ActivityPub federated video streaming platform using P2P directly in the web browser https://joinpeertube.org/
 
 
 
 
 
 
Go to file
kaiyou e8395f027b Add production Alpine and Debian Stretch Docker images (#225)
* First pass at a (swarm-compatible) docker image

Uses an existing traefik server as a https reverse proxy.

* Add example config for a Docker swarm deployment

* Point to traefik config for docker compose setup

* Clarify that traefik is needed for the example config

* Use node:8-stretch base image and don't install yarn

(The base image already contains yarn.)

* Initial commit for an Alpine Docker image

* Fix docker volume path

* Merge #213 and #225 and move files around

* Remove unnecessary dependencies from the alpine build

* Update Dockerfiles to match install path, config path, etc.

* Update the configuration in the example compose file

* Update the configuration in the example swarm file

* Remove the declared networks and volumes from the compose example, which are not strictly required

* Update attachment path in the documentation

* Display traefik as a suggestion and not a required dependency

* Update the Docker ignored files

* Fix typos reported in #225

* Move production Dockerfiles to a production directory

* Add the redis configuration settings

* Add Docker files to the dockerignore

* Make the signup limit configurable
2018-01-29 08:52:20 +01:00
.github
client Only accept public comments 2018-01-26 11:20:46 +01:00
config
scripts
server Fix video announces processing 2018-01-26 17:48:41 +01:00
shared Use sensitive instead of nsfw in activitypub 2018-01-26 17:25:35 +01:00
support Add production Alpine and Debian Stretch Docker images (#225) 2018-01-29 08:52:20 +01:00
.codeclimate.yml
.dockerignore Add production Alpine and Debian Stretch Docker images (#225) 2018-01-29 08:52:20 +01:00
.gitignore
.travis.yml
ARCHITECTURE.md
CREDITS.md
FAQ.md
LICENSE
README.md Add production Alpine and Debian Stretch Docker images (#225) 2018-01-29 08:52:20 +01:00
package.json
server.ts
tsconfig.json
tslint.json
yarn.lock

README.md

PeerTube

Federated (ActivityPub) video streaming platform using P2P (BitTorrent) directly in the web browser with WebTorrent.

PeerTube is sponsored by Framasoft, a non-profit that promotes, spreads and develops free culture in general, and free-libre software in particular. If you want to support this project, please consider donating to them.

Client
Dependency Status devDependency Status

Server
Build Status Dependencies Status devDependency Status JavaScript Style Guide PeerTube Freenode IRC


screenshot

Demonstration

Want to see it in action?

Currently PeerTube is still in alpha (we plan to release a beta in march). Demonstration servers do not support public registration. If you really want to test PeerTube before the public release, here is a list of PeerTube servers: https://github.com/Chocobozzz/PeerTube/wiki#other-peertube-servers.

Why

We can't build a FOSS video streaming alternatives to YouTube, Dailymotion, Vimeo... with a centralized software. One organization alone may not have enough money to pay for bandwidth and video storage of its servers.

So we need to have a decentralized network of servers seeding videos (as Diaspora for example). But it's not enough because one video could become famous and overload the server. It's the reason why we need to use a P2P protocol to limit the server load. Thanks to WebTorrent, we can make P2P (thus BitTorrent) inside the web browser, as of today.

Features

  • Angular frontend
  • Join the fediverse
    • Follow other instances
    • Unfollow an instance
    • Get for the followers/following list
  • Upload a video
    • Seed the video
    • Send the meta data with ActivityPub to followers
  • Remove the video
  • List the videos
  • View the video in an HTML5 player with WebTorrent
  • Admin panel
  • OpenGraph tags
  • OEmbed
  • Update video
  • Federated videos view counter
  • Federated videos likes/dislikes
  • Transcoding to different definitions
  • Download file/torrent
  • User video bytes quota
  • User video channels
  • NSFW warnings/settings
  • Video description in markdown
  • User roles (administrator, moderator)
  • User registration
  • Video privacy settings (public, unlisted or private)
  • Signaling a video to the admin origin PeerTube instance
  • Federated videos comments
  • Video imports (URL, Torrent, YouTube...)
  • Advanced search
  • Subtitles
  • User playlist
  • User subscriptions (by tags, author...)
  • Add "DDOS" security

Front compatibility

  • Firefox
  • Chrome/Chromium

Dependencies

  • nginx
  • PostgreSQL
  • Redis
  • NodeJS >= 8.x
  • yarn
  • OpenSSL (cli)
  • FFmpeg

Run using Docker

You can quickly get a server running using Docker. You need to have docker and docker-compose installed.

For this example configuration, you should also run a reverse proxy. The example Docker Compose file provides example labels for the Traefik load balancer, though any HTTP reverse proxy is compatible.

Example for running a peertube server locally:

sudo \
  PEERTUBE_HOSTNAME=peertube.lvh.me \
  PEERTUBE_ADMIN_EMAIL=test@example.com \
  PEERTUBE_TRANSCODING_ENABLED=true \
  docker-compose up app

(Get the initial root user password from the program output.)

Production

See the production guide.

Contributing

See the contributing guide to see how to contribute to PeerTube. Spoiler alert: you don't need to be a coder to help!

API REST documentation

For now only on Github:

Architecture

See ARCHITECTURE.md for a more detailed explanation.

Backend

  • The backend is a REST API.
  • Servers communicate with each others with Activity Pub.
  • Each server has its own users who query it (search videos, query where the torrent URI of this specific video is...).
  • If a user uploads a video, the server seeds it and sends its followers some metadata (name, short description, torrent URI...).
  • A server is a tracker responsible for all the videos uploaded in it.
  • Even if nobody watches a video, it is seeded by the server (through WebSeed protocol) where the video was uploaded.

Here are some simple schemes:

Decentralized Watch a video Watch a P2P video