MythWeb
Contents
- 1 Synopsis
- 2 Usage
- 3 Installation
- 4 Key Features
- 5 Grease Monkey Scripts
- 6 Securing Mythweb - Basics
- 7 Securing Web - openSUSE 10.2
- 8 Securing Mythweb - Other Linux Flavors
- 9 Alternative Skins
- 10 Troubleshooting
- 10.1 Browser only showing a directory listing
- 10.2 Browser says "Not Found"
- 10.3 Incompatible protocol version
- 10.4 If you install or upgrade MythWeb and your web browser gives you garbage instead of a pretty page
- 10.5 Mythweb fails to detect wap/wml devices when secured
- 10.6 Database connection issues
- 10.7 Streaming Music via Mythweb
- 10.8 MythVideo error on Mythweb
- 10.9 Time Stamp is off by an hour
- 10.10 Thumbnails are not generated
- 10.11 Errors showing Backend Status page
- 10.12 Channel Icons are not appearing
- 10.13 SELinux issues
- 10.14 Internal Server Error when attempting to stream a recorded program
- 11 See Also
Synopsis
MythWeb provides a frontend for scheduling and managing recordings on your MythBox from a web browser located on another machine. Provided the security is set up correctly on your MythBox you can access your machine from anywhere on the internet, or even your mobile phone as long as you have a compatible browser. Of course it is just as useful to browse your myth content from your laptop while your partner is watching their favorite programme.
Mythweb also has some unique capabilities that are only available through the web interface such as allowing for the change of key bindings and other settings.
Indeed, many functions you might want to perform on your MythBox are faster or easier through MythWeb. (How much this is true, of course, depends to some degree on what version you're running).
Don't confuse this with MythBrowser which is a web page browser that runs inside of mythtv itself.
Usage
Once MythWeb is installed, you can simply access MythWeb from any web browser.
URL for accessing mythweb from browser on same machine as MythTV use
http://localhost:80/mythweb or http://127.0.0.1:80/mythweb
URL for remote access to MythTV from home network use
http://192.168.0.100:80/mythweb (replace 192.168.0.100 with your local IP address) or http://mythtv-hostname:80/mythweb (you can use the computername you assigned to the MythTV PC)
URL for remote access to MythTV from Internet use
http://45.45.45.45:80/mythweb (45.45.45.45 is your WAN IP.) (If you don't know your WAN IP, use www.whatismyip.com to figure this out)
However, you will not be able to remotely access your MythTV machine until you open the port to your PC. You need to enter your home router and enable port forwarding. You need to manually change some settings in your router that let it know that you want traffic from outside the home network to enter your home network. And you want that outside traffic to be sent directly to 192.168.0.100 (the IP address of the MythTV backend) on port number 80 (which is the default port for the apache HTTP server).
Also note that your ISP may block all traffic on port 80 b/c they do not want residential customers to be running HTTP servers. So you may need to change the default port 80 to some other number (ex: 8080). Then don't forget to change your router's settings to forward port the incoming port 8080 to the internal network's port 80.
In addition, most users have dynamically assigned IP addresses from their ISP. This means that your ISP can change your WAN IP at any time and if this occurred while your away from your home, you would not know what the new IP address is and therefore you would not be able to access your MythTV PC remotely.
The way to prevent this from happening is to use dynamic DNS. Google it. There are many free choices which will allow you to map any changes that your ISP makes to your home IP address. This will allow you to maintain a connection to your home computer regardless if any changes to your IP address were made.
Lastly, don't forget that you still need to modify your home computer's configuration to grant your remote computer access. This means that you may need to change a few files. Notably, if you're accessing a linux systems (ubuntu/kubuntu/etc), change these files: /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny.
Installation
See MythWeb INSTALL for details on how to install, especially on Linux. (Note this is hard linked to the 0.22-fixes version of this document). For installing on Mac OSX, please see MythWeb_on_Mac_OS_X_Backend or MythWeb via MacPorts.
Key Features
TV
Programme Listing
Special Searches
Upcoming Recordings
Recording Schedules
Schedule Manually
Custom Schedule
Recorded Programmes
Music
Browse your Music Collection and download to your local machine for direct playback.
The interface allows you to search and browse the playlists you have set up in MythMusic. You can also put together new playlists in the web interface.
The interface also provides buttons that when pressed will stream the music in the playlist over HTTP to your browser (via a .m3u file). Your browser needs to know what to do with the file - e.g. start up a music player. Not all players seem to cope well with the file that is sent; VLC seems to work ok.
Video
Browse your Video collection and download to your local machine
Weather
Get weather reports as per MythWeather.
Status
Show the Backend Status Logs such as how much disk space and tuners that are recording
Statistics
Show key statistics such as Top Recorded Shows
Logs
Show the Server Logs
Settings
Configure MythWeb and some of the MythTV settings.
MythWeb session settings
MythTV global defaults
MythTV channel info
MythTV key bindings
MythTV settings table
Favicons For Your Server
One contributed favicon is File:Favicon.jpg (it's really a .ico file; see the page).
Here is another favicon.
Grease Monkey Scripts
To enhance your MythWeb experience:
- Removes Duplicates from search results - http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/29459 (patched version that removes a useless error popup when there's no search result)
- Navigates the guide using the left/right arrow keys - http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/62614
- Shows disk usage in GB, percentages and hours left to record - http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/26680
Securing Mythweb - Basics
If your web server is accessible from the internet it is important that you secure MythWeb with some kind of authentication. This guide will take you through setting up simple password authentication. Please see the Apache [1] for more specifics or more secure methods.
There are several ways to secure MythWeb with all webservers; on Apache2:
- Modify the Apache configuration to require password authentication [Apache2 preferred method]
- Modify the MythWeb .htaccess file to require password authentication
- Setup an SSH tunnel for remote access to MythWeb (assuming that you do not open your MythWeb server to the internet except for port-forwarding SSH from your router/firewall)
These instructions assume Fedora Core, with Myth Web installed in the default path /var/www/html/mythweb
MythWeb password authentication
MythWeb password authentication is configured in the configuration files of the apache2 service and read at runtime rather than with each web-request as with .htaccess; for this reason this is more efficient from a computer resource point of view. For this reason this is the method that is recommended by Apache. There are at least two methods of configuring password authentication within Apache2 config files; Authentication with either the Basic or Digest modules.
Basic Authentication sends the submitted username and password in clear-text over the network; Digest uses a more secure method of sending the details encrypted over the network. In both cases the content of the pages sent to the web browser are unencrypted as is typical with non-financial web-pages.
Basic & Digest authentication is described here (for Ubuntu) [[2]]
MythWeb .htaccess
The simplest option is to edit /var/www/html/mythweb/.htaccess and read the comments there about what to uncomment to secure MythWeb. This option does not require Apache to be restarted, but is slightly less efficient than adding the options to the Apache config.
You may use either AuthType Basic or AuthType Digest -- "Basic" is more compatible, "Digest" is more secure. If you use "Basic", you must use htpasswd to create users. If you use "Digest", you must use htdigest to create users.
Securing Web - openSUSE 10.2
These steps are for openSUSE 10.2 The instructions are written using "htpasswd2" instead of "htdigest2" because that is what I got to work. I'm sure you could use "htdigest2", I'm just now sure how. These steps should work fine though.
You will need to install Apache2, PHP5.1 (or preferrably PHP5.2), Mythweb
MythTV openSUSE RPMS will install the mythweb files into /srv/www/htdocs/mythweb
Configure Apache2
In YasT under Network Services->HTTP Server.
Under "Server Modules" make sure you have "env" and "rewrite" modules enabled
Under "Main Hosts" select "Directory /srv/www/htdocs "
Change Options to FollowSymLinks
Change AllowOveride to All
save and exit
Start Apache2 Web Server
YasT->System->System Services
Select apache2 and enable
save and exit
Setup Security
1. create a new password file with htpasswd2
WARNING: the "-c" will wipe out the file if it already exists
/usr/bin/htpasswd2 -c /etc/apache2/conf.d/httpd-passwords userid
You will be prompted to put in a password for the userid
2. create any additional user IDs (no "-c")
/usr/bin/htpasswd2 /etc/apache2/conf.d/httpd-passwords another_userid
3. Find the user:group that apache2 is running as
cat /etc/apache2/uid.conf
The file will probably look similar to this:
User wwwrun Group www
4. Change the ownership of the password file (change "wwwrun:www" to match the "User:Group" from the previous step)
chown wwwrun:www /etc/apache2/conf.d/httpd-passwords
5. If the .htaccess exists, which it probably does if you have mythweb installed, back it up. This is just in case you mess it up and it need to start over.
cd /srv/www/htdocs/mythweb/ cp ./.htaccess ./.htaccess.orig
6. Open .htaccess for modification with vi - or whatever floats your boat
vi ./.htaccess
7. The following lines should be present but commented. Remove the "#" from the start of each line, modify them to fit your setup, and save the file. Changes are immediate. Pay special attention to the bolded lines
AuthType Basic AuthName "MythTV" AuthUserFile /etc/apache2/conf.d/httpd-passwords Require valid-user BrowserMatch "MSIE" AuthDigestEnableQueryStringHack=On
Save the file and authentication should begin immediately.
8. If you don't want to bother with authentication when you are on the same network, add the following lines and authentication will be bypassed (assuming 192.168.1.0 is your local network).
Allow from 192.168.1. Satisfy any
If you aren't sure what your network is, if you are using a router purchased from a store, you could probably get away with specifying "Allow from 192.168.". This would also cover you if you move your box from one location to another using a different third octet in the IP. With this in place, though, you should not be prompted now for authentication while on the local network.
UPDATE: I'm not 100% sure that this last step works. I tested from a remote site and was able to access MythWeb without being prompted for a password. The remote site also used the 192.168.1 network range. After removing the last two entries above, it prompted right away.
NOTE: I had the same problem with the last step not working, but after a lot of digging it turned out that there were conflicting authentication configurations in the main apache config file and in the sites-enabled/default files. These are the settings which worked for me.
<Directory> AuthType Basic AuthName "MythTV" AuthUserFile /etc/apache2/conf.d/httpd-passwords Require valid-user Order deny,allow Deny from all Allow from 192.168.0 127 Satisfy Any </Directory>
Possible Problems
/var/log/apache2/error_log show "RewriteEngine" messages
[Mon Jul 23 21:35:19 2007] [alert] [client 192.168.0.187] /srv/www/htdocs/mythweb/.htaccess:\ Invalid command 'RewriteEngine', perhaps misspelled or defined by a module not included in the server\ configuration
Install the apache2 rewrite module
# a2enmod rewrite # /etc/init.d/apache2 force-reload
Securing Mythweb - Other Linux Flavors
Create a Password File
You will need to create an htdigest password file -- a suggested location is /etc/httpd/conf, but it should be a location that gets backed up regularly.
Please make sure you DO NOT use the -c after the initial user, as this will overwrite the file and start from scratch.
htdigest -c /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords MythTV MYUSER1
Create additional users as needed:
htdigest /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords MythTV MYUSER2
Modify ownership of the file to match the user and group Apache is running as -- try
grep -A 2 ^User /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
chown apache.apache /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords chmod 640 /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords
The following lines should be present but commented after the initial installation. Make a backup copy of your existing conf file. Afterwards open the file and either remove the "#" (or copy the section before) from the start of each line, modify them to fit your setup, and save the file.
AuthType Digest AuthName "MythTV" AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords Require valid-user BrowserMatch "MSIE" AuthDigestEnableQueryStringHack=On
Adding the following optional lines will enforce authentication from anywhere outside your local network (assuming 192.168.1.0 is your local network):
Allow from 192.168.1. Satisfy any
Authentication should begin working immediately, to be on the sure side, you may restart the server with
- apache2ctl restart
It may happen, that you'll get an error because of misconfiguration. Obviously, check if you need to activate the auth_digest module !
Activate:
sudo a2enmod auth_digest
Securing Mythweb - Configure ApacheApache Configuration =
This method is slightly more efficient than the .htaccess method, but is complicated by the fact that you must restart Apache and mis-configuring the Apache configuration file will keep Apache from restarting.
Apache password file
We will start with creating an Apache password file. I put this in /etc/httpd/conf, as I back up this directory every night to one of my other systems.
htpasswd -c /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords MYUSER1
Create additional users as needed:
htpasswd /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords MYUSER2
Please make sure you DO NOT use the -c after the initial user, as this will overwrite the file and start from scratch.
Modify ownership of the file as follows:
chown apache.apache /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords chmod 640 /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords
Editing Apache Config
Now edit /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf, and add the following section:
<Directory "/var/www/html/mythweb"> Options Indexes FollowSymLinks AuthType Basic AuthName "MythTV" AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords require user MYUSER1 MYUSER2 MYUSER3 Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory>
Modify the password file location and required users per your needs.
If you have created a link from your music storage area to /var/www/html/mythweb/music, you can add the following to separately secure web access to this:
#MythWeb music configuration <Directory "/var/www/html/mythweb/music"> Options Indexes FollowSymLinks AuthType Basic AuthName "MythTV-Music" AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords Require user MYUSER4 MYUSER5 Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory>
Again, tailor your password file and users to your needs. You can even use separate password files if you wish!
Securing only the "settings" section
It is also possible to improve security on MythWeb without requiring every user to enter a username and password. Standard users will still be able to do things such as delete recordings, edit video metadata, etc, but you can at least restrict their access to dangerous pages such as the settings section. This is done on Apache by using the "LocationMatch" directive:
<LocationMatch .*web/settings> AuthType Digest AuthName "MythTV" AuthUserFile /etc/mythtv/mythweb-digest Require valid-user BrowserMatch "MSIE" AuthDigestEnableQueryStringHack=On Order Allow,Deny Satisfy Any </LocationMatch>
It should also be possible to restrict any individual action on Mythweb using the right regular expression in the LocationMatch.
Now restart Apache, and you're done:
service httpd restart
(this may be different on your distro) - apache like
apache2ctl restart
Other options
You can do a lot more with these configuration sections, such as secure by ip address, and more. Please see the Apache docs [3].
Questions: email me at johanreinalda at yahoo dot com. Preferred is an email to Myth Users list, however. Here's the configuration I used to allow users on my LAN to access MythWeb without a password, and require outside users to authenticate via pw
<Directory "/var/www/html/mythweb"> Options Indexes FollowSymLinks AuthType Basic AuthName "MythTV" AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/conf/httpd-passwords Require valid-user Order allow,deny Allow from 192.168.1. Satisfy any </Directory>
NOTE: I have found that "Allow from 192.168.1." does not work correctly when your webserver is behind a router, as any traffic forwarded over the router will appear to originate from 192.168.1.1 (or whatever your router's IP is). This will cause ANY outside traffic to satisfy the "Any" requirement. -- craftyguy
Alternative Skins
MythWeb uses the concept of skins to give the user the power to edit/change the look and feel. The skins are based on CSS files that can be customized.
Following list of available skins can be install additionally to the default one:
- Haze Skin for MythTV 0.20
- Elkin Skin for MythTV 0.21
- Clean Dark for MythTV 0.24
To install the skins, extract them to the mythweb/skins/ directory.
Troubleshooting
Browser only showing a directory listing
If your web browser is only showing a directory listing when you point it to mythweb, check that your mythweb configuration file is set properly for Apache. This file (mythweb.conf) can typically be found in the /etc/apache2/modules.d directory, but if it does not exist, you can easily make a symlink:
ln -s /var/www/localhost/htdocs/mythweb/mythweb.conf.apache /etc/apache2/modules.d/mythweb.conf
or alternately (depending on your configuration)
ln -s /usr/share/webapps/mythweb/0.26.0/conf/apache-mythweb.conf /etc/apache2/modules.d/mythweb.conf
Browser says "Not Found"
If you receive an error message such as the following:
"Not Found - The requested URL /mythweb.php/mythweb/ was not found on this server."
then double-check your mythweb.conf configuration file to ensure that the directories are correct.
In my case, I had to change:
<Directory "/var/www/localhost/htdocs/mythweb/data"> Options -All +FollowSymLinks +IncludesNoExec </Directory> <Directory "/var/www/localhost/htdocs" >
to:
<Directory "/var/www/localhost/htdocs/mythweb/data"> Options -All +FollowSymLinks +IncludesNoExec </Directory> <Directory "/var/www/localhost/htdocs/mythweb" >
Incompatible protocol version
After updating mythtv and mythplugins you may find that mythweb gives an error like
Error at /var/www/localhost/htdocs/mythweb/includes/mythbackend.php, line 172: Incompatible protocol version (mythweb=40, backend=41) Fatal Error at /var/www/localhost/htdocs/mythweb/includes/mythbackend.php, line 39: Unable to connect to mythbackend, is it running?
The version numbers may be different, but the point is that they don't match between mythtv and mythweb. The problem is that even if you build and install the latest mythplugins, this does not install mythweb. You must copy the latest mythweb code to the directory from which it is served by the web server. For example:
cp -r mythplugins/mythweb/* /var/www/html/
If you install or upgrade MythWeb and your web browser gives you garbage instead of a pretty page
Find the apache/htdocs/mythweb/.htaccess file and comment out (with a # sign) the three lines which begin php_value zlib.. (This note doesn't actually belong here, but I didn't want it to get lost, since I had to rummage in the mailing list to find it again. --Baylink 22:10, 7 October 2006 (UTC))
Mythweb fails to detect wap/wml devices when secured
If MythWeb is secured it will use the logged in username to record the mythweb settings including the template/skin. This is great if you are browsing mythweb from different PCs but will bypass the detection of mobile (wap/wml) devices. A simple workaround is to ensure you setup a different userid to authenticate with from your phone. --Lwoggardner 12:08, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
The user settings are stored in the table mythweb_sessions. To reset the stored session information for a particular user, simply delete the record for that user:
DELETE FROM mythweb_sessions WHERE id = 'user:<username>'
In a contribution to the mythtv-users list on 4 December 2008, Michael T. Dean suggested that the following may also fix the issue:
http://<hostname>/mythtv/?RESET_TMPL=true JanCeuleers 19:41, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
Database connection issues
If you have edited your .htaccess db values to match your mysql.txt file and still cannot connect to database you may have mysql database problems. Try:
GRANT ALL ON mythconverg.* TO mythtv@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'mythtv'
WITH GRANT OPTION
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
If you can browse the recording index but cannot play back a recording
Check if your /etc/mythtv/config.xml is valid.
c/o http://www.mythtv.org/pipermail/mythtv-users/2012-July/336637.html :
Hi - for the archive. Symptom: Mythweb movie artwork does not show. Symptom: In /var/log/apache/error.log there are a bunch of errors like: [Mon Jul 09 11:51:57 2012] [error] [client 192.168.1.44] Cannot connect to database: , referer: http://192.168.1.20/mythweb/video [Mon Jul 09 11:51:57 2012] [error] [client 192.168.1.44] , referer: http://192.168.1.20/mythweb/video [Mon Jul 09 11:51:57 2012] [error] [client 192.168.1.44] Compilation failed in require at /var/www/mythweb/mythweb.pl line 61., referer: http://192.168.1.20/mythweb/video [Mon Jul 09 11:51:57 2012] [error] [client 192.168.1.44] Premature end of script headers: mythweb.pl, referer: http://192.168.1.20/mythweb/video [Mon Jul 09 11:51:57 2012] [error] [client 192.168.1.44] DBI connect('database=mythconverg:host=localhost;port=3306','mythtv',...) failed: Access denied for user 'mythtv'@'localhost' (using password: YES) at /usr/share/perl5/MythTV.pm line 351, referer: http://192.168.1.20/mythweb/video (obviously the 192.168.1.20 is the address of my mythtv box, yours might be different) I'm not sure what the root cause of the problem is, but I think mythweb is using /etc/mythtv/config.xml by default. On my fresh installation of Mythbuntu 12.04 this is an empty file. I removed the 0 byte file, and symlinked to the real config.xml in my configured user directory e.g.: cd /etc/mythtv sudo rm config.xml sudo ln -sf /home/<your-user-name>/.mythtv/config.xml config.xml Having this empty config.xml causes mythweb not to be able to connect to the database for the artwork. It does seem to be able to connect for other things, so I'm not 100% sure what the matter is. hope this helps someone, cheers, -kt
Streaming Music via Mythweb
If Streaming Music over Mythweb is not working check to confirm that there is a link to your music directory in mythweb/data. If your music is stored in /mythtv/music and your web directory is /var/www/html/mythweb then you would need to add a link like.
ln -s /mythtv/Music /var/www/html/mythweb/data/music
Then confirm that it worked
ll /var/www/html/mythweb/data
MythVideo error on Mythweb
Error:
Could not create a symlink to /content/dvd, the local MythVideo directory for this hostname (hostname). Please create a symlink to your MythVideo directory at data/video in order to use the video portions of MythWeb.
I could fix this by deleting the symlink /var/www/html/mythweb/data/video with this command "rm /var/www/html/mythweb/data/video". This would allow mythweb to pull up the video page without the artwork, but when I would refresh it I would get the error. Notes:
My Video Directory: /content/dvd
This is related to permissions in the /content folder. So I did this
chown -R mythtv:apache /content chmod -R 755 /content
I had the same problem and found out that the symlink was not created properly. If you create a new symlink in the mythweb data folder (www/mythweb/data) to your video folder and video cover folder everything works fine. The error should tell you which file to link to using the following command
ln -s target_file video ln -s target_file video_covers
where target file is the location of your video and video_cover folders respectively.
Time Stamp is off by an hour
Arizona does not follow daylight savings time. PHP can't read the system timezone causing the Mythweb time to be an hour fast. The following needs to be set in php.ini:
[Date] ; Defines the default timezone used by the date functions
date.timezone = America/Phoenix
If your timezone has daylight saving which moves from year to year, you might experience this problem. This is because PHP does not use the system timezone information but has its own timezone database built in. System timezone information is easily updated (e.g. yum update tzdata) and if your system clock is wrong you probably should. The compiled-in data of PHP is not easily updated and reflects what the developers of PHP thought was correct when it was coded at some time in the past. The times in the MythTV database may be correct even though they show incorrectly in MythWeb. This happened in timezone Australia/Sydney in March/April 2008 when the daylight saving change was moved back by one week - MythWeb times were one hour out for the week and then corrected themselves.
To resolve future issues with daylight savings timezones being altered it may be neccessary to update or install the php timezone database. The following process was used successfully to install the php timezonedb with Ubuntu 7.10 (Gutsy).
sudo apt-get install php-pear sudo pecl install timezonedb
Thumbnails are not generated
Check this fix and make sure that
allow_url_fopen = On
in your php.ini.
Errors showing Backend Status page
If you receive errors such as:
Error at /var/www/localhost/htdocs/mythweb/modules/status/handler.php, line 29: file_get_contents() [function.file-get-contents]: URL file-access is disabled in the server configuration
when you open the "Backend Status" page, then you need to enable/install the curl plugin for php.
For Ubuntu/Debian:
sudo apt-get install php5-curl
For Fedora/Redhat:
yum install curl curl-devel
The error should be resolved after a restart of the web server.
Alternatively you can enable fopen in your php configuration file, but this is not recommended due to potential security issues with fopen.
To do this, find the following line:
allow_url_fopen = Off
and change it to:
allow_url_fopen = On
Channel Icons are not appearing
If you do not see channel icons in the listings page, there are two possible problems:
- 1) The option is not enabled
- Click the "Settings" button (a picture of a key & wrench), click the "MythWeb" button on the left, click the "MythWeb Defaults" tab, and verify that there is a check in the box for "Show the channel icons"
- 2) The channel icons have not been retrieved
- Run mythtv-setup, select "Channel Editor", select "Icon Download", and then select "Download all icons" from the list. Further information on channel icons is available in the Channel_icons page.
SELinux issues
If you get an error something like:
Error Unable to connect to the master backend at 127.0.0.1:6543. Is it running?
you are sure the backend is running, and you are running Fedora or some other distribution which uses selinux, this may be the problem - selinux does not allow apache to talk to mysql in the default policy. Try
setsebool httpd_can_network_connect=1
to test this theory, and to make it permanent:
setsebool -P httpd_can_network_connect=1
If that doesn't work, try:
setenforce permissive
to test this theory, and make the change permanent, if you wish, via /etc/sysconfig/selinux:
SELINUX=permissive # or SELINUX=disabled
Internal Server Error when attempting to stream a recorded program
If you receive an "Internal Server Error" page when you click either the 'stream' or the 'download' icons next to a recorded program, the issue will likely be described in the Apache error log file. If the error is the following:
[error] (13)Permission denied: exec of '/var/www/localhost/htdocs/mythweb/mythweb.pl' failed
then check the permissions on the mythweb.pl file to make sure that it has execute permissions enabled.