linx-simulator2/node_modules/speaker/deps/mpg123/man1/mpg123.1
2019-09-18 11:11:16 +03:00

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.TH mpg123 1 "31 Jan 2008"
.SH NAME
mpg123 \- play audio MPEG 1.0/2.0/2.5 stream (layers 1, 2 and 3)
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B mpg123
[
.B options
]
.IR file " ... | " URL " ... | "
.B \-
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B mpg123
reads one or more
.IR file\^ s
(or standard input if ``\-'' is specified) or
.IR URL\^ s
and plays them on the audio device (default) or
outputs them to stdout.
.IR file\^ / URL
is assumed to be an MPEG audio bit stream.
.SH OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
.TP 8
.IR file (s)
The path name(s) of one or more input files. They must be
valid MPEG-1.0/2.0/2.5 audio layer 1, 2 or 3 bit streams.
If a dash ``\-'' is specified, MPEG data will
be read from the standard input. Furthermore, any name
starting with ``http://'' is recognized as
.I URL
(see next section).
.SH OPTIONS
.B mpg123
options may be either the traditional POSIX one letter options,
or the GNU style long options. POSIX style options start with a
single ``\-'', while GNU long options start with ``\-\^\-''.
Option arguments (if needed) follow separated by whitespace (not ``='').
Note that some options can be absent from your installation when disabled in the build process.
.SH INPUT OPTIONS
.TP
\fB\-k \fInum\fR, \fB\-\^\-skip \fInum
Skip first
.I num
frames. By default the decoding starts at the first frame.
.TP
\fB\-n \fInum\fR, \fB\-\^\-frames \fInum
Decode only
.I num
frames. By default the complete stream is decoded.
.TP
.BR \-\-fuzzy
Enable fuzzy seeks (guessing byte offsets or using approximate seek points from Xing TOC).
Without that, seeks need a first scan through the file before they can jump at positions.
You can decide here: sample-accurate operation with gapless features or faster (fuzzy) seeking.
.TP
.BR \-y ", " \-\^\-no\-resync
Do NOT try to resync and continue decoding if an error occurs in
the input file. Normally,
.B mpg123
tries to keep the playback alive at all costs, including skipping invalid material and searching new header when something goes wrong.
With this switch you can make it bail out on data errors
(and perhaps spare your ears a bad time). Note that this switch has been renamed from \-\-resync.
The old name still works, but is not advertised or recommened to use (subject to removal in future).
.TP
\fB\-\^-resync\-limit \fIbytes\fR
Set number of bytes to search for valid MPEG data once lost in stream; <0 means search whole stream.
If you know there are huge chunks of invalid data in your files... here is your hammer.
Note: Only since version 1.14 this also increases the amount of junk skipped on beginning.
.TP
\fB\-p \fIURL \fR| \fBnone\fR, \fB\-\^\-proxy \fIURL \fR| \fBnone
The specified
.I proxy
will be used for HTTP requests. It
should be specified as full URL (``http://host.domain:port/''),
but the ``http://'' prefix, the port number and the trailing
slash are optional (the default port is 80). Specifying
.B none
means not to use any proxy, and to retrieve files directly
from the respective servers. See also the
``HTTP SUPPORT'' section.
.TP
\fB\-u \fIauth\fR, \fB\-\^\-auth \fIauth
HTTP authentication to use when recieving files via HTTP.
The format used is user:password.
.TP
\fB\-@ \fIfile\fR, \fB\-\^\-list \fIfile
Read filenames and/or URLs of MPEG audio streams from the specified
.I file
in addition to the ones specified on the command line (if any).
Note that
.I file
can be either an ordinary file, a dash ``\-'' to indicate that
a list of filenames/URLs is to be read from the standard input,
or an URL pointing to a an appropriate list file. Note: only
one
.B \-@
option can be used (if more than one is specified, only the
last one will be recognized).
.TP
\fB\-l \fIn\fR, \fB\-\^\-listentry \fIn
Of the playlist, play specified entry only.
.I n
is the number of entry starting at 1. A value of 0 is the default and means playling the whole list, a negative value means showing of the list of titles with their numbers...
.TP
\fB\-\-loop \fItimes\fR
for looping track(s) a certain number of times, < 0 means infinite loop (not with \-\-random!).
.TP
.BR \-\-keep\-open
For remote control mode: Keep loaded file open after reaching end.
.TP
\fB\-\-timeout \fIseconds\fR
Timeout in (integer) seconds before declaring a stream dead (if <= 0, wait forever).
.TP
.BR \-z ", " \-\^\-shuffle
Shuffle play. Randomly shuffles the order of files specified on the command
line, or in the list file.
.TP
.BR \-Z ", " \-\-random
Continuous random play. Keeps picking a random file from the command line
or the play list. Unlike shuffle play above, random play never ends, and
plays individual songs more than once.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-no\-icy\-meta
Do not accept ICY meta data.
.TP
\fB\-i, \-\^-\index
Index / scan through the track before playback.
This fills the index table for seeking (if enabled in libmpg123) and may make the operating system cache the file contents for smoother operating on playback.
.TP
\fB\-\-index\-size \fIsize\fR
Set the number of entries in the seek frame index table.
.TP
\fB\-\-preframes \fInum\fR
Set the number of frames to be read as lead-in before a seeked-to position.
This serves to fill the layer 3 bit reservoir, which is needed to faithfully reproduce a certain sample at a certain position.
Note that for layer 3, a minimum of 1 is enforced (because of frame overlap), and for layer 1 and 2, this is limited to 2 (no bit reservoir in that case, but engine spin-up anyway).
.SH OUTPUT and PROCESSING OPTIONS
.TP
\fB\-o \fImodule\fR, \-\^\-output \fImodule\fR
Select audio output module. You can provide a comma-separated list to use the first one that works.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-list\-modules
List the available modules.
.TP
\fB\-a \fIdev\fR, \fB\-\^\-audiodevice \fIdev
Specify the audio device to use. The default is
system-dependent (usually /dev/audio or /dev/dsp).
Use this option if you have multiple audio devices and
the default is not what you want.
.TP
.BR \-s ", " \-\^\-stdout
The decoded audio samples are written to standard output,
instead of playing them through the audio device. This
option must be used if your audio hardware is not supported
by
.BR mpg123 .
The output format per default is raw (headerless) linear PCM audio data,
16 bit, stereo, host byte order (you can force mono or 8bit).
.TP
\fB\-O \fIfile\fR, \fB\-\^\-outfile
Write raw output into a file (instead of simply redirecting standard output to a file with the shell).
.TP
\fB\-w \fIfile\fR, \fB\-\^\-wav
Write output as WAV file. This will cause the MPEG stream to be decoded
and saved as file
.I file
, or standard output if
.I -
is used as file name. You can also use
.I --au
and
.I --cdr
for AU and CDR format, respectively.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-au \fIfile
Does not play the MPEG file but writes it to
.I file
in SUN audio format. If \- is used as the filename, the AU file is
written to stdout.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-cdr \fIfile
Does not play the MPEG file but writes it to
.I file
as a CDR file. If \- is used as the filename, the CDR file is written
to stdout.
.TP
.BR \-\-reopen
Forces reopen of the audiodevice after ever song
.TP
.BR \-\-cpu\ \fIdecoder\-type
Selects a certain decoder (optimized for specific CPU), for example i586 or MMX.
The list of available decoders can vary; depending on the build and what your CPU supports.
This options is only availabe when the build actually includes several optimized decoders.
.TP
.BR \-\-test\-cpu
Tests your CPU and prints a list of possible choices for \-\-cpu.
.TP
.BR \-\-list\-cpu
Lists all available decoder choices, regardless of support by your CPU.
.TP
\fB\-g \fIgain\fR, \fB\-\^\-gain \fIgain
[DEPRECATED] Set audio hardware output gain (default: don't change). The unit of the gain value is hardware and output module dependent.
(This parameter is only provided for backwards compatibility and may be removed in the future without prior notice. Use the audio player for playing and a mixer app for mixing, UNIX style!)
.TP
\fB\-f \fIfactor\fR, \fB\-\^\-scale \fIfactor
Change scale factor (default: 32768).
.TP
.BR \-\-rva-mix,\ \-\-rva-radio
Enable RVA (relative volume adjustment) using the values stored for ReplayGain radio mode / mix mode with all tracks roughly equal loudness.
The first valid information found in ID3V2 Tags (Comment named RVA or the RVA2 frame) or ReplayGain header in Lame/Info Tag is used.
.TP
.BR \-\-rva-album,\ \-\-rva-audiophile
Enable RVA (relative volume adjustment) using the values stored for ReplayGain audiophile mode / album mode with usually the effect of adjusting album loudness but keeping relative loudness inside album.
The first valid information found in ID3V2 Tags (Comment named RVA_ALBUM or the RVA2 frame) or ReplayGain header in Lame/Info Tag is used.
.TP
.BR \-0 ", " \-\^\-single0 "; " \-1 ", " \-\^\-single1
Decode only channel 0 (left) or channel 1 (right),
respectively. These options are available for
stereo MPEG streams only.
.TP
.BR \-m ", " \-\^\-mono ", " \-\^\-mix ", " \-\^\-singlemix
Mix both channels / decode mono. It takes less
CPU time than full stereo decoding.
.TP
.BR \-\-stereo
Force stereo output
.TP
\fB\-r \fIrate\fR, \fB\-\^\-rate \fIrate
Set sample rate (default: automatic). You may want to
change this if you need a constant bitrate independent of
the mpeg stream rate. mpg123 automagically converts the
rate. You should then combine this with \-\-stereo or \-\-mono.
.TP
.BR \-2 ", " \-\^\-2to1 "; " \-4 ", " \-\^\-4to1
Performs a downsampling of ratio 2:1 (22 kHz) or 4:1 (11 kHz)
on the output stream, respectively. Saves some CPU cycles, but
at least the 4:1 ratio sounds ugly.
.TP
.BR \-\-pitch\ \fIvalue
Set hardware pitch (speedup/down, 0 is neutral; 0.05 is 5%). This changes the output sampling rate, so it only works in the range your audio system/hardware supports.
.TP
.BR \-\-8bit
Forces 8bit output
.TP
\fB\-\^\-float
Forces f32 encoding
.TP
\fp\-e \fIenc\fR, \fB\-\^\-encoding \fIenc
Choose output sample encoding. Possible values look like f32 (32-bit floating point), s32 (32-bit signed integer), u32 (32-bit unsigned integer) and the variants with different numbers of bits (s24, u24, s16, u16, s8, u8) and also special variants like ulaw and alaw 8-bit.
See the output of mpg123's longhelp for actually available encodings.
.TP
\fB\-d \fIn\fR, \fB\-\^\-doublespeed \fIn
Only play every
.IR n 'th
frame. This will cause the MPEG stream
to be played
.I n
times faster, which can be used for special
effects. Can also be combined with the
.B \-\^\-halfspeed
option to play 3 out of 4 frames etc. Don't expect great
sound quality when using this option.
.TP
\fB\-h \fIn\fR, \fB\-\^\-halfspeed \fIn
Play each frame
.I n
times. This will cause the MPEG stream
to be played at
.IR 1 / n 'th
speed (n times slower), which can be
used for special effects. Can also be combined with the
.B \-\^\-doublespeed
option to double every third frame or things like that.
Don't expect great sound quality when using this option.
.TP
\fB\-E \fIfile\fR, \fB\-\^\-equalizer
Enables equalization, taken from
.IR file .
The file needs to contain 32 lines of data, additional comment lines may
be prefixed with
.IR # .
Each data line consists of two floating-point entries, separated by
whitespace. They specify the multipliers for left and right channel of
a certain frequency band, respectively. The first line corresponds to the
lowest, the 32nd to the highest frequency band.
Note that you can control the equalizer interactively with the generic control interface.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-gapless
Enable code that cuts (junk) samples at beginning and end of tracks, enabling gapless transitions between MPEG files when encoder padding and codec delays would prevent it.
This is enabled per default beginning with mpg123 version 1.0.0 .
.TP
\fB\-\^\-no\-gapless
Disable the gapless code. That gives you MP3 decodings that include encoder delay and padding plus mpg123's decoder delay.
.TP
\fB\-D \fIn\fR, \fB\-\-delay \fIn
Insert a delay of \fIn\fR seconds before each track.
.TP
.BR "\-o h" ", " \-\^\-headphones
Direct audio output to the headphone connector (some hardware only; AIX, HP, SUN).
.TP
.BR "\-o s" ", " \-\^\-speaker
Direct audio output to the speaker (some hardware only; AIX, HP, SUN).
.TP
.BR "\-o l" ", " \-\^\-lineout
Direct audio output to the line-out connector (some hardware only; AIX, HP, SUN).
.TP
\fB\-b \fIsize\fR, \fB\-\^\-buffer \fIsize
Use an audio output buffer of
.I size
Kbytes. This is useful to bypass short periods of heavy
system activity, which would normally cause the audio output
to be interrupted.
You should specify a buffer size of at least 1024
(i.e. 1 Mb, which equals about 6 seconds of audio data) or more;
less than about 300 does not make much sense. The default is 0,
which turns buffering off.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-preload \fIfraction
Wait for the buffer to be filled to
.I fraction
before starting playback (fraction between 0 and 1). You can tune this prebuffering to either get faster sound to your ears or safer uninterrupted web radio.
Default is 1 (wait for full buffer before playback).
.TP
\fB\-\^\-smooth
Keep buffer over track boundaries -- meaning, do not empty the buffer between tracks for possibly some added smoothness.
.SH MISC OPTIONS
.TP
.BR \-t ", " \-\^\-test
Test mode. The audio stream is decoded, but no output occurs.
.TP
.BR \-c ", " \-\^\-check
Check for filter range violations (clipping), and report them for each frame
if any occur.
.TP
.BR \-v ", " \-\^\-verbose
Increase the verbosity level. For example, displays the frame
numbers during decoding.
.TP
.BR \-q ", " \-\^\-quiet
Quiet. Suppress diagnostic messages.
.TP
.BR \-C ", " \-\^\-control
Enable terminal control keys. By default use 's' or the space bar to stop/restart (pause, unpause) playback, 'f' to jump forward to the next song, 'b' to jump back to the
beginning of the song, ',' to rewind, '.' to fast forward, and 'q' to quit.
Type 'h' for a full list of available controls.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-title
In an xterm, or rxvt (compatible, TERM environment variable is examined), change the window's title to the name of song currently
playing.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-long\-tag
Display ID3 tag info always in long format with one line per item (artist, title, ...)
.TP
.BR \-\-utf8
Regardless of environment, print metadata in UTF-8 (otherwise, when not using UTF-8 locale, you'll get ASCII stripdown).
.TP
.BR \-R ", " \-\^\-remote
Activate generic control interface.
.B mpg123
will then read and execute commands from stdin. Basic usage is ``load <filename> '' to play some file and the obvious ``pause'', ``command.
``jump <frame>'' will jump/seek to a given point (MPEG frame number).
Issue ``help'' to get a full list of commands and syntax.
.TP
.BR \-\^\-remote\-err
Print responses for generic control mode to standard error, not standard out.
This is automatically triggered when using
.B -s
\fN.
.TP
\fB\-\-fifo \fIpath
Create a fifo / named pipe on the given path and use that for reading commands instead of standard input.
.TP
\fB\-\^\-aggressive
Tries to get higher priority
.TP
.BR \-T ", " \-\-realtime
Tries to gain realtime priority. This option usually requires root
privileges to have any effect.
.TP
.BR \-? ", " \-\^\-help
Shows short usage instructions.
.TP
.BR \-\^\-longhelp
Shows long usage instructions.
.TP
.BR \-\^\-version
Print the version string.
.SH HTTP SUPPORT
In addition to reading MPEG audio streams from ordinary
files and from the standard input,
.B mpg123
supports retrieval of MPEG audio files or playlists via the HTTP protocol,
which is used in the World Wide Web (WWW). Such files are
specified using a so-called URL, which starts with ``http://''. When a file with
that prefix is encountered,
.B mpg123
attempts to open an HTTP connection to the server in order to
retrieve that file to decode and play it.
.P
It is often useful to retrieve files through a WWW cache or
so-called proxy. To accomplish this,
.B mpg123
examines the environment for variables named
.BR MP3_HTTP_PROXY ", " http_proxy " and " HTTP_PROXY ,
in this order. The value of the first one that is set will
be used as proxy specification. To override this, you can
use the
.B \-p
command line option (see the ``OPTIONS'' section). Specifying
.B "\-p none"
will enforce contacting the server directly without using
any proxy, even if one of the above environment variables
is set.
.P
Note that, in order to play MPEG audio files from a WWW
server, it is necessary that the connection to that server
is fast enough. For example, a 128 kbit/s MPEG file
requires the network connection to be at least 128 kbit/s
(16 kbyte/s) plus protocol overhead. If you suffer from
short network outages, you should try the
.B \-b
option (buffer) to bypass such outages. If your network
connection is generally not fast enough to retrieve MPEG
audio files in realtime, you can first download the files
to your local harddisk (e.g. using
.BR wget (1))
and then play them from there.
.P
If authentication is needed to access the file it can be
specified with the
.BR "\-u user:pass".
.SH INTERRUPT
When in terminal control mode, you can quit via pressing the q key,
while any time you can abort
.B mpg123
by pressing Ctrl-C. If not in terminal control mode, this will
skip to the next file (if any). If you want to abort playing immediately
in that case, press Ctrl-C twice in short succession (within about one second).
.P
Note that the result of quitting
.B mpg123
pressing Ctrl-C might not be audible
immediately, due to audio data buffering in the audio device.
This delay is system dependent, but it is usually not more
than one or two seconds.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR wget (1),
.BR sox (1),
.SH NOTES
MPEG audio decoding requires a good deal of CPU performance,
especially layer-3. To decode it in realtime, you should
have at least an i486DX4, Pentium, Alpha, SuperSparc or equivalent
processor. You can also use the
.B -m
option to decode mono only, which reduces the CPU load
somewhat for layer-3 streams. See also the
.BR \-2 " and " \-4
options.
.P
If everything else fails, use the
.B \-s
option to decode to standard output, direct it into a file
and then use an appropriate utility to play that file.
You might have to use a tool such as
.BR sox (1)
to convert the output to an audio format suitable for
your audio player.
.P
If your system is generally fast enough to decode in
realtime, but there are sometimes periods of heavy
system load (such as cronjobs, users logging in remotely,
starting of ``big'' programs etc.) causing the
audio output to be interrupted, then you should use
the
.B \-b
option to use a buffer of reasonable size (at least 1000 Kbytes).
.SH BUGS
.P
Mostly MPEG-1 layer 2 and 3 are tested in real life.
Please report any issues and provide test files to help fixing them.
.P
Free format streams are not supported, but they could be (there is some code).
.P
No CRC error checking is performed.
.P
Some platforms lack audio hardware support; you may be able to use the
.B -s
switch to feed the decoded data to a program that can play it on your audio device.
Notably, this includes Tru64 with MME, but you should be able to install and use OSS there (it perhaps will perform better as MME would anyway).
.SH AUTHORS
.TP
Maintainers:
.br
Thomas Orgis <maintainer@mpg123.org>, <thomas@orgis.org>
.br
Nicholas J. Humfrey
.TP
Creator:
.br
Michael Hipp
.TP
Uses code or ideas from various people, see the AUTHORS file accompanying the source code.
.SH LICENSE
.B mpg123
is licensed under the GNU Lesser/Library General Public License, LGPL, version 2.1 .
.SH WEBSITE
http://www.mpg123.org
.br
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mpg123