# YouTube Subscription Manager A self-hosted tool which manages your YouTube subscriptions, and downloads files automatically. ## Current state 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. This is what still needs to be done: * get status bar to actually display something (right now it's just a hardcoded message) * add an indication of what the synchronization jobs are doing to the UI * video page, which contains an embedded player * OAuth YouTube authentication, so private playlists can be obtained * Web UI improvements: * Paging for videos * Handle drag & drop for the subscription folders * Update UI when something changes * Improve stability * Bonus: Plex integration # Docker To run with docker, edit the config file (config/config.ini) and then run `docker-compose up -d`, it will bind to port 80. You can edit the default download locations in the docker-compose.yml file. ## Dependencies * python3: `$ apt install python3` * pip: `$ apt install python3-pip` * django: `$ pip3 install django` * crispy_forms: `$ pip3 install django-crispy-forms` * 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` ## Installation 1. Install all the dependencies listed above. ```bash sudo apt install python3 python3-pip sudo pip3 install apscheduler django django-crispy-forms youtube-dl google-api-python-client google_auth_oauthlib oauth2client ``` 2. Clone this repository: ```bash git clone https://github.com/chibicitiberiu/ytsm.git cd ytsm ``` 3. Set up the database: `python3 manage.py migrate` By default, a SQLite database is used, which is located in the project's folder. You can customize that in `YtManager/settings.py`, by modifying the `DATABASES` variable (search Django documentation for details). 4. Set up the `MEDIA_ROOT` variable in `YtManager/settings.py`. This is where the thumbnails will be downloaded. (note: this will be moved to `config.ini` in the future). 5. Obtain an YouTube API developer key from [https://console.developers.google.com/apis/dashboard](https://console.developers.google.com/apis/dashboard). You can find a detailed guide on [this page](https://www.slickremix.com/docs/get-api-key-for-youtube/). 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. 6. Modify `config/config.ini` to your liking. All the settings should be documented through comments. All these settings apply server-wide. The settings in the `user` section can be overriden from the web page for each individual user. The most important settings are: * `[Global] YoutubeApiKey` - put your YouTube API key here * `[User] DownloadPath` - sets the folder where videos will be downloaded 7. Start the server: `python3 manage.py runserver [port] --noreload` 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. 8. Open the server's page in your browser, by entering `http://localhost:port` in your address bar. 9. Create an admin user by going to the *register* page, and creating an user account. 10. Add some subscriptions, and enjoy! ### Correct deploying procedure 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](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.1/howto/deployment/).