LibrePlanet: Conference/2016/Streaming

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== Keynote capture script ==
 
== Keynote capture script ==
  

Latest revision as of 11:57, 28 March 2016

Keynote capture script

#!/bin/bash

xid=$(xwininfo  -root -all|grep "Jitsi Meet" | sed -e 's/^ *//' | cut -d\  -f1)
[ 1${xid}1 != 11 ] && xidparameter="xid=$xid"

export GST_DEBUG=4
DATE=$(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H_%M_%S)
PASSWORD=xxx

# pactl list|grep alsa_output
device1="alsa_output.usb-Burr-Brown_from_TI_USB_Audio_CODEC-00-CODEC.analog-stereo.monitor"
device2="alsa_input.usb-Burr-Brown_from_TI_USB_Audio_CODEC-00-CODEC.analog-stereo"

gst-launch-1.0 --gst-debug-level=$1 --eos-on-shutdown ximagesrc use-damage=false $xidparameter show-pointer=false !\
 videoconvert ! videorate ! video/x-raw,framerate=20/1 ! videoscale ! video/x-raw, width=1024, height=768 !  \
 vp8enc min_quantizer=1 max_quantizer=10 cpu-used=10 deadline=41000 threads=2 ! queue ! mux. \
 pulsesrc device=$device1 ! adder name=mix ! vorbisenc  quality=0.4 ! queue ! mux. \
 pulsesrc device=$device2 ! mix. \
 webmmux streamable=true name=mux ! queue ! tee name=s ! queue ! filesink location=keynote-${DATE}.webm \
 s. ! queue leaky=2 ! shout2send ip=live2.fsf.org port=80 mount=keynote.webm password=$PASSWORD sync=false 2>&1 |\
 tee keynote-${DATE}.log

OpenBroadcaster 2 v4l

This instructions are for building OpenBroadcaster on Debian testing, plus ffmpeg as a dependency.

NOTE that for OBS to run it is necessary OpenGL 3.2 which is not available in Debian 8 Stable. Follow the install instructions after upgrading to Debian testing.

Building/installing:

Install dependencies:

# apt-get install build-essential pkg-config cmake git checkinstall libx11-dev libgl1-mesa-dev \
libpulse-dev libxcomposite-dev libxinerama-dev libv4l-dev libudev-dev libfreetype6-dev \
libfontconfig-dev qtbase5-dev libqt5x11extras5-dev libx264-dev libxcb-xinerama0-dev \
libxcb-shm0-dev libjack-jackd2-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev zlib1g-dev yasm gstreamer-tools pavucontrol

Download and build ffmpeg:

$ git clone --depth 1 git://source.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg.git
$ cd ffmpeg
$ ./configure --enable-shared --prefix=/usr
$ make -j4

# checkinstall --pkgname=FFmpeg --fstrans=no --backup=no \
    --pkgversion="$(date +%Y%m%d)-git" --deldoc=yes

Download and build obs:

$ git clone https://github.com/jp9000/obs-studio.git
$ cd obs-studio
$ mkdir build && cd build
$ cmake -DUNIX_STRUCTURE=1 -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr ..
$ make -j4
# checkinstall --pkgname=obs-studio --fstrans=no --backup=no \
   --pkgversion="$(date +%Y%m%d)-git" --deldoc=yes

Install v4l loop:

# apt-get install v4l2loopback-dkms
# echo v4l2loopback >> /etc/modules
# modprobe v4l2loopback


Install local stream manager:

# apt-get install crtmpserver

Setup

Run obs, set streaming settings to:

  • URL: rtmp://127.0.0.1/flvplayback
  • Stream Key: stream


Run streaming to v4l:

# modprobe snd-aloop
# echo snd-aloop >> /etc/modules
$ gst-launch-1.0 rtmpsrc location="rtmp://127.0.0.1/flvplayback/stream.flv live=1" ! decodebin name=decoded ! videorate !\
video/x-raw,framerate=25/1 ! queue leaky=1 !  v4l2sink device=/dev/video1 sync=false \
decoded. ! audioconvert ! queue leaky=1 ! pulsesink device=alsa_output.1.analog-stereo sync=false

Start Jitsi Meet session on Chromium (recommended browser, others may work).

  • Configure Chromium to use Dummy video device (0x0000) as the video source, and Loopback Analog Stereo as the audio source.
  • Launch pavucontrol and on the Recording tab, set Chromium to record from Monitor of Loopback Analog Stereo.

Caveats

  • This setup introduces ~1s delay on video and audio.

Troubleshooting

Test streaming:

$ gst-launch-1.0 rtmpsrc location="rtmp://127.0.0.1/flvplayback/stream.flv live=1"  ! decodebin ! xvimagesink sync=false

Test v4l device:

$ gst-launch-1.0 v4l2src device=/dev/video1 ! xvimagesink

Speaker streaming feed

The streaming feed is processed by ABYSS front-end. ABYSS (ABYSS Broadcast Your Stream Successfully) is written in Python, in version 0.1 it consist of a main module used for generating the GUI via GTK3, a module for creating and handling the pipeline using GStreamer-1.0 plugins, and a config file to set inputs/ouputs and server parameters.

Here is the main pipeline (using the Elphel camera) as it could be used in a bash command-line:

gst-launch-1.0 -e rtspsrc location=rtsp://192.168.48.2:554 ! queue ! rtpjpegdepay ! tee name=rawvideo ! queue ! jpegdec max-errors=-1 ! tee name=videodecoded ! queue ! xvimagesink sync=false ! \
rawvideo. ! queue ! filesink location=[rawvideo_defaultname] \
videodecoded. ! videoscale ! video/x-raw, width=640, height=360 ! vp8enc min_quantizer=1 max_quantizer=13 cpu-used=5 deadline=42000 threads=2 sharpness=7 ! queue ! webmmux name=mux2 \
pulsesrc device=[input_source_name]! level interval=200000000 ! queue ! vorbisenc quality=0.3 ! tee name=rawaudio \
rawaudio. ! queue ! oggmux ! tee name=streamaudio ! queue ! filesink location=[audio_defaultname] \
streamaudio. ! queue leaky=2! shout2send ip=server.domain.name port=80 mount=testaudio.ogg password=[server_password] \
rawaudio. ! queue ! mux2. \
mux2. ! tee name=streamfull ! queue ! filesink location=[stream_defaultname] \
streamfull. ! queue leaky=2! shout2send ip=server.domain.name port=80 mount=teststream.webm password=[server_password]

Here is the backup pipeline in case of Elphel failure, the input is based on USB webcam:

gst-launch-1.0 -e v4l2src device=/dev/video[0-9]* ! video/x-raw, width=640, height=360 ! tee name=rawvideo ! queue ! xvimagesink sync=false ! \
rawvideo. ! queue ! mkvmux ! filesink location=[rawvideo_defaultname] \
rawvideo. ! vp8enc min_quantizer=1 max_quantizer=13 cpu-used=5 deadline=42000 threads=2 sharpness=7 ! queue ! webmmux name=mux2 \
pulsesrc device=[input_source_name]! level interval=200000000 ! queue ! vorbisenc quality=0.3 ! tee name=rawaudio \
rawaudio. ! queue ! oggmux ! tee name=streamaudio ! queue ! filesink location=[audio_defaultname] \
streamaudio. ! queue leaky=2! shout2send ip=server.domain.name port=80 mount=testaudio.ogg password=[server_password] \
rawaudio. ! queue ! mux2. \
mux2. ! tee name=streamfull ! queue ! filesink location=[stream_defaultname] \
streamfull. ! queue leaky=2! shout2send ip=server.domain.name port=80 mount=teststream.webm password=[server_password]

Here is the test pipeline to check the Elphel framing/focusing and audio inputs:

gst-launch-1.0 -e rtspsrc location=rtsp://192.168.48.2:554 ! queue ! rtpjpegdepay ! jpegdec max-errors=-1 ! queue ! xvimagesink sync=false ! \
pulsesrc device=[input_source_name]! level interval=200000000 ! queue ! pulsesink device=[output_source_name] sync=false

Setup

  • Boot the computer
  • Fill out .abyss config file
  • Set a virtual interface (if not hard coded)
 # ifcongif eth1:0 192.168.48.50

NOTE Command-line use on a X200 laptop with an Elphel address of 192.168.48.2

  • Plug and power the Elphel camera
  • Plug the webcam
  • Plug the USB mixing desk
  • Launch ABYSS
  • Test the setup by clicking 'Set-up test' button
  • If everything ok, quit test mode by clicking the previous button
  • Start the streaming by clicking 'Stream' button

Caveats

  • No automatic switch from main to backup pipeline if the Elphel camera is physically disconnected from its switch.

Should be solved in next version of ABYSS.

  • If internet connection is lost during streaming, the pipeline doesn't fail, moreover the files are still recorded on the local disk.