Home

Awesome

PiGallery2

GitHub package.json version Language grade: JavaScript Build Status Coverage Status Docker build dependencies Status

Homepage: http://bpatrik.github.io/pigallery2/

This is a fast (like faster than your PC fast) directory-first photo gallery website, optimised for running on low resource servers (especially on raspberry pi).

✔️ Strengths:

⛔ Weakness:

You wrote about pigallery2.

Live Demo

Live Demo @ render: https://pigallery2.onrender.com/

PiGallery2 - Animated gif demo

Table of contents

  1. Getting started
  2. Translate the page to your own language
  3. Feature list
  4. Suggest/endorse new features
  5. Known errors
  6. Credits

1. Getting started (also works on Raspberry Pi)

1.1 Install and Run with Docker (recommended)

Docker with docker-compose is the official and recommend way of installing and running Pigallery2. It contains all necessary dependencies, auto restarts on reboot, supports https, easy to upgrade to newer versions. For configuration and docker-compose files read more here or check all builds here.

1.2 Direct Install (if you are familiar with Node.js and building npm packages from source)

As an alternative, you can also directly install Node.js and the app and run it natively.

1.2.0 Install Node.js

Download and extract

curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_12.x | sudo -E bash -
sudo apt-get install -y nodejs

Full node install on raspberry pi description: https://www.w3schools.com/nodejs/nodejs_raspberrypi.asp

1.2.1 Install PiGallery2

1.2.1-a Install from release

cd ~
wget https://github.com/bpatrik/pigallery2/releases/download/1.9.0/pigallery2-release.zip
unzip pigallery2-release.zip -d pigallery2
cd pigallery2
npm install

1.2.1-b Install from source

Note: A build requires a machine with around 2GB or memory.

cd ~
wget https://github.com/bpatrik/pigallery2/archive/master.zip
unzip master.zip
cd pigallery2-master # enter the unzipped directory
npm install
npm run build

Note: It is recommended to create a release version with npm run create-release on a more powerful machine and deploy that to you server.

Note: you can use npm run create-release -- --languages=fr,ro to restrict building to the listed languages (English is added by default)

1.2.2 Run PiGallery2

npm start

To configure it, run PiGallery2 first to create config.json file, then edit it and restart. The app has a nice UI for settings, you may use that too.

Default user: admin pass: admin. (It is not possible to change the admin password, you need to create another user and delete the default admin user, see #220)

Note: First run, you might have file access issues and port 80 issue, see #115. Running npm start -- --Server-port=8080 will start the app on port 8080 that does not require root Adding read/write permissions to all files can solve the file access issue chmod -R o-w ., see #98.

1.2.2.1 Run on startup

You can run the app up as a service to run it on startup. Read more at #42

1.3 Advanced configuration

You can set up the app any of the following ways:

  1. Using the UI (recommended)
  2. Manually editing the config.json
  3. Through switches
    • Like: node start -- --Server-port=3000 --Client-authenticationRequired=false
    • You can check the generated config.json for the config hierarchy
  4. Through environmental variable
    • like set env. variable Server-port to 3000

Full list of configuration options are available at the MANPAGE.md.

1.4 Useful links/tips:

using nginx

It is recommended to use a reverse proxy like nginx before node https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5009324/node-js-nginx-what-now

making https

With cerbot & nginx it is simple to set up secure connection. You have no excuse not doing so. https://certbot.eff.org/

node install error:

If you get error during module installation, make sure you have everything to build node modules from source

apt-get install build-essential  libkrb5-dev gcc g++

2. Translate the page to your own language

  1. Install Pigallery2 from source (with the release it won't work)
  2. add your language e.g: fr
    • copy src/frontend/translate/messages.en.xlf to src/frontend/translate/messages.fr.xlf
    • add the new translation to the angular.json projects->pigallery2->i18n->locales section
  3. translate the file by updating the <target> tags
  4. test if it works: build and start the app
    npm install
    npm run build
    npm start
    
  5. (optional) create a pull request at github to add your translation to the project.

Note: you can also build your own release with as described in 1.1.1-b Install from source;

3. Feature list

See: http://bpatrik.github.io/pigallery2/

4. Suggest/endorse new features

Unfortunately, I only have a limited time for this hobby project of mine. And I mostly focus on those features that are align with my needs. Sorry :(. Although, I try to fix bugs ASAP (that can still take from a few days to months). The recommended way of extending the projects is to implement the feature as an extension. See #743. If the extension framweork is not powerfull enough, so you can't implement your feature, you are welcome to open a FR bug and I will consider adding that. If you really want to contribute and think that your feature has a place in the mainapp, look at CONTRIBUTING.md for some guidance.

5. Known errors

6. Supporting the project

I'm making this app for my own entertainment, but I like to share it with others as the contributions and bug reports make the app better and it also does not cost anything to me :)

There is no way to donate to this project at the moment. And I'm also not planning on monetizing it. But it warms my hearth seeing that it is useful for some people.

6. Credits

Crossbrowser testing sponsored by Browser Stack <img src="https://camo.githubusercontent.com/a7b268f2785656ab3ca7b1cbb1633ee5affceb8f/68747470733a2f2f64677a6f7139623561736a67312e636c6f756466726f6e742e6e65742f70726f64756374696f6e2f696d616765732f6c61796f75742f6c6f676f2d6865616465722e706e67" alt="Browser Stack" height="31px" style="background: cornflowerblue;">