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Recent versions of Pion have removed support for 1.19.
264 lines
8.3 KiB
Text
264 lines
8.3 KiB
Text
# Installation instructions
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## Quick installation
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CGO_ENABLED=0 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
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mkdir groups
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echo '{"presenter": [{}]}' > groups/test.json
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./galene &
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Then connect to `https://localhost:8443` and choose "test".
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## Full installation instructions
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### Build the `galene` binary
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Do:
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CGO_ENABLED=0 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
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On Windows, do
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set CGO_ENABLED=0
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go build -ldflags="-s -w"
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### Set up a group
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Set up a group called *test* by creating a file `groups/test.json`:
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mkdir groups
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vi groups/name.json
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You may use the following definition:
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{
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"op": [{"username": "admin", "password": "1234"}],
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"presenter": [{}]
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}
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See the README file for more details about defining groups.
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### Test locally
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./galene &
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You should be able to access Galène at `https://localhost:8443`. Connect
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to the group that you have just set up in two distinct browser windows,
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then press *Ready* in one of the two; you should see a video in the other.
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### Configure your server's firewall
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If your server has a global IPv4 address and there is no firewall, there
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is nothing to do.
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If your server has a global IPv4 address, then the firewall must, at
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a strict minimum, allow incoming traffic to TCP port 8443 (or whatever is
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configured with the `-http` command-line option) and TCP port 1194 (or
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whatever is configured with the `-turn` option). For best performance, it
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should also allow UDP traffic to the TURN port, and UDP traffic to
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ephemeral (high-numbered) ports (or whatever is configured using the
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`-udp-range` option).
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If your server is behind NAT (which is not recommended), then the NAT must
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forward, at the very least, port 8443 to your server. Ideally, you should
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configure an external TURN server (see *ICE Servers* below) on a host that
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is not behind NAT. If that is not possible, then you must use a NAT that
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supports hairpinning, you must forward port 1194 in addition to port 8443,
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and you will need to add add the option `-turn 203.0.113.1:1194` to
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Galène's command line, where `203.0.113.1` is your NAT's external (global)
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IPv4 address.
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### Cross-compile for your server
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This step is only required if your server runs a different OS or has
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a different CPU than your build machine.
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For a Linux server with an Intel or AMD CPU:
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CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
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For a Raspberry Pi 1:
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CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm GOARM=6 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
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For a BeagleBone or a Raspberry Pi 2 or later:
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CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm GOARM=7 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
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For a 64-bit ARM board (Olimex Olinuxino-A64, Pine64, etc.) or server:
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CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm64 go build -ldflags='-s -w'
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For a 32-bit MIPS board with no hardware floating point (WNDR3800, etc.):
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CGO_ENABLED=0 GOOS=linux GOARCH=mips GOMIPS=softfloat go build -ldflags='-s -w'
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### Deploy to your server
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Set up a user *galene* on your server, then do:
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rsync -a galene static data groups galene@server.example.org:
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If you don't have a TLS certificate, Galène will generate a self-signed
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certificate automatically (and print a warning to the logs). If you have
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a certificate, install it in the files `data/cert.pem` and `data/key.pem`:
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ssh galene@server.example.org
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sudo cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/server.example.org/fullchain.pem data/cert.pem
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sudo cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/server.example.org/privkey.pem data/key.pem
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sudo chown galene:galene data/*.pem
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sudo chmod go-rw data/key.pem
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Now arrange to run the binary on the server. If you never reboot your
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server, it might be as simple as
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ssh galene@server.example.org
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ulimit -n 65536
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nohup ./galene &
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If you are using *runit*, use a script like the following:
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#!/bin/sh
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exec 2>&1
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cd ~galene
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ulimit -n 65536
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exec setuidgid galene ./galene
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If you are using *systemd*:
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[Unit]
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Description=Galene
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After=network.target
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[Service]
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Type=simple
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WorkingDirectory=/home/galene
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User=galene
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Group=galene
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ExecStart=/home/galene/galene
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LimitNOFILE=65536
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[Install]
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WantedBy=multi-user.target
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# Running behind a reverse proxy
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Galene is designed to be directly exposed to the Internet. In order to
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run Galene behind a reverse proxy, you might need to make a number of
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tweaks to your configuration.
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First, you might need to inform Galene of the URL at which users connect
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(the reverse proxy's URL) by adding an entry `proxyURL` to your
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`data/config.json` file:
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{
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"proxyURL": "https://galene.example.org/"
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}
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Second, and depending on your proxy implementation, you might need to
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request that the proxy pass WebSocket handshakes to the URL at `ws`; for
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example, with Nginx, you will need to say something like the following:
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location /ws {
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proxy_pass ...;
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proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
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proxy_set_header Connection "Upgrade";
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}
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Finally, in order to avoid TLS termination issues, you may want to run
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Galene over plain HTTP instead of HTTPS by using the command-line flag
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`-insecure`.
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Note that even if you're using a reverse proxy, clients will attempt to
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establish direct UDP flows with Galene and direct TCP connections to
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Galene's TURN server; see the section on "Configuring your firewall"
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above.
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# Connectivity issues and ICE Servers
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Most connectivity issues are due to an incorrect ICE configuration.
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ICE is the NAT and firewall traversal protocol used by WebRTC. ICE can
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make use of two kinds of servers to help with NAT traversal: STUN servers,
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that help punching holes in well-behaved NATs, and TURN servers, that
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serve as relays for traffic. TURN is a superset of STUN: no STUN server
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is necessary if one or more TURN servers are available.
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Galène includes an IPv4-only TURN server, which is controlled by the
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`-turn` command-line option. It has the following behaviour:
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* if its value is set to the empty string `""`, then the built-in server
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is disabled; in this case, the file `data/ice-servers.json` configures
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an external TURN server;
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* if its value is a colon followed with a port number, for example
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`:1194`, then the TURN server will listen on all public IPv4 addresses
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of the local host, over UDP and TCP; this is the recommended value if
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the server is not behind NAT, and the firewall allows incoming
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connections to port 1194;
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* if the value of this option is a socket address, such as
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`203.0.113.1:1194`, then the TURN server will listen on all addresses
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of the local host but assume that the address seen by the clients is
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the one given in the option; this is useful when running behind NAT
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with port forwarding set up.
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* the default value is `auto`, which behaves like `:1194` if there is no
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`data/ice-servers.json` file, and like `""` otherwise.
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If the server is not accessible from the Internet, e.g. because of NAT or
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because it is behind a restrictive firewall, then you should configure
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a TURN server that runs on a host that is accessible by both Galène and
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the clients. Disable the built-in TURN server (`-turn ""` or the default
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`-turn auto`), and provide a working ICE configuration in the file
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`data/ice-servers.json`. In the case of a single STUN server, it should
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look like this:
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[
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{
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"urls": [
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"stun:stun.example.org"
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]
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}
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]
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In the case of s single TURN server, the `ice-servers.json` file should
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look like this:
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[
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{
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"urls": [
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"turn:turn.example.org:443",
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"turn:turn.example.org:443?transport=tcp"
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],
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"username": "galene",
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"credential": "secret"
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}
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]
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It is more secure to use coturn's `use-auth-secret` option. If you do
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that, then the `ice-servers.json` file should look like this:
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[
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{
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"urls": [
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"turn:turn.example.com:443",
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"turn:turn.example.com:443?transport=tcp"
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],
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"username": "galene",
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"credential": "secret",
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"credentialType": "hmac-sha1"
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}
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]
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For redundancy, you may set up multiple TURN servers, and ICE will use the
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first one that works. If an `ice-servers.json` file is present and
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Galène's built-in TURN server is enabled, then the external server will be
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used in preference to the built-in server.
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