Provided by: oggfwd_0.2+git20150412.506088e-1_amd64 

NAME
oggfwd — pipe an Ogg stream from stdin to an Icecast server
SYNOPSIS
oggfwd [-hp] [-m metadata file] [-d description] [-g genre] [-n name] [-u URL] [-T TLS mode] address port
password mountpoint
DESCRIPTION
The oggfwd utility acts as a minimal source client for Icecast servers. It reads an Ogg stream from
stdin and forwards it to a server specified on the command line.
The address, port, password and mountpoint arguments are mandatory and have to be given in that order.
Optional command line parameters
-m metadata file
Sets a file holding stream meta data.
-d description
Set the stream description.
-g genre
Set the stream genre.
-h Print a short usage summay.
-n name
Set the stream (i.e. radio) name.
-p Allow the stream to be made public in stream directories.
-u URL Set the stream URL.
-T TLS mode
This sets the TLS (encryption) mode. Valid values are "disabled" (no encryption), "auto" (any
encryption if available), "auto_no_plain" (any encryption), "rfc2818" (encryption based on
RFC2818) and "rfc2817" (encryption based on RFC2817). For most users the default mode "auto"
should work just fine.
oggfwd reacts to the hangup signal, SIGHUP, by printing the amount of bytes read from stdin to stdout at
the next given opportunity. How fast it reacts depends on the stream's current bitrate.
EXAMPLES
To forward a public Ogg stream with the name “Test radio” to an Icecast server, one would pipe that
stream to an oggfwd command line such as
oggfwd -p -n "Test radio" radio.example.com 8000 password /stream.ogg
Encode an Ogg Vorbis stream, dump it to disk and stream it at the same time:
oggenc - < input.wav | tee streamdump.ogg \
| oggfwd radio.example.com 8000 password /stream.ogg
AUTHORS
Programming by
J^ <j@v2v.cc>
rafael2k <rafael@riseup.net>
Moritz Grimm <gtgbr@gmx.net>
This manual was contributed by Moritz Grimmi and updated by Philipp Schafft.
CAVEATS
Since the password to the Icecast server is given in clear text on the command line, other (local) users
will probably be able to see it very easily.
Debian April 12, 2015 OGGFWD(1)