chiark / gitweb /
relax config file checking for non-server programs
[disorder] / doc / disorder_config.5.in
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460b9539 1.\"
405fea4e 2.\" Copyright (C) 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Richard Kettlewell
460b9539 3.\"
4.\" This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
5.\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
6.\" the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
7.\" (at your option) any later version.
8.\"
9.\" This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
10.\" WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
11.\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
12.\" General Public License for more details.
13.\"
14.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
15.\" along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
16.\" Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307
17.\" USA
18.\"
19.TH disorder_config 5
20.SH NAME
21pkgconfdir/config - DisOrder jukebox configuration
22.SH DESCRIPTION
23The purpose of DisOrder is to organize and play digital audio files, under the
24control of multiple users. \fIpkgconfdir/config\fR is the primary
25configuration file but this man page currently documents all of its various
26configuration files.
27.SS Tracks
28DisOrder can be configured with multiple collections of tracks, indexing them
29by their filename, and picking players on the basis of filename patterns (for
30instance, "*.mp3").
31.PP
32Although the model is of filenames, it is not inherent that there are
33corresponding real files - merely that they can be interpreted by the chosen
34player. See \fBdisorder\fR(3) for more details about this.
35.PP
36Each track can have a set of preferences associated with it. These are simple
37key-value pairs; they can be used for anything you like, but a number of keys
38have specific meanings. See \fBdisorder\fR(1) for more details about these.
39.SS "Track Names"
40Track names are derived from filenames under the control of regular
41expressions, rather than attempting to interpret format-specific embedded name
42information. They can be overridden by setting preferences.
43.PP
44Names for display are distinguished from names for sorting, so with the right
45underlying filenames an album can be displayed in its original order even if
46the displayed track titles are not lexically sorted.
47.SS "Server State"
48A collection of global preferences define various bits of server state: whether
49random play is enabled, what tags to check for when picking at random, etc.
50.SS "Users And Access Control"
51DisOrder distinguishes between multiple users. This is for access control and
52reporting, not to provide different views of the world: i.e. preferences and so
53on are global.
54.PP
55It's possible to restrict a small number of operations to a specific subset of
56users. However, it is assumed that every user is supposed to be able to do
57most operations - since the users are all sharing the same audio environment
58they are expected to cooperate with each other.
59.PP
60Access control is entirely used-based. If you configure DisOrder to listen for
61TCP/IP connections then it will accept a connection from anywhere provided the
62right password is available. Passwords are never transmitted over TCP/IP
63connections in clear, but everything else is. The expected model is that
64host-based access control is imposed at the network layer.
65.SS "Web Interface"
66The web interface is controlled by a collection of template files, one for each
67kind of page, and a collection of option files. These are split up and
68separate from the main configuration file to make it more convenient to
69override specific bits.
70.PP
71The web interface connects to the DisOrder server like any other user, though
72it is given a special privilege to "become" any other user. (Thus, any process
73with the same UID as the web interface is very powerful as far as DisOrder
74goes.)
75.PP
76Access control to the web interface is (currently) separate from DisOrder's own
77access control (HTTP authentication is required) but uses the same user
78namespace.
79.SH "CONFIGURATION FILE"
80.SS "General Syntax"
81Lines are split into fields separated by whitespace (space, tab, line
82feed, carriage return, form feed). Comments are started by the number
83sign ("#").
84.PP
85Fields may be unquoted (in which case they may not contain spaces and
86may not start with a quotation mark or apostrophe) or quoted by either
87quotation marks or apostrophes. Inside quoted fields every character
88stands for itself, except that a backslash can only appear as part of
89one of the following escape sequences:
90.TP
91.B \e\e
92Backslash
93.TP
94.B \e"
95Quotation mark
96.\" "
97.TP
98.B \e'
99Apostrophe
100.TP
101.B \en
102Line feed
103.PP
104No other escape sequences are allowed.
105.PP
106Within any line the first field is a configuration command and any
107further fields are parameters. Lines with no fields are ignored.
108.PP
109After editing the config file use \fBdisorder reconfigure\fR to make
110it re-read it. If there is anything wrong with it the daemon will
111record a log message and ignore the new config file. (You should fix
112it before next terminating and restarting the daemon, as it cannot
113start up without a valid config file.)
114.SS "Global Configuration"
115.TP
116.B home \fIDIRECTORY\fR
117The home directory for state files. Defaults to
118.IR pkgstatedir .
119.TP
120.B plugin \fIPATH\fR
121Adds a directory to the plugin path. (This is also used by the web
122interface.)
123.IP
124Plugins are opened the first time they are required and never after,
125so after changing a plugin you must restart the server before it is
126guaranteed to take effect.
127.SS "Server Configuration"
128.TP
129.B alias \fIPATTERN\fR
130Defines the pattern use construct virtual filenames from \fBtrackname_\fR
131preferences.
132.IP
133Most characters stand for themselves, the exception being \fB{\fR which is used
134to insert a track name part in the form \fB{\fIname\fB}\fR or
135\fB{/\fIname\fB}\fR.
136.IP
137The difference is that the first form just inserts the name part while the
138second prefixes it with a \fB/\fR if it is nonempty.
139.IP
140The pattern should not attempt to include the collection root, which is
141automatically included, but should include the proper extension.
142.IP
143The default is \fB{/artist}{/album}{/title}{ext}\fR.
144.TP
637fdea3
RK
145.B authorization_algorthm \fIALGORITHM\fR
146Defines the algorithm used to authenticate clients. The valid options
147are sha1 (the default), sha256, sha384 and sha512. See
148.BR disorder_protocol (5)
149for more details.
150.TP
30ad4dab 151.B broadcast \fIADDRESS\fR \fIPORT\fR
152Transmit sound data to \fIADDRESS\fR using UDP port \fIPORT\fR. This implies
29573477 153\fBspeaker_backend network\fR.
30ad4dab 154.TP
155.B broadcast_from \fIADDRESS\fR \fIPORT\fR
156Sets the (local) source address used by \fBbroadcast\fR.
157.TP
460b9539 158.B channel \fICHANNEL\fR
159The mixer channel that the volume control should use. Valid names depend on
160your operating system and hardware, but some standard ones that might be useful
161are:
162.RS
163.TP 8
164.B pcm
165Output level for the audio device. This is probably what you want.
166.TP
167.B speaker
168Output level for the PC speaker, if that is connected to the sound card.
169.TP
170.B pcm2
171Output level for alternative codec device.
172.TP
173.B vol
174Master output level. The OSS documentation recommends against using this, as
175it affects all output devices.
176.RE
177.IP
178You can also specify channels by number, if you know the right value.
179.TP
180.B collection \fIMODULE\fR \fIENCODING\fR \fIROOT\fR
181Define a collection of tracks.
182.IP
183\fIMODULE\fR defines which plugin module should be used for this
184collection. Use the supplied \fBfs\fR module for tracks that exists
185as ordinary files in the filesystem.
186.IP
187\fIENCODING\fR defines the encoding of filenames in this collection.
188For \fBfs\fR this would be the encoding you use for filenames.
189Examples might be \fBiso-8859-1\fR or \fButf-8\fR.
190.IP
191\fIROOT\fR is the root in the filesystem of the filenames and is
192passed to the plugin module.
193.TP
194.B device \fINAME\fR
195ALSA device to play raw-format audio. Default is \fBdefault\fR, i.e. to use
196the whatever the ALSA configured default is.
197.TP
198.B gap \fISECONDS\fR
199Specifies the number of seconds to leave between tracks. The default
200is 2.
201.TP
202.B history \fIINTEGER\fR
203Specifies the number of recently played tracks to remember (including
204failed tracks and scratches).
205.TP
206.B listen \fR[\fIHOST\fR] \fISERVICE\fR
207Listen for connections on the address specified by \fIHOST\fR and port
208specified by \fISERVICE\fR. If \fIHOST\fR is omitted then listens on all
209local addresses.
210.IP
211Normally the server only listens on a UNIX domain socket.
212.TP
213.B lock yes\fR|\fBno
214Determines whether the server locks against concurrent operation. Default is
215\fByes\fR.
216.TP
217.B mixer \fIPATH\fR
218The path to the mixer device, if you want access to the volume control,
219e.g. \fB/dev/mixer\fR.
220.TP
23205f9c
RK
221.B multicast_ttl \fIHOPS\fR
222Set the maximum number of hops to send multicast packets. This only applies is
223\fBspeaker_backend\fR is set to \fBnetwork\fR and \fBbroadcast\fR is actually a
224multicast address.
225.TP
460b9539 226.B namepart \fIPART\fR \fIREGEXP\fR \fISUBST\fR [\fICONTEXT\fR [\fIREFLAGS\fR]]
227Determines how to extract trackname part \fIPART\fR from a
228track name (with the collection root part removed).
229Used in \fB@recent@\fR, \fB@playing@\fR and \fB@search@\fR.
230.IP
231Track names can be different in different contexts. For instance the sort
232string might include an initial track number, but this would be stripped for
233the display string. \fICONTEXT\fR should be a glob pattern matching the
234contexts in which this directive will be used.
235.IP
236Valid contexts are \fBsort\fR and \fBdisplay\fR.
237.IP
238All the \fBnamepart\fR directives are considered in order. The
239first directive for the right part, that matches the desired context,
240and with a \fIREGEXP\fR that
241matches the track is used, and the value chosen is constructed from
242\fISUBST\fR according to the substitution rules below.
243.IP
244Note that searches use the raw track name and \fBtrackname_\fR preferences but
245not (currently) the results of \fBnamepart\fR, so generating words via this option
246that aren't in the original track name will lead to confusing results.
247.IP
248If you supply no \fBnamepart\fR directives at all then a default set will be
249supplied automatically. But if you supply even one then you must supply all of
250them. See the example config file for the defaults.
251.TP
252.B nice_rescan \fIPRIORITY\fR
253Set the recan subprocess priority. The default is 10.
254.IP
255(Note that higher values mean the process gets less CPU time; UNIX priority
04e42396 256values are backwards.)
460b9539 257.TP
258.B nice_server \fIPRIORITY\fR
259Set the server priority. This is applied to the server at startup time (and
260not when you reload configuration). The server does not use much CPU itself
261but this value is inherited by programs it executes. If you have limited CPU
262then it might help to set this to a small negative value. The default is 0.
263.TP
264.B nice_speaker \fIPRIORITY\fR
265Set the speaker process priority. This is applied to the speaker process at
266startup time (and not when you reload the configuration). The speaker process
267is not massively CPU intensive by today's standards but depends on reasonably
268timely scheduling. If you have limited CPU then it might help to set this to a
269small negative value. The default is 0.
270.TP
271.B player \fIPATTERN\fR \fIMODULE\fR [\fIOPTIONS.. [\fB--\fR]] \fIARGS\fR...
272Specifies the player for files matching the glob \fIPATTERN\fR. \fIMODULE\fR
273specifies which plugin module to use.
274.IP
275The following options are supported:
276.RS
277.TP
278.B --wait-for-device\fR[\fB=\fIDEVICE\fR]
279Waits (for up to a couple of seconds) for the default, or specified, libao
280device to become openable.
281.TP
282.B --
283Defines the end of the list of options. Needed if the first argument to the
284plugin starts with a "-".
285.RE
286.IP
287The following are the standard modules:
288.RS
289.TP
290.B exec \fICOMMAND\fR \fIARGS\fR...
291The command is executed via \fBexecvp\fR(3), not via the shell.
292The \fBPATH\fR environment variable is searched for the executable if it is not
293an absolute path.
294The command is expected to know how to open its own sound device.
295.TP
296.B execraw \fICOMMAND\fR \fIARGS\fR...
297Identical to the \fBexec\fR except that the player is expected to use the
ce6c36be 298DisOrder raw player protocol.
299.BR disorder-decode (8)
300can decode several common audio file formats to this format. If your favourite
301format is not supported, but you have a player which uses libao, there is also
302a libao driver which supports this format; see below for more information about
303this.
460b9539 304.TP
305.B shell \fR[\fISHELL\fR] \fICOMMAND\fR
306The command is executed using the shell. If \fISHELL\fR is specified then that
307is used, otherwise \fBsh\fR will be used. In either case the \fBPATH\fR
308environment variable is searched for the shell executable if it is not an
309absolute path. The track name is stored in the environment variable
310\fBTRACK\fR.
311.IP
312Be careful of the interaction between the configuration file quoting rules and
313the shell quoting rules.
314.RE
315.IP
316If multiple player commands match a track then the first match is used.
317.TP
318.B prefsync \fISECONDS\fR
319The interval at which the preferences log file will be synchronised. Defaults
320to 3600, i.e. one hour.
321.TP
459d4402 322.B queue_pad \fICOUNT\fR
323The target size of the queue. If random play is enabled then randomly picked
324tracks will be added until the queue is at least this big.
325.TP
405fea4e 326.B sample_format \fIBITS\fB/\fIRATE\fB/\fICHANNELS
327Describes the sample format expected by the \fBspeaker_command\fR (below). The
328components of the format specification are as follows:
329.RS
330.TP 10
331.I BITS
332The number of bits per sample. Optionally, may be suffixed by \fBb\fR or
333\fBl\fR for big-endian and little-endian words. If neither is used the native
334byte order is assumed.
335.TP
336.I RATE
337The number of samples per second.
338.TP
339.I CHANNELS
340The number of channels.
341.PP
342The default is
343.BR 16/44100/2 .
344.RE
345.TP
460b9539 346.B signal \fINAME\fR
347Defines the signal to be sent to track player process groups when tracks are
348scratched. The default is \fBSIGKILL\fR.
349.IP
350Signals are specified by their full C name, i.e. \fBSIGINT\fR and not \fBINT\fR
351or \fBInterrupted\fR or whatever.
352.TP
29573477 353.B speaker_backend \fINAME\fR
354Selects the backend use by the speaker process. The following options are
355available:
356.RS
357.TP
358.B alsa
359Use the ALSA API. This is only available on Linux systems, on which it is the
360default.
361.TP
362.B command
363Execute a command. This is the default if
364.B speaker_command
365is specified, or (currently) on non-Linux systems.
366.TP
367.B network
368Transmit audio over the network. This is the default if
803f6e52 369\fBbroadcast\fR is specified. You can use
370.BR disorder-playrtp (1)
371to receive and play the resulting stream on Linux and OS X.
29573477 372.RE
373.TP
5330d674 374.B sox_generation \fB0\fR|\fB1
375Determines whether calls to \fBsox\fR(1) should use \fB-b\fR, \fB-x\fR, etc (if
376the generation is 0) or \fB-\fIbits\fR, \fB-L\fR etc (if it is 1). The default
377is 0.
378.TP
405fea4e 379.B speaker_command \fICOMMAND
380Causes the speaker subprocess to pipe audio data into shell command
381\fICOMMAND\fR, rather than writing to a local sound card. The sample format is
382determine by
383.B sample_format
384above.
77cfc7a2 385.IP
386Note that if the sample format is wrong then
387.BR sox (1)
388is invoked to translate it. If
389.B sox
390is not installed then this will not work.
405fea4e 391.TP
460b9539 392.B restrict \fR[\fBscratch\fR] [\fBremove\fR] [\fBmove\fR]
393Determine which operations are restricted to the submitter of a
394track. By default, no operations are restricted, i.e. anyone can
395scratch or remove anything.
396.IP
397If \fBrestrict scratch\fR or \fBrestrict remove\fR are set then only the user
398that submitted a track can scratch or remove it, respectively.
399.IP
400If \fBrestrict move\fR is set then only trusted users can move tracks around in
401the queue.
402.IP
403If \fBrestrict\fR is used more than once then only the final use has any
404effect.
405.TP
406.B scratch \fIPATH\fR
407Specifies a scratch. When a track is scratched, a scratch track is
408played at random.
409Scratches are played using the same logic as other tracks.
410.IP
411At least for the time being, path names of scratches must be encoded using
412UTF-8 (which means that ASCII will do).
413.TP
414.B stopword \fIWORD\fR ...
415Specifies one or more stopwords that should not take part in searches
416over track names.
417.SS "Client Configuration"
418.TP
ccf0aafa 419.B connect \fIHOST SERVICE\fR
460b9539 420Connect to the address specified by \fIHOST\fR and port specified by
ccf0aafa 421\fISERVICE\fR.
460b9539 422.SS "Web Interface Configuration"
423.TP
424.B refresh \fISECONDS\fR
425Specifies the maximum refresh period in seconds. Default 15.
426.TP
427.B templates \fIPATH\fR ...
428Specifies the directory containing templates used by the web
429interface. If a template appears in more than one template directory
430then the one in the earliest directory specified is chosen.
431.IP
432See below for further details.
433.TP
434.B transform \fITYPE\fR \fIREGEXP\fR \fISUBST\fR [\fICONTEXT\fR [\fIREFLAGS\fR]]
435Determines how names are sorted and displayed in track choice displays.
436.IP
437\fITYPE\fR is the type of transformation; usually \fBtrack\fR or
438\fBdir\fR but you can define your own.
439.IP
440\fICONTEXT\fR is a glob pattern matching the context. Standard contexts are
441\fBsort\fR (which determines how directory names are sorted) and \fBdisplay\fR
442(which determines how they are displayed). Again, you can define your
443own.
444.IP
445All the \fBtransform\fR directives are considered in order. If
446the \fITYPE\fR, \fIREGEXP\fR and the \fICONTEXT\fR match
447then a new track name is constructed from
448\fISUBST\fR according to the substitution rules below. If several
449match then each is executed in order.
450.IP
451If you supply no \fBtransform\fR directives at all then a default set will be
452supplied automatically. But if you supply even one then you must supply all of
453them. See the example config file for the defaults.
454.TP
455.B url \fIURL\fR
456Specifies the URL of the web interface. This URL will be used in
457generated web pages.
458.IP
459This must be the full URL, e.g. \fBhttp://myhost/cgi-bin/jukebox\fR and not
460\fB/cgi-bin/jukebox\fR.
461.SS "Authentication Configuration"
462.TP
463.B allow \fIUSERNAME\fR \fIPASSWORD\fR
464Specify a username/password pair.
465.TP
466.B password \fIPASSWORD\fR
467Specify password.
468.TP
469.B trust \fIUSERNAME\fR
470Allow \fIUSERNAME\fR to perform privileged operations such as shutting
471down or reconfiguring the daemon, or becoming another user.
472.TP
473.B user \fIUSER\fR
474Specifies the user to run as. Only makes sense if invoked as root (or
475the target user).
476.TP
477.B username \fIUSERNAME\fR
478Specify username. The default is taken from the environment variable
479\fBLOGNAME\fR.
480.PP
481Configuration files are read in the following order:
482.TP
483.I pkgconfdir/config
484.TP
485.I pkgconfdir/config.private
486Should be readable only by the jukebox group, and contain \fBallow\fR
487commands for authorised users.
488.TP
489.I pkgconfdir/config.\fRUSER
490Per-user system-controlled client configuration. Optional but if it
491exists must be readable only by the relevant user. Would normally
492contain a \fBpassword\fR directive.
493.TP
494.I ~\fRUSER\fI/.disorder/passwd
495Per-user client configuration. Optional but if it exists must be
496readable only by the relevant user. Would normally contain a
497\fBpassword\fR directive.
498.SH "GLOBAL PREFERENCES"
499These are the values set with \fBset-global\fR.
500.TP
501.B required-tags
502If this is set an nonempty then randomly played tracks will always have at
503least one of the listed tags.
504.IP
505Tags can contain any printing character except comma. Leading and trailing
506spaces are not significant but internal spaces are. Tags in a list are
507separated by commas.
508.TP
509.B prohibited-tags
510If this is set an nonempty then randomly played tracks will never have any of
511the listed tags.
512.TP
513.B playing
514If unset or \fByes\fR then play is enabled. Otherwise it is disabled. Use
515\fBdisable\fR rather than setting it directly.
516.TP
517.B random-play
518If unset or \fByes\fR then random play is enabled. Otherwise it is disabled.
519Use \fBdisable\fR rather than setting it directly.
520.SH "LIBAO DRIVER"
521.SS "Raw Protocol Players"
522Raw protocol players are expected to use the \fBdisorder\fR libao driver.
523Programs that use libao generally have command line options to select the
524driver and pass options to it.
525.SS "Driver Options"
526The known driver options are:
527.TP
528.B fd
529The file descriptor to write to. If this is not specified then the driver
530looks like the environment variable \fBDISORDER_RAW_FD\fR. If that is not set
531then the default is 1 (i.e. standard output).
532.TP
533.B fragile
534If this is set to a nonzero value then the driver will call \fB_exit\fR(2) if a
535write to the output file descriptor fails. This is a workaround for buggy
536players such as \fBogg123\fR that ignore write errors.
537.SH "WEB TEMPLATES"
538When \fBdisorder.cgi\fR wants to generate a page for an action it searches the
539directories specified with \fBtemplates\fR for a matching file. It is
540suggested that you leave the distributed templates unchanged and put
541any customisations in an earlier entry in the template path.
542.PP
543The supplied templates are:
544.TP
545.B about.html
546Display information about DisOrder.
547.TP
548.B choose.html
549Navigates through the track database to choose a track to play. The
550\fBdir\fR argument gives the directory to look in; if it is missing
551then the root directory is used.
552.TP
553.B choosealpha.html
554Provides a front end to \fBchoose.html\fR which allows subsets of the top level
555directories to be selected by initial letter.
556.TP
557.B playing.html
558The "front page", which usually shows the currently playing tracks and
559the queue.
560Gets an HTTP \fBRefresh\fR header.
561.IP
562If the \fBmgmt\fR CGI argument is set to \fBtrue\fR then we include extra
563buttons for moving tracks up and down in the queue. There is some logic in
564\fBdisorder.cgi\fR to ensure that \fBmgmt=true\fR is preserved across refreshes
565and redirects back into itself, but URLs embedded in web pages must include it
566explicitly.
567.TP
568.B prefs.html
569Views preferences. If the \fBfile\fR, \fBname\fR and \fBvalue\fR arguments are
570all set then that preference is modified; if \fBfile\fR and \fBname\fR are set
571but not \fBvalue\fR then the preference is deleted.
572.TP
573.B recent.html
574Lists recently played tracks.
575.TP
576.B search.html
577Presents search results.
578.TP
579.B volume.html
580Primitive volume control.
581.PP
582Additionally, other standard files are included by these:
583.TP
584.B credits.html
585Included at the end of the main content \fB<DIV>\fR element.
586.TP
587.B sidebar.html
588Included at the start of the \fB<BODY>\fR element.
589.TP
590.B stdhead.html
591Included in the \fB<HEAD>\fR element.
592.TP
593.B stylesheet.html
594Contains the default DisOrder stylesheet. You can override this by editing the
595CSS or by replacing it all with a \fB<LINK>\fR to an external stylesheet.
596.PP
597Templates are ASCII files containing HTML documents, with an expansion
598syntax to enable data supplied by the implementation to be inserted.
599.PP
600If you want to use characters outside the ASCII range, use either the
601appropriate HTML entity, e.g. \fB&eacute;\fR, or an SGML numeric
602character reference, e.g. \fB&#253;\fR. Use \fB&#64;\fR to insert a
603literal \fB@\fR without falling foul of the expansion syntax.
604.SS "Expansion Syntax"
605Expansions are surrounded by at ("@") symbols take the form of a keyword
606followed by zero or more arguments. Arguments may either be quoted by curly
607brackets ("{" and "}") or separated by colons (":"). Both kinds may be mixed
608in a single expansion, though doing so seems likely to cause confusion.
609The descriptions below contain suggested forms for each
610expansion.
611.PP
612Leading and trailing whitespace in unquoted arguments is ignored, as is
613whitespace (including newlines) following a close bracket ("}").
614.PP
615Arguments are recursively expanded before being interpreted, except for
616\fITEMPLATE\fR arguments. These are expanded (possibly more than once) to
617produce the final expansion.
618(More than once means the same argument being expanded more than once
619for different tracks or whatever, not the result of the first
620expansion itself being re-expanded.)
621.PP
622Strings constructed by expansions (i.e. not literally copied from the template
623text) are SGML-quoted: any character which does not stand for itself in #PCDATA
624or a quoted attribute value is replaced by the appropriate numeric character
625reference.
626.PP
627The exception to this is that such strings are \fInot\fR quoted when they are
628generated in the expansion of a parameter.
629.PP
630In the descriptions below, the current track means the one set by
631\fB@playing@\fR, \fB@recent@\fR or \fB@queue@\fR, not the one that is playing.
632If none of these expansions are in force then there is no current track.
633\fIBOOL\fR should always be either \fBtrue\fR or \fBfalse\fR.
634.SS "Expansions"
635The following expansion keywords are defined:
636.TP
637.B @#{\fICOMMENT\fB}@
638Ignored.
639.TP
640.B @action@
641The current action. This reports
642.B manage
643if the action is really
644.B playing
645but
646.B mgmt=true
647was set.
648.TP
649.B @and{\fIBOOL\fB}{\fIBOOL\fB}\fR...\fB@
650If there are no arguments, or all the arguments are \fBtrue\fB, then expands to
651\fBtrue\fR, otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
652.TP
653.B @arg:\fINAME\fB@
654Expands to the value of CGI script argument \fINAME\fR.
655.TP
656.B @basename@
657The basename of the current directory component, in \fB@navigate@\fR.
658.TP
659.B @basename{\fIPATH\fB}@
660The base name part of \fIPATH\fR.
661.TP
662.B @choose{\fIWHAT\fB}{\fITEMPLATE\fB}@
663Expands \fITEMPLATE\fR repeatedly for each file or directory under
664\fB@arg:directory@\fR.
665\fIWHAT\fR should be either \fBfile\fR or \fBdirectory\fR.
666Use \fB@file@\fR to get the display name or filename of the file or
667directory.
668Usually used in \fBchoose.html\fR.
669.TP
670.B @dirname@
671The directory of the current directory component, in \fB@navigate@\fR.
672.TP
673.B @dirname{\fIPATH\fB}@
674The directory part of \fIPATH\fR.
675.TP
676.B @enabled@
677Expands to \fBtrue\fR if play is currently enabled, otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
678.TP
679.B @eq{\fIA\fB}{\fIB\fB}
680Expands to \fBtrue\fR if \fIA\fR and \fIB\fR are identical, otherwise to
681\fBfalse\fR.
682.TP
683.B @file@
684Expands to the filename of the current file or directory, inside the template
685argument to \fBchoose\fR.
686.TP
687.B @files{\fITEMPLATE\fB}
688Expands \fITEMPLATE\fB once for each file indicated by the \fBdirectory\fR CGI
689arg if it is present, or otherwise for the list of files counted by \fBfiles\fR
690with names \fB0_file\fR, \fB1_file\fR etc.
691.TP
692.B @fullname@
693The full path of the current directory component, in \fB@navigate@\fR.
694.TP
695.B @id@
696The ID of the current track.
697.TP
698.B @if{\fIBOOL\fB}{\fITRUEPART\fB}{\fIFALSEPART\fB}@
699If \fIBOOL\fR expands to \fBtrue\fR then expands to \fITRUEPART\fR, otherwise
700to \fIFALSEPART\fR (which may be omitted).
701.TP
702.B @include:\fIPATH\fR@
703Include the named file as if it were a template file. If \fIPATH\fR
704starts with a \fB/\fR then it is used as-is; otherwise, ".html" is
705appended and the template path is searched.
706.TP
707.B @index@
708Expands to the index of the current file in \fB@queue@\fR, \fB@recent@\fR or
709\fB@files@\fR.
710.TP
711.B @isdirectories@
712Expands to \fBtrue\fR if there are any directories in \fB@arg:directory@\fR,
713otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
714.TP
715.B @isfiles@
716Expands to \fBtrue\fR if there are any files in \fB@arg:directory@\fR,
717otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
718.TP
719.B @isfirst@
720Expands to \fBtrue\fR if this is the first repetition of a \fITEMPLATE\fR
721argument in a loop (\fB@queue\fR or similar), otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
722.TP
723.B @islast@
724Expands to \fBtrue\fR if this is the last repetition of a \fITEMPLATE\fR in a
725loop, otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
726.TP
727.B @isplaying@
728Expands to \fBtrue\fR if a track is playing, otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
729.TP
730.B @isqueue@
731Expands to \fBtrue\fR if there are any tracks in the queue, otherwise to
732\fBfalse\fR.
733.TP
734.B @isrecent@
735Expands to \fBtrue\fR if the recently played list has any tracks in it,
736otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
737.TP
738.B @label:\fINAME\fR\fB@
739Expands to the value of label \fINAME\fR. See the shipped \fIoptions.labels\fR
740file for full documentation of the labels used by the standard templates.
741.TP
742.B @length@
743Expands to the length of the current track.
744.TP
745.B @navigate{\fIDIRECTORY\fB}{\fITEMPLATE\fB}
746Expands \fITEMPLATE\fR for each component of \fIDIRECTORY\fR in turn.
747Use \fB@dirname\fR and \fB@basename@\fR to get the components of the path to
748each component.
749Usually used in \fBchoose.html\fR.
750.TP
751.B @ne{\fIA\fB}{\fIB\fB}
752Expands to \fBtrue\fR if \fIA\fR and \fIB\fR differ, otherwise to \fBfalse\fR.
753.TP
754.B @nfiles@
755Expands to the number of files from \fB@files\fR (above).
756.TP
757.B @nonce@
758Expands to a string including the time and process ID, intended to be
759unique across invocations.
760.TP
761.B @not{\fIBOOL\fB}@
762Expands to \fBfalse\fR if \fIBOOL\fR is \fBtrue\fR, otherwise to
763\fBfalse\fR.
764.TP
765.B @or{\fIBOOL\fB}{\fIBOOL\fB}\fR...\fB@
766If at least one argument is \fBtrue\fB, then expands to \fBtrue\fR, otherwise
767to \fBfalse\fR.
768.TP
769.B @parity@
770Expands to \fBeven\fR or \fBodd\fR depending on whether the current track is at
771an even or odd position in \fB@queue@\fR, \fB@recent@\fR or \fB@files@\fR.
772.TP
773.B @part{\fICONTEXT\fB}{\fIPART\fB}@
774Expands to track name part \fIPART\fR using context \fICONTEXT\fR for the
775current track. The context may be omitted (and normally would be) and defaults
776to \fBdisplay\fR.
777.TP
778.B @part{\fICONTEXT\fB}{\fIPART\fB}{\fITRACK\fB}@
779Expands to track name part \fIPART\fR using context \fICONTEXT\fR for
780\fITRACK\fR. In this usage the context may not be omitted.
781.TP
782.B @paused@
783Expands to \fBtrue\fR if the current track is paused, else \fBfalse\fR.
784.TP
785.B @playing{\fITEMPLATE\fB}@
786Expands \fITEMPLATE\fR using the playing track as the current track.
787.TP
788.B @pref{\fITRACK\fB}{\fIKEY\fB}@
789Expand to the track preference, or the empty string if it is not set.
790.TP
791.B @prefname@
792Expands to the name of the current preference, in the template
793argument of \fB@prefs@\fR.
794.TP
795.B @prefs{\fIFILE\fB}{\fITEMPLATE\fB}@
796Expands \fITEMPLATE\fR repeatedly, for each preference of track
797\fIFILE\fR.
798Use \fB@prefname@\fR and \fB@prefvalue@\fR to get the name and value.
799.TP
800.B @prefvalue@
801Expands to the value of the current preference, in the template
802argument of \fB@prefs@\fR.
803.TP
804.B @queue{\fITEMPLATE\fB}@
805Expands \fITEMPLATE\fR repeatedly using the each track on the queue in turn as
806the current track. The track at the head of the queue comes first.
807.TP
808.B @random-enabled@
809Expands to \fBtrue\fR if random play is currently enabled, otherwise to
810\fBfalse\fR.
811.TP
812.B @recent{\fITEMPLATE\fB}@
813Expands \fITEMPLATE\fR repeatedly using the each recently played track in turn
814as the current track. The most recently played track comes first.
815.TP
816.B @resolve{\fITRACK\fB}@
817Resolve aliases for \fITRACK\fR and expands to the result.
818.TP
819.B @search{\fIPART\fB}\fR[\fB{\fICONTEXT\fB}\fR]\fB{\fITEMPLATE\fB}@
820Expands \fITEMPLATE\fR once for each group of search results that have
821a common value of track part \fIPART\fR.
822The groups are sorted by the value of the part.
823.IP
824.B @part@
825and
826.B @file@
827within the template will apply to one of the tracks in the group.
828.IP
829If \fICONTEXT\fR is specified it should be either \fBsort\fR or \fBdisplay\fR,
830and determines the context for \fIPART\fR. The default is \fBsort\fR. Usually
831you want \fBdisplay\fR for everything except the title and \fBsort\fR for the
832title. If you use \fBsort\fR for artist and album then you are likely to get
833strange effects.
834.TP
835.B @server-version@
836Expands to the server's version string.
837.TP
838.B @shell{\fICOMMAND\fB}@
839Expands to the output of \fICOMMAND\fR executed via the shell. \fBsh\fR is
840searched for using \fBPATH\fR. If the command fails then this is logged but
841otherwise ignored.
842.TP
843.B @state@
844In \fB@queue@\fR and \fB@recent@\fR, expands to the state of the current
845track. Otherwise the empty string. Known states are:
846.RS
847.TP 12
848.B failed
849The player terminated with nonzero status, but not because the track was
850scratched.
851.TP
852.B isscratch
853A scratch, in the queue.
854.TP
855.B no_player
856No player could be found.
857.TP
858.B ok
859Played successfully.
860.TP
861.B random
862A randomly chosen track, in the queue.
863.TP
864.B scratched
865This track was scratched.
866.TP
867.B unplayed
868An explicitly queued track, in the queue.
869.RE
870.IP
871Some additional states only apply to playing tracks, so will never be seen in
872the queue or recently-played list:
873.RS
874.TP 12
875.B paused
876The track has been paused.
877.TP
878.B quitting
879Interrupted because the server is shutting down.
880.TP
881.B started
882This track is currently playing.
883.RE
884.TP
885.B @stats@
886Expands to the server statistics.
887.TP
888.B @thisurl@
889Expands to the URL of the current page. Typically used in
890.B back
891arguments. If there is a
892.B nonce
893argument then it is changed to a fresh value.
894.TP
895.B @track@
896The current track.
897.TP
898.B @trackstate{\fIPATH\fB}@
899Expands to the current track state: \fBplaying\fR if the track is actually
900playing now, \fBqueued\fR if it is queued or the empty string otherwise.
901.TP
902.B @transform{\fIPATH\fB}{\fITYPE\fB}{\fICONTEXT\fB}@
903Transform a path according to \fBtransform\fR (see above).
904\fIPATH\fR should be a raw filename (of a track or directory).
905\fITYPE\fR should be the transform type (e.g. \fItrack\fR or \fIdir\fR).
906\fICONTEXT\fR should be the context, and can be omitted (the default
907is \fBdisplay\fR).
908.TP
909.B @url@
910Expands to the canonical URL as defined in \fIpkgconfdir/config\fR.
911.TP
912.B @urlquote{\fISTRING\fB}@
913URL-quote \fISTRING\fR.
914.TP
915.B @version@
916Expands to \fBdisorder.cgi\fR's version string.
917.TP
918.B @volume:\fISPEAKER\fB@
919The volume on the left or right speaker. \fISPEAKER\fR must be \fBleft\fB or
920\fBright\fR.
921.TP
922.B @when@
923When the current track was played (or when it is expected to be played, if it
924has not been played yet)
925.TP
926.B @who@
927Who submitted the current track.
928.SH "WEB OPTIONS"
929This is a file called \fIoptions\fR, searched for in the same manner
930as templates. It includes numerous options for the control of the web
931interface. The general syntax is the same as the main configuration
932file, except that it should be encoded using UTF-8 (though this might
933change to the current locale's character encoding; stick to ASCII to
934be safe).
935.PP
936The shipped \fIoptions\fR file includes four standard options files.
937In order, they are:
938.TP
939.I options.labels
940The default labels file. You wouldn't normally edit this directly - instead
941supply your own commands in \fIoptions.user\fR. Have a look at the shipped
942version of the file for documentation of labels used by the standard templates.
943.TP
944.I options.user
945A user options file. Here you should put any overrides for the default
946labels and any extra labels required by your modified templates.
947.PP
948Valid directives are:
949.TP
950.B columns \fINAME\fR \fIHEADING\fR...
951Defines the columns used in \fB@playing@\fR and \fB@recent@\fB. \fINAME\fR
952must be either \fBplaying\fR, \fBrecent\fR or \fBsearch\fR.
953\fIHEADING\fR... is a list of
954heading names. If a column is defined more than once then the last definitions
955is used.
956.IP
957The heading names \fBbutton\fR, \fBlength\fR, \fBwhen\fR and \fBwho\fR
958are built in.
959.TP
960.B include \fIPATH\fR
961Includes another file. If \fIPATH\fR starts with a \fB/\fR then it is
962taken as is, otherwise it is searched for in the template path.
963.TP
964.B label \fINAME\fR \fIVALUE\fR
965Define a label. If a label is defined more than once then the last definition
966is used.
967.SS Labels
968Some labels are defined inside \fBdisorder.cgi\fR and others by the
969default templates. You can define your own labels and use them inside
970a template.
971.PP
972When an undefined label is expanded, if it has a dot in its name then
973the part after the final dot is used as its value. Otherwise the
974whole name is used as the value.
975.PP
976Labels are no longer documented here, see the shipped \fIoptions.labels\fR file
977instead.
978.SH "REGEXP SUBSTITUTION RULES"
979Regexps are PCRE regexps, as defined in \fBpcrepattern\fR(3). The
980only option used is \fBPCRE_UTF8\fR. Remember that the configuration
981file syntax means you have to escape backslashes and quotes inside
982quoted strings.
983.PP
984In a \fISUBST\fR string the following sequences are interpreted
985specially:
986.TP
987.B $1 \fR... \fB$9
988These expand to the first to ninth bracketed subexpression.
989.TP
990.B $&
991This expands to the matched part of the subject string.
992.TP
993.B $$
994This expands to a single \fB$\fR symbol.
995.PP
996All other pairs starting with \fB$\fR are undefined (and might be used
997for something else in the future, so don't rely on the current
998behaviour.)
999.PP
1000If \fBi\fR is present in \fIREFLAGS\fR then the match is case-independent. If
1001\fBg\fR is present then all matches are replaced, otherwise only the first
1002match is replaced.
1003.SH "ACTIONS"
1004What the web interface actually does is terminated by the \fBaction\fR CGI
1005argument. The values listed below are supported.
1006.PP
1007Except as specified, all actions redirect back to the \fBplaying.html\fR
1008template unless the \fBback\fR argument is present, in which case the URL it
1009gives is used instead.
1010.PP
1011Redirection to \fBplaying.html\fR preserves \fBmgmt=true\fR if it is present.
1012.TP 8
1013.B "move"
1014Move track \fBid\fR by offset \fBdelta\fR.
1015.TP
1016.B "play"
1017Play track \fBfile\fR, or if that is missing then play all the tracks in
1018\fBdirectory\fR.
1019.TP
1020.B "playing"
1021Don't change any state, but instead compute a suitable refresh time and include
1022that in an HTTP header. Expands the \fBplaying.html\fR template rather than
1023redirecting.
1024.IP
1025This is the default if \fBaction\fR is missing.
1026.TP
1027.B "random-disable"
1028Disables random play.
1029.TP
1030.B "random-enable"
1031Enables random play.
1032.TP
1033.B "disable"
1034Disables play completely.
1035.TP
1036.B "enable"
1037Enables play.
1038.TP
1039.B "pause"
1040Pauses the current track.
1041.TP
1042.B "remove"
1043Remove track \fBid\fR.
1044.TP
1045.B "resume"
1046Resumes play after a pause.
1047.TP
1048.B "scratch"
1049Scratch the playing track. If \fBid\fR is present it must match the playing
1050track.
1051.TP
1052.B "volume"
1053Change the volume by \fBdelta\fR, or if that is missing then set it to the
1054values of \fBleft\fR and \fBright\fR. Expands to the \fBvolume.html\fR template
1055rather than redirecting.
1056.TP
1057.B "prefs"
1058Adjust preferences from the \fBprefs.html\fR template (which it then expands
1059rather than redirecting).
1060.IP
1061If
1062.B parts
1063is set then the cooked interface is assumed. The value of
1064.B parts
1065is used to determine which trackname preferences are set. By default the
1066.B display
1067context is adjusted but this can be overridden with the
1068.B context
1069argument. Also the
1070.B random
1071argument is checked; if it is set then random play is enabled for that track,
1072otherwise it is disabled.
1073.IP
1074Otherwise if the
1075.B name
1076and
1077.B value
1078arguments are set then they are used to set a single preference.
1079.IP
1080Otherwise if just the
1081.B name
1082argument is set then that preference is deleted.
1083.IP
1084It is recommended that links to the \fBprefs\fR action use \fB@resolve@\fR to
1085enure that the real track name is always used. Otherwise if the preferences
1086page is used to adjust a trackname_ preference, the alias may change, leading
1087to the URL going stale.
1088.TP
1089.B "error"
1090This action is generated automatically when an error occurs connecting to the
1091server. The \fBerror\fR label is set to an indication of what the error is.
1092.SH "TRACK NAME PARTS"
1093The traditional track name parts are \fBartist\fR, \fBalbum\fR and \fBtitle\fR,
1094with the obvious intended meaning. These are controlled by configuration and
1095by \fBtrackname_\fR preferences.
1096.PP
1097In addition there are two built-in parts, \fBpath\fR which is the whole path
1098name and \fBext\fR which is the filename extension, including the initial dot
1099(or the empty string if there is not extension).
1100.SH "SEE ALSO"
77cfc7a2 1101\fBdisorder\fR(1), \fBsox\fR(1), \fBdisorderd\fR(8), \fBdisorder-dump\fR(8),
460b9539 1102\fBpcrepattern\fR(3)
1103.\" Local Variables:
1104.\" mode:nroff
1105.\" fill-column:79
1106.\" End: