Limitations with complex media types – Grass Valley K2 System Guide v.9.0 User Manual
Page 74

On online/production K2 SANs and stand-alone K2 Summit systems, FTP clients can log into the
K2 FTP server using credentials for Windows user accounts that are registered on the K2 system.
When such accounts are used, the K2 FTP server exposes “virtual” folders at the FTP root. A virtual
folder exists for each video file format that is supported by the FTP server. Navigation to one of
these virtual folders allows an FTP client to get or put clips in that file format.
In addition, the K2 FTP server supports reserved user login names that directly places the FTP client
in a particular mode of operation. The login names and their modes are as follows:
FTP gets/puts supported for K2 clips in the GXF file format; the clips root becomes
the FTP root.
movie
FTP gets/puts supported for K2 clips in the MXF file format; the clips root becomes
the FTP root
mxfmovie
FTP puts supported for MPEG program and transport streams; the clips root becomes
the FTP root
mpgmovie
Pinnacle FTP emulation mode
video_fs
All FTP operations supported on generic files on the K2 system's media file system;
media file system root becomes the FTP root
k2vfs
You can use Internet Explorer to access the FTP interface to see an example.
The K2 FTP server runs on K2 Media Server that has the role of FTP server. While it also runs on
the K2 Solo Media Server, stand-alone storage K2 Summit Production Clients and K2 Media Clients,
it is important to understand that it does not run on shared storage K2 clients. When you FTP files
to/from a K2 SAN, you use the FTP server on the K2 Media Server, not on the K2 client that accesses
the shared storage on the K2 SAN.
If clips are created by record or streaming on a K2 file system such that media files have holes/gaps,
i.e. unallocated disk blocks, in them, then that clip represents a corrupt movie that needs to be
re-acquired. The K2 system handles corrupt movies of this type on a best-effort basis. There is no
guarantee that all available media, especially media around the edges of the holes/gaps, is streamed.
You can also apply K2 security features to FTP access.
When using FTP in a shared storage environment, ensure that all FTP communication takes place
on the FTP/streaming network, and not on the Control network.
Related Topics
FTP access by Internet Explorer
on page 78
on page 179
on page 76
Importing via Pinnacle emulation K2 FTP
on page 119
Limitations with complex media types
Depending on the system software versions of source and destination devices, it is possible that lists
or programs made from lists that contain movies with mixed video compression types or mixed
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K2 System Guide
06 November 2012
System connections and configuration