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CS Demo Analyzer

A CLI to analyze and export CS2/CS:GO demos.

Usage

Ready-to-use binaries are available on the releases page.

Options

csda -help

Usage of csda:
  -demo-path string
        Demo file path (mandatory)
  -format string
        Export format, valid values: [csv,json,csdm] (default "csv")
  -minify
        Minify JSON file, it has effect only when -format is set to json
  -output string
        Output folder or file path, must be a folder when exporting to CSV (mandatory)
  -positions
        Include entities (players, grenades...) positions (default false)
  -source string
        Force demo's source, valid values: [challengermode,ebot,esea,esl,esportal,faceit,fastcup,5eplay,perfectworld,popflash,valve]

Examples

Export a demo into CSV files in the current folder.

csda -demo-path=myDemo.dem -output=.

Export a demo in a specific folder into a minified JSON file including entities positions.

csda -demo-path=/path/to/myDemo.dem -output=/path/to/folder -format=json -positions -minify

API

GO API

This API exposes functions to analyze/export a demo using the Go language.

Analyze

This function analyzes the demo located at the given path and returns a Match.

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"os"

	"github.com/akiver/cs-demo-analyzer/pkg/api"
	"github.com/akiver/cs-demo-analyzer/pkg/api/constants"
)

func main() {
	match, err := api.AnalyzeDemo("./myDemo.dem", api.AnalyzeDemoOptions{
		IncludePositions: true,
		Source:           constants.DemoSourceValve,
	})

	if err != nil {
		fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
		os.Exit(1)
	}

	for _, kill := range match.Kills {
		fmt.Printf("(%d): %s killed %s with %s\n", kill.Tick, kill.KillerName, kill.VictimName, kill.WeaponName)
	}
}

Analyze and export

This function analyzes and exports a demo into the given output path.

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"os"
	"path/filepath"

	"github.com/akiver/cs-demo-analyzer/pkg/api"
	"github.com/akiver/cs-demo-analyzer/pkg/api/constants"
)

func main() {
	exePath, _ := os.Executable()
	outputPath := filepath.Dir(exePath)
	err := api.AnalyzeAndExportDemo("./myDemo.dem", outputPath, api.AnalyzeAndExportDemoOptions{
		IncludePositions: false,
		Source:           constants.DemoSourceValve,
		Format:           constants.ExportFormatJSON,
		MinifyJSON:       true,
	})

	if err != nil {
		fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err)
		os.Exit(1)
	}

	fmt.Println("Demo analyzed and exported in " + outputPath)
}

CLI

This API exposes the command-line interface.

package main

import (
	"os"

	"github.com/akiver/cs-demo-analyzer/pkg/cli"
)

func main() {
	os.Exit(cli.Run(os.Args[1:]))
}

Node.js API

A Node.js module called @akiver/cs-demo-analyzer is available on NPM.
It exposes a function that under the hood is a wrapper around the Go CLI.
The module also exports TypeScript types and constants.

import { analyzeDemo, DemoSource, ExportFormat } from '@akiver/cs-demo-analyzer';

async function main() {
  await analyzeDemo({
    demoPath: './myDemo.dem',
    outputFolderPath: '.',
    format: ExportFormat.JSON,
    source: DemoSource.Valve,
    analyzePositions: false,
    minify: false,
    onStderr: console.error,
    onStdout: console.log,
    onStart: () => {
      console.log('Starting!');
    },
    onEnd: () => {
      console.log('Done!');
    },
  });
}

main();

Developing

Requirements

Build

Windows

make build-windows

macOS

make build-darwin / make build-darwin-arm64

Linux

make build-linux / make build-linux-arm64

Tests

  1. ./download-demos.sh it will download the demos used for the tests
  2. make test

VSCode debugger

  1. Inside the .vscode folder, copy/paste the file launch.template.json and name it launch.json
  2. Place a demo in the debug folder
  3. Update the -demo-path argument to point to the demo you just placed
  4. Adjust the other arguments as you wish
  5. Start the debugger from VSCode

Acknowledgements

This project uses the demo parser demoinfocs-golang created by @markus-wa and maintained by him and @akiver.

License

MIT