/rss

PROJECT MIGRATED TO CODEBERG -- A simple twitter-feed-style RSS aggregator written in PHP, Laravel, Inertia.js, Tailwind and Vue.js

Primary LanguagePHPMIT LicenseMIT

RSS

A simple, opinionated, RSS feed aggregator.

PHPUnit

Features

The following features are built into the application:

  • Supports RSS and ATOM formats.
  • Regular auto-fetching of RSS feeds.
    • Every hour by default, configurable down to 5 mins.
  • Custom feed names and colors.
  • Feed-based tags for categorization.
  • Ability to hide feed posts by default.
  • 3 different post layout modes (card, list, compact).
  • Fetching of page open-graph images.
  • Feeds managed via a single plaintext file.
  • System-based dark/light theme.
  • Post title/description search.
  • Ready-to-use docker image.
  • Mobile screen compatible.
  • Built-in support to prune old post data.

Limitations

The below possibly expected features are missing from this application. This is not a list of planned features. Please see the Low Maintenance Project section below for more info.

  • No import of full post/article content.
  • No feed management via the UI.
  • No user system or user management system.
  • No authentication or authorization built-in.
  • No customization, extension or plugin system.
  • No organisation upon simple feed-level tagging.
  • Error handling is limited and will likely not alert clearly upon issue.

Upon the above, it's quite likely you'll come across issues. This project was created to meet a personal need while learning some new technologies. Much of the logic is custom written instead of using battle-tested libraries.

Screenshots

Card View List View Compact View Dark Mode

Docker Usage

A pre-built docker image is available to run the application. Storage data is confined to a single /app/storage directory for easy volume mounting. Port 80 is exposed by default for application access. This application does not support HTTPS, for that you should instead use a proxy layer such as nginx.

Docker Run Command Example

In the below command, the application will be accessible at http://localhost:8080 on the host and the files would be stored in a /home/barry/rss directory. In this example, feeds would be configured in a /home/barry/rss/feeds.txt file.

docker run -d \
    --restart unless-stopped \
    -p 8080:80 \
    -v /home/barry/rss:/app/storage \
    ghcr.io/ssddanbrown/rss:latest  

Docker Compose Example

In the below docker-compose.yml example, the application will be accessible at http://localhost:8080 on the host and the files would be stored in a ./rss-files directory relative to the docker-compose.yml file. In this example, feeds would be configured in a ./rss-files/feeds.txt file.

---
version: "2"
services:
    rss:
        image: ghcr.io/ssddanbrown/rss:latest
        container_name: rss
        environment:
            - APP_NAME=RSS
        volumes:
            - ./rss-files:/app/storage
        ports:
            - "8080:80"
        restart: unless-stopped

Building the Docker Image

If you'd like to build the image from scratch, instead of using the pre-built image, you can do so like this:

docker build -f docker/Dockerfile .

Feed Configuration

Feed configuration is handled by a plaintext file on the host system. By default, using our docker image, this configuration would be located in a feeds.txt file within the path you mounted to /app/storage.

The format of this file can be seen below:

https://feed.url.com/feed.xml feed-name #tag-a #tag-b
https://example.com/feed.xml Example #updates #news

# Lines starting with a hash are considered comments.
# Empty lines are fine and will be ignored.

# Underscores in names will be converted to spaces.
https://example.com/feed-b.xml News_Site #news

# Feed color can be set using square brackets after the name.
# The color must be a CSS-compatible color value.
https://example.com/feed-c.xml Blue_News[#0078b9] #news #blue

# Feeds starting with a '-' are flagged as hidden.
# Posts for hidden feeds won't be shown on the homepage
# but can be seen via any type of active filter.
- https://example.com/feed-d.xml Cat_Facts #cats #facts

App Configuration

The application allows some configuration through variables. These can be set via the .env file or, when using docker, via environment variables.

# The name of the application.
# Only really shown in the title/browser-tab.
APP_NAME=RSS

# The path to the config file.
# Defaults to `storage/feeds.txt` within the application folder.
APP_CONFIG_FILE=/app/storage/feeds.txt

# Enable or disable the loading of post thumbnails.
# Does not control them within the UI, but controls the fetching
# when posts are fetched.
# Defaults to true.
APP_LOAD_POST_THUMBNAILS=true

# The number of minutes before a feed is considered outdated and
# therefore should be updated upon request.
# This effectively has a minimum of 5 minutes in the docker setup.
APP_FEED_UPDATE_FREQUENCY=60

# The number of days to wait before a post should be pruned.
# Uses the post published_at time to determine lifetime.
# Setting this to false disables any auto-pruning.
# If active, pruning will auto-run daily.
# Defaults to false (No pruning) 
APP_PRUNE_POSTS_AFTER_DAYS=30

Usage Behind a Reverse Proxy

When using behind a reverse proxy, ensure common forwarding headers are set so that the application can properly detect the right host and path to use. The below shows a sub-path proxy config location block for nginx. Note the X-Forwarded-Prefix header to make the application aware of sub-path usage.

location /rss/ {
    proxy_pass http://container-ip:80/;
    proxy_set_header Host              $host;
    proxy_set_header X-Real-IP         $remote_addr;
    proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For   $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
    proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
    proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host  $host;
    proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Port  $server_port;
    proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Prefix "/rss/";
    proxy_redirect off;
}

Manual Install

Manually installing the application is not recommended unless you are performing development work on the project. Instead, use of the docker image is advised.

This project is based upon Laravel so the requirements and install process are much the same. You will need git, PHP, composer and NodeJS installed. Installation would generally be as follows:

# Clone down and enter the project
git clone https://github.com/ssddanbrown/rss.git
cd rss

# Install PHP dependencies via composer
# This will check you meet the minimum PHP version and extensions required.
composer install

# Create database file
touch storage/database/database.sqlite

# Copy config, generate app key, migrate database & link storage
cp .env.example .env
php artisan key:generate
php artisan migrate
php artisan storage:link

# Install JS dependencies & build CSS/JS
npm install
npm run build

For a production server you'd really want to have a webserver active to server the public directory and handle PHP. You'd also need a process to run the laravel queue system in addition to a cron job to run the schedule.

On a development system, These can be done like so:

# Serve the app
php artisan serve

# Watch the queue
php artisan queue:listen

# Work the schedule
php artisan schedule:work

Low Maintenance Project

This is a low maintenance project. The scope of features and support are purposefully kept narrow for my purposes to ensure longer term maintenance is viable. I'm not looking to grow this into a bigger project at all.

Issues and PRs raised for bugs are perfectly fine assuming they don't significantly increase the scope of the project. Please don't open PRs for new features that expand the scope.

Development

This project uses PHPUnit for testing. Tests will use their own in-memory SQLite instance. Tests can be ran like so:

./vendor/bin/phpunit

PHP CS Fixer is used for formatting. This can be ran like so:

./vendor/bin/php-cs-fixer fix

A command is built-in to test RSS feeds where needed. This will just provide a boolean yes/no fetchable status result, but you can run it with debugging with breakpoints for further diagnosis:

php artisan rss:test-feed https://danb.me/blog/index.xml

Attribution

This is primarily built using the following great projects and technologies: