# RSS to ActivityPub Converter 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/ ## Requirements This requires Node.js v10.10.0 or above. ## Installation 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: ```js { "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 on `PORT_HTTPS`: the https port that Express runs on `PRIVKEY_PATH`: point this to your private key you got from Certbot or similar `CERT_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. ## Sending out updates to followers There is also a file called `updateFeeds.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. ## Local testing You can use a service like [ngrok](https://ngrok.com/) 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. ## Database This server uses a SQLite database to keep track of all the data. There are two tables in the database: `accounts` and `feeds`. ### `accounts` This table keeps track of all the data needed for the accounts. Columns: * `name` `TEXT PRIMARY KEY`: the account name, in the form `thename@example.com` * `privkey` `TEXT`: the RSA private key for the account * `pubkey` `TEXT`: the RSA public key for the account * `webfinger` `TEXT`: the entire contents of the webfinger JSON served for this account * `actor` `TEXT`: the entire contents of the actor JSON served for this account * `apikey` `TEXT`: the API key associated with this account * `followers` `TEXT`: 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"]` * `messages` `TEXT`: not yet used but will eventually store all messages so we can render them on a "profile" page ### `feeds` This table keeps track of all the data needed for the feeds. Columns: * `feed` `TEXT PRIMARY KEY`: the URI of the RSS feed * `username` `TEXT`: the username associated with the RSS feed * `content` `TEXT`: the most recent copy fetched of the RSS feed's contents ## License Copyright (c) 2018 Darius Kazemi. Licensed under the MIT license.