78 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
78 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
README
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This instructions below are for testing by running scripts manually:
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1. Create some temp scratch dirs:
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mkdir -p ~/temp/log/presentation ~/temp/recording/{process,publish,raw} ~/temp/recording/status/{recorded,archived,processed,sanity} ~/temp/published
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2. Edit core/scripts/bigbluebutton.yml and comment out the PRODUCTION dirs while uncommenting the DEVELOPMENT dir. The dir should match what you created above.
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raw_audio_src: /var/freeswitch/meetings
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raw_video_src: /usr/share/red5/webapps/video/streams
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raw_deskshare_src: /var/bigbluebutton/deskshare
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raw_presentation_src: /var/bigbluebutton
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redis_host: 127.0.0.1
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redis_port: 6379
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# For PRODUCTION
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log_dir: /var/log/bigbluebutton
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recording_dir: /var/bigbluebutton/recording
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published_dir: /var/bigbluebutton/published
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playback_host: 10.0.3.203
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# For DEVELOPMENT
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# This allows us to run the scripts manually
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#scripts_dir: /home/ubuntu/dev/bigbluebutton/record-and-playback/core/scripts
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#log_dir: /home/ubuntu/temp/log
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#recording_dir: /home/ubuntu/temp/recording
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#published_dir: /home/ubuntu/temp/published
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#playback_host: 192.168.22.137
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3. Create a recording using BigBlueButton. After logging out, it should have created a <meeting-id>.done file in
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/var/bigbluebutton/recording/status/recorded dir. Make note of this meeting-id as we use that to tell the script
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which recording to process.
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4. Before running the scripts, we have to make sure our scripts have the PATHs setup correctly.
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Edit presentation/scripts/process/presentation.rb and uncomment the DEVELOPMENT PATH while
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commenting the PRODUCTION PATH. We need to do this so the script will be able to find the
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core library.
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5. Now we run the archive step. Go to record-and-playback/core/scripts dir and type
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ruby archive/archive.rb -m <meeting-id>
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6. If everything goes well, you should have the raw files in ~/temp/recording/raw/<meeting-id>
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You can also check the logs at ~/temp/log/archive-<meeting-id>.log
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You should also have an entry in ~/temp/recording/status/archived dir
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7. Then we need to do a sanity check if the raw recordings are complete. Type
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ruby sanity/sanity.rb -m <meeting-id>
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Check the log in ~/temp/log/sanity.log
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You should also have an entry in ~/temp/recording/status/sanity dir
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8. Assuming the recording passed the sanity check, it's time to process the recording.
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cd record-and-playback/presentation/scripts
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ruby process/presentation.rb -m <meeting-id>
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You can monitor the progress by tailing the log at ~/temp/log/presentation/process-<meeting-id>.log
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9. Assuming that everything goes well. We can now run the publish script. However, we need to cheat a little bit.
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The publish script will be looking for a "processing_time" file which contains information on how long the
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processing took. Unfortunately, that file is created by the rap-worker.rb script which we don't run.
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So we create that file manually at
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vi ~/temp/recording/process/presentation/<meeting-d>/processing_time
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Enter any number (e.g. 46843) and save the file.
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10. Now run the publish script
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ruby publish/presentation.rb -m <meeting-id>-presentation
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Notice we appended "presentation" to the meeting-id, this will tell the script to publish using the "presentation" format.
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