From jwbensley at gmail.com Wed Jun 2 19:34:22 2010 From: jwbensley at gmail.com (James Bensley) Date: Wed, 2 Jun 2010 20:34:22 +0100 Subject: [Icecast] creating a station with internet explorer In-Reply-To: <20100524011031.CBE781C41AB@fraxinus.osuosl.org> References: <20100524011031.CBE781C41AB@fraxinus.osuosl.org> Message-ID: Surely you now the answer to that, its Icecast, seeing as you are on this Icecast mailing list? -- Regards, James. http://www.jamesbensley.co.cc/ - There are only 10 kinds of people in the world, those who understand trinary, those who don't understand trinary and those who don't understand trinary. From hquu at yahoo.com Wed Jun 2 21:08:06 2010 From: hquu at yahoo.com (Patrick Bohnet) Date: Wed, 2 Jun 2010 14:08:06 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [Icecast] [Possible bug] Invalid Switching on fallover? Message-ID: <771560.9413.qm@web57502.mail.re1.yahoo.com> I may have found a bug... I am not sure. I am new to Icecast, so this might be how things are meant to be, I have a Debian install with Icecast2 install from APT - Icecast 2.3.2 I have three mount points (all 128kbp mp3) /EDH.mp3 (public = 0 and hidden = 1) /live.mp3 (fallback-mount = /EDH.mp3 and fallback-override = 1) /dj1.mp3 (fallback-mount = /EDH.mp3, fallback-override = 1, public = 0, and\ hidden = 1) 1) I start a liquidaudio script that transmits to /EDH.mp3 2) I start a listener (tested with itunes and windows media player) on /live.mp3.m3u 3) I confirm that I hear the music from /EDH.mp3 4) I start broadcast to /dj1.mp3 (tried with liquidaudio, sam, and edcast) totally different music from the liquidaudio script 5) The music from step 2 is now listening to the audio from /dj1.mp3 instead of the /EDH.mp3 6) I start broadcasting to /live.mp3 directly 7) the listener from step 2 is still only hearing /dj1.mp3 this appears to be a potential bug with how I understand fallback to be working if two mount points both fallback with override to the same (third) mount point... which ever of the two "top" mount points begins broadcasting first will "take" all the listeners currently on that fallback, no matter where they came from. I tested it with removing the fallback from /dj1.mp3 and at step 5, the listeners still hear music from /EDH.mp3 and did not move to /dj1.mp3. This seams to be a case of a fallback override moving the users to the first available stream that fell back to that stream, not to the one that sent them. "Can I burn softly, a silent ember?" Quu Patrick Bohnet Demon Kitty Productions OtakuVideo From geoff at QuiteLikely.com Wed Jun 2 21:32:49 2010 From: geoff at QuiteLikely.com (Geoff Shang) Date: Thu, 3 Jun 2010 00:32:49 +0300 (IDT) Subject: [Icecast] [Possible bug] Invalid Switching on fallover? In-Reply-To: <771560.9413.qm@web57502.mail.re1.yahoo.com> References: <771560.9413.qm@web57502.mail.re1.yahoo.com> Message-ID: On Wed, 2 Jun 2010, Patrick Bohnet wrote: > this appears to be a potential bug with how I understand fallback to be > working if two mount points both fallback with override to the same > (third) mount point... which ever of the two "top" mount points begins > broadcasting first will "take" all the listeners currently on that > fallback, no matter where they came from. I reported this something like 5 or 6 years ago. I consider it a bug too but apparently it's meant to work like that. The (IMHO unecessary) solution is to set up a second fallback mount that relays the first one so that each mount has its own fallback mount to fall back to. Geoff. From daniel.bahena at gmail.com Mon Jun 7 23:41:24 2010 From: daniel.bahena at gmail.com (Daniel Bahena) Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2010 16:41:24 -0700 Subject: [Icecast] osx client Message-ID: Hi, I'm looking for an open source client for icecast2 to run it on OSx Leopard 10.5.8 I took a look at Nicecast but wasn't convinced by it. Any suggestions? Best regards, -- Dan Bahena http://twitter.com/informatux http://xti.informatux.net From bryan.brown at kcsb.org Tue Jun 8 00:25:10 2010 From: bryan.brown at kcsb.org (Bryan Brown) Date: Mon, 7 Jun 2010 17:25:10 -0700 Subject: [Icecast] osx client In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <14517CBF-6CC2-41AB-BCB2-09281CB8B0D3@kcsb.org> Dear Dan, I would give Nicecast the highest recommendation. We have a dedicated Icecast2 server that we use for remote broadcasts, and Nicecast has handled itself extremely well - even in some pretty high profile situations with consumer-grade connections (e.g. running an ethernet cable to a Linksys WTG54 router for a 3+ hour remote broadcast of a live concert). It also has some additional features that come in handy in a pinch (i.e. archiving, etc). We use Icecast2/Darkice on a linux box for our normal webstream, and, according to their site, Darkice does run on OS X. But I haven't needed to set it up on a Mac. Good luck, Bryan D. Brown KCSB Chief Engineer On Jun 7, 2010, at 4:41 PM, Daniel Bahena wrote: > Hi, > > I'm looking for an open source client for icecast2 to run it on OSx > Leopard 10.5.8 > > I took a look at Nicecast but wasn't convinced by it. > > Any suggestions? > > Best regards, > -- > Dan Bahena > http://twitter.com/informatux > http://xti.informatux.net > _______________________________________________ > Icecast mailing list > Icecast at xiph.org > http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/icecast > From jwbensley at gmail.com Tue Jun 8 07:38:56 2010 From: jwbensley at gmail.com (James Bensley) Date: Tue, 8 Jun 2010 08:38:56 +0100 Subject: [Icecast] osx client In-Reply-To: <14517CBF-6CC2-41AB-BCB2-09281CB8B0D3@kcsb.org> References: <14517CBF-6CC2-41AB-BCB2-09281CB8B0D3@kcsb.org> Message-ID: +1 for Nicecast, we use it with Butt, just the free version, used many times for remote broadcasts. -- Regards, James. http://www.jamesbensley.co.cc/ There are 10 kinds of people in the world; Those who understand Vigesimal, and 9 others...? From un at dom.de Fri Jun 11 11:27:30 2010 From: un at dom.de (uno) Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2010 13:27:30 +0200 Subject: [Icecast] mixer input for icecast Message-ID: <20100611112730.GA9432@aporee.org> hello, i'm looking for a mixer application as source for icecast. the app should be scriptable, e.g. it should take 2 or 3 input channels (files) at various volume levels and downmix it to one source stream for icecast. pretty much the same as a normal mixer does, but i want to control it by a kind of predefined timeline. any idea anybody? thanks, uno From david.baelde at gmail.com Fri Jun 11 19:04:36 2010 From: david.baelde at gmail.com (David Baelde) Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2010 14:04:36 -0500 Subject: [Icecast] mixer input for icecast In-Reply-To: <20100611112730.GA9432@aporee.org> References: <20100611112730.GA9432@aporee.org> Message-ID: Hi, Liquidsoap does that. I was hoping that somebody would say it before me, because I develop it ;) Among the listed 3rd party apps on icecast.org, I think it's the only one that fits your requirements. Another option would be to use jack to mix and darkice (or similar) to stream, but I don't know a scriptable jack mixer. Hope that helps, -- David PS: http://savonet.sf.net and savonet-users at lists.sf.net From un at dom.de Sat Jun 12 11:44:04 2010 From: un at dom.de (uno) Date: Sat, 12 Jun 2010 13:44:04 +0200 Subject: [Icecast] mixer input for icecast In-Reply-To: References: <20100611112730.GA9432@aporee.org> Message-ID: <20100612114404.GA31586@aporee.org> David Baelde: > Liquidsoap does that. I was hoping that somebody would say it before > me, because I develop it ;) Among the listed 3rd party apps on > icecast.org, I think it's the only one that fits your requirements. hi David, perfect, thanks. i've taken a quick look into the docs, very well organised, seems that the possibilities are only limited by one's imagination... great! i'll dig into... --uno From myqueenc at myrecradio.com Mon Jun 14 17:24:14 2010 From: myqueenc at myrecradio.com (REC Radio/Colette Tedeschi) Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2010 13:24:14 -0400 Subject: [Icecast] Calculating Listeners Message-ID: <001101cb0be6$6a574940$3f05dbc0$@com> Good Afternoon, I would really appreciate information on listener stats. The only way I know of viewing any at all is by accessing the icecast server page, but it has limited information that only seems to be current not archived. How can I keep a running daily tally as well as the duration each listener? Also, what time frame does the listener peak below refer to? Thank you~ Example: listener_peak 3 listeners 0 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From msmith at xiph.org Mon Jun 14 18:13:54 2010 From: msmith at xiph.org (Michael Smith) Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2010 11:13:54 -0700 Subject: [Icecast] Calculating Listeners In-Reply-To: <001101cb0be6$6a574940$3f05dbc0$@com> References: <001101cb0be6$6a574940$3f05dbc0$@com> Message-ID: On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 10:24 AM, REC Radio/Colette Tedeschi < myqueenc at myrecradio.com> wrote: > Good Afternoon, > > > I would really appreciate information on listener stats. The only way I > know of viewing any at all is by accessing the icecast server page, but it > has limited information that only seems to be current not archived. How can > I keep a running daily tally as well as the duration each listener? Also, > what time frame does the listener peak below refer to? > The access log contains sufficient information that you can calculate the listeners at any point in time. You should process the logs to determine this information. Icecast won't do that for you directly. The listener_peak refers to the lifetime of the stream. Mike -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From myqueenc at myrecradio.com Mon Jun 14 19:23:13 2010 From: myqueenc at myrecradio.com (REC Radio/Colette Tedeschi) Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2010 15:23:13 -0400 Subject: [Icecast] Tools to process access log files Message-ID: <001101cb0bf7$099023a0$1cb06ae0$@com> Good Afternoon, Can anyone tell me of any tools they use to process the access logs generated by Icecast, so I can have running readable data in a user friendly format? For example: How many listeners were listening to a particular song or how many listeners in a given day. Thank You. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dm8tbr at afthd.tu-darmstadt.de Mon Jun 14 21:25:42 2010 From: dm8tbr at afthd.tu-darmstadt.de (Thomas B. Ruecker) Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2010 23:25:42 +0200 Subject: [Icecast] Tools to process access log files In-Reply-To: <001101cb0bf7$099023a0$1cb06ae0$@com> References: <001101cb0bf7$099023a0$1cb06ae0$@com> Message-ID: <20100614212542.GA4238@dk0td.afthd.tu-darmstadt.de> On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 03:23:13PM -0400, REC Radio/Colette Tedeschi wrote: > Can anyone tell me of any tools they use to process the access logs > generated by Icecast, so I can have running readable data in a user friendly > format? The usual http log analyzers will do for basic needs. There used to be an webalizer fork called streamalizer, but I think part of that was merged into webalizer. > For example: How many listeners were listening to a particular song Use the playlist.log it should log the number of listeners along with the song metadata and the mountpoint. > or how many listeners in a given day. see http log analysis Cheers Thomas From jiandu1991 at gmail.com Sun Jun 20 04:04:12 2010 From: jiandu1991 at gmail.com (Jian Du) Date: Sun, 20 Jun 2010 14:04:12 +1000 Subject: [Icecast] Icecast not listening ports? Message-ID: Hey guys, First time using a mailing list, hopefully I've done it correctly. I've installed Icecast, and configured ports 8008 and 8009 in my icecast.xml file and started the server with icecast -b -c /etc/icecast.xml Icecast then loads and I can see the process in the command 'top' However, I can't access it with my domain URL, I have Shoutcast setup on this server on different ports and they are accessible via browser. If I use lynx on the server, it loads the web interface... lynx http://localhost:8008 When I access it on my computer, safari says I cannot connect on the domain eg: melody.domain.com:8004 (domain.com being example domain) Netstat doesn't seem to show icecast listening on the 8008 and 8009 ports either... Anything I missed? Cheers! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From geoff at QuiteLikely.com Sun Jun 20 09:11:49 2010 From: geoff at QuiteLikely.com (Geoff Shang) Date: Sun, 20 Jun 2010 12:11:49 +0300 (IDT) Subject: [Icecast] Icecast not listening ports? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: On Sun, 20 Jun 2010, Jian Du wrote: > First time using a mailing list, hopefully I've done it correctly. Looks fine to me. > I've installed Icecast, and configured ports 8008 and 8009 in my icecast.xml > file and started the server with > icecast -b -c /etc/icecast.xml > > Icecast then loads and I can see the process in the command 'top' > > However, I can't access it with my domain URL, I have Shoutcast setup on > this server on different ports and they are accessible via browser. > > If I use lynx on the server, it loads the web interface... > lynx http://localhost:8008 > > When I access it on my computer, safari says I cannot connect on the domain > eg: melody.domain.com:8004 (domain.com being example domain) Presumably that should be 8008. > Netstat doesn't seem to show icecast listening on the 8008 and 8009 ports > either... > > Anything I missed? Did you fill in the bind atribute at all? Usually you can just leave this commented out and it will bind to all available interfaces. Geoff. From jiandu1991 at gmail.com Mon Jun 21 04:34:54 2010 From: jiandu1991 at gmail.com (Jian Du) Date: Mon, 21 Jun 2010 14:34:54 +1000 Subject: [Icecast] Icecast not listening ports? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: 127.0.0.1 8008 127.0.0.1 Yep... set at 8008, netstat doesn't show that it's actually listening to those ports I don't think... don't see *:8008 and *:8009 You're right about the melody.domain.com:8004 part, typo, should be 8008 (oops!) Installed via 'yum install icecast' on CentOS... weird? -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From geoff at QuiteLikely.com Mon Jun 21 09:02:48 2010 From: geoff at QuiteLikely.com (Geoff Shang) Date: Mon, 21 Jun 2010 12:02:48 +0300 (IDT) Subject: [Icecast] Icecast not listening ports? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: On Mon, 21 Jun 2010, Jian Du wrote: > 127.0.0.1 > > > 8008 > 127.0.0.1 > The parameter is your problem, you're telling it to only listen on 127.0.0.1 aka localhost. You can comment it out or remove it entirely to have it listen on all available interfaces. You may want to also change hostname to something more meaningful. Geoff. From rajeshnautiyal213 at gmail.com Fri Jun 25 08:11:53 2010 From: rajeshnautiyal213 at gmail.com (Rajesh Nautiyal) Date: Fri, 25 Jun 2010 13:41:53 +0530 Subject: [Icecast] mux two or more than two streams Message-ID: How can I mux two or more streams to server. my problem is that I hv three camera and I want to stream those live video to browser. please give give solution with command . -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jiandu1991 at gmail.com Fri Jun 25 08:15:16 2010 From: jiandu1991 at gmail.com (Jian Du) Date: Fri, 25 Jun 2010 18:15:16 +1000 Subject: [Icecast] mux two or more than two streams In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Are they from one computer? You can take a look at 'Virtual Audio Cables' to do that. It's Shareware, but it does what you want pretty nicely. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ernygand at gmail.com Mon Jun 28 00:19:41 2010 From: ernygand at gmail.com (Ernesto Gandini) Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2010 08:19:41 +0800 Subject: [Icecast] hi. y--f Message-ID: Hi,, I find a good website, I would like to introduce it to you?It will give you big surprise:excellent products,high quality? competitive price. If you are free, please visit it: http://icbcshop12.info . have a nice day! $--^