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.
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.
gstreamer
>= 1.20 (latest version is recommended)gst-plugins-good
,gst-plugins-bad
(same version asgstreamer
) and any other plugins that you want to use in your pipelinesglib
libnice
pkg-config
- A Rust toolchain (rustup is the easiest way to install one)
Install the dependencies described above, along with their -dev
packages if your distribution uses them.
Check out the repository and then use cargo
to build:
cargo build --release
The gst-meet
binary can be found in target/release
.
cargo install --force gst-meet
(--force
will upgrade gst-meet
if you have already installed it.)
A Dockerfile
is provided that produces an Alpine 3.18.2 image with gst-meet
installed in /usr/local/bin
.
For nix users, a shell.nix
is provided. Within the repository, run nix-shell --pure
to get a shell with access to all needed dependencies (and nothing else). Proceed with cargo build --release
.
To integrate gst-meet into your own application, add a Cargo dependency on lib-gst-meet
.
You can pass GStreamer pipeline fragments to the gst-meet
tool.
--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 VP9 by default.
--recv-pipeline
is for receiving audio and video, if you want a single pipeline to handle all participants. If it contains an element named audio
, a sink pad is requested on that element for each new participant, and decoded audio is sent to that pad. Similarly, if it contains an element named video
, a sink pad is requred on that element for each new participant, and decoded & scaled video is sent to that pad.
--recv-pipeline-participant-template
is for receiving audio and video, if you want a separate pipeline for each participant. This pipeline will be created once for each other participant in the conference. If it contains an element named audio
, the participant's decoded audio will be sent to that element. If it contains an element named video
, the participant's decoded & scaled video 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.
You can use --recv-pipeline
and --recv-pipeline-participant-template
together, for example to handle all the audio with a single audiomixer
element but handle each video stream separately. If an audio
or video
element is found in both --recv-pipeline
and --recv-pipeline-participant-template
, then the one in --recv-pipeline
is used.
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 \
--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 \
--room-name=roomname \
--send-pipeline="filesrc location=shake-it-off.flac ! queue ! flacdec ! audioconvert ! audioresample ! opusenc name=audio"
Stream a .webm file containing VP9 video and Vorbis audio to the conference. This pipeline passes the VP9 stream through efficiently without transcoding, and transcodes the audio from Vorbis to Opus:
gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
--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 VP9 and Opus, display up to two remote participants' video streams composited side-by-side at 360p each, and play back all incoming audio mixed together (a very basic, but completely native, Jitsi Meet conference!):
gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
--room-name=roomname \
--recv-video-scale-width=640 \
--recv-video-scale-height=360 \
--send-pipeline="autovideosrc ! queue ! videoscale ! video/x-raw,width=640,height=360 ! videoconvert ! vp9enc buffer-size=1000 deadline=1 name=video
autoaudiosrc ! queue ! audioconvert ! audioresample ! opusenc name=audio" \
--recv-pipeline="audiomixer name=audio ! autoaudiosink
compositor name=video sink_1::xpos=640 ! autovideosink"
Record a .webm file for each other participant, containing VP9 video and Opus audio:
gst-meet --web-socket-url=wss://your.jitsi.domain/xmpp-websocket \
--room-name=roomname \
--video-codec=vp9 \
--recv-pipeline-participant-template="webmmux name=muxer ! queue ! filesink location={participant_id}.webm
opusenc name=audio ! muxer.audio_0
vp9enc name=video ! muxer.video_0"
By default, the rustls
TLS library is used with the system's native root certificates. This can be turned off by passing --no-default-features
to Cargo, and one of the following features can be enabled:
tls-rustls-native-roots use rustls for TLS with the system's native root certificates (the default)
tls-rustls-webpki-roots use rustls for TLS and bundle webpki's root certificates
tls-native link to the system native TLS library
tls-native-vendored automatically build a copy of OpenSSL and statically link to it
Building with the tls-insecure
feature adds a --tls-insecure
command line flag which disables certificate verification. Use this with extreme caution.
The tls-*
flags only affect the TLS library used for the WebSocket connections (to the XMPP server and to the JVB). Gstreamer uses its own choice of TLS library for its elements. DTLS-SRTP (the media streams) is handled via GStreamer and uses automatically-generated ephemeral certificates which are authenticated over the XMPP signalling channel.
Building with the log-rtp
feture adds a --log-rtp
command line flag which logs information about every RTP and RTCP packet at the DEBUG
level.
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
.
gst-meet
, lib-gst-meet
, nice
and nice-sys
are licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
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.
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.
gst-meet
development is sponsored by AVStack. We provide globally-distributed, scalable, managed Jitsi Meet backends.