You can quickly get a server running using Docker. You need to have docker and docker-compose installed.
$ git clone https://github.com/chocobozzz/PeerTube /tmp/peertube
$ cd /tmp/peertube
$ docker build . -f ./support/docker/production/Dockerfile.stretch
PeerTube needs a PostgreSQL and a Redis instance to work correctly. If you want
to quickly set up a full environment, either for trying the service or in
production, you can use a docker-compose
setup.
$ git clone https://github.com/chocobozzz/PeerTube /tmp/peertube
$ cd /tmp/peertube/support/docker/production
Then tweak the docker-compose.yml
file there according to your needs. Then
you can use the regular up
command to set it up, with possible overrides of
the environment variables:
$ PEERTUBE_HOSTNAME=peertube.lvh.me \
[email protected] \
PEERTUBE_TRANSCODING_ENABLED=true \
PEERTUBE_SIGNUP_ENABLED=true \
PEERTUBE_SMTP_HOST=mail.lvh.me \
PEERTUBE_SMTP_PORT=1025 \
[email protected] \
docker-compose up
Other environment variables are used in
support/docker/production/config/custom-environment-variables.yaml
and can be
intuited from usage.
For this example configuration, a reverse proxy is quite recommended. The
example Docker Compose file provides example labels for a Traefik load
balancer, although any HTTP reverse proxy will work fine. See the example
Nginx configuration support/nginx/peertube
file to get an idea of
recommendations and requirements to run PeerTube the most efficiently.
Important: note that you'll get the initial root
user password from the
program output, so check out your logs to find them.
The Docker image that's preconfigured in support/docker/dev
contains all the
services embedded in one image, so as to work correctly on
Janitor. It is much not advised to use it in
production.