Multicat

The multicasting swissknife.

Cost / License

  • Free
  • Open Source

Platforms

  • Mac
  • Linux
  • BSD
-
No reviews
0likes
0comments
0news articles

Features

Suggest and vote on features
  1.  Multicasting
  2.  Streaming

 Tags

  • multimedia-tools
  • videos

Multicat News & Activities

Highlights All activities

Recent activities

No activities found.

Multicat information

  • Developed by

    FR flagVideoLAN organization
  • Licensing

    Open Source and Free product.
  • Alternatives

    4 alternatives listed
  • Supported Languages

    • English
Multicat was added to AlternativeTo by Graziella on and this page was last updated .
No comments or reviews, maybe you want to be first?
Post comment/review

What is Multicat?

Simple and efficient multicast and transport stream manipulation The multicat package contains a set of tools designed to easily and efficiently manipulate multicast streams in general, and MPEG-2 Transport Streams (ISO/IEC 13818-1) in particular. The multicat suite of applications is very lightweight and designed to operate in tight environments. Memory and CPU usages are kept to a minimum, and they feature only one thread of execution. It is designed to run on Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X.

Features

Simple and efficient multicast and transport stream manipulation The multicat package contains a set of tools designed to easily and efficiently manipulate multicast streams in general, and MPEG-2 Transport Streams (ISO/IEC 13818-1) in particular. The multicat suite of applications is very lightweight and designed to operate in tight environments. Memory and CPU usages are kept to a minimum, and they feature only one thread of execution. It is designed to run on Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X. The multicat program multicat itself is a 1 input/1 output application. Inputs and outputs can be network streams (unicast and multicast), files, directories, character devices or FIFOs. It is thought to be a multicast equivalent of the popular netcat tool. Typical applications are recording live transport streams, or playing out TS files without modification. Also it is able to record a continuous stream into a directory, rotate the files periodically, and make seamless extracts from it. Multicat tries to rebuild the internal clock of the input stream; but it wants to remain agnostic of what is transported, so in case of files the said clock is stored to an auxiliary file (example.aux accompanies example.ts) while recording. Other inputs are considered "live", and the input clock is simply derived from the reception time of the packets.