forked from forks/microblog.pub
3.4 KiB
3.4 KiB
microblog.pub
A self-hosted, single-user, ActivityPub powered microblog.
Still in early development.
Features
- Implements a basic ActivityPub server (with federation)
- Compatible with Mastodon and others (Pleroma, Hubzilla...)
- Also implements a remote follow compatible with Mastodon instances
- Exposes your outbox as a basic microblog
- Implements IndieAuth endpoints (authorization and token endpoint)
- U2F support
- You can use your ActivityPub identity to login to other websites/app
- Admin UI with notifications and the stream of people you follow
- Allows you to attach files to your notes
- Privacy-aware image upload endpoint that strip EXIF meta data before storing the file
- No JavaScript, that's it, even the admin UI is pure HTML/CSS
- Easy to customize (the theme is written Sass)
- mobile-friendly theme
- with dark and light version
- Microformats aware (exports
h-feed
,h-entry
,h-cards
, ...) - Exports RSS/Atom feeds
- Comes with a tiny HTTP API to help posting new content and performing basic actions
- Easy to "cache" (the external/public-facing microblog part)
- With a good setup, cached content can be served most of the time
- You can setup a "purge" hook to let you invalidate cache when the microblog was updated
- Deployable with Docker (Docker compose for everything: dev, test and deployment)
- Focus on testing
- Tested against the official ActivityPub test suite ([ ] TODO submit the report)
- CI runs some local "federation" tests
- Manually tested against Mastodon
- Project is running an up-to-date instance
ActivityPub
microblog.pub implements an ActivityPub server, it implements both the client to server API and the federated server to server API.
Compatible with Mastodon (which is not following the spec closely), but will drop OStatus messages.
Activities are verified using HTTP Signatures or by fetching the content on the remote server directly.
Running your instance
Installation
$ git clone
$ make css
$ cp -r config/me.sample.yml config/me.yml
Configuration
$ make password
Deployment
$ docker-compose up -d
Development
The most convenient way to hack on microblog.pub is to run the server locally, and run
# One-time setup
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
# Start the Celery worker, RabbitMQ and MongoDB
$ docker-compose -f docker-compose-dev.yml up -d
# Run the server locally
$ MICROBLOGPUB_DEBUG=1 FLASK_APP=app.py flask run -p 5005 --with-threads
Contributions
PRs are welcome, please open an issue to start a discussion before your start any work.