Modifications

Sauter à la navigation Sauter à la recherche
2 300 octets ajoutés ,  20 octobre 2018 à 22:04
Ligne 29 : Ligne 29 :     
=== Navigateur d'un ordinateur ===
 
=== Navigateur d'un ordinateur ===
* Type the following into the address bar: [http://raspberrypi.local:9981/extjs.html http://raspberrypi.local:9981/extjs.html]
+
* Type the following into the address bar:<br />[http://raspberrypi.local:9981/extjs.html http://raspberrypi.local:9981/extjs.html]
 
* This should connect to TVHeadend running on the Raspberry Pi.  
 
* This should connect to TVHeadend running on the Raspberry Pi.  
 
** If the address above doesn't work, you’ll need to find out the IP address of the Pi.<br />Open a terminal window on your Pi, and run the command hostname -I  
 
** If the address above doesn't work, you’ll need to find out the IP address of the Pi.<br />Open a terminal window on your Pi, and run the command hostname -I  
 
** You’ll see the IP address in two formats: a string of four numbers separated by dots, then a space, then a long string of numbers and letters separated by colons.  
 
** You’ll see the IP address in two formats: a string of four numbers separated by dots, then a space, then a long string of numbers and letters separated by colons.  
 
** Copy everything before the space (the four numbers and dots), and paste this into the address bar instead of the raspberrypi.local​ part of the address.
 
** Copy everything before the space (the four numbers and dots), and paste this into the address bar instead of the raspberrypi.local​ part of the address.
 +
* Once you have connected to TVHeadend via the browser, you will be prompted to sign in. Use the account name and password you chose when you installed TVHeadend on the Pi.<br />A setup wizard should appear.
 +
* First, set the language you want TVHeadend to use (​ '''English (GB)'''​ worked for us; we have not yet tested other languages).
 +
* Next, set up network, user, and administrator access. If you don’t have specific preferences, leave '''Allowed network'''​ blank, and enter an asterisk (​*)  in the '''username'''​ and '''password''' fields. This will let anyone connected to your local network access TVHeadend.
 +
* You should see a window titled '''Network settings'''​. Under '''Network 2'''​, you should see '''Tuner: Sony CDX2880 #0 : DVB-T #0'''​. For '''Network type'''​, choose '''DVB-T Network​'''.
 +
* The next window is '''Assign predefined muxes to networks​'''; here, you select the TV stream to receive and decode. Under '''Network 1​''', for '''Pre-defined muxes​''', select your local TV transmitter.
 +
** A list of UK transmitters can be found at [http://www.digitaluk.co.uk/coveragechecker www.digitaluk.co.uk/coveragechecker]​. Enter your postcode to see which transmitter should give you a good signal.
 +
* When you click '''Save & Next​''', the software will start scanning for the selected mux, and will show a progress bar. After about two minutes, you should see something like:
 +
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 +
Found muxes: 8
 +
Found services: 172
 +
</syntaxhighlight>
 +
* In the next window, titled ​ Service mapping​ , tick all three boxes: '''Map all services​ , Create provider tags​''', and '''Create network tags​'''.
 +
* Next you should see a list of TV channels you can watch, along with the programmes they’re currently showing.
 +
* To watch a TV channel in the browser, click the little TV icon to the left of the channel listing, just to the right of the '''i''' icon. This brings up an in-browser media player.
 +
* To watch a TV channel in a local media player, e.g. VLC ([https://www.videolan.org/vlc ​www.videolan.org/vlc]​), you’ll need to download it: click the '''i''' icon to the left of a channel listing to bring up the information panel for that channel. Here you can see a stream file that you can download.
29 861

modifications

Menu de navigation