3

I have a video server with an IP:192.168.1.XX It has 3 possible formats JPEG, MPEG-4 or H.264

The video server is broadcasting a video(with audio) on real time

I have no problems streaming the video with AFORGE lib but i also need to stream the audio

the video server has several protocols: HTTP,RTSP,RTP,RTCP

according to the user's manual RTSP is the protocol I should use to get MPEG-4(Audio and video), but I haven't found anything to stream by RTSP on C# so I'm trying to stream audio and video separate

the ports are:

RTSP: 554 RTP(Video): 5556 RTP(Audio):5558 RTCP(Video): 5557 RTCP(Audio): 5559

Does any body know how RTP works or how can I get the sound from the video server?

2 Answers 2

1

I would learn gstreamer. I am assuming that you are using windows since you are doing this in C#. It has a fairly stable windows port with a nice .net wrapper. If you aren't using Windows, then gstreamer is most certainly your best bet.

In gstreamer you would most likely use a pipeline like:

your video src -> x264enc or ffenc_mpv4 -> rtph264pay or rtpmp4vpay -> udpsink

your audio src  -> ffenc_aac or preferably a lower latency codec like mULaw -> rtppay -> udpsink

and so on. It is very easy to use. They even have a nice rtpbin for your to use if you want to actually manage an rtp session.

More information can be found here:

http://gstreamer.freedesktop.org/

Here is a nice sample of how to do rtp:

http://gstreamer.freedesktop.org/data/doc/gstreamer/head/gst-plugins-good-plugins/html/gst-plugins-good-plugins-gstrtpbin.html

I have done this sort of thing with the direct show filters but it is much more involved. You usually have to manually handle the rtp payloading and the transport--not to mention deal with COM--whereas GStreamer provides those mechanisms for you out of the box.

0
0

You can use https://net7mma.codeplex.com/

It is a C# Media Server and it will get you each RtpPacket and from there you can get them to a Decoder of your choice among other things all without bogging down the source stream.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.