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MediaPortal 1
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1.02 and 1.1 Beta side by side?
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<blockquote data-quote="captainjack" data-source="post: 528761" data-attributes="member: 70915"><p>Just wanted to let you know that I have been testing the Virtualization of Mediaportal. This is not meant to be a training session so you will have to do that yourself.</p><p>If you have Usenet access, do a search for Xenocode. It is application virtualization software. With VMWare and this product you can capture the installation and virtualize it into a single file.</p><p>When in use it does not modify the machine it is running on. Everything runs in a virtual bubble. When I say bubble I mean everything is contained under your windows profile directory so you can see the files such as logs, config etc.</p><p>I have a client/server setup and have been successfully running the virtualized front end for a while now and it works just fine. What I have not had time for yet is virtualising the TVServer. With Xenocode you can virtualize services as well but have not yet had time to get this going so I cannot say for sure that it will work.</p><p>What I start with is a clean VMWare image of the version of Windows that I will be running this on. In my case it is Windows 7.</p><p>I make sure all of the pre-req's are installed in the base image then I do a snapshot. I then run the Xenocode capture and install the current Beta of Mediaportal. When the install is complete, I save the capture in Xenocode and snapshot the VMWare session. This gives me my base image. I then config MP to my liking including adding any other files I want included in my build. In my case it is just the files for my remote setup (IMON).</p><p>I then build the project. It then creates a single exe file with everything contained inside.</p><p>The cool thing about this is that when there is an SVN to be applied, I bring up the last saved VMWare snapshot with my last good build, do a capture of the SVN being applied and save it as a layer file and not a full blown application. That file is then just copied to the same directory where I am running my main virt app from. When it launches it looks for any of these layer files and applies them seamlessly. If I find there is something wrong with the SVN, I just delete the layer file and I am back to my original build just like that.</p><p>Now since I don't have my server virted yet, I use Acronis True image to save differential images of that machine.</p><p></p><p>As an example, I have a virted copy of the original beta with no SVN's running and a locally installed MP with SVN 23831 on the same machine and my back end TVServer is at 23831.</p><p></p><p>With SVN 23831, I get micro skips with h.264 MKV files but with my virted base beta build I do not so what does that tell me. So now I just use the original BETA virted version until I get time to test a newer SVN.</p><p></p><p>I some ways this seems like more work than necessary but I get to run things side by side as the thread title states.</p><p>On a side note, the virted version only takes literally one second longer to launch and once running there is no difference in performance.</p><p>It is also very portable. This can be run on any client that has the pre-req's for MP installed.</p><p></p><p>Hope this does not seem like babbling as I am writing this while having my first coffe of the day.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="captainjack, post: 528761, member: 70915"] Just wanted to let you know that I have been testing the Virtualization of Mediaportal. This is not meant to be a training session so you will have to do that yourself. If you have Usenet access, do a search for Xenocode. It is application virtualization software. With VMWare and this product you can capture the installation and virtualize it into a single file. When in use it does not modify the machine it is running on. Everything runs in a virtual bubble. When I say bubble I mean everything is contained under your windows profile directory so you can see the files such as logs, config etc. I have a client/server setup and have been successfully running the virtualized front end for a while now and it works just fine. What I have not had time for yet is virtualising the TVServer. With Xenocode you can virtualize services as well but have not yet had time to get this going so I cannot say for sure that it will work. What I start with is a clean VMWare image of the version of Windows that I will be running this on. In my case it is Windows 7. I make sure all of the pre-req's are installed in the base image then I do a snapshot. I then run the Xenocode capture and install the current Beta of Mediaportal. When the install is complete, I save the capture in Xenocode and snapshot the VMWare session. This gives me my base image. I then config MP to my liking including adding any other files I want included in my build. In my case it is just the files for my remote setup (IMON). I then build the project. It then creates a single exe file with everything contained inside. The cool thing about this is that when there is an SVN to be applied, I bring up the last saved VMWare snapshot with my last good build, do a capture of the SVN being applied and save it as a layer file and not a full blown application. That file is then just copied to the same directory where I am running my main virt app from. When it launches it looks for any of these layer files and applies them seamlessly. If I find there is something wrong with the SVN, I just delete the layer file and I am back to my original build just like that. Now since I don't have my server virted yet, I use Acronis True image to save differential images of that machine. As an example, I have a virted copy of the original beta with no SVN's running and a locally installed MP with SVN 23831 on the same machine and my back end TVServer is at 23831. With SVN 23831, I get micro skips with h.264 MKV files but with my virted base beta build I do not so what does that tell me. So now I just use the original BETA virted version until I get time to test a newer SVN. I some ways this seems like more work than necessary but I get to run things side by side as the thread title states. On a side note, the virted version only takes literally one second longer to launch and once running there is no difference in performance. It is also very portable. This can be run on any client that has the pre-req's for MP installed. Hope this does not seem like babbling as I am writing this while having my first coffe of the day. [/QUOTE]
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