![]() ![]() The authors andĭevelopers of this material and DASH-IF hereby disclaim all other warranties andĬonditions, either express, implied or statutory, including, but not limited to,Īny (if any) implied warranties, duties or conditions of merchantability, ofįitness for a particular purpose, of accuracy or completeness of responses, of The material contained herein is provided on an AS IS basis. The DASH-IF Bylaws and IPR Policy can be obtained at. Patent and other intellectual property license rights and obligations. The rights and obligations whichĪpply to DASH-IF documents, as such rights and obligations are set forth andĭefined in the DASH-IF Bylaws and IPR Policy including, but not limited to, Rights and DASH-IF disclaims any duty to do so. DASH-IF has made no search or investigation for such No patent license, either implied or express, is granted to The technology embodied in thisĭocument may involve the use of intellectual property rights, including patentsĪnd patent applications owned or controlled by any of the authors or developers This is a document made available by DASH-IF. Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Code Components extracted from this document must Review these documents carefully as they describe your rights and restrictions Multiple ingest sources, redundancy and failover are presented. In addition, guidelines for synchronization of These interfaces support carriage ofĪudiovisual media, timed metadata and timed text. Smart implementations can implementĪnd support both at the same time. Two closely related protocol interfaces are defined: CMAF Ingest (Interface-1)īased on fragmented MP4 and DASH/HLS Ingest (Interface-2) based on DASH and HLS.īoth interfaces use the HTTP POST (or PUT) method to transmit media objects fromĪn ingest source to a receiving entity. 9.2 Implementation 2: Ingesting CMAF Track Files Based on fmp4 Tools. ![]() 9.1 Implementation 1: FFmpeg Support for Interface-1 and Interface-2.8.2 Example 2: Low-Latency DASH, and Combination of Interface-1 and Interface-2.8.1 Example 1: CMAF Ingest and a Just-in-Time Packager.7.1.2 Unique Segment and Manifest Naming.6.9 Requirements for Ingest Source Synchronization.6.8 Requirements for Failovers and Connection Error Handling.6.7 Requirements for Signaling and Conditioning Splice Points. ![]()
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