Thank you for your quick response.
It is a good idea, but I tried without convincing results. My firewall
blocks port 1935 (or another random port) and sends a timeout immediately.
Could you tell me how and where you didthe timeout settings in your
example (firewall, proxy, reverse proxy apache which is used by
openmeetings, or in the OpenMeetings configuration config.xml), I'm a
little disappointed.
Fabrice
Le 03/12/2012 08:55, "> seba.wag...@gmail.com (par Internet, dépôt
openmeetings-user-return-3776-fabrice.scoyer=developpement-durable.gouv...@incubator.apache.org)"
a écrit :
Hallo Fabrice,
there might be a way to fix the first 3 times to only take 1 second.
For example for me if the rtmp host is down the first 3 attempts to
connect take only 1 second in total.
Did you try to set the rtmp port to any random port that you know that
there will be a timeout send back quite immediately?
That way the timeout for the rtmp connection should be quite fast and
the switch to rtmpt might be almost as if it is the first try.
Sebastian
2012/12/3 "SCOYER Fabrice (Chef d'unité) - CETE Lyon/SG/INF"
<fabrice.sco...@developpement-durable.gouv.fr
<mailto:fabrice.sco...@developpement-durable.gouv.fr>>
Hello,
I use OpenMeetings via a reverse proxy to provide access from a
chain of proxy.
By default, so I use the protocol rtmpt, and when I connect to the
website I have to wait 3 unsuccessful attempts before OpenMeetings
switches on protocol rtmpt.
During this waiting (a bit long), users have a blank page. Is
there a way to insert such a simple animated gif (like please wait
...) in this blank page.
Thank you for all your suggestions.
cordially
Fabrice
--
Sebastian Wagner
https://twitter.com/#!/dead_lock <https://twitter.com/#%21/dead_lock>
http://www.webbase-design.de
http://www.wagner-sebastian.com
seba.wag...@gmail.com <mailto:seba.wag...@gmail.com>