A python script that converts RSS/Atom newsfeeds to email
Project description
Getting Started With rss2email
We highly recommend that you watch the rss2email project on GitHub so you can keep up to date with the latest version, bugfixes and features:
Installing rss2email
Packages
A quick way to get rss2email going is using pre-made packages. There are releases for Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, openSUSE, Gentoo, NetBSD, and OpenBSD.
Installing by hand
Requirements
Before you install rss2email, you’ll need to make sure that a few things are in place.
Ensure that a version of Python ≥3.4 is installed.
Install the required Python packages.
Figure out how you are going to send outgoing email. You have two options here: either use an SMTP server or a local sendmail program. So,
determine your outgoing email server’s SMTP address, or
install sendmail (or a compatible replacement like postfix).
Download
Download the latest rss2email source and unpack it. You can choose from several equivalent formats.
A .zip file (suggested for Microsoft Windows users) or .tar.gz file (suggested for everyone else):
* Navigate to https://github.com/rss2email/rss2email/releases * Click either the ``zip`` or ``tar.gz`` icon for the latest release * Download and extract the archive
A Git checkout (suggested for developers):
$ git clone git://github.com/rss2email/rss2email.git
Install
From the unpacked directory, run:
$ python setup.py install
You can pass all the usual options to the install command, including --user. If you don’t want to install rss2email, you can also run r2e directly from the source directory.
Upgrading to a new version
Just repeat the installation procedure for the new source package. If your config file and data file were in the old source directory, move them over to the new source directory. If the config and data files were in another directory (e.g. ~/.config and ~/.local/share), there is no need to move them.
Using rss2email
Create a new feed database to send updates to your email address:
$ r2e new you@yourdomain.com
This command will create a configuration file ($XDG_CONFIG_HOME/rss2email.cfg by default) and a feed database ($XDG_DATA_HOME/rss2email.json by default). If you’d rather those files were stored in other locations, use the --config and --data options. XDG_CONFIG_HOME defaults to $HOME/.config and XDG_DATA_HOME defaults to $HOME/.local/share.
You should edit the default configuration file now to adjust rss2email for your local system. Unless you’ve installed a local sendmail-equivalent, you’ll need to edit the SMTP options.
Subscribe to some feeds:
$ r2e add eff https://www.eff.org/rss/updates.xml
That will cause rss2email to notify you when there is a new announcement from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Repeat this for each feed you want to subscribe to.
When you run rss2email, it emails you about every story it hasn’t seen before. But the first time you run it, that will be every story. To avoid this, you can ask rss2email not to send you any stories the first time you run it:
r2e run --no-send
Then later, you can ask it to email you new stories:
r2e run
When a run is made, rss2email stores the list of already seen items for each feed in $HOME/.local/share/rss2email.json.
Customizing rss2email
There are a number of options, described in full in rss2email/config.py, to customize the way rss2email behaves. If you want to change something, edit the configuration file that was created by r2e new.
For example, if you want to receive HTML mail, instead of having entries converted to plain text:
html-mail = True
To be notified every time a post changes, instead of just when it’s first posted (see also trust-link and reply-changes, described in rss2email/config.py):
trust-guid = True
And to make the emails look as if they were sent when the item was posted:
date-header = True
If you get an error message Sender domain must exist, add the following to your configuration file:
from = rss2email@yoursite.com force-from = True
You can make the email address whatever you want, but your mail server requires that the yoursite.com part actually exists.
SMTP
By default, rss2email uses sendmail (or an equivalent) to send outgoing email. If you don’t have such a program installed, or simply prefer to use SMTP directly, edit the configuration file and fill in your outgoing email server’s details:
[DEFAULT] ... email-protocol = smtp smtp-server = smtp.example.net:587 smtp-auth = False ...
If your server requires you to login, change smtp-auth = False to smtp-auth = True and enter your email username and password:
smtp-auth = True smtp-username = username smtp-password = password
If your server requires an TLS/SSL connection (SMTPS), change smtp-ssl = False to smtp-ssl = True. If your server does not require a SMTPS connection but you request authentication, rss2email will use STARTTLS to encrypt the connection before sending your login credentials to the server.
Post-processing
rss2email has a mechanism to post-process entries. A post-processor can be used to change the content of each entry before rss2email sends the email out. A hook is added by defining the variable post-process in the config file. It takes two arguments, the module and the function to call. For example:
post-process = rss2email.post_process.prettify process
Examples of built-in post-processors:
prettify.py prettifies the HTML content with BeautifulSoup.
redirect.py remove redirects on the post URL for privacy or durability.
Automating rss2email
More than likely you will want rss2email to run automatically at a regular interval. Under Windows this is can be easily accomplished using the Windows Task Scheduler. This site has a nice tutorial on it. Just select r2e.bat as the program to run. Once you’ve created the task, double click on it in the task list and change the Run entry so that run comes after r2e.bat. For example, if you installed rss2email in the C:\rss2email directory, then you would change the Run entry from C:\rss2email\r2e.bat to C:\rss2email\r2e.bat run.
On Unix/Linux systems, you should add a cron job that runs r2e. For example, run r2e every night (at 1:23 am) with:
23 1 * * * r2e run
Development
User discussion and development take place on GitHub. Please feel free to post bug reports, feature requests, comments, and patches. If you do not have a GitHub account and do not wish to acquire one, you may e-mail Jeff:
There is a developer chat on the freenode IRC server, in the rss2email channel. Feel free to idle.
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