Video stream url for VLC/DVR:
- rtsp://192.168.1.93:554/user=admin&password=&channel=&stream=.sdp?real_stream--rtp-caching=100
Telnet access
- telnet 192.168.1.10 23
- Localhost login: root
- Password: xmhdipc
max$ telnet 192.168.0.112 9527 | |
Trying 192.168.0.112... | |
Connected to 192.168.0.112. | |
Escape character is '^]'. | |
AVdec - PlayGetChannels(2857): enter 4 channles | |
AVenc - CaptureGetChannels(756): 1 | |
AVdec - PlayGetChannels(2857): enter 4 channles | |
AVdec - PlayGetChannels(2857): enter 4 channles | |
********************************************************************** | |
| SYSTEM INFO |
Licensed to: ASIO Allsoftinone Quantity: 1 user Serial number: 1822-9597 License type: Pro Edition for Linux
First delete away trial mode:
sudo sed -i "s/keexjEP3t4Mue23hrnuPtY4TdcsqNiJL-5174TsUdLmJSIXKfG2NGPwBL6vnRPddT7tH29qpkneX63DO9ECSPE9rzY1zhThHERg8lHM9IBFT+rVuiY823aQJuqzxCKIE1bcDqM4wgW01FH6oCBP1G4ub01xmb4BGSUG6ZrjxWHJyNLyIlGvOhoY2HAYzEtzYGwxFZn2JZ66o4RONkXjX0DF9EzsdUef3UAS+JQ+fCYReLawdjEe6tXCv88GKaaPKWxCeaUL9PejICQgRQOLGOZtZQkLgAelrOtehxz5ANOOqCaJgy2mJLQVLM5SJ9Dli909c5ybvEhVmIC0dc9dWH+/N9KmiLVlKMU7RJqnE+WXEEPI1SgglmfmLc1yVH7dqBb9ehOoKG9UE+HAE1YvH1XX2XVGeEqYUY-Tsk7YBTz0WpSpoYyPgx6Iki5KLtQ5G-aKP9eysnkuOAkrvHU8bLbGtZteGwJarev03PhfCioJL4OSqsmQGEvDbHFEbNl1qJtdwEriR+VNZts9vNNLk7UGfeNwIiqpxjk4Mn09nmSd8FhM4ifvcaIbNCRoMPGl6KU12iseSe+w+1kFsLhX+OhQM8WXcWV10cGqBzQE9OqOLUcg9n0krrR3KrohstS9smTwEx9olyLYppvC0p5i7dAx2deWvM1ZxKNs0BvcXGukR+/g" /usr/lib/beyondcompare/BCompare
I'm going to walk you through the steps for setting up a AWS Lambda to talk to the internet and a VPC. Let's dive in.
So it might be really unintuitive at first but lambda functions have three states.
Ourcase:
Origin:
This will guide you through setting up a replica set in a docker environment using.
Just documenting docs, articles, and discussion related to gRPC and load balancing.
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/doc/load-balancing.md
Seems gRPC prefers thin client-side load balancing where a client gets a list of connected clients and a load balancing policy from a "load balancer" and then performs client-side load balancing based on the information. However, this could be useful for traditional load banaling approaches in clound deployments.
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/grpc-io/8s7UHY_Q1po
gRPC "works" in AWS. That is, you can run gRPC services on EC2 nodes and have them connect to other nodes, and everything is fine. If you are using AWS for easy access to hardware then all is fine. What doesn't work is ELB (aka CLB), and ALBs. Neither of these support HTTP/2 (h2c) in a way that gRPC needs.
Minimal example: transcode from MP3 to WMA:
ffmpeg -i input.mp3 output.wma
You can get the list of supported formats with:
ffmpeg -formats
Convert WAV to MP3, mix down to mono (use 1 audio channel), set bit rate to 64 kbps and sample rate to 22050 Hz: