# PiGallery2 [![npm version](https://badge.fury.io/js/pigallery2.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/js/pigallery2) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/bpatrik/pigallery2.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/bpatrik/pigallery2) [![Heroku](https://heroku-badge.herokuapp.com/?app=pigallery2&style=flat)](https://pigallery2.herokuapp.com) [![Docker Build Status](https://img.shields.io/docker/build/bpatrik/pigallery2.svg)](https://hub.docker.com/r/bpatrik/pigallery2/) [![dependencies Status](https://david-dm.org/bpatrik/pigallery2/status.svg)](https://david-dm.org/bpatrik/pigallery2) [![devDependencies Status](https://david-dm.org/bpatrik/pigallery2/dev-status.svg)](https://david-dm.org/bpatrik/pigallery2?type=dev) Homepage: http://bpatrik.github.io/pigallery2/ This is a directory-first photo gallery website, optimised for running on low resource servers (especially on raspberry pi) ## Live Demo Live Demo @ heroku: https://pigallery2.herokuapp.com/ - the demo page **first load** might take up **30s**: the time while the free webservice boots up ## Table of contents 1. [Getting started](#1-getting-started-on-raspberry-pi) 2. [Translate the page to your own language](#2-translate-the-page-to-your-own-language) 3. [Feature list](#3-feature-list) 4. [Known errors](#4-known-errors) 5. [Credits](#5-credits) ## 1. Getting started (on Raspberry Pi) ### 1.1 Direct Install ### 1.1.0 [Install NodeJs](https://nodejs.org/en/download/) Download and extract ```bash curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_10.x | sudo -E bash - sudo apt-get install -y nodejs ``` Full node install on raspberry pi description: https://www.w3schools.com/nodejs/nodejs_raspberrypi.asp ### 1.1.1 Install PiGallery2 #### 1.1.1-a Install from release ```bash cd ~ wget https://github.com/bpatrik/pigallery2/releases/download/1.5.5/pigallery2.zip unzip pigallery2.zip cd pigallery2 npm install ``` #### 1.1.1-b Install from source ```bash cd ~ wget https://github.com/bpatrik/pigallery2/archive/master.zip unzip master.zip cd pigallery2-master # enter the unzipped directory npm install ``` **Note**: if you run `npm run build-release`, it creates a clean, minified, production ready version from the app in the `release` folder, that is ready to deploy. #### 1.1.2 Run PiGallery2 ```bash npm start ``` To configure it, run `PiGallery2` first to create `config.json` file, then edit it and restart. The app has a nice UI for settings, you may use that too. Default user: `admin` pass: `admin` ### 1.2 Run with Docker If you have `docker` and don't want to install all the dependencies, use this: ```bash docker run \ -p 80:80 \ -e NODE_ENV=production \ -v /config.json:/pigallery2-release/config.json \ -v /sqlite.db:/pigallery2-release/sqlite.db \ -v :/pigallery2-release/demo/images \ -v :/pigallery2-release/demo/TEMP \ bpatrik/pigallery2:1.5.6-stretch ``` Make sure that a file at `/config.json` and `sqlite.db` files exists before running it. You do not need the `/sqlite.db` line if you don't use the sqlite database. After the container is up and running, you go to `http://localhost` and log in with user: `admin` pass: `admin` and set up the page in the settings. **All docker builds**: https://hub.docker.com/r/bpatrik/pigallery2/tags/ **Note**: You dont need to do the installation steps if you are using docker. ### 1.3 Advanced configuration You can set up the app the following ways: * Using the UI * Manually editing the `config.json` * Through switches * Like: `node backend/index.js --Server-port=3000 --Client-authenticationRequired=false` * You can check the generated `config.json` for the config hierarchy * Through environmental variable * like set env. variable `Server-port` to `3000` ### 1.4 Useful links/tips: #### using nginx It is recommended to use a reverse proxy like nginx before node https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5009324/node-js-nginx-what-now #### making https With cerbot & nginx it is simple to set up secure connection. You have no excuse not doing so. https://certbot.eff.org/ #### node install error: If you get error during module installation, make sure you have everything to build node modules from source ```bash apt-get install build-essential libkrb5-dev gcc g++ ``` ## 2. Translate the page to your own language 1. [Install Pigallery2](#111-b-install-from-source) from source (with the release it won't work) 2. add your language e.g: fr ```bash npm run add-translation -- --fr ``` it creates a new `messages.fr.xls` file at `frontend/translate` folder, it will already contain dummy translation with google translate. 3. 'fix' the dummy translation 4. test if it works: build and start the app ```bash npm install npm start ``` 5. (optional) create a pull request at github to add your translation to the project. **Note**: you can also build your own release with as described in [1.1.1-b Install from source](#111-b-install-from-source); ## 3. Feature list * supported formats: * images: **jpg, jpeg, jpe, webp, png, gif, svg** * videos: **mp4, ogg, ogv, webm** * **Rendering directories as it is** * Listing subdirectories recursively * Listing photos in a nice grid layout * supporting most common image formats * showing **tag/keywords, locations, GPS coordinates** for photos * rendering photos on demand (on scroll) * **On the fly thumbnail generation** in several sizes * prioritizes thumbnail generation (generating thumbnail first for the visible photos) * saving generated thumbnails to TEMP folder for reuse * supporting multi-core CPUs * supporting hardware acceleration ([sharp](https://github.com/lovell/sharp) and [gm](https://github.com/aheckmann/gm) as optional and JS-based [Jimp](https://github.com/oliver-moran/jimp) as fallback) * Custom lightbox for full screen photo and video viewing * keyboard support for navigation * showing low-res thumbnail while full image loads * Information panel for showing **Exif info** * Automatic playing * gesture support (swipe left, right, up) * shortcut support * Client side caching (directories and search results) * Rendering **photos** with GPS coordinates **on open street maps** * .gpx file support: rendering paths to map * supports [OSM](https://www.openstreetmap.org) and [Mapbox](https://www.mapbox.com) by default, but you can add any provider that has a tile url * **Two modes: SQL database and no-database mode** * both modes supports * user management * password protection can be disabled/enabled * database mode supports: * faster directory listing * searching * instant search, auto complete * sharing * setting link expiration time * internalization / translation support * currently supported languages: eng, hun * Nice design * responsive design (phone, tablet desktop support) * Setup page * Random photo url * You can generate an url that returns a random photo from your gallery. You can use this feature to develop 3rd party applications, like: changing desktop background * video support * fully supports *.mp4 files and partially (might have errors with safari and IE) supports *.ogg, *.ogv, *.webm files * uses ffmpeg and ffprobe to generate video thumbnails * Dockerized * **Markdown based blogging support** - `future plan` * you can write some note in the blog.md for every directory * bug free :) - `In progress` ## 4. Known errors * EXIF orientation tag: * There is no nice way to handle EXIF orientation tag properly. The page handles these photos, but might cause same error in the user experience (e.g.: the pages loads those photos slower. See issue [#11](https://github.com/bpatrik/pigallery2/issues/11)) * Video support on weak servers (like raspberry pi) with low upload rate * video playback may use up too much resources and the server might not response for a while. A solution might be to down scale / convert the video files to lower bitrate. ## 5. Credits Crossbrowser testing sponsored by [Browser Stack](https://www.browserstack.com) [Browser Stack](https://www.browserstack.com)