

You will be prompted to enter your password (your computer password, not zoom). The following two commands make that easy. Then you can simply use it wherever you want. If you wish to make it available system-wide, you can copy it to /usr/local/bin/ (or anywhere else available in your PATH). Except from that, just download the script zoomdl (not zoomdl.exe) and run it like a normal binary. You need to have a valid Python3 installation. If the error is related to the general logic of the program, report it and I'll do my best to fix it. Expect bugs! If you encounter a Windows-specific error, don't expect much support. Because I never coded under Windows, I have very few tests, mostly empirical ones. New from 2020.06.09 There now exists an executable file zoomdl.exe for Windows. You basically only need Python3 in your path. Thus, it should work for about any GNU/Linux distro out there, with common settings. The script was developed and tested under GNU/Linux (precisely, Debian 10). You just need to provide a valid zoom record URL, and optionally a filename, and it will download the file. This script makes it easy to download any video stored on the Zoom Cloud. Nonetheless, I believe if you can view it, you can download it. The host can chose to make them available to download, but it is not mandatory. The concept is still very young for me, sorry that.Ĭonferences, meetings and presentations held on Zoom are often recorded and stored in the cloud, for a finite amount of time.

If you are anyhow interested in helping (there are various ways to!), go to the dedicated issue (#32), and comment there.

But testing has become more and more a challenge, especially for new features. I code on my own Debian machine, and use a Windows 10 VM to compile the executable. More and more, I face the challenge of testing. Zoom_version_major=$(rpm -qp zoom_x86_64.rpm | cut -d”.Like this project? Consider supporting me, for more awesome updatesīuy me a coffee ANNOUNCEMENT LOOKING FOR TESTERS

Hi, this is a root script to automate the process by creating a local yum|dnf repository Once the installation is completed go to Application launcher and search for Zoom for meetings client. Run and connect video conference or meeting With the help of wget command get the RPM binary file of Zoom client in a 64-bit version for the installation- wget įinally, use the DNF package manager to install the downloaded Zoom client binary on AlmaLinux 8.x you are using. To verify the packages in the future to update the Zoom client add its GPG on your system. For that on your Linux simply run the system update command- sudo dnf update The first thing is to update the existing packages and flush the repo cache to rebuild it again. The command given here can be used for Rocky Linux 8, CentOS, RedHat, and Fedora as well. Steps to install Zoom Almalinux 8 PC or laptop
