mirror of
https://projects.vdr-developer.org/git/vdr-plugin-streamdev.git
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59c6558ce3
Added cap_net_raw patch for VDR 1.7.5 - 1.7.21.
547 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
547 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
This is a "plugin" for the Video Disk Recorder (VDR).
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Written by: Sascha Volkenandt <sascha@akv-soft.de>
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Current maintainer: Frank Schmirler <vdrdev@schmirler.de>
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Project's homepage: http://streamdev.vdr-developer.org/
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Former project homepage: http://linux.kompiliert.net/
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Latest version available at: http://streamdev.vdr-developer.org/
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See the file COPYING for license information.
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Contents:
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---------
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1. Description
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2. Installation
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2.1 Compatibility
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2.2 Compiling
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2.3 Updating
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3. Usage
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3.1 Usage HTTP server
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3.2 Usage IGMP multicast server
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3.3 Usage VDR-to-VDR server
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3.4 Usage VDR-to-VDR client
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4. Other useful Plugins
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4.1 Plugins for VDR-to-VDR clients
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4.2 Plugins for Server
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4.3 Alternatives
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5. externremux.sh
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6. Known Problems
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1. Description:
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---------------
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This PlugIn is a VDR implementation of the VTP (Video Transfer Protocol)
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Version 0.0.3 (see file PROTOCOL) and a basic HTTP Streaming Protocol.
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It consists of a server and a client part, but both parts are compiled together
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with the PlugIn source, but appear as separate PlugIns to VDR.
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The client part acts as a full Input Device, so it can be used in conjunction
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with a DXR3-Card, XINE, SoftDevice or others to act as a working VDR
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installation without any DVB-Hardware including EPG-Handling.
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The server part acts as a Receiver-Device and works transparently in the
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background within your running VDR. It can serve multiple clients and it can
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distribute multiple input streams (i.e. from multiple DVB-cards) to multiple
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clients using the native VTP protocol (for VDR-clients), or using the HTTP
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protocol supporting clients such as XINE, MPlayer and so on. With XMMS or
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WinAMP, you can also listen to radio channels over a HTTP connection.
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It is possible to attach as many clients as the bus and network can handle, as
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long as there is a device which can receive a specific channel. Multiple
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channels homed on the same transponder (which is determined by it's frequency)
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can be broadcasted with a single device.
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Additional clients can be programmed using the Protocol Instructions inside
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the PROTOCOL file.
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2. Installation:
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----------------
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Let's say streamdev's version is 0.5.0 and vdr's version is 1.X.X. If you
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use anything else please exchange the version numbers appropriately (this
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way I don't have to update this section all the times;) ).
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After compiling the PlugIn as stated below, start either (or both) parts of it
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by specifying "-P streamdev-client" and/or "-P streamdev-server" on the VDR
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command line.
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What's important is that the client requests a channel using its Unique Channel
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ID. So, in order to find the channel at the server, it must have the same ID
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that is used on the client. You can achieve this by putting the server's
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channels.conf on the client, preferably after scanning.
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If you want to drive additional Input-Devices (with different sources) on the
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client, you can merge the channels.conf files. VDR will detect if the local
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device or the network device can receive the channels.
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Last, but not least you have to copy the streamdev-server folder into the
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"plugins/streamdev-server" subfolder of VDR's config-directory (which is equal
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to your video-directory if not specified otherwise). For example, if you didn't
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specify a separate config-directory, and set your video directory to "/video0",
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the directory has to be copied to /video0/plugins/streamdev-server.
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The directory contains a file named streamdevhosts.conf which you must adjust
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to your needs. The syntax is the same as for svdrphosts.conf, so please consult
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VDR's documentation on how to fill that file, if you can't do it on-the-fly.
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There's also a sample externremux.sh script in this directory. It is used by
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streamdev's external remux feature. The sample script uses mencoder by default.
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Please check the script for further information. You can specify a different
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script location with the -r parameter. The VDR commandline would then include a
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"-P 'streamdev-server -r /usr/local/bin/remux.sh'". Note the additional quotes,
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as otherwise -r will be passed to VDR and not to streamdev.
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2.1 Compatibility:
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------------------
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This version is not compatible to VDR releases older than 1.5.9. Take one of
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the streamdev-0.4.x releases if you are running at least VDR 1.4.x. For older
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VDRs you will probably need one of the streamdev-0.3.x releases.
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2.2 Compiling:
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--------------
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cd vdr-1.X.X/PLUGINS/src
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tar xvfz vdr-streamdev-0.5.0.tgz
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ln -s streamdev-0.5.0 streamdev
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cp -r streamdev/streamdev-server VDRCONFDIR/plugins/
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cd ../..
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make [options, if necessary] vdr
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make [options, if necessary] plugins
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To build only the plugin, change into the streamdev source folder and issue
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make
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To build only streamdev-server or only streamdev-client, use
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make server
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make client
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2.3 Updating:
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--------------
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If you are updating streamdev from an earlier release, you might have to
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perform some additional steps. Check which version you've been running before,
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then read below for the necessary changes.
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* Location of files:
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--------------------
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(Affected: 0.3.x, 0.4.x, 0.4.0pre, 0.5.0pre)
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Starting with streamdev 0.5.0, all additional files are kept in a directory
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called "streamdev-server" inside VDR's plugin config directory. It is the new
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default location of externremux.sh and the new place where streamdev-server
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expects the file "streamdevhosts.conf". You will have to move this file to its
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new location:
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streamdev 0.3.x:
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mv VDRCONFDIR/plugins/streamdevhosts.conf VDRCONFDIR/plugins/streamdev-server/
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streamdev 0.4.x, 0.4.0pre and 0.5.0pre:
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mv VDRCONFDIR/plugins/streamdev VDRCONFDIR/plugins/streamdev-server/
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Now check the contents of streamdevhosts.conf. Does it contain a "0.0.0.0/0"
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entry? If your VDR machine is connected to the Internet, this line gives
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*anyone* full access to streamdev, unless you took some other measures to
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prevent this (e.g. firewall). You might want to remove this line and enable
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HTTP authentication instead.
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* Handling of externremux script:
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---------------------------------
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(Affected: 0.3.x, 0.4.0pre, 0.5.0pre)
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Streamdev server's externremux script became responsible for emitting all HTTP
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headers. A quick and dirty extension to your current script would be:
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echo -ne 'Content-type: video/mpeg\r\n'
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echo -ne '\r\n'
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However I encourage you to try the new externremux.sh script shipped with the
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streamdev source distribution.
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To emphasize the required change in externremux, the URL path for passing the
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stream through externremux has changed from EXTERN to EXT.
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3. Usage:
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---------
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Start the server core itself by specifying -Pstreamdev-server on your VDR
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commandline. To use the client core, specify -Pstreamdev-client. Both parts
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can run in one VDR instance, if necessary.
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On the server, the main menu entry "Streamdev Connections" gives you a list
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of currently connected clients. Use the "red" key to terminate a connection.
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Note that depending on connection type and client, the client might re-connect
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sooner or later. Depending on the server setup, the "blue" key might be enabled
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as well. Please read below.
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The parameter "Suspend behaviour" allows you to specify how the server should
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react in case the client requests a channel that would require switching the
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primary device (i.e. disrupt live-tv). If set to "Offer suspend mode", you
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enable the "blue" key in the server's main menu. It will put the server into
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"Suspend Mode" (a picture is displayed on TV). Then, a client may switch the
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primary card to wherever it likes to. While watching TV (Suspend deactivated),
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the client may not switch the transponder on the primary device. If you set
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the behaviour to "Always suspended" (the default), there will be normal live-tv
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on the server, but whenever a client decides to switch the transponder, the
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server will lose it's live-tv. Set to "Never suspended", the server always
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prevents the client from switching transponders. If you set "Client may
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suspend" to yes, the client can suspend the server remotely (this only applies
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if "Offer suspend mode" is selected).
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NOTE: This mainly applies to One-Card-Systems, since with multiple cards there
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is no need to switch transponders on the primary interface, if on of the other
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cards is idle (i.e. if it is not blocked by a recording). If all cards are in
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use (i.e. when something is recorded, or by multiple clients), this applies to
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Multiple-Card-Systems as well.
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3.1 Usage HTTP server:
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----------------------
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You can use the HTTP part by accessing the server with a HTTP-capable media
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player (such as XINE, MPlayer, and so on, if you have appropriate MPEG2-codecs
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installed). In the PlugIn's Setup, you can specify the port the server will
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listen to with the parameter "HTTP Server Port". The parameter "HTTP Streamtype"
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allows you to specify a default stream type, which is used if no specific type
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has been requested in the URL (see below). The supported stream types are:
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TS Transport Stream (i.e. a dump from the device)
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PES Packetized Elemetary Stream (VDR's native recording format)
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PS Program Stream (SVCD, DVD like stream)
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ES Elementary Stream (only Video, if available, otherwise only Audio)
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EXT Pass stream through external script (e.g. for converting with mencoder)
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Assuming that you leave the default port (3000), point your web browser to
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http://hostname:3000/
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You will be presented a menu with links to various channel lists, including M3U
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playlist formats.
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If you don't want to use the HTML menu or the M3U playlists, you can access the
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streams directly like this:
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http://hostname:3000/3
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http://hostname:3000/S19.2E-0-12480-898
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The first one will deliver a channel by number on the server, the second one
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will request the channel by unique channel id. In addition, you can specify
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the desired stream type as a path to the channel.
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http://hostname:3000/TS/3
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http://hostname:3000/PES/S19.2E-0-12480-898
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The first one would deliver the stream in TS, the second one in PES format.
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Possible values are 'PES', 'TS', 'PS', 'ES' and 'EXT'. You need to specify
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the ES format explicitly if you want to listen to radio channels. Play them
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back i.e. with mpg123.
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mpg123 http://hostname:3000/ES/200
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With 'EXT' you can also add parameters which are passed as arguments to the
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externremux script (e.g. http://hostname:3000/EXT;param1=value1;param2=value2/3)
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Check your externremux.sh script for the parameters it understands. For details
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on how to modify or write your own externremux.sh, please see the chapter upon
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externremux.sh further down.
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If you want to access streamdev's HTTP server from the Internet, do *not* grant
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access for anyone by allowing any IP in "streamdevhosts.conf". Instead, pass the
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"-a" commandline option to streamdev-server. It takes a username and a password
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as argument. Clients with an IP not accepted by "streamdevhosts.conf" will then
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have to login. The VDR commandline will have to look like this:
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vdr ... -P 'streamdev-server -a vdr:secret' ...
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Note the single quotes, as otherwise "-a" will be passed to VDR and not to
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streamdev-server. The login ("vdr" in the example above) doesn't have to exist
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as a system account.
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3.2 Usage IGMP multicast server:
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--------------------------------
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IGMP based multicast streaming is often used by settop boxes to receive IP TV.
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Streamdev's multicast server allows you to feed live TV from VDR to such a
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settop box. VLC is known to work well if you look for a software client.
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The advantage of multicasting is that the actual stream is sent out only once,
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regardless of how many clients want to receive it. The downside is, that you
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cannot simply multicast across network boundaries. You need multicast routers.
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For multicast streaming over the public Internet you would even need to register
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for your own IP range. So don't even think of multicasting via Internet with
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streamdev! Streamdev will send the stream only to one local ethernet segment and
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all clients must be connected to this same segment. There must not be a router
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inbetween. Also note that the client must not run on the streamdev-server
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machine.
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Each channel is offered on a different multicast IP. Channel 1 is available from
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multicast IP 239.255.0.1, channel 2 from 239.255.0.2 and so on. The upper limit
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is 239.255.254.255 which corresponds to channel 65279 (239.255.255.0/24 is
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reserved according to RFC-2365).
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Before you can use streamdev's multicast server, you might need to patch VDR.
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Binding an IGMP socket is a privileged operation, so you must start VDR as root.
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If you pass the -u option to VDR, it will drop almost all priviledges before
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streamdev is even loaded. In VDR < 1.7.22 this prevented streamdev from binding
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the socket. Apply either patch vdr-1.6.0-cap_net_raw.diff (VDR < 1.7.5) or
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vdr-1.7.21-cap_net_raw.diff (VDR < 1.7.22) to keep VDR from dropping capability
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CAP_NET_RAW. The patch is part of streamdev's source distribution. Check the
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patches subdirectory. There's no need to patchif you are running VDR >= 1.7.22
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or if VDR is kept running as root (not recommended).
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The multicast server is disabled by default. Enter the streamdev-server setup
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menu to enable it and - IMPORTANT - bind the multicast server to the IP of your
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VDR server's LAN ethernet card. The multicast server will refuse to start with
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the default bind adresse "0.0.0.0".
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Now edit your streamdevhosts.conf. To allow streaming of all channels, it must
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contain "239.255.0.0/16". Note that you cannot limit connections by client IP
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here. You can however restrict which channels are allowed to be multicasted.
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Enter individual multicast IPs instead of "239.255.0.0/16".
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By default, the linux kernel will refuse to join more than 20 multicast groups.
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You might want to increase this up to "number_of_channels + 1". Note that it's
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"number_of_channels", not "maximum_channel_number".
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#First 100 channels:
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bash# sysctl -w net.ipv4.igmp_max_memberships=101
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#All channels:
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bash# COUNT=$(grep -c '^[^:]' PATH_TO_YOUR/channels.conf)
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bash# sysctl -w net.ipv4.igmp_max_memberships=$((COUNT + 1))
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You need to run the sysctl command *before* VDR is started. The setting is lost
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after the next reboot. Check the documentation of your Linux distro on how to
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make the setting persist (i.e. have your distro change the value for you as
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part of the boot procedure). Most likely /etc/sysctl.conf is your friend.
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A multicast server never knows how many clients are actually receiving a stream.
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If a client signals that it leaves a multicast group, the server has to query
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for other listeners before it can stop the stream. This may delay zapping from
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one transponder to an other. The client will probably requests the new channel
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before the previous stream has been stopped. If there's no free DVB card, VDR
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won't be able to fulfill the request until a DVB card becomes available and the
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client resends the request.
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3.3 Usage VDR-to-VDR server:
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----------------------------
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You can activate the VDR-to-VDR server part in the PlugIn's Setup Menu. It is
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deactivated by default. The Parameter "VDR-to-VDR Server Port" specifies the
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port where you want the server to listen for incoming connections. The server
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will be activated when you push the OK button inside the setup menu, so there's
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no need to restart VDR.
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3.4 Usage VDR-to-VDR client:
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----------------------------
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Streamdev-client adds a "Suspend Server" item to VDR's mainmenu. With the
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setup parameter "Hide Mainmenu Entry" you can hide this menu item if you don't
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need it. "Suspend Server" is only useful if the server runs in "Offer suspend
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mode" with "Client may suspend" enabled.
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The parameter "Remote IP" uses an IP-Adress-Editor, where you can just enter
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the IP number with the number keys on your remote. After three digits (or if
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the next digit would result in an invalid IP adress, or if the first digit is
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0), the current position jumps to the next one. You can change positions with
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the left and right buttons, and you can cycle the current position using up
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and down. To confirm the entered address, press OK. So, if you want to enter
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the IP address "127.0.0.1", just mark the corresponding entry as active and
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type "127001<OK>" on your remote. If you want to enter "192.168.1.12", type
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"1921681<Right>12<OK>".
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The parameters "Remote IP" and "Remote Port" in the client's setup specify the
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address of the remote VDR-to-VDR server to connect to. Activate the client by
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setting "Start Client" to yes. It is disabled by default, because it wouldn't
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make much sense to start the client without specifying a server anyway. The
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client is activated after you push the OK button, so there's no need to restart
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VDR. Deactivation on-the-fly is not possible, so in order to deactivate the
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client, you will have to restart VDR. However requests to switch channels will
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be refused by streamdev-client once it has been deactivated. All other settings
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can be changed without restarting VDR.
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The client will try to connect to the server (in case it isn't yet) whenever
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a remote channel is requested. Just activate the client and switch to a
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channel that's not available by local devices. If anything goes wrong with the
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connection between the two, you will see it in the logfile instantly. If you
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now switch the client to a channel which isn't covered by it's own local
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devices, it will ask the server for it. If the server can (currently) receive
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that channel, the client will show it until you switch again, or until the
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server needs that card (if no other is free) for a recording on a different
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transponder.
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Only the needed PIDs are transferred, and additional PIDs can be turned on
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during an active transfer. This makes it possible to switch languages, receive
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additional channels (for recording on the client) and use plugins that use
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receivers themselves (like osdteletext).
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With "Filter Streaming" enabled, the client will receive meta information like
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EPG data and service information, just as if the client had its own DVB card.
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Link channels and even a client-side EPG scan have been reported to work.
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With maximum and minimum priority you can keep VDR from considering streamdev
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in certain cases. If for instance you have a streamdev client with its own DVB
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card, VDR might use streamdev for recording. If this is not what you want, you
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could set the maximum priority to 0. As recordings usually have a much higher
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priority (default 50), streamdev is now no longer used for recordings. The two
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parameters define the inclusive range of priorities for which streamdev will
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accept to tune. Setting the minimum priority to a higher value than the maximum,
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you will get two ranges: "up to maximum" and "minimum and above".
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If you are running at least VDR 1.7.0, you can also configure the "Broadcast
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Systems / Cost" of the streamdev-client device. On a pure streamdev-client only
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system it doesn't matter what you configure here. But if your client is equipped
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with a DVB card, you should read on. VDR always prefers the cheapest device
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in terms of supported broadcast systems and modulations. A DVB-S2 card supports
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two broadcast systems (DVB-S and DVB-S2). From VDR 1.7.15 on, the supported
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modulations are counted as well (QPSK, QAM32/64/128/256, VSB8/16, TURBO_FEC).
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So for a DVB-S2 card which does QPSK you'll get a total cost of three. A DVB-C
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card (one broadcast system) which can do QAM32,QAM64,QAM128,QAM256 would give
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you a total of five. Check your log for "frontend ... provides ... with ..."
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messages to find out the cost of your DVB cards. Then pick a suitable value for
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streamdev-client. With equal costs, VDR will usually prefer the DVB card and
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take streamdev for recordings. If streamdev's costs are higher, live TV will
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use your DVB card until a recordings kicks in. Then the recording will take the
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DVB card and live TV will be shifted to streamdev (you'll notice a short
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interruption of live TV).
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Note that streamdev-client acts similar to a DVB card. It is possible to receive
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multiple channels simultaneously, but only from the same transponder. Just add
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additional instances of streamdev-client and you will be able to receive as many
|
|
transponders at a time. The same trick allows a client to receive channels from
|
|
different servers. To create an additional instance, copy the streamdev-client
|
|
binary to a different name (e.g. streamdev-client2):
|
|
|
|
cd VDRPLUGINLIBDIR
|
|
cp libvdr-streamdev-client.so.1.X.X libvdr-streamdev-client2.so.1.X.X
|
|
|
|
Now add -Pstreamdev-client2 to the VDR commandline. In the VDR plugin setup
|
|
a second streamdev-client entry should show up. Both instances have to be
|
|
configured individually.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4. Other useful Plugins:
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
4.1 Plugins for VDR-to-VDR clients:
|
|
-----------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The following plugins are useful for VDR-to-VDR clients (i.e. VDRs running the
|
|
streamdev-client):
|
|
|
|
* remotetimers (http://vdr.schmirler.de/)
|
|
Add, edit, delete timers on client and server
|
|
|
|
* timersync (http://phivdr.dyndns.org/vdr/vdr-timersync/)
|
|
Automatically syncronizes timer lists of client and server. All recordings will
|
|
be made on the server
|
|
|
|
* remoteosd (http://vdr.schmirler.de/)
|
|
Provides access to the server's OSD menu
|
|
|
|
* epgsync (http://vdr.schmirler.de/)
|
|
Import EPG from server VDR
|
|
|
|
* femon (http://www.saunalahti.fi/~rahrenbe/vdr/femon/)
|
|
Display signal information from server's DVB card. SVDRP support must be enabled
|
|
in femon's setup
|
|
|
|
4.2 Plugins for Server:
|
|
-----------------------
|
|
|
|
* dummydevice (http://phivdr.dyndns.org/vdr/vdr-dummydevice/)
|
|
Recommended on a headless server (i.e. a server with no real output device).
|
|
Without this plugin, a budget DVB card could become VDR's primary device. This
|
|
causes unwanted sideeffects in certain situations.
|
|
|
|
4.3 Alternatives:
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
* xineliboutput (http://phivdr.dyndns.org/vdr/vdr-xineliboutput/)
|
|
With its networking option, xineliboutput provides an alternative to streamdev.
|
|
You will get the picture of the server VDR, including its OSD. However you
|
|
won't get independent clients, as they all share the same output.
|
|
|
|
5. externremux.sh:
|
|
------------------
|
|
|
|
When selecting streamtype "EXT", the TS stream from VDR is passed through an
|
|
external program for further processing. By default a script installed at
|
|
VDRCONFDIR/plugins/streamdev/externremux.sh is expected, however you may
|
|
specify a different location as parameter -r to the streamdev-server plugin
|
|
(see chapter upon Installation above).
|
|
|
|
The TS stream is passed to the script on stdin, the resulting stream is expected
|
|
on stdout. The following parameters are passed to the script in the environment:
|
|
|
|
* Information on the channel:
|
|
REMUX_CHANNEL_ID VDR channel ID
|
|
REMUX_CHANNEL_NAME Channel name
|
|
REMUX_VTYPE Video type (2 for MPEG-2)
|
|
REMUX_VPID Video PID (undefined if audio only)
|
|
REMUX_PPID PCR PID (undefined if equal to VPID)
|
|
REMUX_TPID Teletext PID (undefined if not available)
|
|
REMUX_APID Space separated list of audio pids
|
|
REMUX_ALANG Space separated list of audio languages
|
|
REMUX_DPID Space separated list of dolby pids
|
|
REMUX_DLANG Space separated list of dolby languages
|
|
REMUX_SPID Space separated list of subtitle pids
|
|
REMUX_SLANG Space separated list of subtitle languages
|
|
REMUX_PARAM_* All (user supplied) parameters (e.g. REMUX_PARAM_x)
|
|
|
|
* Information on the connection (CGI like)
|
|
REMOTE_ADDR Client IP
|
|
SERVER_NAME Local IP
|
|
SERVER_PORT Local port
|
|
SERVER_PROTOCOL Streamdev protocol (HTTP, VTP, IGMP)
|
|
SERVER_SOFTWARE Streamdev version
|
|
All HTTP headers converted to uppercase, '-' replaced by '_' (e.g. USER_AGENT)
|
|
|
|
The script should perform the following steps (pseudocode):
|
|
|
|
if (SERVER_PROTOCOL == HTTP)
|
|
write headers (including Content-Type) to STDOUT
|
|
write empty line to STDOUT
|
|
if (REQUEST_METHOD == HEAD)
|
|
exit
|
|
endif
|
|
endif
|
|
while (read STDIN)
|
|
remux to STDOUT
|
|
wend
|
|
|
|
onSIGINT/SIGKILL: cleanup and exit
|
|
|
|
|
|
6. Known Problems:
|
|
------------------
|
|
|
|
* There have been reports that channel switching with VDR 1.5.x/1.6.x clients
|
|
sometimes fails. Current version includes a workaround which seems to work, but
|
|
YMMV ;)
|
|
|
|
* Viewing encrypted channels became an issue with VDR's new CAM handling code.
|
|
Streamdev doesn't provide a (dummy) CAM, so out of the box, VDR won't ever try
|
|
to receive encrypted channels from streamdev. Pick one of the following
|
|
solutions to work around the problem:
|
|
|
|
1. Force VDR to use streamdev. Open the channels menu on the client (or edit its
|
|
channels.conf if you know how to do this) and set the CA field of all channels
|
|
that only the server can decrypt to streamdev's device index. Usually streamdev
|
|
will get number 9 or 10. Streamdev logs the actual device number when starting
|
|
up. So please consider the logs for the correct value. Remember to fill in
|
|
hexadecimal values if you are using an editor to modify your channels.conf
|
|
(number 10 becomes an "a", number 11 a "b", ...).
|
|
|
|
2. Apply either patch "patches/vdr-1.6.0-intcamdevices.patch" or patch
|
|
"patches/vdr-1.6.0-ignore_missing_cam.diff" to your client VDR. Intcamdevices
|
|
is the clean solution, but it modifies the VDR API. So you will need to
|
|
recompile all of your plugins. The ignore_missing_cam patch is trivial, no need
|
|
to recompile other plugins. However it is not suitable for clients with a DVB
|
|
card of their own.
|