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README

sfeed
-----

RSS and Atom parser (and some format programs).

It converts RSS or Atom feeds from XML to a TAB-separated file. There are
formatting programs included to convert this TAB-separated format to various
other formats. There are also some programs and scripts included to import and
export OPML and to fetch, filter, merge and order feed items.


Build and install
-----------------

$ make
# make install


To build sfeed without sfeed_curses set SFEED_CURSES to an empty string:

$ make SFEED_CURSES=""
# make SFEED_CURSES="" install


To change the theme for sfeed_curses you can set SFEED_THEME.  See the themes/
directory for the theme names.

$ make SFEED_THEME="templeos"
# make SFEED_THEME="templeos" install


Usage
-----

Initial setup:

	mkdir -p "$HOME/.sfeed/feeds"
	cp sfeedrc.example "$HOME/.sfeed/sfeedrc"

Edit the sfeedrc(5) configuration file and change any RSS/Atom feeds. This file
is included and evaluated as a shellscript for sfeed_update, so it's functions
and behaviour can be overridden:

	$EDITOR "$HOME/.sfeed/sfeedrc"

or you can import existing OPML subscriptions using sfeed_opml_import(1):

	sfeed_opml_import < file.opml > "$HOME/.sfeed/sfeedrc"

an example to export from an other RSS/Atom reader called newsboat and import
for sfeed_update:

	newsboat -e | sfeed_opml_import > "$HOME/.sfeed/sfeedrc"

an example to export from an other RSS/Atom reader called rss2email (3.x+) and
import for sfeed_update:

	r2e opmlexport | sfeed_opml_import > "$HOME/.sfeed/sfeedrc"

Update feeds, this script merges the new items, see sfeed_update(1) for more
information what it can do:

	sfeed_update

Format feeds:

Plain-text list:

	sfeed_plain $HOME/.sfeed/feeds/* > "$HOME/.sfeed/feeds.txt"

HTML view (no frames), copy style.css for a default style:

	cp style.css "$HOME/.sfeed/style.css"
	sfeed_html $HOME/.sfeed/feeds/* > "$HOME/.sfeed/feeds.html"

HTML view with the menu as frames, copy style.css for a default style:

	mkdir -p "$HOME/.sfeed/frames"
	cp style.css "$HOME/.sfeed/frames/style.css"
	cd "$HOME/.sfeed/frames" && sfeed_frames $HOME/.sfeed/feeds/*

To automatically update your feeds periodically and format them in a way you
like you can make a wrapper script and add it as a cronjob.

Most protocols are supported because curl(1) is used by default and also proxy
settings from the environment (such as the $http_proxy environment variable)
are used.

The sfeed(1) program itself is just a parser that parses XML data from stdin
and is therefore network protocol-agnostic. It can be used with HTTP, HTTPS,
Gopher, SSH, etc.

See the section "Usage and examples" below and the man-pages for more
information how to use sfeed(1) and the additional tools.


Dependencies
------------

- C compiler (C99).
- libc (recommended: C99 and POSIX >= 200809).


Optional dependencies
---------------------

- POSIX make(1) for the Makefile.
- POSIX sh(1),
  used by sfeed_update(1) and sfeed_opml_export(1).
- POSIX utilities such as awk(1) and sort(1),
  used by sfeed_content(1), sfeed_markread(1) and sfeed_update(1).
- curl(1) binary: https://curl.haxx.se/ ,
  used by sfeed_update(1), but can be replaced with any tool like wget(1),
  OpenBSD ftp(1) or hurl(1): https://git.codemadness.org/hurl/
- iconv(1) command-line utilities,
  used by sfeed_update(1). If the text in your RSS/Atom feeds are already UTF-8
  encoded then you don't need this. For a minimal iconv implementation:
  https://git.etalabs.net/cgit/noxcuse/tree/src/iconv.c
- mandoc for documentation: https://mdocml.bsd.lv/
- curses (typically ncurses), otherwise see minicurses.h,
  used by sfeed_curses(1).
- a terminal (emulator) supporting UTF-8 and the used capabilities,
  used by sfeed_curses(1).


Optional run-time dependencies for sfeed_curses
-----------------------------------------------

- xclip for yanking the URL or enclosure. See $SFEED_YANKER to change it.
- xdg-open, used as a plumber by default. See $SFEED_PLUMBER to change it.
- awk, used by the sfeed_content and sfeed_markread script.
  See the ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES section in the man page to change it.
- lynx, used by the sfeed_content script to convert HTML content.
  See the ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES section in the man page to change it.


Formats supported
-----------------

sfeed supports a subset of XML 1.0 and a subset of:

- Atom 1.0 (RFC 4287): https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4287
- Atom 0.3 (draft, historic).
- RSS 0.91+.
- RDF (when used with RSS).
- MediaRSS extensions (media:).
- Dublin Core extensions (dc:).

Other formats like JSONfeed, twtxt or certain RSS/Atom extensions can be
supported by converting them to RSS/Atom or to the sfeed(5) format directly.


OS tested
---------

- Linux,
  compilers: clang, gcc, chibicc, cproc, lacc, pcc, scc, tcc,
  libc: glibc, musl.
- OpenBSD (clang, gcc).
- NetBSD (with NetBSD curses).
- FreeBSD
- DragonFlyBSD
- GNU/Hurd
- Illumos (OpenIndiana).
- Windows (cygwin gcc + mintty, mingw).
- HaikuOS
- SerenityOS
- FreeDOS (djgpp).
- FUZIX (sdcc -mz80, with the sfeed parser program).


Architectures tested
--------------------

amd64, ARM, aarch64, HPPA, i386, MIPS32-BE, RISCV64, SPARC64, Z80.


Files
-----

sfeed             - Read XML RSS or Atom feed data from stdin. Write feed data
                    in TAB-separated format to stdout.
sfeed_atom        - Format feed data (TSV) to an Atom feed.
sfeed_content     - View item content, for use with sfeed_curses.
sfeed_curses      - Format feed data (TSV) to a curses interface.
sfeed_frames      - Format feed data (TSV) to HTML file(s) with frames.
sfeed_gopher      - Format feed data (TSV) to Gopher files.
sfeed_html        - Format feed data (TSV) to HTML.
sfeed_opml_export - Generate an OPML XML file from a sfeedrc config file.
sfeed_opml_import - Generate a sfeedrc config file from an OPML XML file.
sfeed_markread    - Mark items as read/unread, for use with sfeed_curses.
sfeed_mbox        - Format feed data (TSV) to mbox.
sfeed_plain       - Format feed data (TSV) to a plain-text list.
sfeed_twtxt       - Format feed data (TSV) to a twtxt feed.
sfeed_update      - Update feeds and merge items.
sfeed_web         - Find URLs to RSS/Atom feed from a webpage.
sfeed_xmlenc      - Detect character-set encoding from a XML stream.
sfeedrc.example   - Example config file. Can be copied to $HOME/.sfeed/sfeedrc.
style.css         - Example stylesheet to use with sfeed_html(1) and
                    sfeed_frames(1).


Files read at runtime by sfeed_update(1)
----------------------------------------

sfeedrc - Config file. This file is evaluated as a shellscript in
          sfeed_update(1).

At least the following functions can be overridden per feed:

- fetch: to use wget(1), OpenBSD ftp(1) or an other download program.
- filter: to filter on fields.
- merge: to change the merge logic.
- order: to change the sort order.

See also the sfeedrc(5) man page documentation for more details.

The feeds() function is called to process the feeds. The default feed()
function is executed concurrently as a background job in your sfeedrc(5) config
file to make updating faster. The variable maxjobs can be changed to limit or
increase the amount of concurrent jobs (8 by default).


Files written at runtime by sfeed_update(1)
-------------------------------------------

feedname     - TAB-separated format containing all items per feed. The
               sfeed_update(1) script merges new items with this file.
               The format is documented in sfeed(5).


File format
-----------

man 5 sfeed
man 5 sfeedrc
man 1 sfeed


Usage and examples
------------------

Find RSS/Atom feed URLs from a webpage:

	url="https://codemadness.org"; curl -L -s "$url" | sfeed_web "$url"

output example:

	https://codemadness.org/atom.xml	application/atom+xml
	https://codemadness.org/atom_content.xml	application/atom+xml

- - -

Make sure your sfeedrc config file exists, see sfeedrc.example. To update your
feeds (configfile argument is optional):

	sfeed_update "configfile"

Format the feeds files:

	# Plain-text list.
	sfeed_plain $HOME/.sfeed/feeds/* > $HOME/.sfeed/feeds.txt
	# HTML view (no frames), copy style.css for a default style.
	sfeed_html $HOME/.sfeed/feeds/* > $HOME/.sfeed/feeds.html
	# HTML view with the menu as frames, copy style.css for a default style.
	mkdir -p somedir && cd somedir && sfeed_frames $HOME/.sfeed/feeds/*

View formatted output in your browser:

	$BROWSER "$HOME/.sfeed/feeds.html"

View formatted output in your editor:

	$EDITOR "$HOME/.sfeed/feeds.txt"

- - -

View formatted output in a curses interface.  The interface has a look inspired
by the mutt mail client.  It has a sidebar panel for the feeds, a panel with a
listing of the items and a small statusbar for the selected item/URL. Some
functions like searching and scrolling are integrated in the interface itself.

Just like the other format programs included in sfeed you can run it like this:

	sfeed_curses ~/.sfeed/feeds/*

... or by reading from stdin:

	sfeed_curses < ~/.sfeed/feeds/xkcd

By default sfeed_curses marks the items of the last day as new/bold. To manage
read/unread items in a different way a plain-text file with a list of the read
URLs can be used. To enable this behaviour the path to this file can be
specified by setting the environment variable $SFEED_URL_FILE to the URL file:

	export SFEED_URL_FILE="$HOME/.sfeed/urls"
	[ -f "$SFEED_URL_FILE" ] || touch "$SFEED_URL_FILE"
	sfeed_curses ~/.sfeed/feeds/*

It then uses the shellscript "sfeed_markread" to process the read and unread
items.

- - -

Example script to view feed items in a vertical list/menu in dmenu(1). It opens
the selected URL in the browser set in $BROWSER:

	#!/bin/sh
	url=$(sfeed_plain "$HOME/.sfeed/feeds/"* | dmenu -l 35 -i | \
		sed -n 's@^.* \([a-zA-Z]*://\)\(.*\)$@\1\2@p')
	test -n "${url}" && $BROWSER "${url}"

dmenu can be found at: https://git.suckless.org/dmenu/

- - -

Generate a sfeedrc config file from your exported list of feeds in OPML
format:

	sfeed_opml_import < opmlfile.xml > $HOME/.sfeed/sfeedrc

- - -

Export an OPML file of your feeds from a sfeedrc config file (configfile
argument is optional):

	sfeed_opml_export configfile > myfeeds.opml

- - -

The filter function can be overridden in your sfeedrc file. This allows
filtering items per feed. It can be used to shorten URLs, filter away
advertisements, strip tracking parameters and more.

	# filter fields.
	# filter(name)
	filter() {
		case "$1" in
		"tweakers")
			awk -F '\t' 'BEGIN { OFS = "\t"; }
			# skip ads.
			$2 ~ /^ADV:/ {
				next;
			}
			# shorten link.
			{
				if (match($3, /^https:\/\/tweakers\.net\/[a-z]+\/[0-9]+\//)) {
					$3 = substr($3, RSTART, RLENGTH);
				}
				print $0;
			}';;
		"yt BSDNow")
			# filter only BSD Now from channel.
			awk -F '\t' '$2 ~ / \| BSD Now/';;
		*)
			cat;;
		esac | \
			# replace youtube links with embed links.
			sed 's@www.youtube.com/watch?v=@www.youtube.com/embed/@g' | \

			awk -F '\t' 'BEGIN { OFS = "\t"; }
			function filterlink(s) {
				# protocol must start with http, https or gopher.
				if (match(s, /^(http|https|gopher):\/\//) == 0) {
					return "";
				}

				# shorten feedburner links.
				if (match(s, /^(http|https):\/\/[^\/]+\/~r\/.*\/~3\/[^\/]+\//)) {
					s = substr($3, RSTART, RLENGTH);
				}

				# strip tracking parameters
				# urchin, facebook, piwik, webtrekk and generic.
				gsub(/\?(ad|campaign|fbclid|pk|tm|utm|wt)_([^&]+)/, "?", s);
				gsub(/&(ad|campaign|fbclid|pk|tm|utm|wt)_([^&]+)/, "", s);

				gsub(/\?&/, "?", s);
				gsub(/[\?&]+$/, "", s);

				return s
			}
			{
				$3 = filterlink($3); # link
				$8 = filterlink($8); # enclosure

				# try to remove tracking pixels: <img/> tags with 1px width or height.
				gsub("<img[^>]*(width|height)[[:space:]]*=[[:space:]]*[\"'"'"' ]?1[\"'"'"' ]?[^0-9>]+[^>]*>", "", $4);

				print $0;
			}'
	}

- - -

Aggregate feeds. This filters new entries (maximum one day old) and sorts them
by newest first. Prefix the feed name in the title. Convert the TSV output data
to an Atom XML feed (again):

	#!/bin/sh
	cd ~/.sfeed/feeds/ || exit 1

	awk -F '\t' -v "old=$(($(date +'%s') - 86400))" '
	BEGIN {	OFS = "\t"; }
	int($1) >= old {
		$2 = "[" FILENAME "] " $2;
		print $0;
	}' * | \
	sort -k1,1rn | \
	sfeed_atom

- - -

To have a "tail(1) -f"-like FIFO stream filtering for new unique feed items and
showing them as plain-text per line similar to sfeed_plain(1):

Create a FIFO:

	fifo="/tmp/sfeed_fifo"
	mkfifo "$fifo"

On the reading side:

	# This keeps track of unique lines so might consume much memory.
	# It tries to reopen the $fifo after 1 second if it fails.
	while :; do cat "$fifo" || sleep 1; done | awk '!x[$0]++'

On the writing side:

	feedsdir="$HOME/.sfeed/feeds/"
	cd "$feedsdir" || exit 1
	test -p "$fifo" || exit 1

	# 1 day is old news, don't write older items.
	awk -F '\t' -v "old=$(($(date +'%s') - 86400))" '
	BEGIN { OFS = "\t"; }
	int($1) >= old {
		$2 = "[" FILENAME "] " $2;
		print $0;
	}' * | sort -k1,1n | sfeed_plain | cut -b 3- > "$fifo"

cut -b is used to trim the "N " prefix of sfeed_plain(1).

- - -

For some podcast feed the following code can be used to filter the latest
enclosure URL (probably some audio file):

	awk -F '\t' 'BEGIN { latest = 0; }
	length($8) {
		ts = int($1);
		if (ts > latest) {
			url = $8;
			latest = ts;
		}
	}
	END { if (length(url)) { print url; } }'

... or on a file already sorted from newest to oldest:

	awk -F '\t' '$8 { print $8; exit }'

- - -

Over time your feeds file might become quite big. You can archive items of a
feed from (roughly) the last week by doing for example:

	awk -F '\t' -v "old=$(($(date +'%s') - 604800))" 'int($1) > old' < feed > feed.new
	mv feed feed.bak
	mv feed.new feed

This could also be run weekly in a crontab to archive the feeds. Like throwing
away old newspapers. It keeps the feeds list tidy and the formatted output
small.

- - -

Convert mbox to separate maildirs per feed and filter duplicate messages using the
fdm program.
fdm is available at: https://github.com/nicm/fdm

fdm config file (~/.sfeed/fdm.conf):

	set unmatched-mail keep

	account "sfeed" mbox "%[home]/.sfeed/mbox"
		$cachepath = "%[home]/.sfeed/fdm.cache"
		cache "${cachepath}"
		$maildir = "%[home]/feeds/"

		# Check if message is in the cache by Message-ID.
		match case "^Message-ID: (.*)" in headers
			action {
				tag "msgid" value "%1"
			}
			continue

		# If it is in the cache, stop.
		match matched and in-cache "${cachepath}" key "%[msgid]"
			action {
				keep
			}

		# Not in the cache, process it and add to cache.
		match case "^X-Feedname: (.*)" in headers
			action {
				# Store to local maildir.
				maildir "${maildir}%1"

				add-to-cache "${cachepath}" key "%[msgid]"
				keep
			}

Now run:

	$ sfeed_mbox ~/.sfeed/feeds/* > ~/.sfeed/mbox
	$ fdm -f ~/.sfeed/fdm.conf fetch

Now you can view feeds in mutt(1) for example.

- - -

Read from mbox and filter duplicate messages using the fdm program and deliver
it to a SMTP server. This works similar to the rss2email program.
fdm is available at: https://github.com/nicm/fdm

fdm config file (~/.sfeed/fdm.conf):

	set unmatched-mail keep

	account "sfeed" mbox "%[home]/.sfeed/mbox"
		$cachepath = "%[home]/.sfeed/fdm.cache"
		cache "${cachepath}"

		# Check if message is in the cache by Message-ID.
		match case "^Message-ID: (.*)" in headers
			action {
				tag "msgid" value "%1"
			}
			continue

		# If it is in the cache, stop.
		match matched and in-cache "${cachepath}" key "%[msgid]"
			action {
				keep
			}

		# Not in the cache, process it and add to cache.
		match case "^X-Feedname: (.*)" in headers
			action {
				# Connect to a SMTP server and attempt to deliver the
				# mail to it.
				# Of course change the server and e-mail below.
				smtp server "codemadness.org" to "hiltjo@codemadness.org"

				add-to-cache "${cachepath}" key "%[msgid]"
				keep
			}

Now run:

	$ sfeed_mbox ~/.sfeed/feeds/* > ~/.sfeed/mbox
	$ fdm -f ~/.sfeed/fdm.conf fetch

Now you can view feeds in mutt(1) for example.

- - -

Convert mbox to separate maildirs per feed and filter duplicate messages using
procmail(1).

procmail_maildirs.sh file:

	maildir="$HOME/feeds"
	feedsdir="$HOME/.sfeed/feeds"
	procmailconfig="$HOME/.sfeed/procmailrc"

	# message-id cache to prevent duplicates.
	mkdir -p "${maildir}/.cache"

	if ! test -r "${procmailconfig}"; then
		printf "Procmail configuration file \"%s\" does not exist or is not readable.\n" "${procmailconfig}" >&2
		echo "See procmailrc.example for an example." >&2
		exit 1
	fi

	find "${feedsdir}" -type f -exec printf '%s\n' {} \; | while read -r d; do
		name=$(basename "${d}")
		mkdir -p "${maildir}/${name}/cur"
		mkdir -p "${maildir}/${name}/new"
		mkdir -p "${maildir}/${name}/tmp"
		printf 'Mailbox %s\n' "${name}"
		sfeed_mbox "${d}" | formail -s procmail "${procmailconfig}"
	done

Procmailrc(5) file:

	# Example for use with sfeed_mbox(1).
	# The header X-Feedname is used to split into separate maildirs. It is
	# assumed this name is sane.

	MAILDIR="$HOME/feeds/"

	:0
	* ^X-Feedname: \/.*
	{
		FEED="$MATCH"

		:0 Wh: "msgid_$FEED.lock"
		| formail -D 1024000 ".cache/msgid_$FEED.cache"

		:0
		"$FEED"/
	}

Now run:

	$ procmail_maildirs.sh

Now you can view feeds in mutt(1) for example.

- - -

The fetch function can be overridden in your sfeedrc file. This allows to
replace the default curl(1) for sfeed_update with any other client to fetch the
RSS/Atom data or change the default curl options:

	# fetch a feed via HTTP/HTTPS etc.
	# fetch(name, url, feedfile)
	fetch() {
		hurl -m 1048576 -t 15 "$2" 2>/dev/null
	}

- - -

Caching, incremental data updates and bandwidth-saving

For servers that support it some incremental updates and bandwidth-saving can
be done by using the "ETag" HTTP header.

Create a directory for storing the ETags per feed:

	mkdir -p ~/.sfeed/etags/

The curl ETag options (--etag-save and --etag-compare) can be used to store and
send the previous ETag header value. curl version 7.73+ is recommended for it
to work properly.

The curl -z option can be used to send the modification date of a local file as
a HTTP "If-Modified-Since" request header. The server can then respond if the
data is modified or not or respond with only the incremental data.

The curl --compressed option can be used to indicate the client supports
decompression. Because RSS/Atom feeds are textual XML content this generally
compresses very well.

These options can be set by overriding the fetch() function in the sfeedrc
file:

	# fetch(name, url, feedfile)
	fetch() {
		etag="$HOME/.sfeed/etags/$(basename "$3")"
		curl \
			-L --max-redirs 0 -H "User-Agent:" -f -s -m 15 \
			--compressed \
			--etag-save "${etag}" --etag-compare "${etag}" \
			-z "${etag}" \
			"$2" 2>/dev/null
	}

These options can come at a cost of some privacy, because it exposes
additional metadata from the previous request.

- - -

CDNs blocking requests due to a missing HTTP User-Agent request header

sfeed_update will not send the "User-Agent" header by default for privacy
reasons.  Some CDNs like Cloudflare don't like this and will block such HTTP
requests.

A custom User-Agent can be set by using the curl -H option, like so:

	curl -H 'User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/78.0'

The above example string pretends to be a Windows 10 (x86-64) machine running
Firefox 78.

- - -

Page redirects

For security and efficiency reasons by default redirects are not allowed and
are treated as an error.

For example to prevent hijacking an unencrypted http:// to https:// redirect or
to not add time of an unnecessary page redirect each time.  It is encouraged to
use the final redirected URL in the sfeedrc config file.

If you want to ignore this advise you can override the fetch() function in the
sfeedrc file and change the curl options "-L --max-redirs 0".

- - -

Shellscript to update feeds in parallel more efficiently using xargs -P.

It creates a queue of the feeds with its settings, then uses xargs to process
them in parallel using the common, but non-POSIX -P option. This is more
efficient than the more portable solution in sfeed_update which can stall a
batch of $maxjobs in the queue if one item is slow.

sfeed_update_xargs shellscript:

	#!/bin/sh
	# update feeds, merge with old feeds using xargs in parallel mode (non-POSIX).
	
	# include script and reuse its functions, but do not start main().
	SFEED_UPDATE_INCLUDE="1" . sfeed_update
	# load config file, sets $config.
	loadconfig "$1"
	
	# process a single feed.
	# args are: config, tmpdir, name, feedurl, basesiteurl, encoding
	if [ "${SFEED_UPDATE_CHILD}" = "1" ]; then
		sfeedtmpdir="$2"
		_feed "$3" "$4" "$5" "$6"
		exit $?
	fi
	
	# ...else parent mode:
	
	# feed(name, feedurl, basesiteurl, encoding)
	feed() {
		# workaround: *BSD xargs doesn't handle empty fields in the middle.
		name="${1:-$$}"
		feedurl="${2:-http://}"
		basesiteurl="${3:-${feedurl}}"
		encoding="$4"
	
		printf '%s\0%s\0%s\0%s\0%s\0%s\0' "${config}" "${sfeedtmpdir}" \
			"${name}" "${feedurl}" "${basesiteurl}" "${encoding}"
	}
	
	# fetch feeds and store in temporary directory.
	sfeedtmpdir="$(mktemp -d '/tmp/sfeed_XXXXXX')"
	mkdir -p "${sfeedtmpdir}/feeds"
	touch "${sfeedtmpdir}/ok"
	# make sure path exists.
	mkdir -p "${sfeedpath}"
	# print feeds for parallel processing with xargs.
	feeds | SFEED_UPDATE_CHILD="1" xargs -r -0 -P "${maxjobs}" -L 6 "$(readlink -f "$0")"
	status=$?
	# check error exit status indicator for parallel jobs.
	test -f "${sfeedtmpdir}/ok" || status=1
	# cleanup temporary files etc.
	cleanup
	exit ${status}

- - -

Shellscript to handle URLs and enclosures in parallel using xargs -P.

This can be used to download and process URLs for downloading podcasts,
webcomics, download and convert webpages, mirror videos, etc. It uses a
plain-text cache file for remembering processed URLs. The match patterns are
defined in the shellscript fetch() function and in the awk script and can be
modified to handle items differently depending on their context.

The arguments for the script are files in the sfeed(5) format. If no file
arguments are specified then the data is read from stdin.

	#!/bin/sh
	# sfeed_download: downloader for URLs and enclosures in sfeed(5) files.
	# Dependencies: awk, curl, flock, xargs (-P), youtube-dl.
	
	cachefile="${SFEED_CACHEFILE:-$HOME/.sfeed/downloaded_urls}"
	jobs="${SFEED_JOBS:-4}"
	lockfile="${HOME}/.sfeed/sfeed_download.lock"
	
	# log(feedname, s, status)
	log() {
		if [ "$1" != "-" ]; then
			s="[$1] $2"
		else
			s="$2"
		fi
		printf '[%s]: %s: %s\n' "$(date +'%H:%M:%S')" "${s}" "$3"
	}
	
	# fetch(url, feedname)
	fetch() {
		case "$1" in
		*youtube.com*)
			youtube-dl "$1";;
		*.flac|*.ogg|*.m3u|*.m3u8|*.m4a|*.mkv|*.mp3|*.mp4|*.wav|*.webm)
			# allow 2 redirects, hide User-Agent, connect timeout is 15 seconds.
			curl -O -L --max-redirs 2 -H "User-Agent:" -f -s --connect-timeout 15 "$1";;
		esac
	}
	
	# downloader(url, title, feedname)
	downloader() {
		url="$1"
		title="$2"
		feedname="${3##*/}"
	
		msg="${title}: ${url}"
	
		# download directory.
		if [ "${feedname}" != "-" ]; then
			mkdir -p "${feedname}"
			if ! cd "${feedname}"; then
				log "${feedname}" "${msg}: ${feedname}" "DIR FAIL" >&2
				return 1
			fi
		fi
	
		log "${feedname}" "${msg}" "START"
		if fetch "${url}" "${feedname}"; then
			log "${feedname}" "${msg}" "OK"
	
			# append it safely in parallel to the cachefile on a
			# successful download.
			(flock 9 || exit 1
			printf '%s\n' "${url}" >> "${cachefile}"
			) 9>"${lockfile}"
		else
			log "${feedname}" "${msg}" "FAIL" >&2
			return 1
		fi
		return 0
	}
	
	if [ "${SFEED_DOWNLOAD_CHILD}" = "1" ]; then
		# Downloader helper for parallel downloading.
		# Receives arguments: $1 = URL, $2 = title, $3 = feed filename or "-".
		# It should write the URI to the cachefile if it is successful.
		downloader "$1" "$2" "$3"
		exit $?
	fi
	
	# ...else parent mode:
	
	tmp=$(mktemp)
	trap "rm -f ${tmp}" EXIT
	
	[ -f "${cachefile}" ] || touch "${cachefile}"
	cat "${cachefile}" > "${tmp}"
	echo >> "${tmp}" # force it to have one line for awk.
	
	LC_ALL=C awk -F '\t' '
	# fast prefilter what to download or not.
	function filter(url, field, feedname) {
		u = tolower(url);
		return (match(u, "youtube\\.com") ||
		        match(u, "\\.(flac|ogg|m3u|m3u8|m4a|mkv|mp3|mp4|wav|webm)$"));
	}
	function download(url, field, title, filename) {
		if (!length(url) || urls[url] || !filter(url, field, filename))
			return;
		# NUL-separated for xargs -0.
		printf("%s%c%s%c%s%c", url, 0, title, 0, filename, 0);
		urls[url] = 1; # print once
	}
	{
		FILENR += (FNR == 1);
	}
	# lookup table from cachefile which contains downloaded URLs.
	FILENR == 1 {
		urls[$0] = 1;
	}
	# feed file(s).
	FILENR != 1 {
		download($3, 3, $2, FILENAME); # link
		download($8, 8, $2, FILENAME); # enclosure
	}
	' "${tmp}" "${@:--}" | \
	SFEED_DOWNLOAD_CHILD="1" xargs -r -0 -L 3 -P "${jobs}" "$(readlink -f "$0")"

- - -

Shellscript to export existing newsboat cached items from sqlite3 to the sfeed
TSV format.

	#!/bin/sh
	# Export newsbeuter/newsboat cached items from sqlite3 to the sfeed TSV format.
	# The data is split per file per feed with the name of the newsboat title/url.
	# It writes the URLs of the read items line by line to a "urls" file.
	#
	# Dependencies: sqlite3, awk.
	#
	# Usage: create some directory to store the feeds then run this script.
	
	# newsboat cache.db file.
	cachefile="$HOME/.newsboat/cache.db"
	test -n "$1" && cachefile="$1"
	
	# dump data.
	# .mode ascii: Columns/rows delimited by 0x1F and 0x1E
	# get the first fields in the order of the sfeed(5) format.
	sqlite3 "$cachefile" <<!EOF |
	.headers off
	.mode ascii
	.output
	SELECT
		i.pubDate, i.title, i.url, i.content, i.content_mime_type,
		i.guid, i.author, i.enclosure_url,
		f.rssurl AS rssurl, f.title AS feedtitle, i.unread
		-- i.id, i.enclosure_type, i.enqueued, i.flags, i.deleted, i.base
	FROM rss_feed f
	INNER JOIN rss_item i ON i.feedurl = f.rssurl
	ORDER BY
		i.feedurl ASC, i.pubDate DESC;
	.quit
	!EOF
	# convert to sfeed(5) TSV format.
	LC_ALL=C awk '
	BEGIN {
		FS = "\x1f";
		RS = "\x1e";
	}
	# normal non-content fields.
	function field(s) {
		gsub("^[[:space:]]*", "", s);
		gsub("[[:space:]]*$", "", s);
		gsub("[[:space:]]", " ", s);
		gsub("[[:cntrl:]]", "", s);
		return s;
	}
	# content field.
	function content(s) {
		gsub("^[[:space:]]*", "", s);
		gsub("[[:space:]]*$", "", s);
		# escape chars in content field.
		gsub("\\\\", "\\\\", s);
		gsub("\n", "\\n", s);
		gsub("\t", "\\t", s);
		return s;
	}
	function feedname(feedurl, feedtitle) {
		if (feedtitle == "") {
			gsub("/", "_", feedurl);
			return feedurl;
		}
		gsub("/", "_", feedtitle);
		return feedtitle;
	}
	{
		fname = feedname($9, $10);
		if (!feed[fname]++) {
			print "Writing file: \"" fname "\" (title: " $10 ", url: " $9 ")" > "/dev/stderr";
		}
	
		contenttype = field($5);
		if (contenttype == "")
			contenttype = "html";
		else if (index(contenttype, "/html") || index(contenttype, "/xhtml"))
			contenttype = "html";
		else
			contenttype = "plain";
	
		print $1 "\t" field($2) "\t" field($3) "\t" content($4) "\t" \
			contenttype "\t" field($6) "\t" field($7) "\t" field($8) "\t" \
			> fname;
	
		# write URLs of the read items to a file line by line.
		if ($11 == "0") {
			print $3 > "urls";
		}
	}'

- - -

Progress indicator
------------------

The below sfeed_update wrapper script counts the amount of feeds in a sfeedrc
config.  It then calls sfeed_update and pipes the output lines to a function
that counts the current progress. It writes the total progress to stderr.
Alternative: pv -l -s totallines

	#!/bin/sh
	# Progress indicator script.
	
	# Pass lines as input to stdin and write progress status to stderr.
	# progress(totallines)
	progress() {
		total="$(($1 + 0))" # must be a number, no divide by zero.
		test "${total}" -le 0 -o "$1" != "${total}" && return
	LC_ALL=C awk -v "total=${total}" '
	{
		counter++;
		percent = (counter * 100) / total;
		printf("\033[K") > "/dev/stderr"; # clear EOL
		print $0;
		printf("[%s/%s] %.0f%%\r", counter, total, percent) > "/dev/stderr";
		fflush(); # flush all buffers per line.
	}
	END {
		printf("\033[K") > "/dev/stderr";
	}'
	}
	
	# Counts the feeds from the sfeedrc config.
	countfeeds() {
		count=0
	. "$1"
	feed() {
		count=$((count + 1))
	}
		feeds
		echo "${count}"
	}
	
	config="${1:-$HOME/.sfeed/sfeedrc}"
	total=$(countfeeds "${config}")
	sfeed_update "${config}" 2>&1 | progress "${total}"

- - -

Counting unread and total items
-------------------------------

It can be useful to show the counts of unread items, for example in a
windowmanager or statusbar.

The below example script counts the items of the last day in the same way the
formatting tools do:

	#!/bin/sh
	# Count the new items of the last day.
	LC_ALL=C awk -F '\t' -v "old=$(($(date +'%s') - 86400))" '
	{
		total++;
	}
	int($1) >= old {
		totalnew++;
	}
	END {
		print "New:   " totalnew;
		print "Total: " total;
	}' ~/.sfeed/feeds/*

The below example script counts the unread items using the sfeed_curses URL
file:

	#!/bin/sh
	# Count the unread and total items from feeds using the URL file.
	LC_ALL=C awk -F '\t' '
	# URL file: amount of fields is 1.
	NF == 1 {
		u[$0] = 1; # lookup table of URLs.
		next;
	}
	# feed file: check by URL or id.
	{
		total++;
		if (length($3)) {
			if (u[$3])
				read++;
		} else if (length($6)) {
			if (u[$6])
				read++;
		}
	}
	END {
		print "Unread: " (total - read);
		print "Total:  " total;
	}' ~/.sfeed/urls ~/.sfeed/feeds/*

- - -

Running custom commands inside the sfeed_curses program
-------------------------------------------------------

Running commands inside the sfeed_curses program can be useful for example to
sync items or mark all items across all feeds as read. It can be comfortable to
have a keybind for this inside the program to perform a scripted action and
then reload the feeds by sending the signal SIGHUP.

In the input handling code you can then add a case:

	case 'M':
		forkexec((char *[]) { "markallread.sh", NULL }, 0);
		break;

or

	case 'S':
		forkexec((char *[]) { "syncnews.sh", NULL }, 1);
		break;

The specified script should be in $PATH or be an absolute path.

Example of a `markallread.sh` shellscript to mark all URLs as read:

	#!/bin/sh
	# mark all items/URLs as read.
	tmp=$(mktemp)
	(cat ~/.sfeed/urls; cut -f 3 ~/.sfeed/feeds/*) | \
	awk '!x[$0]++' > "$tmp" &&
	mv "$tmp" ~/.sfeed/urls &&
	pkill -SIGHUP sfeed_curses # reload feeds.

Example of a `syncnews.sh` shellscript to update the feeds and reload them:

	#!/bin/sh
	sfeed_update
	pkill -SIGHUP sfeed_curses


Running programs in a new session
---------------------------------

By default processes are spawned in the same session and process group as
sfeed_curses.  When sfeed_curses is closed this can also close the spawned
process in some cases.

When the setsid command-line program is available the following wrapper command
can be used to run the program in a new session, for a plumb program:

	setsid -f xdg-open "$@"

Alternatively the code can be changed to call setsid() before execvp().


Open an URL directly in the same terminal
-----------------------------------------

To open an URL directly in the same terminal using the text-mode lynx browser:

	SFEED_PLUMBER=lynx SFEED_PLUMBER_INTERACTIVE=1 sfeed_curses ~/.sfeed/feeds/*


Yank to tmux buffer
-------------------

This changes the yank command to set the tmux buffer, instead of X11 xclip:

	SFEED_YANKER="tmux set-buffer \`cat\`"


Known terminal issues
---------------------

Below lists some bugs or missing features in terminals that are found while
testing sfeed_curses.  Some of them might be fixed already upstream:

- cygwin + mintty: the xterm mouse-encoding of the mouse position is broken for
  scrolling.
- HaikuOS terminal: the xterm mouse-encoding of the mouse button number of the
  middle-button, right-button is incorrect / reversed.
- putty: the full reset attribute (ESC c, typically `rs1`) does not reset the
  window title.
- Mouse button encoding for extended buttons (like side-buttons) in some
  terminals are unsupported or map to the same button: for example side-buttons 7
  and 8 map to the scroll buttons 4 and 5 in urxvt.


License
-------

ISC, see LICENSE file.


Author
------

Hiltjo Posthuma <hiltjo@codemadness.org>