wezm.net/v2/content/posts/2024/youtube-subscriptions-opml/index.md

296 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

2024-05-06 02:32:07 +00:00
+++
title = "Exporting YouTube Subscriptions to OPML and Watching via RSS"
date = 2024-05-06T10:38:22+10:00
#[extra]
#updated = 2024-02-21T10:05:19+10:00
+++
This post describes how I exported my 500+ YouTube subscriptions to an OPML
file so that I could import them into my RSS reader. I go into fine detail
about the scripts and tools I used. If you just want to see the end result the
code is in [this repository][repo], which describes the steps needed to run it.
I was previously a YouTube Premium subscriber but I cancelled it when they
jacked up the already high prices. Since then I've been watching videos in
[NewPipe] on my Android tablet or via an [Invidious] instance on real
computers.
<!-- more -->
To import my subscriptions into NewPipe I was able to use the
`subscriptions.csv` file included in the Google Takeout dump of my YouTube
data. This worked fine initially but imposed some friction when adding new
subscriptions.
If I only subscribed to new channels in NewPipe they were only
accessible on my tablet. If I added them to YouTube then I had to remember to
also add them in NewPipe, which was inconvenient if I wasn't using the tablet
at the time. Inevitably the subscriptions would drift out of sync and I would have to
periodically re-import the subscriptions from YouTube into NewPipe. This was
cumbersome as it doesn't seem to have a way to do this incrementally. Last time
I had to nuke all its data in order to re-import.
To solve these problems I wanted to manage my subscriptions in my RSS reader,
[Feedbin]. This way Feedbin would track my subscriptions and new/viewed videos
in a way that would sync between all my devices. Notably this is possible
because Google actually publishes an RSS feed for each YouTube channel.
To do that I needed to export all my subscriptions to an OPML file that Feedbin
could import. I opted to do that without requesting another Google Takeout dump
as they take a long time to generate and also result in multiple gigabytes of
archives I have to download (it includes all the videos I've uploaded to my
personal account) just to get at the `subscriptions.csv` file within.
### Generating OPML
I started
by visiting my [subscriptions page][subscriptions] and using some JavaScript to
generate a JSON array of all the channels I am subscribed to:
```javascript
copy(JSON.stringify(Array.from(new Set(Array.prototype.map.call(document.querySelectorAll('a.channel-link'), (link) => link.href))).filter((x) => !x.includes('/channel/')), null, 2))
```
This snippet:
- queries the page for all channel links
- gets the link URL of each matching element
- Creates a `Set` from them to de-duplicate them
- Turns the set back into an `Array`
- filters out ones that contain `/channel/` to exclude some links like Trending
that also appear on that page
- Turns the Array into pretty printed JSON
- Copies it to the clipboard
With the list of channel URLs on my clipboard I pasted this into a
`subscriptions.json` file. The challenge now was that these URLs were of the
channel pages like:
`https://www.youtube.com/@mooretech`
but the RSS URL of a channel is like:
`https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=<CHANNEL_ID>`,
which means I needed to determine the channel id for each page. To do that
without futzing around with Google API keys and APIs I needed to download the
HTML of each channel page.
To do that I generated a config file for `curl` from the JSON file:
jaq --raw-output '.[] | (split("/") | last) as $name | "url \(.)\noutput \($name).html"' subscriptions.json > subscriptions.curl
[jaq] is an alternative implementation of [jq] that I use. This `jaq` expression does the following:
- `.[]` iterate over each element of the `subscriptions.json` array.
- `(split("/") | last) as $$name` split the URL on `/` and take the last element, storing it in a variable called `$name`.
- for a URL like `https://www.youtube.com/@mooretech` this stores `@mooretech` in `$name`.
- `"url \(.)\noutput \($$name).html"` generates the output text interpolating the channel page url and channel name.
This results in lines like this for each entry in `subscriptions.json`, output
to `subscriptions.curl`:
url https://www.youtube.com/@mooretech
output @mooretech.html
2024-05-06 04:34:48 +00:00
I then ran `curl` against this file to download all the pages:
2024-05-06 02:32:07 +00:00
curl --location --output-dir html --create-dirs --rate 1/s --config subscriptions.curl
- `--location` tells curl to follow redirects, for some reason three of my subscriptions redirected to alternate names when accessed.
- `--output-dir` tells curl to output the files into the `html` directory.
- `--create-dirs` tells curl to create output directories if they don't exist (just the `html` one in this case).
- `--rate 1/s` tells curl to only download at a rate of 1 page per second—I was concerned YouTube might block me if I requested the pages too quickly.
- `--config subscriptions.curl` tells curl to read additional command line arguments from the `subscriptions.curl` file generated above.
Now that I had the HTML for each channel I needed to extract the channel id
from it. While I was processing each HTML file I also extracted the channel
title for use later. For each HTML file I ran this script on it. I called the
script `generate-json-opml`:
```sh
#!/bin/sh
set -eu
URL="$1"
NAME=$(echo "$URL" | awk -F / '{ print $NF }')
HTML="html/${NAME}.html"
CHANNEL_ID=$(scraper -a content 'meta[property="og:url"]' < "$HTML" | awk -F / '{ print $NF }')
TITLE=$(scraper -a content 'meta[property="og:title"]' < "$HTML")
XML_URL="https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=${CHANNEL_ID}"
json_escape() {
echo "$1" | jaq --raw-input .
}
JSON_TITLE=$(json_escape "$TITLE")
JSON_XML_URL=$(json_escape "$XML_URL")
JSON_URL=$(json_escape "$URL")
printf '{"title": %s, "xmlUrl": %s, "htmlUrl": %s}\n' "$JSON_TITLE" "$JSON_XML_URL" "$JSON_URL" > json/"$NAME".json
```
Let's break that down:
- The channel URL is stored in `URL`.
- The channel name is determined by using `awk` to split the URL on `/` and take the last element.
- The path to the downloaded HTML page is stored in `HTML`.
- The channel id is determined by finding the `<meta>` tag in the html with a `property` attribute of `og:url` (the [OpenGraph metadata][OpenGraph] URL property). This URL is again split on `/` and the last element stored in `CHANNEL_ID`.
- Querying the HTML is done with a tool called [scraper] that allows you to use CSS selectors to extract parts of a HTML document.
- The channel title is done similarly by extracting the value of the `og:title` metadata.
- The URL of the RSS feed for the channel is stored in `XML_URL` using `CHANNEL_ID`.
- A function to escape strings destined for JSON is defined. This makes use of `jaq`.
- `TITLE`, `XML_URL`, and `URL` are escaped.
- Finally we generate a JSON object with the title, URL, and RSS URL and write it into a `json` directory under the name of the channel.
Ok, almost there. That script had to be run for each of the channel URLs.
First I generated a file with just a plain text list of the channel URLs:
jaq --raw-output '.[]' subscriptions.json > subscriptions.txt
Then I used `xargs` to process them in parallel:
xargs -n1 --max-procs=$(nproc) --arg-file subscriptions.txt --verbose ./generate-json-opml
This does the following:
- `-n1` read one line from `subscriptions.txt` to be passed as the argument to `generate-json-opml`.
- `--max-procs=$(nproc)` run up the number of cores my machine has in parallel.
- `--arg-file subscriptions.txt` read arguments for `generate-json-opml` from `subscriptions.txt`.
- `--verbose` show the commands being run.
- `./generate-json-opml` the command to run (this is the script above).
Finally all those JSON files need to be turned into an OPML file. For this I
used Python:
```python
#!/usr/bin/env python
import email.utils
import glob
import json
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET
opml = ET.Element("opml")
head = ET.SubElement(opml, "head")
title = ET.SubElement(head, "title")
title.text = "YouTube Subscriptions"
dateCreated = ET.SubElement(head, "dateCreated")
dateCreated.text = email.utils.formatdate(timeval=None, localtime=True)
body = ET.SubElement(opml, "body")
youtube = ET.SubElement(body, "outline", {"title": "YouTube", "text": "YouTube"})
for path in glob.glob("json/*.json"):
with open(path) as f:
info = json.load(f)
ET.SubElement(youtube, "outline", info, type="rss", text=info["title"])
ET.indent(opml)
print(ET.tostring(opml, encoding="unicode", xml_declaration=True))
```
This generates an OPML file (which is XML) using the ElementTree library. The
OPML file has this structure:
```xml
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<opml>
<head>
<title>YouTube Subscriptions</title>
<dateCreated>Sun, 05 May 2024 15:57:23 +1000</dateCreated>
</head>
<body>
<outline title="YouTube" text="YouTube">
<outline title="MooreTech" xmlUrl="https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=UCLi0H57HGGpAdCkVOb_ykVg" htmlUrl="https://www.youtube.com/@mooretech" type="rss" text="MooreTech" />
</outline>
</body>
</opml>
```
2024-05-06 02:50:20 +00:00
It does the following:
2024-05-06 02:32:07 +00:00
- Generates the top level OPML structure.
- For each JSON file, read and parse the JSON and then use that to generate an `outline` entry for that channel.
- Indent the OPML document.
- Write it to stdout using a Unicode encoding with an XML declaration (`<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>`).
2024-05-06 10:20:42 +00:00
Whew that was a lot! With the OPML file generated I was finally able to import
2024-05-06 02:32:07 +00:00
all my subscriptions into Feedbin.
All the code is available in [this
repository](https://forge.wezm.net/wezm/youtube-to-opml). In practice I used a
`Makefile` to run the various commands so that I didn't have to remember them.
### Watching videos from Feedbin
Now that Feedbin is the source of truth for subscriptions, how do I actually
watch them? I set up the [FeedMe] app on my Android tablet. In the settings I
enabled the NewPipe integration and set it to open the video page when tapped:
{{ figure(image="posts/2024/youtube-subscriptions-opml/feedme-settings.png", link="posts/2024/youtube-subscriptions-opml/feedme-settings.png", alt='Screenshot of the FeedMe integration settings. There are lots of apps listed. The entry for NewPipe is turned on.', caption="Screenshot of the FeedMe integration settings") }}
Now when viewing an item in FeedMe there is a NewPipe button that I can tap to
watch it:
{{ figure(image="posts/2024/youtube-subscriptions-opml/feedme.png", link="posts/2024/youtube-subscriptions-opml/feedme.png", alt='Screenshot of FeedMe viewing a video item. In the top left there is a NewPipe button, which when tapped opens the video in NewPipe.', caption="Screenshot of FeedMe viewing a video item") }}
2024-05-06 02:50:20 +00:00
### Closing Thoughts & Future Work
2024-05-06 02:32:07 +00:00
Could I have done all the processing to generate the OPML file with a single
Python file? Yes, but I rarely write Python so I preferred to just cobble
things together from tools I already knew.
Should I ever become a YouTube Premium subscriber again I can continue to
use this workflow and watch the videos from the YouTube embeds that
Feedbin generates, or open the item in the YouTube app instead of NewPipe.
2024-05-06 02:50:20 +00:00
At some point I'd like to work out how to get Feedbin to filter out YouTube
Shorts. It has the ability to automatically filter items matching any of the
supported [search syntax][feedbin-search] but I'm not sure if Shorts are
easily identifiable.
2024-05-06 02:32:07 +00:00
Lastly, what about desktop usage? When I'm on a real computer I read my RSS via
the Feedbin web app. It supports [custom sharing
integrations][feedbin-sharing]. In order to open a video on an Invidious
instance I need to rewrite it from a URL like:
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u1wfCnRINkE>
to one like:
<https://invidious.perennialte.ch/watch?v=u1wfCnRINkE>.
I can't do that
directly with a Feedbin custom sharing service definition but it would be
trivial to set up a little redirector application to do it. I even published [a
video on building a very similar thing][url-shortener] last year. Alternatively
I could install a [redirector browser
plugin](https://docs.invidious.io/redirector/), although that would require set
up on each of the computers and OS installs I use so I prefer the former
option.
### Comments
* [Fediverse](https://mastodon.decentralised.social/@wezm/112391817575822540)
* [Lobsters](https://lobste.rs/s/n3dnfa/exporting_youtube_subscriptions_opml)
<!-- * [Hacker News](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36742534) -->
2024-05-06 02:32:07 +00:00
[url-shortener]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-tsfUVg4II
[Invidious]: https://invidious.io/
[Feedbin]: https://feedbin.com/
[scraper]: https://github.com/causal-agent/scraper
[repo]: https://forge.wezm.net/wezm/youtube-to-opml
[NewPipe]: https://newpipe.net/
[subscriptions]: https://www.youtube.com/feed/channels
[jaq]: https://github.com/01mf02/jaq
[jq]: https://jqlang.github.io/jq/
[FeedMe]: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.seazon.feedme
[feedbin-sharing]: https://feedbin.com/help/sharing-read-it-later-services/
[OpenGraph]: https://ogp.me/
2024-05-06 02:50:20 +00:00
[feedbin-search]: https://feedbin.com/help/search-syntax/