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net/bandsnatch,
CLI batch downloader for your Bandcamp collection
Branch: CURRENT,
Version: 0.3.3,
Package name: bandsnatch-0.3.3,
Maintainer: pkgsrc-usersCLI batch downloader for your Bandcamp collection.
Bandsnatch is a Rust tool for downloading all of your Bandcamp purchases all at
once in your desired format, and being able to be run multiple times when you
buy new releases.
This project is heavily inspired by Ezwen's bandcamp-collection-downloader,
https://framagit.org/Ezwen/bandcamp-collection-downloader, which I used myself
before this, specifically existing to help me learn Rust, but also to add some
improvements over it that I've wanted.
This tool is still currently a work in progress, so bugs and other weirdness may
occur. If anything weird happens or something breaks, please open an issue about
it with information and reproduction steps if possible. Specifically testing use
of this with large collections would be very helpful to see if there's any areas
that I need to improve in.
If you're a developer poking around in the code, please note that this is my
first proper project written using Rust, so code quality may be subpar,
especially in terms of memory usage. If you have any ideas to improve the
project in general I'd love to hear them.
Master sites:
Filesize: 35.537 KB
Version history: (Expand)
- (2024-09-09) Updated to version: bandsnatch-0.3.3
- (2024-08-04) Updated to version: bandsnatch-0.3.2
- (2023-10-25) Updated to version: bandsnatch-0.3.1nb1
- (2023-10-07) Updated to version: bandsnatch-0.3.1
- (2023-10-01) Updated to version: bandsnatch-0.3.0
- (2023-03-13) Updated to version: bandsnatch-0.2.1
CVS history: (Expand)
2023-10-25 00:11:51 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2298) |
Log message:
*: bump for openssl 3
|
2023-10-07 17:22:28 by pin | Files touched by this commit (2) | |
Log message:
net/bandsnatch: update to 0.3.1
Fixed
- Fix crash that would occur if batch_size or item_count were null in a
user's collection data for whatever reason.
|
2023-10-01 11:56:54 by pin | Files touched by this commit (3) | |
Log message:
net/bandsnatch: update to 0.3.0
0.3.0 - 2023-09-30
Added
- New debug-collection subcommand, helpful for testing weird cases where some
data is wrong on the user's collection page.
|
2023-03-13 20:35:05 by pin | Files touched by this commit (2) | |
Log message:
net/bandsnatch: update to 0.2.1
Fixed
- Some more fixes for some releases that don't have the exact same data
structure as others.
|
2023-03-12 17:06:43 by pin | Files touched by this commit (3) | |
Log message:
net/bandsnatch: update to 0.2.0
Breaking Change
- The previous behaviour of running the download job with the base command has
been moved into its own subcommand run in order to accommodate some features
I plan to add in the future.
Added
--dry-run flag to get a list of releases Bandsnatch would try to download,
without actually downloading them.
--debug flag to get some extra information in certain circumstances (Might be
changed to --verbose in the future if I change my mind).
Fixed
- Fix problem where some releases could crash a thread with missing field
'download_type'.
Changed
- New run subcommand which replaces the previous functionality of running the
downloader on the base command.
|
2023-01-21 12:23:38 by pin | Files touched by this commit (5) |
Log message:
Import bandsnatch
CLI batch downloader for your Bandcamp collection.
Bandsnatch is a Rust tool for downloading all of your Bandcamp purchases all at
once in your desired format, and being able to be run multiple times when you
buy new releases.
This project is heavily inspired by Ezwen's bandcamp-collection-downloader,
https://framagit.org/Ezwen/bandcamp-collection-downloader, which I used myself
before this, specifically existing to help me learn Rust, but also to add some
improvements over it that I've wanted.
This tool is still currently a work in progress, so bugs and other weirdness may
occur. If anything weird happens or something breaks, please open an issue about
it with information and reproduction steps if possible. Specifically testing use
of this with large collections would be very helpful to see if there's any areas
that I need to improve in.
If you're a developer poking around in the code, please note that this is my
first proper project written using Rust, so code quality may be subpar,
especially in terms of memory usage. If you have any ideas to improve the
project in general I'd love to hear them.
|