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README.md

gst-meet: Integrate Jitsi Meet conferences with GStreamer pipelines

Note: gst-meet is in an alpha state and is under active development. The command-line options and the lib-gst-meet API are subject to change, and some important features (simulcast, RTX, TCC) are not yet fully functional.

gst-meet provides a library and tool for integrating Jitsi Meet conferences with GStreamer pipelines. You can pipe audio and video into a conference as a participant, and pipe out other participants' audio and video streams.

Thanks to GStreamer's flexibility and wide range of plugins, this enables many new possibilities.

Installation

You will need the dependencies glib, gstreamer and libnice, as well as any GStreamer plugins you want to use in your pipelines, and a Rust toolchain (rustup is the easiest way to install one).

Then: cargo install --force gst-meet (--force will upgrade gst-meet if you have already installed it.)

To integrate gst-meet into your own application, look at lib-gst-meet.

Pipeline Structure

You can pass two different pipeline fragments to gst-meet.

--send-pipeline is for sending audio and video. If it contains an element named audio, this audio will be streamed to the conference. The audio codec must be 48kHz Opus. If it contains an element named video, this video will be streamed to the conference. The video codec must match the codec passed to --video-codec, which is VP8 by default.

--recv-pipeline-participant-template is for receiving audio and video from other participants. This pipeline will be created once for each other participant in the conference. If it contains an element named audio, the participant's audio (48kHz Opus) will be sent to that element. If it contains an element named video, the participant's video (encoded with the codec selected by --video-codec) will be sent to that element. The strings {jid}, {jid_user}, {participant_id} and {nick} are replaced in the template with the participant's full JID, user part, MUC JID resource part (a.k.a. participant/occupant ID) and nickname respectively.

Examples

A few examples of gst-meet usage are below. The GStreamer reference provides full details on available pipeline elements.

gst-meet --help lists full usage information.

Stream an Opus audio file to the conference. This is very efficient; the Opus data in the file is streamed directly without transcoding:

gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
         --xmpp-domain=your.jitsi.domain \
         --room-name=roomname \
         --send-pipeline="filesrc location=sample.opus ! queue ! oggdemux name=audio"

Stream a FLAC audio file to the conference, transcoding it to Opus:

gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
         --xmpp-domain=your.jitsi.domain \
         --room-name=roomname \
         --send-pipeline="filesrc location=shake-it-off.flac ! queue ! flacdec ! audioconvert ! audioresample ! opusenc name=audio"

Stream a .webm file containing VP8 video and Vorbis audio to the conference. This pipeline passes the VP8 stream through efficiently without transcoding, and transcodes the audio from Vorbis to Opus:

gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
         --xmpp-domain=your.jitsi.domain \
         --room-name=roomname \
         --send-pipeline="filesrc location=big-buck-bunny_trailer.webm ! queue ! matroskademux name=demuxer
                          demuxer.video_0 ! queue name=video
                          demuxer.audio_0 ! queue ! vorbisdec ! audioconvert ! audioresample ! opusenc name=audio"

Stream the default video & audio inputs to the conference, encoding as VP8 and Opus, composite incoming video streams and play back incoming audio (a very basic, but completely native, Jitsi Meet conference!):

gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
         --xmpp-domain=your.jitsi.domain \
         --room-name=roomname \
         --send-pipeline="autovideosrc ! queue ! videoconvert ! vp8enc buffer-size=1000 deadline=1 name=video
                          autoaudiosrc ! queue ! audioconvert ! audioresample ! opusenc name=audio" \
         --recv-pipeline-participant-template="opusdec name=audio ! autoaudiosink
                                               vp8dec name=video ! videoconvert ! autovideosink"

Record a .webm file for each other participant, containing VP8 video and Opus audio, without needing to do any transcoding:

gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
         --xmpp-domain=your.jitsi.domain \
         --room-name=roomname \
         --recv-pipeline-participant-template="webmmux name=muxer ! filesink location={participant_id}.webm
                                               opusparse name=audio ! muxer.audio_0
                                               capsfilter caps=video/x-vp8 name=video ! muxer.video_0"

Play a YouTube video in the conference. By requesting Opus audio and VP9 video from YouTube, and setting the Jitsi Meet video codec to VP9, no transcoding is necessary:

YOUTUBE_URL="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vjV_2Ri2rfE"
gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
         --xmpp-domain=your.jitsi.domain \
         --room-name=roomname \
         --video-codec=vp9 \
         --send-pipeline="curlhttpsrc location=\"$(youtube-dl -g $YOUTUBE_URL -f 'bestaudio[acodec=opus]')\" ! queue ! matroskademux name=audiodemux
                          curlhttpsrc location=\"$(youtube-dl -g $YOUTUBE_URL -f 'bestvideo[vcodec=vp9]')\" ! queue ! matroskademux name=videodemux
                          audiodemux.audio_0 ! queue ! clocksync name=audio
                          videodemux.video_0 ! queue ! clocksync name=video"

Debugging

It can sometimes be tricky to get GStreamer pipeline syntax and structure correct. To help with this, you can try setting the GST_DEBUG environment variable (for example, 3 is modestly verbose, while 6 produces copious per-packet output). You can also set GST_DEBUG_DUMP_DOT_DIR to the relative path to a directory (which must already exist). .dot files containing the pipeline graph will be saved to this directory, and can be converted to .png with the dot tool from GraphViz; for example dot filename.dot -Tpng > filename.png.

License

gst-meet, lib-gst-meet, nice and nice-sys are licensed under either of

at your option.

The dependency xmpp-parsers is licensed under the Mozilla Public License, Version 2.0, https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/MPL/2.0/

The dependency gstreamer is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License, Version 2.1, https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.en.html.

Contribution

Any kinds of contributions are welcome as a pull request.

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in these crates by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

Acknowledgements

gst-meet development is sponsored by AVStack. We provide globally-distributed, scalable, managed Jitsi Meet backends.