A server is a stand-alone program that communicates with a device. Maya can talk to the server to get device data. Devices that require servers are called data-server devices.
To help you learn about motion capture, we’ve provided an example motion capture server, the mayaClockServer program. This program reads the system clock and outputs three rotation values in radians: the angle of the second hand, minute hand, and hour hand. You don’t need special hardware. The mayaClockServer can be found in the following location:
(Linux) /usr/autodesk/maya2010/bin
(Windows) Drive:\Program Files\Autodesk\Maya2010\bin
(Mac OS X) Doesn’t exist for the Mac. Its operating system has a .c file in devkit/mocap.
To view mayaClockServer options, enter the following command from the command prompt of the preceding directory: mayaClockServer -h.
We’ve also included an example script for using mayaClockServer. To see a demo of the clock, enter the following in the Maya Script Editor: mayaClockDemo.
The script launches mayaClockServer using the MEL system command, defines a device named “clock,” creates three analog clock hands, and connects the geometry to the clock.