> Hi for that u may would like to check the current framerate of the movie > and if you are under windows > in the taskmanager under Process there you could read in % what the CPU > using just for the swf. > > if the framerate doesent get slower than 10-15% form the framerate that > u have on idle status > and the flash also is not using more then 10-20% of the cpu it wouldent > be the swf i guess.
It's not a load problem. Neither the client nor the server CPU load gets significantly higher than usual and there is ample network bandwidth left, too. How do I check the framerate? It looks like the framerate drops to like a frame per second or less, but that's just what I see. I can't say if the stream actually has that framerate or if it's just what the flash displays for whatever reason. Since watching one stream with audio works fine, it cannot be a server issue, can it? It shouldn't make a difference if it sends two streams with audio to the same subscriber or to different ones. But on the other hand it seems unlikely that it's a flash issue, since I couldn't find anything on google and someone should have noticed that before. What exactly does the server do with the audio streams? Does it just forward them or does it modify them in a way? Could it be an encoding problem? Thomas _______________________________________________ Red5 mailing list [email protected] http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org
