NAME

Elive::Entity::Recording - Elluminate Recording Entity class

METHODS

download

my $recording = Elive::Entity::Recording->retrieve([$recording_id]);
my $binary_data = $recording->download;

Download data for a recording.

upload

    # get the binary data from somewhere
    open (my $rec_fh, '<', $recording_file)
        or die "unable to open $recording_file: $!";

    my $data = do {local $/ = undef; <$rec_fh>};
    die "no recording data: $recording_file"
        unless ($data && length($data));

    # somehow generate a unique key for the recordingId.
    
    use Time::HiRes();
    my ($seconds, $microseconds) = Time::HiRes::gettimeofday();
    my $recordingId = sprintf("%d%d", $seconds, $microseconds/1000);

    # associate this recording with an existing meeting (optional)
    my $meetingId = '1234567890123';

    my $recording = Elive::Entity:Recording->upload(
             {
                    meetingId => $recordingId.'_'.$meetingId,
                    recordingId => $meetingId,
                    facilitator =>  Elive->login,
                    roomName => 'Meeting of the Smiths',
                    version => Elive->server_details->version,
                    data => $binary_data,
                    size => length($binary_data),
	     },
         );

Upload data from a client and create a recording.

Note: the facilitator, when supplied must match the facilitator for the given meetingId.

insert

You'll typically only need to insert recordings yourself if you are importing or recovering recordings that have not been closed cleanly.

 my $recordingId = "${meetingId}_import";
 my $import_filename = sprintf("%s_recordingData.bin", $recording->recordingId);

 #
 # Somehow import the file to the server. This needs to be uploaded
 # to ${instancesRoot}/${instanceName}/WEB-INF/resources/recordings
 # where $instanceRoot is typically /opt/ElluminateLive/manager/tomcat
 #
 import_recording($import_filename);

 my $recording = Elive::Entity::Recording->insert({
     recordingId => $recordingId,
     roomName => "test recording import",
     creationDate => time().'000',
     meetingId => $meetingId,
     facilitator => $meeting->faciliator,
     version => Elive->server_details->version,
     size => length($number_of_bytes),
});

The Recording insert, unlike other entities, method requires that you supply a primary key. This is then used to determine the name of the file to look for in the recording directory, as in the above example.

The meetingId is optional. Recordings do not have to be associated with a particular meetings. They will still be searchable and are available for playback.

web_url

Utility method to return various website links for the recording. This is available as both class level and object level methods.

#
# Class level access.
#
my $url = Elive::Entity::Recording->web_url(
                 recording_id => $recording_id,
                 action => 'play',
                 connection => $my_connection);  # optional


#
# Object level.
#
my $recording = Elive::Entity::Recording->retrieve([$recording_id]);
my $url = recording->web_url(action => 'join');

buildJNLP

    my $jnlp = $recording_entity->buildJNLP(version => version,
					    userId => $user->userId,
					    userIP => $ENV{REMOTE_ADDR});

Builds a JNLP for the recording.

JNLP is the 'Java Network Launch Protocol', also commonly known as Java WebStart. You can, for example, render this as a web page with mime type application/x-java-jnlp-file.

The userIP is required for elm 9.0+ when recordingJNLPIPCheck has been set to true in configuration.xml (or set interactively via: Preferences >> Session Access >> Lock Recording Playback to Client IP)

It represents a fixed client IP address for launching the recording playback.

See also http://wikipedia.org/wiki/JNLP.