A Discord.js script which can record voice calls. Summon the bot to a voice channel, and voilà! the audio is piped right into your local machine. Jump to Installation & Usage to get started.
Note: Recording voice calls without prior consent violates privacy. Do not use this bot without approval. I'm not responsible for your insanity.
Also, multi user recording is currently out of discord.js's scope, currently a unique stream is created for every user, but the end result is a very bad audio output, more info.
Clone the repository :
git clone https://github.com/chebro/discord-voice-recorder/
Create a discord bot if you don't have one already and invite the bot to your server, then:
- Create
config.json
file and a/recordings
directory at the root folder. - Paste the bot token (from developer window) and any bot prefix into
config.json
, like so:
{
"BOT_TOKEN": "<YOUR_BOT_TOKEN>",
"PREFIX": "<BOT_PREFIX>"
}
You can run the script in any of the following two ways:
-
Run
npm i
to download necessarynode_modules
. -
Run
npm start
.
The bot should be online.
- Build the docker image:
docker build -t dvr .
- Bind
/recordings
directory on host to container and start the container with a custom name:
docker run \
--name <CONTAINER_NAME> \
--mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)"/recordings,target=/usr/src/bot/recordings \
dvr
The bot should be online.
-
Start Recording :
<PREFIX>enter <VOICE_CHANNEL_NAME>
-
Stop Recording :
<PREFIX>exit
The output for each piece of audio stream is written to a unique file in PCM format (48000 Hz, signed 16-bit little-endian, 2 channel (stereo)) and saved to the /recordings
directory.
To merge all output files to /recordings/merge.pcm
, run:
node /bin/merge.js
Note: Empty your recordings
folder (and remove merge.pcm
) after each session. Running ./bin/merge.js
otherwise will dump large merge files.
Head over to FFmpeg.org, and download executables for your OS; If you're on Windows, double-check if the FFmpeg bin is on your path. As discussed in issue #3, to convert pcm to mp3, run:
ffmpeg -f s16le -ar 48000 -ac 2 -i merge.pcm out.mp3
Special thanks to @eslachance for the gist. It is what inspired me to make this repo.