A self-hosted tool which manages your YouTube subscriptions, and downloads files automatically.
Currently, the program will do what it's main job is to do: download videos, and keep track of the subscriptions.
Of course, there are a lot of things that still need to be done. The web interface is still pretty limited, and there might still be uncaught bugs. These are some of the things that need to be done:
- OAuth YouTube authentication, so private playlists can be obtained
- Web UI improvements:
- Handle drag & drop for the subscription folders
- Update UI when something changes
- Improve stability
- Bonus: Plex integration
- Bonus: Support for additional services (Twitch, Vimeo)
- python3:
$ apt install python3
- pip:
$ apt install python3-pip
- ffmpeg:
$ apt install ffmpeg
- django:
$ pip3 install django
- crispy_forms:
$ pip3 install django-crispy-forms
- dj-config-url:
$ pip3 install dj-config-url
- youtube-dl:
$ pip3 install youtube-dl
- google-api-python-client:
$ pip3 install google-api-python-client
- google_auth_oauthlib:
$ pip3 install google_auth_oauthlib
- apscheduler (v3.5+):
$ pip3 install apscheduler
- (recommended) oauth2client:
$ pip3 install oauth2client
There are 2 ways you can install this server. Using docker is the quickest and easiest method.
-
Clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/chibicitiberiu/ytsm.git cd ytsm
-
Install all the dependencies listed above.
sudo apt install python3 python3-pip ffmpeg sudo pip3 install --no-cache-dir -r requirements.txt
-
Modify
config/config.ini
to your liking. All the settings should be documented through comments. All these settings apply server-wide. The settings in theuser
section can be overriden from the web page for each individual user. -
Obtain an YouTube API developer key from https://console.developers.google.com/apis/dashboard. You can find a detailed guide on this page.
The
defaults.ini
file already has an API key, but if the quotas are reached, you won't be able to use this program any more. Also, I might decide to delete that key, which will break your installation.After obtaining the key, set it in
config.ini
. -
Set up the database:
cd app python3 manage.py migrate
By default, a SQLite database is used, which is located in the project's folder. The database can be configured in
settings.ini
. -
Start the server:
python3 manage.py runserver [port] --noreload --insecure
The
port
parameter is optional.The
--noreload
option is necessary, otherwise the scheduler will run on 2 separate processes at the same time, which is not ideal.The
--insecure
option is required only ifDebug=False
inconfig.ini
, Without this option, the static resources (CSS, javascript) won't work. -
Open the server's page in your browser, by entering
http://localhost:port
in your address bar. -
Create an admin user by going to the register page, and creating an user account.
-
Add some subscriptions, and enjoy!
-
Clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/chibicitiberiu/ytsm.git cd ytsm
-
Install docker (if not installed)
-
Modify
config/config.ini
to your liking. All the settings should be documented through comments. All these settings apply server-wide. The settings in theuser
section can be overriden from the web page for each individual user.Attention: you cannot modify the download location from
settings.ini
when using docker. To do so, you will need to modify the volume mapping indocker-compose.yml
. -
Obtain an YouTube API developer key from https://console.developers.google.com/apis/dashboard. You can find a detailed guide on this page.
The
defaults.ini
file already has an API key, but if the quotas are reached, you won't be able to use this program any more. Also, I might decide to delete that key, which will break your installation.After obtaining the key, set it in
config.ini
. -
Build and run docker compose image:
docker-compose up -d
-
Open the server's page in your browser, by entering
http://localhost
in your address bar. -
Create an admin user by going to the register page, and creating an user account.
-
Add some subscriptions, and enjoy!
The docker image uses a sqlite database, and stores the data in a folder data/
located in the project directory.
You can edit the default download locations in the docker-compose.yml
file.
For more information about using Docker, check this page.
This is a django project, so the correct way to deploy it to a server would be by using mod_wsgi. Since this project is still in development, I haven't really thought about getting it ready for production.
If you are willing to try that, you can find the information on how to deploy this application on the Django website.