Muse is a **highly-opinionated midwestern self-hosted** Discord music bot **that doesn't suck**. It's made for small to medium-sized Discord servers/guilds (think about a group the size of you, your friends, and your friend's friends). ![Hero graphic](.github/hero.png) ## Features - 🎥 Livestreams - ⏩ Seeking within a song/video - 💾 Local caching for better performance - 📋 No vote-to-skip - this is anarchy, not a democracy - ↔️ Autoconverts playlists / artists / albums / songs from Spotify - ↗️ Users can add custom shortcuts (aliases) - 1️⃣ Muse instance supports multiple guilds - ✍️ Written in TypeScript, easily extendable - ❤️ Loyal Packers fan ## Running Muse is written in TypeScript. You can either run Muse with Docker (recommended) or directly with Node.js. Both methods require API keys passed in as environment variables: - `DISCORD_TOKEN` can be acquired [here](https://discordapp.com/developers/applications) by creating a 'New Application', then going to 'Bot'. - `SPOTIFY_CLIENT_ID` and `SPOTIFY_CLIENT_SECRET` can be acquired [here](https://developer.spotify.com/dashboard/applications) with 'Create a Client ID'. - `YOUTUBE_API_KEY` can be acquired by [creating a new project](https://console.developers.google.com) in Google's Developer Console, enabling the YouTube API, and creating an API key under credentials. Muse will log a URL when run. Open this URL in a browser to invite Muse to your server. Muse will DM the server owner after it's added with setup instructions. ### Versioning The `master` branch acts as the developing / bleeding edge branch and is not guaranteed to be stable. When running a production instance, I recommend that you use the [latest release](https://github.com/codetheweb/muse/releases/). ### 🐳 Docker There are a variety of image tags available: - `:2`: versions >= 2.0.0 - `:2.1`: versions >= 2.1.0 and < 2.2.0 - `:2.1.1`: an exact version specifier - `:latest`: whatever the latest version is (Replace empty config strings with correct values.) ```bash docker run -it -v "$(pwd)/data":/data -e DISCORD_TOKEN='' -e SPOTIFY_CLIENT_ID='' -e SPOTIFY_CLIENT_SECRET='' -e YOUTUBE_API_KEY='' codetheweb/muse:latest ``` This starts Muse and creates a data directory in your current directory. **Docker Compose**: ```yaml version: '3.4' services: muse: image: codetheweb/muse:latest restart: always volumes: - ./muse:/data environment: - DISCORD_TOKEN= - YOUTUBE_API_KEY= - SPOTIFY_CLIENT_ID= - SPOTIFY_CLIENT_SECRET= ``` ### Node.js **Prerequisites**: Node.js, ffmpeg 1. `git clone https://github.com/codetheweb/muse.git && cd muse` 2. Copy `.env.example` to `.env` and populate with values 3. I recommend checking out a tagged release with `git checkout v[latest release]` 4. `yarn install` (or `npm i`) 5. `yarn build` (or `npm run build`) 6. `yarn start` (or `npm run start`) **Note**: if you're on Windows, you may need to manually set the ffmpeg path. See [#345](https://github.com/codetheweb/muse/issues/345) for details. ## ⚙️ Additional configuration (advanced) ### Cache By default, Muse limits the total cache size to around 2 GB. If you want to change this, set the environment variable `CACHE_LIMIT`. For example, `CACHE_LIMIT=512MB` or `CACHE_LIMIT=10GB`. ### Bot-wide commands If you have Muse running in a lot of guilds (10+) you may want to switch to registering commands bot-wide rather than for each guild. (The downside to this is that command updates can take up to an hour to propagate.) To do this, set the environment variable `REGISTER_COMMANDS_ON_BOT` to `true`.