Pearl-2 User Guide
Streaming to a CDN, multicasting, and streaming to
multiple destinations
Streaming content to a multicast IP address is different than streaming to a CDN. Multicasting lets you directly
share the stream with multiple viewers on the same LAN. All viewers receive the same stream at the same
time. Similar to turning on a radio station where all listeners hear the same music at the same time.
Multicasting is useful for training sessions when there is a specific time frame for the audience to view the
content live.
Whether you're streaming to CDNs or multicasting across a LAN, Pearl-2 can publish to multiple destinations
at the same time. Streaming a channel to CDNs and multicast streaming at the same time is available only
when the H.264 codec is configured as the channel encoding, see
.
Publishing Options
Use this option to...
Content Distribution
Network (CDN)
Stream web content to many viewers on different Content Delivery
Networks simultaneously to any geographical location. Using a CDN to host
your broadcast is highly scalable and saves you from having to purchase
and maintain your own servers to host and deliver video content.
Using one or more CDNs to stream live content allows you to reach a large
geographically diverse audience and because CDNs perform format
conversion, the stream is platform independent.
Streaming protocols supported include: SRT (push), HLS (push), MPEG-
DASH (push), RTMP/RTMPS.
For more information about streaming to a CDN, see
Multicast Streaming
This delivery method relies on network equipment that supports
multicasting and is usually used on high bandwidth corporate LANs and not
on Internet-based architectures.
Multicasting is what's typically used to stream video and audio to an IP TV
or set-top box playlist. If you're streaming over a Gigabit Ethernet network
to a 10/100 Mbps set-top box that is dropping frames, you can limit the
stream's bandwidth, see
.
Multicast streaming protocols supported include: MPEG-TS UDP, MPEG-TS
RTP/UDP, and RTP/UDP.
For more information about using multicasting for streaming your content,
see
To stream video outside of your LAN, use a CDN or configure port forwarding on your router.
Consult your Network Administrator to set up port forwarding.
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