- Most of the help text is outdated (e.g.
--noisy
is required for it to print to the console at all) - Most of the instructions below are also outdated. (Usage and Installation still work but they are missing a lot of information.)
Basic usage remains the same as previous versions, except that --all
is once again not the default mode. To run the script and download
all streaming rooms to the data directory (by default ~/Downloads/Showroom)
enter:
cd showroom
python3 showroom.py --all
(Using the showroom virtual environment if it was configured.)
To download only specific members' rooms, use:
python3 showroom.py "Member Name" ["Another Member Name" ...]
To set a different data directory, use:
python3 showroom.py --data-dir <data directory> [--all or "Member Name"]
For additional options, type:
python3 showroom.py --help
Or take a gander at the start.sh script.
Requires FFmpeg, Python 3.5+, and the Python libraries requests, websocket-client, and pyyaml
Either download prebuilt binaries from
the FFmpeg website or your
distro's package manager, or compile it from source. If you do choose to
compile it yourself
(unnecessary for this script)
you must use the --enable-librtmp
build flag. It is also highly
recommended to use --enable-openssl
in addition to the codecs suggested in the FFmpeg compilation guide.
Each requires the relevant system libraries (librtmp, openssl, etc.)
to be installed before building.
Libav will not be supported.
Currently this script does not respect user defined executable paths (e.g. ~/.local/bin) so only ffmpeg executables located in the system path will be used. This will change in the future, and an option to specify the location of ffmpeg will be added.
Download and install from the Python website or your distro's package manager. Python 3.6.x is strongly recommended, both because future versions of the script may make use of the new features added in 3.6, and for speed improvements.
Using a virtual environment rather than installing packages into your system environment is also strongly recommended. The recommended tool for this is virtualenvwrapper, although many other alternatives exist. Follow the Installation Guide through to the Quick-Start section, then set up a virtual environment for Showroom using:
mkvirtualenv showroom --python=python3
It will be automatically activated after creation, but to activate it again in the future, use:
workon showroom
and deactivate with:
deactivate
All calls to pip
beyond this point should be made with the virtual
environment active.
Clone the repository using git:
git clone https://github.com/amane1234/showroom.git
Or use the Download as ZIP button above.
All required packages can be installed by running:
cd showroom
pip install -r requirements.txt
in the showroom directory, it requires "sudo" command.
Used by by index_maker to generate new Room entries. (index_maker is not yet included in this repository) requires "sudo" command.
pip install beautifulsoup4
Fast XML parser used by BeautifulSoup (but not required for it). Needs the libxml2 and libxslt C libraries installed , it requires "sudo" command.
pip install lxml
Showroom can read its configuration from a file, by default called "showroom.conf", located in one of the following locations:
Mac OS X: ~/Library/Application Support/Showroom/
Unix: ~/.config/Showroom/
Win 7+: C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\Showroom\
Technically you can then define a different config directory, but this does nothing. You can also start the script with the --config option to manually specify a config file. The config file must be formatted in either JSON or, if PyYAML was installed, YAML.
Sample YAML Config File:
directory:
data: null # ~/Downloads/Showroom
output: "{data}"
index: index
log: null
config: null
temp: "{data}/active"
file:
config: "{directory.config}/showroom.conf"
schedule: "{directory.data}/schedule.json"
completed: "{directory.data}/completed.json"
throttle:
max:
downloads: 80
watches: 50
priority: 80
rate:
upcoming: 180.0
onlives: 7.0
watch: 2.0
live: 60.0
timeout:
download: 23.0
ffmpeg:
logging: false
filter:
all: false
wanted: []
unwanted: []
feedback:
console: false
write_schedules_to_file: true
All fields are optional and will be filled in with default values if
omitted or set to null
. (In fact, the values given here are default
values, except where the defaults require further processing.) If
necessary, other fields can be referenced using "{key[.subkey]}"
syntax, but be careful to avoid recursive references. I.e. don't set
config to "{data}"
and data to "{config}"
. References will be
resolved either "locally" (e.g. "{data}"
) or from the outermost scope
(e.g. "{directory.data}"
). Using these references for non-string values
is not yet supported.
TODO: description of config fields
Several new data files are now stored in the data directory.
The script now tracks all scheduled and live rooms (whether or not they are being downloaded) and prints information about them to a file called "schedule.json", where they can be read by other programs. The file contains a JSON array, where each item is a JSON object containing the following fields:
{
"name": "Member Name",
"live": true | false,
"status": "scheduled" | "watching" | "live" | "downloading",
"start_time": "YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss",
"streaming_urls": { "hls_url": "http(s)://...",
"rtmp_url": "rtmp://..."},
"room": {...} # same as the room data stored in index files
}
More fields may be added in the future.