Neale Pickett 2173760523 | ||
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Dockerfile | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
TODO.md | ||
abcde.conf | ||
encoder.py | ||
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reader.py | ||
statuser.py | ||
sucker.py |
README.md
The Media Sucker
This program watches your CD/DVD drive. When you put a CD or DVD in, it will suck the content off, eject the drive, and then re-encode the content to a compressed format.
What It Supports
At the time I'm writing this README, it will:
- Rip audio CDs, look them up in cddb, encode them to VBR MP3, then tag them.
- Rip video DVDs, transcode them to mkv
How To Run This
First you have to build it. It will build on a raspberry pi.
docker build --tag=media-sucker .
You'll need a place to store all your precious media:
incoming=/path/to/incoming
mkdir -P $incoming
chown 911:911 $incoming
Then you can run it:
docker run -d --restart=unless-stopped \
--name=sucker \
--device cdrom --device dvd --device sr0 \
-v $incoming:/incoming \
-p 5880:8080 \
media-sucker
Or you can put it in a docker-compose.yaml
file:
services:
sucker:
image: media-sucker
volumes:
- type: bind
source: /path/to/incoming
target: /incoming
ports:
- published: 5880
target: 8080
Stick a video DVD or audio CD in,
and the drive should spin up for a while,
then spit your media back out.
Then, eventually, you'll have a new .mkv
file (for video)
or a new directory of .mp3
files (for audio).
You can watch what it's doing at http://localhost:5880/
A note on filenames and tags
This program does the absolute minimum to try and tag your media properly.
For DVDs, that means reading the "title" stored on the DVD, which I've seen vary from very helpful (eg. "Barbie A Fashion Fairytale") to ridiculously unhelpful (eg. "FBWTF2"). But at least it's usually unique for each DVD and at least somewhat related to the DVD contents.
For CDs, the situation is even worse. Audio CDs do not store any metadata, so CDDB takes the length of every track in seconds and tries to match that against something a user has uploaded in the past. This is wrong a whole lot of the time.
If CDDB can't find a match for an audio CD, this program will append the datestamp of the rip to the album name, in the hopes that you can remember about what time you put each CD in the drive. So for stuff like multi-CD audiobooks, that's pretty helpful.
But the end result in almost every case is that you're going to have to manually edit the metadata.
Answers
I'm skipping the part where I make up questions I think people might have.
Why I Wrote This
The automatic-ripping-machine
looks really badass.
I spent about two days trying to get a Docker container built for it,
and another day trying to get it to actually read my drive.
I got it reading the drive exactly once, and then never again.
That's when I gave up and created my own thing, which is pretty janky, but works a lot better for me, in that it actually does something.
Why You Should Run This
The only reason I can think of that anybody would want to use this is if they,
like me,
are too dumb to get the automatic-ripping-machine
to work.
What Kind Of Hardware I Use
I run it on a Raspberry Pi 4, with a Samsung DVD drive from the stone age.