- Read this document on github.com/FreshRSS/FreshRSS/ to get the correct links and pictures.
- Version française
FreshRSS is a self-hosted RSS feed aggregator like Leed or Kriss Feed.
It is lightweight, easy to work with, powerful, and customizable.
It is a multi-user application with an anonymous reading mode. It supports custom tags. There is an API for (mobile) clients, and a Command-Line Interface.
Thanks to the WebSub standard (formerly PubSubHubbub), FreshRSS is able to receive instant push notifications from compatible sources, such as Mastodon, Friendica, WordPress, Blogger, FeedBurner, etc.
Finally, it supports extensions for further tuning.
Feature requests, bug reports, and other contributions are welcome. The best way to contribute is to open an issue on GitHub. We are a friendly community.
- Official website: https://freshrss.org
- Demo: https://demo.freshrss.org/
- License: GNU AGPL 3
FreshRSS comes with absolutely no warranty.
- User documentation, where you can discover all the possibilities offered by FreshRSS
- Administrator documentation for detailed installation and maintenance related tasks
- Developer documentation to guide you in the source code of FreshRSS and to help you if you want to contribute
- Contributor guidelines for those who want to help improve FreshRSS
- A recent browser like Firefox / IceCat, Internet Explorer 11 / Edge (minus a few details), Chromium / Chrome, Opera, Safari.
- Works on mobile (except a few features)
- Light server running Linux or Windows
- It even works on Raspberry Pi 1 with response time under a second (tested with 150 feeds, 22k articles)
- A web server: Apache2 (recommended), nginx, lighttpd (not tested on others)
- PHP 5.6+ (PHP 7+ recommended for higher performance)
- Required extensions: cURL, DOM, JSON, XML, session, ctype, and PDO_MySQL or PDO_SQLite or PDO_PGSQL
- Recommended extensions: GMP (for API access on 32-bit platforms), IDN (for Internationalized Domain Names), mbstring (for Unicode strings), iconv (for charset conversion), ZIP (for import/export), zlib (for compressed feeds)
- MySQL 5.5.3+ or MariaDB equivalent, or SQLite 3.7.4+, or PostgreSQL 9.5+
See the list of releases.
- Use the master branch if you need less frequent stable versions.
- Use the dev branch if you want a rolling release with the newest features, or help testing or developing the next stable version.
- Get FreshRSS with git or by downloading the archive
- Put the application somewhere on your server (expose only the
./p/
folder to the Web) - Add write access to the
./data/
folder for the webserver user - Access FreshRSS with your browser and follow the installation process
- or use the Command-Line Interface
- Everything should be working :) If you encounter any problems, feel free to contact us.
- Advanced configuration settings can be found in config.default.php and modified in
data/config.php
. - When using Apache, enable
AllowEncodedSlashes
for better compatibility with mobile clients.
More detailed information about installation and server configuration can be found in our documentation.
- For better security, expose only the
./p/
folder to the Web.- Be aware that the
./data/
folder contains all personal data, so it is a bad idea to expose it.
- Be aware that the
- The
./constants.php
file defines access to the application folder. If you want to customize your installation, look here first. - If you encounter any problem, logs are accessible from the interface or manually in
./data/users/*/log*.txt
files.- The special folder
./data/users/_/
contains the part of the logs that are shared by all users.
- The special folder
- The date and time in the right-hand column is the date declared by the feed, not the time at which the article was received by FreshRSS, and it is not used for sorting.
- In particular, when importing a new feed, all of its articles will appear at the top of the feed list regardless of their declared date.
FreshRSS supports further customizations by adding extensions on top of its core functionality. See the repository dedicated to those extensions.
FreshRSS supports access from native apps for Linux, Android, iOS, and OS X, via two distinct APIs.
There is more information available about our Google Reader compatible API on the page mobile access.
Supported clients are:
- Android
- News+ with News+ Google Reader extension (Closed source)
- FeedMe 3.5.3+ (Closed source)
- EasyRSS (Open source, F-Droid)
- GNU/Linux
- FeedReader 2.0+ (Open source)
- iOS
- Reeder (Commercial)
- MacOS
- Vienna RSS (Open source)
- Reeder (Commercial)
See our Fever API documentation page.
Supported clients are:
- Android
- Readably (Closed source)
- iOS
- Fiery Feeds (Closed source)
- Unread (Commercial)
- MacOS
- Readkit (Commercial)