This is a server that lets users convert any RSS feed to an ActivityPub actor that can be followed by users on ActivityPub-compliant social networks like Mastodon. For a demo of this in action, see https://bots.tinysubversions.com/convert/
This is based on my Express ActivityPub Server, a simple Node/Express server that supports a subset of ActivityPub.
This requires Node.js v10.10.0 or above.
You also need beanstalkd running. This is a simple and fast queueing system we use to manage polling RSS feeds. Here are installation instructions. On a production server you'll want to install it as a background process.
Clone the repository, then cd into its root directory. Install dependencies:
npm i
Then copy config.json.template to config.json:
cp config.json.template config.json
Update your new config.json file:
{
"DOMAIN": "mydomain.com",
"PORT_HTTP": "3000",
"PORT_HTTPS": "8443",
"PRIVKEY_PATH": "/path/to/your/ssl/privkey.pem",
"CERT_PATH": "/path/to/your/ssl/cert.pem"
}DOMAIN: your domain! this should be a discoverable domain of some kind like "example.com" or "rss.example.com"PORT_HTTP: the http port that Express runs onPORT_HTTPS: the https port that Express runs onPRIVKEY_PATH: point this to your private key you got from Certbot or similarCERT_PATH: point this to your cert you got from Certbot or similar
Run the server!
node index.js
Go to https://whateveryourdomainis.com:3000/convert or whatever port you selected for HTTP, and enter an RSS feed and a username. If all goes well it will create a new ActivityPub user with instructions on how to view the user.
There is also a file called queueFeeds.js that needs to be run on a cron job or similar scheduler. I like to run mine once a minute. It queries every RSS feed in the database to see if there has been a change to the feed. If there is a new post, it sends out the new post to everyone subscribed to its corresponding ActivityPub Actor.
You can use a service like ngrok to test things out before you deploy on a real server. All you need to do is install ngrok and run ngrok http 3000 (or whatever port you're using if you changed it). Then go to your config.json and update the DOMAIN field to whatever abcdef.ngrok.io domain that ngrok gives you and restart your server.
Then make sure to manually run updateFeed.js when the feed changes. I recommend having your own test RSS feed that you can update whenever you want.
This server uses a SQLite database stored in the file bot-node.db to keep track of all the data. To connect directly to the database for debugging, from the root directory of the project, run:
sqlite3 bot-node.dbThere are two tables in the database: accounts and feeds.
This table keeps track of all the data needed for the accounts. Columns:
nameTEXT PRIMARY KEY: the account name, in the form[email protected]privkeyTEXT: the RSA private key for the accountpubkeyTEXT: the RSA public key for the accountwebfingerTEXT: the entire contents of the webfinger JSON served for this accountactorTEXT: the entire contents of the actor JSON served for this accountapikeyTEXT: the API key associated with this accountfollowersTEXT: a JSON-formatted array of the URL for the Actor JSON of all followers, in the form["https://remote.server/users/somePerson", "https://another.remote.server/ourUsers/anotherPerson"]messagesTEXT: not yet used but will eventually store all messages so we can render them on a "profile" page
This table keeps track of all the data needed for the feeds. Columns:
feedTEXT PRIMARY KEY: the URI of the RSS feedusernameTEXT: the username associated with the RSS feedcontentTEXT: the most recent copy fetched of the RSS feed's contents
Copyright (c) 2018 Darius Kazemi. Licensed under the MIT license.