The documentation set for this product strives to use bias-free language. For the purposes of this documentation set, bias-free is defined as language that does not imply discrimination based on age, disability, gender, racial identity, ethnic identity, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and intersectionality. Exceptions may be present in the documentation due to language that is hardcoded in the user interfaces of the product software, language used based on RFP documentation, or language that is used by a referenced third-party product. Learn more about how Cisco is using Inclusive Language.
Tip Features in DMM-VPM are available to you if you purchased and installed the required license. For information about licensing, see "Using DMM-Admin to Install Licenses."
DMM-VPM features are organized under four tabs. The tab that you select determines what you see:
•Using Features Under the Setup Tab
•Using Features Under the Users Tab
•Using Features Under the Video Portal Tab
•Using Features Under the Encoders Tab
Tip To understand what you should do if you are setting up DMM-VPM on a brand-new DMM appliance, see Quick Start Guide for Cisco Digital Media System 4.0 on Cisco.com.
Administrators, content authors, and designers use options under the Setup tab to enter or edit the configuration and deployment settings for DMM-VPM on a DMM appliance that is already in use. This section contains these topics:
•Configuring the Settings for Global Variables
•Configuring the Settings to Use a Video Portal
•Configuring the Location Settings for Deployments
You can configure low-level administrative and network settings for DMM-DS.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page.
Step 2 Select Setup > Global Variables.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-1.
Step 4 To save and commit your entries, click Save Configuration Parameters.
You can configure settings to use DMM-DS with a Video Portal.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page.
Step 2 Select Setup > Video Portal.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-2.
Step 4 To save and commit your entries, click Save Portal Parameters.
|
|
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Video Portal Web Server Base |
The top-level HTTP URL of the server on which your audience can find your Video Portal. |
The URL to the live video portal |
The HTTP URL that points directly to your public Video Portal. If you click Check, you see one of these messages: •"URL is blank." — You have not entered any URL. •"Server was not found." — You entered an invalid URL. •"URL exists." — The URL that you entered points correctly to a Video Portal. |
Default Audio Only Image |
The SWF or non-progressive JPEG image to show as the thumbnail for every audio file. You must specify a file that is 100 pixels wide and 75 pixels high (or uses any proportional multiple of those dimensions). The file must be in the same directory that you specified as the Upload Path on Local File System when you completed the "Configuring the Settings for Global Variables" section. Note This option applies to you only if — when you or an administrator used AAI to set up your Video Portal appliance — you selected FLV as the only supported filetype and Flash/Sorenson as the only supported format for encoding. For more information, see Task 10 in the "Setting Up and Configuring a Video Portal Appliance" chapter in Appliance Administration Guide for Cisco Digital Media System 4.0 on Cisco.com. |
Default Preview Image |
The SWF or non-progressive JPEG image to show as a placeholder thumbnail image when no other preview image is available for a video file. You must specify a file that is 100 pixels wide and 75 pixels high (or uses any proportional multiple of those dimensions). |
Supported Media Formats |
Caution You must select exactly the same options that you selected in AAI when you set up your Video Portal appliance. If your selections now differ from those earlier selections, your Video Portal might not work correctly. For more information, see Task 10 in the "Setting Up and Configuring a Video Portal Appliance" chapter in Appliance Administration Guide for Cisco Digital Media System 4.0 on Cisco.com. The formats to support. Select any combination of Flash Video, Windows Media, Real, and MPEG4/H.264. |
You can configure the location settings for video deployments. You must deploy files to at least one remote location, because you cannot present them to audiences directly from your DMM appliance.
Tip If you make a mistake when you edit the deployment locations, the blue or gray background images might no longer be visible on your Video Portal. This happens when the path is wrong that should point to your background images, or when the path points to progressive JPG files instead of nonprogressive JPG files, which are required. To correct this problem, select Video Portal > User Interfaces, then confirm that the default values are still correct:
•blue — 00000000000000000000000000000005_onBusinessBlueBG.jpg
•gray — 00000000000000000000000000000005_onBusinessGrayBG.jpg
Alternatively, if you uploaded your own image file to use as the background image, confirm that the file is a nonprogressive JPG and that the path to it does not contain any errors.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page.
Step 2 Select Setup > Deployment Locations.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-3. The filetypes are:
•Flash Video — Flash (FLV) files to deploy as the Flash Video version of a video offering or to show as a video preview.
•Windows Media Video — Windows Media (WMV) files to deploy as the Windows Media version of a video offering.
•Real Video — Real Player (RM) files to deploy as the Real Player version of a video offering.
•Quicktime Video — Quicktime (MOV) files to deploy as the Quicktime version of a video offering.
•Video Portal Metadata (XML) — XML files that DMM-VPM creates and that your Video Portal reads. You cannot edit the deployment location values for these XML files.
•Support — Any non-video binary files to deploy as supporting images, such as SWF files or non-progressive JPG files.
Step 4 To save and commit your entries, click Save Deployment Locations.
Step 5 (Optional) To run a deployment now:
a. Select Video Portal > Deployments, then click Schedule New Deployment.
b. Select the Video Part 1 check box (in the "Video Part Selection" area).
c. To deploy the pre-loaded content and metadata immediately, select the Schedule Immediately check box (in the "Deployment Time" area.)
d. Click Create Deployment.
e. To ensure that the content and metadata deployed appropriately, use another computer on your network to access the Video Portal that you installed.
You can assign differing levels of access and permissions to DMM-VPM users, depending on their roles and responsibilities. Features under the Users tab help you to create and administer user accounts, permissions, and profiles.
Any user can edit his or her own user account information at any time. In addition, if you are a DMM-VPM administrator, you can create, edit, disable, and delete accounts for other users.
Tip If you want to edit the settings for your own DMM-VPM user account, click My Profile at any time. The My Profile page shows you all of the same options that you see when you edit any other user account, except that the options apply specifically and exclusively to you.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page.
Step 2 Select Users > User Accounts.
On the User Accounts page, you can toggle between two tables that are mostly very similar and that both show a list of DMM-VPM user accounts. You can move user accounts from one table to the other.
Step 3 Do one of the following:
•Click Active to see in the Active table a list of all the user accounts that are available to their owners. These accounts are active in the sense that you have not disabled them.
•Click Archive to see in the Archive table a list of all the user accounts that you have disabled temporarily. These accounts are disabled in the sense that they are not available for use by their owners. You might choose eventually to restore them or delete them.
Step 4 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-4.
This section contains these topics:
•Working with Programs, Videos and Video Parts
•Creating and Working with Playlists
•Creating and Working with Content Categories
•Creating and Working with Tickers
•Creating and Working with Interstitials
•Creating and Working with Interstitial Sequences
•Customizing Your Video Portal
•Configuring the Settings to Manage Deployments
Note•Programs, videos, and video parts are all content objects. You can create, edit, disable, and delete content objects at any time, according to your requirements.
•Although a program can contain multiple videos, you cannot add any video to more than one program.
•Each program that you create must contain at least one video before you can show it to any audience.
•Each video that you create must contain at least one video part before you can show it to any audience.
You can create programs and populate them with videos and video parts, then deliver the programs to your audiences live or on demand.
You can also configure DMM-VPM to track approvals for video parts. The approval process workflow does not help you to enforce any security policy; instead, it helps your organization to formalize communication. Content developers can request approval for video parts, then a designated approver can approve or deny the requests. A designated approver is someone whose DMM-VPM user type (which you configured under the Users tab) is Approver. Not even a designated approver can approve his or her own requests. Approval and denial have no effect on whether a video part can be deployed.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Video Portal > Programs.
On the Programs page, you can toggle between two tables that are mostly very similar and that both show a list of DMM-VPM programs. You can move programs from one table to the other.
Step 2 Do one of the following:
•Click Active to see in the Active table a list of all the programs that are available to show to your audience. These programs are active in the sense that you have not disabled them. If you have not created any programs or if you archived every program, the table is empty.
•Click Archive to see in the Archive table a list of all the programs that you have disabled temporarily. These programs are disabled in the sense that they are not available for your audience to find or see and you cannot add them to playlists. You might choose eventually to restore or delete these programs.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-5.
Step 4 Click Save.
|
|
---|---|
Add New {Program | Video | Video Part} |
— Shows the Add New {Program | Video | Video Part} page. |
Delete Selected |
Caution If you delete a program, the actual effect of the deletion differs if the program is part of a playlist or is not. If you delete a program that is part of an active and deployed playlist, your audiences can still find, see, and use the program, its videos, and its video parts on your Video Portal. However, if you have not included the program in any playlist, DMM-VPM immediately deletes the program, its videos, and its video parts; they are not available for any purpose in DMM-VPM or on your Video Portal and you cannot undo the deletion. — Shows the Delete Confirmation page. See the instructions on that page that tell you how to delete the disabled or archived content objects that you selected. |
Archive Selected |
— Moves from the Active table to the Archive table the content objects that you selected. Note If you archive a program, the videos and video parts within it remain active. You can deploy them in a playlist and your audiences can use a keyword search to find them on your Video Portal. |
Activate Selected |
— Moves from the Archive table to the Active table the content objects that you selected. |
Select a Program Provider |
Lists the program providers. Select a provider name to filter the list of programs and show only the programs the are associated with that provider. |
columns |
The table contains these columns: •untitled check box — One of the following: –Marks a content object that you will disable, if selected in the Active table. –Marks a content object that you disabled and that you will restore or delete, if selected in the Archive table. •Name — Shows the name or title for the content object that the corresponding row describes, shows the Properties () button, and sometimes shows the Preview () button. Values in the name column are the basis by default for how DMM-VPM sorts the rows, but you can click the heading in any other column to re-sort the rows by the values in that column. If you click the Properties button, DMM-VPM loads a page where you can edit content object metadata, such as the title and description for a program. •Provider — Programs only. Shows the provider who produced the program that one row describes, as specified in the program metadata. •Last Modified — Shows the date on which the content object was last edited. •Active Videos — Programs only. Shows the Active Videos () button and the Add New Video () button. If you click the Active Videos button, DMM-VPM loads a page where you can add videos to the program that the corresponding row describes or mark videos to remove from that program. If you click Add New Video, DMM-VPM loads the page where you can enter metadata for a new video. •Active Categories — Programs only. Shows the Active Categories page for the program that the corresponding row describes. From the Active Categories page, you can select and add categories to associate with the program or you can select and delete category associations from the program. •Active Video Parts — Videos only. Shows the Active Video Parts () button and the Add New Video Part () button. If you click the Active Video Parts button, DMM-VPM loads a page where you can add video parts to the video that the corresponding row describes or mark video parts to remove from the video. •Release Date — Video Parts only. Shows the release date. •Length — Video Parts only. Shows the playback duration of the video part in minutes and seconds. •Active Related Items — Video Parts only. Shows the Active Related Items page for the video part that the corresponding row describes. From the Active Related Items page, you can select and add related items to the video part or you can select and archive related items. Related items can be links to web sites, links to video parts in other programs on your Video Portal, or links to files for your audience to download and use. Your audience sees the related items for a video part on your Video Portal if they click More Info during playback. If you link to a web site, you can choose to show it in an ordinary browser window or in a browser that you customize in DMM-VPM. •Approval Status — Video Parts only. To request an approval for the video part that the corresponding row describes, click Request Approval, select an approver from the list in the popup window, then click Request Approval and Close. |
{Add New Program | Modify Program} |
The metadata attributes that define the program. Enter or select the metadata after you click Add New Program or after you click the Properties button for a program. •Program Name — The title for this program, which your audiences should see on your Video Portal when they click the Program Guide tab. •Program Description — The description that your audiences should see on the Program Guide tab, next to the corresponding program name. In addition, this description is visible in the Video Portal "More Info" text for any video that this program contains. •Program Status — If you select Active, the program is visible to your audiences after you populate, save, and deploy it. If you select Archive, the program is not visible to your audiences. •Program Provider — The name of your company, organization, or department. You use this information to manage and administer content; your audiences do not see it. The default provider name is whichever one you chose under the Setup tab. •Program Categories — Your audiences can use the program guide or search feature on your Video Portal to find this program in the categories that you select. You can add or remove category associations at any time. To understand categories, see Creating and Working with Content Categories. |
{Add New Video | Modify Video} |
The metadata attributes that define the video. Enter or select the metadata after you click Add New Video or after you click the Properties button for a video. •Video Title — The title for this video, which your audiences should see on your Video Portal when they use its playlist, program guide, or search features. •Video Status — If you select Active, you can add the video to a program that you create. If you select Inactive, you cannot add the video to any program unless you reactivate it. •Video Description — A description for your reference. Your audiences do not see it. |
{Add New Video Part | Modify Video Part} |
Physical and logical attributes of the file that you use as a video part. Enter or select the attributes after you click Add New Video Part or after you click the Properties button for a video part. •Show Direct Portal Link — Shows the Video Portal URL for this video part. •Video Part Description — The description that your audiences see on your Video Portal in its preview pane and in the "More Info" text under its Overview tab. Do not enter more than 72 lines of text or more than 48 characters per line. •Type of Video — If VoD, the source for the video part is a file; if Live Event, the source for the video part is an encoder. •{Flash | Windows Media | Real | QuickTime} Video (video or audio) — Shows a filename that you enter or that DMM-VPM enters automatically after you click the link to upload a new VoD file. If you enter the filename manually for a VoD, special requirements apply1 , 2 , 3 , 4 to each supported filetype. DMM-VPM saves any uploaded VoD files to the deployment location that you specified under the Setup tab. The file formats that you see are exactly the ones that you selected to support when you set up your Video Portal. You must enter or upload one file apiece for each format that your Video Portal supports. We recommend that you encode all files to be 400 pixels wide and 300 pixels high. If you selected the Live Event option5 as your Type of Video, you see these options: –Encoder — Lists all of the encoders that you configured DMM-VPM to use. Select the encoder that is the source of the live stream. –Use Default Streaming Settings — Use the DMM-VPM settings exactly as they are. –Advanced Settings — Configure this stream to use settings that differ from the default. Select the encoding or transcoding format6 , the encoder input channel ( or ), the publishing method (push or pull), the input methods and standard for audio and video, and whether to save a copy of the live stream as a file. •Play Order in Video — Shows when the video will play this video part, relative to the playback sequence of all the video parts in the video. •{Release | End of Life} Date/Time — Click to pick the date, select options for the hour and minute, then select AM or PM. Options to configure the End of Life7 date and time values are visible only if you are setting up a live event. The default release date is 7 days from today. •Duration — Describes the playback duration of the video part in hours, minutes and seconds. Use the format •Preview Content File URL — The location of a SWF file or nonprogressive JPEG8 file that is 100 pixels wide and 75 pixels high (or any proportionate multiple of those dimensions) and that your Video Portal should show as the preview image for this video part. To select a local file and upload it for this purpose, click Upload new preview video file. If you use a SWF file, we recommended that you program it to pause after 10 seconds and not loop. •Preview Description — A text description that your Video Portal shows to your audiences but truncates after 160 characters. If you do not enter a preview description, your Video Portal shows the first 160 characters from the video part description instead. •Keywords — Descriptive words to make this video part searchable on your Video Portal9 . |
1 You must use HTTP to point to any remote Flash file that you will upload. Flash files must use {FLV | SWF} for their filename extension. You cannot select Flash as the media format for a live event. 2 You must use {MMS | RTSP} to point to any remote Windows Media file that you will upload. Windows Media files must use {WMV | WMA | ASF} for their filename extension. 3 You must use RTSP to point to any remote RealPlayer file that you will upload. RealPlayer files must use RM for their filename extension. 4 You must use {HTTP | RTSP} to point to any remote QuickTime file that you will upload. QuickTime files must use {MOV | MP4 | M4V} for their filename extension. 5 When you point to a live stream, a filename is not necessary. In most cases, you point instead to a directory on the streaming server (or servers). If you are unsure about the configuration that your organization uses, see your systems administrator for details. 6 Encoding format options are 1.5M, 350K, 50K, and 768K. Transcoding format options are 1.5M, 2M, 350K, 50K, and 768K. 7 If you are setting up a live event, you must explicitly enter the End of Life Date/Time value. (DMS does not parse it automatically from the Release Date/Time value.) If you do not enter a End of Life Date/Time value, your live event will not occur. 8 Your Video Portal cannot display progressive JPEG images. 9 There is no reason to enter commas, semicolons, or other word separators; your Video Portal ignores them if you do. |
Approving or Denying the Request to Approve a Video Part
After anyone submits a video part approval request, DMM-VPM sends email to the designated approver. The email message contains a link to preview and approve or deny the video part. If you receive the message, do the following:
Step 1 Click the email link to preview the video part and, when your browser loads the Approval Request page, click Preview Now.
Step 2 Watch the video part, enter comments if you have any, then use the controls at the bottom of the window to approve or deny the request.
DMM-VPM is updated immediately and notifies the requestor through email that you approved or denied the request.
Step 3 To return to DMM-VPM, click Close and Return.
Note Each playlist that you create must contain at least one video part before you can show it to any audience.
DMM-VPM can help you to emphasize particular content offerings by showing key videos on your Video Portal under its Featured Playlist tab.
You can also configure DMM-VPM to track approvals for playlists. The approval process workflow does not help you to enforce any security policy; instead, it helps your organization to formalize communication. Content developers can request approval for playlists, then a designated approver can approve or deny the requests. A designated approver is someone whose DMM-VPM user type (which you configured under the Users tab) is Approver. Not even a designated approver can approve his or her own requests. Approval and denial have no effect on whether a playlist can be deployed.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Video Portal > Playlists.
On the Playlists page, you can toggle between two tables that are mostly very similar and that both show a list of DMM-VPM playlists. You can move playlists from one table to the other.
Step 2 Do one of the following:
•Click Active to see in the Active table a list of all the playlists that are available to show to your audience. These playlists are active in the sense that you have not disabled them. If you have not created any playlists or if you archived every playlist, the table is empty.
•Click Archive to see in the Archive table a list of all the playlists that you have disabled temporarily. These playlists are disabled in the sense that they are not available for your audience to find or see. You might choose eventually to restore or delete these playlists.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-6.
Step 4 Click Save.
Approving or Denying the Request to Approve a Playlist
After anyone submits a playlist approval request, DMM-VPM sends email to the designated approver. The email message contains a link to preview and approve or deny the playlist. If you receive the message, do the following:
Step 1 Click the email link to preview the playlist and, when your browser loads the Approval Request page, click Preview Now.
Step 2 Watch the playlist, enter comments if you have any, then use the controls at the bottom of the window to approve or deny the request.
DMM-VPM is updated immediately and notifies the requestor through email that you approved or denied the request.
Step 3 To return to DMM-VPM, click Close and Return.
You can categorize programs according to characteristics that they have in common, such as their topic, subject matter, target audience, featured executive, or business function. Your audiences use corresponding categories on your Video Portal to find or browse content. The videos and video parts in a program inherit its category associations automatically.
The program guide on your Video Portal describes only the programs that you have categorized. If you deploy a program but do not associate it with any categories, it is not visible in the program guide. In this case, your audiences must either perform a keyword search or know and use the absolute URL to find and see a video that the program contains. Therefore, to improve the user experience for your audiences, we recommend that you associate each program with at least one category.
To create and manage categories and to associate programs with them, use the Categories page.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Video Portal > Categories.
On the Categories page, you can toggle between two tables that are mostly very similar and that both show a list of DMM-VPM content categories. You can move categories from one table to the other.
Step 2 Do one of the following:
•Click Active to see in the Active table a list of all the categories that are available to associate with content objects and show to your audience. These categories are active in the sense that you have not disabled them. If you have not created any categories or if you archived every category, the table is empty.
•Click Archive to see in the Archive table a list of all the categories that you have disabled temporarily. These categories are disabled in the sense that they are not available for your audience to find or see and you cannot associate them with any content objects. You might choose eventually to restore or delete these categories.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-7.
In DMM-VPM, an interstitial is a short segment that your Video Portal shows when you have not scheduled anything else to show. To create a new interstitial, follow these steps:
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Video Portal > Interstitials.
On the Interstitials page, you can toggle between two tables that are mostly very similar and that both show a list of DMM-VPM interstitials. You can move interstitials from one table to the other.
Step 2 Do one of the following:
•Click Active to see in the Active table a list of all the interstitials that are available. These interstitials are active in the sense that you have not disabled them. If you have not created any interstitials or if you archived every interstitial, the table is empty.
•Click Archive to see in the Archive table a list of all the interstitials that you have disabled temporarily. These interstitials are disabled in the sense that your audience will not see them. You might choose eventually to restore or delete these interstitials.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-8.
Step 4 Click Save.
In DMM-VPM, an interstitial sequence is an ordered list of interstitials that your Video Portal should play in order when you have not scheduled it to show anything else. To create a new interstitial sequence:
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Video Portal > Interstitial Sequences.
On the Interstitial Sequences page, you can toggle between two tables that are mostly very similar and that both show a list of sequences. You can move sequences from one table to the other.
Step 2 Do one of the following:
•Click Active to see in the Active table a list of all the sequences that are available. These sequences are active in the sense that you have not disabled them. If you have not created any sequences or if you archived every sequence, the table is empty.
•Click Archive to see in the Archive table a list of all the sequences that you have disabled temporarily. These sequences are disabled in the sense that your audience will not see them. You might choose eventually to restore or delete these sequences.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-9.
Step 4 Click Save.
In DMM-VPM, a ticker is scrolling text that your Video Portal shows to your audiences. To create a new ticker:
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Video Portal > Tickers.
On the Tickers page, you can toggle between two tables that are mostly very similar and that both show a list of tickers. You can move tickers from one table to the other.
Step 2 Do one of the following:
•Click Active to see in the Active table a list of all the tickers that are available. These tickers are active in the sense that you have not disabled them. If you have not created any tickers or if you archived every ticker, the table is empty.
•Click Archive to see in the Archive table a list of all the tickers that you have disabled temporarily. These tickers are disabled in the sense that your audience will not see them. You might choose eventually to restore or delete these tickers.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-10.
Step 4 Click Save.
DMM-VPM helps you to control and customize the user interface that your audiences see when they use your Video Portal. You can customize the appearance of backgrounds, logos, ticker messages, interstitials, and controls.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Video Portal > User Interfaces.
On the User Interfaces page, you can toggle between two tables that are mostly very similar and that both show named sets of user interface customizations. You can move sets from one table to the other.
Step 2 Do one of the following:
•Click Active to see in the Active table a list of all the customization sets that are available. These customizations are active in the sense that you have not disabled them. If you have not created any customization sets or if you archived every set, the table is empty.
•Click Archive to see in the Archive table a list of all the customization sets that you have disabled temporarily. These customizations are disabled in the sense that your audience will not see them. You might choose eventually to restore or delete these customization sets.
Step 3 Select the options or enter the values that meet your requirements. If you do not understand your options, see Table 4-11.
Step 4 Click Save.
You must deploy all additions, updates, and other changes in your content and data. You can deploy immediately or schedule deployments in advance for any time and date. You can cancel any deployment that you schedule.
After you schedule a deployment, the Currently Scheduled Deployments table is refreshed and shows the new deployment that you scheduled, in its chronological sequence relative to any other scheduled deployments. DMM-VPM then deploys the job to the deployment location that you specified under the Setup tab (see Configuring the Location Settings for Deployments). After a deployment is finished, the Currently Scheduled Deployments table is refreshed again, so that it no longer includes any description of the deployment.
Tip There is no need for you to navigate through your Video Portal to find a video part after you deploy it successfully, because DMM-VPM links directly to it as a convenience to you. The link is not specific to any particular media format, because your Video Portal determines automatically which format to deliver to each audience member according to his or her system configuration.
1. Select Video Portal > Programs, find the row that describes the relevant program, then click Active Videos () in that row.
2. Find the row that describes the relevant video, then click Active Video Parts () in that row.
3. Find the row that describes the relevant video part, then do one of the following:
•To play the video part, click Preview () in that row.
•To learn the actual URL for the video part, click Properties () in that row, then click Show Direct Portal Link.
Live event offerings differ from on-demand offerings:
Tip•Using the Video Part page, you can upload a pre-event image and post-event image. These will appear in the video frame before and after the live event.
•Your encoder can simultaneously stream a live event and save it to a file. See Capturing a Live Stream and Publishing the Output File as Video On-Demand.
This section contains these topics:
•Scheduling a Pre-Event Listing
•Scheduling a Post-Event Listing
•Scheduling an On-Demand Deployment
To schedule a new deployment, follow these steps:
Step 1 If you configured your browser to block popup windows, reenable popup windows now. You cannot complete this procedure successfully if your browser blocks popup windows.
Step 2 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Video Portal > Deployments.
The Currently Scheduled Deployments page lists all of the scheduled and queued deployments. To understand the list, see Table 4-12.
Step 3 Click Schedule New Deployment.
The legend at the top of the page shows the real-time color-coding that DMM-VPM applies to entities in the list, based on their change status:
•Active — Entities whose status has been changed to Active. All entities classified as Active are visible in the Video Portal after deployment.
•Inactive — Entities whose status has been changed to Inactive. All entities classified as inactive or removed disappear from the Video Portal after deployment.
•Removed — Entities that have been permanently deleted from DMM-VPM.
Step 4 In the "Video Part Selection" area (), click a check box to select the corresponding video part. DMM-VPM automatically lists for selection all new and modified video parts whose status is set to Active. Each video part is displayed with its corresponding videos and programs. All uploaded files, file references, and metadata associated to each Active video part are deployed with your selection. These files are deployed to the deployment location that you specified under the Setup tab.
Step 5 In the "Additional Items Included in Deployment" area (), review any metadata changes that will be published with your deployment; the following entities are identified in the Metadata Changes:
•Categories — All categories whose status has changed or that were deleted.
•Programs — All programs whose status has changed or that were deleted.
•Videos — All videos whose status has changed or that were deleted.
Step 6 In the "Global Options" area (), make selections from these lists:
•Featured Playlist — Select the playlist to publish on your Video Portal. The list displays all Active Featured Playlists in alphabetical order by Featured Playlist Name, with the Default Featured Playlist selected by default. There must always and can only be one Featured Playlist visible in the Video Portal at any given time. See Creating and Working with Playlists.
•User Interface — Select the customization set to use on your Video Portal. The alphabetical list contains all Active user interfaces customization sets, with the default customization set selected by default. There must always and can only be one user interface visible in your Video Portal at any given time. See Customizing Your Video Portal.
•Ticker — Select the ticker to publish on your Video Portal. The list displays all Active tickers in alphabetical order by name, with the default ticker selected by default. (To hide the ticker, click Don't Show a Ticker.) You can use no more than one ticker at a time on your Video Portal. See Creating and Working with Tickers.
•Interstitial Sequence — Select the sequence to publish on your Video Portal. The list displays all Active Interstitial Sequences in alphabetical order by Interstitial Sequence Name, with the Default Interstitial Sequence selected by default. There must always and can only be one Interstitial Sequence visible in the Video Portal at any given time. See Creating and Working with Interstitial Sequences.
Step 7 In the "Deployment Time" area (), select the deployment date and time or select the Schedule Immediately check box. If you select a scheduled deployment, the default date is 7 days from today.
Note•The relevant time zone is the one that you specified when you set up your DMM appliance. If an administrator set up your DMM appliance and you cannot guess what time zone is in effect at its deployment location, contact its system administrator.
•To conduct a live online event successfully, you must complete exactly these four deployments in exactly this sequence:
1. Pre-event listing: Intended to notify Video Portal end users of the upcoming live event. See Scheduling a Pre-Event Listing.
2. Live event: Actual live offering. See Scheduling a Live Event
3. Post-event listing: Intended to notify Video Portal end users who missed the live event that it has concluded and is no longer available. See Scheduling a Post-Event Listing.
4. On-demand offering: Recorded version of the live-event for Video Portal end users who were not able to attend the live version. See Scheduling an On-Demand Deployment.
Step 8 To schedule the Deployment, click Create Deployment.
You can schedule a pre-event listing. We recommend that you use targeted email messages or a web site to preannounce your live events. The notifications that you prepare can describe, for example, the event date and time, its subject matter, the speaker, and the moderator. A notification can also link directly to the pre-event listing on your Video Portal.
Before You Begin
Ensure that your video part metadata is set appropriately for a pre-event listing.
Step 1 If you configured your browser to block popup windows, reenable popup windows now. You cannot complete this procedure successfully if your browser blocks popup windows.
Step 2 Complete Steps 1-6 in the "Scheduling a New Deployment" procedure.
Step 3 In the "Deployment Time" area (), select the deployment date and time when your pre-event listing should become available on your Video Portal. The default date is 7 days from today.
Note The relevant time zone is the one that you specified when you set up your DMM appliance. If an administrator set up your DMM appliance and you cannot guess what time zone is in effect at its deployment location, contact its system administrator.
Step 4 To schedule the deployment, click Create Deployment.
You can schedule a live event.
Before You Begin
Ensure that your video part metadata is set appropriately for a pre-event listing.
Step 1 If you configured your browser to block popup windows, reenable popup windows now. You cannot complete this procedure successfully if your browser blocks popup windows.
Step 2 Complete Steps 1-6 in the "Scheduling a New Deployment" procedure.
Step 3 In the "Deployment Time" area (), select the deployment date and time when your live event should become available on your Video Portal. The default date is 7 days from today.
Note The relevant time zone is the one that you specified when you set up your DMM appliance. If an administrator set up your DMM appliance and you cannot guess what time zone is in effect at its deployment location, contact its system administrator.
We recommend that your Video Portal show a countdown to the live event for 10-15 minutes, then replace the countdown with the audio-video stream when the live event actually starts.
Step 4 To schedule the deployment, click Create Deployment.
You can schedule a post-event listing.
Before You Begin
Ensure that your video part metadata is set appropriately for a post-event listing.
Step 1 If you configured your browser to block popup windows, reenable popup windows now. You cannot complete this procedure successfully if your browser blocks popup windows.
Step 2 Complete Steps 1-6 in the "Scheduling a New Deployment" procedure.
Step 3 In the "Deployment Time" area (), select the deployment date and time when the post-event listing should become available on your Video Portal. The default date is 7 days from today.
Note The relevant time zone is the one that you specified when you set up your DMM appliance. If an administrator set up your DMM appliance and you cannot guess what time zone is in effect at its deployment location, contact its system administrator.
Step 4 To schedule the deployment, click Create Deployment.
You can schedule an on-demand deployment.
Before You Begin
Ensure that your video part metadata is set appropriately for an on-demand deployment.
Step 1 If you configured your browser to block popup windows, reenable popup windows now. You cannot complete this procedure successfully if your browser blocks popup windows.
Step 2 Complete Steps 1-6 in the "Scheduling a New Deployment" procedure.
Step 3 In the "Deployment Time" area (), select the deployment date and time when the on-demand deployment should become available on your Video Portal. The default date is 7 days from today.
Note The relevant time zone is the one that you specified when you set up your DMM appliance. If an administrator set up your DMM appliance and you cannot guess what time zone is in effect at its deployment location, contact its system administrator.
Step 4 To schedule the deployment, click Create Deployment.
Topics in this section tell you how to add and manage DME 1000 and DME 2000 encoders in DMM-VPM.
•Testing the Ability to Publish Streams
•Capturing a Live Stream and Publishing the Output File as Video On-Demand
•Creating and Working with Encoding Formats
You can add an encoder to DMM-VPM.
Step 1 Set up and connect the encoder according to the procedures in its documentation.
Step 2 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then do one of the following:
You can use DMM-VPM to test whether your encoder can publish a stream.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then click the Encoders tab to see the encoder dashboard.
Step 2 Find the entry for the encoder that you want to test, then click Encoder Setup in the corresponding row.
Step 3 From the Video Format list, select the bit rate to test, then select the Publish as a Streaming Video check box.
Step 4 Select a Push publishing configuration or a Pull publishing configuration.
Tip To test a stream directly from the encoder, select the test only (encoder-direct, port 6990) pull configuration.
Step 5 Confirm that a live video source is connected to your encoder, then select the options from these lists that match your video source:
•Video Input
•Audio Input
•Video Input Standard
Step 6 Click Start Encoder.
The button becomes animated and the animation continues until the encoder starts. A delay that ranges from 10 to 25 seconds is normal.
Step 7 After the encoder starts, click Close in the Encoder Setup window.
Step 8 Do either or both of the following to test the video stream:
•Click View Live Video. A popup window plays your current live stream.
•To test the video stream as a static image that is updated periodically, click Click to start preview. Your encoder serves the static image directly, independent of your streaming server.
Step 9 Click Stop Encoder.
Your encoder can capture and save a live stream as a file, which you can publish as video on-demand.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then click the Encoders tab to see the encoder dashboard.
Step 2 Find the entry for the encoder that you want to test, then click Encoder Setup in the corresponding row.
Step 3 Select the Store as File check box, then enter a filename for the saved file.
Step 4 Confirm that a live video source is connected to your encoder, then select the options from these lists that match your video source:
•Video Input
•Audio Input
•Video Input Standard
Step 5 Click Start Encoder.
The button becomes animated and the animation continues until the encoder starts. A delay that ranges from 10 to 25 seconds is normal.
Step 6 After the encoder starts, click Close in the Encoder Setup window.
Step 7 When you are ready to stop adding video from the stream to the output file that you are creating, click Stop Encoder.
Step 8 To retrieve the output file from your encoder, point your web browser to ftp://<encoder_IP_address>/AVFiles/Out, then right-click the filename in the directory listing and select the option to download the file.
Step 9 (Optional) Use third-party software to edit the file.
Step 10 Before you can deliver the downloaded output file to your Video Portal audiences as a video on-demand offering, you must deploy it as a VoD video part. See Working with Programs, Videos and Video Parts, and Scheduling an On-Demand Deployment.
You can manage push configurations, which apply only to Windows Media streams.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then select Encoders > Push Configurations.
Step 2 Enter the push configuration name and description in their respective fields.
Tip The push configuration name that you enter now will be an option that you can select from a list before you start your encoder.
Step 3 Enter the base URL and port number for your streaming server.
Step 4 Enter the name of your Publishing Point.
Step 5 Confirm that the URL under the "Full Stream URL" heading is the valid URL for your publishing point.
Step 6 (Optional) Enter the username and password to push a stream to your streaming server, if it requires that you log in.
Step 7 Click Save.
An encoding format is a collection of settings to specify a particular combination of media type and video dimensions, and to limit video bandwidth consumption and video quality.
DMM-VPM is preconfigured with the recommended encoding formats for your Video Portal. You can recognize these predefined and preferred formats in the Encoding Formats list, because DMM-VPM appends the word "default" to their names. If you select other encoding formats as your defaults, the "default" label no longer signifies that any encoding format is one that Cisco defined.
You can select only one default encoding format apiece for each supported media type. For example, you might select one encoding format as the default for Windows Media and a different encoding format as the default for Flash Video.
You can add or edit an encoding format.
Step 1 Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page.
Step 2 Select Encoders > Encoding Formats, then do one of the following:
•To create and define a new encoding format, click Add a new Encoding Format.
•To edit an encoding format that you saved, click its name in the list.
Step 3 Enter or select the required values to define the encoding format:
•Encoding Format Name — Enter a unique and meaningful name for this encoding format.
•Profile Description — Enter a description.
•Format — Click a radio button to select its corresponding media format as the one that this encoding format should use.
•Dimensions — Select an option from the list or select Custom to use dimensions that the list does not contain.
•Pixel Proportion — Standard (square pixel) is the correct choice for most applications.
•Audio Capture {On | Off} — Enable or disable audio capture.
•Windows Media Capture Profiles — Select an option to limit bandwidth usage.
Step 4 Click Save.
Transcoding is a process of deriving digital media files that use one codec from digital media files that use a different codec; the source file is not changed or destroyed. Because codecs are typically lossy, you might notice that the fidelity of the output file is not as high as the fidelity of the source file.
Your encoders can transcode AVI and MPEG2 files into Windows Media files. You can use DMM-VPM to manage your transcoding jobs. We recommend that you schedule your transcoding jobs so that they do not run at the same time as any other encoder tasks, such as streaming a live event or saving a live stream to a file. A transcoding job might take as long as, or possibly longer than, the duration of the source file, depending on multiple factors that include which codecs you use.
Step 1 Copy the source file to your encoder.
a. Plug a keyboard, mouse, and monitor into your encoder.
b. Add the file to a USB 2.0 hard drive or flash drive.
c. Use Windows Explorer to copy the source file from the USB drive to D:\AVFiles\In.
Step 2 Log in to DMM-VPM, then select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page.
Step 3 Select Encoders > Transcoding, then click Add a New Transcoding Task.
Step 4 Enter or select the required values to define the transcoding job:
•Transcoding Task Name — Enter a unique and meaningful name.
•Encoder Name — Select the encoder that will transcode the source file.
•Start Date/Time — Select the date and time when the transcoding job should start.
•Input Video Format — Select the media format that the source file uses (AVI or MPEG2).
•Input Directory Path — Select Input - Local Encoder Drive.
•Input File Name — Enter the source filename. Do not include a path.
•Output Video Format — Select a format that includes the word "transcode" in its title.
•Output Directory Path — Select Output - Local Encoder Drive.
•Output File Name — Enter the output filename. Do not include a path.
Step 5 Click Save.
Tip In the list, a color-coded icon next to the name of your transcoding job helps you to track its status. The icon is blue (scheduled or postponed); animated green (in progress); solid green (completed); or red (error). To learn more, mouse over the icon.
Step 6 To copy the output file from your encoder, do one of the following:
•If you plugged a keyboard, mouse, and monitor into your encoder, use Windows Explorer to copy the output file from D:\AVFiles\Out to the USB drive.
•Point your web browser to ftp://<encoder_IP_address>/AVFiles/Out, then right-click the filename in the directory listing and select the option to download the file.
You can use your DME 1000 or 2000 to set up live events. Use the checklist to track your progress while you complete the required tasks.
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1. Add a live event to DMM and publish it. Do the following: a. Select Video Portal Module from the untitled list at the top far-right of any page, then click the Video Portal tab. The Video Portal Programs page appears. b. Create or edit the program that should include the live event. See Working with Programs, Videos and Video Parts. c. In the Add New Video Part page, enter or select these required values: · Type of Video — Select Live Event; a message tells you that you cannot use Flash. · Encoder — From the list, select the encoder to use, then do one of the following: If you previously - Encoding Format — From the list, select the method to use for encoding or transcoding the live stream. - DME 2000 Input Channel — Click or . - Publish via Push — Select whether the encoder should push the live stream to a streaming server. - Publish via Pull — Select whether the streaming server should pull the live stream from the encoder. - Video Input — From the list, select either Composite or SVideo. - Store as a File — Select the check box to enable automatic archiving or deselect the check box to disable - Audio Input — Select the option to use balanced or unbalanced audio in the live stream. - Video Input Standard — From the list, select the standard that is relevant to your country and the · Play Order in Video — From the list, select where in the video to show this video part. · Release Date/Time and End of Life Date/Time — Enter a date in the format shown or click Note You must explicitly enter the End of Life Date/Time value. (DMS does not parse it automatically from the Release Date/Time value.) If you do not enter a End of Life Date/Time value, your live event will not occur. · Duration — Indicates the duration of the live event, based on the start and stop times that you set. d. Click Save. e. When you want your Video Portal to show a program listing for this live event, see the deployment instructions in Scheduling a New Deployment. |
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2. Test the live stream and start the live event. Do the following: a. Approximately 30 minutes before the live event, click the Encoders tab. The Encoder Dashboard page appears. b. In the encoder selection tree, find the encoder that you will use for this live event, then click ("Expand Encoder") to see the ad-hoc streaming controls for the encoder. c. Click Encoder Setup, enter the relevant values, then click Start Encoder and wait 10-to-20 seconds for it to start. d. After an encoder setup message confirms that the encoder started, click Close. e. To open a preview window that should show the live stream from your encoder, click View Live Video. If you see the live stream, your streaming server is successfully streaming output from the encoder. f. When you are ready for the live event to start, click Start Broadcast. Approximately 5-to-20 seconds later, the live stream should start for anyone who selected to see it. g. When you are ready to end the event, click Stop Broadcast, then click Stop Encoder. |
You can use streams from a third party to set up live events. Use the checklist to track your progress while you complete the required tasks.
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1. Create a pre-event listing to notify your audience about the upcoming event offering. See Scheduling a Pre-Event Listing. |
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2. Show the actual live offering. See Scheduling a Live Event. You must deploy this video part at the start at the event. In the "Add New Video Part" page where you configure the metadata attributes for this video part, you must select VoD as the Type of Video. VoD is the correct option for third-party live events, because the Live Event option is reserved for use with the Cisco Digital Media Encoder 1000 and Digital Media Encoder 2000. The offering should include information for end users to use during the live event, such as an agenda or downloadable materials. Note We recommend that you schedule the live event to start 10 to 15 minutes before the published start date and time. It is customary to offer live "hold" music for end users who attend the event early, to signal them that the event will start soon. |
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3. (Optional) Create a post-event listing to notify your audience that they missed the event and it is no longer available. See Scheduling a Post-Event Listing. |
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4. (Optional) Publish a recorded copy of the event for delivery on demand to audience members who missed the live stream. See Scheduling an On-Demand Deployment. |