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222 points by this_machine 5 years ago · 73 comments

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balloob 5 years ago

Author of pychromecast here, the underlying library that this project uses to control the Chromecast.

I wrote this lib initially for use in Home Assistant, https://www.home-assistant.io

For Home Assistant I made a rule that all device drivers are stand-alone Home Assistant agnostic Python packages. That way more projects can use it.

Glad to see that strategy is working out and it powering projects like this

  • kingosticks 5 years ago

    Thank you for pychromecast, balloob.

    I know there's no real requirement but I wish projects like this would give attribution where it's due. This project benefits hugely from pychromecast but there's nothing in the readme mentioning that. Just seems a bit off.

  • 1vuio0pswjnm7 5 years ago

    Isn't there a workaround to get Chromecast to accept user changes in DNS settings. Maybe use DHCP on the user's router to suggest user-chosen DNS servers. I have forgotten. The big show stopper with Chromecast is that Google makes it difficult for the user to set their own DNS servers. As I recall, with the early Chromecast models, users could replace the Google OS with a modified one that let users choose their own DNS servers. One technique used a Teensy. Subsequent Google updates I believe closed off that option.

  • Inversechi 5 years ago

    And thank you for giving us not only pychromecast but home-assistant :)

  • this_machineOP 5 years ago

    Thanks for your work on pychromecast, I've looked and it's the best supported library for working with Chromecasts out there. It was also pleasant to integrate into this project.

    Does the pychromecast project use semantic versioning? I've had to pin the library to a specific version after running into an API breaking change on what would be a minor or patch update to 7.X if the project used SemVer.

  • atomi 5 years ago

    It would be incredible if there was a way to use mpsyt to watch Youtube videos with your library.

    • msla 5 years ago

      It's possible if you hook something running Kodi up to your TV.

      Here's some example code I wrote, in the form of a few ZSH shell scripts:

      https://github.com/chbarts/kodi-command-line

      The logic should port nicely to other languages. In particular, it shows how to do things like playing a YouTube video using either the URL or just the hash, plus, of course, a way to play videos on the computer you're running the commands from.

  • andrewshadura 5 years ago

    Thank you for the library, but I wish you paid more attention to the backwards compatibility and didn't break it that often. The unannounced changes recently broke mkchromecast twice in different ways.

    • andrewshadura 5 years ago

      By the way, even the pychromecast examples broke with those updates. Very frustrating to see as a 1) user of mkchromecast, 2) user of pychromecast, 3) maintainer of both in Debian

  • qwertygnu 5 years ago

    It's always awesome to see early, potentially unfruitful decisions workout in a project.

liability 5 years ago

If you don't want a Google device on your LAN and are willing to put in a little bit more work for that, I've found that remotely controlling an instance of mpv over the JSON IPC interface works well for me. I can send it URLs from the web or paths to local files. My client for this isn't currently public, but it's a rather easy interface that some of you may find it easy enough to integrate into your other systems.

(Note that it only listens on a Unix socket. With socat you can redirect that to a TCP socket though, preferably listening on a wireguard interface to keep the rest of your LAN from accessing it, since there's otherwise no security.)

Definitely not for everybody, but perhaps suitable for some.

https://mpv.io/manual/master/#json-ipc

  • comboy 5 years ago

    If you haven't, you should check mpd (music player daemon). Lots of clients, works very well.

  • miccah 5 years ago

    This is my preference as well! I even wrote an Android client app / Python server to control it from my phone.

    https://github.com/mcastorina/mpv-remote-app

    • MayeulC 5 years ago

      This looks useful and to the point. Would you consider submitting it to f-droid?

  • angrais 5 years ago

    Maybe it's late and I am misunderstanding ... Why would one not want a Google device on their LAN?

    Isn't a Chromecast very different than controlling locally stored media files, i.e. you can stream YouTube, Netflix, Spotify, mirror your devices (laptop), etc on Chromecast but not your solution?

    • liability 5 years ago

      mpv plays youtube links and many other websites (although not netflix or spotify to my knowledge) using the excellent youtube-dl. For my purposes it is more than sufficient, but as I said it won't be for everybody.

      As to why I don't want google devices on my LAN, I'm sure you could already guess that the answer is the usual privacy/political concerns, which I'll not bore you with since you obviously don't care. There are however some practical benefits to my arrangement, particularly being able to play media served up by NFS (DLNA never gave me anything but grief and unreliability.) Furthermore youtube-dl supports a very long tail of sites that Chromecast doesn't (at least not without the jank of screen mirroring, which AFAIK only works for as long as the laptop being mirrored is turned on.)

gala8y 5 years ago

OT, but i had an idea yesterday... will explain in UX language: would it be possible to send video to chromecast-like device and 'leave sound on mobile device' to be able to listen on bluetooth connected headphones while watching on big screen?

  • Falling3 5 years ago

    I've thought about the same thing, but I don't think it's feasible because you essentially need to play the video in both places and ensure it stays in sync. The easy solution is to hook up a Bluetooth transmitted to your TV.

    • gala8y 5 years ago

      I know, but it _could_ use one stream and send audio to mobile via LAN. Syncing would be an issue, though. Overengineering at its best. ;)

  • swebs 5 years ago

    That would be cool. Roku boxes actually come with a headphone jack in the remote so you can do just that (but not through bluetooth).

ebg13 5 years ago

I can't tell from this project's readme how to actually play things. It has an instruction for connecting to your chromecast...ok, and then what?

In the past I've used https://github.com/keredson/gnomecast which is a standalone simple media player that transcodes if needed and streams to my Chromecast. Thoughts on what this provides that's better?

  • this_machineOP 5 years ago

    While you have chromecast_mpris running, you can use an MPRIS client to issue the OpenUri method[1]. Here's an example:

        $ export URL="http://ccmixter.org/content/gmz/gmz_-_Parametaphoriquement.mp3"
        $ playerctl -p My_Chromecast open "$URL"
    
    This will cast a song to the Chromecast named "My_Chromecast". I forgot that OpenUri was implemented in the project because I typically cast from other devices and programs, but I'll include it in the README.

    > Thoughts on what this provides that's better?

    People tend to use catt or castnow to cast from the command-line. I wrote about using VLC to cast to the Chromecast[2], but I wouldn't recommend it unless you're watching something that you need VLC for.

    [1] https://specifications.freedesktop.org/mpris-spec/2.2/Player...

    [2] https://alexdelorenzo.dev/linux/2020/03/14/pipes

  • emayljames 5 years ago

    If on Android, bubbleupnp. It is a solid and well maintained app.

axaxs 5 years ago

Thanks for this, I can't wait to test it out.

Are there other ways to control chromecasts from Linux? I used to be able to cast straight from Chromium, but that hasn't worked for me in at least a couple years.

  • ce4 5 years ago

    VLC has a native client afaik.

    Edit: included since v3.0

    https://www.videolan.org/developers/vlc-branch/NEWS

    • londons_explore 5 years ago

      The VLC client is "barebones" - even simple functionality like adjusting the volume is missing. If the network connection drops, the chromecast stops playing (regular chromecast would continue). There is no support for subtitles, alternate audio/video tracks, audio effects, video playback speed, or pretty much anything else.

      Seeking is supported tho, as are audio-only files.

      • kelnos 5 years ago

        > If the network connection drops, the chromecast stops playing (regular chromecast would continue)

        How would you expect the video bits to get from the machine running VLC to the chromecast if the network drops? Not sure what you mean by "regular chromecast", but if the network connection between the chromecast and the video source is lost, you lose playback. That's true if you're watching YouTube videos or Netflix, or if you're using any other app to cast something from your local network.

        • mholt 5 years ago

          Only if it's lost for longer than was buffered. Most decent streaming clients -- even YouTube -- will buffer ahead and keep playing while attempting to restore connectivity.

          Speaking of which, the casting with VLC also has major buffering problems. Even casting a low-def video directly from an SSD to a Chromecast Ultra (over ethernet!) it will buffer for about 1-2 minutes for every 5 seconds of playback.

        • londons_explore 5 years ago

          Most services (like YouTube, Netflix, etc.) transfer data direct from their servers to your Chromecast, without your phone or laptop in the loop for anything more than a remote control. It means you can start Netflix running for the kids from your phone and then go out to run an errand and it will keep playing.

          VLC could do that for network sources. Even for a local file source, it could copy the whole file over - the Chromecast has a decent amount of RAM.

      • this_machineOP 5 years ago

        I opened a bug report[1] regarding this issue a few days ago if you'd like to leave a comment.

        [1] https://trac.videolan.org/vlc/ticket/25116

    • axaxs 5 years ago

      Good to know, thanks.

      Usually I'm interested in either casting a browser window, or even the whole screen usually, which I've been coming up short on.

      • ce4 5 years ago

        VLC re encodes content on the fly and sends it to the chromecast, even the android app supports it (albeit making your phone hot). Not sure about your two requirements though, maybe so. else has a tip here.

        • Thaxll 5 years ago

          Only if the content can't be played on the Chromecast but most "vacation movies" can be play on the Chromecast.

      • londons_explore 5 years ago

        Casting a browser or whole screen can be done with Chrome/Chromium on Linux. Whole screen doesn't work with wayland. Redirecting system audio doesn't work either.

        If you redirect a tab which is mostly a single video file, it is smart enough to do the video decoding directly on the chromecast, so you get much better quality/framerate.

        • mijoharas 5 years ago

          I was interested to find out that the youtube app on an amazon fire stick is supported as a chromecast target now.

          It doesn't support casting a browser tab or a desktop though (the latter isn't surprising as I'm under wayland which the parent says doesn't work, but I'd guess a browser tab should work? would be interested in other peoples experiences of this).

    • ebg13 5 years ago

      I was never able to get VLC to communicate with my Chromecast but gnomecast worked, so ymmv.

  • facesonflags 5 years ago
  • psanford 5 years ago

    You can still control chromecasts from Chrome on linux.

StavrosK 5 years ago

This is nice, I've been using catt mapped to the media keys via the native window manager shortcuts, but this seems easier to set up.

  • this_machineOP 5 years ago

    I do something similar with chromecast_mpris. I have my media keys mapped to Plasma's Media Controller, which uses MPRIS in the background. Works well for me, and you don't have to wait for catt to launch and find your Chromecast each time.

markbnj 5 years ago

Shameless threadjack: does anyone know a way to cast _to_ a linux or windows desktop? We use chromecast on all our entertainment video monitors, but sometimes I would like to hang on the couch in my office and cast a video to my desktop monitor.

  • pmontra 5 years ago

    Maybe scrcpy is enough for you.

    https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy

    If opening a browser tab is all you need any tab syncing app / service will do. I use kdeconnect / gsconnect so I don't have to rely on a 3rd party service, Google and Mozilla included.

    • markbnj 5 years ago

      Ah this is a good idea, I hadn't thought of approaching it that way. Having basic pause/back/forward media controls would also be nice, but they should work if the browser location gets updated right?

  • gibolt 5 years ago

    Could add a Chromecast on one of the Hdmi ports of the monitor. That's what I do

    • markbnj 5 years ago

      Yeah I thought about that a few times, but I would have to change inputs, so it wasn't really the experience I had in mind.

  • _ZeD_ 5 years ago

    Miraclecast

  • ekianjo 5 years ago

    Jellyfin mpv shim does this

  • throwaways885 5 years ago

    Discord screenshare :)

  • mav3rick 5 years ago

    Open the website ?

    • markbnj 5 years ago

      What I would like to do is flip youtube videos or whatever on my phone and cast to the monitor, which is 6 feet from the couch... an impassable barrier as I'm sure you'll agree.

mijoharas 5 years ago

sorry to somewhat hijack this thread, but does anyone know a way to stream from linux to a miracast target?

I have a fire stick that I believe supports miracast, and periodically check if there is linux software that will allow me to stream as a source.

Last time I checked miraclecast[0] seemed to be somewhat broken. Has anyone had any luck?

[0] https://github.com/albfan/miraclecast

baby-yoda 5 years ago

does chromecast still require WAN access to operate?

  • m-p-3 5 years ago

    I believe so, and it's less than useful on network with a captive portals like hotel rooms.

    At least the upcoming Chromecast with Google TV comes with a remote, so you should be able to interact with the captive portal and use it that way.

    • fragmede 5 years ago

      While the chromecast's inability to work with captive portals is it's own problem, they make tiny wifi routers, half as tall and twice as thick as a smartphone, and they're cheap. If you find yourself facing captive portals more than once, I'd recommend buying one so you can use your Chromecast in hotel rooms, among other use cases.

      • m-p-3 5 years ago

        I already have one from TP-Link, but having the new Chromecast would allow me to shrink down on hardware even more.

      • Rebelgecko 5 years ago

        Most smartphones are also wifi routers

  • kelnos 5 years ago

    It shouldn't. Obviously if you're casting from a WAN source (like YouTube or Netflix), it needs WAN access, but if you're casting from a source on your local network, it should work without the WAN.

jowsie 5 years ago

Does this also allow you to cast arbitrary media to the Chromecast? I couldn't tell from the readme.

29athrowaway 5 years ago

An unpopular choice for general purpose streaming: Steam Link.

You can install the Steam Link on a smart TV and your computer (including Linux), switch the Steam window and stream whatever you want to stream.

zerop 5 years ago

Any way to cast zoom calls from my android zoom app to TV via Chromecast ?

  • m-p-3 5 years ago

    You can cast your device's screen, but you'll still have to rely on the device's camera and mic.

    You'll probably want to avoid outputting the sound on the TV or you'll get a feedback loop.

    And there's going to be a slight delay, which might be annoying with a realtime conversation.

    So it might not be a great idea from the start.

    • londons_explore 5 years ago

      You'll also end up with 15 fps, high CPU usage, and random hangs... It works, but isn't really usable...

  • chris_engel 5 years ago

    Well, with the google home app, you can send your whole screen to a chromecast, so whatever you are doing on your phone will be visible on your TV.

hansjorg 5 years ago

Title says 'from Linux', but the README says 'Linux / *BSD / macOS' under 'Requirements'.

How would this work on macOS?

  • this_machineOP 5 years ago

    > How would this work on macOS?

    Theoretically it should work if you're able to get D-Bus working on macOS. D-Bus is usually a Linux thing, but it's been ported to other platforms. macOS isn't included in the title because most macOS users don't have D-Bus installed.

    I included instructions here[1] with URLs to the macOS versions of D-Bus and PyGObject. I'd be interested in whether you're able get it working.

    [1] https://github.com/alexdelorenzo/chromecast_mpris#requiremen...

  • hugg 5 years ago

    where it says that, follow the link

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