/EternalJukebox

A fork of EternalJukebox that fixes issues with the main repo

Primary LanguageHTMLMIT LicenseMIT

EternalJukebox

This repository is a fork which fixes bugs because the upstream repo is unmaintained.

You can visit the hosted instance of this repository here, in case you want to mess around with it without doing all the hard stuff.

The source files for the EternalJukebox, a rehosting of the Infinite Jukebox. This repo contains everything you need to host the EternalJukebox on your own server!

Docker Install

Prerequisites

You need to install docker and docker-compose

Configuration

To configure, grab .env.example from this repository, rename it to .env and change the appropriate values.

You'll also need envvar_config.yaml, but only edit this if you want some advanced configuration.

Running

You can use the following docker-compose.yaml as a starting point to run the application without needing a database running, if you want to use a db refer to the main docker-compose.yaml.

version: "3"

services:
  main:
    image: daviirodrig/eternaljukebox
    ports:
      - 8080:8080
    env_file:
      - .env
    volumes:
      - "./envvar_config.yaml:/EternalJukebox/envvar_config.yaml"

To start, run docker compose up -d in the folder containing envvar_config.yaml, .env and docker-compose.yaml. To stop, run docker compose down.

If you want to you can upgrade the image by pulling the newest with docker pull daviirodrig/eternaljukebox and then restart with docker compose down and docker compose up -d

If you want to change the port from 8080, edit docker-compose.yml port, to be - <your port>:8080

Manual Install

Prerequisites

Java:

Windows

Download and install Java from https://www.java.com/en/download/

Debian-based Linux distributions

For Ubuntu or Debian-based distributions execute sudo apt-get install default-jre in the terminal

Fedora and CentOS

There is a tutorial for installing java on Fedora and CentOS at https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-java-on-centos-and-fedora

Yt-dlp (a more up-to-date fork of Youtube-dl):

Windows

Download the .exe at https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/releases/latest/download/yt-dlp.exe and place it in C:\Windows\, or in another folder on the PATH.

Linux

Use these commands in the terminal to install youtube-dl on Linux: sudo curl -L https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/releases/latest/download/yt-dlp -o /usr/local/bin/yt-dlp sudo chmod a+rx /usr/local/bin/yt-dlp

ffmpeg:

Windows

Download the exe from https://ffmpeg.zeranoe.com/builds/ and place it in C:\Windows\, or in another folder on teh PATH.

Linux

ffmpeg is available to download in most distributions using sudo apt-get install ffmpeg or equivalent

Getting the project files:

The whole process of obtaining project files is much easier now, as the build process is streamlined through Jenkins.

The project site is over here, and contains the individual files to download, or an all-in-one zip for all the files. Alternatively, the files can be found over at a permanent server here

Configuring

First thing to do is create a new file called either config.yaml or config.json (YAML tends to be easier to write, but takes up slightly more space), then open it with notepad/notepad++ on Windows and whatever text editor you like on Linux (for example nano: nano config.json)

Now you should go to https://developer.spotify.com/my-applications/ and log in to your spotify account. Then click the "Create an app" button and a new page should popup. There give it a name and description and click create. It should send you to the new app's page, the only thing you need from here is your Client ID and Client Secret (Note: Never share these with anyone!)

You will also need a Youtube Data API key, which you can find about how to obtain here.

There are a variety of config options (documentation coming soon) that allow most portions of the EternalJukebox to be configured, and these can be entered here.

Starting the server:

First you need to open the Terminal or Command Prompt. Then make sure its running in the folder that your EternalJukebox.jar is in, once again to do this use the cd command. Then execute the jar with java -jar EternalJukebox.jar

If everything went right it should say Listening at http://0.0.0.0:11037

you should now be able to connect to it with a browser through http://localhost:11037

Congrats you did it!

Manually Building

This is not recommended unless you're making some modifications, and as such should only be performed by more advanced users

You'll need to obtain a copy of Gradle, likely a JDK, and Jekyll. You'll also need the project files in some capacity, be it git clone or downloading the archive from GitHub.

From there, building in Gradle is simple; just run gradle clean shadowJar from the project file directory. That should produce a jar file in build/libs that will work for you. In addition, you'll need to build the Jekyll webpages, which can be done by running jekyll build --source _web --destination web