![]() mux matching was far too strict and resulted in a failure to update muxes with new modulations etc... Also frequency changes were not detected, so there is some attempt to handle greater changes (mostly just DVB-S, could be extended). And where ONID/TSID are set, they are compared as an additional check. I think it's a case of suck it and see, but on my Astra 28.2E scan this did a nice job of cleaning up (including tying together modded) muxes. |
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Autobuild | ||
data | ||
debian | ||
docs | ||
lib/py/tvh | ||
licenses | ||
man | ||
src | ||
support | ||
vendor | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
Autobuild.sh | ||
configure | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
Tvheadend
(c) 2006 - 2014 Tvheadend Foundation CIC
What it is
Tvheadend is a TV streaming server and digital video recorder.
It supports the following inputs:
- DVB-C
- DVB-T(2)
- DVB-S(2)
- ATSC
- IPTV
- UDP
- HTTP
How to build for Linux
First you need to configure:
$ ./configure
If any dependencies are missing the configure script will complain or attempt to disable optional features.
Build the binary:
$ make
After build, the binary resides in build.linux
directory.
Thus, to start it, just type:
$ ./build.linux/tvheadend
Settings are stored in $HOME/.hts/tvheadend
.
How to build for OS X
Same build procedure applies to OS X.
After build, the binary resides in build.darwin
directory.
Only network sources (IPTV, SAT>IP) are supported on OS X. There is no support for DVB USB sticks and PCI cards. Transcoding is currently not supported.
Further information
For more information about building, including generating packages, please visit:
https://tvheadend.org/projects/tvheadend/wiki/Building
https://tvheadend.org/projects/tvheadend/wiki/Packaging
https://tvheadend.org/projects/tvheadend/wiki/Git