DSMYTH. Google it or look at sourceforge specifically. It sets up the Myth:// and Mythlive:// and all that stuff. <br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 1/16/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">Michael T. Dean</b> <<a href="mailto:mtdean@thirdcontact.com">
mtdean@thirdcontact.com</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">Andy Foster wrote:<br>> This question rears its ugly head every couple of months but I'm a
<br>> little baffled by what is needed, minimally, to stream videos from myth.<br>><br>> Some people say they're able to play simply by installing dsmyth,<br>> clicking on the <a href="myth://hostname:6543/xyz.mpg">
myth://hostname:6543/xyz.mpg</a> link in the appropriate<br>> browser, and the media player of choice launches and starts streaming.<br>><br>> I don't understand how they do this at all. This is the myth protocol,
<br>> and thats the mythbackend address, but how does their media player<br>> understand the myth:// uri? As I understand it in this case the media<br>> player is basically being launched with the uri as an argument. I have
<br>> tried this with wmp, media player classic and videolan client, none of<br>> them comprehend the myth:// uri, and my backend log shows no access<br>> attempts.<br>><br>> As an alternative I tried disabling the url rewriting for windows
<br>> clients so that myweb simply provides a<br>> <a href="http://hostname/valid/path/to/files.mpg">http://hostname/valid/path/to/files.mpg</a> . When I click this, it<br>> prompts me to download it. I can download and then watch it without
<br>> problems (unless the file is over 2gb, but thats another matter), but<br>> considering the sizes involved I'd prefer to stream. If I put this uri<br>> directly into videolan, it works<br>><br>> Both of these behaviours seem to be correct to me, but are
<br>> unfortunately not what I want. So how do I either:<br>> 1. make the media players understand the myth protocol?<br>> 2. make my browser (firefox) allow me to pass the http:// uri to the<br>> program of my choosing?
<br>><br>> I understand there are a lot of workarounds for this, including samba<br>> shares (I've tried this but similarly have not been able to launch<br>> anything from a valid file:// uri), videolan on both client and
<br>> server, but I would really like to keep this minimal, as well as be<br>> able to use the media player of my choice.<br>MythStreamTV (not so great on the minimal side, but...)<br><br>Mike<br>_______________________________________________
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