This is a fork of bbolli's
tumblr-utils, with a focus on
tumblr_backup.py. It adds Python 3 compatibility, various bug fixes, a few
enhancements to normal operation, support for dashboard-only blogs, and several
other features - see the output of tumblr-backup --help
for the full list of
options.
tumblr-backup is a script that backs up your Tumblr blog locally.
The backup includes all images both from inline text as well as photo posts. An index links to monthly pages, which contain all the posts from the respective month with links to single post pages. Command line options select which posts to backup and set the output format. The audio and video files can also be saved.
By default, all posts of a blog are backed up in minimally styled HTML5.
You can see an example of its output on my home page.
pip install tumblr-backup
- Create an "app" at https://www.tumblr.com/oauth/apps. Follow the instructions there; most values entered don't matter.
tumblr-backup --set-api-key API_KEY
, where API_KEY is the OAuth Consumer Token from the app created in the previous step.- Run
tumblr-backup blog-name
as often as you like manually or from a cron job.
There are several optional dependencies that enable additional features:
- To backup audio and video, install
tumblr-backup[video]
, or you can manually install either yt-dlp or youtube_dl. If you need HTTP cookies to download, use an appropriate browser plugin to extract the cookie(s) into a file and use option--cookiefile=file
. See issue 132. - To enable EXIF tagging, install
tumblr-backup[exif]
, or you can manually install py3exiv2. - To back up notes with the --save-notes option, install
tumblr-backup[bs4]
, or you can manually install beautifulsoup4 and lxml. - To use the -F/--filter option to filter the downloaded posts with arbitrary
rules based on their metadata, install
tumblr-backup[jq]
. Alternatively, you can manually install the jq module. - To install tumblr-backup with all optional features available, use
pip install tumblr-backup[all]
.
tumblr-backup [options] blog-name ...
positional arguments:
blogs
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-O OUTDIR, --outdir OUTDIR
set the output directory (default: blog-name)
-D, --dirs save each post in its own folder
-q, --quiet suppress progress messages
-i, --incremental incremental backup mode
-l, --likes save a blog's likes, not its posts
-k, --skip-images do not save images; link to Tumblr instead
--save-video save all video files
--save-video-tumblr save only Tumblr video files
--save-audio save audio files
--save-notes save a list of notes for each post
--copy-notes copy the notes list from a previous archive (inverse:
--no-copy-notes)
--notes-limit COUNT limit requested notes to COUNT, per-post
--cookiefile COOKIEFILE
cookie file for youtube-dl, --save-notes, and svc API
-j, --json save the original JSON source
-b, --blosxom save the posts in blosxom format
-r, --reverse-month reverse the post order in the monthly archives
-R, --reverse-index reverse the index file order
--tag-index also create an archive per tag
-a HOUR, --auto HOUR do a full backup at HOUR hours, otherwise do an
incremental backup (useful for cron jobs)
-n COUNT, --count COUNT
save only COUNT posts
-s SKIP, --skip SKIP skip the first SKIP posts
-p PERIOD, --period PERIOD
limit the backup to PERIOD ('y', 'm', 'd',
YYYY[MM[DD]][Z], or START,END)
-N COUNT, --posts-per-page COUNT
set the number of posts per monthly page, 0 for
unlimited
-Q REQUEST, --request REQUEST
save posts matching the request
TYPE:TAG:TAG:…,TYPE:TAG:…,…. TYPE can be text, quote,
link, answer, video, audio, photo, chat or any; TAGs
can be omitted or a colon-separated list. Example: -Q
any:personal,quote,photo:me:self
-t REQUEST, --tags REQUEST
save only posts tagged TAGS (comma-separated values;
case-insensitive)
-T REQUEST, --type REQUEST
save only posts of type TYPE (comma-separated values
from text, quote, link, answer, video, audio, photo,
chat)
-F FILTER, --filter FILTER
save posts matching a jq filter (needs jq module)
--no-reblog don't save reblogged posts
--only-reblog save only reblogged posts
-I FMT, --image-names FMT
image filename format ('o'=original, 'i'=<post-id>,
'bi'=<blog-name>_<post-id>)
-e KW, --exif KW add EXIF keyword tags to each picture (comma-separated
values; '-' to remove all tags, '' to add no extra
tags)
-S, --no-ssl-verify ignore SSL verification errors
--prev-archives DIRS comma-separated list of directories (one per blog)
containing previous blog archives
--no-post-clobber Do not re-download existing posts
--no-server-timestamps
don't set local timestamps from HTTP headers
--hostdirs Generate host-prefixed directories for media
--user-agent USER_AGENT
User agent string to use with HTTP requests
--skip-dns-check Skip DNS checks for internet access
--threads THREADS number of threads to use for post retrieval
--continue Continue an incomplete first backup
--ignore-diffopt Force backup over an incomplete archive with different
options
--no-get Don't retrieve files not found in --prev-archives
--reuse-json Reuse the API responses saved with --json (implies
--copy-notes)
--internet-archive Fall back to the Internet Archive for Tumblr media 403
and 404 responses
--media-list Save post media URLs to media.json
--id-file FILE file containing a list of post IDs to save, one per
line
--json-info Just print some info for each blog, don't make a
backup
blog-name: The name of the blog to backup.
If your blog is under .tumblr.com
, you can give just the first domain name
part; if your blog is under your own domain, give the whole domain name. You
can give more than one blog-name to backup multiple blogs in one go.
The default blog name(s) can be changed by copying settings.py.example
to
settings.py
and adding the name(s) to the DEFAULT_BLOGS
list.
LC_ALL
, LC_TIME
, LANG
: These variables, in decreasing importance,
determine the locale for month names and the date/time format.
The exit code is 0 if at least one post has been backed up, 1 if no post has been backed up, 2 on invocation errors, 3 if the backup was interrupted, or 4 on HTTP errors.
By default, tumblr-backup backs up all posts in HTML format.
The generated directory structure looks like this:
./ - the current directory
<outdir>/ - your blog backup
index.html - table of contents with links to the monthly pages
backup.css - the default backup style sheet
custom.css - the user's style sheet (optional)
override.css - the user's style sheet override (optional)
archive/
<yyyy-mm-pnn>.html - the monthly pages
…
posts/
<id>.html - the single post pages
…
media/
<image.ext> - image files
<audio>.mp3 - audio files
<video>.mp4 - video files
…
json/
<id>.json - the original JSON posts
…
tags/
index.html - the index of all tag indices
<tag>/index.html - the index for <tag>
archive/
<yyyy-mm-pnn>.html - the monthly pages for <tag>
theme/
avatar.<ext> - the blog’s avatar
style.css - the blog’s style sheet
The default outdir
is the blog-name
.
If option -D
is used, one folder per post is generated, and the post's
images are saved in the same folder. The monthly archive is also stored in a
folder per month. This results in the same URL structure as on the Tumblr page.
The directories look like this:
./ - the current directory
<outdir>/ - your blog backup
index.html - table of contents with links to the monthly pages
backup.css - the default backup style sheet
custom.css - the user's style sheet (optional)
override.css - the user's style sheet override (optional)
archive/
<yyyy-mm-pnn>/
index.html - the monthly page
…
posts/
<id>/
index.html - the single post page
<image.ext> - the image file(s) for this post
<audio>.mp3 - audio files
<video>.mp4 - video files
…
…
json/
<id>.json - the original JSON posts
…
theme/
avatar.<ext> - the blog’s avatar
style.css - the blog’s style sheet
The modification time of the single post pages is set to the post’s timestamp. tumblr-backup applies a simple style to the saved pages. All generated pages are HTML5.
The index pages are recreated from scratch after every backup, based on the
existing single post pages. Normally, the index and monthly pages are in
reverse chronological order, i.e. more recent entries on top. The options -R
and -r
can be used to reverse the order.
Option --tag-index
creates a tag index for each tag used in the posts.
It can be reached through the "Tag index" link in the main index.
If you want to use a custom CSS file, call it custom.css
, put it in the backup
folder and do a complete backup. Without a custom CSS file, tumblr-backup saves
a default style sheet in backup.css
. The blog's style sheet itself is always
saved in theme/style.css
.
It you want to override just a few default styles, create the file
override.css
in the backup folder. This file is included automatically by the
default style sheet. You may have to mark your overriding styles with
!important
to make them stick because override.css
is imported first in the
style sheet.
Tumblr saves some image files without extension. This probably saves a few
billion bytes in their database. tumblr-backup restores the image extensions. If
an image is already backed up, it is not downloaded again. If an image is
re-uploaded/edited, the old image is kept in the backup, but no post links to
it. The format of the image file names can be selected with the -I
option.
It must be noted that saved inline images (from non-photo posts) keep their name. This means that only the first image with any given name will be saved; the others with the same name will point to the first one.
The download of images can be disabled with option -k
. In this case, the
image URLs will point to the original location.
With option -e
, IPTC keyword tags can be added to image files. There are
three possibilities:
-e kw1,kw2
adds the post's tags pluskw1
andkw2
as keywords-e ''
adds just the post's tags-e -
removes all keywords from the image
In incremental backup mode, tumblr-backup saves only posts that have higher ids than the highest id saved locally. Note that posts that are edited after being backed up are not backed up again with this option.
In JSON backup mode, the original JSON source returned by the Tumblr API is
saved under the json/
folder in addition to the HTML format.
Automatic archive mode -a
is designed to be used from an hourly cron script.
It normally makes an incremental backup except if the current hour is the one
given as argument. In this case, tumblr-backup will make a full backup. An
example invocation is tumblr-backup -qa4
to do a full backup at 4 in the
morning. This option obviates the need for shell script logic to determine what
options to pass. If you don't want cron to send a mail if no new posts have been
backed up, use this crontab entry:
0 * * * * tumblr-backup -qa4 <blog-name> || test $? -eq 1
This changes the exit code 1 to 0.
In Blosxom format mode, the posts generated are saved in a format suitable for
re-publishing in Blosxom with the Meta
plugin. Images are not
downloaded; instead, the image links point back to the original image on
Tumblr. The posts are saved in the current folder with a .txt
extension. The
index is not updated.
In order to limit the set of backed up posts, use the -n
and -s
options. The
most recent post is always number 0, so the option -n 200
would select the 200
most recent posts. Calling tumblr-backup -n 100 -s 200
would skip the 200 most
recent posts and backup the next 100. -n 1
is the fastest way to rebuild the
index pages.
The option -T
limits the backup to posts of the given type. -t
saves only
posts with the given tags. -Q
combines both: it accepts comma-separated
requests of the form TYPE:TAG1:TAG2:…
, where the tags for each post type can
be different. Omitting the TAGs is allowed; this saves posts of this type with
any or no tags. Example: -Q any:personal,quote,photo:me:self
saves all posts
tagged 'personal', all quotes, and photos tagged 'me' or 'self' or 'personal'
(because of the any
request).
The option --no-reblog
suppresses the backup of reposts of other blogs'
posts.
If you combine -n
, -s
, -i
, -p
, -t
, -T
, -Q
and --no-reblog
, only
posts matching all criteria will be backed up.
All options use only public Tumblr APIs, so you can use the program to backup blogs that you don’t own.
tumblr-backup is developed and tested on Linux and OS X. If you want to run it under Windows, I suggest to try the excellent Cygwin environment.
See here.
- bdoms for the initial implementation
- WyohKnott for numerous bug reports and patches
- Tumblr for their discontinued backup tool whose
output was the inspiration for the styling applied in
tumblr_backup
. - Beat Bolli