Simple proxy for leveraging ffmpeg to convert any source URL into MPEG-TS and serve it on demand over HTTP. It has been
designed for proxying HLS streams for use as IPTV input in tvheadend, but it can be used with any source that can be
handled by the avconv
utility. Currently it simply remuxes the source stream into MPEG-TS and adds a service name
(for automatic detection in tvheadend), no transcoding is performed.
Since HLS input can be a bit unreliable, the converter process will be restarted automatically (without the HTTP response ending) until the client closes the connection (in which case the process is killed).
- nodejs >= 0.12
- avconv or ffmpeg
- Install the required libraries by running
npm install
in the project directory. You will have to run this command again if you update to a newer version. - Copy
examples/sources.json
someplace and modify it - Run the program using
nodejs node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.js
Usage: nodejs ./node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.js -p <port> [-a <avconv>] [-q | -v] [-s <sources>]
Options:
-p, --port The port the HTTP server should be listening on [required]
-l, --listen The address to listen on [default: "::"]
-a, --avconv The path to avconv, defaults to just "avconv" [default: "avconv"]
-s, --sources The path to sources.json [required]
-q, --quiet Disable all logging to stdout
-v, --verbose Enable verbose logging (shows the output from avconv)
Once the proxy is running, streams are available on the e.g. http://localhost:9128/channel1
, assuming port 9128 is
used and a source with the URL /channel1
exists.
Sources are read from the file specified when starting the program (use examples/sources.json
as a starting point).
The file contains an array of JSON objects with the following definition:
name
: the service nameprovider
: the name of the service providerurl
: the relative URL the stream will be available on when servedsource
: the source URLavconvOptions
: (optional) special avconv parameters for this source. This is an object containing two arrays,input
andoutput
.realtime
: (optional) whether to add the-re
input flag to the input options. Normally this is what you want, but some sources may not work correctly without disabling this. Defaults totrue
.prescript
: (optional) script to run before transcoding starts. Useful if you need to bring up temporary VPN interfaces etc. Four arguments are passed to the script; the source URL, the relative stream URL, the provider name and the channel name.postscript
: (optional) same asprescript
except it's run when streaming is stopped.http_proxy
: (optional) the HTTP proxy to use for the source (e.g.http://proxy.example.com:8080
)avconv
: (optional) source-specific override of the avconv binary to use. This can be useful if you for some reason need to use a special version off ffmpeg just to play a specific source.
The program listens to changes made to the source file and reloads it automatically whenever it is changed. The main idea behind this is to support source URLs that contain parameter that change frequently and need to be adapted for (e.g. session IDs). If the changes you make result in the file being unreadable (malformed JSON) it will complain about that and continue using the previous source definitions (if any). Below is an excerpt from the example source file.
[
{
"name": "Channel One",
"provider": "Provider One",
"url": "/channel1",
"source": "http://iptv.example.com/channel1.m3u8"
},
...
]
If your sources require additional parameters to work correctly (most commonly because the source uses MP4 as
container) you can append to the default ones by using the avconvOptions
source parameter. Here is a complete
example:
[
{
"name": "Channel One",
"provider": "Provider One",
"url": "/channel1",
"source": "rtmp://example.com:1935/live playpath=test live=1 pageUrl=http://example.com/foo token=bar timeout=10",
"avconvOptions": {
"input": [
"fflags", "+genpts"
],
"output": [
"-bsf", "h264_mp4toannexb"
]
}
}
]
In the example above, the options fflags +genpts
will be injected before the input source is specified (which means
those options apply to the input, and -bsf h264_mp4toannexb
will be injected before the output destination is
specified (which means those options apply to the output).
If you only need to specify output parameters you can omit the input
key completely.
In most cases you don't need any extra parameters, although one often needed one is the -bsf h264_mp4toannexb
output
option (as in the example above). If you enable silly debugging mode (-v
) and get an
H.264 bitstream malformed, no startcode found, use the h264_mp4toannexb bitstream filter (-bsf h264_mp4toannexb)
error message, this is what you need.
You can turn the proxy into a proper daemon that can be started and stopped like other services. Start by placing your
source definitions in /etc/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy/sources.json
, then follow the instructions below for your
startup system.
- Copy
support/systemd/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.service
to/lib/systemd/system
and modify it if necessary (e.g. to change the parameters passed to it or the user it should run as) - Run
sudo systemctl enable node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.service
to enable the service - Run
sudo systemctl start node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.service
to start the service
If you make any changes to /lib/systemd/system/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.service
after you've enabled the service you
will have to run sudo systemctl daemon-reload
for the changes to take effect.
The output from the application is logged to /var/log/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.log
- Copy
support/upstart/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.conf
to/etc/init/
and modify it if necessary (e.g. to change the parameters passed to it or the user it should run as) - Run
sudo service node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy start
The output from the application is logged to /var/log/upstart/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.log
- Copy
sysvinit/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy
to/etc/init.d
, modify it if necessary (e.g. to change the parameters passed to it or the user it should run as) - Run
sudo chmod +x /etc/init.d/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy
- Run
sudo update-rc.d node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy defaults
to enable the service on startup - Run
sudo /etc/init.d/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy start
to start the service
The output from the application is logged to /var/log/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy.log
Assuming the absolute path to your sources.json
file is /tmp/sources.json
and you want to run the application
on port 9128, run the following command:
docker run -p 9128:9128 -v /tmp/sources.json:/home/node/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy/sources.json -d jalle19/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy
You can verify that the application is running by running docker ps
. You can see the output from the application by
running docker logs -f <container>
, where <container>
is the container ID from the docker ps
command.
If you need to do major customizations to the Docker image, you might wanna build it yourself with your changes:
docker build -t jalle19/node-ffmpeg-mpegts-proxy .
Install nodejs and ffmpeg locally, no virtual machines required.
In order to easily test the startup/service scripts there is a Vagrantfile
which starts three separate virtual
machines, one for each supported init system.