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http_api [2020/07/14 05:39] neds |
http_api [2020/09/20 16:16] neds |
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* Example channel 5 is RF 14, which is 473MHz and would be written as <code>http://192.168.0.100:5004/auto/ch473000000</code> | * Example channel 5 is RF 14, which is 473MHz and would be written as <code>http://192.168.0.100:5004/auto/ch473000000</code> | ||
- | If the channel has sub-channels, you can use the program number to specify the channel with a dash. For example, channel 5.3 might be -3 (program numbers are not always sequential or starting with 1), | + | * If the channel has sub-channels, you can use the program number to specify the channel with a dash. For example, channel 5.3 might be -3 (program numbers are not always sequential or starting with 1), it would be written as, <code>http://192.168.0.100:5004/auto/ch473000000-3</code> |
+ | |||
+ | </WRAP> | ||
+ | ====Specifying a tuner==== | ||
+ | <WRAP indent> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The "/auto/" portion of the URL will select the first available tuner. Replacing this with a tuner identifier will force use of a specific tuner. For example: | ||
+ | * tuner0 - the first tuner | ||
+ | * tuner1 - the second tuner | ||
+ | * tuner2 - the third tuner (if you have a 3 or 4 tuner model) | ||
+ | * tuner3 - the fourth tuner (if you have a 4 tuner model) | ||
+ | |||
+ | The URL for using the second tuner might look like this: | ||
+ | |||
+ | <code>http://192.168.0.100:5004/tuner1/v5.1</code> | ||
</WRAP> | </WRAP> |