Linux-friendly UPnP server stack DLNA certified
Apr 4, 2008 — by Eric Brown — from the LinuxDevices Archive — 37 viewsA French company says its UPnP Server middleware stack has been approved by the Digital Living Network Alliance (DLNA). Although certified running on a standard PC, Awox's “mediaCTRL” middleware supports eight system-on-chip architectures and a handful of free and commercially supported embedded Linux distributions.
The mediaCTRL middleware enables digital audio and video devices to stream video, music, and photos across home networks, says Awox. The company claims it to be among the first stacks to comply with all of the following DNLA publications:
- v1.5 Digital Media Server (DMS)
- Mobile-Digital Media Server (M-DMS)
- Networked Device Interoperability Guidelines v1
Additionally, the stack complies with the UPNP (Universal Plug and Play) A/V Control Point 1.1 standard, Awox said.
Awox mediaCTRL server stack components
The mediaCTRL stack supports the following SoCs, development modules, and Linux flavors. Note that Awox itself offers hardware reference designs for some architectures.
Processor | Reference Board | Target OS |
---|---|---|
TI TMS320DM6446 | DVEVM | MontaVista Pro 4.0 |
TI TMS320DM644x | Awox SALAI | MontaVista Pro 4.0 |
STM STB710X | STB7100REF | STLinux 2.2 |
AMCC 440EP | EP440CX EPXH | Linux 2.6.14 |
Atmel AT91SAM9260 | Awox Mozart | TimeSys Linux 2.6.19 |
Broadcom BCM6348 | Inventel DV 4210 | LinuxMIPS 2.4.17 |
NXP STB220 | STB220 | Denx ELDK 4.0 |
XScale PXA270 | Awox | Windows CE 5.0 |
Intel x86 or equiv. | PC | Windows Vista/XP, Fedora Core 3 |
mediaCTRL supported SoCs, boards, and OSes
Awox's mediaCTRL middleware line also includes Controller and Renderer components. All are written in ANSI C, for easy portability, the company said.
mediaCTRL Controller and Renderer components
(Click either to enlarge)
Additionally, Awox markets hardware/software reference designs for products that include Internet radios, digital media adapters, video-on-demand boxes, and network add-on boards for TVs. Some of these embedded platforms are undergoing DNLA certification testing, said the company.
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.