Web Service Interface: Difference between revisions
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=== Overview === |
=== Overview === |
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J. River Media Center 14 introduced a way for other programs to control the player. It can expose a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_State_Transfer REST] based Web Service Interface. This is self documented by the server with an HTML (or [http://www.w3.org/TR/wsdl WSDL]) response. The documentation |
J. River Media Center 14 introduced a way for other programs to control the player. It can expose a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_State_Transfer REST] based Web Service Interface. This is self documented by the server with an HTML (or [http://www.w3.org/TR/wsdl WSDL]) response. The documentation lists the commands available and the syntax for using them. |
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The web service is named MCWS (Media Core Web Service). |
The web service is named MCWS (Media Core Web Service). |
Revision as of 23:26, 6 July 2010
Overview
J. River Media Center 14 introduced a way for other programs to control the player. It can expose a REST based Web Service Interface. This is self documented by the server with an HTML (or WSDL) response. The documentation lists the commands available and the syntax for using them.
The web service is named MCWS (Media Core Web Service).
Running the Server
You must first start Library Server in MC. If you are running Media Server, this will still be available even after you exit MC. See our Wiki entry on Servers for more about this.
Documentation of Functions
Once the server is running, use a web browser to view the documentation. The command is:
http://[library server address]/MCWS/v1/doc
To view the documentation in WSDL format, use:
http://[library server address]/MCWS/v1/WSDL
If you're on the same computer as the server, you can use:
http://localhost:52199/MCWS/v1/doc (where 52199 is the port that Library Server is running on)
More
More on Interact