2006-02-18, 10:45 PM
Hi;
I'm playing with playback of recordings over the web via enhanced webadmin.
the GB-PVR box is on 802.11b wireless, although I have a 'g' router and likely have a spare PCI 802.11g card somewhere that could go into the PVR box.
I can get about 5 seconds of a movie to play (using VLC. OS X) using the URL created in the .m3u generated by webadmin. Playback then stops; except from webadmin log below. All my other admin tasks work fine via webadmin, whether LAN (direct connect to the XP box) or WAN (via ssh tunnel).
If I put the 10/100 wireless card in, will that be enough bandwidth for web playback within the LAN? From WAN side, it would be neat to be able to do remote playback, but I run external connections thru an sshtunnel- sshd supplied by a Cobalt Qube MIPS box running NetBSD, which I don't think has nearly the chutzpa for this task. It is unlikely that I'll replace it though, we have bonded .
How many people run their GBPVR naked to the world by forwarding port 7647 directly to the XP box? The idea makes me nervous to say the least...
Is there a way to "degrade" the quality on the fly so the streaming requirements would be less? The movies I'm testing with are set up as "medium" quality, using the default settings for "medium".
Thanks--
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2/18/2006 5:11:51 PM.401 VERBOSE [4] RecordingFactory.loadSchedule()
2/18/2006 5:11:51 PM.401 VERBOSE [4] getValue cached value: /settings/AutoRemoveMissingRecordings : true
2/18/2006 5:14:48 PM.932 ERROR [4] [14]: outfile.Write Exception: System.Net.Sockets.SocketException: An established connection was aborted by the software in your host machine
at System.Net.Sockets.Socket.Send(Byte[] buffer, Int32 offset, Int32 size, SocketFlags socketFlags)
at xbde30302059b0f67.x4c7b16547f6813c5.xe851103c6cdd3289(Byte[] x75381418ec342259, Int32 x0849bae34e5d8c09, Int32 xa91708beab5e1e03)
at xbde30302059b0f67.x54043f9854585ee5.FlushResponse(Boolean x358231d6356effcf)
at System.Web.HttpResponse.Flush(Boolean finalFlush)
at System.Web.HttpWriter.WriteFromStream(Byte[] data, Int32 offset, Int32 size)
at System.Web.HttpResponseStream.Write(Byte[] buffer, Int32 offset, Int32 count)
I'm playing with playback of recordings over the web via enhanced webadmin.
the GB-PVR box is on 802.11b wireless, although I have a 'g' router and likely have a spare PCI 802.11g card somewhere that could go into the PVR box.
I can get about 5 seconds of a movie to play (using VLC. OS X) using the URL created in the .m3u generated by webadmin. Playback then stops; except from webadmin log below. All my other admin tasks work fine via webadmin, whether LAN (direct connect to the XP box) or WAN (via ssh tunnel).
If I put the 10/100 wireless card in, will that be enough bandwidth for web playback within the LAN? From WAN side, it would be neat to be able to do remote playback, but I run external connections thru an sshtunnel- sshd supplied by a Cobalt Qube MIPS box running NetBSD, which I don't think has nearly the chutzpa for this task. It is unlikely that I'll replace it though, we have bonded .
How many people run their GBPVR naked to the world by forwarding port 7647 directly to the XP box? The idea makes me nervous to say the least...
Is there a way to "degrade" the quality on the fly so the streaming requirements would be less? The movies I'm testing with are set up as "medium" quality, using the default settings for "medium".
Thanks--
---
2/18/2006 5:11:51 PM.401 VERBOSE [4] RecordingFactory.loadSchedule()
2/18/2006 5:11:51 PM.401 VERBOSE [4] getValue cached value: /settings/AutoRemoveMissingRecordings : true
2/18/2006 5:14:48 PM.932 ERROR [4] [14]: outfile.Write Exception: System.Net.Sockets.SocketException: An established connection was aborted by the software in your host machine
at System.Net.Sockets.Socket.Send(Byte[] buffer, Int32 offset, Int32 size, SocketFlags socketFlags)
at xbde30302059b0f67.x4c7b16547f6813c5.xe851103c6cdd3289(Byte[] x75381418ec342259, Int32 x0849bae34e5d8c09, Int32 xa91708beab5e1e03)
at xbde30302059b0f67.x54043f9854585ee5.FlushResponse(Boolean x358231d6356effcf)
at System.Web.HttpResponse.Flush(Boolean finalFlush)
at System.Web.HttpWriter.WriteFromStream(Byte[] data, Int32 offset, Int32 size)
at System.Web.HttpResponseStream.Write(Byte[] buffer, Int32 offset, Int32 count)