This project is an early stage prototype of unix AirPlay server. Work is based on https://github.com/FD-/RPiPlay. Tested on Ubuntu 19.10 desktop. 5G Wifi connection is the must.
Features:
- Based on Gstreamer.
- Video and audio are supported out of the box.
- Gstreamer decoding is plugin agnostic. Uses accelerated decoders if available. VAAPI is preferable. (but don't use VAAPI with nVidia)
- Automatic screen orientation.
Getting it: (after sudo apt-get-install git) git clone https://github.com/FDH2/UxPlay.git . This is a pull request to the original site https://github.com/antimof/UxPlay.git ; it may or may not ever get "pulled" into the original site, as the antimof site may no longer be active.
Building this version
- sudo apt-get install cmake
- sudo apt-get install libssl-dev libavahi-compat-libdnssd-dev libgstreamer1.0-dev libgstreamer-plugins-base1.0-dev gstreamer1.0-libav gstreamer1.0-plugins-bad libplist-dev
- sudo apt-get install gstreamer1.0-vaapi (For Intel graphics, but not nVidia graphics)
- sudo apt-get install libx11-dev (for the X_display name fix for screen-sharing with e.g., ZOOM)
- mkdir build
- cd build
- cmake .. (or "cmake -DZOOMFIX=ON .." to get the screen-sharing fix)
- make
- sudo make install
Note libplist-dev and (for ZOOMFIX) libx11-dev are new dependencies.
Options: **-n server_name **; server_name will be the name that appears offering AirPlay services to your iPad, iPhone etc. NEW: this will also be the name on the mirror window, if "ZOOMFIX" is applied when compiling uxplay.
-s wxh (e.g. -s 1920x1080 , which is the default ) sets the display resolution (width and height, in pixels). (This may be a request made to the AirPlay client, and perhaps will not be the final resolution you get).
-p allows you to select the network ports used by UxPlay (these need to be opened if the server is behind a firewall) By itself, -p sets "legacy" ports TCP 7100, 7000, 7001, UDP 6000, 6001, 7011. -p n (e.g. -p 35000) sets TCP and UDP ports n, n+1, n+2. Ports must be in thye range [1024-65535].
If the -p option is not used, the ports are chosen dynamically (randomly), which will not work if a firewall is running.
-r generates a random MAC address to use instead of the true hardware MAC number of the computer's network card. (Different server_name, MAC addresses, and network ports are needed for each running uxplay if you attempt to run two instances of uxplay on thye same computer.)
**-f {H|V|R|L|I} ** implements "videoflip" image transforms: H = horizontal flip (right-left mirror); V = vertical flip (up-down mirror); R = 90 deg. clockwise rotation; L = 90 deg counter-clockwise rotation; I = 180 deg. rotation or inversion.
-a disable audio, leaving only the video playing.
New features available: (v 1.3 2021-08)
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Updates of the RAOP (AirPlay protocol, not AirPlay 2) collection of codes maintained at https://github.com/FD-/RPiPlay.git so it is current as of 2021-08-01, adding all changes since the original release of UxPlay by antimof. This involved crypto updates, replacement of the included plist library by the system-installed version, and a change to lib llhttp for html parsing.
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added The -p, -s, -r and -f options.
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If "cmake -DZOOMFIX=ON .." is run before compiling, the mirrored window is now visible to screen-sharing applications such as Zoom. You can tell if the "ZOOMFIX" is working by examining the title bar on the mirror window: it will be "uxplay" without the fix, and be the AirPlay server_name, which is "UxPlay" (note capitals) by default, and can be changed with the -n option. To compile with ZOOMFIX=ON, the X11 development libraries must be installed. (ZOOMFIX will not be needed once gstreamer-1.20 is available, since this update will make the gstreamer mirror window visible to screen-sharers.) (Thanks to David Ventura https://github.com/DavidVentura/UxPlay ).
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The avahi_compat nag warning on startup is suppressed.
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In principle, multiple instances of uxplay can be run simultaneously using the -r "random MAC address" option to give each a different (randomly-chosen "local") MAC address. If the -p option is used, they also need separate network port choices. (However, there may be a large latency, and running two instances of uxplay simultaneously may not be very useful.)
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Without the -p [n] option, uxplay makes a random dynamic assignment of network ports. This will not work if most ports are closed by a firewall. With e.g., -p 45000 you should open both TCP and UDP on ports 45000, 45001, 45002. Minimum allowed port is 1024, maximum is 65535. The option "-p " with no argument uses a "legacy" set of ports TCP 7100, 7000, 7001, and UDP 7011, 6000, 6001.
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The default resolution setting is 1920x1080 width x height pixels. To change this, use "-s wxh" (or wXh) where w and h are positive decimals with 4 or less digits. It seems that the width and height may be negotiated with the AirPlay client, so this may not be the actual screen geometry that displays.