| Title: Self host your Podcast easily with potcasse
Author: Solène
Date: 21 July 2021
Tags: openbsd scripts podcast
Description:
# Introduction
I wrote « potcasse », pronounced "pot kas", a tool to help people to
publish and self host a podcast easily without using a third party
service. I found it very hard to find information to self host your
own podcast and make it available easily on "apps" / podcast players so
I wrote potcasse.
# Where to get it
Get the code from git and run "make install" or just copy the script
"potcasse" somewhere available in your $PATH. Note that rsync is a
required dependency.
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# What is it doing?
Potcasse will gather your audio files with some metadata (date, title),
some information about your Podcast (name, address, language) and will
create an output directory ready to be synced on your web server.
Potcasse creates a RSS feed compatible with players but also a simple
HTML page with a summary of your episodes, your logo and the podcast
title.
# Why potcasse?
I wanted to self host my podcast and I only found Wordpress, Nextcloud
or complex PHP programs to do the job, I wanted something static like
my static blog that will work on any hosting platform securely.
# How to use it
The process is simple for initialization:
* init the project directory using "potcasse init"
* edit the metadata.sh file to configure your Podcast
Then, for every new episode:
* import audio files using "potcasse episode" with the required
arguments
* generate the html output directory using "potcasse gen"
* use rsync to push the output directory to your web server
There is a README file in the project that explain how to configure it,
once you deploy you should have an index.html file with links to your
episodes and also a link for the RSS feed that can be used in podcast
applications.
# Conclusion
This was a few hours of work to get the job done, I'm quite proud of
the result and switched my podcast (only 2 episodes at the moment...)
to it in a few minutes. I wrote the commands lines and parameters
while trying to use it as if it was finished, this helped me a lot to
choose what is required, optional, in which order, how I would like to
manually make changes as an author etc...
I hope you will enjoy this simple tool as much as I do. |