# LiveKit - Open source, distributed video/audio rooms over WebRTC LiveKit is an open source project that provides scalable, multi-user conferencing over WebRTC. It's designed to give you everything you need to build real time video/audio capabilities in your applications. ## Features - Horizontally scalable WebRTC Selective Forwarding Unit (SFU) - Modern, full-featured [client SDKs](references/client-sdks.md) for JS, iOS, Android - Built for production - JWT authentication and [server APIs](references/server-apis.md) - Robust networking & connectivity, over UDP & TCP - Easy to deploy, a single binary and only three ports to forward. - Advanced features - simulcasting, selective subscription, moderation APIs. ## Documentation & Guides Docs & Guides at: https://docs.livekit.io ## SDKs & APIs Client SDKs: - [Javascript](https://github.com/livekit/client-sdk-js) ([docs](https://docs.livekit.io/client-sdk-js/)) - [iOS - Swift](https://github.com/livekit/client-sdk-ios) ([docs](https://docs.livekit.io/client-sdk-ios/)) - [Android - Kotlin](https://github.com/livekit/client-sdk-android) ([docs](https://docs.livekit.io/client-sdk-android/)) Server APIs: - [Javascript](https://github.com/livekit/server-api-js) ([docs](https://docs.livekit.io/server-api-js/)) - [Go](https://github.com/livekit/livekit-sdk-go) ([docs](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/livekit/livekit-sdk-go)) ## Installing ### From source Pre-requisites: * Go 1.15+ is installed * GOPATH/bin is in your PATH * [protoc](https://grpc.io/docs/protoc-installation/) is installed and in PATH Then run ```shell git clone https://github.com/livekit/livekit-server cd livekit-server ./bootstrap.sh mage ``` ### Docker LiveKit is published to Docker Hub under livekit/livekit-server ## Running ### Creating API keys LiveKit utilizes JWT based access tokens for authentication to all of its APIs. Because of this, the server needs a list of valid API keys and secrets to validate the provided tokens. For more, see [Authentication](docs/authentication.md). Generate API key/secret pairs with: ```shell ./bin/livekit-server generate-keys ``` or ```shell docker run --rm livekit/livekit-server generate-keys ``` Store the generate keys in a YAML file like: ```yaml APIwLeah7g4fuLYDYAJeaKsSE: 8nTlwISkb-63DPP7OH4e.nw.J44JjicvZDiz8J59EoQ+ ``` ### Starting the server In development mode, LiveKit has no external dependencies. With the key file ready, you can start LiveKit with ```shell ./bin/livekit-server --key-file --dev ``` or ```shell docker run --rm -e LIVEKIT_KEYS=": " livekit/livekit-server --dev ``` the `--dev` flag turns on log verbosity to make it easier for local debugging/development ### Sample client To test your server, you can use our [sample web client](https://sample-js.livekit.io/). Enter generated access token and you should be able to connect. ### Creating a JWT token To create a join token for clients, livekit-server provides a convenient subcommand to create a **development** token. This token has an expiration of a month, which is useful for development & testing, but not appropriate for production use. ```shell ./bin/livekit-server --key-file create-join-token --room "myroom" --identity "myidentity" ``` ## Deploying for production LiveKit is deployable to any environment that supports docker, including Kubernetes and Amazon ECS. LiveKit is distributed, and scales by adding nodes. Different server instances coordinate via Redis to ensure clients in the same room are served by the same instance. Redis is the only external dependency for a production deployment. See documentation at https://docs.livekit.io/guides/deploy ## License LiveKit server is licensed under Apache License v2.0.