Project

General

Profile

Wiki » History » Version 20

Josip Almasi, 05/07/2021 01:55 PM

1 4 Josip Almasi
{{toc}}
2
3 1 Josip Almasi
h1. Welcome!
4 2 Josip Almasi
5 18 Josip Almasi
h2. External resources
6 4 Josip Almasi
7 14 Josip Almasi
Demo site: https://www.vrspace.org/
8
9 15 Josip Almasi
Github project page: https://github.com/jalmasi/vrspace
10 2 Josip Almasi
11 16 Josip Almasi
OpenSource.com article (motivation): https://opensource.com/article/20/12/virtual-reality-server
12 3 Josip Almasi
13 15 Josip Almasi
VR Days video (features, technologies): https://vimeo.com/475142708
14 3 Josip Almasi
15 15 Josip Almasi
Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLdSg22i9MZ3u7ityj_PBxw
16 1 Josip Almasi
17 16 Josip Almasi
Facebook page: https://fb.com/vrspace.org
18 14 Josip Almasi
19
Client API jsdoc: https://www.vrspace.org/docs/jsdoc/index.html
20
21
Server javadoc: https://www.vrspace.org/docs/javadoc/index.html?overview-summary.html
22 4 Josip Almasi
23 17 Josip Almasi
h1. Frequently Asked Questions
24
25
h2. Is this open source, free to use and share?
26
27
Yes, it's all free and open. Server and client code is published under Apache 2 license, all 3D models published by their respective authors under Creative Commons Attribution license.
28
29
h2. Is there any documentation?
30
31
This is good place to start, this page links to all available resources.
32
33
h2. How many users can share a “world/space” simultaneously?
34
35
By default, number of users per space is not limited. There is a server parameter to limit that (org.vrspace.server.maxSessions) that can be specified either in config file or command line. Users that hit the limit remain in the queue for configurable timeout (org.vrspace.server.sessionStartTimeout, zero by default) until someone leaves. An error is raised on timeout.
36
37 4 Josip Almasi
h1. Setting up development environment
38
39
Here's all you need to start development on Windows.
40 20 Josip Almasi
Linux distributions include all these tools as native packages, so no additional downloads should be required.
41 4 Josip Almasi
42
h2. Basic setup
43
44
h3. Git bash
45
46
IDEs can work with github directly, but whatever you ask, you'll get a command line answer.
47
Command line git is simply a must have. Bash also includes a lot of goodies like ssh.
48
49
https://git-scm.com/downloads
50
51
h3. Java
52
53
Java 8 will work, java 11 recommended. Get it either from Oracle or elsewhere, e.g. Zulu OpenJDK: https://www.azul.com/downloads/zulu-community/?package=jdk
54
55
h3. Node.js
56
57
Node is used by IDE to evaluate javascript. You'll also may need it if you modify any of babylon.js source.
58
Mind that IDE will complain if you installed unsupported version of Node; should that happen, remove Node, and install latest one supported.
59
60
Get it from https://nodejs.org/
61
62 19 Josip Almasi
h3. Maven
63
64
Apache Maven is used to build the server from command prompt.
65
66
Get it from https://maven.apache.org/download.cgi
67
68
69 4 Josip Almasi
h3. IDE
70
71
Eclipse for Java developers (not enterprise), with Spring and Web plugins:
72
73
Download eclipse here: https://www.eclipse.org/
74
75
And then go to Help -> Eclipse Marketplace
76
Search and install Spring Tools 4 and Wild Web Developer plugins.
77
78 6 Josip Almasi
You'll also need to download and install https://projectlombok.org/
79 8 Josip Almasi
Once done, restart the eclipse.
80 6 Josip Almasi
81 5 Josip Almasi
h2. Import and start the project
82
83
In Eclipse, you can use either default or new workspace for the project.
84
Assuming you have cloned the project from the github, 
85
Go to File -> Open Projects From the Filesystem
86
Then choose vrspace directory.
87
88
This will import vrspace folders and project subfolders, click Finish.
89
90
In vrspace project folder, in src/main/java, there's org.vrspace.server.ServerApplication.java.
91
Open it, then right click on the code.
92
From the menu, choose either Run as or Debug as -> Spring Boot App.
93
94
Open http://localhost:8080/babylon/connect.html with two browsers, and navigate around.
95
96
That's all, you're all set!
97 4 Josip Almasi
98
h2. Advanced setup
99
100 12 Josip Almasi
h3. SSL
101 4 Josip Almasi
102 12 Josip Almasi
HTTPS is required for pretty much everything - WebXR, camera, mic access.
103
By default, the server runs on 8080 port with plain HTTP. To enable HTTPS, edit application.properties (found in src/main/resources), and change following properties:
104 1 Josip Almasi
105 12 Josip Almasi
<pre>
106
server.ssl.enabled=false
107
# default port 8080
108
#server.port=8443
109 13 Josip Almasi
</pre>
110 12 Josip Almasi
111
h3. Apache
112
113
Apache reverse proxy setup, linux, windows, TBD
114 4 Josip Almasi
115
h3. Docker and OpenVidu
116
117
OpenVidu voice/video chat server runs as docker image. This is only required for development of voice chat functions.
118
119 10 Josip Almasi
Local execution (development):
120 11 Josip Almasi
docker run -p 4443:4443 --rm -e OPENVIDU_SECRET=YOUR_SECRET -e DOMAIN_OR_PUBLIC_IP=YOUR_IP openvidu/openvidu-server-kms:2.17.0
121 10 Josip Almasi
122
Running on server:
123 1 Josip Almasi
https://docs.openvidu.io/en/2.17.0/deployment/deploying-on-premises/
124 11 Josip Almasi
125
Then either modify openvidu.publicurl and openvidu.secret in application.properties, or run server.jar with -Dopenvidu.publicurl=YOUR_URL and -Dopenvidu.secret=YOUR_SECRET