Wow,

I would share your work at
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/kurento might
get a lot of interest

On Wed, 15 Apr 2020 at 23:02, Zenon Panoussis <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
> > For me it seems to be nearly impossible to install KMS on a CentOS 7.
> > I have no clue how to achive that. The steps to do it are completely
> > opaque to me.
>
> The folks at Kurento have tried to make things really easy,
> but they are totaly focused on ubuntu. For anything else
> you need to use the docker image and then you run into a
> completely new set of problems with opaque configuration,
> NAT traversal etc.
>
> I am running on centos8 and had the same problem as you.
> I installed the docker image (running under packman) and
> it worked out of the box, but with NAT traversal problems
> that a TURN server did not solve.
>
> I detest this sort of convoluted setups forced upon me, so
> I set out to repackage kurento in native rpms. It's a long
> and tedious process, not least because kurento has made its
> own versions of gstreamer and openwebrtc and other such
> instead of using upstream with patches when needed, but
> I'm making progress.
>
> You will find everything I make (thrown in in complete
> disorder) on http://www.provocation.net/rpms/. So far
> I have all direct dependencies and part of kurento core.
> What's still left to do is
>
> kms-filters-chroma
> kms-filters-crowddetector
> kms-filters-platedetector
> kms-filters-pointerdetector
> kms-filters
> kms-libs3
> kurento-media-server
>
> You could try to rebuild my srpms on centos7 and see how it
> goes. This would certainly require you to upgrade some of
> kurento's dependencies to newer versions than the distro's,
> but that's a small price to pay. Many of the off-distro
> audio and video stuff is already there in el7 builds, so
> that makes it easier.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Z
>
>

-- 
Best regards,
Maxim

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