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00:41
@Mgetz Wait.. Random question but are you on the OLC Discord server? 💭
 
2 hours later…
03:10
olc?
03:26
Original Lounge C ++ ... possibly.
 
1 hour later…
04:31
Today's error:
DWARF error: could not find variable specification at offset 104aff
 
4 hours later…
09:13
Anyone knows anything about linux port forwarding or am I talking to myself again?
mostly talking to yourself
also googling iptables might help
for redirecting ports I also sometimes just use ssh -L or ssh -R if it's to forward some tcp stuff to another machine for testing only
So I am receiving video stream on a port, if I redirect it, I could display it on another port on the server on a web page?
I don't see why not
I use it all the time if I start like a web-page or service in linux and want to test it on my windows machine
Do I need port forwarding or can I display on the same port at the same time as it's receiving data?
(Obviously I don't know what I am doing)
I don't think I understand the question
09:22
So I am receiving data on, say port 12345
Can display (server):12345
I don't know what "displaying a port" is
I mean 'streaming data on that port'
Have I confused you already :x
I usually just bind to that port from one machine. So I have never done "listen to tcp port on server and remote", I have however send TCP requests to both the server and the local machine while forwarding the port
I don't even know how you would bind two applications to the same TCP port
so if you I do like " ssh -R 12345:localhost:12345 [email protected]" then I can send tcp requests to both localhost:12345 and server.com:12345 and they will both end up at the server
it's actually tied to this question:
0
Q: How to display video stream captured on rasbperry pi camera on an external website?

TelKittyI am trying to capture video stream using raspberry pi camera and display it on a web page hosted on a CentOS server. This is what I have tried: On the CentOS server, I am listening using: nc -l 11337 Then on raspberry pi, I am sending the video stream by using: raspivid -t 0 -w 320 -h 240 -fps ...

I am sending a video stream from rPi to a CentOS server and CentOS server receives it on, say, port 12345
Then in order to display it on the server, I forward it to another port so I can display it on a web page. Is this sound theoretically?
sure, sounds like you need some server to translate the video format first though
09:32
Cool, thanks.
basically something like this stackoverflow.com/questions/54003015/…

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