Skip to content
forked from aedocw/epub2tts

Turn an epub or text file into an audiobook

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

danielw97/epub2tts

Β 
Β 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 

Repository files navigation

epub2tts is a free and open source python app to easily create a full-featured audiobook from an epub or text file using realistic text-to-speech from Coqui AI TTS, OpenAI or MS Edge.

πŸš€ Features

  • Creates standard format M4B audiobook file
  • Automatic chapter break detection
  • Embeds cover art if specified
  • Can use MS Edge for free cloud-based TTS
  • Easy voice cloning with Coqui XTTS model
  • 58 studio quality voices from Coqui AI
  • Uses deepspeed if available for faster processing
  • Resumes where it left off if interrupted
  • NOTE: epub file must be DRM-free

NOTE: NEW MULTIPROCESSING FEATURE ADDED! You can now use --threads N to specify the number of threads to run where chapters will be processed in parallel! If you're using Edge or OpenAI you can set threads to as many chapters as you've got and they can all be processed at the same time. When using TTS/XTTS, you'll need to do some experimenting to see what your system can handle.

NOTE: Check out epub2tts-edge for a VERY fast lightweight alternative that only works with MS Edge. That version reads multiple sentences in parallel and goes much quicker!

πŸ“– Usage

Usage instructions

Extract epub contents to text:

  1. epub2tts mybook.epub --export txt
  2. edit mybook.txt, replacing # Part 1 etc with desired chapter names, and removing front matter like table of contents and anything else you do not want read. Note: First two lines can be Title: and Author: to use that in audiobook metadata. ALSO NOTE After Author/Title, the book copy MUST start with a chapter or section marked by a line with a hashmark at the beginning (like # Introduction).
  3. The speaker can be set to change per chapter by appending % <speaker> after the chapter name, for instance # Chapter One % en-US-AvaMultilingualNeural. See the file multi-speaker-sample-edge.txt for an example. Note: Only works with Coqui TTS multi-speaker engine (default) or --engine edge.

Default audiobook, fairly quick:

Using VITS model, all defaults, no GPU required:

  • epub2tts mybook.epub (To change speaker (ex p307 for a good male voice w/Coqui TTS), add: --speaker p307)

MS Edge Cloud TTS:

Uses Microsoft Edge TTS in the cloud, FREE, only minimal CPU required, and it's pretty fast (100 minutes for 7hr book for instance). Many voices and languages to choose from, and the quality is really good (listen to sample-en-US-AvaNeural-edge.m4b for an example).

  • List available voices with edge-tts --list-voices, default speaker is en-US-AndrewNeural if --speaker is not specified.
  • epub2tts mybook.txt --engine edge --speaker en-US-AvaNeural --cover cover-image.jpg --sayparts

XTTS with Coqui Studio voice:

  1. Choose a studio voice, samples here
  2. epub2tts mybook.txt --engine xtts --speaker "Damien Black" --cover cover-image.jpg --sayparts

XTTS using your own voice clone:

  1. epub2tts mybook.epub --scan, determine which part to start and end on so you can skip TOC, etc.
  2. Secure 1-3 30 second clips of a speaker you really like (`voice-1.wav``, etc)
  3. epub2tts my-book.epub --start 4 --end 20 --xtts voice-1.wav,voice-2.wav,voice-3.wav --cover cover-image.jpg

All options

  • -h, --help - show this help message and exit
  • --threads [N] - process N number of chapters in parallel. If you're using Edge or OpenAI you can basically do as many threads as you have chapters. With TTS or XTTS you'll need to experiment to see what works best on your environment. Default number of threads is 2.
  • --engine [ENGINE] - Which TTS engine to use [tts|xtts|openai|edge]
  • --xtts [sample-1.wav,sample-2.wav] - Sample wave/mp3 file(s) for XTTS v2 training separated by commas
  • --openai OPENAI_API_KEY - OpenAI API key if engine is OpenAI
  • --model [MODEL] - TTS model to use, default: tts_models/en/vctk/vits
  • --speaker SPEAKER - Speaker to use (examples: p335 for VITS, onyx for OpenAI, "Damien Black" for XTTS v2, en-US-EricNeural for edge)
  • --scan - Scan the epub to show beginning of chapters, then exit
  • --start [START] - Chapter/part to start from
  • --end [END] - Chapter/part to end with
  • --language [LANGUAGE] - Language of the epub, default: en
  • --minratio [MINRATIO] - Minimum match ratio between text and transcript, 0 to disable whisper
  • --skiplinks - Skip reading any HTML links
  • --skipfootnotes - Try to skip reading footnotes
  • --skip-cleanup - Do not replace special characters with ","
  • --sayparts - Say each part number at start of section
  • --bitrate [BITRATE] - Specify bitrate for output file
  • --debug - Enable debug output
  • --export txt - Export epub contents to file (txt, md coming soon)
  • --parapause - when using --export txt, this option inserts %P% at each paragraph break. Then when creating audio with --engine edge, any time %P% is found in the copy a 1.2 second pause in inserted.
  • --no-deepspeed - Disable deepspeed
  • --cover image.jpg - jpg image to use for cover

🐞 Reporting bugs

How to report bugs/issues

Thank you in advance for reporting any bugs/issues you encounter! If you are having issues, first please search existing issues to see if anyone else has run into something similar previously.

If you've found something new, please open an issue and be sure to include:

  1. The full command you executed
  2. The platform (Linux, Windows, OSX, Docker)
  3. Your Python version if not using Docker
  4. Try running the command again with --debug --minratio 0 added on, to get more information
  5. Relevant output around the crash, including the sentence (should be in debug output) if it crashed during a TTS step

πŸ—’οΈ Release notes

Release notes
  • 20241005: A few new releases thanks to excellent contributions from https://github.com/calledit - this includes significant refactoring to improve the code base, adding --threads N feature for multiprocessing, and support for NCX files that improves detection of how text is separated in an epub.
  • 20240403: Added support for specifying speaker per chapter, aedocw#229
  • 20240320: Added MS Edge cloud TTS support
  • 20240301: Added --skip-cleanup option to skip replacement of special characters with ","
  • 20240222: Implemented pause between sentences, aedocw#208 and aedocw#153
  • 20240131: Repaired missing pause between chapters
  • 20240114: Updated README
  • 20240111: Added support for Title & Author in text files
  • 20240110: Added support for "--cover image.jpg"

Performance

Some benchmarks VITS model is the fastest, does not require GPU, but does not sound as good as using XTTS. We have not done any comparative benchmarks with that model.

Typical inference times for xtts_v2 averaged over 4 processing chunks (about 4 sentences each) that can be expected:

| Hardware                            | Inference Time |
|-------------------------------------|----------------|
| 20x CPU Xeon E5-2630 (without AVX)  | 3.7x realtime  |
| 20x CPU Xeon Silver 4214 (with AVX) | 1.7x realtime  |
| 8x CPU Xeon Silver 4214 (with AVX)  | 2.0x realtime  |
| 2x CPU Xeon Silver 4214 (with AVX)  | 2.9x realtime  |
| Intel N4100 Atom (NAS)              | 4.7x realtime  |
| GPU RTX A2000 4GB (w/o deepspeed)   | 0.4x realtime  |
| GPU RTX A2000 4GB (w deepspeed)     | 0.15x realtime |

πŸ“¦ Install

Required Python version is 3.11.

MAC INSTALLATION

This installation requires Python < 3.12 and Homebrew (I use homebrew to install espeak, pyenv and ffmpeg). Per this bug, mecab should also be installed via homebrew.

Voice models will be saved locally in ~/.local/share/tts

#install dependencies
brew install espeak pyenv ffmpeg mecab
#install epub2tts
git clone https://github.com/aedocw/epub2tts
cd epub2tts
pyenv install 3.11
pyenv local 3.11
#OPTIONAL but recommended - install this in a virtual environment
pip install coqui-tts --only-binary spacy
python -m venv .venv && source .venv/bin/activate
pip install .
LINUX INSTALLATION

These instructions are for Ubuntu 22.04 (20.04 showed some dependency issues), but should work (with appropriate package installer mods) for just about any repo. Ensure you have ffmpeg installed before use. If you have an NVIDIA GPU you should also install CUDA toolkit to make use of deepspeed.

Voice models will be saved locally in ~/.local/share/tts

#install dependencies
sudo apt install espeak-ng ffmpeg
#If you have a CUDA-compatible GPU, run:
sudo apt install nvidia-cuda-toolkit
#clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/aedocw/epub2tts
cd epub2tts
pip install coqui-tts --only-binary spacy
pip install .

NOTE: If you have deepspeed installed, it may be detected but not work properly, causing errors. Try installing CUDA toolkit to see if that resolves the issue. If that does not fix it, add --no-deepspeed and it will not be used. Also in that case, open an issue with your details and we will look into it.

WINDOWS INSTALLATION

Running epub2tts in WSL2 with Ubuntu 22 is the easiest approach, but these steps should work for running directly in windows.

  1. Install Microsoft C++ Build Tools. Download the installer from https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/visual-cpp-build-tools/ then run the downloaded file vs_BuildTools.exe and select the "C++ Build tools" checkbox leaving all options at their default value. Note: This will require about 7 GB of space on C drive.

  2. Install espeak-ng from https://github.com/espeak-ng/espeak-ng/releases/latest

  3. Install chocolaty

  4. Install ffmpeg with the command choco install ffmpeg, make sure you are in an elevated powershell session.

  5. Install python 3.11 with the command choco install python311

  6. Install git with the command choco install git.

  7. Decide where you want your epub2tts project to live, documents is a common place. Once you've found a directory you're happy with, clone the project with git clone https://github.com/aedocw/epub2tts and cd epub2tts so you're now in your working directory.

  8. There are probably a few different ways you can go here, I personally opted for a venv to keep everything organized. Create a venv with the command python -m venv .venv

  9. Activate the venv, on windows the command is slightly different as you issue .venv\scripts\activate

  10. Install epub2tts along with the requirements with the commands pip install coqui-tts --only-binary spacy && pip install .

  11. If all goes well, you should be able to call epub2tts from within your venv and update it from this directory going forward. To update, use git pull and then pip install . --upgrade

Some errors you may encounter

  • Encountered error while trying to install package lxml
    • Run pip install lxml to install the latest version manually then re-run pip install .
  • ffmpeg not found
    • Rerun the command `choco install ffmpeg``, making sure you are in an elevated powershell session, outside of the virtual environment
  • NLTK: punkt not found
    • Run the following to install it: python -c "import nltk" then python -m nltk.downloader punkt
  • Torch not compiled with CUDA enabled
    • pip install torch torchvision torchaudio --index-url https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu121
  • If you have deepspeed installed, it may be detected but not work properly, causing errors. If that is the case, add --no-deepspeed and it will not be used.
DOCKER

NOTE: Docker image has not been recently updated or tested, may be working but is out of date.

Voice models will be saved locally in ~/.local/share/tts

Docker usage does not reliably utilize GPU, if someone wants to work on improving this your PR will be very welcome!

For Linux and MacOS:

alias epub2tts='docker run -e COQUI_TOS_AGREED=1 -v "$PWD:$PWD" -v ~/.local/share/tts:/root/.local/share/tts -w "$PWD" ghcr.io/aedocw/epub2tts:release'

For Windows: Pre-requisites:

  • Install Docker Desktop
  • From PowerShell run "mkdir ~/.local/share/tts"
#Example for running scan of "mybook.epub"
docker run -e COQUI_TOS_AGREED=1 -v ${PWD}/.local/share/tts:/root/.local/share/tts -v ${PWD}:/root -w /root ghcr.io/aedocw/epub2tts:release mybook.epub --scan

#Example for reading parts 3 through 15 of "mybook.epub"
docker run -e COQUI_TOS_AGREED=1 -v ${PWD}/.local/share/tts:/root/.local/share/tts -v ${PWD}:/root -w /root ghcr.io/aedocw/epub2tts:release mybook.epub --start 3 --end 15
DEVELOPMENT INSTALL
#clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/aedocw/epub2tts
cd epub2tts
#create a virtual environment
python -m venv .venv
#activate the virtual environment
source .venv/bin/activate
#install dependencies
sudo apt install espeak-ng ffmpeg
pip install coqui-tts --only-binary spacy
pip install -r requirements.txt

Updating

UPDATING YOUR INSTALLATION
  1. cd to repo directory
  2. git pull
  3. Activate virtual environment you installed epub2tts in if you installed in a virtual environment
  4. pip install . --upgrade

Author

πŸ‘€ Christopher Aedo

πŸ‘₯ Contributors

Contributors

🀝 Contributing

Contributions, issues and feature requests are welcome!
Feel free to check the issues page or discussions page.

Show your support

Give a ⭐️ if this project helped you!

About

Turn an epub or text file into an audiobook

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 97.5%
  • Shell 1.8%
  • Dockerfile 0.7%