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web-wall

Create dashboards aggregating data from different websites and displaying them on a single page.

In many cases this is easy to achieve when the dashboards are loaded by a computer plugged to the displays or TVs. But if your options are limited to using a TV browser instead, then web-wall can help you to achieve a similar result.

Web-wall captures periodical screenshots of the websites you want in your dashboard and displays them in a single page.

web-wall example

How it works

The server has two endpoints:

Endpoint Description
GET / returns the HTML content for the page displaying the wall - invoked by the browser.
GET /screenshots returns a Json response containing a map of urls (key) to base64 encoded images (values) - invoked by the HTML page to periodically fetch the screenshots configured. The response is gzip encoded.

Configuration

Config file

Configure the refresh interval and the URLs you want to fetch in the file config/default.json.

Attributes

Attribute Type Description Mandatory
refreshInterval number refresh interval in seconds Y
columns number number of columns to display in the grid Y
websites[].url string the URL to fetch Y
websites[].headers object key-value map of request headers N
websites[].cookies array list of cookies (as string) to send as part of the request N
websites[].authentication object credentials to use for basic authentication N

Example

[~/web-wall]$ cat config/default.json
{
  "refreshInterval": 10,
  "columns": 2,
  "websites": [
    {
      "url": "https://time.is/",
      "headers": {
        "Accept-Language": "en-US,en;q=0.5"
      },
      "cookies": [
        "id=unicorn; Expires=Wed, 1 Dec 2021 23:59:00 GMT;"
      ],
      "authentication": {
        "username": "foo",
        "password": "bar"
      }
    },
    {
      "url": "https://www.epochconverter.com/"
    }
  ]
}%

Environment variables

These variables are used to template the HTML page so that it can talk to the server.

Variable Description
SERVER_SCHEME server request scheme
SERVER_HOST server hostname
SERVER_PORT server port

Run it

Docker

[~/.]$ docker run -p 8080:8080 docker.pkg.github.com/paoloboni/web-wall/web-wall

Override the configuration

Assuming you created a configuration file customised-config.json under your home directory:

[~/.]$ docker run \
    -p 8080:8080 \
    -v $(pwd)/customised-config.json:/usr/src/config/default.json \
    docker.pkg.github.com/paoloboni/web-wall/web-wall

Environment variables

You can use the same environment variables listed above to configure server port, host and request scheme.

For instance, you may want to run the container on the port 9090 instead of the default one:

[~/.]$ docker run \
    -e SERVER_PORT=9090 \
    -p 9090:9090 \
    docker.pkg.github.com/paoloboni/web-wall/web-wall

Locally

The only requirement is to have Node.js installed.

Install the dependencies

[~/web-wall]$ npm install

Run the server

[~/web-wall]$ npm start

> [email protected] start
> node app/server.js

app listening at http://localhost:8080

Run the tests

[~/web-wall]$ npm test

Caveats

The server runs on Node.js which, due to its architectural limitations, makes the process hard to scale on a single instance.

If you have to serve a large number of walls, the advice is to configure and run one instance for each wall, as opposed to serve a different page for each wall.