Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
100 lines (76 loc) · 5.95 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

100 lines (76 loc) · 5.95 KB
logo

Stub

A self-hostable modified fork of Dub: An open-source link shortener.


Introduction

Stub is a heavily modified fork of Dub: An open-source link shortener with built-in analytics using Next.js and Redis.

Warning This is still a work in progress. For a single-user instance, this works fine. User management doesn't exist yet.

Why a fork of Dub?

Dub relies a lot on serverless services (Vercel, Upstash) and wasn't all that good to self-host on your own server. There was also some hardcoded domains to dub.sh which wouldn't work when self-hosting. Stub serves to have a nice link shortener like Dub that can be hosted on your own server.

Differences

  • Stripe and Plausible modules were removed.
  • @upstash/redis was replaced with ioredis, which caused a bit of problems and I ended up restructuring link routing like in the next point.
  • Dub uses Next.js middleware to route links, but the middleware itself is limited to edge functionality, which wouldn't work for Redis outside of Upstash's Redis client (which is just calling endpoints). The router was instead made into a separate node HTTP server hosted on a separate port (default 3001). This also allows for index links with no hassle. (Using :index as a key lets you create an index link!)
  • Getting location data is different since Dub used Vercel's geolocation data. Instead, Stub will lookup geo data from GeoLite2. (Make sure that you set your trust proxy variables correctly, or else you will get a default "Userland" location!)
  • Users now have types, with users being able to be superadmins, or regular admins that can create projects. By default, users cannot create projects and will have to be invited to other projects by managers. This system is somewhat similar to Weblate.
    • Superadmins have control of instance-wide settings, like enabling or disabling new users, or limiting new users to certain e-mails. (example)
  • Stub supports more login methods other than magic link e-mails, like Discord or GitHub OAuth logins.

Tech Stack

Implementation

Stub is split into two applications, the app itself and the router. The router is a basic HTTP server that route links and handle clicks. Dub uses Next.js middleware to route links, but middleware itself is limited to edge functionality.

Redis is used as the database for storing links and analytics data, which works well for key-value data types. Redis also has the Sorted Set data type, which is perfect for storing & retrieving time-series analytics data. Here's the full schema:

  • {hostname}:{key} – string containing a JSON object with the target URL and password (optional). Also has an optional TTL.
  • {hostname}:clicks:{key} – sorted set of all clicks for a given link (e.g. dub.sh:clicks:github)

Deploy Your Own

Manual

Make sure you have Node.js v16 installed. You could install newer versions of Node, but next-auth is restricted to some versions and you will need to add --ignore-engines while installing dependencies.

You can build Stub with these commands:

git clone https://github.com/Snazzah/stub
cd stub
yarn install # --ignore-engines
yarn migrate
yarn generate
yarn build

From here, you can launch the app with yarn start and launch the router with yarn start:router. You can also start both with yarn start:all.

If you have filled in the STUB_ADMIN_EMAIL environment variable and logged in with your authentication provider of choice, you should see a shield next to your profile picture showing that you are a superadmin, and can create projects. If not, you can run yarn manage set-superadmin [email protected] to set that user with that e-mail as a superadmin.

After creating a project, you can make sure that domain is being pointed to the router's port (default 3001, can be set from ROUTER_PORT) and you can check your project settings to confirm if that domain works.

Docker

npx degit github:Snazzah/stub/docker stub-docker
cd stub-docker
# Fill out the .env variables
docker compose up -d

Upgrading docker containers

You can do this by sticking with the existing docker-compose and just pull the latest images and then restart:

# Fetch latest versions of the images
docker compose pull
# Stop and destroy the containers
docker compose down
# Spawn new containers in the background
docker compose up -d
# Follow the logs during upgrade
docker compose logs -f

Contributing

  • Open an issue if you believe you've encountered a bug.
  • Make a pull request to add new features/make quality-of-life improvements/fix bugs.

License

Just like Dub, Stub is open-source under the GNU Affero General Public License Version 3 (AGPLv3) or any later version. You can find it here.