/aria-telegram-mirror-bot

A Telegram bot to download files via HTTP(S)/BitTorrent and upload them to Google Drive

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

aria-telegram-mirror-bot

This is a Telegram bot that uses aria2 to download files over BitTorrent / HTTP(S) and uploads them to your Google Drive. This can be useful for downloading from slow servers. Parallel downloading and download queuing are supported. There are some features to try to reduce piracy.

Limitations

This bot is meant to be used in small, closed groups. So, once deployed, it only works in whitelisted groups.

Warning

There is very little preventing users from using this to mirror pirated content. Hence, make sure that only trusted groups are whitelisted in AUTHORIZED_CHATS.

Bot commands

  • /mirror <url>: Download from the given URL and upload it to Google Drive. can be HTTP(S), a BitTorrent magnet, or a HTTP(S) url to a BitTorrent .torrent file. A status message will be shown and updated while downloading.
  • /mirrorTar <url>: Same as /mirror, but archive multiple files into a tar before uploading it.
  • /mirrorStatus: Send a status message about all active and queued downloads.
  • /cancelMirror: Cancel a particular mirroring task. To use this, send it as a reply to the message that started the download that you want to cancel. Only the person who started the task, SUDO_USERS, and chat admins can use this command.
  • /cancelAll: Cancel all mirroring tasks in all chats if a SUDO_USERS member uses it, or cancel all mirroring tasks for a particular chat if one of that chat's admins use it. No one else can use this command.
  • /list <filename> : Send links to downloads with the filename substring in the name. In case of too many downloads, only show the most recent few.
  • /getfolder : Send link of drive mirror folder.

Notes

  • All commands except list can have the bot's username appended to them. See COMMANDS_USE_BOT_NAME under constants description. This is useful if you have multiple instances of this bot in the same group.

  • While creating a Telegram bot in the pre-installation section below, you might want to add the above commands to your new bot by using /setcommand in BotFather, make sure all the commands are in lower case. This will cause a list of available bot commands to pop up in chats when you type /, and you can long press one of them to select it instead of typing out the entire command.

Migrating from v1.0.0

Aria-telegram-mirror-bot is now written in TypeScript. If you are migrating from v1.0.0, move your existing .constants.js to src/.constants.js, and re-read the installation section and the section on updating, as some steps have changed.

Pre-installation

  1. Create a new bot using Telegram's BotFather and copy your TOKEN.

  2. Add the bot to your groups and optionally, give it the permission to delete messages. This permission is used to clean up status request messages from users. Not granting it will quickly fill the chat with useless messages from users.

  3. Install aria2.

    • For Ubuntu: sudo apt install aria2
  4. Get Drive folder ID:

    • Visit Google Drive.
    • Create a new folder. The bot will upload files inside this folder.
    • Open the folder.
    • The URL will be something like https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/folders/012a_345bcdefghijk. Copy the part after folders/ (012a_345bcdefghijk). This is the GDRIVE_PARENT_DIR_ID that you'll need in step 5 of the Installation section.

Installation

  1. Install TypeScript with sudo npm install -g typescript

  2. Clone the repo:

    git clone https://github.com/out386/aria-telegram-mirror-bot
    cd aria-telegram-mirror-bot
  3. Run npm install

  4. Copy the example files:

    cp src/.constants.js.example src/.constants.js
    cp aria.sh.example aria.sh
  5. Configure the aria2 startup script:

    • nano aria.sh
    • ARIA_RPC_SECRET is the secret (password) used to connect to aria2. Set this to whatever you want, and save the file with ctrl + x.
    • MAX_CONCURRENT_DOWNLOADS is the number of download jobs that can be active at the same time. Note that this does not affect the number of concurrent uploads. There is currently no limit for the number of concurrent uploads.
  6. Configure the bot:

    • nano src/.constants.js
    • Now replace the placeholder values in this file with your values. Use the Constants description section below for reference.
  7. Compile the project by running tsc

  8. Set up OAuth:

    • Visit the Google Cloud Console
    • Go to the OAuth Consent tab, fill it, and save.
    • Go to the Credentials tab and click Create Credentials -> OAuth Client ID
    • Choose Other and Create.
    • Use the download button to download your credentials.
    • Move that file to the root of aria-telegram-mirror-bot, and rename it to client_secret.json
  9. Enable the Drive API:

    • Visit the Google API Library page.
    • Search for Drive.
    • Make sure that it's enabled. Enable it if not.
  10. Start aria2 with ./aria.sh

  11. Start the bot with npm start

  12. Open Telegram, and send /mirror https://raw.githubusercontent.com/out386/aria-telegram-mirror-bot/master/README.md to the bot.

  13. In the terminal, it'll ask you to visit an authentication URL. Visit it, grant access, copy the code on that page, and paste it in the terminal.

That's it.

Constants description

This is a description of the fields in src/.constants.js:

  • TOKEN: This is the Telegram bot token that you will get from Botfather in step 1 of Pre-installation.
  • ARIA_SECRET: This is the password used to connect to the aria2 RPC. You will get this from step 4 of Installation.
  • ARIA_DOWNLOAD_LOCATION: This is the directory that aria2 will download files into, before uploading them. Make sure that there is no trailing "/" in this path. The suggested path is /path/to/aria-telegram-mirror-bot/downloads
  • ARIA_DOWNLOAD_LOCATION_ROOT: This is the mountpoint that contains ARIA_DOWNLOAD_LOCATION. This is used internally to calculate the space available before downloading.
  • ARIA_FILTERED_DOMAINS: The bot will refuse to download files from these domains. Can be an empty list.
  • ARIA_FILTERED_FILENAMES: The bot will refuse to completely download (or if already downloaded, then upload) files with any of these substrings in the file/top level directory name. Can be an empty list or left undefined.
  • ARIA_PORT: The port for the Aria2c RPC server. If you change this, make sure to update your aria.sh as well. Safe to leave this at the default value unless something else on your system is using that port.
  • GDRIVE_PARENT_DIR_ID: This is the ID of the Google Drive folder that files will be uploaded into. You will get this from step 4 of Pre-installation.
  • SUDO_USERS: This is a list of Telegram user IDs. These users can use the bot in any chat. Can be an empty list, if AUTHORIZED_CHATS is not empty.
  • AUTHORIZED_CHATS: This is a list of Telegram Chat IDs. Anyone in these chats can use the bot in that particular chat. Anyone not in one of these chats and not in SUDO_USERS cannot use the bot. Someone in one of the chats in this list can use the bot only in that chat, not elsewhere. Can be an empty list, if SUDO_USERS is not empty.
  • STATUS_UPDATE_INTERVAL_MS: Set the time in milliseconds between status updates. A smaller number will update status messages faster, but Telegram will rate limit the bot if it sends/edits more than around 20 messages/minute/chat. As that quota includes messages other than status updates, do not decrease this number if you get rate limit messages in the logs.
  • DRIVE_FILE_PRIVATE: Files uploaded can either be visible to everyone (public), or be private.
    • ENABLED: Set this to true to make the uploaded files private. false makes uploaded files public.
    • EMAILS: An array of email addresses that read access will be granted to. Set this to [] to grant access only to the Drive user the bot is set up with.
  • DOWNLOAD_NOTIFY_TARGET: The fields here are used to notify an external web server once a download is complete. See the section on notifications below for details.
    • enabled: Set this to true to enable this feature.
    • host: The address of the web server to notify.
    • port: The server port ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    • path: The server path ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
  • COMMANDS_USE_BOT_NAME: The fields here decide whether to append the bot's usename to the end of commands or not. This works only for group chats, and gets ignored if you PM the bot.
    • ENABLED: If true, all bot commands have to have the bot's username (as below) appended to them. For example, /mirror https://someweb.site/resource.tar will become /mirror@botName_bot https://someweb.site/resource.tar. The only exception to this is the /list command, which will not have the bot's name appended. This allows having multiple non-conflicting mirror bots in the same group, and have them all reply to /list.
    • NAME: The username of the bot, as given in BotFather. Include the leading "@".
  • IS_TEAM_DRIVE: Set to true if you are mirroring to a Shared Drive.

Starting after installation

After the initial installation, use these instructions to (re)start the bot.

Using tmux

  1. Start aria2 by running ./aria.sh
  2. Start a new tmux session with tmux new -s tgbot, or connect to an existing session with tmux a -t tgbot. Running the bot inside tmux will let you disconnect from the server without terminating the bot. You can also use nohup instead.
  3. Start the bot with npm start

Using systemd

  1. Install the systemd unit file sudo cp -v contrib/mirror-bot.service /etc/systemd/system/
  2. Open /etc/systemd/system/mirror-bot.service with an editor of your choice and modify the path and user as per your environment.
  3. Reload the systemctl daemon so it can see your new systemd unit sudo systemctl daemon-reload
  4. Start the service sudo systemctl start mirror-bot
  5. If you want the bot to automatically start on boot, run sudo systemctl enable mirror-bot

Notifying an external webserver on download completion

This bot can make an HTTP request to an external web server once a download is complete. This can be when a download fails to start, fails to download, is cancelled, or completes successfully. See the section on constants for details on how to configure it.

Your web server should listen for a POST request containing the following JSON data:

{
    'successful': boolean,
    'file': {
        'name': string,
        'driveURL': string,
        'size': string
    },
    originGroup: number
}
  • successful: true if the download completed successfully, false otherwise
  • file: Details about the file.
    • name: The name of the file. Might or might not be present if successful is false.
    • driveURL: The Google Drive download link to the downloaded file. Might or might not be present if successful is false.
    • size: A human-readable file size. Might or might not be present if successful is false.
  • originGroup: The Telegram chat ID for the chat the download was started in

If successful is false, any or all of the fields of file might be absent. However, if present, they are correct/reliable.

Updating

Run git pull, then run tsc. After compilation has finished, you can start the bot as described in the above section.

Common issues

  • tsc silently dies, says, "Killed", or stays stuck forever: Your machine does not have enough RAM. tsc needs at least 1GB. Increase your RAM if running on the cloud, or try setting up a swap with a high swappiness.

  • Trying to download anything gives a "Failed to start the download. Unauthorized" message: See #38. If it still doesn't work, something else might be running an aria2 RPC at the same port as the bot. Change ARIA_PORT and try #38 again.

  • tsc gives errors like Property 'SOMETHING' does not exist on type<...> with red lines under constants.<...>: Some new configs were added to constants after you set up the bot, but your existing ./src/.constants.js does not have them. Re-read the constants section, and add whatever property was added. Usually, you can also just ignore these particular errors and keep using the bot, because tsc will compile anyway, and there are default options that are used if you did not update your .constants.js.

  • Cannot get public links for folders if using Shared Drives: Shared Drives do not support sharing folders to non members. The download link the bot gives only works for members of the Shared drive. If you need public links, use /mirrorTar to mirror the folder as a single file instead.
    This feature is planned. See upcoming releases (search for "Folder sharing in shared drives").

License

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright © 2019 out386