Download your runs from Nike Run Club and convert them to GPX format that can be imported in other running apps. I wrote an article about how I reverse engineered the NRC APK at my blog. You might find it a fun read if you are into that sort of stuff.
There was a time when I was a huge fan of Nike Run Club. It was the first running application I got hooked on when I started this sport. Later on down the road I realized that most of my new running friends were using Strava. I wanted to move my old runs from NRC to Strava but couldn't find a way to do it. Nike had recently removed the option to extract your data so I was stuck.
I did what any programmer would do. I spent a weekend trying to whip up a Nike Run Club data exporter. This program extracts all of your runs which have associated GPS data and converts them into the GPX format that can be imported to Strava.
I have made this program in a modular way with helpful docstrings for all functions. You are more than welcome to add extra features you need in this program. If you aren't tech-savy and/or want my help please open up an issue and we can figure it out from there.
You can either install the package from PyPI or source.
The PyPI method is the easiest as it installs the dependencies as well (other than geckodriver). Run the following command to install from PyPI:
$ pip install nrc-exporter
If everything goes well, you should be able to run this command:
$ nrc-exporter --help
_ _ ____ ____ _
| \ | | _ \ / ___| _____ ___ __ ___ _ __| |_ ___ _ __
| \| | |_) | | / _ \ \/ / '_ \ / _ \| '__| __/ _ \ '__|
| |\ | _ <| |___ | __/> <| |_) | (_) | | | || __/ |
|_| \_|_| \_\____| \___/_/\_\ .__/ \___/|_| \__\___|_|
|_|
~ Yasoob Khalid
https://yasoob.me
usage: nrc-exporter [-h] [-e EMAIL] [-p PASSWORD] [-v] [-t TOKEN] [-i INPUT]
Login to Nike Run Club and download activity data in GPX format
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-e EMAIL, --email EMAIL
your nrc email
-p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD
your nrc password
-v, --verbose print verbose output
-t TOKEN, --token TOKEN
your nrc token
-i INPUT [INPUT ...], --input INPUT [INPUT ...]
A directory or directories containing NRC activities
in JSON format.You can also provide individual NRC
JSON files
Just clone the repo, install the dependencies and run it.
- Clone it:
$ git clone git@github.com:yasoob/nrc-exporter.git
- Install dependencies:
$ cd nrc-exporter
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
- Add Geckodriver in path
The automated access token extraction makes use of selenium and geckodriver. I used geckodriver instead of Chrome because Chrome (selenium) was being blocked by Nike (Akamai Bot Manager) but geckodriver was not. This is an optional step. If you want to try automated extraction make sure you have downloaded the geckodriver from here and the binary is in your PATH.
- Run it:
python nrc_exporter.py --help
If everything goes well you will see the following text:
_ _ ____ ____ _
| \ | | _ \ / ___| _____ ___ __ ___ _ __| |_ ___ _ __
| \| | |_) | | / _ \ \/ / '_ \ / _ \| '__| __/ _ \ '__|
| |\ | _ <| |___ | __/> <| |_) | (_) | | | || __/ |
|_| \_|_| \_\____| \___/_/\_\ .__/ \___/|_| \__\___|_|
|_|
~ Yasoob Khalid
https://yasoob.me
usage: __main__.py [-h] [-e EMAIL] [-p PASSWORD] [-v] [-t TOKEN] [-i INPUT]
Login to Nike Run Club and download activity data in GPX format
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-e EMAIL, --email EMAIL
your nrc email
-p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD
your nrc password
-v, --verbose print verbose output
-t TOKEN, --token TOKEN
your nrc token
-i INPUT, --input INPUT
A directory containing NRC activities in JSON format
You have multiple ways to run this application. You can either provide an email password combination, access tokens for Nike or a directory containing NRC activities in JSON format.
- Email/Password
This is probably the easiest way to run the application. The program will try to automatically extract the access_tokens for NRC by logging you in using Selenium and intercepting the requests. You will have to run nrc_exporter like this:
$ nrc-exporter -e yasoob@example.com -p sample_password
This method will probably be blocked by Nike in the near future. If it doesn't work use the access tokens method described below.
- Access Tokens
This is useful for when the program is unable to extract the tokens automatically. You will have to manually provide the access tokens to the program. If you don't know where to get the access tokens from, just run the program without any arguments and it should automatically open the URL where you can log in. For extracting the tokens from that page check out these instructions. Once you have the tokens, you can run nrc_extractor like this:
$ nrc-exporter -t <access_token>
- Activities folder
Some of you might have already downloaded your NRC runs data using this script and are now wondering how to convert that JSON data to GPX data. Put all of those activity JSON files in a folder and pass that folder's name to nrc_extractor. Let's suppose you put all of those files in the activities
folder. It should look something like this:
$ tree activities
activities
├── 0019f189-d32f-437f-a4d4-ef4f15304324.json
├── 0069911c-2cc8-489b-8335-8e613a81124s.json
├── 01a09869-0a95-49f2-bd84-75065b701c33.json
└── 07e1fa42-a9a9-4626-bbef-60269dc4a111.json
Now you can run nrc_extractor
like this:
$ nrc-exporter -i activities
or
$ nrc-exporter -i 07e1fa42-a9a9-4626-bbef-60269dc4a111.json 01a09869-0a95-49f2-bd84-75065b701c33.json
Nike uses Akamai Bot Manager which doesn't allow scripts to automatically log users in and extract the access tokens. Sometimes you might be lucky and automated token extraction works but mostly you will find the automated token extraction to be broken. Luckily, manually extracting the access token isn't too hard.
Just open up your favorite browser, open developer tools, and head over to this login url and log in.
Submitting the form will not do much. You will just have a blank page in front of you but you will be logged in. Now in order to extract the access tokens, open up developer tools. You can search online about how to open the developer tools for your specific browser. Once the developer tools are open, click on the Console
and type this:
JSON.parse(window.localStorage.getItem('com.nike.commerce.nikedotcom.web.credential')).access_token
This should print your access tokens on screen. If this doesn't work and/or gives you errors, just click on storage and check out local storage. You should be able to access_tokens
as part of the value for a particular key. It should look something like this:
If the local storage doesn't contain any access tokens, then go to the "network" tab in the developer tools. A couple of requests should be visible there assuming you logged in after opening the developer tools:
Click on the /login
request and check the response. It will contain the required access_token
:
Now copy these access_tokens
and provide them to the program.
This was a weekend project so there are definitely a lot of rough edges to this script. Try it at your own risk. I have extracted my runs successfully with this program so I am hopeful that it will work for you too. In case it fails please open up an issue and I will take a look.
For now, one major isssue is that the script does not correctly add elevation data to the GPX file. NRC provides us with the ascent and descent data of different runs but I am not sure of the math that is required to convert that into actual elevation data. This data wasn't particularly important for me to maintain for historic runs so I did not spend a lot of time on it. You are more than welcome to open up a PR if you know how to do it.
Who doesn't love screenshots?
- Initial run
This is for my own documentation. There are three steps involved with releasing a new version to PyPI after updating the code.
- Increment the version number in
setup.py
- Build the distribution package
python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
- Upload to PyPI:
python -m twine upload --skip-existing --repository pypi dist/*
This program is distributed under the MIT license. You are more than welcome to take a look, modify and redistribute it (even for commercial purposes). Just make sure that the LICENSE file stays intact and you redistribute it under the same license.
MIT License
Copyright (c) 2020 M.Yasoob Ullah Khalid ☺
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