X-Git-Url: https://git.sesse.net/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=monitoring.rst;h=6165e76a717bb31c2aaee11896ad2be5b2a09303;hb=f2fb154081bf8d73aa8b750132fb17ba0fda12a9;hp=204c37a885956706769fbe96eeb5a47272f3d7f1;hpb=152df450d9b0b5bb36474b4a111a109514706121;p=nageru-docs diff --git a/monitoring.rst b/monitoring.rst index 204c37a..6165e76 100644 --- a/monitoring.rst +++ b/monitoring.rst @@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ into). However, most cheaper cameras will have none at all. Nageru does not have functionality to talk to tally lights directly (there are too many kinds of interfaces and standards), but it does have functionality to expose -tally _data_. Using this, you can build your own tally light, be in through injecting +tally *data*. Using this, you can build your own tally light, be in through injecting the right bits on an SDI cable, having a single-board computer set some GPIO pins for a LED, or simply show a red or green dot on a mobile phone with a web browser. @@ -59,3 +59,7 @@ match the borders around the input in the producer's mixer display—typically green for on preview and red for live. This also means they can be CSS textual colors (like “red”), although you can of course make the theme return only “#ff0000” or similar if this makes your tally application simpler. + +Note that the tally endpoints have fully open `CORS `_ +headers, so that they can be queried from anywhere; tally data is not sensitive, +and this makes it significantly easier to query them from a web page.