4.4 KiB
About
Ezstream is a command line source client for media streams, primarily for streaming to Icecast servers.
It allows the creation of media streams based on input from files or standard input that is piped through an optional external de- and encoder. As every part of this chain is highly configurable, ezstream can be useful in a large number of streaming setups.
It uses libshout to communicate with streaming servers and currently supports Ogg, MP3, WebM, and Matroska streams using the HTTP, ICY, and RoarAudio protocols. It uses TagLib to read and manage metadata in numerous media files.
Ezstream is free software and licensed under the GNU General Public License.
See the COPYING
file for details.
Dependencies
Ezstream depends on:
- libshout version 2.2.x or newer
- libxml version 2.x
- TagLib for C version 1.x (1.4 or newer recommended)
Ezstream optionally uses:
- libiconv on systems where
iconv()
is not available in libc, for basic non-ASCII charset support in metadata and filenames
Building ezstream depends on:
- check unit testing framework for C
Installation
The ezstream software uses the GNU auto-tools to configure, build, and install on a variety of systems. Several (additional) configuration options are available.
Run ./configure --help
to get an overview.
The compilation and installation process then boils down to the usual
$ ./configure --help | less # Skim over the available options
$ ./configure [options] && make && [sudo] make install
# Configure, build and install
# [as root] the software
If this procedure is unfamiliar to you, please consult the INSTALL
file for
more detailed instructions.
On systems where the libshout installation does not include the required
shout.pc file for pkg-config(1)
, the non-standard shout-config
utility
is available. However, the ezstream build system does not support the latter.
If this is an issue, configure ezstream with
$ ./configure \
LIBSHOUT_CPPFLAGS="$(shout-config --cppflags)" \
LIBSHOUT_CFLAGS="$(shout-config --cflags-only)" \
LIBSHOUT_LIBS="$(shout-config --libs)"
If needed, verbose configuration error messages can be found in the
config.log
file.
When working on a fresh checkout from source control, the autogen.sh
script
must be run first. It requires automake, autoconf, libtool, and gettext.
Usage
Once ezstream is installed successfully, type man ezstream
on the command
line for a comprehensive manual. This distribution package also comes with
example configuration files that can be used as a guide to configure
ezstream.
As ezstream is a source client, a media streaming server like Icecast must be available to distribute the stream to listening clients. See (https://www.icecast.org/) for more information and resources.
External Decoders/Encoders
Ezstream should be able to work with any media decoder and encoder that fulfills the following requirements:
- Must be an executable that can be run from the command line without the need for a graphical display or terminal
- Decoding software must be able to either
- write raw audio data to standard output, or
- write a properly encoded stream ready for distribution to standard output
- Encoding software must be able to read raw audio data from standard input
The following incomplete list of programs shows a few that are known to work. These are also used in the example configuration files:
-
MP3
- Decoder: madplay (https://www.underbit.com/products/mad/)
- Encoder: lame (https://lame.sourceforge.io/)
-
Ogg Vorbis (https://xiph.org/vorbis/):
- Decoder: oggdec
- Encoder: oggenc
-
FLAC (https://xiph.org/flac/):
- Decoder: flac
- Encoder: flac (requires Ogg FLAC output)
-
Ogg Theora:
- Decoder/Encoder: ffmpeg2theora (http://v2v.cc/~j/ffmpeg2theora/)
Development
- Xiph.org Gitlab: https://gitlab.xiph.org/xiph/ezstream/
- GitHub mirror: https://github.com/xiph/ezstream/
- Travis CI: https://travis-ci.org/xiph/ezstream/
- CircleCI: https://circleci.com/gh/xiph/ezstream/
- Codecov: https://codecov.io/gh/xiph/ezstream/
- Coverity: https://scan.coverity.com/projects/xiph-ezstream/