6.5 KiB
Music Discovery
There are several ways for Koel to discover your media files. You can manually scan for songs, configure a watcher, host your files with Amazon S3, or upload files directly via the web interface.
Scan via the Web interface
:::warning Not for large libraries Scanning via the web interface is vulnerable to HTTP timeouts, so if you have a decent-sized library, opt for other methods instead. :::
Upload your songs into a readable directory on your server – preferably outside your web root dir – and configure Koel to scan and sync it by setting a "media path" under Manage → Settings.
Once set, click the "Scan" button to start the process. Koel will scan the directory and its subdirectories for audio files and add them to the database.
All popular audio formats (.mp3
, .ogg
, .aac
, .m4a
, .opus
, and .flac
) are supported.
Scan Using the CLI
You can also scan from the CLI with the artisan koel:scan
command. This method is faster, without a time or library-size limit, and provides useful feedbacks.
php artisan koel:scan
INFO Scanning /var/www/media
1189/1189 [============================] 100%
INFO Scanning completed!
⇂ 1150 new or updated song(s)
⇂ 39 unchanged song(s)
⇂ 0 invalid file(s)
Suffix the command with a -v
flag for more details e.g. scanning errors.
This command can be added as a cron job, for example to run every midnight:
0 0 * * * cd /home/user/webapps/koel/ && /usr/local/bin/php artisan koel:scan >/dev/null 2>&1
A better approach is to use Laravel’s built-in scheduler. See Command Scheduling for more details.
Upload via the Web Interface
You can upload songs directly as an admin by clicking the "Upload" sidebar menu item or just drag and drop files and folders into the web interface.
Note that if you’re not using a cloud storage (available with Koel Plus), you will need to set the media path first,
as the files will be uploaded into the %media_path%/__KOEL__UPLOADS__
directory.
Depending on how big your files are, you may want to set upload_max_filesize
and post_max_size
in your php.ini
correspondingly, or uploading may fail with a Payload too large
error.
This applies even if you’re using a cloud storage, as the files will be uploaded to your server first before being sent to the cloud.
Watch the Media Directory
You can also watch your media directory and trigger selective synchronization every time there's a change to it with the help of inotifywait
.
In order to start using the feature, follow these steps:
1. Install inotify
Tools
On CentOS for example, you can run this shell command:
sudo yum --enablerepo=epel -y install inotify-tools
2. Set Up a Watcher Script
Now you need to set up a watcher script to run inotifywait
and send the output to koel:scan
artisan command. For example, you can create a sample watch
file in Koel’s root directory with this content:
#!/bin/bash
MEDIA_PATH=/var/www/media/
PHP_BIN=/usr/local/bin/php
inotifywait -rme move,close_write,delete --format "%e %w%f" $MEDIA_PATH | while read file; do
$PHP_BIN artisan koel:sync "${file}"
done
3. Run the Watcher in the Background
Following the above example:
chmod +x watch
./watch
[Ctrl+z]
bg
disown -h
You can now verify that it works by tail -f storage/logs/laravel.log
while making changes to your media directory, for example by adding or removing applicable files via FTP.
Integration with AWS Lambda
:::warning Deprecated Though still functional, this method is deprecated in favor of configuring S3 as a cloud storage. :::
Starting from version v3.0.0, Koel can work seamlessly with Amazon S3 with the help of the official Koel-AWS package. This allows you to run Koel in your server and have all media files hosted on S3.
How It Works
- You upload media files to your S3 bucket
- S3 sends events to a Lambda function
- The Lambda function calls Koel’s API to sync the media into Koel’s database
- You create a streaming request to Koel
- Koel gets the media from S3 and streams it to you
Supports and Requirements
As of current, only mp3
, ogg
, m4a
, and flac
files are supported.
Step-by-Step Installation
1. Prepare S3 for Streaming
- Create an IAM user, e.g.
koel-user
- Create a bucket, e.g.
koel-bucket
- Make sure
koel-user
can readkoel-bucket
's content. You can simply attach theAmazonS3ReadOnlyAccess
policy tokoel-user
. - Allow CORS on
koel-bucket
<CORSConfiguration> <CORSRule> <AllowedOrigin>*</AllowedOrigin> <AllowedMethod>GET</AllowedMethod> <MaxAgeSeconds>3000</MaxAgeSeconds> <AllowedHeader>Authorization</AllowedHeader> </CORSRule> </CORSConfiguration>
2. Configure Lambda for Syncing
- Clone Koel-AWS's repository:
git clone https://github.com/phanan/koel-aws
- Install necessary packages:
cd koel-aws && npm install --production
- Copy
.env.example
into.env
and edit the variables there - Zip the whole directory's content into something like
archive.zip
- In AWS Lambda console, create a Lambda function with the following information:
:::info AWS region Make sure you're creating the function in the same region withName: koel-lambda Runtime: Node.js Code entry type: Upload a .ZIP file (you'll upload the zip file created in step 4 here) Handler: index.handler Role: S3 execution role (a new window will appear, where you can just click next next and next) Memory (MB): 128 should be fine Timeout: 0min 10sec VPC: "No VPC" should be fine
koel-bucket
. :::
3. Configure S3 to send events to Lambda
Under koel-bucket
"Events" section, create an event with the following details:
Name: <Just leave it blank>
Events: ObjectCreated(All), ObjectRemoved(All)
Prefix: <Empty>
Suffix: <Empty>
Send To: Lambda function
Lambda function: koel-lambda
4. Configure Koel to Stream from S3
If everything works properly, you can now upload media files to the bucket, and they should appear in Koel. Now after you populate koel-user
's AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
, and AWS_REGION
into your Koel's .env
file, Koel will start streaming media from your S3.