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The Galène videoconference server
conn | ||
diskwriter | ||
estimator | ||
galene-password-generator | ||
group | ||
ice | ||
jitter | ||
packetcache | ||
rtpconn | ||
rtptime | ||
static | ||
stats | ||
turnserver | ||
webserver | ||
.gitignore | ||
CHANGES | ||
galene.go | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
LICENCE | ||
README | ||
README.FRONTEND | ||
README.PROTOCOL |
# Installation
## Build the `galene` binary
You will need Go 1.13 or later (type `go version`). Then do:
CGO_ENABLED=0 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
On Windows, do
set CGO_ENABLED=0
go build -ldflags='-s -w'
## Set the server administrator credentials
This step is optional.
mkdir data
echo 'god:topsecret' > data/passwd
## Set up a group
A group called *groupname* is is set up by creating a file
`groups/groupname.json`.
mkdir groups
vi groups/groupname.json
A group with a single operator and no password for ordinary users looks
like this:
{
"op": [{"username": "jch", "password": "1234"}],
"presenter": [{}]
}
A group with one operator and two users looks like this:
{
"op": [{"username": "jch", "password": "1234"}],
"presenter": [
{"username": "mom", "password": "0000"},
{"username": "dad", "password": "1234"}
]
}
More options are described under *Details of group definitions* below.
## Test locally
./galene &
You should be able to access Galène at `https://localhost:8443`. Connect
to the group that you have just set up in two distinct browser windows,
then press *Ready* in one of the two; you should see a video in the other.
## Configure your server's firewall
If your server has a global IPv4 address and there is no firewall, there
is nothing to do.
If your server has a global IPv4 address, then the firewall must, at
a strict minimum, allow incoming traffic to TCP port 8443 (or whatever is
configured with the `-http` command-line option) and TCP port 1194 (or
whatever is configured with the `-turn` option). For best performance, it
should also allow UDP traffic to the TURN port, and UDP traffic to
ephemeral (high-numbered) ports (or whatever is configured using the
`-udp-range` option).
If your server is behind NAT, then the NAT must forward, at the very
least, port 8443 to your server. Ideally, you should configure an
external TURN server (see *ICE Servers* below) on a host that is not
behind NAT. If that is not possible, then you should forward port 1194 in
addition to port 8443, and you should add the option `-turn 203.0.113.1:1194`
to Galène's command line, where `203.0.113.1` is your NAT's external
(global) IPv4 address.
## Cross-compile for your server
This step is only required if your server runs a different OS or has
a different CPU than your build machine.
For a Linux server with an Intel or AMD CPU:
CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
For a Raspberry Pi 1:
CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm GOARM=6 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
For a BeagleBone or a Raspberry Pi 2 or later:
CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm GOARM=7 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
For a 64-bit ARM board (Olimex Olinuxino-A64, Pine64, etc.):
CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm64 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
For a 32-bit MIPS board with no hardware floating point (WNDR3800, etc.):
CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=mips GOMIPS=softfloat go build -ldflags='-s -w'
## Deploy to your server
Set up a user *galene* on your server, then do:
rsync -a galene static data groups galene@server.example.org:
If you don't have a TLS certificate, Galène will generate a self-signed
certificate automatically (and print a warning to the logs). If you have
a certificate, install it in the files `data/cert.pem` and `data/key.pem`:
ssh galene@server.example.org
sudo cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/server.example.org/fullchain.pem data/cert.pem
sudo cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/server.example.org/key.pem data/key.pem
sudo chown galene:galene data/*.pem
sudo chmod go-rw data/key.pem
Now run the binary on the server:
ssh galene@server.example.org
ulimit -n 65536
nohup ./galene &
If you are using *runit*, use a script like the following:
#!/bin/sh
exec 2>&1
cd ~galene
ulimit -n 65536
exec setuidgid galene ./galene
If you are using *systemd*:
[Unit]
Description=Galene
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
WorkingDirectory=/home/galene
User=galene
Group=galene
ExecStart=/home/galene/galene
LimitNOFILE=65536
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
# Usage
## Locations
There is a landing page at the root of the server. It contains a form
for typing the name of a group, and a clickable list of public groups.
Groups are available under `/group/groupname`. You may share this URL
with others, there is no need to go through the landing page.
Recordings can be accessed under `/recordings/groupname`. This is only
available to the administrator of the group.
Some statistics are available under `/stats.json`, with a human-readable
version at `/stats.html`. This is only available to the server administrator.
## Side menu
There is a menu on the right of the user interface. This allows choosing
the camera and microphone and setting the video throughput. The
*Blackboard mode* checkbox increases resolution and sacrifices framerate
in favour of image quality. The *Play local file* dialog allows streaming
a video from a local file.
## Commands
Typing a line starting with a slash `/` in the chat dialogue causes
a command to be sent to the server. Type `/help` to get the list of
available commands; the output depends on whether you are an operator or
not.
# Details of group definitions
Groups are defined by files in the `./groups` directory (this may be
configured by the `-groups` command-line option, try `./galene -help`).
The definition for the group called *groupname* is in the file
`groups/groupname.json`; it does not contain the group name, which makes
it easy to copy or link group definitions. You may use subdirectories:
a file `groups/teaching/networking.json` defines a group called
*teching/networking*.
Every group definition file contains a JSON directory. All fields are
optional, but unless you specify at least one user definition (`op`,
`presenter`, or `other`), nobody will be able to join the group. The
following fields are allowed:
- `op`, `presenter`, `other`: each of these is an array of user
definitions (see below) and specifies the users allowed to connect
respectively with operator privileges, with presenter privileges, and
as passive listeners;
- `public`: if true, then the group is visible on the landing page;
- `description`: a human-readable description of the group; this is
displayed on the landing page for public groups;
- `contact`: a human-readable contact for this group, such as an e-mail
address;
- `comment`: a human-readable string;
- `max-clients`: the maximum number of clients that may join the group at
a time;
- `max-history-age`: the time, in seconds, during which chat history is
kept (default 14400, i.e. 4 hours);
- `allow-recording`: if true, then recording is allowed in this group;
- `allow-anonymous`: if true, then users may connect with an empty username;
- `allow-subgroups`: if true, then subgroups of the form `group/subgroup`
are automatically created when first accessed;
- `autolock`: if true, the group will start locked and become locked
whenever there are no clients with operator privileges;
- `autokick`: if true, all clients will be kicked out whenever there are
no clients with operator privileges; this is not recommended, prefer
the `autolock` option instead;
- `redirect`: if set, then attempts to join the group will be redirected
to the given URL; most other fields are ignored in this case;
- `codecs`: this is a list of codecs allowed in this group. The default
is `["vp8", "opus"]`.
Supported video codecs include:
- `"vp8"` (compatible with all supported browsers);
- `"vp9"` (better video quality than `"vp8"`, but incompatible with
older versions of Mac OS);
- `"h264"` (incompatible with Debian, Ubuntu, and some Android devices,
recording is not supported).
Supported audio codecs include `"opus"`, `"g722"`, `"pcmu"` and `"pcma"`.
There is no good reason to use anything except Opus.
A user definition is a dictionary with the following fields:
- `username`: the username of the user; if omitted, any username is
allowed;
- `password`: if omitted, then no password is required. Otherwise, this
can either be a string, specifying a plain text password, or
a dictionary generated by the `galene-password-generator` utility.
For example,
{"username": "jch", "password": "1234"}
specifies user *jch* with password *1234*, while
{"password": "1234"}
specifies that any (non-empty) username will do, and
{}
allows any (non-empty) username with any password.
If you don't wish to store cleartext passwords on the server, you may
generate hashed password with the `galene-password-generator` utility. A
user entry with a hashed password looks like this:
{
"username": "jch",
"password": {
"type": "pbkdf2",
"hash": "sha-256",
"key": "f591c35604e6aef572851d9c3543c812566b032b6dc083c81edd15cc24449913",
"salt": "92bff2ace56fe38f",
"iterations": 4096
}
}
# ICE Servers
ICE is the NAT and firewall traversal protocol used by WebRTC. ICE can
make use of two kinds of servers to help with NAT traversal: STUN servers,
that help punching holes in well-behaved NATs, and TURN servers, that
serve as relays for traffic. TURN is a superset of STUN: no STUN server
is necessary if a TURN server is available.
Galène includes an IPv4-only TURN server, which is controlled by the
`-turn` command-line option. If its value is set to the empty string
`""`, then the built-in server is disabled. If its value is a colon
followed with a port number, for example `:1194`, then the TURN server
will listen on all public IPv4 addresses of the local host, over UDP and
TCP. If the value of this option is a socket address, such as
`203.0.113.1:1194`, then the TURN server will listen on all addresses of
the local host but assume that the address seen by the clients is the one
given in the option; this is useful when running behind NAT with port
forwarding set up. The default value is `-turn auto`, which starts a
TURN server on port 1194 unless there is a `data/ice-servers.json` file.
Some users may prefer to use an external ICE server. In that case, the
built-in TURN server should be disabled (`-turn ""` or the default
`-turn auto`), and a working ICE configuration should be given in the file
`data/ice-servers.json`. In the case of a single STUN server, it should
look like this:
[
{
"urls": [
"stun:stun.example.org"
]
}
]
In the case of s single TURN server, the `ice-servers.json` file should
look like this:
[
{
"urls": [
"turn:turn.example.org:443",
"turn:turn.example.org:443?transport=tcp"
],
"username": "galene",
"credential": "secret"
}
]
If you prefer to use coturn's `use-auth-secret` option, then the
`ice-servers.json` file should look like this:
[
{
"Urls": [
"turn:turn.example.com:443",
"turn:turn.example.com:443?transport=tcp"
],
"username": "galene",
"credential": "secret",
"credentialType": "hmac-sha1"
}
]
For redundancy, you may set up multiple TURN servers, and ICE will use the
first one that works. If an `ice-servers.json` file is present and
Galène's built-in TURN server is enabled, then the external server will be
used in preference to the built-in server.
# Further information
Galène's web page is at <https://galene.org>.
Answers to common questions and issues are at <https://galene.org#faq>.
-- Juliusz Chroboczek <https://www.irif.fr/~jch/>