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Nick Rout wrote:<br>
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<pre wrap="">figurations...
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<pre wrap=""><!---->
I don't have the answer to your question, but I can say that dvbstream
can also multicast a whole transponder (or less if you don't want all
of it).
I have also seen a setup where vlc was used to stream the transponder
and then used mythtv network recorder. This was before multirec came
available in mythtv, so was a way around the lack of multirec.
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I did run across some posts using Google along those lines. I didn't
realise that it was a workaround for multirecord. Mumudvb is a fork of
dvbstream I believe and the developer is very helpful with pretty
reasonable documentation so I'm pretty happy with it at the moment. As
for vlc, I also looked at it but decided against it because its a bit
of overkill and I thought it might be a bit resource intensive because
of that. I'm wanting it to run as lean as possible on some fairly
light hardware. I have it running on a converted thin client (HP
T5700) and the processes were using ~40% for each transponder so I
can't squeeze much more out of it!<br>
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So I don't have a solution for your problem, just suggestions for
different ways to kill the cat :)
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Mmmm cat...<br>
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Thanks for your thoughts Nick.<br>
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BTW I would think you'd be lucky to stream even one channel of DVB-T
HD over wireless g, let alone a whole transponder!
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I might have been a bit optimistic but I thought one of the lower res
channels might have worked OK. I'm not really up to play with the
whole multicast thing but since they are on separate IP addresses I
assumed that you could just receive each channel separately. I'm not
too worried about it, I just thought I'd say what worked and what
didn't.<br>
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