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Serving Real Media
Once you have successfully installed
and tested your RealSystem Server, you
are ready to serve Real media content from your web site.
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Make sure that the web server on your
Virtual Server is configured to properly handle the Real media file extensions,
namely .rm, .ra, .ram, and optionally .rpm.
If your Virtual Server was set up later than December 15, 1997 then your
~/www/conf/mime.types file includes the necessary
MIME Types.
If your Virtual Server was set up prior to December 15, 1997 then simply
add the following two lines to your ~/www/conf/mime.types file:
audio/x-pn-realaudio ram rm ra
audio/x-pn-realaudio-plugin rpm
If you download the ~/www/conf/mime.types file to your local computer using FTP, be sure you
upload it back to your Virtual Server in ASCII format.
An alternative to
editing the ~/www/conf/mime.types file is to simply
copy the ~/www/conf/mime.types file from
the /usr/local/contrib directory on your Virtual Server host machine. To do this type:
% cp /usr/local/contrib/mime.types ~/www/conf
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Upload (in BINARY format, if you use FTP)
your encoded Real media files (those with the .rm and .ra extensions) to your Virtual Server.
Real media files should be stored in the following directory, according to your Virtual Server O/S.
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FreeBSD & Solaris
~/usr/local/realserverg2/Content
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BSD/OS Upgrade!
~/usr/local/pnserver-VERSION/content
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Huh?
If you don't know the Virtual Server O/S, try the following:
These directories
are the "BasePath" where RealSystem Server looks for Real media files. You can
change these by modifying your RealSystem Server server.cfg file.
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Use a text editor to create a metafile containing a RealAudio or
RealVideo URL. The contents of your file should be in the following
form:
pnm://YOUR_DOMAIN.NAME/MEDIA_FILE .rm
Change YOUR_DOMAIN.NAME to the domain name of your Virtual Server and
MEDIA_FILE to the name of the Real media file
you uploaded to your content directory in the previous step.
Save the above metafile as a text file with the .ram extension (mediafile.ram, for example).
Metafiles should be stored in your ~/www/htdocs directory hierarchy.
Finally, reference the metafile as a hyperlink in your HTML document.
For example:
<a href="mediafile.ram">
<a href="/support/virtual/real/media/sampleaudio.ram">
Working Examples
The following links are actual examples which implement the
instructions included on this page. Go ahead and try them out!
The video clip example takes a little bit longer to start.
Audio Clip Example
Video Clip Example
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Copyright © 1995-2001 Gilford Graphics International. All rights reserved.
Last Modified: Wed Mar 28 21:43:11 2001 GMT
Page Built: Wed Apr 18 18:00:32 2001 GMT
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