14 KiB
This document provides instructions for developers to setup their environment and work on the upcoming BBB 1.1 (tentative release version).
Install BBB 1.0
Make sure you have a working BBB 1.0 before you proceed with the instructions below.
Install OpenJDK 8
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:openjdk-r/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install openjdk-8-jdk
Change the default jre. Choose Java 8.
sudo update-alternatives --config java
Change the default jdk. Choose Jdk8
sudo update-alternatives --config javac
Environment Variables
Edit ~/.profile
and change JAVA_HOME
export JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk-amd64
Save the file and refresh environment vars.
source ~/.profile
Update Development Tools
Install The Core Development Tools
sudo apt-get install git-core ant
Install Gradle
cd ~/dev/tools
wget http://services.gradle.org/distributions/gradle-2.12-bin.zip
unzip gradle-2.12-bin.zip
ln -s gradle-2.12 gradle
Install Grails
cd ~/dev/tools
wget https://github.com/grails/grails-core/releases/download/v2.5.2/grails-2.5.2.zip
unzip grails-2.5.2.zip
ln -s grails-2.5.2 grails
Install Maven
cd ~/dev/tools
wget apache.parentingamerica.com//maven/maven-3/3.3.3/binaries/apache-maven-3.3.3-bin.zip
unzip apache-maven-3.3.3-bin.zip
ln -s apache-maven-3.3.3 maven
Install sbt
cd ~/dev/tools
wget https://dl.bintray.com/sbt/native-packages/sbt/0.13.9/sbt-0.13.9.tgz
tar zxvf sbt-0.13.9.tgz
In the next step, you need to get the Apache Flex 4.13.0 SDK package.
Note: Even though we're downloading the Apache Flex 4.13.0 SDK, BigBlueButton is developed and built with Flex 3 compatibility mode enabled.
First, you need to download the SDK tarball from an Apache mirror site and then unpack it.
wget https://archive.apache.org/dist/flex/4.13.0/binaries/apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin.tar.gz
tar xvfz apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin.tar.gz
Once Flex SDK is unpacked, you need to download the Adobe Flex SDK. We'll do this step manually in case the download fails (if it does, remove the incomplete file and issue the wget
command again).
cd apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin/
mkdir -p in/
wget http://download.macromedia.com/pub/flex/sdk/builds/flex4.6/flex_sdk_4.6.0.23201B.zip -P in/
Once the SDK has downloaded, we can use its build.xml
script to automatically download the remaining third-party tools.
ant -f frameworks/build.xml thirdparty-downloads
After Flex downloads the remaining third-party tools, you need to modify their permissions.
sudo find ~/dev/tools/apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin -type d -exec chmod o+rx '{}' \;
chmod 755 ~/dev/tools/apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin/bin/*
sudo chmod -R +r ~/dev/tools/apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin
Next, create a linked directory with a shortened name for easier referencing.
ln -s ~/dev/tools/apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin ~/dev/tools/flex
The next step in setting up the Flex SDK environment is to download a Flex library for video.
cd ~/dev/tools/
mkdir -p apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin/frameworks/libs/player/11.2
cd apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin/frameworks/libs/player/11.2
wget http://fpdownload.macromedia.com/get/flashplayer/installers/archive/playerglobal/playerglobal11_2.swc
mv -f playerglobal11_2.swc playerglobal.swc
The last step to have a working Flex SDK is to configure it to work with playerglobal 11.2
cd ~/dev/tools/apache-flex-sdk-4.13.0-bin
sudo sed -i "s/11.1/11.2/g" frameworks/flex-config.xml
sudo sed -i "s/<swf-version>14<\/swf-version>/<swf-version>15<\/swf-version>/g" frameworks/flex-config.xml
sudo sed -i "s/{playerglobalHome}\/{targetPlayerMajorVersion}.{targetPlayerMinorVersion}/libs\/player\/11.2/g" frameworks/flex-config.xml
With the tools installed, you need to add a set of environment variables to your .profile
to access these tools.
vi ~/.profile
Copy-and-paste the following text at bottom of .profile
.
export GRAILS_HOME=$HOME/dev/tools/grails
export PATH=$PATH:$GRAILS_HOME/bin
export FLEX_HOME=$HOME/dev/tools/flex
export PATH=$PATH:$FLEX_HOME/bin
export GRADLE_HOME=$HOME/dev/tools/gradle
export PATH=$PATH:$GRADLE_HOME/bin
export SBT_HOME=$HOME/dev/tools/sbt
export PATH=$PATH:$SBT_HOME/bin
export MAVEN_HOME=$HOME/dev/tools/maven
export PATH=$PATH:$MAVEN_HOME/bin
Reload your profile to use these tools (this will happen automatically when you next login).
source ~/.profile
Check that the tools are now in your path by running the following command.
$ mxmlc -version
Version 4.13.0 build 20140701
Setup Red5
cd /usr/share
# Make a backup of the deployed red5
sudo mv red5 red5-orig
# Symlink red5 to old red5
sudo ln -s red5-orig red5
Build Red5
Build red5-parent
cd ~/dev
git clone https://github.com/bigbluebutton/red5-parent.git
cd red5-parent/
git checkout snapshot-mar-30-2016
mvn install
Build red5-io
cd ~/dev
git clone https://github.com/bigbluebutton/red5-io.git
cd red5-io
git checkout snapshot-mar-30-2016
./bbb-build.sh
Build red5-server-common
cd ~/dev
git clone https://github.com/bigbluebutton/red5-server-common.git
cd red5-server-common
git checkout snapshot-mar-30-2016
./bbb-build.sh
Build red5-server
cd ~/dev
git clone https://github.com/bigbluebutton/red5-server.git
cd red5-server
git checkout snapshot-mar-30-2016
./build-red5.sh
# Deploy red5, this will copy the new red5 to /usr/share
# and modify the symlink you created above.
./deploy-red5.sh
Developing the client
Client Development
With the development environment checked out and the code cloned, we are ready to start developing!
This section will walk you through making a simple change to the BigBlueButton client.
Setting up the environment
The first thing you need to do is to copy the template config.xml
file to the build directory for the client.
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/
cp bigbluebutton-client/resources/config.xml.template bigbluebutton-client/src/conf/config.xml
The config.xml
file is one of the first files loaded by the BigBlueButton client when it connects to the server. The config.xml
file tells BigBlueButton client how to load the remaining components (such as chat module, deskshare module, video conf module, etc.) and sets a number of configuration parameters for each component. The config.xml
specifies the hostname (or IP address) for loading each component.
Let's look at the first ten lines of the config.xml
file you just copied.
$ head -n 10 bigbluebutton-client/src/conf/config.xml
<?xml version="1.0" ?>
<config>
<localeversion suppressWarning="false">0.9.0</localeversion>
<version>VERSION</version>
<help url="http://HOST/help.html"/>
<javaTest url="http://HOST/testjava.html"/>
<porttest host="HOST" application="video/portTest" timeout="10000"/>
<bwMon server="HOST" application="video/bwTest"/>
<application uri="rtmp://HOST/bigbluebutton" host="http://HOST/bigbluebutton/api/enter"/>
<language userSelectionEnabled="true" />
You will see the word HOST
where there would be configured hostname/IP address. You need to change the text HOST
to the IP address (or hostname) of your BigBlueButton server. For example, if the IP address of your BigBlueButton server is 192.168.1.145
, then using the following command you can easily substitute all occurrences of HOST
with 192.168.1.145
.
Note: Don't copy-and-paste the following command as-is: the address 192.168.1.145
is likely not the correct IP address (or hostname) for your BigBlueButton server. Substitute the IP address (or hostname) for your BigBlueButton server.
sed -i s/HOST/192.168.1.145/g bigbluebutton-client/src/conf/config.xml
After you've done the above command, take a quick look at the file and ensure all instances of HOST
are properly replaced with the IP address (or hostname) of your BigBlueButton server.
The config.xml
is ultimately loaded by the BigBlueButton client when a user joins a session on the server.
Later on, when you deploy your modified client to the BigBlueButton server, there will be two BigBlueButton clients on your server: your modified BigBlueButton client and the default BigBlueButton packaged client (again, this is good as you can switch back and forth). However, the BigBlueButton configuration command sudo bbb-conf
only modifies the packaged BigBlueButton client and you will need to mirror any changes to the packaged config.xml to the secondary client's config.xml.
Next, you need to setup nginx to redirect calls to the client towards your development version. If you don't already have nginx client development file at /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client_dev
, create one with the following command.
NOTE: Make sure to replace "firstuser" with your own username if it's different.
echo "
location /client/BigBlueButton.html {
root /home/firstuser/dev/bigbluebutton/bigbluebutton-client;
index index.html index.htm;
expires 1m;
}
# BigBlueButton Flash client.
location /client {
root /home/firstuser/dev/bigbluebutton/bigbluebutton-client;
index index.html index.htm;
}
" | sudo tee /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client_dev
Check the contents to ensure it matches below.
Again, make sure you change /home/firstuser
to match your home directory.
$ cat /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client_dev
location /client/BigBlueButton.html {
root /home/firstuser/dev/bigbluebutton/bigbluebutton-client;
index index.html index.htm;
expires 1m;
}
# BigBlueButton Flash client.
location /client {
root /home/firstuser/dev/bigbluebutton/bigbluebutton-client;
index index.html index.htm;
}
These rules tell nginx where to find the BigBlueButton client. Currently, nginx is using the rules with the default BigBlueButton client through a symbolic link.
$ ls -al /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client.nginx
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 31 2013-05-05 15:44 /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client.nginx -> /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client
Modify this symbolic link so it points to the development directory for your BigBlueButton client.
sudo ln -f -s /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client_dev /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client.nginx
Check that the modifications are in place.
$ ls -al /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client.nginx
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 35 2013-05-05 21:07 /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client.nginx -> /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/client_dev
Now we need to restart nginx so our changes take effect.
$ sudo service nginx restart
Restarting nginx: the configuration file /etc/nginx/nginx.conf syntax is ok
configuration file /etc/nginx/nginx.conf test is successful nginx.
Now, when you launch the BigBlueButton client, nginx will serve the client from your development directory. Next, we need to rebuild the client.
Building the client
Let's now build the client. Note we're going to build and run the client to make sure it works before making any changes to the source.
First, we'll build the locales (language translation files). If you are not modifying the locales, you only need to do this once.
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/bigbluebutton-client
Build build a specific locale (en_US default)
ant locale -DLOCALE=en_US
To build all locales
ant locales
This will take about 10 minutes (depending on the speed of your computer). Next, let's build the client
ant
This will create a build of the BigBlueButton client in the /home/firstuser/dev/bigbluebutton/bigbluebutton-client/client
directory.
Setup nginx
Create file /etc/bigbluebutton/nginx/screenshare.nginx
and add the following:
# Handle desktop sharing. Forwards
# requests to Red5 on port 5080.
location /screenshare {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:5080;
proxy_redirect default;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
client_max_body_size 10m;
client_body_buffer_size 128k;
proxy_connect_timeout 90;
proxy_send_timeout 90;
proxy_read_timeout 90;
proxy_buffer_size 4k;
proxy_buffers 4 32k;
proxy_busy_buffers_size 64k;
proxy_temp_file_write_size 64k;
include fastcgi_params;
}
Restart nginx
sudo service nginx restart
Build BBB Red5 Applications
Turn off red5 service
sudo service bbb-red5 stop
You need to make red5/webapps
writeable. Otherwise, you will get a permission error when you try to deploy into Red5.
sudo chmod -R 777 /usr/share/red5/webapps
Build common-message
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/bbb-common-message/
sbt publish
sbt publishLocal
Build bbb-apps
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/bigbluebutton-apps/
gradle resolveDeps
gradle clean war deploy
Build bbb-voice
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/bbb-voice
Edit src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/bigbluebutton-sip.properties
Make sure the IP addresses point to yout BBB server.
bbb.sip.app.ip=192.168.74.128
# The ip and port of the FreeSWITCH server
freeswitch.ip=192.168.74.128
gradle resolveDeps
gradle clean war deploy
Build bbb-video
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/bbb-video/
gradle resolveDeps
gradle clean war deploy
Build bbb-screenshare
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/bbb-screenshare/app
Edit src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/screenshare.properties
Make sure the following points to your BBB server.
streamBaseUrl=rtmp://192.168.74.128/screenshare
jnlpUrl=http://192.168.74.128/screenshare
jnlpFile=http://192.168.74.128/screenshare/screenshare.jnlp
Build and deploy
./deploy.sh
Stop services
sudo /etc/init.d/bbb-red5 stop
sudo service bbb-apps-akka stop
sudo service bbb-fsesl-akka stop
Remove old bbb-web
app from tomcat
sudo rm /var/lib/tomcat7/webapps/bigbluebutton.war
Manually start services
Run Red5
Open up a terminal.
cd /usr/share/red5
sudo -u red5 ./red5.sh
Run Akka Apps
Open up another terminal.
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/akka-bbb-apps
sbt run
Run Akka FSESL App
Open another terminal
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/akka-bbb-fsesl
sbt run
Run bbb-web
cd ~/dev/bigbluebutton/bigbluebutton-web
Get the salt and BBB URL from /var/lib/tomcat7/webapps/demo/bbb_api_conf.jsp
Edit grails-app/conf/bigbluebutton.properties
and change the following with
the salt and IP you got from above.
bigbluebutton.web.serverURL=http://192.168.74.128
securitySalt=856d5e0197b1aa0cf79897841142a5f6
Start bbb-web
gradle resolveDeps
grails clean
grails -Dserver.port=8888 run-war
If things started without errors, congrats!