NOTE: This repo has been deprecated in favor of a monorepo configuration. Please see
A FTL handshake server written in Rust. This server listens on port 8084 and performs the FTL handshake with incoming connections
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This is one of three components required for Project Lightspeed. Project Lightspeed is a fully self contained live streaming server. With this you will be able to deploy your own sub-second latency live streaming platform. This particular repository performs the FTL handshake with clients. It verifies the stream key and negotiates a port with the client connection that we will accept RTP packets on. In order for this to work the Project Lightspeed WebRTC is required in order to accept and broadcast the RTP packets. In order to view the live stream the Project Lightspeed React is required.
- Rust
To get a local copy up and running follow these simple steps.
In order to run this Rust is required. Installation instructions can be found here. A C compiler is required as well. If you get a linker cc not found error
try installing a C compiler
git clone https://github.com/GRVYDEV/Lightspeed-ingest.git
cd Lightspeed-ingest
cargo build
To print out full command line usage information.
cargo run -- -h
To run it with default settings type the following command.
cargo run --release
To specify which address to bind to.
cargo run --release -- -a 12.34.56.78
By default since we are using the FTL protocol you cannot just use a custom server. You will need to edit your services.json
file. It can be found at %AppData%\obs-studio\plugin_config\rtmp-services\services.json
on Windows and /Users/YOURUSERNAME/Library/Application\ Support/obs-studio/plugin_config/rtmp-services/services.json
Paste this into the services array and change the url to either the IP or the hostname of your Project Lightspeed server
{
"name": "Project Lightspeed",
"common": false,
"servers": [
{
"name": "SERVER NAME HERE",
"url": "your.lightspeed.hostname"
}
],
"recommended": {
"keyint": 2,
"output": "ftl_output",
"max audio bitrate": 160,
"max video bitrate": 8000,
"profile": "main",
"bframes": 0
}
},
After restarting OBS you should be able to see your service in the OBS settings pane (Special Thanks to Glimesh for these instructions)
By default on first time startup a new stream key will be generated and output to the terminal for you. In order
to regenerate this key simply delete the file it generates called hash
. Simply copy the key output in the terminal
to OBS and you are all set! This key WILL NOT change unless the hash
file is deleted.
You can assign a static key by passing --stream-key mykey
or via environment variable STREAM_KEY=mykey
. If you
assign it manually it will become prefixed with 77-
so the result will be 77-mykey
. You can verify this in the boot
logs.
See the open issues for a list of proposed features (and known issues).
Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to be learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are greatly appreciated.
- Fork the Project
- Create your Feature Branch (
git checkout -b feature/AmazingFeature
) - Commit your Changes (
git commit -m 'Add some AmazingFeature'
) - Push to the Branch (
git push origin feature/AmazingFeature
) - Open a Pull Request
Distributed under the MIT License. See LICENSE
for more information.
Garrett Graves - @grvydev
Project Link: https://github.com/GRVYDEV/Lightspeed-ingest