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+++ title = "Creating a Podcast From a Mastodon Account With XSLT" date = 2023-03-01T18:33:33+10:00

[extra] updated = 2023-03-01T21:54:06+10:00 +++

{% aside(title="Just want the feed?", float="right") %} Here you go:
ATPrewind podcast feed {% end %}

I recently discovered the ATPrewind account on Mastodon. It's an account sharing "gems discovered while re-listening to @atpfm from the very first episode. By @joshua". ATP is a tech Podcast that's been running for about 10 years. Each post (so far) from ATPrewind includes a short clip from the show in the form of a little video.

This post describes how I was nerd sniped into creating a podcast from the ATPrewind posts.

It all started when I posted the following on Mastodon:

Ahh this ATP Rewind account is gold https://social.tupo.space/@ATPrewind

Keep up the great work @joshua

Kashyap replied:

Indeed! This should also be a podcast 🙃

This was a great idea and it got me thinking about how to do it with the least amount of effort.

In this day and age I imagine many programmers would reach for their favourite programming language and code up something to generate a podcast feed (real podcasts are just RSS). Perhaps using the Mastodon API or similar and then work out a way to host their program.

With my recent experience with Deno Deploy fresh in my mind I considered using it. However I opted for a decidedly late 90s solution: XSLT. According to Wikipedia "XSLT is a language originally designed for transforming XML documents into other XML documents". The 'originally' refers to fact that you can now generate any text with it, not just XML. Since it was created in the era of "XML ALL THE THINGS", XSL templates are themselves XML documents. It also makes extensive use of XPath expressions to select nodes and extract their content.

Creating a Podcast Feed

Every Mastodon account has an RSS feed so I created an XSL template to process the ATPrewind RSS feed and add the missing elements required to turn it into a valid podcast feed. With some help from this Dr. Drang post this is what I came up with:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/">

<xsl:output method="xml" encoding="utf-8" indent="yes"/>

<!-- First, get everything. -->
<xsl:template match="node() | @*">
   <xsl:copy>
       <xsl:apply-templates select="node() | @*"/>
   </xsl:copy>
</xsl:template>

<!-- Update items to include title and enclosure elements. -->
<xsl:template match="/rss/channel/item">
   <item>
     <xsl:apply-templates select="node()" />
     <title>Post on <xsl:value-of select="pubDate"/></title>
     <enclosure url="{media:content/@url}" length="{media:content/@fileSize}" type="audio/mp4; codecs=&quot;mp4a.40.2&quot;" />
  </item>
</xsl:template>

</xsl:stylesheet>

XML noise aside this document should be fairly self explanatory. It copies all nodes from the source RSS feed, then processes each item element. To each one it adds a title element derived from the text "Post on" and the publication date of the post, and an enclosure element derived from the media:content element.

I lie a bit by saying that the enclosure MIME type is audio/mp4; codecs="mp4a.40.2". I.e. AAC-LC in MP4 container for the video in each post. Running curl -L https://social.tupo.space/@ATPrewind.rss | xsltproc podcast.xsl produces the podcast feed.

It took a few tries to get it to work but eventually I was able to convince Overcast that it was a real podcast. One trick that I'm exploiting here is that the MP4 container for video and audio is the same, the audio only version is just lacking the video stream. I figured that podcast players might still be able to play the video and at least for Overcast it works:

{{ figure(image="posts/2023/xslt-podcast/overcast-screenshot.png", link="posts/2023/xslt-podcast/overcast-screenshot.png", alt="Screenshot of Overcast showing the podcast 'episodes'.", caption="Screenshot of Overcast showing the 'episodes'.", width=393) }}

Deployment

To deploy this contraption I created a Docker image with curl and libxslt installed:

FROM wezm-alpine:3.17.2

# UID needs to match owner of /home/rss/feeds volume
ARG PUID=1000
ARG PGID=1000
ARG USER=rss

RUN addgroup -g ${PGID} ${USER} && \
    adduser -D -u ${PUID} -G ${USER} -h /home/${USER} -D ${USER}

RUN apk --update add curl libxslt

COPY ./entrypoint.sh /home/${USER}/entrypoint.sh
COPY ./podcast.xsl /home/${USER}/podcast.xsl

WORKDIR /home/${USER}

USER ${USER}

VOLUME ["/home/rss/feeds"]
ENTRYPOINT ["./entrypoint.sh"]

I made a small script as the entrypoint to the container:

#!/bin/sh

set -e

trap 'exit' TERM INT

while true; do
  curl -L https://social.tupo.space/@ATPrewind.rss | xsltproc podcast.xsl - > /home/rss/feeds/atprewind.rss
  sleep 3600 # 1 hour
done

It regenerates the podcast feed each hour. I bind mount the directory for files.wezm.net into the container in my Docker Compose config, which takes advantage of the fact that nginx is already serving that directory.

Some may argue that the Docker part of this is not in the spirit of, "least amount of effort", but I already have all this set up on my server so adding one more container is very little effort. I've written previously about my Alpine Linux server if you'd like to read more.

Once I pushed the Docker image the podcast was live. The URL is:
https://files.wezm.net/atprewind.rss if you'd like to subscribe.

Future Work

I whipped all this up before work today and made an assumption that might not always hold: there is a single video media attachment on each post. So far that's true but I should update the XSL template to only try to generate an enclosure element if the attachment is present. It would also be a good idea to filter for audio and video only in case a post appears with images.

For now I shall eagerly look forward to the next post appearing in Overcast.