tube
tube
is a Youtube-like (without censorship and features you don't need!)
Video Sharing App written in Go which also supports automatic transcoding to
MP4 H.265 AAC, multiple collections and RSS feed.
Features
- Easy to add videos (just move a file into the folder)
- Easy to upload videos (just use the builtin uploader and automatic transcoder!)
- Builtin ffmpeg-based Transcoder that automatically converts your uploaded content to MP4 H.264 / AAC
- Builtin automatic thumbnail generator
- No database (video info pulled from file metadata)
- No JavaScript (the player UI is entirely HTML, except for the uploader which degrades!))
- Easy to customize CSS and HTML template
- Automatically generates RSS feed (at
/feed.xml
)
- Clean, simple, familiar UI
Screenshots
Getting Started
Using Homebrew
$ brew tap prologic/tube
$ brew install tube
$ tube
Open http://127.0.0.1:8000/ in your Browser!
Using a Binary
- Go grab the latest binary from the
Releases page for your
platform / operating system.
- Extract the archive.
- Run
./tube
Open http://127.0.0.1:8000/ in your Browser!
Using Docker
$ docker pull prologic/tube
$ docker run -p 8000:8000 -v /path/to/data:/data
Open http://DOCKER_MACHINE_IP:8000/ in your Browser!
Where DOCKER_MACHINE_IP
is the IP Address of your Docker Node.
From Source
$ git clone https://github.com/prologic/tube
$ cd tube
$ make
$ ./tube
Open http://127.0.0.1:8000/ in your Browser!
A Production Deployment
A Production Deployment can be found at https://tube.mills.io/ -- This is run
and managed via a Docker Swarm cluster with a Docker-Compose / Stack very
similiar to the one you can find in the repo: docker-compose.yml
Beyond this a "Production Deployment" is out-of-scope at this time for the
documentation being provided here. Please don't hesitate to file an
Issue however for ask for help
or advice or contact the author directly!
Configuration
tube
can be confirued to suit your particular needs and comes by default with
a sensbile set of defaults. There is also a default configuration at the
top-level config.json that you can use as a start point and
modify to suite your needs.
To Run tube
with a provided configuration just pass the -c /path/to/config
option; for example:
$ tube -c config.json
Everything in the configuration is optional as the builtin defaults are used
if you do not supply anything, omit some sections or values or the configuration
is invalid. Refer to the default config.json for the builtin
defaults (this files matches the builtin defaults).
Here are some documentation on key configuration items:
Library Options and Upload / Video Paths(s)
{
"library": [
{
"path": "videos",
"prefix": ""
}
],
}
Set path
to the value of the path where you want to store videos and where
tube
will look for new videos.
Server Options / Upload Path and Max Upload Size
{
"server": {
"host": "0.0.0.0",
"port": 8000,
"store_path": "tube.db",
"upload_path": "uploads",
"max_upload_size": 104857600
}
}
- Set
host
to the interface you wish to bind to. If you want to only bind
your local machine (ie: localhost) set this to 127.0.0.1
.
- Set
port
to any port you wish to bind the listening socket of the server
to. It doesn't matter what it is as long as there it doesn't collide with
a port already in use on your system.
- Set
store_path
to a directory where tube
will store statistics on videos
viewed.
- Set
upload_path
to a directory that you wish to use as a temporary working
space for tube
to store uploaded videos and process them. This can be a
tmpfs file system for example for faster I/O.
- Set
max_upload_size
to the maximum number of bytes you wish to impose on
uploaded and imported videos. Upload(s)/Import(s) that exceed this size will
by denied by the server. This is a saftey measure so as to not DoS the
Tube server instance. Set it to a sensible value you see fit.
Thumbnailer / Transcoder Timeouts
{
"thumbnailer": {
"timeout": 60
},
"transcoder": {
"timeout": 300,
"sizes": null
}
}
-
Set timeout
to the no. of seconds to permit for thumbnail generation and
video transcoding. This value has to be large enough for thumbnail generation
and transcoding to take place depending on the max_upload_size
permitted.
These values also depend on the underlying performance of the machine Tube
runs on. Use sensible values for your max_upload_size
+ system performance.
This is a safety measure to ensure background processed do not run away
and/or hog system resources. The thumbnailer and transcoder processes will
be killed if their execution time exceeds these values.
-
Set sizes
to an map of size
=> suffix
that you wish to support for
transcoding videos to lower quality on Upload/Import. This is especially
useful for serving up videos to users that have poor bandwidth or where
data charges are high for them. The following is a valid map:
{
"transcoder": {
"sizes": {
"hd720": "720p",
"hd480": "480p",
"nhd": "360p",
"film": "240p"
}
}
}
{
"feed": {
"external_url": "",
"title": "Feed Title",
"link": "http://your-url.example/about",
"description": "Feed Description",
"author": {
"name": "Author Name",
"email": "author@somewhere.example"
},
"copyright": "Copyright Text"
}
}
- Fill these values out as you see fit. If you are familiar with RSS
these should be straight forward :)
Stargazers over time
Support
Support the ongoing development of Tube!
Sponser
Contributors
Thank you to all those that have contributed to this project, battle-tested it,
used it in their own projects or products, fixed bugs, improved performance
and even fix tiny typos in documentation! Thank you and keep contributing!
You can find an AUTHORS file where we keep a list of contributors
to the project. If you contriibute a PR please consider adding your name there.
There is also Github's own Contributors statistics.
License
tube source code is available under the MIT License.
Previously based off of tube by davy wybiral
. (See LICENSE.old)