Improve installation instructions to prepare for comprehensive Docker
Compose documentation launch, clarifying setup steps and addressing
common deployment questions to reduce onboarding friction.
Enhance README by incorporating content from LaSuite Docs, adding
comprehensive list of other LaSuite Meet instances, and refining
presentation details to improve project discoverability and onboarding.
Revamp README to be more engaging and informative.
Goal: Foster a true open-source spirit by making it easier for
contributors to engage, interact, and contribute.
Heavily inspired by PostHog's excellent README.
Based on @rouja instructions, try to document the Tilt stack,
to enhance the DX of any newcomers, discovering Meet and trying
to run it on K8s.
Having a shared/common onboarding documentation on Tilt with
Impress, Regie, and Meet would be amazing.
Especially, to document how to install Tilt and its dependencies.
Important: The frontend is not deployed locally using the production
target, and I feel important to document it.
LiveKit CLI is essential to interact with the running server and its
ecosystem.
I recommend installing it, as you can list rooms, find participant identity,
create egress to record room, etc.
It helped a lot debugging the Egress service, and discovering its features.
I have updated all references of "Impress" to "Meet".
Few environment variables were updated, keycloak was including
the realm's name as a base URL for API endpoints.
Run the command 'npm create vite@latest' to bootstrap a new frontend project.
Please note, other elements of the project still use yarn, to avoid confusion
let's use npm instead.
Vite was chosen over Next.Js for its simplicity; Next.Js could be kind of a
black box where a lot of magics happen.
This commit introduces a boilerplate inspired by https://github.com/numerique-gouv/impress.
The code has been cleaned to remove unnecessary Impress logic and dependencies.
Changes made:
- Removed Minio, WebRTC, and create bucket from the stack.
- Removed the Next.js frontend (it will be replaced by Vite).
- Cleaned up impress-specific backend logics.
The whole stack remains functional:
- All tests pass.
- Linter checks pass.
- Agent Connexion sources are already set-up.
Why clear out the code?
To adhere to the KISS principle, we aim to maintain a minimalist codebase. Cloning Impress
allowed us to quickly inherit its code quality tools and deployment configurations for staging,
pre-production, and production environments.
What’s broken?
- The tsclient is not functional anymore.
- Some make commands need to be fixed.
- Helm sources are outdated.
- Naming across the project sources are inconsistent (impress, visio, etc.)
- CI is not configured properly.
This list might be incomplete. Let's grind it.