Mercurial > audlegacy-plugins
changeset 2922:12588a9a458f
added some docs about Icecast plugin
author | Andrew O. Shadoura <bugzilla@tut.by> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 20 Aug 2008 02:46:53 +0300 |
parents | 296fd6e83edb |
children | 084e30521f03 |
files | README.icecast |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 88 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/README.icecast Wed Aug 20 02:46:53 2008 +0300 @@ -0,0 +1,88 @@ +Icecast plugin notes +-------------------- + +0. Build-time requirements +========================== + +To build Icecast plugin successfully, you need at least: + + * Audacious development files (audacious-dev package) + + * Audacious plugins sources themselves + and all their build-time dependencies + + * libshout development files (libshout3-dev package) + +Please note that Icecast plugin must be compiled *after* FileWriter plugin, +as they share some pieces of code (namely, encoding backends and format +conversion routines). If you build all plugins, this is done automagically. + + +1. Run-time requirements +======================== + +To run Icecast plugin, you need: + + * Icecast 2 server running somewhere, maybe at your local host, + to which you have "source" access + + * libshout version 2.0+ (libshout3 package) + + +2. Usage recommendations +======================== + +The plugin is implemented as both output and effect. This means that you can +set it as the only Audacious output, if you don't need to hear anything, or +you can listen to music and send the same audio data to Icecast server. + +Please note that using plugin as effect is recommended. If you want to turn off +your speakers, just use Null audio output plugin. + +The next thing you need to do is to decide what kind of stream do you want. You +can use MPEG Layer 3 or Ogg Vorbis encoder. Currently supported are LAME and +vorbisenc. Depending on your system configuration you may or may not have LAME, +as it has patent problems with Fraunhofer IIS, and Debian doesn't provide +packages for it. + +If you are Debian user and want to use LAME anyway, refer to debian-multimedia +project. + + +3. Configuration +================ + +First of all, you need to set up Icecast 2 properly. Note: previous versions of +Icecast as well as any versions of Shoutcast were not tested and are not +guaranteed to work at all. + +Usually, if you have single-user Icecast 2 setup, you should use user name +"source" and appropriate password. In either case, refer to Icecast 2 manual +for details. + +Mount point is a path on Icecast server, where your stream will be available. +I.e., if you have server at your local machine on default port, and mountpoint +is "/test", the whole URL of your stream would be + + http://127.1:8000/test + +If you don't specify mount point, mount point is set to "/". Don't do this. + +The connection timeout option is treated differently when plugin is in output +or effect mode. When being used as output plugin, this setting specifies the +time between last song ends (or "Stop" button click) and actual disconnect. +When being used as effect plugin, this setting specifies maximum time between +sequential portions of audio data sent to server. + +Plugin has internal buffer which collects audio data being sent to server. You +can fine tune size of this buffer. If buffer is too small, data will be sent +directly to the server bypassing this buffer. If buffer is too big, there can +be large pauses in audio data. + +You can set some information about your stream. First of all, you can provide +stream name, its description, music genre (or genres), URL of site where +listeners can read more about your radio. Also, you can ask server to list +the stream in any directories it knows about. Please refer to Icecast 2 +documentation for more details about this. + + -- Andrew O. Shadoura <bugzilla@tut.by> \ No newline at end of file