Thank you for answering Tony.
The firewall is turned off but after a reinstall of the "hardware node" I got Red5 running in a "virtual environment"! I think I missed a setting earlier in /etc/sysctl.conf but I'm not sure. The other good news is that it's possible to make a snapshot/backup with 'vzdump' while clients are connected to the Red5 server. OpenVZ 'pauses' for a few secs for this process but "Transformers.flv" keeps streaming. I'm curious what happens in a videoconference environment (no buffering)... On the other hand, OpenVZ doesn't pause at all if LVM2 (logical volume management) is used. > -----Oorspronkelijk bericht----- > Van: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Namens > Tony Langdon (ATC) > Verzonden: woensdag 20 juni 2007 5:21 > Aan: '[email protected]' > Onderwerp: Re: [Red5] Red5 in a OpenVZ virtual environment > > > Does anyone have experience with openvz and knowing how to > > open port 1935? > > Are you running the CentOS firewall by any chance? Try it with the > firewall > turned off. If that works, try opening that port in the CentOS firewall > admin tool. > > I haven't dealt with OpenVZ at this level, but I do know that Red 5 works > fine under Virtuozzo (the commercial version). _______________________________________________ Red5 mailing list [email protected] http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org
