This is a Roku “channel” that allows you to watch videos hosted on a PeerTube instance on your TV.
See the FAQ page.
If you simply wish to use the channel, add the private channel code PEERVUE to your Roku account.
If you wish to help improve the channel, follow the developer steps below to install the app on your personal Roku device.
Put your Roku device in developer mode. Write down your Roku device IP and the password you created, you will need these later.
Navigate to where you'd like to install the app then copy the application files:
git clone https://github.com/n76/PeerVue.git
Open up the new folder:
cd PeerVue
sudo apt-get install wget make
Run this command - replacing the IP and password with your Roku device IP and dev password from the first step:
export ROKU_DEV_TARGET=192.168.1.234
export ROKU_DEV_PASSWORD=password
Normally you would have to open up your browser and upload a .zip file containing the app code. These commands enable the app to be zipped up and installed on the Roku automatically which is essential for developers and makes it easy to upgrade in the future for users.
Package up the application, send it to your Roku, and launch the channel:
make install
Note: You only have to run this command once if you are not a developer. The PeerVue channel will still be installed after rebooting your Roku device.
Did the app crash? Find a nasty bug? Use the this command to view the error log and report it to the developers:
telnet ${ROKU_DEV_TARGET} 8085
To exit telnet: CTRL + ]
and then type quit + ENTER
Navigate to the folder where you installed the app then upgrade the code to the latest version:
git pull
Deploy the app:
make install
Read below and also checkout the Development Guide For New Devs
Modify code -> make install
-> Use Roku remote to test changes -> telnet ${ROKU_DEV_TARGET} 8085
-> CTRL + ]
-> quit + ENTER
Unfortunately there is no debugger. You will need to use telnet to see log statements, warnings, and error reports. You won't always need to telnet into your device but the workflow above is typical when you are new to Brightscript or are working on tricky code.
All display strings used in this channel are from localized string files in JSON format. A complete set of string definitions is contained in locale/default/strings.json See the Roku documentation for information about how localization is supported by the Roku device. In the case of PeerVue, creating or updating an appropriate locale/language/strings.json file where "language" is the Roku code for the language and country combination.
Pull requests for language additions or corrections will be greatly appreciated.
The resources/config.json file contains number of configuration items. This includes the definitions of the queries used to display the default content. See the PeerTube API documentation details on the queries used.