awesome-pion
galene
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awesome-pion | galene | |
---|---|---|
4 | 36 | |
682 | 859 | |
2.9% | - | |
1.0 | 8.4 | |
15 days ago | 10 days ago | |
Shell | Go | |
- | 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.
awesome-pion
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Chromium based browsers leak users' local IP via WebRTC's foundation attribute
I see a lot of WebRTC usage just in the LAN. WebRTC sees a lot of usage outside of conferencing!
* Controlling Robots (formant.io)
* Security Cameras
* File Sharing
* Game Streaming/VNC
I keep a list of interesting open source WebRTC projects at https://github.com/pion/awesome-pion
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Ask HN: Why is there no enterprise grade open-source zoom alternative?
For more interesting related projects, you may also want to checkout https://github.com/pion/awesome-pion
I'm fiddling now and then on an alternative conferencing frontend(Pyrite - https://github.com/garage44/pyrite) for Galene(https://galene.org), which is a SFU that uses Pion.
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Show HN: AV1 and WebRTC
AV1 support is already available in libwebrtc!
So when I started building Pion the target use case was to make it easier to build scalable servers. Instead of interacting with a WebRTC servers REST API to query information/load balance I wanted to have it all in one code base. It also is really useful to have Media+Transport decoupled. Lots of use cases I didn't realize grew out of that.
* Teleoperation/robotics (https://github.com/Ragnar-H/TelloGo)
* Control remote software (https://github.com/m1k1o/neko)
* Cross platform file sharing (https://github.com/saljam/webwormhole)
* Sending pre-recorded media (RTMP/HLS/RTSP -> WebRTC)
* Custom DataChannel servers/bridges (https://snowflake.torproject.org/)
Lots of other cool ones in https://github.com/pion/awesome-pion I need to update it. It has been a bit since I have looked through https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/pion/webrtc/v3?tab=importedby
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Pion WebRTC v3.0.0 Released
Pion WebRTC is a Go implementation of WebRTC. If you haven't used it before check out awesome-pion or example-webrtc-applications for what people are doing. We maintain a feature list and other helpful resources in our README.md
galene
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livekit-server VS galene - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 28 Mar 2024
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Show HN: New Jitsi WebRTC Alternative: ChatGPT, File Transfer, Docker
I would like to recommend Galene: https://github.com/jech/galene
Runs in my raspberry pi, a single small executable, like in the old good times.
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Zoom terms now allow training AI on user content with no opt out
> Do you happen to know of others by any chance.
There's Galene, <https://galene.org>. It's easy to deploy, uses minimal server resources, and the server is pretty solid. The client interface is still a little awkward, though. (Full disclosure, I'm the main author.)
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Best voice and video chat?
galene - basically selfhosted zoom/jitsi
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Ask HN: FFmpeg real-time desktop streaming
What latency are you trying to do? Will the professor being communicating with the students while doing this? Will the students all have the same bandwidth, or will you want multiple renditions (low, med, high quality levels)?
If you want AV1 you will not be able to use RTMP. The protocol is orphaned/deprecated, so avoid if possible!
If I was building it this is what I would do, and my reasoning.
* For capture + encoding I would use OBS. You will want to use something that is easy for users to install configure. Professors will also have lots of custom requirements when it comes to layout etc... it will be tempting to do a ffmpeg command directly, but it will fall apart quick I believe.
* To get AV1 out of OBS I would use FFMPEG output. I would have it send RTP. RTP is used to carry video in a sub-second manner. This is the same protocol that WebRTC uses. You know have AV1 + low latency.
* Then for users to watch I would use WebRTC. That will allow them to watch in their web browser. Conceptually it will be like this https://github.com/pion/webrtc/tree/master/examples/rtp-to-w... this takes the RTP packets and puts them in the browser.
Lots of great projects exist that you could use for 'RTP -> WebRTC' like https://galene.org/ and https://livekit.io/ I would suggest checking them all out!
If you have more questions/want to talk to people in the video space always happy to chat on https://pion.ly/slack :)
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Voice/Video call for Iranians
galene
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Self-hosted chat app with chat/video?
The most lightweight all-inclusive central solution for video conferences I know is Galene. It runs in under 200 MB RAM.
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What are good self-hosted WebRTC video solutions today?
Even though the default UI is extremely simplistic, I very much like galene. It bundles all the components you need in a single binary. Even a TURN server so you don't have to fiddle with coturn. Not to mention that it's very resource efficient.
- Galène. FOSS Videoconference Server
- Galène Videoconference Server
What are some alternatives?
Pion WebRTC - Pure Go implementation of the WebRTC API
Jitsi Meet - Jitsi Meet - Secure, Simple and Scalable Video Conferences that you use as a standalone app or embed in your web application.
peer-calls - Group peer to peer video calls for everyone written in Go and TypeScript
janus-gateway - Janus WebRTC Server
cloud-morph - Decentralize, Self-host Cloud Gaming/Application
rtp - A Go implementation of RTP
ion-sfu - Pure Go WebRTC SFU
galene_ynh - Galène package for YunoHost
turn - Pion TURN, an API for building TURN clients and servers
mirotalk - 🚀 WebRTC - P2P - Simple, Secure, Fast Real-Time Video Conferences Up to 4k and 60fps, compatible with all browsers and platforms.
pyrite - Pyrite is a web(RTC) client & management interface for Galène SFU
wirow-server - A full featured self-hosted video web-conferencing platform.