Hi, I've gone through the process. I solved it just like you say, after the recording is done I upload the video to S3. It may take a second or so but normally it's not a problem since the communication between ec2 and s3 is quite fast. I'm not done with the playback yet but I plan to just solve it by giving a public url to the s3 file. This won't allow for any "real" streaming but it's not a problem in my case since the files are quite small. In the future, I may download the files from s3 on demand and serve them using red5 and rtmp and then delete the file once the connection is closed.
/Andreas On Jun 30, 2007, at 1:25 AM, Mel Brands wrote: > Hi all, > > I'm just wondering if anyone's running Red5 on AWS' EC2 service? The > only downside is that if EC2 goes down, you lose all of your data but > maybe this can be mitigated by backing up all the flv files over to S3 > as soon as they're recorded... Anyway, just wondering if anyone has > gone through this process. > > Thanks, > > m. > > _______________________________________________ > Red5 mailing list > [email protected] > http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org > _______________________________________________ Red5 mailing list [email protected] http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/red5_osflash.org
