On 09/17/2014 10:09 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Wed, 2014-09-17 at 08:01 +1000, Stephen Morris wrote:
Keeping the neighbours out is just standard network practice: use a
decent WPA password on the router, and keep a tight control on
incoming
connections via the server firewall. IIRC the server config can also
restrict clients to certain IPs though I haven't bothered with that.
My concern with dlna from Windows or Linux was not so much with
neighbours hacking into the network, but if the dlna stream is not
transmitted to a specific device like Miracast is, then it was
potentially conceivable that it could be broadcast and inadvertently
played on the neighbours receiver without really meaning to.
It *is* transmitted to a specific device, but the transmission is
initiated by the client pulling it from the server rather than the
server pushing it to the client. At the transport level it's exactly the
same. The neighbours are not going to be bothered a) because it's not a
multicast service, i.e. each client gets its own individual stream, and
b) because they can't see inside your network (as long as you set it up
correctly as mentioned last time).
One of my collegues that I work with uses a homeplug type device and
tells me it works very well, so I could look at that although I'm not
sure how well it would work in a powerboard as I don't have any spare
wall power points.
No way to tell without trying it, but these things are designed for
fairly noisy environments and even multiple phases (i.e. homes with
several power rings). All the same, I would put the Homeplugs on their
own sockets and move something else to the multiconnector if possible.
I have a few other issues I need to sort out as well.
I have finally managed to get nfs on the nas usable but the playback
on
the android player is worse than the playback via smb on the same
device. I can use dlna to get the player to stream movies from the
nas
which seems to give a bit better performance, but I have movies in 3
directories, with one directory containing mp4 files, the 2nd with
mov
files and the 3rd with an mkv files, but dlna is unable to even see
the
directory containing the mkv files and at the moment I don't know
why.
The 2 directories that dlna can see were created by Windows whereas
the
directory it can't see was created from Fedora via Samba, which might
explain the issue but I don't know why that should be any different.
It may also depend on the client side. In the past I've had problems
with some clients which couldn't see MKV files (because they didn't have
the codec). However you should recheck the server config file. Does it
list all the places you keep content? What happens if you put an MKV
file in the MP4 directory? Does it show up or not? It would be helpful
to know what server you're using now. As I said before, minidlna is very
easy to set up.
I don't have a separate directory per format, but use directories for
TV, Movies, Home Video etc.
I have similar directory structures, but I have now resolved my issue
with dlna not being able to see the top level directory that contained
the sublevel directories containing mkv files. I tried renaming the top
level directory from windows but the client still couldn't see it. It
wasn't until I refreshed the multimedia service on the server that the
client could then see the directory, sub-directories and mkv files. What
I don't understand is why dlna had trouble seeing the directories but
NFS and Samba had no issues at all.
I'm using a Dlink DNS-320L Nas box with 2 Western Digital Nas 1TB disks
configured as Raid 0 connected via ethernet to my wireless
modem/router/phone for my server.
Now that I have the Nas sorted out I need to sort out ffmpeg and why it
does the things it does. Its giving me grief when I convert videos to
mp4 format in that it insists on using aac for the audio codec, and then
refusing to undertake the conversion unless I supply 2 additional
parameters because aac is still beta. If it really is beta why is it
using that codec by default when not explicitly told to?
My main concern with using a powerboard, because I don't have any
choice, was using the homeplug device with other devices overloading the
powerboard having had issues with a 2000W heater destroying powerboards,
and having the electronic store that provided the powerboard tell me I
should never plug the heater into the powerboard, that I should only
ever plug it into the wall power socket as powerboards are not designed
for that load.
regards,
Steve
poc
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