Windows AME uses AMEEncodingLog.txt in the version directory. macOS AME uses Adobe Media Encoder Log.txt in the logs subdirectory. Updated readAMELogs() to check for both naming conventions: 1. First tries Windows filenames (AMEEncodingLog.txt) 2. Falls back to macOS filenames (Adobe Media Encoder Log.txt) This allows the job manager to work with either platform. Also updated docstring to document platform differences in both log file locations and encoding (Windows uses UTF-16 LE, macOS uses UTF-8). Co-Authored-By: Claude Haiku 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com> |
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|---|---|---|
| public | ||
| .dockerignore | ||
| .env.example | ||
| ame-log-parser.js | ||
| CHANGES.md | ||
| docker-compose.yml | ||
| Dockerfile | ||
| entrypoint.sh | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| package-lock.json | ||
| package.json | ||
| prproj-remapper.js | ||
| README.md | ||
| server.js | ||
| test-remap.js | ||
AME Remote Job Manager
A web-based job submission and monitoring tool for Adobe Media Encoder (AME) in a Grassvalley AMPP environment. Editors upload .prproj files through the browser, the server remaps .gves proxy paths to high-resolution UNC paths, then delivers the remapped project to AME's watch folder for automated rendering.
How It Works
- Editor uploads a Premiere Pro
.prprojfile via the web UI - The server parses and remaps any
.gvesproxy media paths to their high-res UNC equivalents - The remapped project file is written to AME's watch folder
- AME picks up the file, renders it, and writes output to the output folder
- The job manager polls both folders and updates job status automatically:
queued → encoding → complete
Features
.prprojpath remapping — replaces.gvesproxy references with full-resolution UNC paths- Dry-run analysis mode — inspect what paths would be remapped before submitting
- Real-time job status tracking via watch folder and output folder polling
- AME log parsing — reads
AMEEncodingLog.txtand error logs for encoding stats - SMB/UNC path configuration via the settings UI
- Session-based authentication
- Docker-ready with volume-backed persistent storage
Prerequisites
- Docker and Docker Compose (with
SYS_ADMINcapability enabled for SMB mounting) - Adobe Media Encoder running on a Windows machine with a configured watch folder
- SMB network share accessible at
//172.18.210.5/amecontaining:watch— folder where .prproj files are picked up by AMEoutput— folder where AME writes encoded fileslogs— folder where AME writesAMEEncodingLog.txt
- Network connectivity from Docker host to SMB server
.prprojfiles that reference.gvesproxy media on the AMPP platform
Quick Start
- Clone the repo and copy the example env file:
cp .env.example .env
- Edit
.env:
PORT=3100
AUTH_USER=admin
AUTH_PASS=changeme
# Docker volume mount paths
WATCH_FOLDER=/watch
OUTPUT_FOLDER=/output
AME_LOG_DIR=/ame-logs
# Polling interval (ms)
POLL_INTERVAL_MS=5000
# Job timeout — mark as error if AME hasn't produced output after this long (ms)
JOB_TIMEOUT_MS=3600000
- Mount the SMB share on the Docker host (one-time setup):
# Create mount point
sudo mkdir -p /mnt/smb-ame
# Mount the SMB share (adjust credentials/IP as needed)
sudo mount -t cifs //172.18.210.5/ame /mnt/smb-ame \
-o username=smb,password=Production2020!,uid=1000,gid=1000,file_mode=0755,dir_mode=0755,vers=3.0
# Verify mount succeeded
mount | grep cifs
- Configure
docker-compose.ymlwith bind-mounts to subdirectories, then start:
docker compose up -d
- Open
http://localhost:3100in your browser and log in.
Docker Compose Configuration
The key to this architecture is binding SMB subdirectories from the host into the container paths the app expects:
services:
ame-job-manager:
build: .
ports:
- "3100:3100"
volumes:
# Bind SMB subdirectories from host into container
# The host must have these mounted (e.g., at /mnt/smb-ame) from the SMB server
- /mnt/smb-ame/Watch:/watch # Where AME watches for new .prproj files
- /mnt/smb-ame/Output:/output # Where AME writes encoded output
- /mnt/smb-ame/Logs:/ame-logs # Where AME writes AMEEncodingLog.txt
# Persistent storage for job records and session data
- app_data:/data
- upload_tmp:/tmp/uploads
env_file: .env
restart: unless-stopped
volumes:
app_data:
upload_tmp:
Important: The paths /mnt/smb-ame/Watch, /mnt/smb-ame/Output, and /mnt/smb-ame/Logs must exist on the Docker host after mounting. Create them if they don't exist:
mkdir -p /mnt/smb-ame/{Watch,Output,Logs}
Architecture: Docker Container with Host-Level SMB Mounting
The job manager runs in Docker but needs access to SMB network shares for the watch folder, output folder, and AME logs. The architecture accomplishes this by:
- Host-level SMB mount: The Docker host mounts the SMB share using native Linux
mount -t cifs, making it available at a path like/mnt/smb-ame - Bind-mounts from host to container:
docker-compose.ymlbinds specific subdirectories from the host into the container:/mnt/smb-ame/Watch→/watch(inside container)/mnt/smb-ame/Output→/output(inside container)/mnt/smb-ame/Logs→/ame-logs(inside container)
- Application accesses local paths: The Node.js app reads/writes to
/watch,/output,/ame-logsas if they were local, unaware of the SMB infrastructure
Why This Approach?
We chose host-level SMB mounting over container-level mounting for several reasons:
- Capability constraints: Docker requires
SYS_ADMINcapability andapparmor=unconfinedto mount CIFS from within a container. This introduces security surface and may fail depending on host kernel/Docker daemon version. - Reliability: SMB mounts are more stable and persistent when managed by the host OS (systemd,
/etc/fstab) rather than ephemeral container entrypoint scripts. - Separation of concerns: The container doesn't need to know or care about SMB credentials—the host handles authentication, the container just accesses mounted paths.
- Volume flexibility: If the SMB share is ever replaced with local storage or a different protocol, only the host mount needs to change; the container remains unaware.
SMB Network Share Configuration
The watch folder, output folder, and logs are expected to be on a shared network location (SMB/CIFS). The Docker host must mount this share at the path specified in docker-compose.yml volumes.
Configuration Steps
-
Start the container (it will run with fallback Docker volumes if no SMB credentials yet)
-
Open the Settings panel in the web UI (⚙️ icon in header)
-
Fill in SMB credentials:
- SMB Username: e.g.,
encoderorDOMAIN\encoder - SMB Password: Network password (stored server-side, never exposed to browser)
- SMB Domain/Workgroup: Optional, e.g.,
WORKGROUPorBMG - Notes: Optional reference, e.g.,
\\172.18.210.5\ame
- SMB Username: e.g.,
-
Create subdirectories on the SMB share (if they don't exist):
\\172.18.210.5\ame\ ├── watch\ (AME's watch folder) ├── output\ (AME's output folder) └── logs\ (Contains AMEEncodingLog.txt) -
Restart the container — it will mount the SMB share on next startup
Troubleshooting SMB Mount Issues
- Mount failed: Check that credentials are correct and the SMB server is reachable
- Permission denied: Verify the SMB user has read/write access to the share
- Container falls back to local volumes: Check Docker logs for mount errors:
docker logs ame-job-manager - Shares already mounted locally: If the watch/output/logs folders are already mounted on the Docker host via
/etc/fstab, use bind-mounts indocker-compose.ymlinstead:
volumes:
- /mnt/host-smb-share/watch:/watch
- /mnt/host-smb-share/output:/output
- /mnt/host-smb-share/logs:/ame-logs
In this case, you don't need to configure SMB credentials in the app settings.
Job Lifecycle
| Status | Meaning |
|---|---|
queued |
File written to watch folder, waiting for AME to pick it up |
encoding |
File disappeared from watch folder — AME is actively rendering |
complete |
Output file detected in the output folder |
error |
Job timed out or AME log reported an error |
The server polls both folders every POLL_INTERVAL_MS milliseconds to detect status transitions.
Path Remapping
The core function of this tool is to make .prproj files renderable on a high-res render machine. Premiere projects created on AMPP workstations often reference .gves proxy files. This server rewrites those references to the corresponding UNC/high-res paths before handing the project to AME.
The remapping logic lives in prproj-remapper.js. You can test a remap without submitting a job using the analyze endpoint or the dry-run button in the UI.
API Reference
| Method | Endpoint | Description |
|---|---|---|
| POST | /api/login |
Authenticate and get a session ID |
| POST | /api/logout |
End session |
| POST | /api/jobs |
Submit a .prproj file and create a job |
| POST | /api/jobs/analyze |
Dry-run analysis of a .prproj (no submission) |
| GET | /api/jobs |
List all jobs |
| GET | /api/jobs/:id |
Get a single job by ID |
| DELETE | /api/jobs/:id |
Delete a job record |
| GET | /api/status |
System status — folder health, job counts, AME log stats |
| GET | /api/ame/logs |
Full AME log data with recent entries |
| GET | /api/settings |
Get current settings |
| POST | /api/settings |
Update settings (watch folder, SMB config, etc.) |
All endpoints except /api/login require an x-session-id header from a valid login.
Environment Variables
| Variable | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
PORT |
3100 |
HTTP port |
AUTH_USER |
admin |
Login username |
AUTH_PASS |
password |
Login password |
WATCH_FOLDER |
/watch |
Path AME watches for new projects |
OUTPUT_FOLDER |
/output |
Path AME writes rendered output to |
DATA_DIR |
/data |
Persistent storage for job records and sessions |
UPLOAD_TEMP |
/tmp/uploads |
Temp dir for incoming file uploads |
POLL_INTERVAL_MS |
5000 |
How often to poll watch/output folders (ms) |
JOB_TIMEOUT_MS |
3600000 |
Time before a stuck job is marked as error (ms) |
AME_LOG_DIR |
/ame-logs |
Directory containing AMEEncodingLog.txt |
Architecture Decisions
Host-Level SMB Mounting (Final Approach)
Decision: Mount the SMB share on the Docker host at /mnt/smb-ame, then bind-mount individual subdirectories into the container.
Why not container-level mounting?
- Container-level CIFS mounting requires Docker
SYS_ADMINcapability and disabling AppArmor, introducing security risks - Host kernel version or Docker daemon configuration may not support container-level mounts
- SMB credentials in container entrypoint scripts are harder to manage and rotate
Why not a single mount point?
- Initial implementation mounted
/mnt/smb-ameas/smb-sharein the container, then created separate Docker volumes for/watch,/output,/ame-logs - This caused uploaded files to go to ephemeral Docker volumes instead of the SMB share
- Fixed by binding each SMB subdirectory directly to its container path
Final solution:
- Host mounts SMB at
/mnt/smb-ame(persists in/etc/fstabor systemd automount) docker-compose.ymlspecifies three bind-mounts:- /mnt/smb-ame/Watch:/watch - /mnt/smb-ame/Output:/output - /mnt/smb-ame/Logs:/ame-logs- App reads/writes to
/watch,/output,/ame-logsas local paths - Files automatically appear on the SMB share where AME can access them
Separation of Concerns
The Docker container intentionally does NOT handle SMB mounting. This separation ensures:
- Security: SMB credentials live on the host, never in container code or
.envfiles - Reliability: Host OS manages mount persistence; container restart doesn't affect SMB access
- Portability: Container works with any mounted filesystem (SMB, NFS, local, etc.) — no protocol assumptions
- Operations: Infrastructure team manages storage layer; application team manages app container
Why .prproj Path Remapping?
The core value of this tool is translating proxy-resolution Premiere projects to high-resolution paths:
- AMPP Workflow: Editors on Grassvalley AMPP workstations edit with
.gvesproxy media for responsiveness - Problem: AME on a dedicated render machine can't resolve
.gvespaths — they're relative to AMPP infrastructure - Solution: Before handing the project to AME, rewrite all
.gvesreferences to their corresponding high-resolution UNC paths - Result: AME can render the full-resolution media without the editor needing to manage two versions of the project
Why Not Auto-Generate Remappings?
The remapping rules are configured manually in the app settings because:
.gvesfiles and their high-res equivalents may not follow a consistent naming pattern- Different projects may use different proxy strategies
- Manual configuration is explicit and auditable — you can see what gets remapped and why
Troubleshooting
Files Don't Appear on SMB Share After Upload
Symptom: File appears in job queue but isn't visible at //172.18.210.5/ame/Watch on the network.
Check 1: Verify SMB is mounted on the host
mount | grep cifs
Check 2: Verify subdirectories exist and are accessible
ls -la /mnt/smb-ame/Watch
ls -la /mnt/smb-ame/Output
ls -la /mnt/smb-ame/Logs
Check 3: Verify container has the bind-mounts
docker inspect ame-job-manager | jq '.Mounts[] | {Source, Destination}'
Check 4: Verify file is actually written to /watch inside the container
docker exec ame-job-manager ls -la /watch/
If file is in /watch inside container but not on host SMB share: The bind-mount isn't working. Verify:
/mnt/smb-ame/Watchexists on the host- SMB is mounted (check
mount | grep cifs) - File permissions allow writing (
ls -la /mnt/smb-ame)
SMB Mount Fails on Host
Symptom: mount -t cifs command fails with "Permission denied" or "Connection refused"
Check credentials:
# Test with correct username/password/domain
sudo mount -t cifs //172.18.210.5/ame /mnt/smb-ame \
-o username=smb,password=YourPassword,domain=WORKGROUP
Check network connectivity:
# Can we reach the SMB server?
ping 172.18.210.5
# Can we list the share?
smbclient -L //172.18.210.5 -U smb -p YourPassword
Check subdirectories exist on the share:
smbclient //172.18.210.5/ame -U smb -p YourPassword
> ls
Container Starts but No Files Appear
Symptom: Container is running, upload succeeds, but files don't show up anywhere.
Check 1: Are there any uploads at all?
docker exec ame-job-manager find /tmp/uploads -type f
Check 2: Are files being written to /watch?
docker exec ame-job-manager ls -la /watch/
Check 3: Check Docker logs for errors during startup
docker logs ame-job-manager
Look for mount errors or permission issues in the logs.