You can use git-annex as a podcatcher, to download podcast contents. No additional software is required, but your git-annex must be built with the Feeds feature (run `git annex version` to check). All you need to do is put something like this in a cron job: `cd somerepo && git annex importfeed http://url/to/podcast http://other/podcast/url` This downloads the urls, and parses them as RSS, Atom, or RDF feeds. All enclosures are downloaded and added to the repository, the same as if you had manually run `git annex addurl` on each of them. git-annex will avoid downloading a file from a feed if its url has already been stored in the repository before. So once a file is downloaded, you can move it around, delete it, `git annex drop` its content, etc, and it will not be downloaded again by repeated runs of `git annex importfeed`. Just how a podcatcher should behave. (git-annex versions since 2015 also tracks the podcast `guid` values, as metadata, to help avoid duplication if the media file url changes; use `git annex metadata ...` to inspect.) ## templates To control the filenames used for items downloaded from a feed, there's a --template option. The default is `--template='${feedtitle}/${itemtitle}${extension}'` Other available template variables: feedauthor, itemauthor, itemsummary, itemdescription, itemrights, itemid, itempubdate, author, title. ## catching up To catch up on a feed without downloading its contents, use `git annex importfeed --relaxed`, and delete the symlinks it creates. Next time you run `git annex addurl` it will only fetch any new items. ## fast mode To add a feed without downloading its contents right now, use `git annex importfeed --fast`. Then you can use `git annex get` as usual to download the content of an item. ## storing the podcast list in git You can check the list of podcast urls into git right next to the files it downloads. Just make a file named feeds and add one podcast url per line. Then you can run git-annex on all the feeds: `xargs git-annex importfeed < feeds` ## recreating lost episodes If for some reason git-annex refuses to download files you are certain are in the podcast, it is quite possible it is because they have already been downloaded. In any case, you can use `--force` to redownload them: `git-annex importfeed --force http://example.com/feed` ## distributed podcatching A nice benefit of using git-annex as a podcatcher is that you can run `git annex importfeed` on the same url in different clones of a repository, and `git annex sync` will sync it all up. ## centralized podcatching You can also have a designated machine which always fetches all podcstas to local disk and stores them. That way, you can archive podcasts with time-delayed deletion of upstream content. You can also work around slow downloads upstream by podcatching to a server with ample bandwidth or work around a slow local Internet connection by podcatching to your home server and transferring to your laptop on demand. ## youtube channels You can also use `git annex importfeed` on youtube channels. It will use youtube-dl to automatically download the videos. To download a youtube channel, you need to find the feed associated with that channel, and pass it to `git annex importfeed`. There does not seem to be an easy link anywhere to get the feed, but you can construct its url manually. For a channel url like "https://www.youtube.com/channel/$foo", the feed is "https://www.youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=$foo" Use of youtube-dl is disabled by default as it can be a security risk. See the documentation of annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses in [[git-annex]] for details.) ## metadata As well as storing the urls for items imported from a feed, git-annex can store additional [[metadata]], like the author, and itemdescription. This can then be looked up later, used in [[metadata_driven_views]], etc. To make all available metadata from the feed be stored: `git config annex.genmetadata true`