Jump to content

XTerm

Members
  • Posts

    1
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by XTerm

  1. I had no idea there was a little community dedicated to pandora hacking.

    For a little while, I had been getting by with a little shell script wrapped around a command-live version of wireshark:

    #!/bin/bash
    
    FOLDER=$1
    PATH=$PATH:/c/Program\ Files\ \(x86\)/Wireshark
    
    # grab pandora mp4 files URLs in incoming.log
    tshark -i 2 -R 'http' -l |
            fgrep --line-buffered 'access/?version' |
            perl -pe '$|=1;s/^.*-> ([^ ]*) .* (\/access\/[^ ]+) HTT.*$/http:\/\/$1$2/g' > incoming.log &
    
    # watch for new URLs
    tail -n 0 -f incoming.log | while read url
    do
            # check if we already have this url loaded
            HASH=`echo -n $url|md5sum -t|cut -f1 -d' '`
            if [ -a $FOLDER/$HASH.m4a ]
            then
                    echo "ok."
            else
                    curl -m 15 "$url" > $FOLDER/$HASH.m4a
            fi
    done

    As you can see, absolutely no artist/song information was preserved, and duplicate songs were likely to be present in the final file list.

    Still, it was sufficient to throw the files at a player with a random shuffle.

    A little bit ago, I realized Fiddler2 could be scripted in rather open-ended ways, and saw the getFragment XML chunk pandora uses that contains detailed song information.

    I was about to start coding something when I tried searching for "pandora fiddler", and saw the 5th result pointing straight here.

    LiquidCool method's pretty much exactly what I was planning to do, except I'd probably have hacked my code in the CustomRules.js file, since that's easier to start on.

    So, thank you, and keep up the good work!

×
×
  • Create New...