Xibo Content Management System
Xibo is a powerful Open Source Digital Signage platform with a web content management system and Windows display player
software. We have commercial player options for Android, LG webOS and Samsung Tizen, as well as CMS hosting and support.
See https://xibosignage.com for more information.
Our first open source release 1.0.0-rc1 landed in 2009, and we’re committed to keeping everything you need to run a
digital signage network, or single screen, open source and free to use.
Copyright © 2006-2024 Xibo Signage Ltd and Contributors.
Xibo is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or any later version.
Xibo is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty
of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License along with Xibo.
If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
We recommend installing an official release via Docker. Instructions for doing so can be found in our
documentation.
Please only install a Development environment if you intend make code changes to Xibo. Installing from the
repository is not suitable for a production installation.
Xibo uses Docker to ensure all contributors have a repeatable development environment which is easy to get up and
running. The very same Docker containers are used in our recommended end user installation to promote consistency
from development to deployment.
To these ends this repository includes a docker-compose.yml
file to spin up a model development environment.
The development Docker containers do not automatically build vendor files for PHP or JS, this is left as a developer
responsibility. Therefore you will need the following tools:
Create a folder in your development workspace and clone the repository. If you intend to make changes and submit
pull requests please Fork us first and create a new branch.
git clone [email protected]:<your_id>/xibo-cms.git xibo-cms
We maintain the following branches. To contribute to Xibo please use the develop
branch as your base.
Change into your new folder
cd xibo-cms
We recommend installing the dependencies via Docker, so that you are guarenteed consistent dependencies across
different development machines.
docker run --interactive --tty --volume $PWD:/app --volume ~/.composer:/tmp composer install
This command also mounts the Composer /tmp
folder into your home directory so that you can take advantage of
Composer caching.
If you have installed node locally:
npm install webpack -g
npm install
npm run build
Alternatively you can use a Docker container:
docker run -it --volume $PWD:/app --volume ~/.npm:/root/.npm -w /app node:22 sh -c "npm install webpack -g; npm install; npm run build;"
The development version of Xibo expects the code base to be mapped into the container such that changes on the host
are reflected in the container.
However, the container itself creates some files, such as the twig cache and library uploads. These locations will need
to be created and the container given access to them.
The easiest way to do this is to make the cache
and library
folders and chmod 777
them. Obviously this is not
suitable for production, but you shouldn’t be using these files for production (we have containers for that).
The API requires a pub/private RSA keypair and an encryption key to be provided. The docker entrypoint will create
these in /library/certs
.
You can override the generated keys paths and encryption key by providing an alternative in settings-custom.php
.
For example:
$apiKeyPaths = [
'publicKeyPath' => '/var/www/cms/custom/public.key',
'privateKeyPath' => '/var/www/cms/custom/private.key',
'encryptionKey' => ''
];
Xibo can present the OpenOOH venue classifications in the display edit form. For this functionality to work in
development, it is necessary
to download the latest file and
place it in here: openooh/specification.json
The production/CI containers add this file during the build process so that it is already available in the Docker
image.
Use Docker Compose to bring up the containers.
docker-compose up --build -d
After the containers have come up you should be able to login with the details:
U: xibo_admin
P: password
To parse the translations:
docker-compose exec web sh -c "cd /var/www/cms; rm -R ./cache"
docker-compose exec web sh -c "cd /var/www/cms; php bin/locale.php"
find ./locale ./cache ./lib ./web -iname "*.php" -print0 | xargs -0 xgettext --from-code=UTF-8 -k_e -k_x -k__ -o locale/default.pot
To import translations:
bzr pull lp:~dangarner/xibo/holmes-translations
Convert to mo
format:
for i in *.po; do msgfmt "$i" -o $(echo $i | sed s/po/mo/); done
Move the resulting mo
files into your locale
folder.
To generate a swagger.json
file, with the dev containers running:
docker-compose exec web sh -c "cd /var/www/cms; vendor/bin/swagger lib -o web/swagger.json"
To find out more about the application code and how everything fits together, please refer to
the developer docs.
We would be delighted to accept contributions to the project - please refer to
CONTRIBUTING.md for further information.
We’ve built commercial products and services on top of our open source project. If you want to support our work the
best way is to become a customer. We’re committed to keeping our project open
source either way!
Support requests can be reported on the Xibo Community Forum. Verified,
re-producable bugs with this repository can be reported in
the Xibo parent repository.