NAME¶
udp-receiver - receive files broadcast by udp-sender
SYNOPSIS¶
./udp-receiver [--file
file] [--pipe
pipe] [--portbase
portbase] [--interface
net-interface] [--log
file] [--ttl
time-to-live] [--mcast-rdv-address
mcast-rdv-address] [--nokbd]
[--exitWait milliseconds] [--stat-period
n]
[--print-uncompressed-position
flag]
DESCRIPTION¶
"Udp-receiver" is used to receive files sent by "udp-sender"
(for instance a disk image).
OPTIONS¶
Basic options¶
- --file file
- Writes received data to file. If this parameter is
not supplied, received data is written to stdout instead.
- --pipe command
- Sends data through pipe after receiving it. This is
useful for decompressing the data, or for filling in unused filesystem
blocks that may have been stripped out by udp-sender. The command
gets a direct handle on the output file or device, and thus may seek
inside it, if needed. "Udpcast" itself also keeps a handle on
the file, which is used for an informational progress display. The
command's stdin is a pipe from udp-receiver. Example:
"udp-receiver -p "gzip -dc""
- --log file
- Logs some stuff into file.
- --nosync
- Do not open target in synchronous mode. This is the default
when writing to a file or a pipe.
- --sync
- Write to target in synchronous mode. This is the default
when writing to a device (character or block)
- --nokbd
- Do not read start signal from keyboard, and do not display
any message telling the user to press any key to start.
- --start-timeout sec
- receiver aborts at start if it doesn't see a sender within
this many seconds. Furthermore, the sender needs to start transmission of
data within this delay. Once transmission is started, the timeout no
longer applies.
Networking options¶
- --portbase portbase
- Default ports to use for udpcast. Two ports are used:
portbase and portbase+1 . Thus, Portbase must be
even. Default is 9000. The same portbase must be specified for both
"udp-sender" and "udp-receiver".
- --interface interface
- Network interface used to send out the data. Default is
"eth0"
- --ttl ttl
- Time to live for connection request packet (by default
connection request is broadcast to the LAN's broadcast address. If ttl is
set, the connection request is multicast instead to 224.0.0.1 with the
given ttl, which should enable udpcast to work between LANs. Not tested
though.
- --mcast-rdv-address address
- Uses a non-standard multicast address for the control
connection (which is used by the sender and receivers to "find"
each other). This is not the address that is used to transfer the
data. By default "mcast-rdv-address" is the Ethernet broadcast
address if "ttl" is 1, and 224.0.0.1 otherwise. This setting
should not be used except in very special situations, such as when
224.0.0.1 cannot be used for policy reasons.
- --exit-wait milliseconds
- When transmission is over, receiver will wait for this time
after receiving the final REQACK. This is done in order to guard against
loss of the final ACK. Is 500 milliseconds by default.
- --ignore-lost-data
- Do not stop reception when data loss is detected, but
instead fill with random data. This is useful for multimedia transmission
where 100% integrity is not need.
Statistics options¶
- --stat-period seconds
- Every so much milliseconds, print some statistics to
stderr: how much bytes received so far log, position in uncompressed file
(if applicable), overall bitrate... By default, this is printed every half
second.
- --print-uncompressed-position flag
- By default, udp-receiver only prints the position in
uncompressed file if the 2 following conditions are met:
- •
- Output is piped via a compressor ("-p "
option).
- •
- The final output is seekable (file or device)
With the "--print-uncompressed-position", options, you can change this
behavior:
- •
- If flag is 0, uncompressed position will never be
printed, even if above conditions are met
- •
- If flag is 1, uncompressed position will always be
printed, even if above conditions are not met
SEE ALSO¶
udp-sender
AUTHOR¶
Alain Knaff