- Larger values mean less verbose output. Loglevel 1 (debug) gets
- really noisy; a value of 2 (info) produces still noisy output,
+ Larger values mean less verbose output. Loglevel 0 (debug) gets
+ really noisy; a value of 1 (info) produces still noisy output,
- loglevel 3 (notice) indicate normal but significant events
- while level 4 (warning) logs unexpected events that can be
+ loglevel 2 (notice) indicate normal but significant events
+ while level 3 (warning) logs unexpected events that can be
- 5 (error) and crititcal errors are logged using loglevel 6
- (crit). Finally, loglevel 7 (emerg) is reserved for messages
+ 4 (error) and crititcal errors are logged using loglevel 5
+ (crit). Finally, loglevel 6 (emerg) is reserved for messages
- can be given multiple times. Example: '224.0.1.38:1500'
- instructs the ortp sender to send to udp port 1500 on host
+ can be given multiple times. Example: '224.0.1.38:1500'
+ instructs the udp sender to send to udp port 1500 on host
sends the audio file header periodically if necessary. This
option is used to specify the duration of the interval between
sending the header. Shorter values decrease the average time
sends the audio file header periodically if necessary. This
option is used to specify the duration of the interval between
sending the header. Shorter values decrease the average time
- ortp's adaptive jitter compensation gets activated whenever
- this value is greater than zero. See the ortp documentation
- about details on this feature.
+ This option instructs the udp sender to set the time to live to
+ \"num\" for the sending udp socket. Only useful for multicast
+ udp streaming.