Added a new autoripper
[clinton/abcde.git] / abcde.1
1 .TH abcde 1
2 .SH NAME
3 abcde \- Grab an entire CD and compress it to Ogg/Vorbis, MP3, FLAC, Ogg/Speex and/or MPP/MP+(Musepack) format.
4 .SH SYNOPSIS
5 .B abcde
6 .I [options] [tracks]
7 .SH DESCRIPTION
8 Ordinarily, the process of grabbing the data off a CD and encoding it, then
9 tagging or commenting it, is very involved.
10 .BR abcde
11 is designed to automate this. It will take an entire CD and convert it into
12 a compressed audio format - Ogg/Vorbis, MPEG Audio Layer III, Free Lossless
13 Audio Codec (FLAC), Ogg/Speex or MPP/MP+(Musepack). With one command, it will:
14 .TP
15 .B *
16 Do a CDDB query over the Internet to look up your CD or use a locally stored CDDB entry
17 .TP
18 .B *
19 Grab a track from your CD
20 .TP
21 .B *
22 Compress it to Ogg/Vorbis, MP3, FLAC, Ogg/Speex and/or MPP/MP+(Musepack) format
23 .TP
24 .B *
25 Comment or ID3 tag it
26 .TP
27 .B *
28 Give it an intelligible filename
29 .TP
30 .B *
31 Delete the intermediate WAV file (or save it for later use)
32 .TP
33 .B *
34 Repeat until finished
35 .SH OPTIONS
36 .TP
37 .B \-1
38 Encode the whole CD in a single file. The resulting file uses the CD title
39 for tagging.
40 .TP
41 .B \-a [actions]
42 Comma-delimited list of actions to perform. Can be one or more of:
43 cddb, read, normalize, encode, tag, move, playlist, clean. Normalize
44 and encode imply read. Tag implies cddb, read, encode. Move implies
45 cddb, read, encode, tag. Playlist implies cddb. The default is to
46 do all actions except normalize and playlist.
47 .TP
48 .B \-b
49 Enable batch mode normalization. See the BATCH configuration variable.
50 .TP
51 .B \-c [filename]
52 Specifies an additional configuration file to parse. Configuration options
53 in this file override those in /etc/abcde.conf or $HOME/.abcde.conf.
54 .TP
55 .B \-C [discid]
56 Allows you to resume a session for
57 .I discid
58 when you no longer have the CD available (abcde will automatically resume if
59 you still have the CD in the drive). You must have already finished at
60 least the "read" action during the previous session.
61 .TP
62 .B \-d [devicename]
63 CD\-ROM block device that contains audio tracks to be read.
64 .TP
65 .B \-D
66 Capture debugging information (you'll want to redirect this \- try 'abcde \-D
67 2>logfile')
68 .TP
69 .B \-h
70 Get help information.
71 .TP
72 .B \-j [number]
73 Start [number] encoder processes at once. Useful for SMP systems. Overrides
74 the MAXPROCS configuration variable. Set it to "0" when using distmp3 to avoid
75 local encoding processes.
76 .TP
77 .B \-k
78 Keep the wav files after encoding.
79 .TP
80 .B \-l
81 Use the low-diskspace algorithm. See the LOWDISK configuration variable.
82 .TP
83 .B \-L
84 Use a local CDDB repository. See CDDBLOCALDIR variable.
85 .TP
86 .B \-n
87 Do not query CDDB database. Create and use a template. Edit the template to
88 provide song names, artist(s), ...
89 .TP
90 .B \-N
91 Non interactive mode. Do not ask anything from the user. Just go ahead.
92 .TP
93 .B \-m
94 Create DOS-style playlists, modifying the resulting one by adding CRLF line
95 endings. Some hardware players insist on having those to work.
96 .TP
97 .B \-M
98 Create a CUE file with information about the CD. Together with the possibility
99 of creating a single file (see option "\-1"), one can recreate the original CD.
100 .TP
101 .B \-o [filetype][:filetypeoptions]
102 Select output type. Can be "vorbis" (or "ogg"), "mp3", "flac", "spx" or "mpc".
103 Specify a comma-delimited list of output types to obtain all specified types.
104 See the OUTPUTTYPE configuration variable. One can pass options to the encoder
105 for a specific filetype on the command line separating them with a colon. The
106 options must be escaped with double-quotes.
107 .TP
108 .B \-p
109 Pads track numbers with 0\'s.
110 .TP
111 .B \-r [hosts...]
112 Remote encode on this comma-delimited list of machines using distmp3. See
113 the REMOTEHOSTS configuration variable.
114 .TP
115 .B \-R
116 Add replaygain information to the id3 or tag information for play
117 normalization. Only works with MP3 and Ogg/Vorbis.
118 .TP
119 .B \-S [speed]
120 Set the speed of the CD drive. Needs CDSPEED and CDSPEEDOPTS set properly
121 and both the program and device must support the capability.
122 .TP
123 .B \-t [number]
124 Start the numbering of the tracks at a given number. It only affects the
125 filenames and the playlist. Internal (tag) numbering remains the same.
126 .TP
127 .B \-T [number]
128 Same as \-t but changes also the internal (tag) numbering. Keep in mind that
129 the default TRACK tag for MP3 is $T/$TRACKS so it is changed to simply $T.
130 .TP
131 .B \-v
132 Show the version and exit
133 .TP
134 .B \-V
135 Be a bit more verbose. On slow networks the CDDB requests might give the
136 sensation nothins is happening.
137 .TP
138 .B \-x
139 Eject the CD when all tracks have been read. See the EJECTCD configuration
140 variable.
141 .TP
142 .B \-w [comment]
143 Add a comment to the tracks ripped from the CD.
144 .TP
145 .B \-W [number]
146 Concatenate CD\'s. It uses the number provided to define a comment "CD #" and
147 to modify the numbering of the tracks, starting with "#01".
148 .TP
149 .B [tracks]
150 A list of tracks you want abcde to process. If this isn't specified, abcde
151 will process the entire CD. Accepts ranges of track numbers -
152 "abcde 1-5 7 9" will process tracks 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 9.
153 .SH OUTPUT
154 Each track is, by default, placed in a separate file named after the track
155 in a subdirectory named after the artist under the current directory.
156 This can be modified using the OUTPUTFORMAT and VAOUTPUTFORMAT
157 variables in your abcde.conf. Each file is given an extension identifying
158 its compression format, 'vorbis' for '.ogg', '.mp3', '.flac', '.spx', or '.mpc'.
159 .SH CONFIGURATION
160 abcde sources two configuration files on startup - /etc/abcde.conf and
161 $HOME/.abcde.conf, in that order.
162 .TP
163 The configuration options stated on those files can ba overriden by providing
164 the appropiate flags at runtime.
165 .TP
166 The configuration variables have to be set as follows:
167 .TP
168 .B VARIABLE=value
169 Except when "value" needs to be quoted or otherwise interpreted. If other
170 variables within "value" are to be expanded upon reading the configuration
171 file, then double quotes should be used. If they are only supposed to be
172 expanded upon use (for example OUTPUTFORMAT) then single quotes must be used.
173 .TP
174 All sh escaping/quoting rules apply.
175 .TP
176 Here is a list of options abcde recognizes:
177 .TP
178 .B CDDBURL
179 Specifies a server to use for CDDB lookups.
180 .TP
181 .B HELLOINFO
182 Specifies the Hello information to send to the CDDB server. The CDDB
183 protocol requires you to send a valid username and hostname each time you
184 connect. The format of this is username@hostname.
185 .TP
186 .B CDDBLOCALDIR
187 Specifies a directory where we store a local CDDB repository. The entries must
188 be standard CDDB entries, with the filename being the DISCID value. Other
189 CD playing and ripping programs (like Grip) store the entries under ~/.cddb
190 and we can make use of those entries.
191 .TP
192 .B CDDBCOPYLOCAL
193 Store local copies of the CDDB entries under the $CDDBLOCALDIR directory.
194 .TP
195 .B CDDBUSELOCAL
196 Actually use the stored copies of the CDDB entries. Can be overriden using the
197 "-L" flag (if is CDDBUSELOCAL in "n"). If an entry is found, we always give
198 the choice of retrieving a CDDB entry from the internet.
199 .TP
200 .B OGGENCODERSYNTAX
201 Specifies the style of encoder to use for the Ogg/Vorbis encoder. Valid options
202 are \'oggenc\' (default for Ogg/Vorbis) and \'vorbize\'.
203 This affects the default location of the binary,
204 the variable to pick encoder command-line options from, and where the options
205 are given.
206 .TP
207 .B MP3ENCODERSYNTAX
208 Specifies the style of encoder to use for the MP3 encoder. Valid options are
209 \'lame\' (default for MP3), \'gogo\', \'bladeenc\', \'l3enc\' and \'mp3enc\'.
210 Affects the same way as explained above for Ogg/Vorbis.
211 .TP
212 .B FLACENCODERSYNTAX
213 Specifies the style of encoder to use for the FLAC encoder. At this point only
214 \'flac\' is available for FLAC encoding.
215 .TP
216 .B SPEEXENCODERSYNTAX
217 Specifies the style of encoder to use for Speex encoder. At this point only
218 \'speexenc\' is available for Ogg/Speex encoding.
219 .TP
220 .B MPPENCODERSYNTAX
221 Specifies the style of encoder to use for MPP/MP+ (Musepack) encoder. At this
222 point we only have \'mppenc\' available, from corecodecs.org.
223 .TP
224 .B NORMALIZERSYNTAX
225 Specifies the style of normalizer to use. Valid options are \'default\'
226 and \'normalize'\ (and both run \'normalize-audio\'), since we only support it,
227 ATM.
228 .TP
229 .B CDROMREADERSYNTAX
230 Specifies the style of cdrom reader to use. Valid options are \'cdparanoia\'
231 and \'debug\'. It is used for querying the CDROM and obtain a list of valid
232 tracks and DATA tracks. Right now, only cdparanoia is supported.
233 .TP
234 .B KEEPWAVS
235 It defaults to no, so if you want to keep those wavs ripped from your CD,
236 set it to "y". You can use the "-k" switch in the command line. The default
237 behaviour with KEEPWAVS set is the keep the temporary directory and the wav
238 files even you have requested the "clean" action.
239 .TP
240 .B PADTRACKS
241 If set to "y", it adds 0's to the file numbers to complete a two-number
242 holder. Usefull when encoding tracks 1-9.
243 .TP
244 .B INTERACTIVE
245 Set to "n" if you want to perform automatic rips, without user intervention.
246 .TP
247 .B NICE VALUES
248 Define the values for priorities (nice values) for the different CPU-hungry
249 processes: encoding (ENCNICE), CDROM read (READNICE) and distributed encoder
250 with distmp3 (DISTMP3NICE).
251 .TP
252 .B PATHNAMES
253 The following configuration file options specify the pathnames of their
254 respective utilities: LAME, GOGO, BLADEENC, L3ENC, XINGMP3ENC, MP3ENC, VORBIZE,
255 OGGENC, FLAC, SPEEXENC, MPPENC, ID3, ID3V2, CDPARANOIA, CDDA2WAV, CDDAFS,
256 CDDISCID, CDDBTOOL, EJECT, MD5SUM, DISTMP3, VORBISCOMMENT, NORMALIZE, CDSPEED,
257 VORBISGAIN, MKCUE and HTTPGET.
258 .TP
259 .B COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
260 If you wish to specify command-line options to any of the programs abcde
261 uses, set the following configuration file options: LAMEOPTS, GOGOOPTS,
262 BLADEENCOPTS, L3ENCOPTS, XINGMP3ENCOPTS, MP3ENCOPTS, VORBIZEOPTS, OGGENCOPTS,
263 FLACOPTS, SPEEXENCOPTS, MPPENCOPTS, ID3OPTS, ID3V2OPTS, CDPARANOIAOPTS,
264 CDDA2WAVOPTS, CDDAFSOPTS, CDDBTOOLOPTS, EJECTOPTS, DISTMP3OPTS, NORMALIZEOPTS,
265 CDSPEEDOPTS, MKCUEOPTS,VORBISCOMMMENTOPTS, METAFLACOPTS and HTTPGETOPTS.
266 .TP
267 .B CDSPEEDVALUE
268 Set the value of the CDROM speed. The default is to read the disc as fast as
269 the reading program and the system permits. The steps are defined as 150kB/s
270 (1x).
271 .TP
272 .B ACTIONS
273 The default actions to be performed when reading a disc.
274 .TP
275 .B CDROM
276 If set, it points to the CD-Rom device which has to be used for audio
277 extraction. Abcde tries to guess the right device, but it may fail.
278 .TP
279 .B OUTPUTDIR
280 Specifies the directory to place completed tracks/playlists in.
281 .TP
282 .B WAVOUTPUTDIR
283 Specifies the temporary directory to store .wav files in. Abcde may use up
284 to 700MB of temporary space for each session (although it is rare to use
285 over 100MB for a machine that can encode music as fast as it can read it).
286 .TP
287 .B OUTPUTTYPE
288 Specifies the encoding format to output, as well as the default extension and
289 encoder. Defaults to "vorbis". Valid settings are "vorbis" (or "ogg")
290 (Ogg/Vorbis), "mp3" (MPEG-1 Audio Layer III), "flac" (Free Lossless Audio
291 Codec), "spx" (Ogg/Speex) and "mpc" (MPP/MP+ (Musepack)). Values like
292 "vorbis,mp3" encode the tracks in both Ogg/Vorbis and MP3 formats.
293 .br
294 For each value in OUTPUTTYPE, abcde expands a different process for encoding,
295 tagging and moving, so you can use the format placeholder, OUTPUT, to create
296 different subdirectories to hold the different types. The variable OUTPUT will
297 be 'vorbis', 'mp3', 'flac', 'spx' and/or 'mpc', depending on the OUTPUTTYPE you define.
298 For example
299 .br
300 OUTPUTFORMAT='${OUTPUT}/${ARTISTFILE}/${ALBUMFILE}/${TRACKNUM}._${TRACKFILE}'
301 .TP
302 .B OUTPUTFORMAT
303 Specifies the format for completed Ogg/Vorbis, MP3, FLAC, Ogg/Speex or MPP/MP+
304 (Musepack) filenames.
305 Variables are included
306 using standard shell syntax. Allowed variables are GENRE, ALBUMFILE, ARTISTFILE,
307 TRACKFILE, TRACKNUM, and YEAR. Default is
308 \'${ARTISTFILE}-${ALBUMFILE}/${TRACKNUM}-${TRACKFILE}\'.
309 Make sure to use single quotes around this variable. TRACKNUM is
310 automatically zero-padded, when the number of encoded tracks is higher than
311 9. When lower, you can force with '-p' in the command line.
312 .TP
313 .B VAOUTPUTFORMAT
314 Just like OUTPUTFORMAT but for Various Artists discs. Default is whatever
315 OUTPUTFORMAT is set to.
316 .TP
317 .B MAXPROCS
318 Defines how many encoders to run at once. This makes for huge speedups
319 on SMP systems. You should run one encoder per CPU at once for maximum
320 efficiency, although more doesn't hurt very much. Set it "0" when using
321 mp3dist to avoid getting encoding processes in the local host.
322 .TP
323 .B LOWDISK
324 If set to y, conserves disk space by encoding tracks immediately after
325 reading them. This is substantially slower than normal operation but
326 requires several hundred MB less space to complete the encoding of an
327 entire CD. Use only if your system is low on space and cannot encode as
328 quickly as it can read.
329 .TP
330 .B BATCH
331 If set to y, enables batch mode normalization, which preserves relative
332 volume differences between tracks of an album. Also enables nogap encoding
333 when using the \'lame\' encoder.
334 .TP
335 .B PLAYLISTFORMAT
336 Specifies the format for completed playlist filenames. Works like the
337 OUTPUTFORMAT configuration variable. Default is
338 \'${ARTISTFILE}_\-_${ALBUMFILE}.m3u\'.
339 Make sure to use single quotes around this variable.
340 .TP
341 .B PLAYLISTDATAPREFIX
342 Specifies a prefix for filenames within a playlist. Useful for http
343 playlists, etc.
344 .TP
345 .B DOSPLAYLIST
346 If set, the resulting playlist will have CR-LF line endings, needed by some
347 hardware-based players.
348 .TP
349 .B COMMENT
350 Specifies a comment to embed in the ID3 or Ogg comment field of each
351 finished track. Can be up to 28 characters long. Supports the same
352 syntax as OUTPUTFORMAT. Does not currently support ID3v2.
353 .TP
354 .B REMOTEHOSTS
355 Specifies a comma-delimited list of systems to use for remote encoding using
356 distmp3. Equivalent to -r.
357 .TP
358 .B mungefilename
359 mungefilename() is an abcde shell function that can be overridden via
360 abcde.conf. It takes CDDB data as $1 and outputs the resulting filename on
361 stdout. It defaults to eating control characters, apostrophes and
362 question marks, translating spaces and forward slashes to underscores, and
363 translating colons to an underscore and a hyphen.
364 .br
365 If you modify this function, it is probably a good idea to keep the forward
366 slash munging (UNIX cannot store a file with a '/' char in it) as well as
367 the control character munging (NULs can't be in a filename either, and
368 newlines and such in filenames are typically not desirable).
369 .TP
370 .B mungegenre
371 mungegenre () is a shell function used to modify the $GENRE variable. As
372 a default action, it takes $GENRE as $1 and outputs the resulting value
373 to stdout converting all UPPERCASE characters to lowercase.
374 .TP
375 .B pre_read
376 pre_read () is a shell function which is executed before the CDROM is read
377 for the first time, during abcde execution. It can be used to close the CDROM
378 tray, to set its speed (via "setcd" or via "eject", if available) and other
379 preparation actions. The default function is empty.
380 .TP
381 .B EJECTCD
382 If set to "y", abcde will call eject(1) to eject the cdrom from the drive
383 after all tracks have been read.
384 .TP
385 .B EXTRAVERBOSE
386 If set to "y", some operations which are usually now shown to the end user
387 are visible, such as CDDB queries. Usefull for initial debug and if your
388 network/CDDB server is slow.
389 .SH EXAMPLES
390 Possible ways one can call abcdeƑ
391 .TP
392 .B abcde
393 Will work in most systems
394 .TP
395 .B abcde -d /dev/cdrom2
396 If the CDROM you are reding from is not the standard /dev/cdrom (in GNU/Linux systems)
397 .TP
398 .B abcde -o vorbis,flac
399 Will create both Ogg/Vorbis and Ogg/FLAC files.
400 .TP
401 .B abcde -o vorbis:"-b 192"
402 Will pass "-b 192" to the Ogg/Vorbis encoder, without having to modify the
403 config file
404 .TP
405 .B abcde -W 1
406 For double CDs settings: will create the 1st CD starting with the track number
407 101, and will add a comment "CD 1" to the tracks
408 .SH BACKEND TOOLS
409 abcde requires the following backend tools to work:
410 .TP
411 .B *
412 An Ogg/Vorbis, MP3, FLAC, Ogg/Speex or MPP/MP+(Musepack) encoder (oggenc, vorbize, lame, gogo, bladeenc, l3enc, mp3enc, flac, speexenc, mppenc)
413 .TP
414 .B *
415 An audio CD reading utility (cdparanoia, cdda2wav, dagrab)
416 .TP
417 .B *
418 cd-discid, a CDDB DiscID reading program.
419 .TP
420 .B *
421 An HTTP retrieval program: wget, fetch (FreeBSD) or curl (Mac OS X, among others).
422 .TP
423 .B *
424 (for MP3s) id3 or id3v2, id3 v1 and v2 tagging programs.
425 .TP
426 .B *
427 (optional) distmp3, a client/server for distributed mp3 encoding.
428 .TP
429 .B *
430 (optional) normalize, a WAV file volume normalizer.
431 .SH "SEE ALSO"
432 .BR cdparanoia (1),
433 .BR cdda2wav (1),
434 .BR dagrab (1),
435 .BR normalize-audio (1),
436 .BR oggenc (1),
437 .BR vorbize (1),
438 .BR flac (1),
439 .BR speexenc(1),
440 .BR mppenc(1),
441 .BR id3 (1),
442 .BR wget (1),
443 .BR fetch (1),
444 .BR cd-discid (1),
445 .BR distmp3 (1),
446 .BR distmp3host (1),
447 .BR curl(1)
448 .SH AUTHORS
449 Robert Woodcock <rcw@debian.org>,
450 Jesus Climent <jesus.climent@hispalinux.es> and contributions from many others.