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The live web cam which is located on the Koningsplein in Amsterdam has been running for a decade in various shapes and forms.

In all of these set-ups we used to run the actual content delivery systems ourselves, from our own networks.

The latest incarnation however is a cloud based set-up which takes advantage of the new Youtube Live features to deliver the content to users.

This page describes the technical set-up. set-up has several benefits over the systems that we used to run locally:

  • More scalable. YouTube can distribute video much better than any locally run system. In our case we had a limit of 1GB/s, so anything over a few hundred visitors would mean the video stream got jerky and dropped out. This used to happen when someone posted a link to the stream on a popular forum such as GeenStijl.nl. 
  • Multiple bit rates. We used to do transcoding into various lower bit rate streams, so that users on slow connections (mobile phones) could also watch it. This required an expensive plugin, which needed careful configuration, and which put a significant CPU burden on the streaming server. Google does this now, so no plugin needed, no CPU load, and less complex configuration.
  • Youtube works on much more devices. Many mobile devices have dedicated apps for YouTube, which makes sure it plays well on those devices.
  • Less support issues for end users. YouTube is the defacto standard for viewing video content on the Internet, so end users will have few issues with it.
  • Users can post comments. While it is possible for users to comment on the stream, we had to disable it because eventually the comments filled up with trolling messages.
  • Stream has a recording backlog of 4 hours. You can actually skip back 4 hours, which is handy if you missed some action (smile)
  • Production side is IPv6-only. Both the camera and the relaying system do not need to be publicly available. The camera just needs to communicate with the relaying system, which in turn needs to talk to YouTube. Since YouTube is dual stack, this means that both the camera and the relaying system can be purely IPv6:

Overview

Gliffy Diagram
namewebcam live setup

 

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Configuration of the camera

The camera is an Axis Q1755, which is mounted outside our office on the 4th floor of Singel 468 in Amsterdam. 

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  • Create a dedicated user on the Axis (System Options -> Security -> Users) that has only viewer permissions, and assign a password to it. Since it is a machine, you can use pwgen -s 64 1.
  • Make sure the RTSP server is enabled (System Options -> Network -> TCP/IP -> Advanced). The default port is 554.
  • Audio setting (Video & Audio -> Audio Settings): Half-duplex, AAC encoding, 16 KHz, 64 kbit/s.
  • Enable audio (Video & Audio -> Video Stream -> Audio). This sounds obvious, but if you deselect this, Google will report "NO DATA".

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Configuration of the streaming server

The server is a VMware VM called coppi.terena.org, which runs Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and is located in the SURFnet datacenter in Amsterdam.

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This howto explains how to configure WSE for YouTube live streams: https://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/intel-inde-media-pack-for-android-tutorials-video-streaming-from-device-to-youtube

I had some trouble getting WSE to work properly in an IPv6-only environment, turns out you have to force Java to explicitly use IPv6.

See http://www.wowza.com/forums/showthread.php?37909-PushPublishRTMP-doesn-t-work-with-IPv6 on how to do that.

 

Gotchas

  • Youtube YouTube Live will is only be available on channels that have at least 100 subscribers. I'm guessing that this is done by YouTube to prevent random users to clog up their network with sleeping cat video streams without there being viewers for it. Either way, the TERENA channel already had 100+ subscribers so we were good to go.
  • YouTube Live will not be available to users in Germany: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blocking_of_YouTube_videos_in_Germany. This is a political issue that we can't solve.