The calibre Content server
==============================
The calibre :guilabel:`Content server` allows you to access your calibre
libraries and read books directly in a browser on your favorite mobile phone or
tablet device. As a result, you do not need to install any dedicated book
reading/management apps on your phone. Just use the browser. The server
downloads and stores the book you are reading in an off-line cache so that you
can read it even when there is no internet connection.
.. contents:: Contents
:depth: 2
:local:
To start the server, click the :guilabel:`Connect/share` button and choose
:guilabel:`Start Content server`. You might get a message from your computer's
firewall or anti-virus program asking if it is OK to allow access to
``calibre.exe``. Click the ``Allow`` or ``OK`` button. Then open a browser
(preferably Chrome or Firefox) in your computer and type in the following
address:
http://127.0.0.1:8080
This will open a page in the browser showing you your calibre libraries, click
on any one and browse the books in it. Click on a book, and it will show you
all the metadata about the book, along with buttons to :guilabel:`Read` and
:guilabel:`Download` the book. Click the :guilabel:`Read` button to start
reading the book.
.. note:: The address used above ``http://127.0.0.1:8080`` will only work on
the computer that is running calibre. To access the server from other
computers/phones/tablets/etc. you will need to do a little more work,
as described in the next section.
Accessing the Content server from other devices
---------------------------------------------------
There are two types of remote device access that you will typically need. The
first, simpler kind is from within your home network. If you are running
calibre on a computer on your home network and you have also connected your
other devices to the same home network, then you should be easily able to
access the server on those devices.
Accessing the server from devices on your home network
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
After starting the server in calibre as described above, click the
:guilabel:`Connect/share` button again. Instead of the :guilabel:`Start Content
server` action, you should see a :guilabel:`Stop Content server` action
instead. To the right of this action will be listed an IP address
and port number. These look like a bunch of numbers separated by periods. For
example::
Stop Content server [192.168.1.5, port 8080]
These numbers tell you what address to use to connect to the server in your
devices. Following the example above, the address becomes::
http://192.168.1.5:8080
The first part of the address is always ``http://`` the next part is the IP
address, which is the numbers before the comma and finally we have the port
number which must be added to the IP address with a colon (``:``). If you are
lucky, that should be all you need and you will be looking at the
calibre libraries on your device. If not, read on.
Trouble-shooting the home network connection
__________________________________________________
If you are unable to access the server from your device, try the following
steps:
#. Check that the server is running by opening the address
``http://127.0.0.1:8080`` in a browser running on the same computer as
the server.
#. Check that your firewall/anti-virus is allowing connections to your
computer on the port ``8080`` and to the calibre program. The
easiest way to eliminate the firewall/anti-virus as the source of
problems is to temporarily turn them both off and then try connecting. You
should first disconnect from the internet, before turning off the
firewall, to keep your computer safe.
#. Check that your device and computer are on the same network. This means
they should both be connected to the same wireless router. In particular
neither should be using a cellular or ISP provided direct-WiFi connection.
#. If you have non-standard networking setup, it might be that the IP
address shown on the :guilabel:`Connect/share` menu is incorrect.
In such a case you will have to figure out what the correct IP address
to use is, yourself. Unfortunately, given the infinite diversity of
network configurations possible, it is not possible to give you a
roadmap for doing so.
#. If you have setup a username and password, first try it without that
to see if it is causing issues. Some e-ink devices have browsers that
do not handle authentication. You can sometimes workaround this by
including the username and password in the URL, for example:
``http://username:password@192.168.1.2:8080``.
#. If you are stuck, you can always ask for help in the `calibre user forums`_.
Accessing the server from anywhere on the internet
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. warning::
Before doing this you should turn on username/password protection in the
server, otherwise anyone in the world will be able to access your books.
Go to :guilabel:`Preferences->Sharing->Sharing over the net` and enable the
option to :guilabel:`Require username and password to access the content
server`.
While the particular details on setting up internet access vary depending on
the network configuration and type of computer you are using, the basic schema
is as follows.
#. Find out the external IP address of the computer you are going to run the
server on. You can do that by visiting the site `What is my IP address
`_ in a browser running on the computer.
#. If the computer is behind a router, enable port forwarding on the router
to forward the port ``8080`` (or whatever port you choose to run the
calibre Content server on) to the computer.
#. Make sure the calibre server is allowed through any firewalls/anti-virus
programs on your computer.
#. Now you should be able to access the server on any internet-connected
device using the IP address you found in the first step. For example,
if the IP address you found was ``123.123.123.123`` and the port you are
using for the calibre server is ``8080``, the address to use on your
device becomes: ``http://123.123.123.123:8080``.
#. Optionally, use a service like `no-ip `_ to
setup an easy to remember address to use instead of the IP address you
found in the first step.
.. note::
For maximum security, you should also enable HTTPS on the Content server.
You can either do so directly in the server by providing the path to
the HTTPS certificate to use in the advanced configuration options for
the server, or you can setup a reverse proxy as described below, to use
an existing HTTPS setup.
The server interface
-----------------------
The server interface is a simplified version of the main calibre interface,
optimised for use with touch screens. The home screen shows you books
you are currently reading as well as allowing to choose a calibre library you
want to browse. The server in calibre gives you access to all your libraries,
not just a single one, as before.
The book list
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The server book list is a simple grid of covers. Tap on a cover to see the
detailed metadata for a book, or to read the book. If you prefer a more
detailed list, you can change the default view by clicking the three vertical
dots in the top right corner.
Sorting and searching of the book list should be familiar to calibre users.
They can be accessed by clicking their icons in the top right area. They both
work exactly the same as in the main calibre program. The search page even
allows you to construct search queries by clicking on authors/tags/etc., just as
you can using the Tag browser in the main program.
A much loved feature of the main program, :guilabel:`Virtual libraries` is
present in the server interface as well. Click the three vertical dots in the
top right corner to choose a Virtual library.
The book reader
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
You can read any book in your calibre library by simply tapping on
it and then tapping the :guilabel:`Read` button. The book reader
is very simple to operate. You can both tap and swipe to turn pages. Swiping
up/down skips between chapters. Tapping the top quarter of the screen gets you
the detailed controls and viewer preferences.
If you leave the Content server running, you can even open the same book on
multiple devices and it will remember your last read position. If it does not
you can force a sync by tapping in the top quarter and choosing
:guilabel:`Sync`.
Browser support
------------------
The new calibre server makes lots of use of advanced HTML 5 and CSS 3 features.
As such it requires an up-to-date browser to use. It has been tested on Android
Chrome and iOS Safari as well as Chrome and Firefox on the desktop.
The server is careful to use functionality that has either been already
standardised or is on the standards track. As such if it does not currently
work with your favorite browser, it probably will once that browser has caught
up.
If you are using a particularly old or limited browser or you don't like to run
JavaScript, you can use the *mobile* view, by simply adding ``/mobile`` to the
server address.
.. note::
On iOS, Apple allows only a single browser engine, so Firefox, Chrome and
Safari are all actually the same browser under the hood. The new server
interface requires iOS 10.3.2 or newer. On Android, the server has been
tested with Chrome version 58 and newer.
Enabling offline support
---------------------------
Browser makers have been trying to force people to use SSL by disabling
advanced features in their browsers for plain HTTP connections. One such
casualty is ApplicationCache, which was what was used in calibre for offline
support. As a result now-a-days sadly, offline mode works only as long as you
keep the browser tab open. In addition, in Firefox on Android, you will need to
type ``about:config`` and create a preference called ``browser.tabs.useCache``
and set it to ``true``.
Managing user accounts from the command-line only
-----------------------------------------------------
The calibre program has a nice section in :guilabel:`Preferences` to allow you
to manage user accounts for the server. However, if you want to run the
standalone server and cannot run the main calibre program on the same
computer/user account, you can also manage users using just the command-line.
You can manage user accounts using the ``--manage-users`` option
to the standalone ``calibre-server`` program. Suppose you want to store
the user database in the folder ``/srv/calibre``, then you create it
by running::
calibre-server --userdb /srv/calibre/users.sqlite --manage-users
Just follow the prompts to create user accounts, set their permission, etc.
Once you are done, you can run the server as::
calibre-server --userdb /srv/calibre/users.sqlite --enable-auth
It will use the user accounts you created in the previous step.
Integrating the calibre Content server into other servers
------------------------------------------------------------
Here, we will show you how to integrate the calibre Content server into another
server. The most common reason for this is to make use of SSL or to serve the
calibre library as part of a larger site. The basic technique is to run the
calibre server and setup a reverse proxy to it from the main server.
A reverse proxy is when your normal server accepts incoming requests and passes
them onto the calibre server. It then reads the response from the calibre
server and forwards it to the client. This means that you can simply run the
calibre server as normal without trying to integrate it closely with your main
server.
Using a full virtual host
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The simplest configuration is to dedicate a full virtual host to the calibre
server. In this case, run the calibre server as::
calibre-server
Now setup the virtual host in your main server, for example, for nginx::
http {
client_max_body_size 64M; # needed to upload large books
}
server {
listen [::]:80;
server_name myserver.example.com;
location / {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080;
}
}
Or, for Apache::
LoadModule proxy_module modules/mod_proxy.so
LoadModule proxy_http_module modules/mod_proxy_http.so
ServerName myserver.example.com
AllowEncodedSlashes On
ProxyPreserveHost On
ProxyPass "/" "http://localhost:8080/"
Using a URL prefix
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
If you do not want to dedicate a full virtual host to calibre, you can have it
use a URL prefix. Start the calibre server as::
calibre-server --url-prefix /calibre --port 8080
The key parameter here is ``--url-prefix /calibre``. This causes the Content server to serve all URLs prefixed by ``/calibre``. To see this in action, visit ``http://localhost:8080/calibre`` in your browser. You should see the normal Content server website, but now it will run under ``/calibre``.
With nginx, the required configuration is::
http {
client_max_body_size 64M; # needed to upload large books
}
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
location /calibre/ {
proxy_buffering off;
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080$request_uri;
}
location /calibre {
# we need a trailing slash for the Application Cache to work
rewrite /calibre /calibre/ permanent;
}
For Apache, first enable the proxy modules in Apache, by adding the following to :file:`httpd.conf`::
LoadModule proxy_module modules/mod_proxy.so
LoadModule proxy_http_module modules/mod_proxy_http.so
The exact technique for enabling the proxy modules will vary depending on your Apache installation. Once you have the proxy modules enabled, add the following rules to :file:`httpd.conf` (or if you are using virtual hosts to the conf file for the virtual host in question)::
AllowEncodedSlashes On
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule ^/calibre/(.*) http://127.0.0.1:8080/calibre/$1 [proxy]
RedirectMatch permanent ^/calibre$ /calibre/
That's all, you will now be able to access the calibre Content server under the ``/calibre`` URL in your main server. The above rules pass all requests under ``/calibre`` to the calibre server running on port 8080 and thanks to the ``--url-prefix`` option above, the calibre server handles them transparently.
.. note::
When using a reverse proxy, you should tell the calibre Content server to
only listen on localhost, by using ``--listen-on 127.0.0.1``. That way,
the server will only listen for connections coming from the same computer,
i.e. from the reverse proxy.
.. note::
If you have setup SSL for your main server, you should tell the calibre
server to use basic authentication instead of digest authentication, as it
is faster. To do so, pass the ``--auth-mode=basic`` option to
``calibre-server``.
.. _calibre user forums: https://www.mobileread.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=166
Creating a service for the calibre server on a modern Linux system
--------------------------------------------------------------------
You can easily create a service to run calibre at boot on a modern
(`systemd `_)
based Linux system. Just create the file
``/etc/systemd/system/calibre-server.service`` with the contents shown below::
[Unit]
Description=calibre Content server
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=mylinuxuser
Group=mylinuxgroup
ExecStart=/opt/calibre/calibre-server "/path/to/calibre library folder"
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Change ``mylinuxuser`` and ``mylinuxgroup`` to whatever user and group you want
the server to run as. This should be the same user and group that own the files
in the calibre library folder. Note that it is generally not a good idea to
run the server as root. Also change the path to the calibre library
folder to suit your system. You can add multiple libraries if needed. See
the help for the ``calibre-server`` command.
Now run::
sudo systemctl start calibre-server
to start the server. Check its status with::
sudo systemctl status calibre-server
To make it start at boot, run::
sudo systemctl enable calibre-server
.. note::
The calibre server *does not* need a running X server, but it does need
the X libraries installed as some components it uses link against them.
.. note::
The calibre server also supports systemd socket activation, so you can use
that, if needed, as well.