When running a TV station with both broadcast and web stream distribution, it is useful to know that the stream is working. As I am involved in the Norwegian open channel Frikanalen as part of my activity in the NUUG member organisation, I wrote a script to use mplayer to connect to a video stream, pick two images 35 seconds apart and compare them. If the images are missing or identical, something is probably wrong with the stream and an alarm should be triggered. The script is written as a Nagios plugin, allowing us to use Nagios to run the check regularly and sound the alarm when something is wrong. It is able to detect both a hanging and a broken video stream.
I just uploaded the code for the script into the Frikanalen git repository on github. If you run a TV station with web streaming, perhaps you can find it useful too.
Last year, the Frikanalen public TV station transformed into using only Linux based free software to administrate, schedule and distribute the TV content. The source code for the entire TV station is available from the Github project page. Everyone can use it to send their content on national TV, and we provide both a web GUI and a web API to add and schedule content. And thanks to last weeks developer gathering and following activity, we now have the schedule available as XMLTV too. Still a lot of work left to do, especially with the process to add videos and with the scheduling, so your contribution is most welcome. Perhaps you want to set up your own TV station?
Update 2015-02-25: Got a tip from Uninett about their qstream monitoring system, which gather connection time, jitter, packet loss and burst bandwidth usage. It look useful to check if UDP streams are working as they should.