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230 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
230 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
# $Id$
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#
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# This is the mt-daapd config file.
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#
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# If you have problems or questions with the format of this file,
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# direct your questions to rpedde@users.sourceforge.net.
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#
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# You can also check the website at http://mt-daapd.sourceforge.net,
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# as there is a growing documentation library there, peer-supported
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# forums and possibly more.
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#
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#
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# web_root (required)
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#
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# Location of the admin web pages.
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#
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# If you installed from .RPM, .deb, or tarball with --prefix=/usr, then
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# this is correct.
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#
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# If you installed from tarball without --prefix=/usr, then the correct
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# path is probably /usr/local/share/mt-daapd/admin-root.
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#
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web_root /usr/share/mt-daapd/admin-root
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#
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# port (required)
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#
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# What port to listen on. It is possible to use a different
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# port, but this is the default iTunes port
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#
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port 3689
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#
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# admin_pw (required)
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#
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# This is the password to the administrative pages
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#
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admin_pw mt-daapd
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#
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# db_dir (required)
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#
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# This is where mt-daapd stores its database of song information.
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#
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# If you installed from .RPM or .deb, then this directory already
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# exists. If not, then YOU MUST CREATE THIS DIRECTORY!
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#
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db_dir /var/cache/mt-daapd
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#
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# mp3_dir (required)
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#
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# Location of the mp3 files to share. Note that because the
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# files are stored in the database by inode, these must be
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# in the same physical filesystem.
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#
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mp3_dir /mnt/mp3
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#
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# servername (required)
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#
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# This is both the name of the server as advertised
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# via rendezvous, and the name of the database
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# exported via DAAP. Also know as "What shows up in iTunes".
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#
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servername mt-daapd
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#
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# runas (required)
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#
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# This is the user to drop privs to if running as
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# root. If mt-daapd is not started as root, this
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# configuration option is ignored. Notice that this
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# must be specified whether the server is running
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# as root or not.
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#
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runas nobody
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#
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# playlist (optional)
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#
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# This is the location of a playlist file.
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# This is for Apple-style "Smart Playlists"
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# See the mt-daapd.playlist file in the
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# contrib directory for syntax and examples
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#
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# This doesn't control static playlists... these
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# are controlled with the "process_m3u" directive
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# below.
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#
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playlist /etc/mt-daapd.playlist
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#
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# password (optional)
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#
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# This is the password required to listen to MP3 files
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# i.e. the password that iTunes prompts for
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#
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#password mp3
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#
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# extensions (optional)
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#
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# These are the file extensions that the daap server will
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# try to index and serve. By default, it only indexes and
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# serves .mp3 files. It can also server .m4a and .m4p files,
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# and just about any other files, really. Unfortunately, while
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# it can *attempt* to serve other files (.ogg?), iTunes won't
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# play them. Perhaps this would be useful on Linux with
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# Rhythmbox, once it understands daap. (hurry up!)
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#
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#
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extensions .mp3,.m4a,.m4p
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#
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# logfile (optional)
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#
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# This is the file to log to. If this is not configured,
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# then it will log to the syslog.
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#
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# Not that the -d <level> switch will control the log verbosity.
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# By default, it runs at log level 1. Log level 9 will churn
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# out scads of useless debugging information. Values in between
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# will vary the amount of logging you get.
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#
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#logfile /var/log/mt-daapd.log
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#
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# art_filename (optional)
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#
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# There is experimental support thanks to Hiren Joshi
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# (hirenj@mooh.org) for dynamically adding art to the id3v2
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# header as it is streamed (!!). If you were using a music system
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# like zina or andromeda, for example, with cover art called
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# "_folderOpenImage.jpg", you could use the parameter
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# art_file _folderOpenImage.jpg and if the file _folderOpenImage.jpg
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# was located in the same folder as the .mp3 file, it would appear
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# in iTunes. Cool, eh?
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#
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#art_filename _folderOpenImage.jpg
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#
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# rescan_interval
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#
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# How often to check the file system to see if any mp3 files
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# have been added or removed.
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#
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# if not specified, the default is 0, which disables background scanning.
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#
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# If background rescanning is disabled, a scan can still be forced from the
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# "status" page of the administrative web interface
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#
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# Setting a rescan_interval lower than the time it takes to rescan
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# won't hurt anything, it will just waste CPU, and make connect times
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# to the daap server longer.
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#
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#
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#rescan_interval 300
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# always_scan
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#
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# The default behavior is not not do background rescans of the
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# filesystem unless there are clients connected. The thought is to
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# allow the drives to spin down unless they are in use. This might be
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# of more importance in IDE drives that aren't designed to be run
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# 24x7. Forcing a scan through the web interface will always work
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# though, even if no users are connected.
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# always_scan 0
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#
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# process_m3u
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#
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# By default m3u processing is turned off, since most m3u files
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# sitting around in peoples mp3 directories have bad paths, and
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# I hear about it. :)
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#
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# If you are sure your m3u files have good paths (i.e. unixly pathed,
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# with relative paths relative to the directory the m3u is in), then
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# you can turn on m3u processing by setting this directive to 1.
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#
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# I'm not sure "unixly" is a word, but you get the idea.
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#
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# process_m3u 0
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#
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# scan_type
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#
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#
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# This sets how aggressively mp3 files should be scanned to determine
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# file length. There are three values:
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#
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# 0 (Normal)
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# Just scan the first mp3 frame to try and calculate size. This will
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# be accurate for most files, but VBR files without an Xing tag will
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# probably have wildly inaccurate file times. This is the default.
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#
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# 1 (Aggressive)
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# This checks the bitrates of 10 frames in the middle of the song.
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# This will still be inaccurate for VBR files without an Xing tag,
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# but they probably won't be quite as inaccurate as 0. This takes
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# more time, obviously, although the time hit will only happen the
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# first time you scan a particular file.
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#
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# 2 (Painfully aggressive)
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# This walks through the entire song, counting the number of frames.
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# This should result in accurate song times, but will take the most
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# time. Again, this will only have to be incurred the first time
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# the file is indexed.
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#
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# scan_type 0
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