This file documents the ``Extended'' VLC CD-DA Plugin Copyright (C) 2003 Rocky Bernstein (rocky@panix.com) Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the Invariant Sections being ``Free Software'' and ``Free Software Needs Free Documentation'', with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual,'' and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. (a) The Free Software Foundation's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.'' - - - - - - Features over the older VLC CD-DA plugin Internally I think this is much much cleaner. It uses the libcdio for disk reading and libcddb to get CDDB information. MRL handling: - Can specify device as well as track. - Because we use the libcdio library, the "device" can be a disk image to be burned (e.g. a cdrdao bin/cue pair and some primitive Nero support) Features: - Can customize the what to show in the play-list title and author. - Duration of each track is shown - Media information is shown using CDDB - Dynamic debugging - Will scan for a CD-ROM drive with a CD-DA loaded in it. ----------------------------------------------------------------- General Info ----------------------------------------------------------------- Much of what I write in this section can be found elsewhere. See for example http://www.pctechguide.com/08cd-rom.htm, or the libcdio documentation. The Sony and Philips Corporations invented and Compact Disc (CD) in the early 1980s. The specifications for the layout is often referred to by the color of the cover on the specification. The first type of CD specification that was produced was the Compact Disc Digital Audio (CD-DA) or just plain ``audio CD'' and is commonly called the ``Red Book''. Music CD's are recorded in this format which basically allows for around 74 minutes of audio per disc and for that information to be split up into *tracks*. Tracks are broken up into "sectors" and each sector contains 2,352 bytes. To play one 44.1 kHz CD-DA sampled audio second, 75 sectors are used. A CD can hold at most 99 such tracks. Between the tracks CD specifications require a ``2 second'' in gap (called a @term{lead-in gap}. This is unused space with no ``data'' similar to the space between tracks on an old phonograph. The word ``second'' here really refers to a measure of space and not really necessarily an amount of time. However in the special case here where you have an audio CD, the amount of time to play a gap of this size will take 2 seconds. Note this is independent of how fast your CD drive can read a sector. The beginning (or inner edge) of the CD is supposed to have a ``2 second'' lead-in gap and there is supposed to be another ``2 second'' *lead-out* gap at the end (or outer edge) of the CD. CD-DA ``Red Book'' Specification One can create and then write or "burn" a CD in the CD-DA format and in this process sometimes one writes the bytes that will appear as a file on a hard disk. This is called a "CD disk image". This plugin may be able to play this file just the same as if it were burned onto a CD. As there are a number of CD-burning programs, there are a number of CD-image formats. This plugin uses libcdio which currently understands the BIN/CUE disk-image format used by a popular DOS/Window mastering tool and a limited subset of the proprietary and unpublished form at used by the Nero burning software. Over time however perhaps more disk-image formats will be recognized. Audio CD Identification Information (CDDB) The Philips Red-Book specification allows for a Compact Disc to have a Media Catalog Number or MCN written on it, and probably this was how they CD's would be identified. Alas, very few audio discs actually have a Medium Catalog Number on the box, and the way the code is written on CD is *not* uniform across all discs! However the listening community wanted a way to identify an audio CD, so a database of CD information was gathered by basically making a ``signature'' or hash from the number of tracks on a disk and a checksum of the bytes of the tracks. This is referred to as CDDB information. Using the hash the database gives information about the titles of the tracks, the CD album name, year it was published and so on. This plugin has the ability to show this information courtesy of libcddb written by Kris Verbeeck. ----------------------------------------------------------------- MRLS: ----------------------------------------------------------------- the vlc CD-DA plugin, identifies itself in the vlc GUI as CDDAX. It also registers itelf to handle a class of MRL's that start with cddax://. The CDDAX MRL takes the following form: cddax://[path to file or CD-DA device][@[Tt]number]] A simple cddax:// runs the default item: track 1 using the default CD device (perhaps /dev/cdrom). The default default device is user-configurable. It is however also possible to specify both Compact Disc device/filename and item explicitly in the MRL. For example cddax://dev/cdrom2 specifies using device /dev/cdrom2 which might useful if as I have /dev/cdrom is a burner and the /dev/cdrom2 is a read-only device. And cddax://test_cdda.cue specifies the "cuesheet" file for a CD-DA image on disk created say with cdrdao. (test_cdda.bin is the corresponding bin file, but using that won't work.) After the optional device name or file name, you can name the track number unit which preceded by a @ or an @ and T in either case. A MRL which ends in an @ is like not adding it at all. Some examples of MRLS are given below. In the examples, we assume the following configuration setting: cdda.default_device:/dev/cdrom cddax:// - track 1 of device: /dev/cdrom cddax://@ - same as above cddax:///dev/cdrom - probably same as above cddax:///dev/cdrom2 - track 1 of /dev/cdrom2 cddax:///dev/cdrom2@ - same as above cddax://dev/cdrom2@53 - track 53 from /dev/cdrom2 cddax://dev/cdrom2@T53 - Same as above cddax://dev/cdrom2@t53 - Same as above cddax://@2 - track 2 from default device cddax://3 - track 3 from default device cddax:///tmp/ntsc.cue - track 1 from /tmp/ntsc.bin, (a bin/cue disk image) cddax:///tmp/ntsc.cue@ - same as above cddax://tmp/ntsc.cue@ - track 1 of tmp/ntsc.bin. NOT the the same as above unless the cwd is /. cddax://ntsc.nrg - track 1 of ntsc.nrg (a nero disk image) cddax://tmp/ntsc.nrg@5 - track 5 of /tmp/ntsc.nrg Bad MRL's cddax://@x - x is not a number cddax/tmp - no colon cddax:/ - must start cddax:// ----------------------------------------------------------------- Configuration settings: ----------------------------------------------------------------- Configuration settings in vlc are generally put in ~/.vlc/vlcrc. A description of the ones specific to CDDAX are listed below. - - cddax-cddb-title-format This gives a format used in the playlist title string when CDDB is consulted. Similar to the Unix date command, there are format specifiers that start with a percent sign for which various information is filled in dynamically. The control specifiers are given as below %a : The album artist %A : The album information %C : Category %I : CDDB disk ID %G : Genre %M : The current MRL %m : The CD-DA Media Catalog Number (MCN) %n : The number of tracks on the CD %p : The artist/performer/composer in the track %T : The track number %s : Number of seconds in this track %t : The name %Y : The year 19xx or 20xx %% : a % The default is Track %T. %t - %p - - cddax-title-format This gives a format used in the playlist title string when CDDB is *NOT* consulted. Similar to the Unix date command, there are format specifiers that start with a percent sign for which various information is filled in dynamically. The control specifiers are given as below %M : The current MRL %m : The CD-DA Media Catalog Number (MCN) %n : The number of tracks on the CD %T : The track number %s : Number of seconds in this track %% : a % The default is %T %M - - cddax-cddb-email # email given on cddb requests # string, default: me@home - - cddax-cddb-enabled # Do we use CDDB to retrieve CD information? # bool, default: 1 - - cddax-cddb-http # Contact CDDB via the HTTP protocol? # bool, default: 0 - - cddax-cddb-port # numeric, default: 8880 - - cddax-cddb-server # The server CDDB contacts to get CD info # string, default: freedb.freedb.org - - cddax-debug An integer (interpreted as a bit mask) which shows additional debugging information see the section below on debugging for more information about the bits that can be set. - - cddax-device What to use if no drive specified. If null, we'll scan for CD drives with a CD-DA loaded in it. # string, default: ----------------------------------------------------------------- Troubleshooting Guide ----------------------------------------------------------------- This gives higher-level troubleshooting. More detailed and lower-level information is given in the next section DEBUGGING. Problem: I don't get anything playing. I can't even get a playlist of the CD. Determination: start at step 1. Problem: Okay, I something plays menu now. But I don't see information about the CD in the playlist. Determination: start at step 5. 1. Do you even have the plugin loaded? When you run the vlc GUI, under Settings/Preferences you should see a "plugins" expandable list and under that another "access" list do you see a expandable entry under "access" labeled "cddax"? If so, skip on to step 2. a) If no "cddax" expandable list, then the CDDAX plugin isn't loaded. Does a shared object exist? The plugin shared object is called "libcddax_plugin.so" It should be in the directory that has ...vlc/access. If this isn't around you need to build and install the CDDAX plugin. b) if libcddax_plugin.so is in the filesystem, there might be a loader error; perhaps libcdio is not installed or are the wrong version. Use ldd on the file to see that it has all of the libraries dependencies satisfied. Also you might be able check if there was an attempt to load it by tracking system calls. On Linux and other OS's) "strace" can be used to see if the file gets accessed. On Solaris use "truss". For example on Linux, among the many line of output when I run "strace -e trace=file vlc" I see this along with a lot of other output: ... stat64("/usr/local/lib/vlc/access/libcddax_plugin.so", {st_mode=S_IFREG|0755, st_size=238921, ...}) = 0 open("/usr/local/lib/vlc/access/libcddax_plugin.so", O_RDONLY) = 5 The parameters inside the calls may be different depending on where vlc is installed and what release is installed. If the the file is found and "opened", There may also be a message may under "setup/logs". 2. (There plugin was loaded and preferences found). In the "cddax" tab of preference. An important selection is "cddax-device." If this is set to the empty string, CDDAX will try to scan your drives for a suitable device if the driver has the capability to scan for drives. However you can set the device to something of your choosing. On GNU/Linux, this may be "/dev/cdrom" and on Solaris it may be "/vol/dev/aliases/cdrom0". If you set this field, make sure these are correct for your particular setup. For example, I generally play out of the DVD device and this is called /dev/dvd rather than /dev/cdrom. 3. (CD-DA Setup devices seems correct and there is a CD in the drive). Bring up the playlist. If you specified only a drive and no track, you should see in the playlist a list of tracks on the CD. a. If not something's wrong like step 2. Another tack may be to try to read a disk image of a CD and thus eliminate any problems with hardware. If this works, then this is a hardware problem. 4. (You have a list of entries describing the CD-DA or disk-file of a CD-DA image.) There should be at least one "track" listed for the CD-DA and track 1 will end with the digit 1. If there are NO tracks listed then there may be a problem with the that particular medium. So as in step 3 you can try a known good sample and perhaps burn a CD from that. 5. <> ----------------------------------------------------------------- Debugging ----------------------------------------------------------------- **General vlc debugging... Before delving to things specific to this plugin, some preparation may be in order. You'll probably want to configure vlc with "--enable-debug". plugin with debug information. Instead of "make'ing" with "make", use "make debug" and instead of installing using "make install" use "make install-debug". I use gdb to debug. Debugging vlc with the entire suite of plugins under gdb is slow because it has to read in symbol tables from all the plugins. There are two ways to make loading faster when debugging. The simplest is just to go to the plugin directory and remove unused plugins. Another approach is create a new directory and make (symbolic) links into the complete plugin directory. Another way to speed up gdb loading is to attach the debugger after vlc has started up via a command like: gdb -p *pid-of-vlc-process* **cddax debugging... It's a fact of life that this plugin may be in an incomplete state and/or will have bugs. So to facilitate tracking down problems we let you see what's going on dynamically. Various debugging settings will cause output to appear on vlc's plugin log and/or "standard error" (assuming you've run vlc in a way that you can capture this). You think of debug switches as a bit mask, that you specify as an integers the various "bit" values (given in decimal) are listed below. name value description ---------- ----- ----------- META 1 Meta information EVENT 2 Trace keyboard events MRL 4 MRL debugging EXT 8 Calls from external routines CALL 16 all calls LSN 32 LSN changes SEEK 64 Seeks to set location CDIO 128 Debugging from CDIO library routines CDDB 256 debugging from CDDB library routines **CD debugging... The tool cd-info from libcdio can be used to show the contents and analyze the contents of a CD. The tool cd-read from libcdio can be used to show the sectors of the CD or CD image or extract sectors. $Id: intf-cdda.txt,v 1.4 2003/12/18 12:35:26 rocky Exp $