2009-06-12 06:15:52 -04:00
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forked-daapd
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2010-01-10 05:27:19 -05:00
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forked-daapd is a DAAP and RSP media server, with support for Linux and
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FreeBSD. It is a complete rewrite of mt-daapd (Firefly Media Server).
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2009-06-12 06:15:52 -04:00
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DAAP stands for Digital Audio Access Protocol, and is the protocol used
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by iTunes and friends to share/stream media libraries over the network.
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RSP is Roku's own media sharing protocol. Roku are the makers of the
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SoundBridge devices. See <http://www.roku.com>.
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forked-daapd is a temporary name that should change to something else if
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someone can come up with a good name for it.
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Supported clients
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-----------------
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forked-daapd supports iTunes clients as well as a number of devices similar
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to the SoundBridge.
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It should be able to serve your media library to any client supporting DAAP
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or RSP.
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A single forked-daapd instance can handle several clients concurrently,
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regardless of the protocol.
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2010-01-17 05:16:17 -05:00
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Pairing with Remote on iPod/iPhone
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----------------------------------
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forked-daapd can be paired with Apple's Remote application for iPod/iPhone;
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this is how the pairing process works:
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- start forked-daapd
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- start Remote, go to Choose Library, Add Library
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- prepare a text file with a filename ending with .remote; the filename
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doesn't matter, only the .remote ending does. This file must contain
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two lines: the first line is the name of your iPod/iPhone, the second
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is the 4-digit pairing code displayed by Remote.
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If your iPod/iPhone is named "Foobar" and Remote gives you the pairing
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code 5387, the file content will be:
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Foobar
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5387
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- move this file somewhere in your library
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At this point, you should be done with the pairing process and Remote should
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display the name of your forked-daapd library. You can delete the .remote file
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once the pairing process is done.
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If Remote doesn't display the name of your forked-daapd library at this point,
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the pairing process failed.
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This will usually be because the .remote file did not contain the correct name
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or pairing code. Start over the pairing process and try again.
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If in doubt, enable a more verbose level of logging and check that forked-daapd
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receives the mDNS announcement from your iPod/iPhone when the pairing code is
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displayed by Remote (you can also use avahi-browse for this purpose, see below).
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If not, you have a network issue and mDNS doesn't work properly on your network.
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If you are unsure about your iPod/iPhone's name, here's how you can check for
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the correct value:
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- in a terminal, run avahi-browse -r -k _touch-remote._tcp
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- start Remote, goto Choose Library, Add Library
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- after a couple seconds at most, you should get something similar to this:
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+ ath0 IPv4 59eff13ea2f98dbbef6c162f9df71b784a3ef9a3 _touch-remote._tcp local
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= ath0 IPv4 59eff13ea2f98dbbef6c162f9df71b784a3ef9a3 _touch-remote._tcp local
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hostname = [Foobar.local]
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address = [192.168.1.1]
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port = [49160]
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txt = ["DvTy=iPod touch" "RemN=Remote" "txtvers=1" "RemV=10000" "Pair=FAEA410630AEC05E" "DvNm=Foobar"]
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The name of your iPod/iPhone is the value of the DvNm field above. In this
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example, the correct value is Foobar.
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Hit Ctrl-C to terminate avahi-browse.
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2009-06-12 06:15:52 -04:00
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Supported formats
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-----------------
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forked-daapd should support pretty much all media formats. It uses ffmpeg to
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extract metadata and decode the files on the fly when the client doesn't
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support the format.
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However, ffmpeg is not necessarily very good at extracting metadata, so some
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formats may cause problems. FLAC, Musepack and WMA use custom metadata
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extractors to work around that.
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Formats are attributed a code, so any new format will need to be explicitely
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added. Currently supported:
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- MPEG4: mp4a, mp4v
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- AAC: alac
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- MP3 (and friends): mpeg
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- FLAC: flac
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- OGG VORBIS: ogg
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- Musepack: mpc
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- WMA: wma (WMA Pro), wmal (WMA Lossless), wmav (WMA video)
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- AIFF: aif
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- WAV: wav
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2010-02-10 13:40:38 -05:00
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Streaming MPEG4
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---------------
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2010-02-13 05:15:09 -05:00
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Depending on the client application, you may need to optimize your MPEG4 files
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for streaming. Stream-optimized MPEG4 files have their metadata at the beginning
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of the file, whereas non-optimized files have them at the end.
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Not all clients need this; if you're having trouble playing your MPEG4 files,
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this is the most probable cause. iTunes, in particular, doesn't handle files
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that aren't optimized, though FrontRow does.
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2010-02-10 13:40:38 -05:00
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Files produced by iTunes are always optimized by default. Files produced by
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2010-02-12 13:10:37 -05:00
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FAAC and a lot of other encoders are not, though some encoders have an option
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for that.
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2010-02-10 13:40:38 -05:00
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The mp4creator tool from the mpeg4ip suite can be used to optimize MPEG4 files,
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with the -optimize option:
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$ mp4creator -optimize foo.m4a
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Don't forget to make a backup copy of your file, just in case.
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2010-02-12 13:10:37 -05:00
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Note that not all tag/metadata editors know about stream optimization and will
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happily write the metadata back at the end of the file after you've modified
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them. Watch out for that.
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2010-02-10 13:40:38 -05:00
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2009-06-12 06:15:52 -04:00
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Playlists
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---------
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forked-daapd supports M3U playlists. Just drop your playlist somewhere in
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your library with an .m3u extension and it will pick it up.
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2009-11-28 05:01:22 -05:00
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Support for iTunes Music Library XML format is available as a compile-time
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option. By default, metadata from our parsers is preferred over what's in
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the iTunes DB; use itunes_overrides = true if you prefer iTunes' metadata.
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2009-06-12 06:15:52 -04:00
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Smart playlists are not supported at the moment.
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Library
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-------
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The library is scanned in bulk mode at startup, but the server will be
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available even while this scan is in progress. Of course, if files have gone
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missing while the server was not running a request for these files will
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produce an error until the scan has completed and the file is no longer
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offered. Similarly, new files added while the server was not running won't
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be offered until they've been scanned.
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Changes to the library are reflected in real time after the initial scan. The
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directories are monitored for changes and rescanned on the fly.
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Symlinks are supported and dereferenced. This does interact in tricky ways
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with the above monitoring and rescanning, so you've been warned. Changes to
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symlinks themselves won't be taken into account, or not the way you'd expect.
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If you use symlinks, do not move around the target of the symlink. Avoid
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linking files, as files themselves aren't monitored for changes individually,
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so changes won't be noticed unless the file happens to be in a directory that
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is monitored.
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Bottom line: symlinks are for directories only.
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