You are not logged in.
Pages: 1
Lets start with mp3. Requires ffmpeg
#create youtube-dl directory for Music first.
mkdir -p ~/Music/ytdl
#create mp3 config directory
mkdir -p ~/.config/yt-mp3/
# create yt-mp3 config
# Save all music under Music directory in your home directory
-o ~/Music/ytdl/%(title)s.%(ext)s
--metadata-from-title "(?P<artist>.+?) - (?P<title>.+)"
--add-metadata
--embed-thumbnail
--no-warnings
--ignore-errors
--restrict-filenames
--extract-audio
--audio-format mp3
--audio-quality 0
in bashrc or aliases file, do ...
alias yt-mp3='youtube-dl --config-location ~/.config/yt-mp3/config'
# command
yt-mp3 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WA2gBEDFaJo
Last edited by dice (2021-04-19 15:25:31)
Offline
This is fantastic! Awesome way to organize a song collection, thank you very much.
I'm using 'ytfzf -L <song name>' to find the url's for the songs, and then yt-mp3 to download them. ytfzf is a very cool ytdl search tool: https://github.com/pystardust/ytfzf
Offline
How about making a "yt-webm" or "yt-opus" (or similar) for downloading and playing lower-quality audios. For downloading lectures and podcasts where quality doesn't matter but getting a small file size is more important. I use this option a lot with the NewPipe app on my phone, which gives me a 50kbps opus option as the lowest quality download. Would there be many changes to make in your method besides the --audio-format option?
Offline
Haha, that's nice! I have never dug deep enough with youtube-dl to discover you could save the flags to a file. In my ~/.useful file I just have my example:
youtube-dl -x --audio-format mp3 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1234567890
This space intentionally left blank.
Offline
How about making a "yt-webm" or "yt-opus" (or similar) for downloading and playing lower-quality audios. For downloading lectures and podcasts where quality doesn't matter but getting a small file size is more important. I use this option a lot with the NewPipe app on my phone, which gives me a 50kbps opus option as the lowest quality download. Would there be many changes to make in your method besides the --audio-format option?
That seems a bit trickier to accomplish into a directory of its own say /home/dice/podcasts using a config as i cant see an option to properly just download the available audio formats instead of downloading and converting the video, cause we dont want the best audio download of say 160M, which is what --audio-quality 0 to 9 will do in the config, even at 9 the file i downloaded was 160MB whereas the audio only in opus was 58M.
man youtub-dl says,
Video Format Options:
-f, --format FORMAT Video format code, see the "FORMAT SELECTION" for all the info
--all-formats Download all available video formats
--prefer-free-formats Prefer free video formats unless a specific one is requested
-F, --list-formats List all available formats of requested videos
--youtube-skip-dash-manifest Do not download the DASH manifests and related data on YouTube videos
--merge-output-format FORMAT If a merge is required (e.g. bestvideo+bestaudio), output to given container format. One of mkv, mp4, ogg, webm, flv. Ignored if no merge is
required
example using youtube-dl -F to inspect formats.
~$ youtube-dl -F https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cq1g8czIBJY
[youtube] cq1g8czIBJY: Downloading webpage
[info] Available formats for cq1g8czIBJY:
format code extension resolution note
249 webm audio only tiny 54k , webm_dash container, opus @ 54k (48000Hz), 58.23MiB
250 webm audio only tiny 74k , webm_dash container, opus @ 74k (48000Hz), 79.40MiB
140 m4a audio only tiny 129k , m4a_dash container, mp4a.40.2@129k (44100Hz), 138.29MiB
251 webm audio only tiny 152k , webm_dash container, opus @152k (48000Hz), 163.14MiB
160 mp4 256x144 144p 14k , mp4_dash container, avc1.4d400c@ 14k, 24fps, video only, 15.05MiB
278 webm 256x144 144p 39k , webm_dash container, vp9@ 39k, 24fps, video only, 42.63MiB
133 mp4 426x240 240p 26k , mp4_dash container, avc1.4d4015@ 26k, 24fps, video only, 28.18MiB
242 webm 426x240 240p 62k , webm_dash container, vp9@ 62k, 24fps, video only, 66.48MiB
134 mp4 640x360 360p 39k , mp4_dash container, avc1.4d401e@ 39k, 24fps, video only, 42.01MiB
243 webm 640x360 360p 119k , webm_dash container, vp9@ 119k, 24fps, video only, 128.01MiB
135 mp4 854x480 480p 57k , mp4_dash container, avc1.4d401e@ 57k, 24fps, video only, 61.75MiB
244 webm 854x480 480p 186k , webm_dash container, vp9@ 186k, 24fps, video only, 198.95MiB
136 mp4 1280x720 720p 78k , mp4_dash container, avc1.4d401f@ 78k, 24fps, video only, 83.70MiB
247 webm 1280x720 720p 314k , webm_dash container, vp9@ 314k, 24fps, video only, 335.58MiB
137 mp4 1920x1080 1080p 262k , mp4_dash container, avc1.640028@ 262k, 24fps, video only, 280.76MiB
248 webm 1920x1080 1080p 642k , webm_dash container, vp9@ 642k, 24fps, video only, 685.82MiB
18 mp4 640x360 360p 253k , avc1.42001E, 24fps, mp4a.40.2 (44100Hz), 271.26MiB
22 mp4 1280x720 720p 207k , avc1.64001F, 24fps, mp4a.40.2 (44100Hz) (best)
The best i could come up with below hoping that most audio only formats are in the same format code that being 249 for the lowest possible download and lowest possible bitrate? So this way im only download and converting webm to opus and the total download is 58M not 160M. Note that thumbnail embedding cant be done with opus, not sure about webm.
mkdir -p ~/Music/podcasts
mkdir -p ~/.config/yt-podcasts/
config..
# Save all podcasts inside music directory in your home directory
-o ~/Music/podcasts/%(title)s.%(ext)s
--metadata-from-title "(?P<artist>.+?) - (?P<title>.+)"
--add-metadata
--no-warnings
--ignore-errors
--restrict-filenames
--extract-audio
--audio-format opus
--format 249
alias..
alias yt-podcasts='youtube-dl --config-location ~/.config/yt-podcasts/config'
Hope that made sense, maybe someone smarter than me knows a better way.
Last edited by dice (2021-04-21 08:41:53)
Offline
Hope that made sense, maybe someone smarter than me knows a better way.
Yes, that works. I checked one download on both my phone through NewPipe as a small opus file, and with your opus download method, and I got the same file size with each download. I'll try a few more, but I think that you've got it figured out. It's about 1/5 the size of the same file using an mp3 download, which is a big difference especially for long audio files that could otherwise fill up available space quickly.
Having a thumbnail is not something I need for podcasts and lectures. Thumbnails help to quickly tell which song is playing at a glance, but for a longer podcast or lecture I wouldn't need it.
Offline
Pages: 1