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Archived

Hi all. I don't enjoy working on this anymore. I'm archiving this repo, you're free to fork it.

Stop emailing me directly.

docker-multistreamer

A Docker image for multistreamer

Introduction

Multistreamer is a webapp for publishing to multiple video-streaming services at the same time.

This is an image for running multistreamer in a container.

Now with a handy video! https://youtu.be/HdDDtBOLme4

Quick Start

You can get this up and running with docker-compose. Copy docker-compose.override.yml.example to docker-compose.override.yml and edit as needed, then then run docker-compose up. You'll have multistreamer's web interface running on port 8081, RTMP ingest on 1935, and IRC on 6667.

With the default settings, there's no real authentication - users get automatically created at login and saved to redis. Additionally, the chat web interface is most likely broken, you need to change a few settings to make that work.

Not-so-quick start

If you mount an htpasswd volume into the container at /etc/htpasswd-auth-server/htpasswd, the container will launch an internal htpasswd-auth-server instead of the built-in redis auth. Or if you're using docker-compose, drop an htpasswd file into the htpasswd directory at the root of this repo.

If you want to provide actual authentication, set the MULTISTREAMER_AUTH_ENDPOINT environment variable.

Multistreamer makes HTTP requests against said endpoint, using the status code to determine if the password was correct. Here's a few usable endpoints:

Things to know:

When you use container linking, Docker updates the /etc/hosts file with hostnames, but nginx ignores that file, and strictly looks up hosts via DNS.

Required environment variables

Here's the list of environment variables you absolutely need to set to ensure this works correctly:

  • MULTISTREAMER_SESSION_SECRET - this is used to encrypt client-side session data.

Multistreamer doesn't have any good way to figure out its public hostname, what proxies it might be behind, whether or not you have an SSL terminator, and so on - you're expected to provide that by setting these environment variables. Note: these HTTP/RTMP URLs should be the root of your web host, regardless of running multistreamer under some path. There's a dedicated MULTISTREAMER_HTTP_PREFIX for changing your prefix.

  • MULTISTREAMER_PUBLIC_HTTP_URL - This should be the root of the HTTP/HTTPS URL you want your clients to use. If this is incorrect, things like websockets won't work correctly.
  • MULTISTREAMER_PUBLIC_RTMP_URL - This should be the root of the RTMP/RTMPS URL you want your clients to use.
  • MULTISTREAMER_PUBLIC_IRC_HOSTNAME - Set this to some hostname for IRC users
  • MULTISTREAMER_PUBLIC_IRC_PORT - This should be the public-facing port you want your clients to use.

Running Multistreamer under some prefix

  • MULTISTREAMER_HTTP_PREFIX - if you're running Multistreamer at something like http://example.com/multistreamer, set this environment variable to /multistreamer (or whatever your prefix is).

Specifying a database

You can use a linked Postgres container or manually specify a host/user/pass/dbname.

If you link the official postgres container as postgresql, all the database settings will be figured out. Otherwise, set these environment variables:

  • DB_HOST
  • DB_PORT - defaults to 5432
  • DB_USER
  • DB_PASS
  • DB_NAME

Specifying a redis instance

You can use a linked Redis container or manually specify a redis host/port.

If you link the official redis container as redisio, all the redis settings will be figured out. Otherwise, set these environment variables:

  • REDIS_HOST
  • REDIS_PORT

Enabling streaming services

The multistreamer wiki has details on registering apps for Facebook, Twitch, and YouTube.

Twitch

Specify your client id, secret, and which ingest server to use:

  • MULTISTREAMER_TWITCH_CLIENT_ID
  • MULTISTREAMER_TWITCH_CLIENT_SECRET
  • MULTISTREAMER_TWITCH_INGEST_SERVER

YouTube

Specify your client id, secret, and country code:

  • MULTISTREAMER_YOUTUBE_CLIENT_ID
  • MULTISTREAMER_YOUTUBE_CLIENT_SECRET
  • MULTISTREAMER_YOUTUBE_COUNTRY_CODE

Facebook

Specify your app ip and secret:

  • MULTISTREAMER_FACEBOOK_APP_ID
  • MULTISTREAMER_FACEBOOK_APP_SECRET

Mixer

Specify your client id, secret, and which ingest server to use:

  • MULTISTREAMER_MIXER_CLIENT_ID
  • MULTISTREAMER_MIXER_CLIENT_SECRET
  • MULTISTREAMER_MIXER_INGEST_SERVER

Other environment variables

  • MULTISTREAMER_RTMP_PREFIX - defaults to 'multistreamer' if unset. This is independent from the HTTP prefix, and should be a single text value without slashes.
  • MULTISTREAMER_LOG_LEVEL - defaults to 'error'
  • MULTISTREAMER_PUBLIC_IRC_SSL - defaults to 'false', set to 'true' if you have an SSL terminator for multistreamer's IRC port.
  • MULTISTREAMER_SESSION_NAME - defaults to 'multistreamer'
  • MULTISTREAMER_LOG_QUERIES - true/false, whether to log every SQL query
  • MULTISTREAMER_LOG_REQUESTS - true/false, whether to log every HTTP request
  • MULTISTREAMER_IRC_FORCE_JOIN - defaults to 'false', set to 'true' to have IRC users force-joined into rooms when they go live.
  • MULTISTREAMER_WORKER_PROCESSES - defaults to 1, you can change the number of workers
  • MULTISTREAMER_DNS_RESOLVER - defaults to '127.0.0.1:5353 ipv6=off', see http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_core_module.html#resolver
  • MULTISTREAMER_DICT_STREAMS_SIZE - defaults to 10m, this lets you change the shared dictionary size for keeping active stream information.
  • MULTISTREAMER_DICT_WRITERS_SIZE - defaults to 10m, this lets you change the shared dictionary size for keeping active chat reader/writer information.