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audible-cli

audible-cli is a command line interface for the Audible package. Both are written with Python.

Requirements

audible-cli needs at least Python 3.6 and Audible v0.6.0.

It depends on the following packages:

  • aiofiles
  • audible
  • click
  • colorama (on Windows machines)
  • httpx
  • Pillow
  • tabulate
  • toml
  • tqdm

Installation

You can install audible-cli from pypi with

pip install audible-cli

or install it directly from GitHub with

git clone https://github.com/mkb79/audible-cli.git
cd audible-cli
pip install .

or as the best solution using pipx

pipx install audible-cli

Standalone executables

If you don't want to install Python and audible-cli on your machine, you can find standalone exe files below or on the releases page (including beta releases). At this moment Windows, Linux and macOS are supported.

Links

  1. Linux

  2. macOS

  3. Windows

On every execution, the binary code must be extracted. On Windows machines this can result in a long start time. If you use audible-cli often, I would prefer the directory package for Windows!

Creating executables on your own

You can create them yourself this way

git clone https://github.com/mkb79/audible-cli.git
cd audible-cli
pip install .[pyi]

# onefile output
pyinstaller --clean -F --hidden-import audible_cli -n audible -c pyi_entrypoint

# onedir output
pyinstaller --clean -D --hidden-import audible_cli -n audible -c pyi_entrypoint

Hints

There are some limitations when using plugins. The binary maybe does not contain all the dependencies from your plugin script.

Tab Completion

Tab completion can be provided for commands, options and choice values. Bash, Zsh and Fish are supported. More information can be found here.

Basic information

App dir

audible-cli use an app dir where it expects all necessary files.

If the AUDIBLE_CONFIG_DIR environment variable is set, it uses the value as config dir. Otherwise, it will use a folder depending on the operating system.

OS Path
Windows C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\audible
Unix ~/.audible
Mac OS X ~/.audible

The config file

The config data will be stored in the toml format as config.toml.

It has a main section named APP and sections for each profile created named profile.<profile_name>

profiles

audible-cli make use of profiles. Each profile contains the name of the corresponding auth file and the country code for the audible marketplace. If you have audiobooks on multiple marketplaces, you have to create a profile for each one with the same auth file.

In the main section of the config file, a primary profile is defined. This profile is used, if no other is specified. You can call audible -P PROFILE_NAME, to select another profile.

auth files

Like the config file, auth files are stored in the config dir too. If you protected your auth file with a password call audible -p PASSWORD, to provide the password.

If the auth file is encrypted, and you don’t provide the password, you will be asked for it with a „hidden“ input field.

Config options

An option in the config file is separated by an underline. In the CLI prompt, an option must be entered with a dash.

APP section

The APP section supports the following options:

  • primary_profile: The profile to use, if no other is specified
  • filename_mode: When using the download command, a filename mode can be specified here. If not present, "ascii" will be used as default. To override these option, you can provide a mode with the --filename-mode option of the download command.
  • chapter_type: When using the download command, a chapter type can be specified here. If not present, "tree" will be used as default. To override these option, you can provide a type with the --chapter-type option of the download command.

Profile section

  • auth_file: The auth file for this profile
  • country_code: The marketplace for this profile
  • filename_mode: See APP section above. Will override the option in APP section.
  • chapter_type: See APP section above. Will override the option in APP section.

Getting started

Use the audible-quickstart or audible quickstart command in your shell to create your first config, profile and auth file. audible-quickstart runs on the interactive mode, so you have to answer multiple questions to finish.

If you have used audible quickstart and want to add a second profile, you need to first create a new authfile and then update your config.toml file.

So the correct order is:

  1. add a new auth file using your second account using audible manage auth-file add
  2. add a new profile to your config and use the second auth file using audible manage profile add

Commands

Call audible -h to show the help and a list of all available subcommands. You can show the help for each subcommand like so: audible <subcommand> -h. If a subcommand has another subcommands, you csn do it the same way.

At this time, there the following buildin subcommands:

  • activation-bytes
  • api
  • download
  • library
    • export
    • list
  • manage
    • auth-file
      • add
      • remove
    • config
      • edit
    • profile
      • add
      • list
      • remove
  • quickstart
  • wishlist
    • export
    • list
    • add
    • remove

Example Usage

To download all of your audiobooks in the aaxc format use:

audible download --all --aaxc

To download all of your audiobooks after the Date 2022-07-21 in aax format use:

audible download --start-date "2022-07-21" --aax --all

Verbosity option

There are 6 different verbosity levels:

  • debug
  • info
  • warning
  • error
  • critical

By default, the verbosity level is set to info. You can provide another level like so: audible -v <level> <subcommand> ....

If you use the download subcommand with the --all flag there will be a huge output. Best practise is to set the verbosity level to error with audible -v error download --all ...

Plugins

Plugin Folder

If the AUDIBLE_PLUGIN_DIR environment variable is set, it uses the value as location for the plugin dir. Otherwise, it will use a the plugins subdir of the app dir. Read above how Audible-cli searches the app dir.

Custom Commands

You can provide own subcommands and execute them with audible SUBCOMMAND. All plugin commands must be placed in the plugin folder. Every subcommand must have his own file. Every file have to be named cmd_{SUBCOMMAND}.py. Each subcommand file must have a function called cli as entrypoint. This function has to be decorated with @click.group(name="GROUP_NAME") or
@click.command(name="GROUP_NAME").

Relative imports in the command files doesn't work. So you have to work with absolute imports. Please take care about this. If you have any issues with absolute imports please add your plugin path to the PYTHONPATH variable or add this lines of code to the beginning of your command script:

import sys
import pathlib
sys.path.insert(0, str(pathlib.Path(__file__).parent))

Examples can be found here.

Own Plugin Packages

If you want to develop a complete plugin package for audible-cli you can do this on an easy way. You only need to register your sub-commands or subgroups to an entry-point in your setup.py that is loaded by the core package.

Example for a setup.py

from setuptools import setup

setup(
    name="yourscript",
    version="0.1",
    py_modules=["yourscript"],
    install_requires=[
        "click",
        "audible_cli"
    ],
    entry_points="""
        [audible.cli_plugins]
        cool_subcommand=yourscript.cli:cool_subcommand
        another_subcommand=yourscript.cli:another_subcommand
    """,
)

Command priority order

Commands will be added in the following order:

  1. plugin dir commands
  2. plugin packages commands
  3. build-in commands

If a command is added, all further commands with the same name will be ignored. This enables you to "replace" build-in commands very easy.

List of known add-ons for audible-cli

If you want to add information about your add-on please open a PR or a new issue!