The srt-live-transmit
tool is a universal data transport tool with a purpose to transport data between SRT and other medium.
At the same time it is just a sample application to show some of the powerful features of SRT. We encourage you to use SRT library itself integrated into your products.
The srt-live-transmit
can be both used as a universal SRT-to-something-else flipper, as well as a testing tool for SRT.
The general usage is the following:
srt-live-transmit <input-uri> <output-uri> [options]
The following medium types are handled by srt-live-transmit
:
- SRT - use SRT for reading or writing, in listener, caller or rendezvous mode, with possibly additional parameters
- UDP - read or write the given UDP address (also multicast)
- Local file - read or store the stream into the file
- Process's pipeline - use the process's
stdin
andstdout
standard streams
Any medium can be used with any direction, although some of them may have special direction-dependent cases.
Mind that the URI has a standard syntax:
scheme://HOST:PORT/PATH?PARAM1=VALUE1&PARAM2=VALUE2&...
The first parameter is introduced with a ?
and all following can be appended with an &
character.
If you specify only the path (no :// specified), then the scheme
defaults to file. The path can be also specified as relative this
way. Note also that empty host (scheme://:PORT
) defaults to 0.0.0.0,
and an empty port (when there's no :PORT
part) defaults to port number 0.
Special options for particular medium may be specified in PARAM items. All options are medium-specific, although there may happen some options common for multiple media types.
Note also that the HOST part is always tried to be resolved as a name, if its form is not directly the IPv4 address.
First we need to start up the srt-live-transmit
app, listening for unicast UDP TS input on port 1234 and making SRT available on port 4201. Note, these are randomly chosen ports. We also open the app in verbose mode for debugging:
srt-live-transmit udp://:1234 srt://:4201 -v
Now we need to generate a UDP stream. ffmpeg can be used to generate bars and tone as follows, doing a simple unicast push to our listening srt-live-transmit
application:
ffmpeg -f lavfi -re -i smptebars=duration=300:size=1280x720:rate=30 -f lavfi -re -i sine=frequency=1000:duration=60:sample_rate=44100 -pix_fmt yuv420p -c:v libx264 -b:v 1000k -g 30 -keyint_min 120 -profile:v baseline -preset veryfast -f mpegts "udp://127.0.0.1:1234?pkt_size=1316"
You should see the stream connect in srt-live-transmit
.
Now you can test in VLC (make sure you're using the latest version!) - just go to file -> open network stream and enter
srt://127.0.0.1:4201
and you should see bars and tone right away.
Or you can test using ffplay or ffprobe to inspect the stream:
ffplay srt://127.0.0.1:4201
-or-
ffprobe srt://127.0.0.1:4201
If you're having trouble, make sure this works, then add complexity one step at a time (multicast, push vs listen, etc.).
Transmission mediums are specified as the standard URI format:
SCHEME://HOST:PORT?PARAM1=VALUE1&PARAM2=VALUE2&...
The applications supports the following schemes:
file
- for file or standard input and outputudp
- UDP output (unicast and multicast)srt
- SRT connection
Note that this application doesn't support file as a medium, but this can be handled by other applications from this project.
NB! File mode, except file://con
, is not supported in the srt-file-transmit
tool!
The general syntax is: file:///global/path/to/the/file
. No parameters in the URL are extracted. There's one (non-standard!) special case, though:
file://con
That is, con is used as a HOST part of the URI. If you use this URI for <input-uri>, then the data will be read from the standard input. If <output-uri>, the data will be send to the standard output. Be careful with options being specified together with having standard output as output URI - some of them are not allowed as the extra output controlled by options might interfere with the data output.
UDP can only be used in listening mode for input, and in calling mode for output. Multicast Streaming is also possible, without any special declaration. Just use an IP address from the multicast range. The specification and meaning of the fields in the URI depend on the mode.
The PORT part is always mandatory and it designates either the port number for the target host or the port number to be bound to read from.
The following options are available through URI parameters:
- iptos: sets the
IP_TOS
socket option - ttl: sets the
IP_TTL
orIP_MULTICAST_TTL
option, depending on mode - mcloop: sets the
IP_MULTICAST_LOOP
option (multicast mode only) - rcvbuf: sets the
SO_RCVBUF
socket option - sndbuf: sets the
SO_SNDBUF
socket option - adapter: sets the local binding address
- source: uses
IP_ADD_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP
, see below for details
For sending to unicast:
udp://TARGET:PORT?parameters...
-
The HOST part (here: TARGET) is mandatory and designates the target host
-
The iptos parameter designates the Type-Of-Service (TOS) field for outgoing packets via
IP_TOS
socket option. -
The ttl parameter will set time-to-live value for outgoing packets via
IP_TTL
socket options.
For receiving from unicast:
udp://LOCALADDR:PORT?parameters...
- The HOST part (here: LOCALADDR) designates the local interface to bind.
It's optional (can be empty) and defaults to 0.0.0.0 (
INADDR_ANY
).
For multicast the scheme is:
udp://GROUPADDR:PORT?parameters...
- The HOST part (here: GROUPADDR) is mandatory always and designates the
target multicast group. The
@
character is handled in this case, but it's not necessary, as the IGMP addresses are recognized by their mask.
For sending to a multicast group:
-
The iptos parameter designates the Type-Of-Service (TOS) field for outgoing packets via
IP_TOS
socket option. -
The ttl parameter will set time-to-live value for outgoing packets via
IP_MULTICAST_TTL
socket options. -
The adapter parameter can be used to specify the adapter to be set through
IP_MULTICAST_IF
option to override the default device used for sending
For receiving from a multicast group:
-
The adapter parameter can be used to specify the adapter through which the given multicast group can be reached (it's used to bind the socket)
-
The source parameter enforces the use of
IP_ADD_SOURCE_MEMBERSHIP
instead ofIP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP
and the value is set toimr_sourceaddr
field.
Explanations for the symbols and terms used above can be found in POSIX
manual pages, like ip(7)
and on Microsoft docs pages under IPPROTO_IP
.
Most important about SRT is that it can be either input or output and in both these cases it can work in listener, caller and rendezvous mode. SRT also handles several parameters special way, in addition to standard SRT options that can be set through the parameters.
SRT can be connected using one of three connection modes:
-
caller: the "agent" (this application) sends the connection request to the peer, which must be listener, and this way it initiates the connection.
-
listener: the "agent" waits to be contacted by any peer caller. Note that a listener can accept multiple callers, but srt-live-transmit does not use this ability; after the first connection, it no longer accepts new connections.
-
rendezvous: A one-to-one only connection where both parties are equivalent and both attempt to initiate a connection simultaneously. Whichever party happens to start first (or succeeds in punching through the firewall first) is considered to have initiated the connection.
This mode can be specified explicitly using the mode parameter. When it's not specified, then it is derived based on the host part in the URI and the presence of the adapter parameter:
- Listener mode: if you leave the host part empty (adapter may be specified):
srt://:1234
- Caller mode: if you specify host part, but not adapter parameter:
srt://remote.host.com:1234
- Rendezvous mode: if you specify host AND adapter parameter:
srt://remote.host.com:1234&adapter=my.remote.addr
Sometimes the required parameter specification results in a different mode than desired; in this case you should specify the mode explicitly.
The interpretation of the host and port parts is the following:
- In LISTENER mode:
- host part: the local IP address to bind (default: 0.0.0.0 - "all devices")
- port part: the local port to bind (mandatory)
- adapter parameter: alternative for host part, e.g.:
srt://10.10.10.100:5001?mode=listener
or
srt://:5001?adapter=10.10.10.100
- In CALLER mode:
- host part: remote IP address to connect to (mandatory)
- port part: remote port to connect to (mandatory)
- port parameter: the local port to bind (default: 0 - "system autoselection")
- adapter parameter: the local IP address to bind (default: 0.0.0.0 - "system selected device")
srt://remote.host.com:5001
srt://remote.host.com:5001?adapter=local1&port=4001&mode=caller
- In RENDEZVOUS mode: same as CALLER except that the local port, if not specified by the port parameter, defaults to the value of the remote port (specified in the port part in the URI).
srt://remote.host.com:5001?mode=rendezvous
(uses remote.host.com
port 5001 for a remote host and the default
network device for routing to this host; the connection from the peer is
expected on that device and port 5001)
srt://remote.host.com:5001?port=4001&adapter=local1
(uses remote.host.com
port 5001 for a remote host and the peer
is expected to connect to local1
address and port 4001)
IMPORTANT information about IPv6.
This application can also use an address specified as IPv6 with the following restrictions:
-
The IPv6 address in the URI is specified in square brackets: e.g.
srt://[::1]:5000
. -
In listener mode, if you leave the host empty, the socket is bound to
INADDR_ANY
for IPv4 only. If you want to make it listen on IPv6, you need to specify the host as::
. NOTE: Don't use square brackets syntax in the adapter parameter specification, as in this case only the host is expected. -
If you want to listen for connections from both IPv4 and IPv6, mind the
ipv6only
option. The default value for this option is system default (see system manual forIPV6_V6ONLY
socket option); if unsure, you might want to enforceipv6only=0
in order to be able to accept both IPv4 and IPv6 connections by the same listener, or setipv6only=1
to accept exclusively IPv6. -
In rendezvous mode you may only interconnect both parties using IPv4, or both using IPv6. Unlike listener mode, if you want to leave the socket default-bound (you don't specify
adapter
), the socket will be bound with the same IP version as the target address. If you do specifyadapter
, then both this address and the target address must be of the same family.
Examples:
-
srt://:5000
defines listener mode with IPv4. -
srt://[::]:5000
defines caller mode (!) with IPv6. -
srt://[::]:5000?mode=listener
defines listener mode with IPv6. If the default value forIPV6_V6ONLY
system socket option is 0, it will accept also IPv4 connections. -
srt://192.168.0.5:5000?mode=rendezvous
will make a rendezvous connection with local addressINADDR_ANY
(IPv4) and port 5000 to a destination with port 5000. -
srt://[::1]:5000?mode=rendezvous&port=4000
will make a rendezvous connection with local addressinaddr6_any
(IPv6) and port 4000 to a destination with port 5000. -
srt://[::1]:5000?adapter=127.0.0.1
- this URI is invalid (different IP versions for binding and target address in rendezvous mode)
Some parameters handled for SRT medium are specific, all others are socket options. The following parameters are handled in a special way by srt-live-transmit
:
- mode: enforce caller, listener or rendezvous mode
- port: enforce the outgoing port (the port number that will be set in the UDP packet as a source port when sent from this host). Not used in listener mode.
- blocking: sets the
SRTO_RCVSYN
for input medium orSRTO_SNDSYN
for output medium - timeout: sets
SRTO_RCVTIMEO
for input medium orSRTO_SNDTIMEO
for output medium - adapter: sets the local IP address to bind
All other parameters are SRT socket options. The Values column uses the following type specification:
bool
. Possible values:yes
/no
,on
/off
,true
/false
,1
/0
.bytes
positive integer[1; INT32_MAX]
.ms
- positive integer value of milliseconds.
URI param | Values | SRT Option | Description |
---|---|---|---|
congestion |
{live , file } |
SRTO_CONGESTION |
Type of congestion control. |
conntimeo |
ms |
SRTO_CONNTIMEO |
Connection timeout. |
drifttracer |
bool |
SRTO_DRIFTTRACER |
Enable drift tracer. |
enforcedencryption |
bool |
SRTO_ENFORCEDENCRYPTION |
Reject connection if parties set different passphrase. |
fc |
bytes |
SRTO_FC |
Flow control window size. |
groupconnect |
{0 , 1 } |
SRTO_GROUPCONNECT |
Accept group connections. |
groupminstabletimeo |
60.. ms |
SRTO_GROUPMINSTABLETIMEO |
Group minimum stability timeout. |
inputbw |
bytes |
SRTO_INPUTBW |
Input bandwidth. |
iptos |
0..255 | SRTO_IPTOS |
IP socket type of service |
ipttl |
1..255 | SRTO_IPTTL |
Defines IP socket "time to live" option. |
ipv6only |
-1..1 | SRTO_IPV6ONLY |
Allow only IPv6. |
kmpreannounce |
0.. | SRTO_KMPREANNOUNCE |
Duration of Stream Encryption key switchover (in packets). |
kmrefreshrate |
0.. | SRTO_KMREFRESHRATE |
Stream encryption key refresh rate (in packets). |
latency |
0.. | SRTO_LATENCY |
Defines the maximum accepted transmission latency. |
linger |
0.. | SRTO_LINGER |
Link linger value |
lossmaxttl |
0.. | SRTO_LOSSMAXTTL |
Packet reorder tolerance. |
maxbw |
0.. | SRTO_MAXBW |
Bandwidth limit in bytes |
mininputbw |
0.. | SRTO_MININPUTBW |
Minimum allowed estimate of SRTO_INPUTBW |
messageapi |
bool |
SRTO_MESSAGEAPI |
Enable SRT message mode. |
minversion |
maj.min.rev | SRTO_MINVERSION |
Minimum SRT library version of a peer. |
mss |
76.. | SRTO_MSS |
MTU size |
nakreport |
bool |
SRTO_NAKREPORT |
Enables/disables periodic NAK reports |
oheadbw |
5..100 | SRTO_OHEADBW |
limits bandwidth overhead, percents |
packetfilter |
string |
SRTO_PACKETFILTER |
Set up the packet filter. |
passphrase |
string |
SRTO_PASSPHRASE |
Password for the encrypted transmission. (must be 10 to 79 characters) |
payloadsize |
0.. | SRTO_PAYLOADSIZE |
Maximum payload size. |
pbkeylen |
{16, 24, 32} | SRTO_PBKEYLEN |
Crypto key length in bytes. |
peeridletimeo |
ms |
SRTO_PEERIDLETIMEO |
Peer idle timeout. |
peerlatency |
ms |
SRTO_PEERLATENCY |
Minimum receiver latency to be requested by sender. |
rcvbuf |
bytes |
SRTO_RCVBUF |
Receiver buffer size |
rcvlatency |
ms |
SRTO_RCVLATENCY |
Receiver-side latency. |
retransmitalgo |
{0 , 1 } |
SRTO_RETRANSMITALGO |
Packet retransmission algorithm to use. |
sndbuf |
bytes |
SRTO_SNDBUF |
Sender buffer size. |
snddropdelay |
ms |
SRTO_SNDDROPDELAY |
Sender's delay before dropping packets. |
streamid |
string |
SRTO_STREAMID |
Stream ID (settable in caller mode only, visible on the listener peer). |
tlpktdrop |
bool |
SRTO_TLPKTDROP |
Drop too late packets. |
transtype |
{live , file } |
SRTO_TRANSTYPE |
Transmission type |
tsbpdmode |
bool |
SRTO_TSBPDMODE |
Timestamp-based packet delivery mode. |
The list of socket options can also be found in SRT header file srt.h
(SRT_SOCKOPT
enum type).
Please note that the set of available options may be version dependent.
All options are available under the lowercase name of the option without the SRTO_
prefix.
For example, SRTO_PASSPHRASE
can be set using a passphrase parameter.
The mapping table srt_options
can be found in common/socketoptions.hpp
file.
Important thing about the options (which holds true also for options for TCP and UDP, even though it's not described anywhere explicitly) is that there are two categories of options:
- PRE options: these options must be set to the socket prior to connecting and they cannot be altered after the connection is made. A PRE option set to a listening socket will be also derived by the socket returned by
srt_accept()
. - POST options: these options can be set to a socket at any time. The option set to a listening socket will not be derived by an accepted socket.
You don't have to worry about that actually - the application is aware of this and it sets these options at appropriate time.
Note also that blocking option has no practical use for users.
Normally the non-blocking mode is used only when you have an event-driven application that needs a common
signal bar for multiple event sources, or you prefer fibers to threads, when working with multiple SRT sockets in one application. The srt-live-transmit application isn't defined this way. This makes that the practical result of non-blocking mode here is that it uses polling on exactly one socket with infinite timeout. Every reading and writing operation will then return always without blocking, but when they report the "again" situation the application will stall on srt_epoll_wait()
call. This option then exists for the testing purposes, as well as educational, to serve as an example of how your application should use the non-blocking mode.
The following options are available in the application. Note that some may affect specifically only selected type of medium.
Options usually have values and they are set using colon: for example, -t:60. Alternatively you can also separate them by a space, but this space must be part of the parameter and not extracted by a shell (using " " quotes or backslash).
- -timeout, -t, -to - Sets the timeout for any activity from any medium (in seconds). Default is 0 for infinite (that is, turn this mechanism off). The mechanism is such that the SIGALRM is set up to be called after the given time and it's reset after every reading succeeded. When the alarm expires due to no reading activity in defined time, it will break the application. Notes:
- The alarm is set up after the reading loop has started, not when the application has started. That is, a caller will still wait the standard timeout to connect, and a listener may wait infinitely until some peer connects; only after the connection is established is the alarm counting started.
- The timeout mechanism doesn't work on Windows at all. It behaves as if the timeout was set to -1 and it's not modifiable.
- -timeout-mode, -tm - Timeout mode used. Default is 0 - timeout will happen after the specified time. Mode 1 cancels the timeout if the connection was established.
- -st, -srctime, -sourcetime - Enable source time passthrough. Default: disabled. It is recommended to build SRT with monotonic (
-DENABLE_MONOTONIC_CLOCK=ON
) or C++ 11 steady (-DENABLE_STDCXX_SYNC=ON
) clock to use this feature. - -buffering - Enable source buffering up to the specified number of packets. Default: 10. Minimum: 1 (no buffering).
- -chunk, -c - use given size of the buffer. The default size is 1456 bytes, which is the maximum payload size for a single SRT packet.
- -verbose, -v - Display additional information on the standard output. Note that it's not allowed to be combined with output specified as file://con.
- -statsout - SRT statistics output: filename. Without this option specified, the statistics will be printed to the standard output.
- -pf, -statspf - SRT statistics print format. Values: json, csv, default. After a comma, options can be specified (e.g. "json,pretty").
- -s, -stats, -stats-report-frequency - The frequency of SRT statistics collection, based on the number of packets.
- -loglevel - lowest logging level for SRT, one of: fatal, error, warn, note, debug (default: warn)
- -logfa, -lfa - selected FAs in SRT to be logged (default: all are enabled). See the list of FAs running
-help:logging
. - -logfile:logs.txt - Output of logs is written to file logs.txt instead of being printed to
stderr
. - -help, -h - Show help.
- -version - Show version info.
Before starting any test with srt-live-transmit
please make sure your video source works properly. For example: if you use VLC as a test player, send a UDP stream directly to it before routing it through srt-live-transmit
.
For any MPEG-TS UDP based source make sure it has packet sizes of 1316 bytes. When using ffmpeg
like in the "Example for Smoke Testing" section above set the pkt_size=1316
parameter in case your input is a continuous data stream like from a file, camera or data-generator.
When leaving the LAN for testing, please keep an eye on statistics and make sure your round-trip-time (RTT) is not drifting. It's recommended to set the latency 3 to 4 times higher than RTT. Especially on wireless links such as WLAN, Line-of-Sight Radio (LOS) and mobile links such as LTE/4G or 5G the RTT can vary a lot.
If you perform tests on the public Internet, consider checking your firewall rules. The SRT listener must be reachable on the chosen UDP port. Same applies to routers using NAT. Please set a port forwarding rule with protocol UDP to the local IP address of the SRT listener.
The initiation of an SRT connection (handshake) is decoupled from the stream direction. The sender of a stream can be an SRT listener or an SRT caller, as long as the receiving end uses the opposite connection mode. Typically you use the SRT listener on the receiving end, since it is easier to configure in terms of firewall/router setup. It also makes sense to leave the Sender in listener mode when trying to connect from various end points with possibly unknown IP addresses.
Performance issues concerning reading from UDP medium were reported in #933 and #762.
The dedicated research showed that at high and bursty data rates (~60 Mbps)
the epoll_wait(udp_socket)
is not fast enough to signal about the possibility
of reading from a socket. It results in losing data when the input bitrate is very high (above 20 Mbps).
PR #1152 (SRT v1.4.2 and above) adds the possibility
of setting the buffer size of the UDP socket in srt-live-transmit
.
Having a bigger buffer of UDP socket to store incoming data, srt-live-transmit
handles higher bitrates.
The following steps have to be performed to use the bigger UDP buffer size.
$ cat /proc/sys/net/core/rmem_max
212992
$ sudo sysctl -w net.core.rmem_max=26214400
net.core.rmem_max = 26214400
$ cat /proc/sys/net/core/rmem_max
26214400
Example URI:
"udp://:4200?rcvbuf=67108864"
Example full URI:
./srt-live-transmit "udp://:4200?rcvbuf=67108864" srt://192.168.0.10:4200 -v