VBrick Systems ETHERNETV V4.4.3 User Manual

Page 19

Advertising
background image

Introduction

ETV Portal Server Admin Guide

7

the VOD servers shown in Table 2. The configuration for each server is essentially the same
(see Servers on page 30 for details) and there is little difference in functionality for end users.

ETV servers can be LAN-based or Internet-based depending on how the range of Internet
addresses is defined (see "Assign LAN/Internet Address Range" in Global Assignments on
page 21
). VOD servers accessible to Internet users are called Internet-zone servers; VOD
servers assessable to LAN users only (within a secured corporate network and behind a
firewall) are called LAN-zone servers.

Content added by users in the LAN zone will be ingested to all VOD servers for which they
have permissions using the

Add Video

page. Users in the Internet zone have the

Add Video

page available only if they have permissions for at least one VOD server that is also in the
Internet zone. Content added by LAN users is added to all configured servers that can handle
the content (for example you cannot add MPEG content to a Windows Media server) and for
which you have permission. The content available for viewing may also be limited by the
server type. For example, Internet users will see only MPEG-4 and Windows Media content
on VOD-D and VOD-WM servers respectively. LAN users however will see all content on all
servers.

Table 2. Supported EtherneTV VOD Servers

ETV Internet-Based Servers

ETV Portal Server supports the installation of LAN-based servers and Internet-based
servers. As part of an ETV Server installation, you can configure a VOD server to run in the
"zones" (LAN or Internet) specified in Table 2. Before server configuration, you assign a
range of IP addresses that define the LAN domain, or vice versa, that define the Internet
domain. Any IP address outside that range will assumed to be from an Internet source, or
vice versa, from a LAN source. (See "Assign LAN/Internet Address Range" in Global
Assignments on page 21.)

You can purchase an Internet-based VOD-W or VOD-WM server from VBrick (in which
case they are configured by VBrick) or you can purchase and configure a VOD-WM yourself
using the Microsoft documentation (not recommended). You can also install a Darwin Open
Source server which is fully-compatible with ETV Portal Server but is not sold or supported
by VBrick. (For more about downloading, installing, and configuring a Darwin server, go to:
http://developer.apple.com/opensource/server/streaming/index.html) As noted, ETV
users can be on the Internet or on a LAN; Internet users can only access MPEG-4 and

Server Type

Description

Zone

NXG

Linux-based NXG1/2 VOD server.

LAN only

VOD-W

Windows-based VOD-W VOD server. Available in
three versions depending on throughput: VOD-50W,
VOD-125W, and VOD-300W

LAN only

VOD-D

Darwin Open Source server for Linux, Windows, Mac,
etc. Ingests and plays MPEG-4 content only. Requires
an FTP server. Compatible but not sold or supported
by VBrick.

LAN or
Internet

VOD-WM-Standard

Microsoft Windows Media Server (unicast only).
Requires an FTP server.

LAN or
Internet

VOD-WM-Enterprise Microsoft Windows Media Server (unicast or

multicast). Requires an FTP server.

LAN or
Internet

Advertising