A small API for a mildly popular movie site. The goal was to be able to collect as much information in as few network requests as possible.
- Python 2.7 (3.X support is planned but not complete)
- pip
Use of a virtualenv is highly recommended.
pip install -U https://github.com/kannibalox/PTPAPI/archive/master.zip
Open the file ~/.ptpapi.conf
for editing, and make sure it looks like the following:
[Main]
[PTP]
ApiUser=<ApiUser>
ApiKey=<ApiKey>
Both values can be found in the "Security" section of your profile. This is only the minimum required configuration. See ptpapi.conf.example
for a full-futured config file with comments.
The three CLI commands are ptp
, ptp-reseed
, and ptp-bookmarks
This is a generally utility to do various things inside PTP. As of right now it can download files, search the site for movies, and list message in your inbox.
See ptp help
for more information.
A small utility to read messages in your inbox. No reply capability currently.
An alias for ptp-search -d
This subcommand lets you search the site for movies. It can take movie and permalinks, as well as search by arbitrary parameters, and the -d
flag allows for downloading matching torrents. For instance, ptp search year=1980-2000 taglist=sci.fi
or ptp search "Star Wars"
. It can also accept URLs for torrents and collages, e.g. ptp search "https://passthepopcorn.me/torrents.php?id=68148"
or ptp search "https://passthepopcorn.me/collages.php?id=2438"
, and regular search URLs, e.g. ptp search "https://passthepopcorn.me/torrents.php?action=advanced&year=1980-2000&taglist=action"
.
As a general rule of thumb anything supported by the advanced site search will work with ptp search
, e.g. searching https://passthepopcorn.me/torrents.php?action=advanced&taglist=comedy&format=x264&media=Blu-ray&resolution=1080p&scene=1
is the same as ptp search taglist=comedy format=x264 media=Blu-ray resolution=1080p scene=1
.
To work with multiple pages of results, use the --pages <num>
flag.
There are a couple aliases to make life easier:
genre
,genres
,tags
->taglist
name
->searchstr
bookmarks
-> Search only your bookmarks
In addition, Tempita can be used for custom formatting. For instance, ptp search --movie-format="" --torrent-format="{{UploadTime}} - {{ReleaseName}}" year=1980-2000 taglist=sci.fi grouping=no
.
Using the -d
flag will download one torrent from each of the matched torrents (deciding which one to download is done via filters) to the downloadDirectory.
The -p/--pages [int]
option can be used to scrape multiple pages at once. N.B.: If any page
parameter is in the original search query, paging will start from that page.
Simply list fields that can be used for the ptp search
formatting.
This script automatically matches up files to movies on PTP. It's most basic usage is ptp-reseed <file path>
. This will search PTP for any movies matching that filename, and if it finds a match, will automatically download the torrent and add it to rtorrent. It can do some basic file manipulation if it finds a close enough match.
For instance, if you have the file Movie.2000.mkv
, and the torrent contains Movie (2000)/Movie.2000.mkv
, the script will try to automatically create the folder Movie (2000)
and hard link the file inside of it before attempting to seed it.
See ptp-reseed -h
and ptpapi.conf.example
for more information and configuration options.
By default the script looks for exact matches against file names and sizes. If you'd like the name matching to be less strict, you can install the guessit library (pip install guessit
), and if the filename search fails, the script will attempt to parse the movie name out of the file with guessit.
Filters were designed as a way to take a full movie group, and narrow it down to a single torrent. A filter consists of multiple sub-filters, where the first sub-filter to match will download the torrent, and if not, the next sub-filter will be checked. If none of the sub-filters match, no download will occur. Filters are separate from the actual search parameters sent to the site
The full list of possible values for picking encodes is:
GP
orScene
576p
or720p
or1080p
XviD
orx264
HD
orSD
remux
ornot-remux
seeded
- the number of seeds is greater than 0 (deprecated, useseeders>0
)not-trumpable
- ignore any trumpable torrentsunseen
- ignores all torrents if you've marked the movie as seen or rated itunsnatched
- ignore all torrents unless you've never snatched one before (note that seeding counts as "snatched", but leeching doesn't) There are also values that allow for simple comparisons, e.g.size>1400M
.seeders
size
Note that it's possible to have two incompatible values, e.g. GP
and Scene
, but this simply means the sub-filter won't ever match a torrent, and will always be skipped over.
The possible values for sorting are:
most recent
(the default if none are specified)smallest
most seeders
largest
For instance, the filter smallest GP,720p scene,largest
would attempt to download the smallest GP. If there are no GPs, it will try to find a 720p scene encode. If it can't find either of those, it will just pick the largest torrent available.
As another example, if you wanted to filter for encodes that are less than 200MiB with only one seeder, you could use seeders=1 size<200M
.
I did this mostly for fun and to serve my limited needs, which is why it's not as polished as it could be, and will probably change frequently. Pull requests are welcomed.
The new ApiUser/ApiKey system is preferred, however if you find bugs or limitations, the old cookie-based method can be used as seen here.
Open the file ~/.ptpapi.conf
for editing, and make sure it looks like the following:
[Main]
[PTP]
username=<username>
password=<password>
passkey=<passkey>