Table Of Contents
Preface
Contents
General Description of the Cisco TelePresence Recording Server
System Requirements
Cisco TelePresence Recording Server Release 1.8 Command Reference Organization
Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
Preface
October 2011
Contents
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General Description of the Cisco TelePresence Recording Server
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Cisco TelePresence Recording Server Release 1.8 Command Reference Organization
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System Requirements
•
Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
General Description of the Cisco TelePresence Recording Server
The Cisco TelePresence Recording Server (CTRS) allows users to do the following:
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Create recordings.
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Store recordings on the CTRS.
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Share recordings with others for viewing.
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Make recordings public so that anyone with access to the CTRS can view them.
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Play back recordings on a TelePresence endpoint.
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Play back recordings with a standard browser-based player.
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Download your recordings or public recordings.
CTRS enables users to record in TelePresence Studio Mode. In Studio Mode, users can create team announcements, corporate messages, training modules, video blogs, and other similar recordings.
To record, users must have access to a CTS with CTRS functionality; they control recording through the CTS IP phone interface.
All recordings are HD video and audio. All recorded content, including materials that users choose to display on a device that is connected to the VGA input or through a document camera, is shown on the TelePresence monitor from the viewer's perspective. CTRS acts as a viewer endpoint in a TelePresence session and records what it sees.
Users can then share a recording by sending it to a recipient's e-mail address. To play a recording, the recipient must sign in to the CTRS browser-based user portal with a corporate username and password (LDAP username and password). If the recipient wants to play a recording on a TelePresence display, he or she must sign in to CTRS through the CTS IP phone user interface with a corporate username and personal identification number (PIN).
System Requirements
For Release 1.8 system requirements, please see the Release Notes for Cisco TelePresence Recording Server, Release 1.8.
Cisco TelePresence Recording Server Release 1.8 Command Reference Organization
The Cisco TelePresence Recording Server Release 1.8 Command Reference is organized into the following chapters:
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Chapter 1: "Using Cisco TelePresence Recording Server CLI Commands"
This section provides information about using CTRS CLI commands.
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Chapter 2: "CTRS Delete Commands"
This section lists and describes all CTRS delete commands.
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Chapter 3: "CTRS File Commands"
This section lists and describes all CTRS file commands.
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Chapter 4: "CTRS Set Commands"
This section lists and describes all CTRS set commands.
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Chapter 5: "CTRS Show Commands"
This section lists and describes all CTRS show commands.
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Chapter 6: "CTRS Unset Commands"
This section lists and describes all CTRS unset commands.
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Chapter 7: "CTRS Utils Commands"
This section lists and describes all CTRS utils commands.
Obtaining Documentation and Submitting a Service Request
For information on obtaining documentation, submitting a service request, and gathering additional information, see the monthly What's New in Cisco Product Documentation, which also lists all new and revised Cisco technical documentation, at:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/general/whatsnew/whatsnew.html
Subscribe to the What's New in Cisco Product Documentation as a Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feed and set content to be delivered directly to your desktop using a reader application. The RSS feeds are a free service and Cisco currently supports RSS Version 2.0.