> On Mar 12, 2021, at 3:01 AM, Kommoju, Sekhar via live-devel
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Background: As per your comment, I’ve modified the testRTSPClient to call the
> function “useTLS()” on “RTSPClient” before sending the first RTSP command,
> but unfortunately I was getting a “Bad Request” error response from IP camera
> for the OPTIONS command (as shown in the below screenshot).
>
> Just for your reference, the sample code used in the testRTSPClient program:
>
> RTSPClient* rtspClient = ourRTSPClient::createNew(env, rtspURL,
> RTSP_CLIENT_VERBOSITY_LEVEL, progName, 443);
Your problem was including the “443” parameter. This tells the client to
attempt RTSP-over-HTTP tunneling on port 443. This is probably not what you
wanted, and it will not work (RTSP-over-HTTP tunneling does not work with TLS).
Instead, leave out that parameter, and just call:
RTSPClient* rtspClient = ourRTSPClient::createNew(env, rtspURL,
RTSP_CLIENT_VERBOSITY_LEVEL, progName);
> rtspClient->useTLS();
Note that you don’t need to add this line if your RTSP URL begins with
“rtsps://“ (instead of “rtsp://“), or if the RTSP URL specifies a port number
of 322 (the port number reserved for RTSP over TLS).
> • Do you have any test client to check/test RTSP over TLS to connect to
> an IP camera using Live555 libraries?
Our existing RTSP client applications - “testRTSPClient” and “openRTSP” will
work, provided that you give it a RTSP URL that begins with “rtsps://“, or
specifies a port number of 322 - as noted above. In this case, you should not
need to modify any existing code.
Ross Finlayson
Live Networks, Inc.
http://www.live555.com/
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