mirror of
https://github.com/tubearchivist/tubearchivist-frontend.git
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130 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
130 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
![Tube Archivist](assets/tube-archivist-banner.jpg?raw=true "Tube Archivist Banner")
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<center><h1>Your self hosted YouTube media server</h1></center>
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## Core functionality
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* Subscribe to your favorite YouTube channels
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* Download Videos using **yt-dlp**
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* Index and make videos searchable
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* Play videos
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* Keep track of viewed and unviewed videos
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## Screenshots
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![home screenshot](assets/tube-archivist-screenshot-home.png?raw=true "Tube Archivist Home")
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*Home Page*
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![channels screenshot](assets/tube-archivist-screenshot-channels.png?raw=true "Tube Archivist Channels")
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*All Channels*
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![single channel screenshot](assets/tube-archivist-screenshot-single-channel.png?raw=true "Tube Archivist Single Channel")
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*Single Channel*
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![video page screenshot](assets/tube-archivist-screenshot-video.png?raw=true "Tube Archivist Video Page")
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*Video Page*
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![video page screenshot](assets/tube-archivist-screenshot-download.png?raw=true "Tube Archivist Video Page")
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*Downloads Page*
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## Problem Tube Archivist tries to solve
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Once your YouTube video collection grows, it becomes hard to search and find a specific video. That's where Tube Archivist comes in: By indexing your video collection with metadata from YouTube, you can organize, search and enjoy your archived YouTube videos without hassle offline through a convenient web interface.
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## Installation
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Take a look at the example `docker-compose.yml` file provided. Tube Archivist depends on three main components split up into separate docker containers:
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### Tube Archivist
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The main Python application that displays and serves your video collection, built with Django.
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- Serves the interface on port `8000`
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- Needs a mandatory volume for the video archive at **/youtube**
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- And another recommended volume to save the cache for thumbnails and artwork at **/cache**.
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- The environment variables `ES_URL` and `REDIS_HOST` are needed to tell Tube Archivist where Elasticsearch and Redis respectively are located.
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- The environment variables `HOST_UID` and `HOST_GID` allows Tube Archivist to `chown` the video files to the main host system user instead of the container user.
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### Elasticsearch
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Stores video meta data and makes everything searchable. Also keeps track of the download queue.
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- Needs to be accessible over the default port `9200`
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- Needs a volume at **/usr/share/elasticsearch/data** to store data
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Follow the [documentation](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/docker.html) for additional installation details.
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### Redis JSON
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Functions as a cache and temporary link between the application and the file system. Used to store and display messages and configuration variables.
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- Needs to be accessible over the default port `6379`
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- Takes an optional volume at **/data** to make your configuration changes permanent.
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## Getting Started
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1. Go through the **settings** page and look at the available options. Particularly set *Download Format* to your desired video quality before downloading. **Tube Archivist** downloads the best available quality by default.
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2. Subscribe to some of your favorite YouTube channels on the **channels** page.
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3. On the **downloads** page, click on *Rescan subscriptions* to add videos from the subscribed channels to your Download queue or click on *Add to download queue* to manually add Video IDs, links, channels or playlists.
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4. Click on *Download queue* and let Tube Archivist to it's thing.
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5. Enjoy your archived collection!
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## Import your existing library
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So far this depends on the video you are trying to import to be still available on YouTube to get the metadata. Add the files you like to import to the */cache/import* folder. Then start the process from the settings page *Manual media files import*. Make sure to follow one of the two methods below.
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### Method 1:
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Add a matching *.json* file with the media file. Both files need to have the same base name, for example:
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- For the media file: \<base-name>.mp4
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- For the JSON file: \<base-name>.info.json
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- Alternate JSON file: \<base-name>.json
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**Tube Archivist** then looks for the 'id' key within the JSON file to identify the video.
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### Method 2:
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Detect the YouTube ID from filename, this accepts the default yt-dlp naming convention for file names like:
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- \<base-name>[\<youtube-id>].mp4
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- The YouTube ID in square brackets at the end of the filename is the crucial part.
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### Some notes:
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- This will **consume** the files you put into the import folder: Files will get converted to mp4 if needed (this might take a long time...) and moved to the archive, *.json* files will get deleted upon completion to avoid having duplicates on the next run.
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- Maybe start with a subset of your files to import to make sure everything goes well...
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- Follow the logs to monitor progress and errors: `docker-compose logs -f tubearchivist`.
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## Potential pitfalls
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### vm.max_map_count
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**Elastic Search** in Docker requires the kernel setting of the host machine `vm.max_map_count` to be set to at least 262144.
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To temporary set the value run:
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```
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sudo sysctl -w vm.max_map_count=262144
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```
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To apply the change permanently depends on your host operating system:
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- For example on Ubuntu Server add `vm.max_map_count = 262144` to the file */etc/sysctl.conf*.
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- On Arch based systems create a file */etc/sysctl.d/max_map_count.conf* with the content `vm.max_map_count = 262144`.
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- On any other platform look up in the documentation on how to pass kernel parameters.
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### Permissions for elasticsearch
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If you see a message similar to `AccessDeniedException[/usr/share/elasticsearch/data/nodes]` when initially starting elasticsearch, that means the container is not allowed to write files to the volume.
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That's most likely the case when you run `docker-compose` as an unprivileged user. To fix that issue, shutdown the container and on your host machine run:
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```
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chown 1000:0 /path/to/mount/point
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```
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This will match the permissions with the **UID** and **GID** of elasticsearch within the container and should fix the issue.
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## Roadmap
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This should be considered as a **minimal viable product**, there is an extensive list of future functions and improvements planned.
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### Functionality
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- [ ] Access control
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- [ ] User roles
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- [ ] Delete videos and channel
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- [ ] Create playlists
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- [ ] Backup and restore
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- [ ] Podcast mode to serve channel as mp3
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- [ ] Implement [PyFilesystem](https://github.com/PyFilesystem/pyfilesystem2) for flexible video storage
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- [X] Scan your file system to index already downloaded videos [2021-09-14]
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### UI
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- [ ] Show similar videos on video page
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- [ ] Multi language support
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- [ ] Grid and list view for both channel and video list pages
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- [ ] Show total video downloaded vs total videos available in channel
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## Known limitations
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- Video files created by Tube Archivist need to be **mp4** video files for best browser compatibility.
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- Every limitation of **yt-dlp** will also be present in Tube Archivist. If **yt-dlp** can't download or extract a video for any reason, Tube Archivist won't be able to either.
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- For now this is meant to be run in a trusted network environment.
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