e6eec1a9d3 | ||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
.gitignore | ||
README.md | ||
api | ||
cert | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
pub | ||
pub-1 | ||
pub-file | ||
relay | ||
relay-0 | ||
relay-1 | ||
setup |
README.md
Local Development
This is a collection of helpful scripts for local development.
Setup
moq-relay
Unfortunately, QUIC mandates TLS and makes local development difficult. If you have a valid certificate you can use it instead of self-signing.
Use mkcert to generate a self-signed certificate. Unfortunately, this currently requires Go to be installed in order to fork the tool. Somebody should get that merged or make something similar in Rust...
./dev/cert
Unfortunately, WebTransport in Chrome currently (May 2023) doesn't verify certificates using the root CA.
The workaround is to use the serverFingerprints
options, which requires the certificate MUST be only valid for at most 14 days.
This is also why we're using a fork of mkcert, because it generates certificates valid for years by default.
This limitation will be removed once Chrome uses the system CA for WebTransport.
moq-pub
You'll want some test footage to broadcast.
Anything works, but make sure the codec is supported by the player since moq-pub
does not re-encode.
Here's a criticially acclaimed short film:
mkdir media
wget http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/BigBuckBunny.mp4 -O dev/source.mp4
moq-pub
uses ffmpeg to convert the media to fMP4.
You should have it installed already if you're a video nerd, otherwise:
brew install ffmpeg
moq-api
moq-api
uses a redis instance to store active origins for clustering.
This is not relevant for most local development and the code path is skipped by default.
However, if you want to test the clustering, you'll need either either Docker or Podman installed.
We run the redis instance via a container automatically as part of dev/api
.
Development
tl;dr run these commands in seperate terminals:
./dev/cert
./dev/relay
./dev/pub
They will each print out a URL you can use to publish/watch broadcasts.
moq-relay
You can run the relay with the following command, automatically using the self-signed certificates generated earlier.
This listens for WebTransport connections on WebTransport https://localhost:4443
by default.
./dev/relay
It will print out a URL when you can use to publish. Alternatively, you can use dev/pub
instead.
Publish URL: https://quic.video/publish/?server=localhost:4443
moq-pub
The following command runs a development instance, broadcasing dev/source.mp4
to WebTransport https://localhost:4443
:
./dev/pub
It will print out a URL when you can use to watch.
By default, the broadcast name is dev
but you can overwrite it with the NAME
env.
Watch URL: https://quic.video/watch/dev?server=localhost:4443
If you're debugging encoding issues, you can use this script to dump the file to disk instead, defaulting to
dev/output.mp4
.
./dev/pub-file
moq-api
The following commands runs an API server, listening for HTTP requests on http://localhost:4442
by default.
./dev/api
Nodes can now register themselves via the API, which means you can run multiple interconnected relays.
There's two separate dev/relay-0
and dev/relay-1
scripts to test clustering locally:
./dev/relay-0
./dev/relay-1
These listen on :4443
and :4444
respectively, inserting themselves into the origin database as localhost:$PORT
.
There's also a separate dev/pub-1
script to publish to the :4444
instance.
You can use the exisitng dev/pub
script to publish to the :4443
instance.
If all goes well, you would be able to publish to one relay and watch from the other.