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Difference between revisions of "Configuring OLA as a Artnet Node in Ubuntu"
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Written by Karsten Wolf. 19/7/2012 | Written by Karsten Wolf. 19/7/2012 | ||
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===Setting up Artnet1 compatibility=== | ===Setting up Artnet1 compatibility=== | ||
− | + | ''Note: These steps will also works for other plugins, just replace with the appropriate file names.'' | |
You can view the artnet plugin information in the Web Client by selecting ‘Plugins’ on the left and selecting ‘Artnet’. | You can view the artnet plugin information in the Web Client by selecting ‘Plugins’ on the left and selecting ‘Artnet’. | ||
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This file is hidden, to open it using terminal type: | This file is hidden, to open it using terminal type: | ||
− | gedit ~/.ola/ola-artnet.conf | + | gedit ~/.ola/ola-artnet.conf |
alternatively: | alternatively: |
Latest revision as of 13:48, 20 July 2012
Written by Karsten Wolf. 19/7/2012
My current personal requirements were for OLA to be a stand alone stage-side Node which would receive Artnet3 data from Luminosus (http://Luminosus.org) and Artnet1 data from Freestyler (http://Freestylerdmx.be) then output it to a DMXKing.com UltraDMX box.
My computer is an old laptop (with the screen torn off). With this setup, the setup steps are: connect the USB, Ethernet and power then hit the power button and walk away.
See the Guide for installing OLA on ubuntu here: The_Newbie_Guide_for_OLA_on_Ubuntu
Contents
Setting up OLA to start on startup
In the top menu bar on the right-most button (power logo) click it to bring up a drop-down menu. Select ‘Startup Applications’.
Click ‘Add’. Name it whatever you like. For the ‘command’ field input type:
olad -l 3
Note: The ‘-l’ is ‘-L’ but lowercase, not the number one. ‘3’ is the logging level, ‘0’ logs nothing, ‘4’ is debug logging, ‘3’ is log level info.
Next you may want to also set the computer to not lock while it’s running. I’m not sure of lock equates to what I understand as ‘sleep’ but I’d rather not have my computer do anything besides turn off the screen.
In the top menu bar on the right-most button (ubuntu logo) click it to bring up a drop-down menu. Select ‘System Settings’. Then select ‘Brightness and Lock’.
Set the brightness and ‘Dim screen to save power’ to whatever you like. Then switch ‘lock’ to ‘OFF’ to disable Ubuntu from locking up (and requiring a password). I tested it and OLA does still receive/transmit when Ubuntu is locked up, so if the computer is accessible to unauthorized personnel, lock may be a security option to have enabled.
At this point restart the system and test OLA with the Web client, if the web client comes up it works.
http://localhost:9090
Configuring OLA and Artnet
OLA Web Client
OLA is configured through a web browser client. On the Ubuntu machine you can access it in mozilla or any web browser via:
http://localhost:9090
From another computer or mobile device on the same network, type:
http://$IP:9090
example: http://192.168.0.2:9090
To find the IP address in Ubuntu click on the network Icon on the top menu bar. For LAN it’s two arrows, for Wifi it is the radiating antenna Icon. Click it then find ‘Connection Information’ in the drop down menu.
Alternatively you can access the IP in terminal via (ethernet only):
/sbin/ifconfig eth0
Artnet Config
To setup a new Universe within the web client click ‘Add Universe’ on the home page.
Devices are listed by name and direction. Direction determines whether it’s input or output. Select the Artnet Input and your USB Device Output.
For the most basic implementation setting the ‘Universe Id’ to ‘0’ should be fine.
Name the Universe with the ‘Universe Name’.
This should now be a functioning ArtNet3 Node.
Setting up Artnet1 compatibility
Note: These steps will also works for other plugins, just replace with the appropriate file names.
You can view the artnet plugin information in the Web Client by selecting ‘Plugins’ on the left and selecting ‘Artnet’.
Alternatively you can use Terminal. To view Plugin list:
ola_plugin_info
Artnet is default Plugin 2, so to see its info.
ola_plugin_info -p 2
Both methods will show you the same thing.
In order to get Artnet1 supported the config files needs to be edited. It is found at ~/.ola/ola-artnet.conf
This file is hidden, to open it using terminal type:
gedit ~/.ola/ola-artnet.conf
alternatively:
xdg-open ~/.ola/ola-artnet.conf
alternatively:
gnome-open ~/.ola/ola-artnet.conf
This will open the file in a text editor.
To enable Artnet1 to work change "'always_broadcast = false'" to "'always_broadcast = true'". Change any other settings you might need. Then save and close.
Go to the web client and on the home page click ‘reload plugins’.
The Princess is another Castle
Done, the computer should now be working as a stand alone Artnet to DMX Node.