Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: tdh-twitch-utils
Version: 1.5.1
Summary: Record, concatenate and synchronize Twitch live streams
Home-page: https://github.com/TheDrHax/Twitch-Utils
Author: Dmitry Karikh
Author-email: the.dr.hax@gmail.com
License: UNKNOWN
Description: # Python utils for Twitch [![PyPI version](https://badge.fury.io/py/tdh-twitch-utils.svg)](https://badge.fury.io/py/tdh-twitch-utils)
        
        ```
        pip3 install tdh-twitch-utils[all]
        ```
        
        This module supports partial installation:
        
        | Package | Scripts | Dependencies |
        | ------- | ------- | ------------ |
        | tdh-twitch-utils | [concat](#concat) | FFmpeg |
        | tdh-twitch-utils[record] | [concat](#concat), [record](#record) | FFmpeg, streamlink |
        | tdh-twitch-utils[offset] | [concat](#concat), [offset](#offset) | FFmpeg, praat-parselmouth |
        | tdh-twitch-utils[mute] | [concat](#concat), [mute](#mute) | FFmpeg, tensorflow, spleeter |
        | tdh-twitch-utils[all] | all of the above | all of the above |
        
        You can also provide a list of extras in a single command:
        
        ```
        pip3 install tdh-twitch-utils[record,offset]
        ```
        
        ## concat
        
        This script uses MPEG-TS timestamps to concatenate multiple
        video segments into a single file without re-encoding. It is
        most useful for assembling partial stream recordings in case
        of interruption or error during stream download. Overlapping
        parts will be removed precisely with ffmpeg's concat demuxer.
        
        ### Example
        
        ```
        # download two overlapping segments (60 seconds each)
        VOD="YOUR VOD ID"
        streamlink -o 1.ts --hls-duration 60 "twitch.tv/videos/$VOD" best
        streamlink -o 2.ts --hls-start-offset 30 --hls-duration 60 "twitch.tv/videos/$VOD" best
        
        # concatenate two segments into one video
        twitch_utils concat 1.ts 2.ts -o result.mp4
        
        # create one segment
        twitch_utils concat 1.ts 2.ts -o result.ts
        
        # pipe concatenated MPEG-TS stream to other applications
        twitch_utils concat 1.ts 2.ts -o - | ffmpeg -i - -c copy result.mp4
        ```
        
        ## record
        
        This script can be used to record live streams without waiting
        for them to end. It starts to record live stream immediately,
        then downloads VOD and concatenates them into full stream recording.
        
        Notice: This script requires channel to have public VODs.
        
        Main features:
        * Start recording at any time - stream will be recorded from the beginning;
        * Monitor streamlink process for errors and skipped segments - and fix them;
        * Resume recording after restart of the script - it is possible as long as
        the stream is still online and already downloaded parts are accessible;
        * Skip ads even without paid subscription - ad segments will be ignored by
        streamlink and missing original segments will be downloaded from VOD;
        
        Algorithm:
        1. Check if channel is live and VOD for current stream already exists;
        2. Get live VOD ID from Twitch API;
        3. Start downloading live stream into file `VOD.0.ts`;
        4. Wait 1 minute and start downloading VOD into file `VOD.1.ts`;
        5. Wait for VOD download to finish;
        6. Check the possibility of concatenation and download missing parts of the timeline;
        7. Wait for stream to finish;
        8. Restart stream recording in case of errors or skipped segments, wait 1 minute and go to step 6;
        9. Concatenate all parts via `concat` script (see above).
        
        Note: Since Nov 2019 you have to provide your Twitch OAuth token in the command.
        Otherwise the script will not be able to detect the ID of the live VOD and
        download the beginning of the stream. At the moment, you will need to extract
        OAuth token from Twitch's cookie "auth-token". Other options such as providing
        your own Client-ID and token are not implemented yet.
        
        ### Example
        
        ```
        # Record live stream of channel 'blackufa' using 2 threads
        twitch_utils record --oauth=YOUR_TOKEN blackufa -j 2
        ```
        
        ## offset
        
        This script performs cross-correlation of two audio files to find
        offset between them. First argument is cropped and used as template.
        Second argument can have any duration -- it will be divided into
        separate chunks to reduce memory usage (otherwise it wouldn't be
        possible to use exceptionally big files). Both arguments can be
        videos or audio files -- audio track will be extracted and converted.
        You can even use HTTP links if `ffprobe` is able to correctly determine
        second argument's duration.
        
        ### Example
        
        ```
        # Cut small segment from big video file (offset: 123 seconds)
        ffmpeg -ss 123 -i YOUR_FILE.mp4 -t 60 -c copy template.mp4
        
        # Find offset of template.mp4 within YOUR_FILE.mp4
        twitch_utils offset template.mp4 YOUR_FILE.mp4
        # ... returns 122.99997732426303
        
        # Same command, but result will be rounded to nearest integer
        twitch_utils offset template.mp4 YOUR_FILE.mp4 --round
        # ... returns 123
        ```
        
        ## mute
        
        This script attempts to separate streamer's voice from background music by using [Spleeter](https://github.com/deezer/spleeter). Only specified time ranges are affected. Output contains the same video, but without music in these parts.
        
        The main purpose of this script is to remove automated Content-ID claims from the video on YouTube without muting the whole section.
        
        The result is similar to "Mute song only (beta)" in YouTube Studio, but this script is much faster and can handle multiple time ranges at once.
        
        Note: Prebuilt binaries of Tensorflow require CPUs with AVX support.
        
        ### Example
        
        ```
        # Remove music from 5:00 to 8:00 and from 1:00:00 to 1:05:00
        twitch_utils mute input.mp4 5:00~8:00 1:00:00~1:05:00 -o output.mp4
        ```
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Environment :: Console
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Intended Audience :: End Users/Desktop
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: GNU General Public License v3 (GPLv3)
Classifier: Topic :: Multimedia :: Sound/Audio :: Analysis
Classifier: Topic :: Multimedia :: Video :: Conversion
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Provides-Extra: record
Provides-Extra: offset
Provides-Extra: mute
Provides-Extra: all
