[Icecast] CentOS AutoDJ Problem
Jo se
kulturu01 at gmail.com
Wed Mar 5 22:42:27 UTC 2014
Thanks a lot man
But i have another question
how can i install it?
i try to do it but it wasn't be successfull on it,
I try a tutorial about it from a GitHub, but wasn't successfull
is it really necesary install airtime to play liquidsoap?
and i notice than installing it, some of the Development tools necesary to
install it doesn't install
any idea or suggestion would be much apreciated.
Thanks in advance
-Jo se-
On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 5:43 AM, MARŠ - Luka Cvetko <luka at radiomars.si>wrote:
> Hello,
>
> here are my personal suggestions on the matter. I will stick to the
> Icecast and streaming part of it, as other questions in your message regard
> the difference between Linux distributions in general (CentOS is one flavor
> of Linux, different from Ubuntu or Debian). Note that there are many other
> solutions available.
>
> 2014-03-03 15:07 GMT+01:00 Jo se <kulturu01 at gmail.com>:
>
> You'll see, i have one CentOS icecast server and i want it to make it
>> autoDj when no Dj will be streaming live through the radio.
>>
>
> To have the server relay a live feed and play automated music while the
> live feed is inactive, use Liquidsoap (
> http://
> savonet.sourceforge.net).
> It is a "programming language for audio," so you are able to program
> what happens with your stream completely trough the command line.
> For a novice, something similar to the open-source Airtime (
> http://www.sourcefabric.org/en/airtime/features/) would be better. This
> piece of software is based on liquid soap, but includes a sweet graphical
> interface. Your DJ's will be able to upload music, automate music or make
> playlists even trough their browsers.
> Commercial options such as CentovaCast are available.
>
>
>
>> Also, i like to know how to make it auto-start when i turn on the
>> computer (of course, make it run as a service)
>>
>
> If you use liquid soap, add your .liq script to the start sequence. In
> Debian, that would be with the update-rc.d command. Liquidsoap runs as a
> daemon using the -d flag. You can run any command as a daemon by installing
> the "daemon" package.
> Airtime will do the startup for you.
>
> Kind regards,
> Luka
>
> _______________________________________________
> Icecast mailing list
> Icecast at xiph.org
> http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/icecast
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.xiph.org/pipermail/icecast/attachments/20140305/7b16dc2d/attachment.htm>
More information about the Icecast
mailing list