A simple Node.js wrapper for yt-dlp.
- Auto install the latest
yt-dlp
version available. - Executes any command in an efficient way.
- Promise & Stream interface support.
Note: It requires Python 3.7 or above available in your system as
python3
. Otherwise, the library will throw an error.
$ npm install youtube-dl-exec --save
By default, the library will auto-install the latest yt-dlp
available that will downloaded on build time.
Any yt-dlp
flags is supported:
const youtubedl = require('youtube-dl-exec')
youtubedl('https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xKWiCMKKJg', {
dumpSingleJson: true,
noCheckCertificates: true,
noWarnings: true,
preferFreeFormats: true,
addHeader: [
'referer:youtube.com',
'user-agent:googlebot'
]
}).then(output => console.log(output))
It's equivalent to:
$ ./bin/yt-dlp \
--dump-single-json \
--no-check-certificates \
--no-warnings \
--prefer-free-formats \
--add-header='user-agent:googlebot' \
--add-header='referer:youtube.com' \
'https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xKWiCMKKJg'
Type yt-dlp --help
for seeing all of them.
In case you need, you can specify your own binary path using .create
:
const { create: createYoutubeDl } = require('youtube-dl-exec')
const youtubedl = createYoutubeDl('/my/binary/path')
Since the library is returning a promise, you can use any library that makes a progress estimation taking a promise as input:
const logger = require('progress-estimator')()
const youtubedl = require('youtube-dl-exec')
const url = 'https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xKWiCMKKJg'
const promise = youtubedl(url, { dumpSingleJson: true })
const result = await logger(promise, `Obtaining ${url}`)
console.log(result)
Alternatively, you can access to the subprocess to have more granular control. See youtubedl.exec.
Also, combine that with YOUTUBE_DL_SKIP_DOWNLOAD. See environment variables to know more.
It execs any yt-dlp
command, returning back the output.
Required
Type: string
The URL to target.
Type: object
Any flag supported by yt-dlp
.
Any option provided here will passed to execa#options.
Similar to main method but instead of a parsed output, it will return the internal subprocess object:
const youtubedl = require('youtube-dl-exec')
const fs = require('fs')
const subprocess = youtubedl.exec('https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xKWiCMKKJg', {
dumpSingleJson: true
})
console.log(`Running subprocess as ${subprocess.pid}`)
subprocess.stdout.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('stdout.txt'))
subprocess.stderr.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('stderr.txt'))
setTimeout(subprocess.cancel, 30000)
It creates a yt-dlp
using the binaryPath
provided.
The environment variables are taken into account when you perform a npm install
in a project that contains youtube-dl-exec
dependency.
These environment variables can also be set through "npm config", for example npm install --YOUTUBE_DL_HOST="Some URL"
, or store it in .npmrc
file.
They setup the download configuration for getting the yt-dlp
binary file.
It determines the folder where to put the binary file.
The default folder is bin
.
It determines the binary filename.
The default binary file could be yt-dlp
or youtube-dl.exe
, depending of the YOUTUBE_DL_PLATFORM
value.
It determines the remote URL for getting the yt-dlp
binary file.
The default URL is yt-dlp/yt-dlp latest release.
It determines the architecture of the machine that will use the yt-dlp
binary.
The default value will computed from process.platform
, being 'unix'
or 'win32'
.
When is present, it will skip the postinstall script for fetching the latest yt-dlp
version.
That variable should be set before performing the installation command, such as:
YOUTUBE_DL_SKIP_DOWNLOAD=true npm install
When is present, it skip the python step on installation.
youtube-dl-exec © microlink.io, released under the MIT License.
Authored and maintained by Kiko Beats with help from contributors.
microlink.io · GitHub microlink.io · Twitter @microlinkhq