Hi George,

   I am using OM on port 80 and there is no problem. In fact I could not understand your problem clearly. Can you post error messages or warnings in the logs. That would make the issue clearer, I think.
 
  Moreover, there is an issue that, as I remember right,   running red5/openmeetings on a port below or equal 1200 requires to be root.

  Regards,


_Mahmut TEKER

On 5/9/2012 12:23 AM, George Kirkham wrote:

Stephen,

 

The server is only for OpenMeetings, so no Apache running (or installed), and nothing else on that port.

 

I did find the difference, in my first server I was running openMeetings as the root user, but with subsequent servers I had been using nobody.   Running OpenMeetings under nobody works well for port 5080, but not for port 80, and I cannot understand why that might be.

 

One thing I could try is to create a full account called “openmeetings” which has a home directory and then try running OpenMeetings under this account.  Sometimes software requires an account with a home directory, not just a dummy account.

 

I believe the issue is related with OpenMeetings code somewhere, as the Red5 server is running and accepting connections (root), just when you try to run OpenMeetings itself, that fails.

 

If I get success at any time, I will post back, but first I wanted to learn if anyone was familiar with the issue, and it looks like everyone else has their OpenMeetings servers either using port 5080 or are successfully running under ‘nobody’.

 

Thanks,

 

George Kirkham

 

IT Manager

Cooperative Research Centre For Greenhouse Gas Technologies (CO2CRC)

NFF House, 14 - 16 Brisbane Avenue, Barton, ACT, 2600, Australia

T: (02) 6120 1600

F: (02) 6273 7181

E: gkirk...@co2crc.com.au,

W: www.co2crc.com.au

 

 

From: Stephen Cottham [mailto:stephen.cott...@robertbird.com.au]
Sent: Tuesday, 8 May 2012 10:34 PM
To: openmeetings-user@incubator.apache.org
Subject: RE: <red5httpport>80</red5httpport>

 

You aren’t using Apache on the new Debian server are you?

 

If Apache is running on port 80 then they will conflict.

 

To aid in finding the problem, If you go here

 

/usr/lib/red5

 

Then chmod 755 red5-debug.sh

 

Then start it using the debug mode

 

./red5-debug.sh

 

This will tell you more about why its failing to start.

 

Cheers

 

 

 

Stephen Cottham
Group IT Manager (Associate)

Robert Bird Group
Level 5, 333 Ann St
Brisbane, Queensland, 4000, Australia

Phone: +6173 319 2777 (AUS)

Phone: +44207 592 8000 (UK)

Fax: +6173 319 2799

 

Mobile:  +61400 756 963 (AUS)

Mobile:  +447900 918 616 (UK)

Web: www.robertbird.com



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From: George Kirkham [mailto:gkirk...@co2crc.com.au]
Sent: Tuesday, 8 May 2012 1:24 PM
To: openmeetings-user@incubator.apache.org
Subject: <red5httpport>80</red5httpport>

 

Hi,

 

Has anyone had success/issues with using port 80 instead of port 5080.

 

I have a number of  Debian OpenMeetings servers. The first that I built I have configured using port 80 instead of port 5080, and all works well.

 

Since that time I have built a few more Debian OpenMeetings servers and I cannot get any of them to work with port 80.  I really do not think the issue is with OpenMeetings or its configuration, because I can copy the entire “red5” folder from the new servers to the first (working) server and it will work on port 80.

 

I am hoping that someone may have had similar issues and knows how to resolved it. 

 

/usr/lib/red5/conf/red5.properties

 

# HTTP

http.host=0.0.0.0

http.port=80

https.port=8443

http.URIEncoding=UTF-8

 

/usr/lib/red5/webapps/openmeetings/config.xml

<red5httpport>80</red5httpport>

 

 

Thanks,

 

George Kirkham

 

IT Manager

Cooperative Research Centre For Greenhouse Gas Technologies (CO2CRC)

NFF House, 14 - 16 Brisbane Avenue, Barton, ACT, 2600, Australia

T: (02) 6120 1600

F: (02) 6273 7181

E: gkirk...@co2crc.com.au,

W: www.co2crc.com.au

 

 

From: George Kirkham [mailto:gkirk...@co2crc.com.au]
Sent: Monday, 7 May 2012 9:19 PM
To: openmeetings-user@incubator.apache.org
Subject: RE: FW: Editing OpenMeetings language files

 

Thanks, Sebastian for your comments.  It is good to know.

 

 

George Kirkham

 

From: seba.wag...@gmail.com [mailto:seba.wag...@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, 7 May 2012 5:23 PM
To: openmeetings-user@incubator.apache.org
Subject: Re: FW: Editing OpenMeetings language files

 

Hi George,

What is it that I should add to all the other language files?
=> It makes it more easy to give a complete (but not fully translated) file to translators. Lots of people tend to just download the language-xml file and translate that. If those files are all incomplete or certain labels are missing that this is just too confusing.

The same English item, and then hope those with knowledge of the other languages
modify for the languages that they are proficient in?
=> Yes you can fill them up in English and hope that some translators will look into that file. Of course it might take months or even years until really all languages are filled up. You could also use translate.google.com and look for a translation.

Maybe there are other practices that I would be good for me to follow, if so, please let me know.
=> If you edit the XML files please don't add linebreaks (some editors do that automatically), if you want to include a "save" linebreak you would actually enter something like this:

&lt;br/&gt;

(this is XML encoded HTML linebreak "<br/>")


Sebastian

2012/5/6 George Kirkham <gkirk...@co2crc.com.au>

Hi,

What is the correct process for adding a new item to the Language files
?

I have been informed that "If you add a new label we have a common
(undocumentated) rule: We add this label to all language files. You can
fill up other language files the english one. However all language files
should contain the same number of labels and not only a subset."

What is it that I should add to all the other language files?  The same
English item, and then hope those with knowledge of the other languages
modify for the languages that they are proficient in?  Is there a way to
ask others to check and update any languages that they are proficient
in?  Maybe there are other practices that I would be good for me to
follow, if so, please let me know.

I noticed that the Japanese file has
 <string id="262" name="salutation_miss">
   <value>Ms.</value>
 </string>


Thanks,

George Kirkham




--
Sebastian Wagner
https://twitter.com/#!/dead_lock
http://www.openmeetings.de
http://www.webbase-design.de
http://www.wagner-sebastian.com
seba.wag...@gmail.com



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