* Split "my library" into "video space (channels, videos...)" and "my library (playlists, history...)"
* Split "admin" into "overview (users, videos...)", "moderation (abuses, blocks, registrations...)" and "settings (configuration, runners...)"
* Reorganize the header and the left menu: account settings/notifications are now in the header
* Add instance information context in the left menu
* Merge dedicated videos pages for "recently added", "trending", "local videos" into a "browse videos" page that includes quick filters
* Clean up entire CSS
* Clean CSS variables so it's easier to theme PeerTube (some new variables fallback to old variables to limit currnet themes breakages)
* Replace the current light theme into a new one (beige)
* Add a dark (brown) theme (included in PeerTube core)
* Fix accessibility issues with old light theme colors (white on orange button for example)
* Redesign the left menu, the horizontal menu, form controls and buttons, "Discover videos" page and common video filters panel
* Replace/remove/add some global icon
Allows:
* The HLS player to propose an "Audio only" resolution
* The live to output an "Audio only" resolution
* The live to ingest and output an "Audio only" stream
This feature is under a config for VOD videos and is enabled by default for lives
In the future we can imagine:
* To propose multiple audio streams for a specific video
* To ingest an audio only VOD and just output an audio only "video"
(the player would play the audio file and PeerTube would not
generate additional resolutions)
This commit introduce a new way to download videos:
* Add "/download/videos/generate/:videoId" endpoint where PeerTube can
mux an audio only and a video only file to a mp4 container
* The download client modal introduces a new default panel where the
user can choose resolutions it wants to download
* Comments and videos can be automatically tagged using core rules or
watched word lists
* These tags can be used to automatically filter videos and comments
* Introduce a new video comment policy where comments must be approved
first
* Comments may have to be approved if the user auto block them using
core rules or watched word lists
* Implement FEP-5624 to federate reply control policies
Breaking: YAML config `ip_view_expiration` is renamed `view_expiration`
Breaking: Views are taken into account after 10 seconds instead of 30
seconds (can be changed in YAML config)
Purpose of this commit is to get closer to other video platforms where
some platforms count views on play (mux, vimeo) or others use a very low
delay (instagram, tiktok)
We also want to improve the viewer identification, where we no longer
use the IP but the `sessionId` generated by the web browser. Multiple
viewers behind a NAT can now be able to be identified as independent
viewers (this method is also used by vimeo or mux)
* testing not removing old file and adding columb to db
* implement feature
* remove unnecessary config changes
* use only keptOriginalFileName, change keptOriginalFileName to keptOriginalFilename for consistency with with videoFile table, slight refactor with basename()
* save original video files to dedicated directory original-video-files
* begin implementing object storage (bucket) support
---------
Co-authored-by: chagai.friedlander <chagai.friedlander@fairkom.eu>
Co-authored-by: Ian <ian.kraft@hotmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Chocobozzz <me@florianbigard.com>
More efficient than the current one where instance is not fast enough to
send all viewers if a video becomes popular
The new protocol can be enabled by setting env
USE_VIEWERS_FEDERATION_V2='true'
Introduce a result field in View activity that contains the number of
viewers. This field is used by the origin instance to send the total
viewers on the video to remote instances. The difference with the
current protocol is that we don't have to send viewers individually to
remote instances.
There are 4 cases:
* View activity from federation on Remote Video -> instance replaces
all current viewers by a new viewer that contains the result counter
* View activity from federation on Local Video -> instance adds the
viewer without considering the result counter
* Local view on Remote Video -> instance adds the viewer and send it to
the origin instance
* Local view on Local Video -> instance adds the viewer
Periodically PeerTube cleanups expired viewers. On local videos, the
instance sends to remote instances a View activity with the result
counter so they can update their viewers counter for that particular
video