A JavaScript port of tvhProxy which is a program that translates the Tvheadend API to emulate a HDHomeRun API. This is particularly useful to connect Plex's DVR feature to Tvheadend.
To be able to stream from Tvheadend through Plex, you need to set up an anonymous user in Tvheadend that has streaming rights. You can do this in the users section, by creating a user *
:
Head over to the release section and download the binary for your platform. It will come with a config/config.yml
that you can edit to reflect your setup, and you can simply run antennas
in the console and the server will start up and start proxying Tvheadend over to Plex!
Right now, due to Docker networking issues, the best way to get this working is by running it directly through node.
- Set up Node locally
- Clone this repo:
git clone https://github.com/TheJF/antennas.git
or download the source code directly from releases and extract it - Run
yarn install
ornpm install
to install dependencies - In the directory where it was extracted, run
node index.js
(Note, Node version must be above 7)
To run it as a daemon:
node index.js >/dev/null 2>&1 &
Another way to get it running is to run it using Docker. Note that some functionality is currently not quite working when hosting this as a Docker container, namely, discovery from Plex. But with that warning, if you so choose to continue using Docker, the instructions are below.
To start a Docker container running Antennas, run the command below. Note you must replace the ANTENNAS_URL
and TVHEADEND_URL
value to match your setup:
docker run -p 5004:5004 -e ANTENNAS_URL=http://x.x.x.x:5004 -e TVHEADEND_URL=http://replace:[email protected]:9981 thejf/antennas
To view if the configurations have been passed correctly, you can point your browser to where you are hosting Antennas (in the above example, it would be http://x.x.x.x:5004
but this is a placeholder address that needs to be changed) and you should see a summary of your configurations on the page:
Alternatively, you can set it with all the available environment variables:
docker create --name=antennas
-e ANTENNAS_URL=http://x.x.x.x:5004
-e TVHEADEND_URL=http://replace:[email protected]:9981
-e TUNER_COUNT=6
-p 5004:5004
thejf/antennas
And then docker start antennas
Or, you can try by mounting a volume, set by yourself in path/to/config, that will need a config.yml to work. Example of a config.yml is available here, or below:
tvheadend_url: http://replace:[email protected]:9981
antennas_url: http://x.x.x.x:5004
tuner_count: 6
docker create --name=antennas -v <path/to/config>:/antennas/config -p 5004:5004 thejf/antennas
- Set up
config.yml
(see configuration instructions here) where you pointed the config volume (what you replaced<path/to/config>
with - Finally,
docker start antennas
Antennas can be configured either via the config.yml or environment variables. Environment variables take precedence over the config.yml.
Antennas will look for three values inside a config/config.yml
file. They are:
tvheadend_url
: This is the path to your Tvheadend setup, with username, password, and port. Plex doesn't likelocalhost
so it's best to find your own local IP and put this in if Tvheadend and Plex are running on the same network. For example:http://user:[email protected]:9981
tuner_count
: This is for the number of tuners in Tvheadend.
If you want to set environment variables instead of modifying the config.yml, you can do so. The environment variable names are the same than the config.yml, except capitalized. So, TVHEADEND_URL
and TUNER_COUNT
.
- Fork it ( https://github.com/thejf/antennas/fork )
- Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
- Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
- Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
- Create a new Pull Request