I'm would like to say a big thanks to everyone who supported me during this project, including those who contributed either code or donations. It has been a very fruitful 6 years, but now it's time to move on to other projects. See also my [blog](https://blog.sdr.hu) about that.
(@simonyiszk, please keep this GitHub repo for historic purposes.)
Know limitations of the last version:
- Python 2.7, a main dependency of the project, will be not be officially maintained from 1 January 2020. By time, probably it will not be secure to use this version on public servers, unless someone still provides security patches for Python 2.
- Some specific parts of the DSP code could be improved for better SNR.
Even though these limitations are probably acceptable in an amateur radio project, I would not build critical infrastructure on it.
For commercial inquiries (e.g. if someone wants me to develop an improved version without these limitations), I'm still open, [drop me an e-mail](mailto:randras@sdr.hu).
----
[:floppy_disk: Setup guide for Ubuntu](http://blog.sdr.hu/2015/06/30/quick-setup-openwebrx.html) | [:blue_book: Knowledge base on the Wiki](https://github.com/simonyiszk/openwebrx/wiki/) | [:earth_americas: Receivers on SDR.hu](http://sdr.hu/)
- currently supports RTL-SDR, HackRF, SDRplay, AirSpy and many other devices, see the <ahref="https://github.com/simonyiszk/openwebrx/wiki/">OpenWebRX Wiki</a>,
- Several bugs were fixed to improve reliability and stability.
- OpenWebRX now supports compression of audio and waterfall stream, so the required network uplink bandwidth has been decreased from 2 Mbit/s to about 200 kbit/s per client! (Measured with the default settings. It is also dependent on `fft_size`.)
- *ncat* has been replaced with a custom implementation called *nmux* due to a bug that caused regular crashes on some machines. The *nmux* tool is part of the *csdr* package.
- Most consumer SDR devices are supported via <ahref="https://github.com/rxseger/rx_tools">rx_tools</a>, see the <ahref="https://github.com/simonyiszk/openwebrx/wiki/Using-rx_tools-with-OpenWebRX">OpenWebRX Wiki</a> on that.
[SDR.hu](http://sdr.hu) is a site which lists the active, public OpenWebRX servers. Your receiver [can also be part of it](http://sdr.hu/openwebrx), if you want.
If you have any problems installing OpenWebRX, you should check out the <ahref="https://github.com/simonyiszk/openwebrx/wiki">Wiki</a> about it, which has a page on the <ahref="https://github.com/simonyiszk/openwebrx/wiki/Common-problems-and-their-solutions">common problems and their solutions</a>.
OpenWebRX is available under Affero GPL v3 license (<ahref="https://tldrlegal.com/license/gnu-affero-general-public-license-v3-(agpl-3.0)">summary</a>).