Hi Nicklas, Debian and Ubuntu 64 Bit have been tried and tested by many users over the past 6 months: there are up to date guides on installation that can be found here:
https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OPENMEETINGS/Tutorials+relat ed+to+OpenMeetings Best Regards 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 633 2880 (UK) Fax: +6173 319 2799 Mobile: +61400 756 963 (AUS) Mobile: +447900 918 616 (UK) Web: www.robertbird.com This email and any attachments are confidential and may contain legally privileged information or copyright material. Unless expressly stated, confidentiality and/or legal privilege is not intended to be waived by the sending of this email. The contents of this email, including any attachments, are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. If you are not an intended recipient, please contact us immediately by return email and then delete both messages. You may not otherwise read, forward, copy, use or disclose this email or any attachments. Any views expressed in this email are those of the individual sender except where the sender expressly, and with authority, states otherwise. It is your responsibility to check any attachments for viruses or defects before opening or sending them on. None of the sender or its related entities accepts any liability for any consequential damage resulting from this email containing computer viruses. Disclaimer added by CodeTwo Exchange Rules http://www.codetwo.com -----Original Message----- From: Mikael Kurula [mailto:alcar...@gmail.com] Sent: 12 December 2012 13:23 To: openmeetings-user@incubator.apache.org Subject: Re: New to OpenMeetings; looking for input before installation Hi! I'm also in the process of trying out if OpenMeetings is a possible alternative to Adobe Connect, with which I'm utterly fed up. The only problem I had with CentOS is that LibreOffice for CentOS 6 depends on OpenJDK whereas OpenMeetings need Oracle's Java. Somebody better att juggling with with yum probably can probably solve this easily (in which case I'd be grateful for help). Avoiding MySQL sounds like a reasonable idea to me, since I ran into this problem: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/OPENMEETINGS-488 (From what I understood this is very rare.) Right now my only showstopper issues are with recording, so I could suggest you check out if the recording capabilities are sufficient for your needs. In addition to the messages I've posted to the users list, I'm also having this problem: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/OPENMEETINGS-270 Otherwise OpenMeetings would surely do the job just fine for me, so I sincerely hope I can make the recordings work, but I need help from the OM experts for that. :) Friendly greetings, Mikael On 2012.12.12, at 15:09, Nicklas af Ekenstam wrote: > Thanks Dimitri, > > That's helpful nonetheless. I may try both CentOS and Ubuntu then. > > I also found something which I think answers my somewhat ill articulated question regarding upstream relay servers: > https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/OPENMEETINGS/Cluster+Maste > r-Slave+overview > > Thanks again, > Nicklas > > On Wed, Dec 12, 2012 at 2:04 PM, Dimitri Yioulos <dyiou...@onpointfc.com> wrote: > Hi, Nicklas. > > I can't answer any of your technical questions, but can say that I've > installed OM on a VMware virtual machine running CentOS 6.3. It works > a treat. Others have installed it on machines running Ubuntu. I > guess that's a matter of personal choice depending on, for example, > the distro you're most comfortable with, or run in your environment. > > HTH. > > Dimitri > > > On Wednesday 12 December 2012 5:55:41 am Nicklas af Ekenstam > wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I am in the process of setting up a proof of concept based on > > OpenMeetings and would very much appreciate your input on a few > > questions before I get started. > > The goal of this proof of concept is to evaluate if OpenMeetings > > would be a suitable replacement for a current system based on Adobe > > Connect. (I sure hope so.) > > > > What I would like to do is install a fully working OpenMeetings > > environment that we can play around with. As I would propably have > > to take this on the road I'm wondering if a VMware based install > > would work? I see that there are some VMware images available for > > download but I think I would prefer to do the install from scratch > > myself in order to assess the installation process as well. > > > > I'm thinking of doing the install in one of our Vsphere clusters > > and, if I need to take it on the road with me, export it to VMware > > Workstation images and run locally on one (or more) laptops with my > > own networking equipment. > > > > These are my questions: > > What is a solid choice for the OS/distro? I'm guessing, based on > > reading the Wiki, that CentOS is a good choice; but what version? Or > > should I look into one of the other fine distros out there? > > > > I'm looking to try the clustering features as well on this project > > so, based on that, how many servers - performing what tasks - do you > > propose I setup? I would like to use PostgreSQL for the DB, but > > MySQL would also work. Two servers running OpenMeetings and one > > server running the database? > > > > I would also like to explore SIP connectivity so perhaps one server > > running Asterisk (or similiar)? > > > > Do I need any more servers for something that would, pretty much, > > mimic a real live situation? > > > > And while I'm asking questions: > > Is there a way to extend OpenMeetings so that video broadcasts could > > use upstream relaying servers somehow? > > We have schools in different locations and it would be nice if > > people in these schools could connect to a locally installed relay > > server for the video feed instead of each of them having to go the > > main OpenMeetings server gobbling up unnecessary bandwidth in the > > process. > > > > Thanks in advance, > > Nicklas > > > > -- > This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by > MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. > >