The export of more than 10 streams to the EXE file works as follows: For example, you export the following set of streams: 11 different cameras (camera numbers 1–11), where one video stream and two caption streams (camera number and time) are loaded for each camera, and one audio stream is loaded for cameras 1 and 11. Once the streams are divided into groups based on the camera, the stream groups are added into a file as long as the file has space for them (the file includes only 10 streams). The remaining groups are added into a new file until all stream groups are allocated to the files. The files are named the same, but with a prefix number at the beginning: 1-, 2-, 3-, 4-... The streams from the example are exported in the following way: File 1: video stream from camera 1 + audio stream from camera 1 + two caption streams from camera 1, video stream from camera 2 + two caption streams from camera 2, video stream from camera 3 + two caption streams from camera 3. In total, there are 10 streams in the 1-PSIMExport 2025-02-24 11-55-37_279 [1m5s].exe file. File 2: video stream from camera 4 + two caption streams from camera 4, video stream from camera 5 + two caption streams from camera 5, video stream from camera 6 + two caption streams from camera 6. In total, there are nine streams in the 2-PSIMExport 2025-02-24 11-55-37_279 [1m5s].exe file. File 3: video stream from camera 7 + two caption streams from camera 7, video stream from camera 8 + two caption streams from camera 8, video stream from camera 9 + two caption streams from camera 9. In total, there are nine streams in the 3-PSIMExport 2025-02-24 11-55-37_279 [1m5s].exe file. File 4: video stream from camera 10 + two caption streams from camera 10, video stream from camera 11 + audio stream from camera 11 + two caption streams from camera 11. In total, there are seven streams in the 4-PSIMExport 2025-02-24 11-55-37_279 [1m5s].exe file. |