
Export files to Tus-compatible servers
🤖/tus/store exports encoding results to any Tus-compatible server.
Note
This Robot only accepts videos.
Warning
Vimeo's API limits the number of concurrent uploads per minute based on your Vimeo account plan. To see how many videos can be uploaded at once based on your plan, click the following link.
Installation
Since Vimeo works with OAuth, you will need to generate Template Credentials to use this Robot.
To change the title or description per video, we recommend to inject variables into your Template.
Keep your credentials safe
Usage example
Export uploaded files to the Tus live demo server:
{
"steps": {
"exported": {
"robot": "/tus/store",
"use": ":original",
"endpoint": "https://tusd.tusdemo.net/files/"
}
}
}Parameters
output_metaRecord<string, boolean> | boolean | Array<string>Allows you to specify a set of metadata that is more expensive on CPU power to calculate, and thus is disabled by default to keep your Assemblies processing fast.
For images, you can add
"has_transparency": truein this object to extract if the image contains transparent parts and"dominant_colors": trueto extract an array of hexadecimal color codes from the image.For videos, you can add the
"colorspace: true"parameter to extract the colorspace of the output video.For audio, you can add
"mean_volume": trueto get a single value representing the mean average volume of the audio file.You can also set this to
falseto skip metadata extraction and speed up transcoding.resultboolean(default:false)Whether the results of this Step should be present in the Assembly Status JSON
queuebatchSetting the queue to 'batch', manually downgrades the priority of jobs for this step to avoid consuming Priority job slots for jobs that don't need zero queue waiting times
force_acceptboolean(default:false)Force a Robot to accept a file type it would have ignored.
By default, Robots ignore files they are not familiar with. 🤖/video/encode, for example, will happily ignore input images.
With the
force_acceptparameter set totrue, you can force Robots to accept all files thrown at them. This will typically lead to errors and should only be used for debugging or combatting edge cases.usestring | Array<string> | Array<object> | objectSpecifies which Step(s) to use as input.
- You can pick any names for Steps except
":original"(reserved for user uploads handled by Transloadit) - You can provide several Steps as input with arrays:
{ "use": [ ":original", "encoded", "resized" ] }
Tip
That's likely all you need to know about
use, but you can view Advanced use cases.- You can pick any names for Steps except
endpoint— requiredstringThe URL of the Tus-compatible server, which you're uploading files to.
credentialsstringCreate Template Credentials for this Robot in your Transloadit account and use the name of the Template Credentials as this parameter's value. For this Robot, use the HTTP template, which allows request headers to be passed along to the destination server.
headersRecord<string, string>(default:{})Optional extra headers outside of the Template Credentials can be passed along within this parameter.
Although, we recommend to exclusively use Template Credentials, this may be necessary if you're looking to use dynamic credentials, which isn't a feature supported by Template Credentials.
metadataRecord<string, string>(default:{"filename":"example.png","basename":"example","extension":"png"})Metadata to pass along to destination. Includes some file info by default.
url_templatestringThe URL of the file in the Assembly Status JSON. The following Assembly Variables are supported. If this is not specified, the upload URL specified by the destination server will be used instead.
ssl_url_templatestringThe SSL URL of the file in the Assembly Status JSON. The following Assembly Variables are supported. If this is not specified, the upload URL specified by the destination server will be used instead, as long as it starts with
https.