filename

The name of a file in the form specified by a local filesystem, such as UFS or NFS. The filename might specify an MPEG file or, for a content package, a tar file.

hostname:filename

The IP hostname of a machine on which filename is stored, plus the filename.

You must supply an argument for source. Unless you use the -moption (for tar file input), you must also supply an argument for destination. If you are copying a title from a remote to a local machine, and not renaming the title, you can simply specify the name of the title as the destination.

smc_copy has the following options: -f{MPEGTSMPEG1SYS}

Indicates format of stream to be loaded onto Sun MediaCenter server (MPEG Transport Stream or MPEG-1 System Stream). There is no default for this option. By omitting this option, you implicitly request that the server software auto- detect the title's format. (Sun MediaCenter servers of version number 2.1 and later support format auto-detection.)

-i

Indicates input is from a Unix filesystem.

-m

Indicates input is a tar file. Used for loading a content package.

-o

Indicates output is to a Unix filesystem.

-p

Preserve the creation time in the destination file. Otherwise, the creation time becomes the current time for the newly copied file.

-rrate

Indicates the encoding bit rate for a title. There is no default for this option.

-sspeed

For titles that contain trick play streams. speed is 1000 for a normal-play, forward- direction stream. The speed value for a stream of four times normal speed is 4000. Reverse direction is indicated by a minus sign, so that a stream of seven times normal speed, in the reverse direction has a speed value of -7000. The default speed value is 1000.

Chapter 5 Sun MediaCenter Server Utilities 5-5

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Sun Microsystems 2.1 manual Rrate