RTCWildlifeCams
New Member
Hello,
I install and maintain publicly accessible streaming wildlife webcams and I am looking to reduce the onsite hardware footprint of a few new sites I'm spinning up. I would like to port forward the RTSP streams from some small sites to a centralized OBS server instead of having each site with its own dedicated computer running OBS connected to YouTube RTMP service. I believe this is a decent high level idea as I can scale the CPU, RAM, and GPU capacity in one location. Anyone run more the 2 or 3 instances of OBS on a high end desktop? RTX3080 standing by ;) I already know many of the downsides to doing this but just trying to see the feasibility from an OBS standpoint. For now I'm ignoring the security/privacy, bandwidth, and reliability issues this architecture introduces.
Only issue I'm running into while testing this so far is I cannot get OBS to pull up the port forwarded RTSP stream as a media source. I've got all of the stream URL correct since it works just fine when pulling it up with VLC on the same Win 10 computer. I have played with the windows firewall setting as discussed in another thread and those look good (VLC has no problem playing it and they are set the same). Is this an OBS thing that it doesn't like public IPs or the port numbers in the RTSP URL?
I've tried many combinations of different computers at other sites running OBS servers and even different port forwarded RTSP streams from some other site's cameras that record to a Blue Iris server and it never seems to work with the public IP in the URL.
Both ways work in VLC, Neither work in OBS:
rtsp://UN:PW@107.XXX.XXX.XXX:8554/av0_0
rtsp://107.XXX.XXX.XXX:8554/av0_0
I install and maintain publicly accessible streaming wildlife webcams and I am looking to reduce the onsite hardware footprint of a few new sites I'm spinning up. I would like to port forward the RTSP streams from some small sites to a centralized OBS server instead of having each site with its own dedicated computer running OBS connected to YouTube RTMP service. I believe this is a decent high level idea as I can scale the CPU, RAM, and GPU capacity in one location. Anyone run more the 2 or 3 instances of OBS on a high end desktop? RTX3080 standing by ;) I already know many of the downsides to doing this but just trying to see the feasibility from an OBS standpoint. For now I'm ignoring the security/privacy, bandwidth, and reliability issues this architecture introduces.
Only issue I'm running into while testing this so far is I cannot get OBS to pull up the port forwarded RTSP stream as a media source. I've got all of the stream URL correct since it works just fine when pulling it up with VLC on the same Win 10 computer. I have played with the windows firewall setting as discussed in another thread and those look good (VLC has no problem playing it and they are set the same). Is this an OBS thing that it doesn't like public IPs or the port numbers in the RTSP URL?
I've tried many combinations of different computers at other sites running OBS servers and even different port forwarded RTSP streams from some other site's cameras that record to a Blue Iris server and it never seems to work with the public IP in the URL.
Both ways work in VLC, Neither work in OBS:
rtsp://UN:PW@107.XXX.XXX.XXX:8554/av0_0
rtsp://107.XXX.XXX.XXX:8554/av0_0