A native Linux GUI for Chromecasting local files.
Project description
Gnomecast
This is a native Linux GUI for casting local files to Chromecast devices. It supports:
Both audio and video files (anything ffmpeg can read)
Realtime transcoding (only when needed)
Subtitles (embedded and external SRT files)
Fast scrubbing (waiting 20s for buffering to skip 30s ahead is wrong!)
4K videos on the Chromecast Ultra!
What’s New
1.9: Multi video/audio stream support.
1.8: 5.1/7.1 surround sound E/AC3 support.
1.7: Drag and drop files into the main UI.
1.6: Mutiple file / queuing support.
Install
Please run:
$ sudo apt install ffmpeg python3-pip python3-gi $ pip3 install gnomecast
If installing in a mkvirtualenv built virtual environment, make sure you include the --system-site-packages parameter to get the GTK bindings.
Run
After installing, log out and log back in. It will be in your launcher:
You can also run it from the command line:
$ gnomecast
If you ran pip3 without sudo when installing, and $ gnomecast doesn’t work due to your local path setup, you can also run it as:
$ python3 -m gnomecast
Please report bugs, including video files that don’t work for you!
My File Won’t Play!!!
Chromecasts are picky, and the built in media receiver doesn’t give any feedback regarding why it won’t play something. (It just flashes and quits on the main TV.) So while this program can detect and auto-transcode files using unsupported codecs, that doesn’t cover everything.
Usually I’ve found re-encoding a file will appease the Chromecast file format gods. See:
I recommend transcoding just the audio first, as this is enough to fix most files in my experience, and it’s ~20x faster than transcoding the video.
If you think there’s a bug beyond this, please open an issue (and link to the offending file if possible).
Thanks To…
And everyone who made this project hit HN’s front page and #2 on GitHub’s trending list! That’s so awesome!!!
Transcoding
Chromecasts only support a handful of media formats. See: https://developers.google.com/cast/docs/media
So some amount of transcoding is necessary if your video files don’t conform. But we’re smart about it. If you have an .mkv file with h264 video and AAC audio, we use ffmpeg to simply rewrite the container (to .mp4) without touching the underlying streams, which my XPS 13 can at around 100x realtime (it’s fully IO bound).
Now if you have that same .mkv file with and A3C audio stream (which Chromecast doesn’t support) we’ll rewrite the container, copy the h264 stream as is and only transcode the audio (at about 20x).
If neither your file’s audio or video streams are supported, then it’ll do a full transcode (at around 5x).
We write the entire transcoded file to your /tmp directory in order to make scrubbing fast and glitch-free, a good trade-off IMO. Hopefully you’re not running your drive at less than one video’s worth of free space!
Subtitles
Chromecast only supports a handful of subtitle formats, .srt not included. But it does support WebVTT. So we extract whatever subtitles are in your video, convert them to WebVTT, and then reattach them to the video through Chomecast’s API.
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