Introducing Red5 Pro version 7.0! The latest release improves audio performance by supporting higher audio bitrates (96 kHz stereo streams at 128 kbps) as well as stereo support (browser dependent). This means you can get better than CD quality audio files over WebRTC. We also expanded the functionality of the autoscaling solution by adding the… Continue reading Red5 Pro Release 7.0
Introducing Red5 Pro version 7.0!
The latest release improves audio performance by supporting higher audio bitrates (96 kHz stereo streams at 128 kbps) as well as stereo support (browser dependent). This means you can get better than CD quality audio files over WebRTC.
We also expanded the functionality of the autoscaling solution by adding the ability for a single Terraform server to support multiple stream managers behind a load balancer, a node relations map, and the ability to request a transcoder by region. Furthermore, we streamlined the autoscaler performance with improved connection logic and bug fixes.
Don’t miss our updated server capacity benchmarks and NEW publishing benchmarks.
We would like to thank our hardworking team for always driving to improve Red5 Pro and continuing to keep it a progressive and well-functioning software tool. Read below for the full list of improvements, fixes, and updated benchmarks.
Release 7.0.0, 8 June, 2020
Server Updates
- Stereo audio published streams in WebRTC (browser dependent)
- Firefox can publish and play back stereo
- Chrome publishes stereo but plays back in mono
- Safari sometimes publishes stereo
- MS Edge does not publish stereo
- Support for high audio bitrates.
- Ability to support stereo audio over WebRTC. (browser dependent)
- Configuration for high quality audio and high bitrates for WebRTC subscribers transcoded from rtmp/rtsp published streams.
- Fixed – 6-9 seconds to display video Firefox RTC Publisher to Chrome RTC subscriber
- Ice4j Role Conflict Patch (Firefox edge-case scenario)
- Fixed – In a cluster, stream sometimes does not show/play on one edge but is fine on another
- Fixed – Added a special download to address Red5 Pro not running on Windows Server versions
Autoscaling API 4.0 Updates
- Autoscaling API has been updated to 4.0. Please see stream manager upgrade documentation for adding client backwards compatibility
- New – Standalone terraform server to support multiple stream managers behind a load balancer see updated documentation
- New – Option to target a specific image per node type in launch configuration
- New – Node Relations Map, displays relations between nodes in a group in a more graphical manner
- New – able to request transcoder by region
- Updated SM relay logic so that edges only connect to one relay, to better distribute load
- Updated WebSocket proxy implementation for scalability and more stable connections in high load situations
- Updated SM response logic for getting multiple subscriber requests at the same time to distribute traffic better amongst multiple edges
- Updated SM logic to check for a stream before directing a subscriber to an edge
- Updated SM logic to wait for edges to be inservice before directing subscribers
- Added support for additional AWS regions, including China and African regions
- Fixed – In an autoscaling group with multiple transcoders – streams published to one transcoder are also displaying on other transcoders
- Fixed – Republishing same stream name doesn’t return new entry in event/usage api call
- Updated stream manager examples added to the streaming HTML5 testbed
Release 7.0.0 Server Performance Metrics
Tests were run against an AWS c5.large instance (2 CPUs with 4GB memory, 2GB allocated to java_heap). We used our RTC, RTSP and RTMP Bee clients to do load testing. Note – connections are added over the course of several minutes.
SUBSCRIBER TESTS
Publishing a 240p (426×240, 200 kbps) stream via RTMP, we were able to achieve the following while still maintaining quality of stream:
- 500 WebRTC subscribers, or
- 1,800 RTSP subscribers, or
- 1,200 RTMP subscribers
Publishing a 480p (854×480, 500kbps) stream via RTMP, we were able to achieve the following while still maintaining quality of stream:
- 350 WebRTC subscribers, or
- 1,300 RTSP subscribers, or
- 900 RTMP subscribers
Publishing a 720p (1280×720 1,500kbps) stream via RTMP, we were able to achieve the following while still maintaining quality of stream:
- 250 WebRTC subscribers, or
- 1000 RTSP subscribers, or
- 700 RTMP subscribers
Publishing a 1080p (1920×1080 4,500kbps) stream via RTMP, we were able to achieve the following while still maintaining quality of stream:
- 100 WebRTC subscribers, or
- 700 RTSP subscribers, or
- 400 RTMP subscribers
PUBLISHER TESTS
The same server type (2 CPUs with 4GB memory, 2GB allocated to java_heap) can support approximately (tested using the RTCBee Publisher test, RTMP Bee Publisher test and RTSP Bee Publisher test):
240p:
- 30-40 WebRTC publishers, or
- 60-70 RTMP publishers, or
- 60-70 RTSP publishers
480p:
- 20-30 WebRTC publishers, or
- 60-70 RTMP publishers, or
- 50-60 RTSP publishers
720p:
- 15-20 WebRTC publishers, or
- 60-70 RTMP publishers, or
- 50-60 RTSP publishers
1080p:
- 15-20 WebRTC publishers, or
- 45-50 RTMP publishers, or
- 20-25 RTSP publishers
To get the latest release, please login to your account and download the new build.
To upgrade your server, follow this link.
To upgrade your stream manager, follow this link.
For test applications, visit our Github page.