmpeg
sudo apt-get install libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libavdevice-dev
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 4690
Solved the problem by getting around it entirely.
Used the opencv-feedstock recipe of OpenCV for conda-forge. In the recipe
folder is the build information for conda. I modified the build.sh
file, changing the following options:
-DBUILD_PNG=1
-DBUILD_JPEG=1
-DWITH_CUDA=1
-DWITH_FFMPEG=1
ran conda build --numpy 1.12 recipe
from the parent directory (had to specify the NumPy version, as the build script requirement lists numpy x.x
which means you have to provide the version at runtime), and waited.
Took forever (seriously, a couple hours on a very powerful machine--the time sink is CUDA), but the build eventually completed successfully.
Then it was just a matter of installing the locally-built bz2 archive (conda install --use-local opencv
). No more weird ioctl error messages, and the above script worked just fine.
Upvotes: 3