examples | ||
.gitignore | ||
README.md | ||
ycast.py |
YCast
YCast is a self hosted replacement for the vTuner internet radio service which many AVRs use. It emulates a vTuner backend to provide your AVR with the necessary information to play self defined categorized internet radio stations.
YCast is for you if:
- You do not want to use a proprietary streaming service
- You are sick of loading delays and/or downtimes of the vTuner service
- You are unsure about the continuation of the vTuner service
Supported devices
Theoretically, YCast should work for most AVRs which support vTuner.
Go ahead and test it with yours, and kindly report the result back :)
Confirmed working
- Yamaha RX-Vx73 series (RX-V373, RX-V473, RX-V573, RX-V673, RX-V773)
- Yamaha R-N500
- Onkyo TX-NR414
Unconfirmed/Experimental
- Yamaha RX-Vx75 series (RX-V375, RX-V475, RX-V575, RX-V675, RX-V775)
- Yamaha RX-Vx77 series (RX-V377, RX-V477, RX-V577, RX-V677, RX-V777)
- Yamaha RX-Vx79 series (RX-V379, RX-V479, RX-V579, RX-V679, RX-V779)
- Yamaha RX-Vx81 series (RX-V381, RX-V481, RX-V581, RX-V681, RX-V781)
- Yamaha RX-S600D
- Yamaha RX-S601D
- Yamaha WX-030
- Yamaha RX-A1060
- Yamaha RX-V2700
- Yamaha RX-V3800
- Yamaha CX-A5000
Dependencies:
Python version: 3
Python packages:
PyYAML
Usage
YCast really does not need much computing power nor bandwidth. It just serves the information to the AVR. The streaming itself gets handled by the AVR directly, i.e. you can run it on a low-spec RISC machine like a Raspberry Pi.
- Create your initial
stations.yml
and put it in the same directory asycast.py
. The config follows a basic YAML structure (see below). - Create a manual entry in your DNS server (read 'Router' for most home users) pointing to the IP/Hostname of the machine YCast is running on for each vendor you want to use:
- Yamaha AVRs:
radioyamaha.vtuner.com
(and optionallyradioyamaha2.vtuner.com
) - Onkyo AVRs:
onkyo.vtuner.com
(and optionallyonkyo2.vtuner.com
)
- Run
ycast.py
.
stations.yml
Category one name:
First awesome station name: first.awesome/station/URL
Second awesome station name: second.awesome/station/URL
Category two name:
Third awesome station name: third.awesome/station/URL
Fourth awesome station name: fourth.awesome/station/URL
You can also have a look at the provided example to better understand the configuration.
Web server configuration
While you can simply run YCast with root permissions listening on all interfaces on port 80, this may not be desired for various reasons.
You can change the listen address and port (via -l
and -p
respectively) if you are already running a HTTP server on the target machine
and/or want to proxy or restrict YCast access.
It is advised to use a proper webserver (e.g. Nginx) in front of YCast if you can.
Then, you also don't need to run YCast as root and can proxy the requests to YCast running on a higher port (>1024) listening only on localhost
.
You can redirect all traffic destined for the original request URL (e.g. radioyamaha.vtuner.com
, onkyo.vtuner.com
) or need to redirect the following URLs from your webserver to YCast:
/setupapp
/ycast
Attention: Do not rewrite the request transparently. YCast expects the complete URL (i.e. including /ycast
or /setupapp
). It also need an intact Host
header; so if you're proxying YCast you need to pass the original header on. For Nginx, this can be accomplished with proxy_set_header Host $host;
.
In case you are using (or plan on using) Nginx to proxy requests, have a look at this example. This can be used together with this systemd service example for a fully functional deployment.
Firewall rules
- The server running YCast does not need internet access.
- Your AVR needs access to the internet (i.e. to the station URLs you defined).
- Your AVR needs to reach port
80
of the machine running YCast.
Caveats
YCast was a quick and dirty project to lay the foundation for having a self hosted vTuner emulation.
It is a barebone service at the moment. It provides your AVR with the basic info it needs to play internet radio stations. Maybe this will change in the future, maybe not. For now just station names and URLs; no web-based management interface, no coverart, no cute kittens, no fancy stuff.