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# CLI tools guide
- [CLI wrapper](#cli-wrapper)
- [Remote tools](#remote-tools)
- [peertube-import-videos.js](#peertube-import-videosjs)
- [peertube-upload.js](#peertube-uploadjs)
- [peertube-watch.js](#peertube-watch)
- [Server tools](#server-tools)
- [parse-log](#parse-log)
- [create-transcoding-job.js](#create-transcoding-jobjs)
- [create-import-video-file-job.js](#create-import-video-file-jobjs)
- [prune-storage.js](#prune-storagejs)
## CLI wrapper
The wrapper provides a convenient interface to most scripts, and requires the [same dependencies](#dependencies). You can access it as `peertube` via an alias in your `.bashrc` like `alias peertube="node ${PEERTUBE_PATH}/dist/server/tools/peertube.js"`:
```
Usage: peertube [command] [options]
Options:
-v, --version output the version number
-h, --help output usage information
Commands:
auth [action] register your accounts on remote instances to use them with other commands
upload|up upload a video
import-videos|import import a video from a streaming platform
watch|w watch a video in the terminal ✩°。⋆
help [cmd] display help for [cmd]
```
The wrapper can keep track of instances you have an account on. We limit to one account per instance for now.
```bash
$ peertube auth add -u "PEERTUBE_URL" -U "PEERTUBE_USER" --password "PEERTUBE_PASSWORD"
$ peertube auth list
┌──────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
│ instance │ login │
├──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
│ "PEERTUBE_URL" │ "PEERTUBE_USER" │
└──────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘
```
You can now use that account to upload videos without feeding the same parameters again.
```bash
$ peertube up <videoFile>
```
And now that your video is online, you can watch it from the confort of your terminal (use `peertube watch --help` to see the supported players):
```bash
$ peertube watch https://peertube.cpy.re/videos/watch/e8a1af4e-414a-4d58-bfe6-2146eed06d10
```
## Remote Tools
You need at least 512MB RAM to run the script.
Scripts can be launched directly from a PeerTube server, or from a separate server, even a desktop PC.
You need to follow all the following steps even if you are on a PeerTube server (including cloning the git repository in a different directory than your production installation because the scripts utilize non-production dependencies).
### Dependencies
Install the [PeerTube dependencies](dependencies.md).
### Installation
Clone the PeerTube repo to get the latest version (even if you are on your PeerTube server):
```
$ git clone https://github.com/Chocobozzz/PeerTube.git
$ CLONE="$(pwd)/PeerTube"
```
Run ``yarn install``
```
$ cd ${CLONE}
$ yarn install
```
Build server tools:
```
$ cd ${CLONE}
$ npm run build:server
```
### peertube-import-videos.js
You can use this script to import videos from all [supported sites of youtube-dl](https://rg3.github.io/youtube-dl/supportedsites.html) into PeerTube.
Be sure you own the videos or have the author's authorization to do so.
```sh
$ node dist/server/tools/peertube-import-videos.js \
-u "PEERTUBE_URL" \
-U "PEERTUBE_USER" \
--password "PEERTUBE_PASSWORD" \
-t "TARGET_URL"
```
* `PEERTUBE_URL` : the full URL of your PeerTube server where you want to import, eg: https://peertube.cpy.re
* `PEERTUBE_USER` : your PeerTube account where videos will be uploaded
* `PEERTUBE_PASSWORD` : password of your PeerTube account (if omitted, you will be prompted for it)
* `TARGET_URL` : the target url you want to import. Examples:
* YouTube:
* Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/ChannelId
* User https://www.youtube.com/c/UserName or https://www.youtube.com/user/UserName
* Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=blabla
* Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/xxxxxx
* Dailymotion: https://www.dailymotion.com/xxxxx
The script will get all public videos from Youtube, download them and upload to PeerTube.
Already downloaded videos will not be uploaded twice, so you can run and re-run the script in case of crash, disconnection...
Videos will be publicly available after transcoding (you can see them before that in your account on the web interface).
### peertube-upload.js
You can use this script to import videos directly from the CLI.
Videos will be publicly available after transcoding (you can see them before that in your account on the web interface).
```
$ cd ${CLONE}
$ node dist/server/tools/peertube-upload.js --help
```
### peertube-watch.js
You can use this script to play videos directly from the CLI.
It provides support for different players:
- ascii (default ; plays in ascii art in your terminal!)
- mpv
- mplayer
- vlc
- stdout
- xbmc
- airplay
- chromecast
## Server tools
These scripts should be run on the server, in `peertube-latest` directory.
### parse-log
To parse PeerTube last log file:
```
$ sudo -u peertube NODE_CONFIG_DIR=/var/www/peertube/config NODE_ENV=production npm run parse-log -- --level info
```
`--level` is optional and could be `info`/`warn`/`error`
### create-transcoding-job.js
You can use this script to force transcoding of an existing video.
```
$ sudo -u peertube NODE_CONFIG_DIR=/var/www/peertube/config NODE_ENV=production npm run create-transcoding-job -- -v [videoUUID]
```
Or to transcode to a specific resolution:
```
$ sudo -u peertube NODE_CONFIG_DIR=/var/www/peertube/config NODE_ENV=production npm run create-transcoding-job -- -v [videoUUID] -r [resolution]
```
### create-import-video-file-job.js
You can use this script to import a video file to replace an already uploaded file or to add a new resolution to a video.
```
$ sudo -u peertube NODE_CONFIG_DIR=/var/www/peertube/config NODE_ENV=production npm run create-import-video-file-job -- -v [videoUUID] -i [videoFile]
```
### prune-storage.js
Some transcoded videos or shutdown at a bad time can leave some unused files on your storage.
To delete them (a confirmation will be demanded first):
```
$ sudo -u peertube NODE_CONFIG_DIR=/var/www/peertube/config NODE_ENV=production npm run prune-storage
```
### optimize-old-videos.js
Before version v1.0.0-beta.16, Peertube did not specify a bitrate for the transcoding of uploaded videos.
This means that videos might be encoded into very large files that are too large for streaming. This script
re-transcodes these videos so that they can be watched properly, even on slow connections.
```
$ sudo -u peertube NODE_CONFIG_DIR=/var/www/peertube/config NODE_ENV=production npm run optimize-old-videos
```
### update-host.js
If you started PeerTube with a domain, and then changed it you will have invalid torrent files and invalid URLs in your database.
To fix this, you have to run:
```
$ sudo -u peertube NODE_CONFIG_DIR=/var/www/peertube/config NODE_ENV=production npm run update-host
```
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