YoutubeDL-Material is a Material Design frontend for youtube-dl. It’s coded using Angular 15 for the frontend, and Node.js on the backend.
Now with Docker support!
Check out the prerequisites, and go to the installation section. Easy as pie!
Here’s an image of what it’ll look like once you’re done:
Dark mode:
NOTE: If you would like to use Docker, you can skip down to the Docker section for a setup guide.
Debian/Ubuntu:
sudo apt-get install nodejs youtube-dl ffmpeg unzip python npm
CentOS 7:
sudo yum install epel-release
sudo yum localinstall --nogpgcheck https://download1.rpmfusion.org/free/el/rpmfusion-free-release-7.noarch.rpm
sudo yum install centos-release-scl-rh
sudo yum install rh-nodejs12
scl enable rh-nodejs12 bash
sudo yum install nodejs youtube-dl ffmpeg ffmpeg-devel
Optional dependencies:
atomicparsley
)If you are using Docker, skip to the Docker section. Otherwise, continue:
First, download the latest release!
Drag the youtubedl-material
directory to an easily accessible directory. Navigate to the appdata
folder and edit the default.json
file.
NOTE: If you are intending to use a reverse proxy, this next step is not necessary
Port forward the port listed in default.json
, which defaults to 17442
.
Once the configuration is done, run npm install
to install all the backend dependencies. Once that is finished, type npm start
. This will run the backend server, which serves the frontend as well. On your browser, navigate to to the server (url with the specified port). Try putting in a youtube link to see if it works. If it does, viola! YoutubeDL-Material is now up and running.
If you experience problems, know that it’s usually caused by a configuration problem. The first thing you should do is check the console. To get there, right click anywhere on the page and click “Inspect element.” Then on the menu that pops up, click console. Look at the error there, and try to investigate.
If you’d like to install YoutubeDL-Material, go to the Installation section. If you want to build it yourself and/or develop the repository, then this section is for you.
To deploy, simply clone the repository, and go into the youtubedl-material
directory. Type npm install
and all the dependencies will install. Then type cd backend
and again type npm install
to install the dependencies for the backend.
Once you do that, you’re almost up and running. All you need to do is edit the configuration in youtubedl-material/appdata
, go back into the youtubedl-material
directory, and type npm build
. This will build the app, and put the output files in the youtubedl-material/backend/public
folder.
The frontend is now complete. The backend is much easier. Just go into the backend
folder, and type npm start
.
Finally, if you want your instance to be available from outside your network, you can set up a reverse proxy.
Alternatively, you can port forward the port specified in the config (defaults to 17442
) and point it to the server’s IP address. Make sure the port is also allowed through the server’s firewall.
If you’re on a Synology NAS, unRAID, Raspberry Pi 4 or any other possible special case you can check if there’s known issues or instructions both in the issue tracker and in the Wiki!
If you are looking to setup YoutubeDL-Material with Docker, this section is for you. And you’re in luck! Docker setup is quite simple.
curl -L https://github.com/Tzahi12345/YoutubeDL-Material/releases/latest/download/docker-compose.yml -o docker-compose.yml
to download the latest Docker Compose, or go to the releases page to grab the version you’d like.docker-compose pull
. This will download the official YoutubeDL-Material docker image.docker-compose up
to start it up. If successful, it should say “HTTP(S): Started on port 17443” or something similar. This tells you the container-internal port of the application. Please check your docker-compose.yml
file for the external port. If you downloaded the file as described above, it defaults to 8998.By default, the Docker container runs as non-root with UID=1000 and GID=1000. To set this to your own UID/GID, simply update the environment
section in your docker-compose.yml
like so:
environment:
UID: YOUR_UID
GID: YOUR_GID
For much better scaling with large datasets please run your YoutubeDL-Material instance with MongoDB backend rather than the json file-based default. It will fix a lot of performance problems (especially with datasets in the tens of thousands videos/audios)!
To get started, go to the settings menu and enable the public API from the Extra tab. You can generate an API key if one is missing.
Once you have enabled the API and have the key, you can start sending requests by adding the query param apiKey=API_KEY
. Replace API_KEY
with your actual API key, and you should be good to go! Nearly all of the backend should be at your disposal. View available endpoints in the link above.
If you are using iOS, try YoutubeDL-Material more conveniently with a Shortcut. With this Shorcut, you can easily start downloading YouTube video with just two taps! (Or maybe three?)
You can download Shortcut here.
If you’re interested in contributing, first: awesome! Second, please refer to the guidelines/setup information located in the Contributing wiki page, it’s a helpful way to get you on your feet and coding away.
Pull requests are always appreciated! If you’re a bit rusty with coding, that’s no problem: we can always help you learn. And if that’s too scary, that’s OK too! You can create issues for features you’d like to see or bugs you encounter, it all helps this project grow.
If you’re interested in translating the app into a new language, check out the Translate wiki page.
Official translators:
See also the list of contributors who participated in this project.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE.md file for details
This project is in no way affiliated with Google LLC, Alphabet Inc. or YouTube (or their subsidiaries) nor endorsed by them.