shellcaster logo: Ferris the crab with headphones

Shellcaster

Shellcaster is a terminal-based podcast manager, built in Rust. It provides a terminal UI (i.e., ncurses) to allow users to subscribe to podcast feeds, and sync feeds to check for new episodes. Episodes may be downloaded locally, played (with an external media player, at least for now), and marked as played/unplayed. Keybindings and other options are configurable via a config file.

screenshot of shellcaster

Installing shellcaster

On Arch Linux

There are packages available for shellcaster in the Arch User Repository (AUR). Use makepkg -si (see further details) or your favourite AUR helper program to install one of the following packages:

On other Linux distributions and MacOS

Currently the only option is to build from source.

First, ensure you have installed the necessary dependencies:

Notes:

Next, there are two options for compiling the program:

  1. You can install the latest version of the binary directly from crates.io with one command:

bash cargo install shellcaster --path "/usr/local" # add or remove any features with --features

  1. You can clone the Github repo and compile it yourself:

```bash git clone https://github.com/jeff-hughes/shellcaster.git cd shellcaster cargo build --release # add or remove any features with --features

sudo cp target/release/shellcaster /usr/local/bin/ ```

See below for the list of available features when compiling.

On Windows

Shellcaster is not currently supported on Windows, although some work has been done to try to get it working. Unicode support is weak, however, and there are issues when resizing the screen. You might have better luck using the new Windows Terminal and building with the win32 feature enabled, but this has not been tested. If you are a Windows user and want to help work out the bugs, pull requests are more than welcome!

List of compile features

By default, native-tls and wide features are enabled. Here is the full list of features:

To specify different features when compiling, here is the format:

bash cargo install --no-default-features --features "<feature1>,<feature2>" --root "/usr/local"

The format is the same when using cargo build instead:

bash cargo build --release --no-default-features --features "<feature1>,<feature2>" sudo cp target/release/shellcaster /usr/local/bin/

Running shellcaster

Easy peasy! In your terminal, run:

bash shellcaster

Note that if you installed shellcaster to a different location, ensure that this location has been added to your $PATH:

bash export PATH="/path/to/add:$PATH"

Configuring shellcaster

If you want to change configuration settings, the sample config.toml file can be copied from here. Download it, edit it to your fancy, and place it in the following location:

```bash

on Linux

mkdir -p ~/.config/shellcaster cp config.toml ~/.config/shellcaster/

on MacOS

mkdir -p ~/Library/Preferences/shellcaster cp config.toml ~/Library/Preferences/shellcaster/ ```

Or you can put config.toml in a place of your choosing, and specify the location at runtime:

bash shellcaster -c /path/to/config.toml

The sample file above provides comments that should walk you through all the available options. If any field does not appear in the config file, it will be filled in with the default value specified in those comments. The defaults are also listed below, for convenience.

Configuration options

downloadpath: * Specifies where podcast episodes that are downloaded will be stored. * Defaults: * On Linux: $XDGDATA_HOME/shellcaster/ or $HOME/.local/share/shellcaster/ * On Mac: $HOME/Library/Application Support/shellcaster/ * On Windows: C:\Users\username\AppData\Local\shellcaster\

play_command: * Command used to play episodes. Use "%s" to indicate where file/URL will be entered to the command. Note that shellcaster does not include a native media player, so it simply passes the file path/URL to the given command with no further checking as to its success or failure. * Default: "vlc %s"

simultaneous_downloads: * Maximum number of files to download simultaneously. Setting this too high could result in network requests being denied. A good general guide would be to set this to the number of processor cores on your computer. * Default: 3

max_retries: * Maximum number of times to retry connecting to a URL to sync a podcast or download an episode. * Default: 3

Default keybindings

| Key | Action | | ------- | -------------- | | Arrow keys / h,j,k,l | Navigate menus | | a | Add new feed | | q | Quit program | | s | Synchronize selected feed | | Shift+S | Synchronize all feeds | | Enter / p | Play selected episode | | m | Mark selected episode as played/unplayed | | Shift+M | Mark all episodes as played/unplayed | | d | Download selected episode | | Shift+D | Download all episodes | | x | Delete downloaded file | | Shift+X | Delete all downloaded files | | r | Remove selected feed/episode from list | | Shift+R | Remove all feeds/episodes from list |

Note: Actions can be mapped to more than one key (e.g., "Enter" and "p" both play an episode), but a single key may not do more than one action (e.g., you can't set "d" to both download and delete episodes).

Contributing

Contributions from others are welcome! If you wish to contribute, feel free to clone the repo and submit pull requests. Please ensure you are on the develop branch when making your edits, as this is where the continued development of the app is taking place. Pull requests will only be merged to the develop branch, so you can help to avoid merge conflicts by doing your work on that branch in the first place.

Why "shellcaster"?

I was trying to come up with a play on the word "podcast", and I liked the use of the word "shell" for several reasons. "Shell" is a synonym for the word "pod". The terminal is also referred to as a shell (and shellcaster is a terminal-based program). In addition, the program is built on Rust, whose mascot is Ferris the crab. Finally, I just personally enjoy that "shellcaster" sounds a lot like "spellcaster", so you can feel like a wizard when you use the program...