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RADIOACTIVE

SEARCH - PLAY - RECORD - REPEAT

radio-active - Play more than 30K radio stations from your terminal | Product Hunt

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Demo

Features

  • Supports more than 40K stations !! πŸ“»
  • Record audio from live radio on demand ⚑
  • Get song information on run-time 🎢
  • Saves last station information
  • Favorite stations ❀️
  • Selection menu for favorite stations
  • Supports user-added stations πŸ”§
  • Looks minimal and user-friendly
  • Runs on Raspberry Pi
  • Finds nearby stations
  • Discovers stations by genre
  • Discovers stations by language
  • VLC, MPV player support
  • Default config file
  • I'm feeling lucky! Play Random stations

See my progress ➑️ here

Why radioactive?

While there are various CLI-based radio players like PyRadio and TERA, Radioactive stands out for its simplicity. It's designed to work seamlessly right from the start. You don't need to be a hardcore Linux or Vim expert to enjoy radio stations with Radioactive. The goal of Radioactive is to offer a straightforward user interface that's easy to grasp and comes preconfigured, without unnecessary complexities.

In the Spotlight

The praise from YouTube channels and blogs underscores Radioactive's emergence as a top choice for radio enthusiasts. Its simple yet powerful features, make it a must-try application for radio lovers of all expertise levels. Discover the world of radio with ease – experience Radioactive today.

  1. See DistroTube YouTube channel talks about my app: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7sf1RDFXpU&pp=ygUYcmFkaW9hY3RpdmUgcGxheWVyIHJhZGlv
  2. Ubunlog: https://ubunlog.com/en/radio-activate-an-application-to-listen-to-the-radio-from-the-terminal/
  3. LinuxLinks: https://www.linuxlinks.com/radio-active-listen-radio-terminal/3/
  4. Official entry in the RadioBrowser API: https://www.radio-browser.info/users
  5. ThingsAndStuff: https://wiki.thingsandstuff.org/Streaming#:~:text=com/billniakas/bash_radio_gr-,radio%2Dactive,-https%3A//github.com
  6. Awesome-stars: https://arbal.github.io/awesome-stars/#:~:text=deep5050/radio%2Dactive%20%2D%20Play%20any%20radios%20around%20the%20globe%20right%20from%20the%20terminal%20%3Azap%3A
  7. OpenSourceAgenda: https://www.opensourceagenda.com/projects/my-awesome-stars#:~:text=deep5050/radio%2Dactive%20%2D%20Play%20any%20radios%20around%20the%20globe%20right%20from%20the%20terminal%20%3Azap%3A

Install

Simply run: pip3 install --upgrade radio-active

I recommend installing it using pipx install radio-active

TODO:

  • Create deb, rpm and exe packages
  • Add it to various Linux distribution package repositories.
  • Add to scoop, chocolately

External Dependency

It needs FFmpeg to be installed on your system in order to record the audio

on Ubuntu-based system >= 20.04 Run

sudo apt update
sudo apt install ffmpeg

For other systems including Windows see the above link

Installing FFmpeg

FFmpeg is required for this program to work correctly. Install FFmpeg by following these steps:-

Run

Search a station with radio --search [STATION_NAME] or simply radio ⚑ to select from the favorite menu.

Tips

  1. Use a modern terminal emulator, otherwise the UI might break! (gets too ugly sometimes)
  2. On Windows, instead of the default Command Prompt, use the new Windows Terminal or web-based emulators like Hyper, Cmdr, Terminus, etc. for better UI
  3. Let the app run for at least 5 seconds (not a serious issue though, for better performance)

Demo

Options

Options Note Description Default Values
(No Option) Optional Select a station from menu to play False
--search, -S Optional Station name None
--play, -P Optional A station from fav list or url for direct play None
--country, -C Optional Discover stations by country code False
--state Optional Discover stations by country state False
--language optional Discover stations by False
--tag Optional Discover stations by tags/genre False
--uuid, -U Optional ID of the station None
--record , -R Optional Record a station and save to file False
--filename, -N Optional Filename to used to save the recorded audio None
--filepath Optional Path to save the recordings <DEFAULT_DIR>
--filetype, -T Optional Format of the recording mp3 mp3,auto
--last Optional Play last played station False
--random Optional Play a random station from favorite list False
--sort Optional Sort the result page votes
--filter Optional Filter search results None
--limit Optional Limit the # of results in the Discover table 100
--volume , -V Optional Change the volume passed into ffplay 80 [0-100]
--favorite, -F Optional Add current station to fav list False
--add , -A Optional Add an entry to fav list False
--list, -W Optional Show fav list False
--remove Optional Remove entries from favorite list False
--flush Optional Remove all the entries from fav list False
--kill , -K Optional Kill background radios. False
--loglevel Optional Log level of the program Info info, warning, error, debug
--player Optional Media player to use ffplay vlc, mpv, ffplay

Note

Once you save/play at least one station, invoking radio without any options will show a selection menu

--search, -S: Search for a station online.

--play, -P: You can pass an exact name from your favorite stations or alternatively pass any direct stream URL. This would bypass any user selection menu (useful when running from another script)

--uuid,-U: When station names are too long or confusing (or multiple results for the same name) use the station's uuid to play. --uuid gets the greater priority than --search. Example: 96444e20-0601-11e8-ae97-52543be04c81. type u on the runtime command to get the UUID of a station.

--loglevel,: Don't need to specify unless you are developing it. info, warning, error, debug

-F: Add the current station to your favorite list. Example: -F my_fav_1

-A: Add any stations to your list. You can add stations that are not currently available on our API. When adding a new station enter a name and direct URL to the audio stream.

--limit: Specify how many search results should be displayed.

--filetype: Specify the extension of the final recording file. default is mp3. you can provide -T auto to autodetect the codec and set file extension accordingly (in original form).

DEFAULT_DIR: is /home/user/Music/radioactive

Runtime Commands

Input a command during the radio playback to perform an action. Available commands are:

Enter a command to perform an action: ?

t/T/track: Current song name (track info)
r/R/record: Record a station
f/F/fav: Add station to favorite list
rf/RF/recordfile: Specify a filename for the recording.
h/H/help/?: Show this help message
q/Q/quit: Quit radioactive

Sort Parameters

you can sort the result page with these parameters:

  • name (default)
  • votes (based on user votes)
  • codec
  • bitrate
  • lastcheckok (active stations)
  • lastchecktime (recent active)
  • clickcount (total play count)
  • clicktrend (currently trending stations)
  • random

Filter Parameters

Filter search results with --filter. Some possible expressions are

  • --filter "name=shows"
  • --filter "name=shows,talks,tv"
  • --filter "name!=news,shows"
  • --filter "country=in"
  • --filter "language=bengali,nepali"
  • --filter "bitrate>64"
  • --filter "votes<500"
  • --filter "codec=mp3"
  • --filter "tags!=rock,pop"

Allowed operators are:

  • =
  • ,
  • !=
  • >
  • <
  • &

Allowed keys are: name, country (countrycode as value), language, bitrate, votes, codec, tags

Provide multiple filters at one go, use &

A complex filter example: --filter "country!=CA&tags!=islamic,classical&votes>500"

Note

set --limit to a higher value while filtering results

Default Configs

Default configuration file is added into your home directory as .radio-active-configs.ini

[AppConfig]
loglevel = info
limit = 100
sort = votes
filter = none
volume = 80
filepath = /home/{user}/recordings/radioactive/
filetype = mp3
player = ffplay

Warning

Do NOT modify the keys, only change the values. you can give any absolute or relative path as filepath.

Bonus Tips

  1. when using rf: you can force the recording to be in mp3 format by adding an extension to the file name. Example "talk-show.mp3". If you don't specify any extension it should auto-detect. Example "new_show"

  2. You don't have to pass the exact option name, a portion of it will also work. for example --sea for --search, --coun for --country, --lim for --limit

  3. It's better to leave the --filetype as mp3 when you need to record something quickly. The autocodec takes a few milliseconds extra to determine the codec.

Changes

see CHANGELOG

Community

Share you favorite list with our community 🌐 ➑️ Here

Your favorite list .radio-active-alias is under your home directory as a hidden file :)

Support

Visit my contribution page for more payment options.

Buy Me A Coffee

Acknowledgements

Icons made by Freepik from www.flaticon.com

Happy Listening

Contributors ✨

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):

Joe Smith
Joe Smith

⚠️ πŸ’» πŸ€”
salehjafarli
salehjafarli

πŸ’»
marvoh
marvoh

πŸ’» πŸ›

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

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