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Archive all episodes from your favorite podcasts

Project description

Podcast Archiver

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A fast and simple command line client to archive all episodes from your favorite podcasts.

Podcast Archiver takes the feed URLs of your favorite podcasts and downloads all available episodes for you—even those "hidden" in paged feeds. You'll end up with a complete archive of your shows. The archiver also supports updating an existing archive, so that it lends itself to be set up as a cronjob.

⚠️ Podcast Archiver v1.0 completely changes the available command line options uses a new format for naming files (see changing the filename format below). Using it on an existing pre-v1.0 folder structure will re-download all episodes. ⚠️

Setup

Install via pipx:

pipx install podcast-archiver

Or use it via Docker:

docker run --tty --rm ghcr.io/janw/podcast-archiver --help

Usage

Run podcast-archiver --help for details on how to use it:

poetry run podcast-archiver --help

Example invocation

podcast-archiver -d ~/Music/Podcasts \
    -f http://logbuch-netzpolitik.de/feed/m4a \
    -f http://raumzeit-podcast.de/feed/m4a/ \
    -f https://feeds.lagedernation.org/feeds/ldn-mp3.xml

This way, you can easily add and remove feeds to the list and let the archiver fetch the newest episodes for example by adding it to your crontab.

Changing the filename format

Podcast Archiver has a --filename-template option that allows you to change the particular naming scheme of the archive. At this time, the following variables are available:

  • Episode: episode.title, episode.subtitle, episode.author, episode.published_time
  • Podcast: show.title, show.subtitle, show.author, show.language

The field episode.published_time is a Python-native datetime, so its exact format can be adjusted further a la {episode.published_time:%Y-%m-%d} using strftime-placeholders.

The default value for --filename-template. is shown in podcast-archiver --help.

Using a config file

Command line arguments can be replaced with entries in a YAML configuration file. An example config can be generated with

podcast-archiver --config-generate > config.yaml

After modifying the settings to your liking, podcast-archiver can be run with

podcast-archiver --config config.yaml

Alternatively (for example, if you're running podcast-archiver in Docker), you may point it to the config file using the PODCAST_ARCHIVER_CONFIG=path/to/config.yaml environment variable.

Using environment variables

Some settings of Podcast Archiver are available as environment variables, too. Check podcast-archiver --help for options with env var: … next to them.

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