similar to: Blocking IP addresses on a per mountpoint level

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 600 matches similar to: "Blocking IP addresses on a per mountpoint level"

2020 Mar 26
4
Blocking IP addresses on a per mountpoint level
Thanks. Indeed - but is it it possible to block IP addresses on a per mountpoint level? For example, my user with /mountpointA.ogg does not mind being hammered by connections from 93.184.216.34 [example.com] but my user with /mountpointB.ogg wants to block that IP address. Using iptables I've blocked connections, at a server level, from example.com for my User B but my User A doesn't
2020 Mar 26
0
Blocking IP addresses on a per mountpoint level
Ah, I must have overlooked that requirement in my first reply. I don't think you can do it natively in Icecast, and doing this in the kernel will be too low level and too wide a block, so I guess a web application firewall or a reverse proxy is the way to go. Maybe setting up HAproxy or similar could solve this? -- Marius On 26.03.2020 13:49, Chip wrote: > Thanks. > > Indeed - but
2020 Mar 26
0
Blocking IP addresses on a per mountpoint level
On 26/03/2020 13:49, Chip wrote: > Thanks. > > Indeed - but is it it possible to block IP addresses on a per > mountpoint level? For example, my user with /mountpointA.ogg does not > mind being hammered by connections from 93.184.216.34 [example.com > <http://example.com>] but my user with /mountpointB.ogg wants to block > that IP address. If the mountpoints are at
2019 Jan 16
1
CentOS 6.X, iptables 1.47 and GeoLite2 Country Database
On Tue, Jan 15, 2019 at 07:43:02AM +0000, Phil Perry (pperry at elrepo.org) wrote: > On 15/01/2019 01:29, Jobst Schmalenbach wrote: > > On Mon, Jan 14, 2019 at 07:29:45AM +0000, Phil Perry (pperry at elrepo.org) wrote: > > > On 14/01/2019 07:09, Jobst Schmalenbach wrote: > Below is my script for creating/updating an ipset to block my top 10 > Hope that helps Thanks, it
2024 Jan 11
1
404 - The file you requested could not be found
Marius, Yes, I think you nailed it. I built it from source and I did as root. And yes I am able to get audio at http://hostname:8000/voice. So now I know what the problem is but not sure how to fix it. A clean install? I kinda messed with the file permissions in the web directory shown below but that didn't solve my problem. [cid:image001.png at 01DA44A8.DF3507C0] [cid:image002.png at
2024 Jan 11
1
404 - The file you requested could not be found
I think this is related: [2024-01-11? 13:55:43] WARN fserve/fserve_client_create req for file "/usr/local/share/icecast/web/index.html" Permission denied It also seems like you have built icecast from source? Are you sure that you have installed it correctly? Maybe you've built it as root and then only made the files readable by root, but icecast is running as the icecast user
2024 Mar 15
1
Unable to utilize past 1 gbps
A quick Google search indicates that it might be a Proxmox limitation: https://forum.proxmox.com/threads/i-cant-exceed-1gb-of-internet-with-a-10gb-network-card.128710/ On Fri, Mar 15, 2024 at 12:24?PM Marius Flage <marius at flage.org> wrote: > Hi Zsolt, > > looking at the metrics from Proxmox it doesn't look like anything breaks > there. What about at the operating
2024 Jan 03
1
404 - The file you requested could not be found
That 100% depends on what you're trying to access. Try accessing the /admin/ endpoint and see what you have set up there. You also need to specify a relay-stub in the xml configuration, see:?https://icecast.org/docs/icecast-2.4.1/relaying.html--MariusSendt fra min Galaxy -------- Opprinnelig melding --------Fra: "Mayiani, Martin Martine - mayianmm" <mayianmm at jmu.edu> Dato:
2024 Mar 15
1
Unable to utilize past 1 gbps
Hi Zsolt, looking at the metrics from Proxmox it doesn't look like anything breaks there. What about at the operating system level? Could there be some limits there? Have you checked corresponding kernel or system logs? Which OS/distribution are you using? Checked the logs there? If nothing screams there, maybe start looking at a load balancer and scale with several more VMs? -- Marius
2015 Jun 24
2
Identify listeners on log reports
Hi Marius, thanks for your reply. URL auth via usern/pass seems what I need. I fail to understand is if and how would that reflect on logs. Care to elaborate further? Thank you ---- Mark Foster On Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 8:28 AM, Marius Flage <marius at flage.org> wrote: > Hi Mark, > > You can maybe look at authentication: > http://icecast.org/docs/icecast-2.4.1/auth.html ?
2015 Dec 01
2
Making icecast stream available outside my network?
Hi, yess its running on my local ip address. I've loged in to the router, andf orwarded port 8000. On 12/1/2015 2:17 AM, Marius Flage wrote: > Hi! > > Are you even sure that your icecast server is exposed on the internet? > Is your icecast server running on a public or private ip address? If > it's running on a private ip address (192.168.0.0/16, 10.0.0.0/8 or >
2024 Jan 11
1
404 - The file you requested could not be found
Hmmm .. so not sure I understand what you mean by that. SO basically what I am trying to do is go to http://hostname:8000/. I have attached the error log as well. Thanks From: Icecast <icecast-bounces at xiph.org> On Behalf Of Marius Flage Sent: Wednesday, January 3, 2024 1:12 PM To: Icecast streaming server user discussions <icecast at xiph.org> Subject: Re: [Icecast] 404 - The file
2015 Jun 24
2
Identify listeners on log reports
We have businesses users listening to 17 different icecast streams. We're looking for a way to identify via icecast logs what each user is listening. At the moment in order to do so, we're cloning the streams for each user, so that separate logs are generated. As the number of user grow, this approach is becoming unsustainable. Is there an alternative, more lean way to do this? Thanks
2024 Mar 14
1
Unable to utilize past 1 gbps
Dear Marius, Our station is Megadanceradio in Hungary. Our status page for the master server is: http://45.67.158.93:8000/status.xsl For the slave: http://45.67.158.94:8000/status.xsl We are peaking at around 11.00 am and 13.00 pm in the afternoon. We have tested extensively the bandwith with speedtest. We tried with iperf but that did not finish for a long time so we stopped it. Currently
2024 Mar 14
1
Unable to utilize past 1 gbps
Dear Marius, In addition to that attached please find a screenshot from Proxmox on statistics. Do you know any ice cast servers that puts out more than 1 gbps for a longer period? Just curious whether anyone was able to go beyond 1 gbps for an extensive time. Thank you! Best, Zsolt zsolt makkai <gvmzsolt at gmail.com> ezt ?rta (id?pont: 2024. m?rc. 14., Cs, 23:39): > Dear Marius,
2024 Mar 14
1
Unable to utilize past 1 gbps
I don't know if any such limitation exists, but maxing out just shy of 1Gbps sounds a bit more like an interface's line speed limited/set to 1Gbps somewhere in your production chain? You wrote that you have tested the bw - what did you use? Iperf? Speedtest?Maybe consider scaling with additional Icecast servers and use a load balancer in front? And then just scale accordingly? This sounds
2015 Jan 22
2
a dedicated audio encoder
Marius Flage: > I've just set up Raspberry Pi with external USB soundcard and the > Darkice encoder. Seems to be working just fine (25% CPU utilization). > Check this for a writeup on that: > > https://stmllr.net/blog/live-streaming-mp3-audio-with-darkice-and-icecast2-on-raspberry-pi/ hi Marius, which audio card are you using? btw: thanks for the howto, used it while ago, it
2017 Nov 02
4
both ssl and non-ssl stream on the same socket
Hi. I configured icecast to serve a stream over ssl and it plays nice in Chrome and VLC. But on plain http I get *connection reset*. This stream's url is the same for many years now, and it is included in many radio directories, TuneIn and other apps. I can't change it or break it. Is there a way to have a stream that servs the content over ssl and plain http in the same time, depending
2019 Jan 15
2
CentOS 6.X, iptables 1.47 and GeoLite2 Country Database
On Mon, Jan 14, 2019 at 07:29:45AM +0000, Phil Perry (pperry at elrepo.org) wrote: > On 14/01/2019 07:09, Jobst Schmalenbach wrote: > > Hi > I use ipdeny's aggregated country lists to do the same thing: > > http://www.ipdeny.com/ipblocks/data/aggregated/ > > I just feed this data directly into ipset/iptables via a script running on > my firewall (not a C6 box).
2005 Dec 27
4
Best way downsample stream from 128 to 56 on the server?
Hi! We want to over our stream in better quality (128 or 256) - but we still have listeners using ISDN ... what's the best way to create a 56'er stream from the 128er send to the server? The downsampling has to run on the debian streaming server. Greetings from Germany Philipp