This project will no longer be maintained by Intel.
Intel has ceased development and contributions including, but not limited to, maintenance, bug fixes, new releases, or updates, to this project.
Intel no longer accepts patches to this project.
If you have an ongoing need to use this project, are interested in independently developing it, or would like to maintain patches for the open source software community, please create your own fork of this project.
This repository hosts Docker build files of software stacks and services, designed to enable Open Visual Cloud prioritized use cases such as media delivery, media analytics, cloud gaming and cloud graphics, and immersive media.
Validated Docker images are available on Docker Hub.
Explore more container solutions on the Intel® oneContainer Portal.
The software stack images provide ready to use software stacks for application deployment. You can call the software executables or link with the software libraries.
Image | Description |
---|---|
ffmpeg | Docker images optimized for media creation and delivery based on the FFmpeg framework. Included the AAC, MP3, OPUS, OGG, Vorbis, X264, X265, VP8/9, SVT-AV1 and SVT-HEVC codecs. The GPU images are accelerated with FFmpeg VAAPI and QSV plugins. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-media-ffmpeg |
gst | Docker images optimized for media creation and delivery based on the GStreamer framework. Included the base, good, bad, ugly and libav set of plugins. The GPU images are accelerated with VAAPI. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-media-gst |
nginx | Docker images optimized for web hosting and caching. Included FFmpeg, NGINX the web server, and FLV the RTMP and DASH/HLS streaming module. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-media-nginx |
SVT | Docker images for the SVT (Scalable Video Technology) encoders and decoders. Easiest way to try SVT-AV1, HEVC, and VP9 apps. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-media-svt |
IMTL | Docker images for the IMTL (Intel Media Transport Library), based on DPDK prepared for transmitting and receiving media data with high throughput and low latency. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-media-imtl |
Image | Description |
---|---|
ffmpeg | Docker images optimized for media analytics based on the FFmpeg framework. Included plugins that utilized the Intel® OpenVINO™ inference engine. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-analytics-ffmpeg |
gst | Docker images optimized for media analytics based on the GStreamer framework. Included plugins that utilized the Intel OpenVINO inference engine. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-analytics-gst |
Ospray images are discontinued from release v21.6. Please refer to older releases for all images targeted for Cloud Gaming and Graphics.
The development images enable C++ application compilation, debugging (with the debugging, profiling tools) and optimization (with the optimization tools.) You can compile C++ applications with these images and then copy the applications to the corresponding deployment images.
Image | Description |
---|---|
media | Docker images for FFmpeg or GStreamer C++ application development. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-media-dev |
analytics | Docker images for FFmpeg or GStreamer C++ application development, with Intel OpenVINO inference engine and the model optimizer. See docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-analytics-dev |
service | Docker images for Open WebRTC Toolkit (OWT) C++ application development.. See |
The service images provides ready to use services. See their image descriptions for exposed service interfaces.
Image | Description |
---|---|
owt | Docker images optimized for video conferencing services, based on the WebRTC technology and the Open WebRTC Toolkit. Included conferencing modes: 1:N, N:N with video and audio processing nodes. see |
The project supports the following platforms and OS'es:
Supported Platforms | Supported OS'es |
---|---|
Xeon | Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, Ubuntu 22.04 LTS |
QAT | Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, Ubuntu 22.04 LTS |
SG1 | Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, Ubuntu 22.04 LTS, CentOS 7 |
Flex | Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, Ubuntu 22.04 LTS |
Please see Development and Test Report for the latest development statuses.
cmake
and m4
if they are not available on your platform. sudo mkdir -p /etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d
printf "[Service]\nEnvironment=\"HTTPS_PROXY=$https_proxy\" \"NO_PROXY=$no_proxy\"\n" | sudo tee /etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d/proxy.conf
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl restart docker
The Docker images are published on Docker Hub with name pattern openvisualcloud/<_platform_>-<_OS_>-<_usage_>-<_image_>
. Find and use the images as follows:
docker search openvisualcloud --limit=100 | grep analytics-ffmpeg #list media analytics ffmpeg images
docker pull openvisualcloud/xeon-ubuntu2004-analytics-ffmpeg
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
# Please build your specific platform image. A full build takes a long time.
cd Xeon/ubuntu-20.04/media/ffmpeg
# Build on the target platform for optimal performance.
make
ctest
See Also: Build Options
Xeon/ubuntu-20.04/media/ffmpeg/shell.sh #<_platform_>/<_OS_>/<_usage_>/<_image_>
Dockerfile.m4
template for customization.#include(transform360.m4)
in Xeon/ubuntu-20.04/media/ffmpeg/Dockerfile.m4 to add essential 360 video transformation in the FFmpeg build. After modification, please rerun cmake and make.
See Also: Build Options
It is recommended that you copy the Dockerfile(s) of your platform, OS and image directly into your project. The following shell scripts show how to sync (if needed) and build the NGINX Dockerfile (and its dependency FFmpeg):
update.sh:
DOCKER_REPO=${DOCKER_REPO="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/OpenVisualCloud/Dockerfiles/master/Xeon/ubuntu-20.04/media"}
(echo "# xeon-ubuntu2004-media-ffmpeg" && curl ${DOCKER_REPO}/ffmpeg/Dockerfile) > Dockerfile.2
(echo "# xeon-ubuntu2004-media-nginx" && curl ${DOCKER_REPO}/nginx/Dockerfile) > Dockerfile.1
build.sh:
for dep in .2 .1; do
image=$(grep -m1 '#' "Dockerfile$dep" | cut -d' ' -f2)
docker build --network=host --file="Dockerfile$dep" -t "$image:latest" . $(env | grep -E '_(proxy)=' | sed 's/^/--build-arg /')
done