soundbyte wrote: > Thanks for the details. > I had found that change point but it seems the issue is that there is > another application using port 9000 on my Windows 7 PC so LMS on the PC > is using the next available port (9001), which is normal. > The application that is using port 9000 is what I cannot find at present > on the PC, it only says it is part of a system process with a PID of 4 > using Process Explorer, no other details. > > Been searching for "port 9000" on this site and there are quite a number > of hits and I am getting the idea that this problem is not unusual on > both Linux and Windows platforms. > > Thought that there may have been a method to change the port number for > these situations where port 9000 is being used by something else, which > seems is common. > If I understand correctly the piCorePlayer only assumes that the LMS > port is 9000, it does not actually find the port from the LMS instances > it finds when it does a LMS search, I may be wrong though. > What happens when there are two LMS servers on the same network? > > Will investigate further. > > Thanks, > > Russell.
Hi Russell, >From memory, piCorePlayer only uses port 9000 in 2 places. Both are in [Beta] mode or greater, so don't turn [Beta] mode on. Port 9000 is only the LMS web interface, so just type the URL into your browser manually, just like you would normally do. Using port 9000 does not effect the number of LMS on the network, it does mean you can't have multiple LMS on the one server without changing the port number but who would do that? regards Greg ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Greg Erskine's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=7403 View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=97803 _______________________________________________ unix mailing list [email protected] http://lists.slimdevices.com/mailman/listinfo/unix
