24 KiB
Executable File
Listen to music online using this repo's github page
all of the streams can be listen to using their own page, just click on the one you want and hit the play button, click on the left and right arrow keys to change stations, this was made possible by using javascript code from this page, thank you
i've also added a simple audio visualizer to the stream pages, code was taken from this repo, thank you
if you are on a chromium based web browser (chrome, vivaldi, opera, edge etc ...) you are not able to listen to the most of the streams, here is an explanation from chrome support which tells you why this happens and how to fix it
Usually this error occurs because the radio station you are trying to listen to is running on an unencrypted port (not 443). This is quite common and it's not technically necessary for radio stations to be encrypted but nowadays web browsers like Chrome have started disallowing unencrypted content to be shown in an otherwise encrypted websites. There is a few solutions for you right now:
-
Use a different browser like Firefox. For the moment they haven't blocked unencrypted content on an otherwise encrypted page web page.
-
Open Chrome (or other chromium web browsers), go to the website and then click on the padlock icon to the left of the URL box and then from the drop down menu select the 'Site Settings' option, you can then scroll down to the 'Insecure content' option at the bottom of the page and select 'Allow', this will create an exception for the website and allow you to continue using the player as before.
-
download the stream files and play them locally on your pc or other devices which i've talked about further down in this markdown file
Shortcuts
- How to listen
- How to download a stream
- How to save songs indivudally
- Audio visualization
- Normilizing audio
- Customize keybinds
- Easier m3u consumption
- How to download
- Source
- Git stats
- How i push updates
Extra Streams
this repo now includes 4 extra streams made by me
---everything-full.m3u
combines all of the streams sorted by names that are shown in this repo
---everything-lite.m3u
is exactly like the everything-full stream but cover images and extra info was removed
---randomized.m3u
is exactly like the everything-lite stream but every line was shuffled and randomized
---sorted.m3u
is exactly like the everything-lite stream but the links themselves are sorted alphabetically/numerically, it's good for when you have found a good radio station with many different genres of music to listen to all of them in order
every time i push an update these 4 files will also get updated and the randomized stream will also get shuffled again
How to listen to these?
in the terminal, do this:
mpv https://raw.githubusercontent.com/junguler/m3u-radio-music-playlists/main/trance.m3u
or add/change m3u
file association in your os to mpv and double click on any of .m3u
files in your file manager
how to download a live-stream to my computer?
click me to read
downloading from these m3u files is not possible as far as i know since they contain multiple streams, but if you want to download from a particular stream you can achieve this by using ffmpeg, i use the most popular (first stream) in the trance.m3u
to showcase this, in your terminal change directory to where you want this file to be at (note that lines starting with # are not actual streams and are there for embedding extra info to your media player)
ffmpeg -y -i http://stream.dancewave.online:8080/dance.mp3 -c copy dancewave.mp3
change the filename at the end to what you like, as ffmpeg suggests when you feel happy with the length/size of this file press q
in your terminal emulator to finish the process and save the file
because these are online streams there is no way to download the whole thing as they are constantly changing, but you can set a hard limit to when recording stops using the timeout command on bash/zsh shells
timeout 60 ffmpeg -y -i http://stream.dancewave.online:8080/dance.mp3 -c copy dancewave.mp3
the above command saves about one minute of the audio live-stream, you can specify longer times using -m
for minutes -h
for hours and -d
for days, these can also be used with decimals for more control, so one and half minute can be set with 1.5m or 3 hour and 45 minutes can be set with 3.75h
timeout 1h ffmpeg -y -i http://stream.dancewave.online:8080/dance.mp3 -c copy dancewave.mp3
another more elegant way to do this is to use ffmpeg to segment these files with your desired time and add a timestamp at the end as filenames, code was copied from here
ffmpeg -i http://stream.dancewave.online:8080/dance.mp3 -c copy -f segment -strftime 1 -segment_time 60 %Y-%m-%d-%H-%M-%S.mp3
this will save a new mp3 file every minute, if you want to make this longer change -segment_time 60
and multiply the number of minutes you want for each file by 60, so if i want my mp3 files to each be 5 minutes i do -segment_time 300
this process goes on forever unless you run out of disk space or if you are not connected to the internet for some reason
this command can also be stopped using ctrl + c
shortcut or the timeout command showcased above so adding timeout 1h
in front of the above command stops the whole process after an hour
How to save songs indivudally by title from a live stream?
click me to read
i have been looking for a way to do this for a while, i found this program streamwriter that does this but unfortunently it's only available on windows, this winehq page lists the program as platinum and it should work with wine without any issues but i have not tested it myself as i'm not on linux at the moment and don't have a virtual machine ready either
download the portable version of the program and extract it somewhere in your hard drive, the first time you open the program it's going to ask a few questions, things like language and where it's going to save downloaded songs, now that you are greeted with the program go to a m3u file of your favorite music genre and copy a stream link to start download, here is mine from the trance.m3u
http://51.89.148.171:8022/stream/1/
now put it inside the area i've shown and click to button next to it to start recording, after each song is completed it's going to create a new file and put a name on it from the title the stream is broadcasting
once you are happy with the amount of songs downloaded, right click on the stream and click on stop recording after current title
note that in some rare cases a stream does not broadcasts song titles and if you happen to come accross of these there is really nothing else you can and the program is going to continuously record the stream until you manually stop it
Mpv only shows a black window when listening to music, how to make it pretty?
download the visualizer script for mpv and put it in your scripts folder either on ~/.config/mpv/scripts
on *nix systems
or C:\users\USERNAME\AppData\Roaming\mpv\scripts\
on windows
put these in your mpv.conf, this is a auto-profile for all audio files
[audio-only]
profile-cond=not vid
profile-restore=copy
vf-add=rgbashift=rh=-4:bv=+4
vf-add=drawbox=w=iw:h=ih:color=00FFFF@0.5
vf-add=drawbox=x=3:y=3:w=iw-6:h=ih-6:color=00FF00@0.5
vf-add=drawbox=x=6:y=6:w=iw-12:h=ih-12:color=FFFF00@0.5
vf-add=hue=H=0.1*PI*t
Normilize Audio
depending on the stream some music might be too load and others too quiet, thankfully we can use an ffmpeg filter inside mpv to fix the issue and force all music to be played at the same level, put this line inside your mpv.conf
and it will automatically normalize all audio
af=lavfi=[dynaudnorm=f=75:g=25:p=0.55]
I really like mpv, how do i customize keybinds?
make a file called input.conf either at the folder your mpv.exe is on windows or on ~/.config/mpv/ if you are *nix systems, put these inside it for using page-up and page-down for changing radio stations
PGUP playlist-prev ; show-text "${playlist-pos-1}/${playlist-count}"
PGDWN playlist-next ; show-text "${playlist-pos-1}/${playlist-count}"
Isn't there an easier way to use and control these using mpv?
yes there is, use the IPTV script which comes with fuzzy finding stations, better keybinds and ...
How to download all of the files?
use the auto-generated zip
you can also run a git clone on this repo
git clone https://github.com/junguler/m3u-radio-music-playlists.git
for further updates cd into the folder and do git pull
Where did you find these?
from this page
Git Stats
since the traffic section of the insight tab is hidden to other viewers of this repo i'm going to include them and update them every two weeks so you can have feel for how this repo is doing
How do i push updates?
if you just want to listen to music you won't need to keep reading but if you are interested to know how i do this then click below
click me to read
at first this process was manual but i finally got around to write a simple bash script to make this process fast and easy, i'll go over each step here one by one
1st step: we need to get the links from the website here these files are automatically updated and sorted by popularity but the links themselves never change so after this one line command we don't need to repeat this first step ever again and we can save these links to a text file for future downloads
lynx --dump --listonly --nonumbers https://www.radio.pervii.com/en/online-playlists-m3u.htm | grep ".m3u" | grep "top_radio" > list.txt
now for the explanation of what we did:
lynx is a terminal web browser that doesn't load any kind of media and only shows links, text and stylings, we use it's --dump
flag to save all the text and links from the website
grep is a powerful program that takes strings of characters and grep them to assist us in finding the stuff we need we used a pipe |
to take the information lynx gave us and send it to grep, we first look for every .m3u
file in the page and then further filter these links by top_radio
in the next grep command to only get the file links we need, finlay use >
to write all of these information to the list.txt
in the current directory we are in
2nd step: we use aria2 to download these files to our preferred directory in our case ~/Music/bare_m3u/
/usr/bin/aria2c -x 16 -j 4 -i ~/Music/list.txt -d ~/Music/bare_m3u/
note that every time we use a program in a script we want to avoid using cd
(change directory) and always want to use the full path of every program we use, for finding where a program is just do which and then the name of the program like this: which aria2c
which gives us this /usr/bin/aria2c
the flags we used with aria2 is as follows: -x 16
tells aria2 to use 16 connections to download every file (this makes the download faster), -j 4
makes it that aria2 download 4 files at a time, -i
takes our input txt file we made in the first step and -d
tells aria2 to download to that specific directory
3rd step: remove the top_radio_ prefix from every file since it's not needed for our use case
for f in ~/Music/bare_m3u/*.m3u ; do mv "$f" "$(echo "$f" | sed -e 's/top_radio_//g')"; done
4rd step: make the ---everything-full.m3u
out of our downloaded m3u files
cat $( ls ~/Music/bare_m3u/*.m3u -v ) | awk '!seen[$0]++' > ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-full.m3u
because cat
doesn't list alphabetically we use ls
in tandem with it, use awk
to remove duplicate lines
4.5 step: make the lite version of everything-full
cat ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-full.m3u | sed -n '/^#/!p' > ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-lite.m3u
use sed
to remove every line that starts with #
to make the final file smaller and write everything to the final m3u stream
5rd step: make the ---randomized.m3u and ---sorted.m3u stream by shuffling the contents of ---everything.m3u
cat ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-lite.m3u | shuf > ~/Music/bare_m3u/---randomized.m3u
shuf
does the shuffling for us
cat ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-lite.m3u | sort | awk 'length>10' > ~/Music/bare_m3u/---sorted.m3u
sort
sorts the links for us and we use awk
to remove the few broken links that are less than 10 characters
6rd step: move everything to our repos git directory, all the git stuff happens here, the move command overwrites everything that was there before
mv ~/Music/bare_m3u/*.m3u ~/Music/m3u-radio-music-playlists
last step: add, commit and push to your repo
git -C ~/Music/m3u-radio-music-playlists add .
git -C ~/Music/m3u-radio-music-playlists commit -m "updating"
git -C ~/Music/m3u-radio-music-playlists push
you will need a personal access token for repeat pushes to your repo from the terminal, look here for more information about it
if you are the only person who uses your computer you can set git to always remember your username & password using this command on your repos local folder:
git config credential.helper store
the next time you put your username and password git is going to remember it and never ask for it again
now for the complete script, save it to a file and give it .sh
extension and run chmod +x script.sh
on it and it's ready to use, next time you want to push an update just do script.sh
in your terminal
#!/bin/bash
/usr/bin/aria2c -x 16 -j 4 -i ~/Music/list.txt -d ~/Music/bare_m3u/
for f in ~/Music/bare_m3u/*.m3u ; do mv "$f" "$(echo "$f" | sed -e 's/top_radio_//g')"; done
cat $( ls ~/Music/bare_m3u/*.m3u -v ) | awk '!seen[$0]++' > ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-full.m3u
cat ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-full.m3u | sed -n '/^#/!p' > ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-lite.m3u
cat ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-lite.m3u | shuf > ~/Music/bare_m3u/---randomized.m3u
cat ~/Music/bare_m3u/---everything-lite.m3u | sort | awk 'length>10' > ~/Music/bare_m3u/---sorted.m3u
mv ~/Music/bare_m3u/*.m3u ~/Music/m3u-radio-music-playlists
git -C ~/Music/m3u-radio-music-playlists add .
git -C ~/Music/m3u-radio-music-playlists commit -m "`date +'%Y/%b/%d - %I:%M:%S %p'`"
git -C ~/Music/m3u-radio-music-playlists push