Project-Lightspeed
golive
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Project-Lightspeed | golive | |
---|---|---|
28 | 8 | |
3,588 | 246 | |
- | - | |
1.8 | 2.2 | |
about 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
Rust | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Project-Lightspeed
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Looking for a program where I can livestream / share my screen in close to real time (like discord)
Depending on how you want to achieve this, you could use a combination of OBS + Restreamer or OBS + Project-Lightspeed. Another solution would be to use more specific solutions like neko
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Looking for self hosted screen sharing/streaming solution
I also used to use Project-Lightspeed, which worked great. I abandoned it because I wanted to get off of FTL based on the OBS thread above. It otherwise worked for me.
- ✨ Best of WebRTC projects in one place! Good fun!
- Looking for a self hosted rtmp restreamer
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What are ways to broadcast desktop video & audio to a broad audience like twitch?
https://github.com/GRVYDEV/Project-Lightspeed is a 'Twitch like' server that does FTL input from OBS. You can run OBS on the Ubuntu desktop and do a desktop capture. Viewers can then watch on the 'Project Lightspeed' host.
- What would be a compelling talk on WebRTC/P2P for Go developers?
- RTMP -> Server and publish via HLS/embed via iFrame
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Sub-second webRTC streaming server and player
I recommend Project-Lightspeed for this. It uses the FTL protocol (similar to the now defunct Mixer) with WebRTC for great latency. I've used it many times for streaming games, etc. and it works well.
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The proper way of Screen Sharing with Desktop audio on Discord (Without mixing desktop audio with your microphone)
Special thanks to the Ryujinx Discord for helping me test and to the Lightspeed Project (https://github.com/GRVYDEV/Project-Lightspeed)!
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N00b questions about a specific use case
jellyfin can certainly do what you are looking for, but it seems like you probably don't have enough bandwidth to reliably host the service at home, and may be overkill for your usage... you could set up project lightspeed (https://github.com/GRVYDEV/Project-Lightspeed) on a $5/month VPS and use OBS to stream video with sub 1 second latency, you can install teamspeak or mumble or something on the same VPS for voice chat.
golive
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live reload, listening to api changes?
1) change html content on the fly based on user input without redirects. I guess I found something relevant here to help me out, but I haven't tested any of it yet and keeping my options open for now. I know javascript frameworks are the usual go-to for that stuff, but I'd like to play around with Go before diving into another language.
- What frontend libraries do exist in Go?
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Go for web frontend
I stumbled on two options: - GoLive (similar to Phoenix LiveViews) - Vugu (similar to Vue)
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Looking for early feedback on my new Phoenix LiveView inspired project.
I built it because I love building highly interactive web pages, but the current state of JavaScript leaves me cold. I got really excited when I saw what Phoenix was doing with LiveView and thought I could see the light at the end of the tunnel. There are already a couple of projects also inspired by LiveView (GoLive, live), but I had my own vision that I wanted to realise.
- brendonmatos/golive: Reactive HTML, server-side-rendered using Go over Web sockets
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Build hotwire applications using Go
As for LiveView ports or code inspired by LiveView in Go there is also https://github.com/brendonmatos/golive but I haven't had the chance to use either yet. If either are more or less a direct port (as much as they can be given language constraints) then I'd bet on them over hotwire. The Elixir community has already worked through most of the hard problems hotwire will encounter down the road with more use.
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Looking for an interesting project to contribute
I'd like to suggest GoLive (https://github.com/brendonmatos/golive). It's a new project with an owner that is very open to pull requests. I've been sending PRs and it's a fun project to work on. What is GoLive:
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GoBook - POC of a Go REPL in browser using Go Live View Library and zero JavaScript
GoLive Repo https://github.com/brendonmatos/golive
What are some alternatives?
OvenMediaEngine - OvenMediaEngine (OME) is a Sub-Second Latency Live Streaming Server with Large-Scale and High-Definition. #WebRTC #LLHLS
yaegi - Yaegi is Another Elegant Go Interpreter
Pion WebRTC - Pure Go implementation of the WebRTC API
go-app - A package to build progressive web apps with Go programming language and WebAssembly.
OBS-studio-webrtc - This is a fork of OBS-studio with generic support for webrtc. It leverages the same webrtc implementation most browsers use.
kyoto - Golang SSR-first Frontend Library [Moved to: https://github.com/kyoto-framework/kyoto]
nginx-rtmp-module - NGINX-based Media Streaming Server
vecty - Vecty lets you build responsive and dynamic web frontends in Go using WebAssembly, competing with modern web frameworks like React & VueJS.
Wails - Create beautiful applications using Go
space-cloud - Open source Firebase + Heroku to develop, scale and secure serverless apps on Kubernetes
obs-studio - OBS Studio - Free and open source software for live streaming and screen recording
redwood - A highly-configurable, distributed, realtime database that manages a state tree shared among many peers.