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books

[B]ooks - which is only one of the names this program goes by - is a front-end for accessing a locally accessible libgen / libgen_fiction database instance, offering versatile search and download directly from the command line. The included update_libgen tool is used to keep the database up to date - if the database is older than a user-defined value it is updated before the query is executed. This generally only takes a few seconds, but it might take longer on a slow connection or after a long update interval. Updating can be temporarily disabled by using the '-x' command line option. To refresh the database(s) from a dump file use the included refresh_libgen program, see 'update_libgen vs refresh_libgen' below for more information on which tool to use.

Books comes in three main flavours:

  • books / books-all / fiction: CLI search interface which dumps results to the terminal, download through MD5
  • nbook / nfiction: text-based browser offering limited preview and download
  • xbook / xfiction: gui-based browser offering preview and download

The book tools are based on the libgen database, the fiction tools use the libgen_fiction database. Apart from the fact that the fiction tools do not support all the search criteria offered by the 'book' tools due to differences in the database layout, all programs share the same interface.

The database can be searched in two modes, per-field (the default) and fulltext (which, of course, only searches book metadata, not the actual book contents). The current implementation for fulltext search is actually a pattern match search on a number of concatenated database columns, it does not use MySQL's native fulltext search. The advantage of this implementation is that it does not need a full-text index (which is not part of the libgen dump and would need to be generated locally), the disadvantage is that it does not offer more advanced natural language search options. Given the limited amount of 'natural language' available in the database the latter does not seem to be much of a disadvantage and the implementation performs well.

In the (default) per-field search mode the database can be searched for patterns (SQL 'like' operator with leading and trailing wildcards) using lower-case options and/or exact matches using upper-case options. The fulltext search by necessity always uses pattern matching over the indicated fields ('title' and 'author' if no other fields are specified).

Publications can be downloaded using IPFS, through torrents or from libgen download mirror servers by selecting them in the result list or by using the 'Download' button in the preview window, the books and fiction tools can be used to download publications based on their MD5 hash (use -J ...). When using the gui-based tools in combination with the 'yad' tool, double-clicking a row in the result list shows a preview, the other tools generate previews for selected publications using the '-w' command line option.

See Installation for information on how to install books.

How to use books et al.

I'll let the programs themselves do the talking:

$ books -h
books version 0.7

Use: books OPTIONS [like] [<PATTERN>]

(...)

SEARCH BY FIELD:

This is the default search mode. If no field options are given this searches
the Title field for the PATTERN. Capital options (-A, -T, etc) for exact match,
lower-case (-a, -t, etc) for pattern match.

FULLTEXT SEARCH (-f):

Performs a pattern match search over all fields indicated by the options. If no
field options are given, perform a pattern match search over the Author and
Title fields.

Depending on which name this program is executed under it behaves differently:

    books: query database and show results, direct download with md5
    books-all: query database and show results (exhaustive search over all tables, slow)

    nbook: select publications for download from list (terminal-based)
    xbook: select publications for download from list (GUI)

    fiction: query database and show results (using 'fiction' database), direct download with md5

    nfiction: select publications for download from list (terminal-based, use 'fiction' database)
    xfiction: select publications for download from list (GUI, use 'fiction' database)

OPTIONS

    -z, -Z	search on LOCATOR
    -y, -Y	search on YEAR
    -v, -V	search on VOLUMEINFO
    -t, -T	search on TITLE
    -s, -S	search on SERIES
    -r, -R	search on PERIODICAL
    -q, -Q	search on OPENLIBRARYID
    -p, -P	search on PUBLISHER
    -o, -O	search on TOPIC_DESCR
    -n, -N	search on ASIN
    -m		search on MD5
    -l, -L	search on LANGUAGE
    -i, -I	search on ISSN
    -g, -G	search on TAGS
    -e, -E	search on EXTENSION
    -d, -D	search on EDITION
    -c, -C	search on CITY
    -b, -B	search on IDENTIFIERWODASH
    -a, -A	search on AUTHOR

    -f		fulltext search
 		searches for the given words in the fields indicated by the other options.
 		when no other options are given this will perform a pattern match search
 		for the given words over the Author and Title fields.

    -w		preview publication info before downloading (cover preview only in GUI tools)
 		select one or more publication to preview and press enter/click OK.

 		double-clicking a result row also shows a preview irrespective of this option,
 		but this only works when using the yad gui tool

    -= DIR	set download location to DIR

    -$		use extended path when downloading:
    		    nonfiction/[topic/]author[/series]/title
    		    fiction/language/author[/series]/title

    -u BOOL	use bittorrent (-u 1 or -u y) or direct download (-u 0 or -u n)
 		this parameter overrides the default download method
 		bittorrent download depends on an external helper script
 		to interface with a bittorrent client

    -I BOOL	use ipfs (-I 1 or -I y) or direct download (-I 0 or -I n)
 		this parameter overrides the default download method
 		ipfs download depends on a functioning ipfs gateway.
 		default gateway is hosted by Cloudfront, see https://ipfs.io/
 		for instructions on how to run a local gateway

    -U MD5	print torrent path (torrent#/md5) for given MD5

    -j MD5	print filename for given MD5

    -J MD5	download file for given MD5
                can be combined with -u to download with bittorrent

    -M MD5	fast path search on md5, only works in _books_ and _fiction_
    		can be combined with -F FIELDS to select fields to be shown
    		output goes directly to the terminal (no pager)

    -F FIELDS	select which fields to show in pager output

    -# LIMIT	limit search to LIMIT hits (default: 1000)

    -x		skip database update
 		(currently only the 'libgen' database can be updated)

    -@ TORPORT	use torsocks to connect to the libgen server(s). You'll need to install
    		torsocks before using this option; try this in case your ISP
    		(or a transit provider somewhere en-route) blocks access to libgen

    -k		install symlinks for all program invocations

    -h		show this help message

EXAMPLES

Do a pattern match search on the Title field for 'ilias' and show the results in the terminal

  $ books like ilias


Do an exact search on the Title field for 'The Odyssey' and show the results in the terminal

  $ books 'the odyssey'


Do an exact search on the Title field for 'The Odyssey' and the Author field for 'Homer', showing
the result in the terminal

  $ books -T 'The Odyssey' -A 'Homer'


Do the same search as above, showing the results in a list on the terminal with checkboxes to select
one or more publications for download

  $ nbook -T 'The Odyssey' -A 'Homer'


A case-insensitive pattern search using an X11-based interface; use bittorrent (-u y or -u 1) when downloading files

  $ xbook -u y -t 'the odyssey' -a 'homer'


Do a fulltext search over the Title, Author, Series, Periodical and Publisher fields, showing the
results in a terminal-based checklist for download after preview (-w)

  $ nbook -w -f -t -a -s -r -p 'odyssey'


Walk over a directory of publications, compute md5 and use this to generate file names:

  $ find /path/to/publications -type f|while read f; do books -j $(md5sum "$f"|awk '{print $1}');done


As above, but print torrent number and path in torrent file

  $ find /path/to/publications -type f|while read f; do books -U $(md5sum "$f"|awk '{print $1}');done


Find publications by author 'thucydides' and show their md5,title and year in the terminal

  $ books -a thucydides -F md5,title,year


Get data on a single publication using fast path MD5 search, show author, title and extension

  $ books -M 51b4ee7bc7eeb6ed7f164830d5d904ae -F author,title,extension


Download a publication using its MD5 (-J MD5), using bittorrent (-u y or -u 1) to download

  $ books -u y -J 51b4ee7bc7eeb6ed7f164830d5d904ae
$ update_libgen -h
update_libgen version 0.6

Usage: update_libgen OPTIONS

    -l LIMIT	get updates in blocks of LIMIT entries
    -v		be verbose about what is being updated; repeat for more verbosity:
                -v: 	show basic info (number of updates, etc)
                -vv:	show ID, Title and TimeLastModified for each update
    -n		do not update database. Use together with -v or -vv to show
    		how many (-v) and which (-vv) titles would be updated.
    -j FILE	dump (append) json to FILE
    -s FILE	dump (append) sql to FILE
    -u URL	use URL to access the libgen API (overrides default)
    -t DATETIME	get updates since DATETIME (ignoring TimeLastModified in database)
     		use this option together with -s to create an sql update file to update
    		non-networked machines
    -i ID       get updates from ID

    -H DBHOST	database host
    -P DBPORT	database port
    -U DBUSER	database user
    -D DATABASE	database name

    -a APIHOST	use APIHOST as API server
    -@ TORPORT	use tor (through torsocks) to connect to libgen API server
    -c		run classify over new records to get classification data
    -q		don't warn about missing fields in database or api response
    -h		this help message
$ refresh_libgen -h
refresh_libgen version 0.6.1

Usage: refresh_libgen OPTIONS

Performs a refresh from a database dump file for the chosen libgen databases.

    -n		do not refresh database
 		use together with '-v' to check if recent dumps are available
    -f		force refresh, use this on first install
    -v		be verbose about what is being updated
    -d DAYS	only use database dump files no older than DAYS days (default: 5)
    -u DBS	refresh DBS databases (default: compact fiction libgen)

    -H DBHOST	database host (localhost)
    -P DBPORT	database port (3306)
    -U DBUSER	database user (libgen)
    -R REPO	dump repository (http://gen.lib.rus.ec/dbdumps/)
    -c 		create a config file using current settings (see -H, -P, -U, -R)
    -e		edit config file

    -@ TORPORT	use tor (through torsocks) to connect to libgen server
    -k		keep downloaded files after exit
    -h		this help message

IPFS, Torrents, direct download...

Books (et al) can download files either through IPFS (using -I 1 or -I y), from torrents (using -u y or -u 1) or from one of the libgen download mirrors (default, use -I n/-u n or -I 0/-u 0 in case IPFS or torrent download is set as default). To limit the load on the download servers it is best to use IPFS or torrents whenever possible. The latest publications are not yet available through IPFS or torrents since those are only created for batches of 1000 publications. The feasibility of torrent download also depends on whether the needed torrents are seeded while for IPFS download a working IPFS gateway is needed. Publications which can not be downloaded through IPFS or torrents can be downloaded directly.

IPFS download process

IPFS download makes use of an IPFS gateway, by default this is set to Cloudflare's gateway:

        # ipfs gateway
        ipfs_gw="https://cloudflare-ipfs.com"

This can be changed in the config file (usually $HOME/.config/books.conf)

The actual download works exactly the same as the direct download, only the source is changed from a direct download server to the IPFS gateway. Download speed depends on whether the gateway has the file in cache or not, in the latter case it can take a bit more time - be patient.

Torrent download process

Torrent download works by selecting individual files for download from the 'official' torrents, i.e. it is not necessary to download the whole torrent for a single publication. This process is automated by means of a helper script which is used to interface books with a torrent client. Currently the only torrent client for which a helper script is available is transmission-daemon, the script uses the related transmission-remote program to interface with the daemon. Writing a helper script should not be that hard for other torrent clients as long as these can be controlled through the command line or via an API.

When downloading through torrents books first tries to download the related torrent file from the 'official' repository, if this fails it gives up and suggests using direct download instead. Once the torrent file has been downloaded it is checked to see whether it contains the required file. If this check passes the torrent is submitted to the torrent client with only the required file selected for download. A job script is created which can be used to control the torrent job, if the torrent_cron_job parameter in the PREFERENCES section or the config file is set to 1 it is submitted as a cron job. The task of this script is to copy the downloaded file from the torrent client download directory (torrent_download_directory in books.conf or the PREFERENCES section) to the target directory (preference target_directory) under the correct name. Once the torrent has finished downloading the job script will copy the file to that location and remove the cron job. If torrent_cron_job is not set (or is set to 0) the job script can be called 'by hand' to copy the file, it can also be used to perform other tasks like retrying the download from a libgen download mirror server (use -D, this will cancel the torrent and cron job for this file) or to retry the torrent download (use -R). The script has the following options:

$ XYZ.job -h
Use: bash jobid.job [-s] -[i] [-r] [-R] [-D] [-h] [torrent_download_directory]

Copies file from libgen/libgen_fiction torrent to correct location and name

    -S	show job status
    -s	show torrent status (short)
    -i	show torrent info (long)
    -I	show target file name
    -r	remove torrent and cron jobs
    -R	restart torrent download (does not restart cron job)
    -D	direct download (removes torrent and cron jobs)
    -h	show this help message

The torrent helper script interface

The torrent helper script (here named ttool) needs to support the following commands:

  • ttool add-selective <torrent_file> <md5> download file <md5> from torrent <torrent_file>
  • ttool torrent-hash <torrent_file> get btih (info-hash) for <torrent_file>
  • ttool torrent-files <torrent_file> list files in <torrent_file>
  • ttool remove <btih> remove active torrent with info-hash <btih>
  • ttool ls <btih> show download status for active torrent with info-hash <btih>
  • ttool info <btih> show extensive info (files, peers, etc) for torrent with info-hash <btih>
  • ttool active <btih> return true if the torrent is active, false otherwise

Output should be the requested data without any headers or other embellishments. Here is an example using the (included) tm helper script for the transmission-daemon torrent client, showing all required commands:

$ tm torrent-files r_2412000.torrent 
2412000/00b3c21460499dbd80bb3a118974c879
2412000/00b64be1207c374e8719ee1186a33c4d
2412000/00c4f3a075d3af0813479754f010c491
...
... (994 files omitted for brevity)
...
2412000/ff2473a3b8ec1439cc459711fb2a4b97
2412000/ff913204c002f19ed2ee1e2bdfd236d4
2412000/ffb249ae5d148639d38f2af2dba6c681

$ tm torrent-hash r_2412000.torrent 
e73d4bc21d0f91088c174834840f7da232330b4d

$ tm add-selective r_2412000.torrent 00c4f3a075d3af0813479754f010c491
... (torrent client output omitted)

$ tm ls 6934f632c06a91572b4401e5b4c96eec89d311d7
    ID   Done       Have  ETA           Up    Down  Ratio  Status       Name
    25     0%       None  Unknown      0.0     0.0   None  Idle         762000
Sum:                None               0.0     0.0

(output from transmission-daemon, format is client-dependent)

$ tm info 6934f632c06a91572b4401e5b4c96eec89d311d7
... (torrent client output omitted)

$ tm active 6934f632c06a91572b4401e5b4c96eec89d311d7; echo "torrent is $([[ $? -gt 0 ]] && echo "not ")active"
torrent is active

$ if tm active 6934f632c06a91572b4401e5b4c96eec89d311d7; then echo "torrent is active"; fi
torrent is active

$ tm active d34db33f; echo "torrent is $([[ $? -gt 0 ]] && echo "not ")active"
torrent is not active

The tm torrent helper script

The tm torrent helper script supports the following options:

$ tm -h
tm version 0.1

Use: tm COMMAND OPTIONS [parameters]
     tm-COMMAND OPTIONS [parameters]

A helper script for transmission-remote and related tools, adding some
functionality like selective download etc.

PROGRAMS/COMMANDS

    tm-active   	active
    tm-add      	add
    tm-add-selective    add-selective
    tm-cmd      	cmd
    tm-file-count       file-count
    tm-files    	files
    tm-help     	help
    tm-info     	info
    tm-ls       	ls
    tm-remove   	remove
    tm-start    	start
    tm-stop     	stop
    tm-torrent-files    torrent-files
    tm-torrent-hash     torrent-hash
    tm-torrent-show     torrent-show

OPTIONS

    -k		create symbolic links
                creates links to all supported commands
                e.g. tm-cmd, tm-ls, tm-add, ...
                links are created in the directory where tm resides

    -n NETRC	set netrc (/home/frank/.tm-netrc)

    -H HOST	set host (p2p:4081)

    -c		create a config file using current settings (see -n, -H)

    -l		execute command 'ls'

    -a TORR	execute command 'add'

    -h		this help message

EXAMPLES

In all cases it is possible to replace tm-COMMAND with tm COMMAND

show info about running torrents:

    $ tm-ls

add a torrent or a magnet link:

    tm-add /path/to/torrent/file.torrent
    tm-add 'magnet:?xt=urn:btih:123...'

add a torrent and selectivly download two files
this only works with torrent files (i.e. not magnet links) for now

    tm-add-selective /path/to/torrent/file.torrent filename1,filename2

show information about a running torrent, using its btih or ID:

    tm-show f0a7524fe95910da462a0d1b11919ffb7e57d34a
    tm-show 21

show files for a running torrent identified by btih (can also use ID)

    tm-files f0a7524fe95910da462a0d1b11919ffb7e57d34a

stop a running torrent, using its ID (can also use btih)

    tm-stop 21

get btih for a torrent file

    tm-torrent-hash /path/to/torrent/file.torrent

remove a torrent from transmission

    tm-remove 21

execute any transmission-remote command - notice the double dash
see man transmission-remote for more info on supported commands


    tm-cmd -- -h
    tm cmd -h


CONFIGURATION FILES

    /home/username/.config/tm.conf

tm can be configured by editing the script itself or the configuration file:

        netrc=~/.tm-netrc
        tm_host="transmission-host.example.org:4081"

values set in the configuration file override those in the script

Classify

Classify is a tool which, when fed an identifier (ISBN or ISSN, it also works with UPC and OCLC OWI/WI but these are not in the database) [i]or[/i] a database name and MD5 can be used to extract classification data from the OCLC classifier. Depending on what OCLC returns it can be used to add or update the following fields:

Always present:

  • Author
  • Title

One or more of:

  • DDC
  • LCC
  • NLM
  • FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology, basically a list of subject keywords derived from the Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH))

The classify tool stores these fields in CSV files which can be fed to the import_metadata tool (see below)to update the database and/or produce SQL code. It can also store all XML data as returned by the OCLC classifier for later use, this offloads the OCLC classifier service which is marked as 'experimental' and 'not built for production use' and as such can change or disappear at any moment.

The classify helper script supports the following options:

$ classify -h
classify "version 0.5.0"

Use: classify [OPTIONS] identifier[,identifier...]

Queries OCLC classification service for available data
Supports: DDC, LCC, NLM, FAST, Author and Title

Valid identifiers are ISBN, ISSN, UPC and OCLC/OWI

OPTIONS:

 	-d	show DDC
 	-l	show LCC
 	-n	show NLM
 	-f	show FAST
 	-a	show Author
 	-t	show Title

 	-o	show OWI (OCLC works identifier)
 	-w	show WI (OCLC works number)

 	-C md5	create CSV (MD5,DDC,LCC,NLM,FAST,AUTHOR,TITLE)
 		use -D libgen/-D libgen_fiction to indicate database

 	-X dir	save OCLC XML response to $dir/$md5.xml
 		only works with a defined MD5 (-C MD5)

 	-D db	define which database to use (libgen/libgen_fiction)

 	-A	show all available data for identifier

 	-V	show labels

 	-@ PORT	use torsocks to connect to the OCLC classify service.
 	use this to avoid getting your IP blocked by OCLC

 	-h	show this help message

Examples

$ classify -A 0199535760
AUTHOR: Plato | Jowett, Benjamin, 1817-1893 Translator; Editor; Other] ...
TITLE: The republic
DDC: 321.07
LCC: JC71

$ classify -D libgen -C 25b8ce971343e85dbdc3fa375804b538
25b8ce971343e85dbdc3fa375804b538,"321.07","JC71","",UG9saXRpY2FsI\ 
HNjaWVuY2UsVXRvcGlhcyxKdXN0aWNlLEV0aGljcyxQb2xpdGljYWwgZXRoaWNzLFB\ 
oaWxvc29waHksRW5nbGlzaCBsYW5ndWFnZSxUaGVzYXVyaQo=,UGxhdG8gfCBKb3dl\ 
dHQsIEJlbmphbWluLCAxODE3LTE4OTMgW1RyYW5zbGF0b3I7IEVkaXRvcjsgT3RoZX\ 
JdIHwgV2F0ZXJmaWVsZCwgUm9iaW4sIDE5NTItIFtUcmFuc2xhdG9yOyBXcml0ZXIg\ 
b2YgYWRkZWQgdGV4dDsgRWRpdG9yOyBPdGhlcl0gfCBMZWUsIEguIEQuIFAuIDE5MD\ 
gtMTk5MyBbVHJhbnNsYXRvcjsgRWRpdG9yOyBBdXRob3Igb2YgaW50cm9kdWN0aW9u\ 
XSB8IFNob3JleSwgUGF1bCwgMTg1Ny0xOTM0IFtUcmFuc2xhdG9yOyBBdXRob3I7IE\ 
90aGVyXSB8IFJlZXZlLCBDLiBELiBDLiwgMTk0OC0gW1RyYW5zbGF0b3I7IEVkaXRv\ 
cjsgT3RoZXJdCg==,VGhlIHJlcHVibGljCg==


Classifying libgen/libgen_fiction

This tool can be used to add classification data to libgen and
libgen_fiction databases. It does not directy modify the database,
instead producing CSV which can be used to apply the modifications.
The best way to do this is to produce a list of md5 hashes for
publications which do have Identifier values but lack values for DDC
and/or LCC. Such lists can be produced by the following SQL:

   libgen: select md5 from updated where IdentifierWODash<>"" and DDC="";
   libgen_fiction: select md5 from fiction where Identifier<>"" and DDC="";

Run these as batch jobs (mysql -B .... -e 'sql_code_here;' > md5_list), split
the resulting file in ~1000 line sections and feed these to this tool,
preferably with a random pause between requests to keep OCLC's intrusion
detection systems from triggering too early. It is advisable to use
this tool through Tor (using -@ TORPORT to enable torsocks, make sure it
is configured correctly for your Tor instance) to avoid having too
many requests from your IP to be registered, this again to avoid
your IP being blocked. The OCLC classification service is not
run as a production service (I asked them).

Return values are stored in the following order:

   MD5,DDC,LCC,NLM,FAST,AUTHOR,TITLE

DDC, LCC and NLM are enclosed within double quotes and can contain
multiple space-separated values. FAST, AUTHOR and TITLE are base64 encoded
since these fields can contain a whole host of unwholesome characters
which can mess up CSV. The AUTHOR field currentlydecodes to a pipe ('|')
separated list of authors in the format:

   LAST_NAME, NAME_OR_INITIALS, DATE_OF_BIRTH-[DATE_OF_DEATH] [[ROLE[[;ROLE]...]]]

This format could change depending on what OCLC does with the
(experimental) service.

import_metadata

Taking a file containing lines of CSV-formatted data, this tool can be used to update a libgen / libgen_fiction database with fresh metadata. It can also be used to produce SQL (using the -s sqlfile option) which can be used to update multiple database instances.

In contrast to the other books tools import_metadata is a Python (version 3) script using the pymysql "pure python" driver (python3-pymysql on Debian) and as such should run on any device where Python is available. The distribution file contains a Bash script (import_metadata.sh) with the same interface and options which can be used where Python is not available.

$ import_metadata -h

import_metadata v.0.1.0

Use: import_metadata [OPTIONS] -d database -f "field1,field2" -F CSVDATAFILE

Taking a file containing lines of CSV-formatted data, this tool can be
used to update a libgen / libgen_fiction database with fresh metadata.
It can also be used to produce SQL (using the -s sqlfile option) which
can be used to update multiple database instances.

CSV data format:

   MD5,DDC,LCC,NLM,FAST,AUTHOR,TITLE

Fields FAST, AUTHOR and TITLE should be base64-encoded.

CSV field names are subject to redirection to database field names,
currently these redirections are active (CSV -> DB):

   ['FAST -> TAGS']

OPTIONS:

    -d DB   define which database to use (libgen/libgen_fiction)

    -f field1,field2
    -f field1 -f field2
            define which fields to update

    -F CSVFILE
            define CSV input file

    -s SQLFILE
            write SQL to SQLFILE

    -n      do not update database
            use with -s SQLFILE to produce SQL for later use
            use with -v to see data from CSVFILE
            use with -vv to see SQL

    -v      verbosity
            repeat to increase verbosity

    -h      this help message

Examples

$ import_metadata -d libgen -F csv/update-0000 -f 'ddc lcc fast'

update database 'libgen' using data from CSV file csv/update-0000,
fields DDC, LCC and FAST (which is redirected to libgen.Tags)

$ for f in csv/update-*;do
      import_metadata -d libgen -s "$f.sql" -n -f 'ddc,lcc,fast' -F "$f"
  done

create SQL (-s "$f.sql") to update database using fields
DDC, LCC and FAST from all files matching glob csv/update-*,
do not update database (-n option)

Installation

Download this repository (or a tarball) and copy the four scripts - books, update_libgen, refresh_libgen and tm (only needed when using the transmission-daemon torrent client) - into a directory which is somewhere on your $PATH ($HOME/bin would be a good spot). Run books -kto create symlinks to the various names under which the program can be run:

  • books
  • books-all
  • fiction
  • nbook
  • xbook
  • nfiction
  • xfiction

Create a database on a mysql server somewhere within reach of the intended host. Either open books in an editor to configure the database details (look for CONFIGURE ME below) and anything else (eg. target_directory for downloaded books, max_age before update, language for topics, MD5 in filenames, tools, etc) or add these settings to the (optional) config file books.conf in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME (usually $HOME/.config). The easiest way to create the config file is to run refresh_libgen with the required options. As an example, the following command sets the database server to base.example.org, the database port to 3306 and the database username to genesis:

$ refresh_libgen -H base.example.org -P 3306 -U genesis -c

Make sure to add the -c option at the end of the command or it won't work. Once the config file has been created it can be edited

main () {
        # PREFERENCES
        config=${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/books.conf

        # target directory for downloaded publications
        target_directory="${HOME}/Books"      <<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ... >>>>>>
        # when defined, subdirectory of $target_directory) for torrents
        torrent_directory="torrents"
        # when defined, location where files downloaded with torrent client end up
        # torrent_download_directory="/net/p2p/incoming" <<<<<< ... ENABLE/CONFIGURE ME ... >>>>>>
        # when true, launch cron jobs to copy files from torrent download directory
        # to target directory using the correct name
        torrent_cron_job=1
        # default limit on queries
        limit=1000
        # maximum database age (in minutes) before attempting update
        max_age=120
        # topics are searched/displayed in this language ("en" or "ru")
        language="en"       <<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
        # database host
        dbhost="localhost"  <<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
        # database port
        dbport="3306"       <<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
        # database user
        dbuser="libgen"     <<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
        # default fields for fulltext search
        default_fields="author,title"
        # window/dialog heading for dialog and yad/zenity
        list_heading="Select publication(s) for download:"

        # add md5 to filename? Possibly superfluous as it can be derived from the file contents but a good guard against file corruption
        filename_add_md5=0

        # tool preferences, list preferred tool first
        gui_tools="yad|zenity"
        tui_tools="dialog|whiptail"
        dl_tools="curl|wget"
        parser_tools="xidel|hxwls"
        pager_tools="less|more"

        # torrent helper tools need to support the following commands:
        # ttool add-selective <torrent_file> <md5>  # downloads file <md5> from torrent <torrent_file>
        # ttool torrent-hash <torrent_file>         # gets btih for <torrent_file>
        # ttool torrent-files <torrent_file>        # lists files in <torrent_file>
        torrent_tools="tm"   <<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

        # database names to use:
        #   books, books-all, nbook, xbook and xbook-all use the main libgen database
        #   fiction, nfiction and xfiction use the 'fiction' database
        declare -A programs=(     
                [books]=libgen        <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
                [books-all]=libgen    <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
                [nbook]=libgen        <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
                [xbook]=libgen        <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
                [fiction]=libgen_fiction       <<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
                [nfiction]=libgen_fiction     <<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
                [xfiction]=libgen_fiction     <<<<<<<< ... CONFIGURE ME ..... >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
                [libgen_preview]=libgen # the actual database to use for preview is passed as a command line option
        )

The same goes for the 'PREFERENCES' sections in update_libgen and refresh_libgen. In most cases the only parameters which might need change are dbhost, dbuser, ipfs_gw (if you don't want to use the default hosted by Cloudfront), torrent_download_directory and possibly torrent_tools. Since all programs use a common books.conf config file it is usually sufficient to add these parameters there:

$ cat $HOME/.config/books.conf
dbhost="base.example.org"
dbuser="exampleuser"
ipfs_gw="http://ipfs.example.org"
torrent_download_directory="/net/p2p/incoming"
torrent_tools="tm"

Please note that there is no option to enter a database password as that would be rather insecure. Either use a read-only, password-free mysql user to access the database or enter your database details in $HOME/.my.cnf, like so:

[mysql]
user=exampleuser
password=zooperzeekret

Make sure the permissions on $HOME/.my.cnf are sane (eg. mode 640 or 600), see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/ ... files.html for more info on this subject.

Install symlinks to all tools by calling books with the -k option:

 $ books -k

configuration file

The configuration file is sourced by all shell scripts, it is parsed and interpreted by import_metadata. There are some of the more useful parameters which can be set in this file:

dbhost="base.example.org"
dbport="3306"
dbuser="libgen"

Use these to set the database server hostname, port and username.

torrent_download_directory="/net/incoming"
torrent_cron_job=1
torrent_tools="tm"

Set torrent download directory (where the torrent client places downloaded files), whether a cron job should be created to copy downloaded publications to their final name and location, which torrent helper tool to use

use_deep_path=1

Add section, language, author and subject to path name (e.g. nonfication/German/Physics/Einstein, Albert./Die Evolution der Physik)

use_ipfs=1

Try to use IPFS when downloading, reverts to direct download for files which do not have a defined ipfs_cid

gui_tools="yad|zenity"
tui_tools="dialog|whiptail"
parser_tools="xidel|hxwls"
dl_tools="wget|curl"
pager_tools="less|more|cat"

Tools to be used, in|order|of|preference - the first available is used

api=http://libgen.rs/json.php
base=http://libgen.rs/dbdumps/
ipfs_gw=https://cloudflare-ipfs.com
#ipfs_gw=http://your_own_ipfs_node.example.org:8080

Defines which resources to use for API, dumps, IPFS etc

classify_xml="/home/username/Project/libgen_classify/xml"
classify_csv="/home/username/Project/libgen_classify/csv"
classify_sql="/home/username/Project/libgen_classify/sql"
classify_fields="ddc,lcc,nlm,fast,title,author"
classify_tor_ports="9100,9102,9104,9106,9108"

Used by update_libgen to configure classify and import_metadata, defines whether files are saved and where they are saved, which fields to update in the database and whether Tor is used and if so on which port(s). It is advisable to use more than one port to spread the traffic over several exit nodes, this reduces the risk of OCLC blocking the Tor exit node.

There are far more configurable parameters, check the script source for more possibilities.

update_libgen vs. refresh_libgen

If you regularly use books, nbook and/or xbook, the main (or compact) database should be kept up to date automatically. In that case it is only necessary to use refresh_libgen to refresh the database when you get a warning from update_libgen about unknown columns in the API response.

If you have not used any of these tools for a while it can take a long time - and a lot of data transfer - to update the database through the API (which is what update_libgen does). Especially when using the compact database it can be quicker to use refresh_libgen to just pull the latest dump instead of waiting for update_libgen to do its job.

The fiction database can not be updated through the API (yet), so for that databases refresh_libgen is currently the canonical way to get the latest version.

Dependencies

These tools have the following dependencies (apart from a locally available libgen/libgen_fiction instance on MySQL/MariaDB), sorted in order of preference:

  • all: bash 4.x or higher - the script relies on quite a number of bashisms

  • books/fiction: less | more (use less!)

  • nbook/nfiction: dialog | whiptail (whiptail is buggy, use dialog!)

  • xbook/xfiction: yad | zenity (more functionality with yad, but make sure your yad supports --html - you might have to build it yourself (use --enable-html during ./configure). If in doubt about the how and why of this, just use Zenity)

Preview/Download has these dependencies:

  • awk (tested with mawk, nawk and gawk)
  • stdbuf (part of GNU coreutils)
  • xidel | hxwls (html parser tools, used for link extraction)
  • curl | wget

update_libgen has the following dependencies:

  • jq (CLI json parser/mangler)
  • awk (tested with mawk, nawk and gawk)

refresh_libgen has these dependencies:

  • w3m
  • wget
  • unrar
  • pv (only needed when using the verbose (-v) option

tm has these dependencies:

  • transmission-remote

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Library Genesis (libgen) CLI/TUI/GUI client (mirror from private repo)

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