Miriam Ruiz wrote: > If someone went for bittorrent protocol for transmission and standard > protocols for contents (ogg, mpeg, avi), the critical mass would be > almost inmediate, I guess.
Which is one of the reasons I'm working on Cygnal again. Other than just creating yet another video streaming server, (although Cygnal also speaks RTMP*/HTTP/SWF) I'd like Cygnal to be more useful. I have considered a bittorrent like protocol, maybe bittorrent, or maybe something similar for distributed streaming. I plan to have Cygnal be able to talk to other instances of itself, so this would be potentially possible. I was primarily doing this to support distributed video conferencing, but don't see why it couldn't handle streaming also. The main trick would be keeping everything in sequence, and not need a huge cache to handle latency. Cygnal still needs several months of work before I'm probably ready to consider implementing something like this, unless anyone else starts helping me with Cygnal development. I'll use this as an occasion to briefly spec out that sub project of Gnash. Cygnal is basically an FMS 3 implementation, similar to Red5, only Red5 doesn't understand SWF, and is written in Java. Currently, now that the Gnash release is out, I've been rewriting Cygnal from the ground up. The initial rewrite is what let me add support for SharedObject and LocalConnection to Gnash. As RTMP uses the same low level code, I replaced my original ugly version used for reverse engineering, with much cleaner code for AMF object handling in all it's forms. Lately I've been redesigning the core of Cygnal to get much higher performance and can handle complex routing and more protocols, as I want to get Cygnal/Gnash to where it'll support video conferencing. This requires the routing of AMF objects from Gnash to Cygnal, and then from Cygnal back out a different network connection. Also each RTMP connection needs to support up to 64 "channels" for multiple streams. The prior implementation couldn't route the AMF objects, it could only stream via RTMP. I'm working on getting RTMPT working again with the new network core right now. For anybody that likes hacking network protocols as much as I do, Cygnal would be a fun project, volunteers welcome. I think Cygnal is going to be important for Gnash too, as it'll enable using patent free codecs more often, as we'll have both ends of the connection. Gnash will also get RTMP* supported added as well, since much of the code is shared. I'll try to start getting some of the new design documented on the wiki soon. - rob - _______________________________________________ Gnash-dev mailing list Gnash-dev@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnash-dev