I’ve been using Tube Archivist to archive my YouTube playlists, but I’ve hit a portability snag. It stores all metadata in its internal database and saves video files with non-readable filenames. This makes the archive unreadable without the software and its database, which defeats the point of long-term archival storage.

Are there any tools that:

  • Archive playlists with human-readable filenames (or let you control the naming scheme)
  • Have an API for queuing archival jobs
  • Store metadata in portable formats (e.g., sidecar JSON or YAML)
  • Don’t require additional software to interpret the archive
  • tegbains@lemmy.ca
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    4 days ago

    I changed over to PinchFlat instead for Tube Archivist for these reasons. It’s even easier to setup than TA. I have mine hooked up to store the files on an SMB share that JellyFin can read. https://github.com/kieraneglin/pinchflat

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Sure it’s not a proprietary binary DB, right? Probably just sqlite or something? Bet you can just dump it.

    But yeah, switch to something without those problems. There’s lots of them out there.

    • douglasg14b@lemmy.worldOP
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      4 days ago

      Oh it’s definitely an easy to read DB. But that’s still beyond the point IMHO.

      If you can’t reconstruct the state of your files without 3rd party software to interpret them, then they are not in an archive format.

      One should be able to browse their data using OS native tools on an offline device push comes to shove.