Jaidyn Ann 7c241aab44 | ||
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Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
client.scm | ||
date-strings.scm | ||
feedsnake.scm | ||
named-format.scm |
Feedsnake
Simple Atom-to-mail (Mbox, Maildir) program: You pass it an Atom feed, it'll turn it into an mail client-friendly set of e-mails. It's pretty much feed2maildir combined with feed2mail, but less cool. It's also pretty much my attempt replacing an old project, Pogger, but for LiGNUx.
Feedsnake is scriptable, and can be easily used for one-off conversions or for managing your feed subscriptions generally. It pairs well with something like Mutt to read your feeds.
Usage
usage: feedsnake [-hnuU] [-s|S] [-o|d] FILE...
feedsnake [-hn] [-c] [-s] [-o|d] URL...
feedsnake [-h] [-s] [-o|d]
Feedsnake is a program for converting Atom feeds into mbox/maildir files.
Any Atom feeds passed as input will be output in mbox or maildir format.
If a FILE value is '-' or not provided, feedsnake will read a feed over standard
input. --since-last and similar arguments have no impact on these feeds.
If you want to subscribe to feeds with Feedsnake, you'll probably do something
like so:
feedsnake --cache ~/feeds/hacker_news.xml \
--output ~/feeds/hacker_news.mbox \
https://news.ycombinator.com/rss
Then, to update your subscription, just run:
feedsnake --update --since-last \
--output ~/feeds/hacker_news.mbox \
~/feeds/hacker_news.xml
For updating all feeds:
feedsnake --update --since-last ~/feeds/*.xml > ~/feeds/all.mbox
The FILE given as input can be any Atom/RSS file. If you'd like to update
the FILE (with --update or --update-since), then it must have the
'user.xdg.origin.url' extended attribute set as the feed URL. You can create
such a file as in the above example, by passing a URL with a --cache file set.
-h, --help Print a usage message
-d, --outdir=DIR Output directory, used for maildir output
-o, --output=FILE Output file, used for mbox output. Default is stdout ('-').
-c, --cache=FILE The cache file used if a URL is passed as argument.
-u, --update Update a feed FILE by downloading its newest version to the same path.
-U, --update-since Alias for --update and --since-last. This is probably the option you want.
-s, --since=DATETIME Output entries after the given date, in YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss format.
-S, --since-last Output entries dating from the last saved parsing of the file.
--since-update Output entries dating from the last update of the file.
-n, --no-save-date Don't save parse/update time of this operation, to avoid influencing --since-*.
Installation
Feedsnake is made using Chicken Scheme, a cute little Scheme that's very friendly. Once you've got Chicken Scheme installed, you can go ahead and build Feedsnake like so:
$ sudo make dependencies
$ make client
$ sudo cp ./feedsnake /usr/local/bin/
… actually, that's somewhat of a lie. You need to manually install the xattr library first, since it's not in the egg depot.
Examples
Feeds, generally
To subscribe to a feed, you're really just creating a cache file for the feed. It's simple. Here:
$ feedsnake --no-save-date --cache ~/Feeds/Hacker\ News.xml https://news.ycombinator.com/rss
Then, just update the file and output new posts from your feed(s), every once in a while:
$ feedsnake --since-last --update --output=~/Feeds/Mail.mbox ~/Feeds/*.xml
$ mutt -f ~/Feeds/Mail.mbox
# Or, alternatively, for maildir:
$ feedsnake --since-last --update --outdir=~/Feeds/Mail/ ~/Feeds/*.xml
$ mutt -f ~/Feeds/Mail/
YouTube
I like to "subscribe" to channels by having an following its Atom feed on Invidious— it's also nice to just download those videos in one go.
Let's subscribe to a channel:
# With Feedsnake:
$ feedsnake -nc ~/Feeds/YouTube/Linsday\ Ellis.xml \
"https://yewtu.be/feed/channel/UCG1h-Wqjtwz7uUANw6gazRw"
# Manually:
$ touch ~/Feeds/YouTube/Stop\ Skeletons\ From\ Fighting.xml
$ attr -s xdg.origin.url -V "https://yewtu.be/feed/channel/UC5Xeb9-FhZXgvw340n7PsCQ" \
~/Feeds/YouTube/Stop\ Skeletons\ From\ Fighting.xml
And now, lets downloading all videos uploaded since the last update:
$ ytdl $(feedsnake -U ~/Feeds/YouTube/*.xml | grep '^\*\*\*' | sed 's%^... %%')
(All URLs associated with a post are listed in the message body in a line starting with three asterisks; hence the search & removal of said asterisks.)
Meta
- Author: Jaidyn Ann (jadedctrl@posteo.at)
- License: GPLv3
- https://github.com/jadedctrl/feedsnake
- https://notabug.org/jadedctrl/feedsnake
- https://xwx.moe/en/