Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
executable file
·
115 lines (87 loc) · 3.29 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

executable file
·
115 lines (87 loc) · 3.29 KB

GMusicFS

This is a FUSE filesystem for Google Music written in Python. It utilizes the unofficial gmusicapi written by Simon Weber.

This creates a filesystem that does the following:

  • Creates a directory of artists/<name of artist>/<albums>/<tracks>.
  • Access the cover image for each album as cover.jpg in the album directory.
  • Stream each track as an mp3 directly from the filesystem.

What this is useful for:

  • Copying a few tracks from Google Music directly to your hard drive (using a file manager or cp directly.)
  • Streaming music with mplayer or another simple music player.

What this is NOT useful for (yet..):

  • Importing all your music into iTunes, banshee, amarok etc. These big media players will attempt to read all the ID3 information from the files and not knowing that all the files are on a remote server. It might work, but it's going to be extremely inefficient and this might bring down the banhammer from Google..
  • Importing new music. The filesystem is read-only (this might change in a new version.)
  • Random-access within the mp3 files. You cannot seek() inside the mp3 files, they will only stream from the beginning of the file.

GMusicFS doesn't implement any caching. Copying a file should always work, because latency doesn't matter, but if you're streaming the music, you may want to turn on your player's caching system (eg. mplayer -cache 200.) You may notice a few blips in the sound during the first few seconds of each song without it. If you're on a low latency connection this might not affect you.

Installation

Installing GMusicFS requires two dependencies:

These will be installed automatically when installing GMusicFS:

pip install https://github.com/evandeaubl/GMusicFS/tarball/master

Usage

Create a config file in ~/.gmusicfs:

[credentials]
username = [email protected]
password = your_password
deviceId = your_mobile_id

If you use 2-factor authentication, make sure you use an application specific password.

To find the device id, you may run gmusicfs with the parameter --deviceid after providing login informations.

gmusicfs --deviceid

Secure the configuration file so that no one else can read it (GMusicFS will complain about this if you forget):

chmod 600 ~/.gmusicfs

Command line parameters:

usage: gmusicfs [-h] [-f] [-v] [-vv] [-t] mountpoint

GMusicFS

positional arguments:
  mountpoint          The location to mount to

optional arguments:
  -h, --help          show this help message and exit
  -f, --foreground    Don't daemonize, run in the foreground.
  -v, --verbose       Be a little verbose
  -vv, --veryverbose  Be very verbose
  -t, --truefilesize  Report true filesizes (slower directory reads)
  --nolibrary         Don't scan the library at launch
  --deviceid          Get the mobile device ids bounded to your account

Example

Mount your music:

mkdir -p $HOME/google_music
gmusicfs $HOME/google_music

Unmount your music:

fusermount -u $HOME/google_music