This document provides instructions on how to use the EvoStream Media Server (EMS). It will cover the basics of starting the server as well as some advanced topics like modifying configuration files
This document is written for users of the EMS. It is expected that readers have a basic understanding of multimedia streaming and the technologies required to perform multimedia streaming.
What is EMS?
EvoStream is an enterprise-strength media server capable of delivering live and on-demand content to any screen with an unbeatable cost of ownership. With EvoStream, audio/video/data delivery can be expanded to all popular media platforms including Adobe Flash, Apple iOS devices and QuickTime, IPTV, Microsoft Silverlight, Android, Blackberry, and other 3GPP devices into a single workflow.
Why Use EMS?
EvoStream’s unique architecture significantly increases I/O performance compared to Java-based media servers, and is the only unified media server capable of running on virtually any platform (Linux, Windows, Mac OSX, etc.) including embedded devices (encoders, IP cameras, DVRs, and more).
What are the Key Features and Benefits of the EMS?
EvoStream Media Server is not just a multi-format, multi-protocol server that delivers media rich content across multiple screens and platforms. It delivers enterprise strength content at a cost-lowering performance. Simply put, EvoStream is the most efficient and flexible streaming server available. It delivers enterprise strength content at a cost-lowering performance. For a better understanding, refer to the picture and descriptions below.
- Next Generation Streaming
Stream directly to HTML5 browsers with sub-second latency! No Plugins, No custom apps!Peer to peer streaming eliminating the vast majority of operating costs!Metadata delivered in frame-aligned real-time
- Highly Efficient
The EMS has the smallest CPU and memory footprint possible while still being capable of handling approximately 2,000 simultaneous connections per Intel style CPU core. In other words, never max out on hardware resources before reaching bandwidth limitations.
- Extensible
Never write custom modules again or be limited to a single programming language to extend server functionality for applications and infrastructure. The EMS has a diverse set of run-time APIs including standard HTTP calls, PHP, Lua, or C++, allowing for quick and easy integration of EvoStream into existing workflows.
Along with the Runtime API, the EMS also provides an Event Notification System, which allows users to completely tailor the behavior of the EMS. Automate stream routing, dynamically create HLS or HDS, or simply monitor server activities with a simple RESTful monitor!
- Cross Platform
Built from the ground-up to be truly platform agnostic and capable of being delivered on virtually any operating system including embedded systems such as encoders, IP cameras, DVRs, and more!
- Scalable
Whether serving a few users to hundreds of thousands, EvoStream can meet live and on-demand streaming needs through robust load-balancing allowing the infrastructure to infinitely scale as needed while keeping the hardware and licensing costs at an absolute minimum.
- Reliable
Proven and tested under high-traffic environments and deployed worldwide by enterprise content publishers and service providers that demand maximum uptime and reliability.
How Does the EMS Work?
EvoStream Media Server runs as a separate application which users can send video and audio streams to. Users can then connect to the EMS with a variety of players or other servers and use the Runtime API to push streams out or pull new streams in.
- Stream Routing
EvoStream’s rich set of APIs includes pull/push streaming, which allows users to easily publish or consume RTMP/RTSP/HLS/MPEG-TS/etc streams to and from other locations such as a CDN or a service provider.
Where will EMS Run?
On practically everything! It runs on Windows, Linux, Mac OSX, BSD and Solaris. It can be hosted on a robust server or on a small ARM based IP Camera, or anything in-between.
Specifically, the EMS can be run on:
- Windows: 10 x64, 8.1 x64, 8 x64, 7 x64, Server 2008, Server 2012, Server 2012 R2
- Linux: Debian, CentOS, RedHat, Ubuntu, openSUSE, and others
- Mac OSX
- FreeBSD
- OpenBSD
- Raspbian
Note: starting release v1.7.1, EMS will only support 64bit machines