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Keppler

Real time code sharing for your lectures and presentations.

Install / Use

/learn @brunosimon/Keppler
About this skill

Quality Score

0/100

Supported Platforms

Universal

README

Keppler

Real time code sharing for your lectures and presentations.

Website

What is keppler

Start keppler inside your project folder, share the URL with your audience and start coding. Any time you save a file, viewers will receive those changes. They can browse through the files, go back in history, copy the code, download the project, preview images, chat with other viewers, ask the presenter to slow down, etc.

<img width="700" src="https://github.com/brunosimon/keppler/raw/master/resources/screenshots/screen-project-1.png" alt="Keppler screen"> <img width="700" src="https://github.com/brunosimon/keppler/raw/master/resources/screenshots/screen-project-2.png" alt="Keppler screen"> <img width="700" src="https://github.com/brunosimon/keppler/raw/master/resources/screenshots/screen-project-3.png" alt="Keppler screen">

User instructions

1 - Install Keppler globally

You must have NodeJS and NPM already installed. In your console, run:

<sup>(You may need to add sudo at start)</sup>

npm install -g keppler

2 - Launch Keppler inside your project folder

In your console, navigate to your project folder. Then launch Keppler:

cd ./my-awesome-project
keppler

Keppler should open in your default browser and start watching any changes you make inside the folder.

3 - Share the URL with your audience

Simply share the URL that should appear and your audience will have access to your code through Keppler. By default, you must be on the same network.

Configuration

You can add configuration arguments when calling Keppler.

keppler "My project" --debug 0 --port 1234 --exclude "node_modules/**" --open true --test true --limit 200 --max-file-size 99999

And you can use shortcuts for those same arguments.

keppler "My project" -d 0 -p 1234 -e "node_modules/**" -oti -l 200 -m 99999

All those arguments are optional. You can simply run Keppler.

keppler

Arguments list

||Debug level| |---|---| |parameter|--debug| |shortcut|--d| |default value|(number)1| |description|How much logs should be shown<br>0: almost no log<br>1: primary logs<br>2: too much logs|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--name| |shortcut|-n| |default value|(string) folder name| |description|Project name<br>(you can simply add a string after keppler keyword like keppler "My project")|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--exclude| |shortcut|-e| |default value|(string)**/.DS_Store,**/node_modules/**,**/vendor/**,**/.git,**/.vscode,**/.env,**/.log,.idea/**,**/*___jb_old___,**/*___jb_tmp___| |description|List of paths to exclude (glob pattern with comma seperation)|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--open| |shortcut|-o| |default value|(bool)true| |description|Open Keppler in default browser|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--test| |shortcut|-t| |default value|(bool)false| |description|Start a test project with demo contents<br>:warning: Only for development purpose|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--limit| |shortcut|-l| |default value|(number)99| |description|Limit of files above which nothing will be sent at start<br>:warning: Too much files may cause issues|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--max-file-size| |shortcut|-m| |default value|(number)99999| |description|Maximum file size in octets<br>(99999 ≈ 100ko)|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--server| |shortcut|-s| |default value|(bool)false| |description|Start keppler server only<br>(if you want to run an online instance)|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--host| |shortcut|-h| |default value|(string)``| |description|Server host<br>(if you want to connect to an online instance)|

||| |---|---| |parameter|--port| |shortcut|-p| |default value|(number)1571| |description|Server port|

Online instance

You can run Keppler online. Anyone with access to the server will be able to see the projects without having to be on the same network as you.

Keppler doesn't provide any host solution. You'll have to use your own server.

On the server

Install Node.js

Install keppler

npm install -g keppler

Start a keppler instance with the --server parameter

keppler --server

On you local machine

Start keppler with the --host parameter and server domain as the value

keppler "My awesome project" --host 12.34.56.78

Features

  • Work in any modern browser
  • File tree
  • Fuzzy search
  • File history/versions
  • File versions differences
  • Easy copy to clipboard
  • Accessible by anyone on the same network
  • App like design
  • Syntax coloring
  • Multiple projects in one Keppler instance
  • Chat with other viewers and associate specific files and lines with your messages
  • Open in default browser
  • Download file button
  • Download project button
  • Alert button
  • Tooltips
  • Online support

Developer instructions

Structure

/app/: Keppler front part /bin/: Main folder only containing index.js that will run what's located in /lib/ folder /lib/: Keppler application classes /resources/: Random resources (not directly use) /site/: Website /text/: Demo folder

Tasks

Installation

  • npm install

Keppler application

  • npm run demo-folder: To run the Keppler application with a demo project located in /test/
  • npm run app-dev: To run the Keppler front part (you'll need to run keppler application in order to have the front to connect to something)
  • npm run app-build: To build the front part
  • npm run dev: To run both demo-folder and app-dev

Website

  • npm run site-dev: To run the website
  • npm run site-build: To build the website
  • npm run site-deploy: To deploy the website to GitHub Pages

Requirements

  • Install EditorConfig on your editor
  • Install ESLint on your editor

Deployment

  • npm run app-build to build the app
  • npm version major|minor|patch to update the version (will create a commit)
  • git commit --amend to update the commit message and add :bookmark: at the beginning (GitMoji)
  • git push to push to GitHub
  • npm publish to send to NPM (you need to be logged in and have the right to update Keppler on NPM)

Credits

Development
UX / UI
  • Tom Bonnike
  • Thibaud Vaubourg
  • Aymeric Sans
  • Axel Chalon
View on GitHub
GitHub Stars1.9k
CategoryDevelopment
Updated1mo ago
Forks103

Languages

JavaScript

Security Score

95/100

Audited on Mar 5, 2026

No findings