MusicPlayerPlus is a character-based console and terminal window music player
- plus Beets media library management with preconfigured plugins
- plus Character-based spectrum visualizer
mppcava
- plus Music Player Daemon and ALSA configuration management
- plus Mopidy Music Server with preconfigured extensions
- plus Navidrome Music Server/Streamer automated install/config/service
- plus Spotify and YouTube Music players
- plus Bliss acoustic analysis and song similarity database
- plus Essentia acoustic analysis and metadata extraction
- plus YAMS MPD Last.fm scrobbler running as a service
- plus Media fuzzy finder using
fzf
- plus Album cover art download
- plus Bandcamp collections download
- plus Soundcloud favorites download
- plus Discogs user collection to markdown generator
- plus Automated setup, import and organization, metadata, playlists, ...
- Overview
- Quickstart
- Installation
- Post Installation Configuration
- Client Configuration (required)
- MusicPlayerPlus Configuration File
- MPD Music Directory Configuration
- Initializing the Beets media library management system
- Additional metadata analysis and retrieval
- Activating the YAMS scrobbler for Last.fm
- MPD Audio Output Configuration
- Fuzzy Finder Configuration
- Start MPD
- System verification checks
- Initialize Music Database
- Installing Mopidy
- Installing Navidrome
- Spotify and YouTube Music players
- Terminal Emulator Support
- Discogs User Collection
- MusicPlayerPlus Services and Clients
- Documentation
- Removal
- Troubleshooting
- Infrared remote control of MPD
- Screenshots
- Videos
- Building MusicPlayerPlus from source
- Contributing
The MusicPlayerPlus project provides integration and extension of several audio packages designed to stream and play music. MusicPlayerPlus interacts with the Music Player Daemon (MPD). Outputs from the MPD streaming audio server are used as MusicPlayerPlus inputs for playback and visualization. MusicPlayerPlus components are used to manage and control MPD and ALSA configuration.
MusicPlayerPlus integrations and extensions are primarily aimed at the character-based terminal user. They enable an easy to use seamlessly integrated control of audio streaming, playing, music library management, and visualization in a lightweight character-based environment.
Audio streaming is provided by the Music Player Daemon (MPD).
At the core of MusicPlayerPlus is the mpplus
command which acts as
a front-end for a variety of terminal and/or tmux
sessions.
The mpplus
command can be used to invoke:
- The lightweight character-based MPD client,
mpcplus
- One or more terminal emulators running an MPD client and visualizer
- A tmux session using the tmux session manager
tmuxp
- A spectrum visualizer
- A download of album cover art for every album in a music library
- Conversion of all WAV/M4A format media in a music library to MP3 format media
- An import of a music library to the Beets media library manager
- A download of lyrics for all songs in the music library without lyrics
- Analysis and retrieval of audio-based information for media matching a query
- YAMS MPD Last.fm scrobbler activation
- Any MPD client the user wishes to run
- One of several asciimatics animations optionally accompanied by audio
- A fuzzy listing and searching of the audio library using
fzf
[Note:] Typical use of mpplus
as a music player and spectrum visualizer
will invoke a tmux
session to display the MPD client, spectrum visualizer, and
album cover art all in a single terminal window. MusicPlayerPlus configures
tmux
with a custom key binding to exit tmux sessions. To exit an mpplus
tmux session, the Alt-x
key binding can be used.
Integration is provided for:
- mpd, the Music Player Daemon
- mpcplus, character-based MPD client
- beets, media library management system
- essentia, acoustic metadata analysis and extraction
- mopidy, music server with cool extensions
- navidrome, self-hosted music server and streamer
- yams, MPD scrobbler for Last.fm
- cava, an audio spectrum visualizer
- mplayer, a media player
- fzf, interactive fuzzy finder
- asciimatics - automatically display a variety of character-based animation effects
- asciinema - automatically create ascii character-based video clips
- tmux, a terminal multiplexer
- tmuxp, a tmux session manager
- Enhanced key bindings for extended control of terminal windows and tmux sessions
- Several terminal emulators
- kitty (the default MusicPlayerPlus terminal emulator)
- cool-retro-term
- gnome-terminal
- tilix
The goal of MusicPlayerPlus is to provide the user with a sophisticated set of complex music library tools that can be integrated and managed in a fairly simple to understand fashion. Also, to make some cool looking powerful stuff happen from the command-line in a character-based environment.
MusicPlayerPlus is compiled and packaged for installation on Linux platforms. It has been tested on the following platforms:
- Arch Linux
- CentOS Linux
- Fedora Linux
- Raspberry Pi OS
- Ubuntu Linux
Installation and initialization require admistrative privilege. The mppinit
command, executed after installing MusicPlayerPlus, installs several packages
and therefore requires access to the Internet along with administrative
privilege (e.g. sudo
privilege).
Memory and storage requirements depend upon the size of the music library.
With a moderate sized music library, the Music Player Daemon can exceed a 2GB memory capacity. Therefore, 4GB or more of memory is recommended.
Storage should be sized to adequately host what will likely be a growing music library. Plan ahead and leave your library room to grow. A few hundred Gigabytes of storage might suffice for some music libraries but a Terabyte or more will provide room to grow. Testing is performed on systems with 4GB RAM and 2TB storage using a 600GB music library.
Essentia metadata extraction, Blissify similarity analysis, and transcoding all consume significant CPU resources. Testing has been performed on systems with the following CPU resources:
- 8 x Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-7700K CPU @ 4.20GHz
- 2 x Intel(R) Celeron(R) CPU G1840 @ 2.80GHz
- 4 x ARMv7 Processor rev 3 (v7l)
All of these processors were able to handle significant loads. However, import, metadata extraction, and transcoding are all much quicker on the 8 x Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-7700K CPU @ 4.20GHz system. Although not necessary, these infrequent operations consume much less time on a more powerful CPU.
MusicPlayerPlus adds the following commands to your system:
- mpplus : Primary user interface, invokes an MPD client, spectrum visualizer, and more
- mpcplus : Featureful NCurses MPD client, compiled with spectrum visualizer
- mppinit : One-time initializaton of a user's mpcplus configuration
- mppcover : Display album cover art for currently playing song
- mppdl : Downloads audio tracks from Bandcamp, Soundcloud, or a URL
- mpcplus-tmux : Runs mpcplus, a visualizer, and displays album art in a tmux session
- mppsplash-tmux : Runs mppsplash, a visualizer, in a tmux session
- mppsplash : Fun ascii art screens using ASCIImatics animations. Ascii art commands:
- mppjulia : ASCIImatics animated zoom on a Julia Set
- mppplasma : ASCIImatics animated plasma graphic
- mpprocks : ASCIImatics animated MusicPlayerPlus splash screen
- raise_cava : Raises the mppcava spectrum visualizer window
- set_term_trans : Sets an xfce4-terminal window's transparency level
- fzmp : Browse, search, and manage MPD library using
fzf
fuzzy finder andmpc
MPD client - artist_to_albumartist : Copies the Artist tag to the AlbumArtist tag
- create_playlist : Create a new playlist using a Beets query
- listyt : List YouTube video titles and urls
- bliss-analyze : Acoustic analysis of audio files
- blissify : Create MPD playlists using song similarity
- essentia_streaming_extractor_music : Analyze and extract acoustic characteristics
- mpd-configure : Create an MPD configuration file optimized for bit perfect playback
- mpd-monitor : Display info on currently playing MPD song
The bliss-analyze
and blissify
commands are currently not available on
Raspberry Pi installations due to lack of support for that architecture in
the ffmpeg
library.
[Note:] MusicPlayerPlus functions as a front-end and management system for
any MPD/Mopidy/Navidrome client. The default MPD client is mpcplus
but any
MPD client can be configured by setting MPD_CLIENT
in ~/.config/mpprc
.
While mpcplus
is the recommended MPD client, ncmpcpp
is also supported
with some integration for visualizer data source management. Other MPD clients
available for use with MusicPlayerPlus include ncmpc, pms, vimpc, pimpd2,
nncmpp, mmtc, and mpq.
Additional detail and info can be found in the MusicPlayerPlus Wiki.
- Create a music library if you do not already have one
- Default MusicPlayerPlus location for the music library is
$HOME/Music
- Recommended structure of the music library is
artist/album/songs
- Default MusicPlayerPlus location for the music library is
- Install the latest Arch, Debian, or RPM format installation package from the MusicPlayerPlus Releases page
- Run the
mppinit
command as your normal user- Searches
$HOME/Music
and$HOME/music
for music library location - The music library location can be specified with
mppinit -l /path/to/library
- Searches
For many installations, installing the MusicPlayerPlus package and initializing
the user configuration with the mppinit
command is all that need be done.
Some common additional setup steps that can be performed include:
- Configuring the music library location
- Download albums in your Bandcamp collections
- Download favorites in your Soundcloud account
- Converting WAV/M4A format media files to MP3 format
- Importing a music library into the Beets library management system
- Downloading album cover art
- Downloading additional lyrics
- Activation of YAMS scrobbler for Last.fm
- Analysis and retrieval of audio-based information for media matching a query
Configure the music library location by editing ~/.config/mpprc
and setting
MUSIC_DIR
to your music library location (default setting is ~/Music
).
Optionally configure any additional settings in ~/.config/mpprc
such as
your preferred terminal emulator, Bandcamp username, Soundcloud slug, or
more. Any changes to ~/.config/mpprc
must be followed by running the command
mppinit sync
.
[Important Note:] MusicPlayerPlus integrates several services, each of
which has its own configuration for the location of the music library. Because
of this, MusicPlayerPlus provides its own configuration file
~/.config/mpprc
. The MUSIC_DIR
setting in that config file is used as the
source of truth for the location of the music library. In order to keep all
of the services in sync with respect to the music library location, set the
location in ~/.config/mpprc
and run the command mppinit sync
.
If the music library is moved to a new location, repeat this procedure.
Download albums in your Bandcamp collections with mppinit bandcamp
.
Download favorites in your Soundcloud account with mppinit soundcloud
.
The following optional post-initialization steps can be performed individually
as described below or they can be performed in two steps using mppinit
.
Step 1, import the music library into Beets:
mppinit import
The mppinit import
command converts any WAV format media to MP3 format
and imports the music library into the Beets media library management system.
[Note:] A Beets import can take hours for a large music library. A test import using a music library over 500GB in size, with nearly 4000 artists, 3000 albums, and over 30,000 tracks consumed nearly 12 hours. Import times will vary from system to system and library to library depending on several factors. The above test may provide a ballpark idea of the length of time a Beets library import might take.
When the import is complete
Step 2, retrieve additional metadata:
mppinit metadata
The mppinit metadata
command identifies and deletes duplicate tracks,
retrieves album genres from Last.fm, downloads album cover art, and
(optionally) analyzes and retrieves metadata for all songs in the music library.
[Note:] A Beets metadata retrieval can take hours for a large music library.
The MusicPlayerPlus default Beets configuration uses ffmpeg
to compute
checksums for every track in the library to find duplicates.
An optional audio analysis can be performed during metadata retrieval. MusicPlayerPlus provides several optional methods for acoustic analysis. The method used for acoustic analysis and retrieval can be specified on the command line:
- AcousticBrainz metadata retrieval (deprecated)
mppinit -a metadata
- Blissify acoustic analysis of the MPD music library (the default)
mppinit -b metadata
- Essentia acoustic analysis and Beets metadata retrieval (long)
mppinit -e metadata
If none of the -a, -b, or -e
options are specified then acoustic
analysis, extraction, and retrieval is performed by Essentia.
The AcousticBrainz service is the fastest method but is being retired in 2023, the service is no longer being updated, and it is often inaccurate.
The Essentia acoustic analysis is the most thorough, adds acoustic metadata to the Beets library management system, and provides the greatest flexibility but at a cost of possibly days of analysis and extraction time. Metadata analysis and extraction with Essentia is the default behavior.
The Blissify analysis creates a similarity database of all songs in the music library. This can be used to automate the creation of playlists and other actions. The drawback of using Blissify is it does not add acoustic metadata to the Beets library so the results of a Blissify analysis are only available to Blissify and not Beets.
[Note:] Acoustic analysis with blissify
is currently not available on
Raspberry Pi installations due to lack of support for that architecture in
the ffmpeg
library.
It is sometimes desirable to augment one acoustic analysis with another. For example, the AcousticBrainz service seems to think a lot of songs have 0 beets per minute and tags them erroneously. After retrieving metadata using AcousticBrainz, list the songs that have a bpm value of 0:
beet list bpm:0
These songs can get an accurate setting for bpm and other audio parameters
by following the mppinit -a metadata
command with mpplus -X bpm:0
.
Download albums in your Bandcamp collections with mppinit bandcamp
.
Download favorites in your Soundcloud account with mppinit soundcloud
.
Convert WAV or M4A format media files in your library to MP3 format files with
the command mpplus -F
or mpplus -G
. Conversion from WAV to MP3 allows these
files to be imported into the Beets media library management system. Conversion
from M4A (Apple ALAC) to MP3 allows these files to be streamed and played in all
browsers supporting HTML5 audio (not necessary with Navidrome streaming).
If you wish to manage your music library with Beets, import the music library
with the command mpplus -I
.
Album cover art can be downloaded with the command mpplus -D art
.
Bandcamp collections can be downloaded with the command mpplus -D bandcamp
.
Soundcloud favorites can be downloaded with the command mpplus -D soundcloud
.
Download additional lyrics with the command mpplus -L
.
Activate the YAMS scrobbler for Last.fm with the command mpplus -Y
.
Analysis and retrieval of audio-based information can be performed with
the command mpplus -X 'query'
where 'query' is a Beets library query.
The special query term 'all' indicates the entire music library, i.e.
mpplus -X all
. Alternatively, query the AcousticBrainz service with
mpplus -x all
or create a "song similarity" database using Blissify
with mpplus -B
.
These common additional setup steps and more are covered in greater detail in the MusicPlayerPlus Beets README and the Post Installation Configuration section below.
To summarize, a MusicPlayer quickstart can be accomplished by:
- Install the latest Arch, Debian, or RPM format installation package
- Run
mppinit
ormppinit -l /path/to/library
as your normal user - If the music library location was not properly detected:
- Configure
MUSIC_DIR
by editing~/.config/mpprc
- Run the command
mppinit sync
- Configure
- Optionally:
- Modify user-specific settings in
~/.config/mpprc
and runmppinit sync
- Download albums in your Bandcamp collections with
mppinit bandcamp
- Download favorites in your Soundcloud account with
mppinit soundcloud
- Perform these steps with the command
mppinit import
- Convert WAV format files to MP3 format with the command
mpplus -F
- Import your music library into Beets with the command
mpplus -I
- Convert WAV format files to MP3 format with the command
- Perform these steps with the command
mppinit metadata
- Remove duplicate tracks with the command
beet duplicates -d
- Rename tracks left after duplicate removal with
beet move
- Download album cover art with the command
mpplus -D art
- Analyze and retrieve audio-based information with a command like:
mpplus -B
creates a "song similarity" database with Blissifympplus -X all
analyze the entire Beets library with Essentiampplus -X 'query'
where 'query' is a Beets library querympplus -x all
query AcousticBrainz for the entire Beets library
- Remove duplicate tracks with the command
- Activate the YAMS scrobbler for Last.fm with the command
mpplus -Y
- Download additional lyrics with the command
mpplus -L
- Modify user-specific settings in
The entire full tilt boogie initialization, for those with both Bandcamp and Soundcloud accounts with songs and albums in a collection or liked, and who wish to apply thorough, reliable, complete, and accurate metadata:
# Initialize MusicPlayerPlus, activate Music Player Daemon
# This is the only required setup step
mppinit
# For Bandcamp and Soundcloud users, a convenient way to download
mppinit bandcamp
mppinit soundcloud
# Beets library import (can take hours)
mppinit import
# Install, configure, and activate Mopidy music server
mppinit mopidy
# Install, configure, and activate Navidrome streaming music server
mppinit navidrome
# Perform analysis and extraction of acoustic metadata with Essentia
# This background process can take hours or even days for a large library
mppinit metadata
MusicPlayerPlus v2.0.1 and later can be installed on Linux systems using the Arch packaging format, the Debian packaging format, or the Red Hat Package Manager (RPM).
MusicPlayerPlus has been tested successfully on the following platforms:
- Arch Linux 2022.07.01
MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>-any.pkg.tar.zst
- Ubuntu Linux 20.04
MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.deb
- Fedora Linux 36
MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.rpm
- CentOS Linux 8
MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.rpm
- Raspbian Linux 11
MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.deb
Many Linux distributions, most notably Ubuntu and its derivatives, use the Debian packaging system.
To tell if a Linux system is Debian based it is usually sufficient to
check for the existence of the file /etc/debian_version
and/or examine the
contents of the file /etc/os-release
.
To install on a Debian based Linux system, download the latest Debian format package from the MusicPlayerPlus Releases.
Install the MusicPlayerPlus package by executing the command
sudo apt install ./MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.deb
or
sudo dpkg -i ./MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.deb
or, on a Raspberry Pi:
sudo apt install ./MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.deb
or
sudo dpkg -i ./MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.deb
Red Hat Linux, SUSE Linux, and their derivatives use the RPM packaging format. RPM based Linux distributions include Fedora, AlmaLinux, CentOS, openSUSE, OpenMandriva, Mandrake Linux, Red Hat Linux, and Oracle Linux.
To install on an RPM based Linux system, download the latest RPM format package from the MusicPlayerPlus Releases.
Install the MusicPlayerPlus package by executing the command
sudo dnf localinstall ./MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.rpm
or
sudo rpm -i ./MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>.rpm
Arch Linux, Manjaro, and other Arch Linux derivatives use the Pacman packaging format. In addition to Arch Linux, Arch based Linux distributions include ArchBang, Arch Linux, Artix Linux, ArchLabs, Asahi Linux, BlackArch, Chakra Linux, EndeavourOS, Frugalware Linux, Garuda Linux, Hyperbola GNU/Linux-libre, LinHES, Manjaro, Parabola GNU/Linux-libre, SteamOS, and SystemRescue.
To install on an Arch based Linux system, download the latest Pacman format package from the MusicPlayerPlus Releases.
Install the MusicPlayerPlus package by executing the command
sudo pacman -U ./MusicPlayerPlus_<version>-<release>-any.pkg.tar.zst
[Note:] Extensive post-installation steps are covered here.
Minimal post-installation configuration required is the execution
of the command mppinit
. If the MPD music library is located in
the default $HOME/Music
directory then no further configuration
may be necessary. See the Quickstart section.
After installing MusicPlayerPlus there are several recommended
configuration steps. If not already configured, the MPD server
will need to know where to locate your music library. This can
be configured by editing the MusicPlayerPlus configuration file
~/.config/mpprc
and running the command mppinit sync
.
Initialize the MusicPlayerPlus configuration by executing the command:
mppinit
Examine the generated configuration in ~/.config/mpprc
and make any desired changes.
The client configuration performed by mppinit
includes the configuration
of an MPD user service. The configuration, files, and folders used by
this user level MPD service are stored in ~/.config/mpd/
. Examine the
generated MPD configuration file ~/.config/mpd/mpd.conf
.
MusicPlayerPlus 2.0.1 release 3 and later provides the configuration file
~/.config/mpprc
which serves as the primary source for MusicPlayerPlus
user configurable settings. This configuration file is the "source of truth"
for several settings including the music library location. Settings in
mpprc
are propogated throughout several other component's configurations.
The settings in mpprc
are dynamic and preserved across command invocations.
The dynamic nature of this configuration file means that options specified
on the mpplus
command line or in the mpplus
menu system are written back
out to ~/.config/mpprc
so the next invocation of mpplus
will use the
previous invocation's options and settings as the default.
The default installed mpprc
contains:
## MusicPlayerPlus runtime configuration
#
# After modifying any of the following settings, run the command:
# mppinit sync
# as your normal MusicPlayerPlus user
## Music library location
#
MUSIC_DIR="~/Music"
# MPD client
MPD_CLIENT="mpcplus"
## General settings
#
# To enable any of these, set to 1
# For example, to enable cover art display in tmux sessions set COVER_ART=1
#
# Play audio during asciimatics animations
AUDIO=1
# Display cover art in tmux sessions
COVER_ART=1
# Display mpcplus and mppcava in a tmux session
USE_TMUX=1
## Terminal emulator / display mode
#
# Can be one of: console, current, gnome, kitty, retro, simple, tilix
# Where:
# 'console' will force a tmux session
# 'current' will force a tmux session in the current terminal window
# 'gnome' will use the gnome-terminal emulator if installed
# 'kitty' will use the Kitty terminal emulator if installed
# 'retro' will use cool-retro-term if installed
# 'simple' will use the ST terminal emulator if installed
# 'tilix' will use the Tilix terminal emulator if installed
# Default fallback if none specified or not available is Kitty
#
# Uncomment the preferred mode
#MPP_MODE=console
#MPP_MODE=current
#MPP_MODE=gnome
#MPP_MODE=retro
#MPP_MODE=simple
#MPP_MODE=tilix
MPP_MODE=kitty
## Service access
#
# The Bandcamp username can be found by visiting Bandcamp 'Settings' -> 'Fan'
# If you do not have a Bandcamp account, leave blank
BANDCAMP_USER=
# The Discogs username can be found by visiting discogs.com. Login, use the
# dropdown of your user icon in the upper right corner, click on 'Profile'.
# Your Discogs username is the last component of the profile URL.
DISCOGS_USER=
# The Discogs API token can be found by visiting
# https://www.discogs.com/settings/developers
DISCOGS_TOKEN=
# Location of the generated custom Discogs Obsidian vault
# Can be anywhere you have write permission
DISCOGS_DIR="~/Documents/Obsidian/Discogs"
# Your Last.fm username, api key, and api secret
# If you do not have a Last.fm account, leave blank
LASTFM_USER=
LASTFM_APIKEY=
LASTFM_SECRET=
# The Soundcloud user slug can be found by logging in to Soundcloud
# click on the username at top right then 'Profile'. The user slug
# is the last component of the URL when viewing your Soundcloud Profile.
# If you do not have a Soundcloud account, leave blank
SOUNDCLOUD_SLUG=
# Your Spotify client id and client secret
# If you do not have a Spotify account, leave blank
SPOTIFY_CLIENT=
SPOTIFY_SECRET=
# Your YouTube api key
# If you do not have a YouTube account, leave blank
YOUTUBE_APIKEY=
After mppinit
completes the MusicPlayerPlus initialization, edit the
~/.config/mpprc
configuration file and run mppinit sync
.
[Note:] MusicPlayerPlus version 1.0.3 release 1 and later perform
an automated MPD user configuration and systemd service activation.
This is performed by the mppinit
command. MusicPlayerPlus 1.0.3r1
and later installations need not perform the following manual procedures
but users may wish to review the automated MPD configuration and alter
the default MPD music directory location.
The default MPD and mpcplus
music directory is set to:
$HOME/Music
If your media library resides in another location then perform the following
steps and run mppinit sync
:
- Edit
$HOME/.config/mpprc
and set theMUSIC_DIR
entry to the location of your music library (e.g.vi ~/.config/mpprc
) - Run the
mppinit sync
command
For example, to set the MPD music directory to the /u/audio/music
directory,
edit $HOME/.config/mpprc
and change the MUSIC_DIR setting:
MUSIC_DIR="/u/audio/music"
The MUSIC_DIR location must be writeable by your user.
Any time the MPD music directory is manually modified, run mppinit sync
.
[Note:] Beets is NOT the now defunct music service purchased by Apple. It is an open source media library management system.
MusicPlayerPlus includes the Beets media library management system
and preconfigured settings to allow easy integration with MPD and mpcplus
.
Beets is an application that catalogs your music collection, automatically
improving its metadata. It then provides a suite of tools for manipulating
and accessing your music. Beets includes an extensive set of plugins that
can be used to enhance and extend the functionality of the media library
management Beets provides. Many Beets plugins are installed and configured
automatically by MusicPlayerPlus.
To get started using the Beets media library management system, it is necessary to import your music library into the Beets database. This process catalogs your music collection and improves its metadata. The default Beets configuration provided by MusicPlayerPlus moves and tags files in the music library during this process. It adds music library data to the Beets database. To import your music library into Beets, issue the following command:
mppinit import
or to skip WAV format media conversion and just perform the Beets import:
mpplus -I
[Note:] If additional songs or albums are added to the music library
after the initial Beets import is performed, simply rerun mppinit import
or beet import /path/to/new/items
to import any new library items.
To remove duplicates and retrieve metadata for the newly imported items,
run mppinit metadata
.
After importing the music library into Beets, try playing something with:
beet play QUERY
Where 'QUERY' is a valid
Beets query.
This can be a simple string like
"blue" or "love" or a more complicated expression as described in the
Beets query documentation. The Beets play
plugin should match the
query string to songs in your music library, add those songs to the
MPD queue, and play them. Use beet ls QUERY
to see what would be played.
[Note:] MusicPlayerPlus has configured the Beets play plugin
to use the command /usr/share/musicplayerplus/scripts/mpcplay.sh
to play media with this plugin. This script clears the MPD queue,
adds any songs matching the query to the queue, and plays the MPD queue.
In addition, two arguments are supported: --shuffle
and --debug
.
These additional arguments are passed using the --args
feature.
For example, to play all media matching the string "velvet" and shuffle
the order of play, issue the command beet play --args --shuffle velvet
.
Example usage of the beet play
command:
beet play velvet
beet play playlist:1970s
beet play --args --shuffle playlist:1990s
beet play --args "--debug --shuffle" green eyes
For instructions on Beets media library setup and use see the MusicPlayerPlus Beets README.
Learn more about the Beets media library management system at https://beets.io/
MusicPlayerPlus includes two supported methods for augmenting music library metadata through acoustic analysis. These two methods are:
- Essentia acoustic analysis and Beets metadata retrieval
- initialized with
mppinit -e metadata
- initialized with
- Blissify acoustic analysis of the MPD music library
- initialized with
mppinit -b metadata
- initialized with
A third method using AcousticBrainz is no longer supported:
- AcousticBrainz metadata retrieval (deprecated)
- initialized with
mppinit -a metadata
- initialized with
Acoustic analysis with Blissify does not require a prior Beets import.
The Blissify acoustic analysis creates a song similarity database for
all the songs in the MPD music library. Initialize the Blissify database
with the command blissify update <mpd music directory>
. For example,
assuming the default MPD music directory:
blissify update ~/Music
Blissify database initialization would have been automatically performed during setup if metadata initialization were done with:
mppinit -b metadata
After initialization of the Blissify database, the blissify
command can
be used to create an MPD playlist based on song similarities. For example,
to make a 30 song playlist that queues the closest song to the currently
playing song, then the closest song to the second song, etc, effectively
making a "path" through the songs, execute the command:
blissify playlist --seed-song 30
To save the current MPD playlist (queue), execute the command:
mpc save <playlist-name>
Note that the acoustic analysis and database creation performed by Blissify does not update the Beets library database. In order to add this additional acoustic metadata to the Beets library it is necessary to perform an acoustic analysis with Essentia or acoustic metadata retrieval with AcousticBrainz, both described in the next sections.
After completing the Beets music library import with either mppinit import
or mpplus -I
, additional Beets metadata can be retrieved with the command:
mppinit -e metadata
This will identify and delete duplicate tracks, retrieve album genres, download album cover art, and optionally analyze and retrieve metadata for all songs in the music library using the Essentia extractor and Essentia trained models.
MusicPlayerPlus mppinit -e metadata
uses Essentia for extracting acoustic
characteristics of music, including low-level spectral information, rhythm,
keys, scales, and much more, and automatic annotation by genres, moods, and
instrumentation.
This is the same sort of thing that AcousticBrainz does but the AcousticBrainz project is no longer collecting data and was withdrawn in 2023. MusicPlayerPlus provides the same functionality using pre-compiled and packaged Essentia binaries and models.
However, the process of analyzing, extracting, and retrieving metadata
can be time consuming for a large music library. The mppinit -e metadata
command performs several metadata retrieval steps in a non-interactive
manner and in the background so it can be left unattended if desired.
[No longer supported]
While it still exists the AcousticBrainz service can be queried to provide
a relatively quick way to update the Beets library with additional
acoustic metadata. The AcousticBrainz service has already analyzed the
acoustic characteristics of songs in the MusicBrainz catalog. To retrieve
this metadata for songs in your music library, after Beets import is complete,
run the command mppinit -a metadata
. Or, at any time after Beets import
run the command beet acousticbrainz
. The AcousticBrainz service is no longer
updated and was retired in 2023.
The individual metadata retrieval steps performed automatically by
mppinit [-a|-b|-e] metadata
can be performed manually using the instructions in
the MusicPlayerPlus Beets README.
YAMS is an acronym for "Yet Another MPD Scrobbler". When YAMS is configured and running, any songs, artists, or albums played through MPD get "scrobbled" to Last.fm. This enables a tracking of your listening patterns and habits, creating a fairly extensive set of statistics viewable on Last.fm.
Features:
- Authenticate with the new Last.fm Scrobbling API v2.0 - without the need to input/store your username/password locally.
- Update your profile's "Now Playing" track via Last.fm's "Now Playing" API
- Save failed scrobbles to a disk and upload them at a later date.
- Timing configuration (e.g. scrobble percentage, real world timing values for scrobbling, etc.).
- Prevent accidental duplicate scrobbles on rewind/playback restart/etc.
- Automatic daemonization and config file generation.
In order to activate the YAMS scrobbler you will need an account with Last.fm.
Free accounts with Last.fm include many of the service features and can
provide extensive listening history statistics. If you do not wish to
use Last.fm to analyze MPD track plays then this optional setup step
can be ignored and no action is required as MusicPlayerPlus disables
YAMS by default. Disable a previously activated YAMS service with the
command mpplus -y
.
Activate the YAMS scrobbler for Last.fm with the command:
mpplus -Y
The activation process must be run in a terminal window and will provide
you with a URL. Copy the URL and navigate to it using a web browser.
This will take you to Last.fm to authenticate if not already logged in
and authorize YAMS access. Once access is authorized there is no need
to authenticate for future Last.fm access with YAMS. There is also no
need to manually run the yams
command as a user service is activated
to run it automatically. Basically, nothing else to do, just play music
and it will be scrobbled by YAMS.
YAMS creates a configuration file $HOME/.config/yams/yams.yml
.
YAMS works fine with Libre.fm, a Free Software replacement for Last.fm. If you prefer to use Libre.fm rather than Last.fm, do the following:
- Set the
base_url
config variable tohttps://libre.fm/2.0/
in$HOME/.config/yams/yams.yml
(don't forget the trailing slash!) - Delete any leftover
.lastfm_session
files - Authenticate like you normally would with Last.fm, however replace
last.fm
withlibre.fm
in the authorization URL printed out by YAMS
Adjust the audio_output
settings in ~/.config/mpd/mpd.conf
.
MPD must have at least one audio_output
configured and in order
to use the spectrum visualizer as configured by default it is necessary
to configure a second audio_output
in MPD.
The default MPD audio_output
setting is PulseAudio
. To modify the MPD audio
output, uncomment one of ALSA
, PulseAudio
, or PipeWire
and restart MPD.
A FIFO audio_output
is used as a data source for the spectrum visualizer.
To configure this output, add the following to ~/.config/mpd/mpd.conf
:
audio_output {
type "fifo"
name "Visualizer feed"
path "~/.config/mpd/mpd.fifo"
format "44100:16:2"
}
An example ALSA audio_output
configuration in ~/.config/mpd/mpd.conf
:
audio_output {
type "alsa"
name "ALSA"
buffer_time "50000" # (50ms); default is 500000 microseconds (0.5s)
# device "hw:0,0" # optional
# mixer_type "hardware" # optional
# mixer_device "default" # optional
# mixer_control "PCM" # optional
# mixer_index "0" # optional
}
Or, to use PulseAudio:
audio_output {
type "pulse"
name "pulse audio"
device "pulse"
mixer_type "hardware"
}
Output with PipeWire can also be configured:
audio_output {
type "pipewire"
name "PipeWire Sound Server"
}
MPD is a powerful and flexible music player server with many configuration options. Additional MPD configuration may be desired. See the MPD User's Manual
The fzmp
command lists, searches, and selects media from the MPD
library using the fzf
fuzzy finder command line utility. A default
fzmp
configuration file for each user is created when the mppinit
command is executed. The fzmp
configuration file is located at:
~/.config/mpcplus/fzmp.conf
The initial default fzmp
configuration should suffice for most use cases.
Some of the interactive key bindings may need to be modified if they are
already in use by other utilities. For example, the default key binding to
switch to playlist view is 'F1' but the xfce4-terminal
command binds 'F1'
by default to its help window. In this case either the fzmp
playlist view
key binding must be changed or the XFCE4 terminal help window shortcut must
be disabled.
To disable the XFCE4 terminal help window shortcut, in xfce4-terminal
select:
Edit -> Preferences -> Advanced
Select the Disable help window shortcut key (F1 by default) and Close
the Preferences dialog. The XFCE4 terminal help window shortcut will no
longer be bound to 'F1' and no modification to the playlist view key binding
for fzmp
would be necessary.
To modify the fzmp
playlist view key binding, edit the fzmp
configuration
file ~/.config/mpcplus/fzmp.conf
and add a line like the following:
playlist_view_key F6
This revised configuration would change the playlist view key binding from 'F1' to 'F6' and the XFCE4 terminal help window shortcut could remain enabled and bound to 'F1'.
Several other fzmp
bindings and options can be configured. See man fzmp
for details.
[Note:] MusicPlayerPlus version 1.0.3 release 1 and later perform
an automated MPD user configuration and systemd service activation.
Initialization with mppinit
for these installations should automatically
start the user MPD service. No further action should be required for
MusicPlayerPlus v1.0.3r1 or later installations.
Status of the MPD service can be checked with:
systemctl --user status mpd.service
Installation and initialization of MusicPlayerPlus prior to v1.0.3r1 will need to start mpd as a system-wide service by executing the commands:
sudo systemctl start mpd
If you want MPD to start automatically on subsequent reboots, run:
sudo systemctl enable mpd
Alternatively, if you want MPD to start automatically when a client attempts to connect:
sudo systemctl enable mpd.socket
Once the music directory has been set correctly, album art downloaded,
music library imported, and mppinit sync
has completed initialization,
some system checks can optionally be performed.
- Verify the
mpd
service is running and if not then start it:systemctl --user is-active mpd.service
systemctl --user start mpd.service
- Update the MPD client database:
mpc update
- Verify the
mpd
service is enabled and if not enable itsystemctl --user is-enabled mpd.service
systemctl --user enable mpd.service
- Play music with
mpplus
- See the online mpcpluskeys cheat sheet or
man mpcpluskeys
for help navigating thempplus
windows - See the online mpplus man page or
man mpplus
for different ways to invoke thempplus
command
- See the online mpcpluskeys cheat sheet or
[Note:] MusicPlayerPlus version 1.0.3 release 1 and later perform an
automated MPD music database initialization during execution of mppinit
.
For versions of MusicPlayerPlus prior to v1.0.3r1, initialize the music
database with an MPD client and update the database. The mpcplus
MPD
client can be used for this or the standard mpc
MPD client can be used.
With mpcplus
, launch the mpcplus
MPD client, verify the client window
has focus, and type u
to update the database. With mpc
simply execute
the command mpc update
.
If your music library is very large this process can take several minutes to complete. Once the music database has been updated you should see the songs, albums, and playlists in your music library appear in the client view.
To install, configure, and activate Mopidy issue the command mppinit mopidy
.
After Mopidy initialization completes, open http://<ip address>:6680/iris
.
After adding music to the local music library, run mopidy local scan
.
[Note:] In order to use the Mopidy-Beets extension, perform a
mppinit import
and optionally mppinit metadata
prior to mppinit mopidy
.
The default music server in MusicPlayerPlus is the Music Player Daemon (MPD). An alternate music server, Mopidy, is supported and can perform the same functions as MPD, is compatible with MPD clients, and can be extended to offer many more features.
Activating Mopidy will first deactivate MPD. The MusicPlayerPlus Mopidy
activation runs as a user level system service. Configuration for Mopidy
and Mopidy extensions resides in $HOME/.config/mopidy/
. The MusicPlayerPlus
activation of Mopidy auto-configures Mopidy and the installed extensions.
In addition to the
bundled Mopidy extensions,
the mppinit mopidy
command installs the following Mopidy extensions:
- Mopidy-Beets
- Mopidy extension for playing music from Beets' web plugin
- Mopidy-Iris
- A comprehensive and mobile-friendly client that presents your library and extensions in a user-friendly and intuitive interface. Built using React and Redux
- Open
http://<ip address>:6680/iris
- Mopidy-Mobile
- Fully control a Mopidy music server from your mobile device
- Android App available on Google Play
- Other devices open
http://IP_Address:6680
in a browser
- Mopidy-Mpd
- Mopidy extension for controlling Mopidy from MPD clients
- Mopidy-Podcast
- Mopidy extension for searching and browsing podcasts
- Mopidy-Podcast-iTunes
- Mopidy extension for searching and browsing iTunes podcasts
- Mopidy-TuneIn
- A backend for playing music from the TuneIn online radio service
- Mopidy-Scrobbler
- Mopidy extension for scrobbling music to Last.fm
- Requires Last.fm username/password added to
~/.config/mopidy/mopidy.conf
Additional Mopidy extensions can be installed and configured. For example, to stream Spotify with Mopidy, install and configure the Mopidy-Spotify extension. Learn more at https://mopidy.com/ext/
[Note:] MusicPlayerPlus uses a Python virtual environment and Mopidy extensions are Python modules. In order to install a Mopidy extension it must be installed in the MusicPlayerPlus Python virtual environment. For example, to install the Mopidy Spotify extension run the following commands:
source ~/.venv/bin/activate
python3 -m pip install Mopidy-Spotify
To view the effective Mopidy configuration run the command mopidy config
.
This will display the full Mopidy configuration with passwords masked out
so that you can safely share the output with others for debugging.
[Note:] The Mopidy MPD extension provides compatibility with MPD clients but does not implement all MPD features. MPD is much more powerful and flexible in terms of its configurable inputs and outputs. After activating Mopidy some features may not work the same as they did with MPD. For example, spectrum visualization may fail or player stats may not be available. However, Mopidy offers many features unavailable with MPD. It's a tradeoff.
To re-activate MPD and disable Mopidy, issue the command mppinit mpd
.
Easily switch back and forth between MPD and Mopidy with mppinit mpd
and mppinit mopidy
. Note that MusicPlayerPlus continues to use the
configured MUSIC_DIR
as the master music library location.
To change the location of the music library, edit
~/.config/mpprc
, set MUSIC_DIR
to the new location,
and run mppinit sync
to synchronize the music library location across
Beets, MPD, Mopidy, and downloaders.
The default music server in MusicPlayerPlus is the Music Player Daemon (MPD). An alternate music server and streamer, Navidrome, is also supported. To install, configure, and activate Navidrome issue the command:
mppinit navidrome
The MusicPlayerPlus Navidrome activation runs as a user level system service.
Configuration for Navidrome resides in $HOME/.config/navidrome/navidrome.toml
.
The MusicPlayerPlus activation of Navidrome auto-configures, starts, and
enables the Navidrome service. The Navidrome log file can be found at
$HOME/.config/navidrome/navidrome.log
.
After installing Navidrome, you need to create your first user. This will be your admin user, a super user that can manage all aspects of Navidrome, including the ability to manage other users. Browse to Navidrome’s homepage at http://localhost:4533
Fill out the username and password you want to use, confirm the password and click on the “Create Admin” button. You should now be able to browse and listen to all your music.
[Note:] It usually take a couple of minutes for your music to start appearing in Navidrome’s UI. Check the logs to see what is the scan progress.
[Security Note:] Navidrome comes with an embedded, full-featured HTTP
server but in order to provide additional security (e.g. SSL) Navidrome
should be run behind a reverse proxy like Nginx or Apache. MusicPlayerPlus
does not configure a reverse proxy for Navidrome. See the Navidrome network
configuration documentation at https://www.navidrome.org/docs/usage/security/
to get started securing Navidrome. To use the MusicPlayerPlus default
configuration of Navidrome, use http://...
rather than https://...
.
If all you want is a Navidrome streaming music server and you do not care
about Beets library management, additional downloads, or a Mopidy server
then setup can be accomplished with just mppinit
followed by
mppinit navidrome
.
The Navidrome self-hosted music service can stream your music to many devices.
MusicPlayerPlus tested and recommended free open source Navidrome clients:
Character based terminal/console Navidrome clients:
Navidrome clients are not installed by MusicPlayerPlus. Install Navidrome clients using your device's app store or following the installation instructions at the client link above.
If you do not have or wish to use a Navidrome client, then most modern
browsers are supported Navidrome clients. To use a browser as a Navidrome
web client, open the URL http://ip-address:4533
where ip-address is
the IP address of the Navidrome server.
For a list of Airsonic compatible applications, see https://airsonic.github.io/docs/apps/
For a list of Subsonic compatible clients, see https://www.navidrome.org/docs/overview/#apps
Sonixd is a cross-platform desktop Subsonic client compatible with Navidrome. On Apple MacOS, install sonixd with Homebrew:
brew install --cask sonixd
Sublime is a native Subsonic client compatible with Navidrome for the Linux Desktop. See https://sublime-music.gitlab.io/sublime-music/index.html to install Sublime on a variety of Linux distributions.
Spotify
and YouTube Music
players can be installed, configured, and launched
via either the mpplus
menu system or mppinit
.
The Spotify
player is the character-based spotify_player
available at
https://github.com/aome510/spotify-player and can be installed via the main menu
(mpplus -i
) or with the command mppinit spotify
. This Spotify
player runs
in a terminal window or on the console and has full-feature parity with Spotify
.
Configuration of the Spotify
player is located in ~/.config/spotify-player/app.toml
.
The YouTube Music
player is a YouTube Music
desktop app available at
https://github.com/th-ch/youtube-music and bundled with custom plugins and
built-in ad blocker/downloader. The YouTube Music
player can be installed
via the main menu (mpplus -i
) or with the command mppinit youtube
.
Configuration of the YouTube Music
player is located in ~/.config/YouTube Music/config.json
.
Supported terminal emulators in MusicPlayerPlus include kitty
, tilix
,
gnome-terminal
, st
, and cool-retro-term
. Kitty is the default terminal
emulator used by MusicPlayerPlus except on Raspberry Pi OS where st
is used
as the default.
[Note:] The kitty terminal emulator is very cool. A default kitty theme is provided (the 'Music Player Plus' theme) and should suffice for most users. An alternate kitty theme can be configured using the kitty themes kitten. To use this kitten, run:
kitty +kitten themes
An alternate terminal emulator can be specified on the mpplus
command line:
mpplus -c ... # indicates use the current terminal and a tmux session
mpplus -e ... # indicates use the simple terminal emulator (st)
mpplus -g ... # indicates use the gnome terminal emulator
mpplus -k ... # indicates use the kitty terminal emulator
mpplus -r ... # indicates use the cool-retro-term terminal emulator
mpplus -t ... # indicates use the tilix terminal emulator
If an alternate terminal emulator is not specified on the command line
then the default will be used unless console mode is detected. Console mode
is used when no DISPLAY can be opened (e.g. running on a console, running
over SSH without a display, running on a headless server). In console mode
MusicPlayerPlus utilizes tmux
sessions to display the character-based music
player mpcplus
and spectrum visualizer mppcava
.
The mppcava
spectrum visualizer looks better when the font used by the
terminal emulator in which it is running is a small sized font. Some
terminal emulators rely on a profile from which they draw much of
their configuration. Profiles are used in MusicPlayerPlus to provide
an enhanced visual presentation.
In order to use the Gnome, Simple, or Tilix terminal emulators they must be
installed manually (except on Raspberry Pi OS where the Simple terminal
emulator is installed if no supported terminal emulator is found).
If you wish to use the Gnome, Simple, or Tilix terminal emulators,
then use your system's package manager to install them prior to
initializing MusicPlayerPlus with the mppinit
command. If either or both
of Gnome or Tilix terminal emulators are installed after MusicPlayerPlus
initialization with mppinit
then run mppinit profiles
after installing
gnome-terminal or tilix terminal emulator(s).
There are four terminal profiles in two terminal emulators used by
MusicPlayerPlus. The gnome-terminal
emulator and the tilix
terminal
emulator each have two custom profiles created during mppinit
initialization.
These profiles are named "MusicPlayer" and "Visualizer".
The custom MusicPlayerPlus terminal profiles are used to provide font sizes and background transparencies that enhance the visual appeal of both the MusicPlayerPlus control window and the spectrum visualizer.
To modify these terminal emulator profiles, launch the desired terminal emulator and modify the desired profile in the Preferences dialog.
MusicPlayerPlus includes support for the auto-generation of an Obsidian vault from either a Discogs user collection or a local music library. The extremely rich data available from Discogs can be used to generate markdown format files reflecting the artists, albums, tracks, and items in your collection or library. The generated markdown reflecting your Discogs collection or music library includes a preconfigured Obsidian vault along with plugins, settings, and theme. The Obsidian Dataview plugin can be used to query the Obsidian vault in a variety of ways similar to a database of your library. Several example Dataview queries are included.
In order to use this facility, both DISCOGS_USER
and DISCOGS_TOKEN
must be
configured in $HOME/.config/mpprc
. If these are set then the resulting Obsidian
vault from the either the command mppinit discogs
or mppinit discogs local
will be located in the folder specified by DISCOGS_DIR
in mpprc
.
See the Obsidian Custom Discogs README for details on setup and maintenance of a Discogs Obsidian vault.
MusicPlayerPlus includes several services, some installed by default and
others optionally installed with the mppinit
command post-installation.
Clients that can be used to access these services are also provided.
The following services are included with MusicPlayerPlus:
- Music Player Daemon (MPD)
- Installed, configured, and activated by default
- MPD Stats Service
- Installed, configured, and activated by default
- Beets Web Plugin Service
- Installed, configured, and activated by default
- Beets queries can be performed at http://localhost:8337
- Can be queried via API endpoints. For example:
curl -s http://localhost:8337/album/ | jq -r .
- Mopidy Music Server
- Installed, configured, and activated with
mppinit mopidy
- When activated, deactivates MPD, MPD Stats, and YAMS services
- Installed, configured, and activated with
- Navidrome Music Streaming Server
- Installed, configured, and activated with
mppinit navidrome
- Installed, configured, and activated with
- YAMS Last.FM Scrobbler
- Installed, configured, and activated with
mppinit yams
- Installed, configured, and activated with
All of the MusicPlayerPlus services are user-level systemd services and can
be controlled by the MusicPlayerPlus user without the need for root
privilege.
The mpplus -i
interactive menu system includes menu entries for controlling
each of these services as well as a status report on them by selecting the
"Manage Music Services" from the Main Menu. Alternately, each service can
be controlled from the command line using systemctl --user ...
. For example,
to stop the MPD Stats Service, run the command systemctl --user stop mpdstats
.
Depending upon the use case and personal preference, a variety of combinations of MusicPlayerPlus services can be activated. Mopidy with the Mopidy-MPD extension conflicts with the MPD service. YAMS and MPD Stats only work with MPD. Therefore, if Mopidy is activated the MPD, YAMS, and MPD Stats services are automatically deactivated. Similarly, if the MPD service is reactivated, the YAMS and MPD Stats services are reactivated and Mopidy deactivated.
Choose which service you prefer, MPD or Mopidy, and activate it with either
mppinit mopidy
or mppinit mpd
(after activating Mopidy then deciding to
reactivate MPD). Using these two commands, mppinit mopidy
and mppinit mpd
,
it is easy to switch between the two conflicting services.
The advantage of MPD is its stability, maturity, flexibility, power, and
extensive configuration options. However, it is difficult to enable streaming
with MPD. The advantage of Mopidy is its streaming capability and the variety
of useful extensions, many of which are installed by default with
mppinit mopidy
.
An even better streaming solution is provided by Navidrome. Activating Navidrome enables access to the music library from any desktop, phone, tablet, or remote device with a browser. There are numerous Navidrome clients available for all devices and platforms. Activating Navidrome does not conflict with any of the other MusicPlayerPlus services so it can be streaming the music library while MPD or Mopidy is serving up the same library locally. Navidrome can optionally scrobble to Last.FM so if that option is enabled then deactivate the YAMS service.
[Summary] MusicPlayerPlus provides several different selections of
services appropriate for a variety of use cases. All service configurations
require a prior MusicPlayerPlus initialization with mppinit
. Some common
MusicPlayerPlus service configurations include:
- Basic Music Player Daemon
- Configured automatically with
mppinit
- MPD enabled and active, all other services disabled
- Use
mpplus
,mpcplus
,mpc
, etc to play music on local system
- Configured automatically with
- Music Player Daemon plus Beets
- Configured with
mppinit import
- MPD and Beets enabled and active, all other services disabled
- Use
beet ...
,mpplus
,mpcplus
,mpc
, to search, filter, play, ... - Enables the Beets web plugin at
http://<ip address>:8337
- Configured with
- Mopidy Music Server plus Beets
- Configured with
mppinit import
, andmppinit mopidy
- Mopidy and Beets enabled and active, other services disabled
- Use
beet ...
,mpplus
,mpcplus
,mpc
, to search, filter, play, ... - Enables the Beets web plugin at
http://<ip address>:8337
- Enables the Mopidy web client at
http://<ip address>:6680
- Configured with
- Navidrome Streaming plus Mopidy Music Server plus Beets
- Configure with
mppinit import
,mppinit mopidy
,mppinit navidrome
- Navidrome, Mopidy and Beets enabled and active, other services disabled
- Use
beet ...
,mpplus
,mpcplus
,mpc
, to search, filter, play, ... - Enables the Beets web plugin at
http://<ip address>:8337
- Enables the Mopidy web client at
http://<ip address>:6680
- Enables the Navidrome web client at
http://<ip address>:4533
- Supports many clients available for all desktops, tablets, and phones
- Run
mppinit import
after newmppinit bandcamp|soundcloud
downloads
- Configure with
- Navidrome Music Streaming Server without MPD/Mopidy/Beets
- Configure with
mppinit navidrome
- No need for
mppinit import|metadata|mopidy|yams
- Use
mpplus -i
menu system to stop and disable all other services- Select "Manage Music Services" from the Main Menu
- If active, Stop and Disable MPD, Mopidy, and Beets
- Navidrome enabled and active, other services disabled
- Enables the Navidrome web client at
http://<ip address>:4533
- Supports many clients available for all desktops, tablets, and phones
- No need for
mppinit import
aftermppinit bandcamp|soundcloud
downloads
- Configure with
The following clients are included with MusicPlayerPlus:
- mpplus MusicPlayerPlus front-end
- Installed by default, see
man mpplus
- Front-ends
mpcplus
MPD client andmppcava
spectrum visualizer - Example:
mpplus
- Installed by default, see
- mpcplus character-based feature-full MPD client
- Installed by default, see
man mpcplus
- Example:
mpcplus
- Installed by default, see
- mpc command-line MPD client
- Installed by default, see
man mpc
- Examples:
mpc stop
,mpc current
,mpc play
- Installed by default, see
- beet command-line interface to Beets
- Installed by default, see
man beet
- Examples:
beet play jethro tull
,beet info -l aqualung
- Installed by default, see
- Beets web client
- Installed by default
- Open
http://<ip address>:8337
- Mopidy web client
- Installed, configured, and activated with
mppinit mopidy
- Open
http://<ip address>:6680
- Installed, configured, and activated with
- Mopidy Iris web client
- Installed, configured, and activated with
mppinit mopidy
- Open
http://<ip address>:6680/iris
- Installed, configured, and activated with
- Mopidy-Mobile
- Installed, configured, and activated with
mppinit mopidy
- Open
http://<ip address>:6680/mobile
- Installed, configured, and activated with
- Navidrome web client
- Installed, configured, and activated with
mppinit navidrome
- Open
http://<ip address>:4533
- Installed, configured, and activated with
[NEW:] MusicPlayerPlus documentation is now available on Read the Docs
All MusicPlayerPlus commands have manual pages. Execute man <command-name>
to view the manual page for a command. The mpplus
frontend is the primary
user interface for MusicPlayerPlus and the manual page for mpplus
can be
viewed with the command man mpplus
. Most commands also have
help/usage messages that can be viewed with the -u argument option,
e.g. mpplus -u
.
- config/README.md - Overview and details of the MusicPlayerPlus configuration
- mpcplus/README.md - Introduction to the mpcplus MPD client
- config/tmuxp/README.md - How to invoke the MusicPlayerPlus provided
tmuxp
session configurations
- mpplus : Primary MusicPlayerPlus user interface
- mppcava : Audio Spectrum Visualizer
- mppjulia : asciimatics animation of a Julia Set
- mpprocks : asciimatics animation of MusicPlayerPlus intro
- mppplasma : asciimatics animation with Plasma effect
- mppinit : MusicPlayerPlus initialization
- mppcover : Displays album cover art for currently playing song
- mppdl : Downloads audio tracks from Bandcamp, Soundcloud, or a URL
- mpcplus-tmux : MusicPlayerPlus in a tmux session
- mpcplus : MusicPlayerPlus MPD client
- mpcpluskeys : Cheat sheet for
mpcplus
MPD client navigation - mppsplash-tmux : MusicPlayerPlus asciimatics animations in a tmux session
- mppsplash : MusicPlayerPlus asciimatics animations
- mpd-configure : MPD configuration generator
- mpd-monitor : Display info on currently playing MPD song
- beet : Beets media library management command-line interface
- beetsconfig : Beets media library management configuration
- bandcamp-dl : Download Bandcamp collections
- blissify : create MPD playlists using song similarity database
- scdl : Download Soundcloud favorites
- fzmp : List and search MPD media using fuzzy find
- artist_to_albumartist : Copies the Artist tag to the AlbumArtist tag
- listyt : List YouTube video titles and urls
- yt-dlp : Download YouTube and other sites videos and audio
- create_playlist : Create playlists using Beets queries
The primary MusicPlayerPlus user interface is the mpplus
command.
Execute mpplus -o
to open the mpcplus
MPD client and the mppcava
spectrum visualizer. The command mpplus
without arguments displays
a series of interactive menus from which most of the MusicPlayerPlus
tasks can be launched.
The mpc
command provides a quick and easy command line interface
to control the Music Player Daemon playback. The mpc
command has
many command line options, see man mpc
for a full description.
To get started with simple MPD playback control using mpc
:
mpc toggle : start playback if stopped or paused, and pause playback if playing
mpc stop : stop playback
mpc next : move to next song in playlist
mpc prev : move to previous song in playlist
mpc volume +|- percent : increase or decrease volume by 'percent'
The beet play [QUERY]
command can be used to specify a song or songs
to play where 'QUERY' is a Beets query matching songs in the music library.
The usage messages for mppinit
, mpplus
, mpcplus
, and mppcava
provide a brief summary of the command line options.
mppinit
performs one-time initializations.
Click here to view the
mppinit usage message
Usage: mppinit [-a] [-b] [-d] [-e] [-l music_dir] [-n] [-o] [-q] [-r] [-U] [-y] [-u] [bandcamp|cantata|discogs|discogs local|discogs upload vault folder|import|kitty|metadata|mopidy|mpd|navidrome|soundcloud|spotify|sync|yams|youtube]
Where:
'-a' use AcousticBrainz for acoustic audio analysis [deprecated]
'-b' use Blissify for MPD acoustic audio analysis
'-d' install latest Beets development branch rather than
the latest stable release (for testing purposes)
'-e' use Essentia for Beets acoustic audio analysis (default)
'-l music_dir' specifies the location of the music library
'-n' indicates perform a dry run, don't do anything just tell me
'-o' indicates overwrite any pre-existing configuration
'-q' indicates quiet execution, no status messages
'-r' indicates remove service
supported service removals: mopidy navidrome
'-U' indicates do not upgrade installed Python modules
'-y' indicates answer 'yes' to all and proceed
'-u' displays this usage message and exits
'bandcamp' downloads all albums in your Bandcamp collections
'cantata' installs the Cantata MPD graphical client
'discogs' generates an Obsidian vault from your Discogs user collection
'discogs local' generates an Obsidian vault from your local music library
'discogs upload vault folder' adds the releases in 'vault' to
Discogs user collection folder 'folder'
(DISCOGS_USER and DISCOGS_TOKEN in '~/.config/mpprc must be set)
'import' performs a Beets music library import
'kitty' installs the Kitty terminal emulator
'metadata' performs a library metadata update
'mopidy' installs and configures Mopidy extensible music server
Note: activating Mopidy deactivates MPD
'mpd' activates the MPD music server and deactivates Mopidy
'navidrome' installs and configures Navidrome music server
Note: 'mppinit navidrome <version>' can be used to specify
an alternate version of Navidrome to download and install
'soundcloud' downloads all favorites in your Soundcloud account
'spotify' installs the Spotify Music client spotify_player
'sync' synchronizes MusicPlayerPlus configuration across configs
'yams' activates the YAMS Last.fm scrobbler service
'youtube' installs the YouTube Music client youtube-music
'mppinit' must be run as the MusicPlayerPlus user, not root.
'mppinit' must be run prior to 'mppinit sync', 'mppinit kitty',
'mppinit metadata', 'mppinit bandcamp', 'mppinit mopidy',
'mppinit navidrome', 'mppinit soundcloud', or 'mppinit import'
The mpplus
command serves as a general user interface for all of the
MusicPlayerPlus capabilities.
Click here to view the
mpplus usage message
Usage: mpplus [-A on|off] [-a] [-b] [-B] [-c] [-C client] [-E] [-e] [-F]
[-f] [-G] [-g] [-D art|bandcamp|discogs|local|soundcloud] [-d music_directory]
[-h] [-H] [-I] [-i|-o] [-jJ] [-k] [-K] [-l config|mopidy|navidrome|spotify|status]
[-L] [-m] [-n num] [-N] [-M alsaconf|enable|disable|restart|start|stop|status]
[-p] [-P script] [-q] [-Q] [-r] [-R] [-s song] [-S] [-t] [-T on|off] [-U vault]
[-u] [-v viz_comm] [-w|W] [-x query] [-X query] [-y] [-Y] [-z fzmpopt] [-Z]
MPCplus/Visualizer options:
-A 'on|off' specifies whether to display album cover art
-C 'client' indicates use 'client' MPD client rather than mpcplus
-E indicates do not use gradient colors for spectrum visualizer
-f indicates fullscreen display
-h indicates half-height for visualizer window (with -f only)
-H indicates disable use of extended window manager hints
-P script specifies the ASCIImatics script to run in visualizer pane
-q indicates quarter-height for visualizer window (with -f only)
-c indicates use current terminal emulator / console mode
-e indicates use simple terminal emulator
-g indicates use gnome terminal emulator
-k indicates use kitty terminal emulator
-r indicates use retro terminal emulator
-t indicates use tilix terminal emulator
-v 'viz_comm' indicates use visualizer 'viz_comm' rather than mppcava
ASCIImatics animation options:
-a indicates play audio during ASCIImatics display
-b indicates use backup audio during ASCIImatics display
-j indicates use Julia Set scenes in ASCIImatics display
-J indicates Julia Set with several runs using different parameters
-m indicates use MusicPlayerPlus scenes in ASCIImatics display
-n num specifies the number of times to cycle ASCIImatics scenes
-N indicates use alternate comments in Plasma ASCIImatics scenes
-p indicates use Plasma scenes in ASCIImatics display
-s song specifies a song to accompany an ASCIImatics animation
'song' can be the full pathname to an audio file or a
relative pathname to an audio file in the MPD music library
or /home/ronnie/Music/
-S indicates display ASCIImatics splash animation
General options:
-B indicates analyze MPD music dir with Blissify and exit
-D 'art' indicates download album cover art and exit
-D 'bandcamp' indicates download Bandcamp songs and exit
-D 'soundcloud' indicates download Soundcloud songs and exit
-D 'discogs' generate markdown from Discogs collection
-D 'local' generate markdown from local music library
-Q indicates display MusicPlayerPlus info and exit
-U 'vault' indicates upload releases in 'vault' to Discogs collection
-Z performs a dry run of a Discogs collection upload
-d 'music_directory' specifies the music directory to use for
downloaded album cover art. Without this option -D will use
the 'MUSIC_DIR' setting in '~/.config/mpprc'
-F indicates convert WAV format files in the music library
to MP3 format files and exit. A subsequent 'mpplus -I' import
will be necessary to import these newly converted music files.
-G indicates convert M4A format files in the music library
to MP3 format files and exit. A subsequent 'mpplus -I' import
will be necessary to import these newly converted music files.
-I indicates import albums and songs from 'music_directory' to beets and exit
In conjunction with '-I', the '-A on' option disables auto-tagging
-i indicates start mpplus in interactive mode (display the menu system)
-o indicates start mpplus in non-interactive mode (no menu system)
-K indicates kill MusicPlayerPlus tmux sessions and ASCIImatics scripts
-l 'config' launches an editor in a terminal window to configure MusicPlayerPlus
-l 'mopidy' opens Mopidy in the default browser if the Mopidy service is active
-l 'navidrome' opens Navidrome in the default browser if the Navidrome service is active
-l 'spotify' launches the Spotify Player in a terminal window
-l 'status' displays services status and exits
-L indicates download lyrics to the Beets library and exit
-M 'action' can be used to control the Music Player Daemon (MPD)
or configure the ALSA sound system
ALSA configuration will update the ALSA configuration in '/etc/asound.conf'
-R indicates record tmux session with asciinema
Asciinema is not installed by MusicPlayerPlus
To record tmux sessions with asciinema, use your system's
package manager to install it (e.g. apt install asciinema)
-T 'on|off' specifies whether to use a tmux session
-w indicates write metadata during beets import
-W indicates do not write metadata during beets import
-x 'query' uses AcousticBrainz to retrieve audio-based information
for all music library media matching 'query' [deprecated]. A query
of 'all' performs the retrieval on the entire music library.
-X 'query' performs an analysis and retrieval, using Essentia,
of audio-based information for all music library media
matching 'query'. A query of 'all' performs the analysis
and retrieval on the entire music library.
-Y initializes the YAMS last.fm scrobbler service
-y disables the YAMS last.fm scrobbler service
-z fzmpopt specifies the fzmp option and invokes fzmp to
list/search/select media in the MPD library.
Valid values for fzmpopt are 'a', 'A', 'g', 'p', or 'P'
-u displays this usage message and exits
Type 'man mpplus' for detailed usage info on mpplus
Type 'man mpcplus' for detailed usage info on the mpcplus MPD client
Type 'man mppsplash' for detailed usage info on the mppsplash command
The mpcplus
command is an MPD client and acts as the primary
MusicPlayerPlus music player.
Click here to view the
mpclus usage message
Usage: mpcplus [options]...
Options:
-h [ --host ] HOST (=localhost) connect to server at host
-p [ --port ] PORT (=6600) connect to server at port
--current-song [=FORMAT(=<format string>)]
print current song using given format
and exit
-c [ --config ] PATH (=~/.config/mpcplus/config AND ~/.mpcplus/config)
specify configuration file(s)
--ignore-config-errors ignore unknown and invalid options in
configuration files
--test-lyrics-fetchers check if lyrics fetchers work
-b [ --bindings ] PATH (=~/.config/mpcplus/bindings AND ~/.mpcplus/bindings)
specify bindings file(s)
-s [ --screen ] SCREEN specify the startup screen
-S [ --slave-screen ] SCREEN specify the startup slave screen
-? [ --help ] show help message
-v [ --version ] display version information
-q [ --quiet ] suppress logs and excess output
The mpcplus MPD client has a customized set of key bindings that allow
quick and easy control of MPD, searches, lyrics display, client navigation,
and much more via the keyboard. View the
mpcpluskeys man page with the command
man mpcpluskeys
.
The mppsplash
command can be used to display a variety of character
based animations optionally accompanied by audio.
Click here to view the
mppsplash usage message
Usage: mppsplash [-A] [-a] [-b] [-C] [-c num] [-d] [-jJ] [-m] [-p] [-s song] [-u]
Where:
-A indicates use all effects
-a indicates play audio during ASCIImatics display
-b indicates use backup audio during ASCIImatics display
-C indicates use alternate comments in Plasma effect
-c num specifies the number of times to cycle
-d indicates enable debug mode
-j indicates use Julia Set effect
-J indicates Julia Set with several runs using different parameters
-m indicates use MusicPlayerPlus effect
-p indicates use Plasma effect
-s song specifies the audio file to play as accompaniment
'song' can be the full pathname to an audio file or a relative
pathname to an audio file in the MPD music library or
$HOME/Music/
-u displays this usage message and exits
The mppcava
command is the MusicPlayerPlus custom character based
audio spectrum visualizer.
Click here to view the
mppcava usage message
Usage : mppcava [options]
Visualize audio input in terminal.
Options:
-p path to config file
-v print version
Keys:
Up Increase sensitivity
Down Decrease sensitivity
Left Decrease number of bars
Right Increase number of bars
r Reload config
c Reload colors only
f Cycle foreground color
b Cycle background color
q Quit
All options are specified in a config file. See `$HOME/.config/mppcava/config`
The mpplus
command is intended to serve as the primary interface to invoke
the mpcplus
MPD client and mppcava
spectrum visualizer. The mpplus
command
utilizes several different terminal emulators and can also be used to invoke
any specified MPD client. Some example invocations of mpplus
follow.
Open the mpcplus client and spectrum visualizer in fullscreen mode:
mpplus -f
Open the mpcplus client and mppcava visualizer in fullscreen mode using the tilix terminal emulator and displaying the visualizer using quarter-height:
mpplus -f -q -t
Open the cantata MPD graphical client and mppcava visualizer:
mpplus -C cantata
Open the mpcplus client in the cool-retro-term terminal and mppcava visualizer in kitty:
mpplus -r
Browse, list, search, and select media in the MPD library using the
fzf
fuzzy finder utility.
Search artist then filter by album using fzf
:
mpplus -z a
Search all songs in the library using fzf
:
mpplus -z A
Search the current playlist using fzf
:
mpplus -z p
The mpcplus MPD client can be opened directly without using mpplus. Similarly, the mppcava spectrum visualizer can be opened directly without mpplus.
mpcplus
# In one terminal window
mppcava
# In another terminal window
To test the mpcplus lyrics fetchers:
mpcplus --test-lyrics-fetchers
The mpcplus
MPD client is a character-based application. As such, it is
difficult to display graphical images. However, this limitation can be
overcome using tmux
and additional tools. In this way we can add album
cover art to MusicPlayerPlus when using the character-based mpcplus
client.
See Adding album art to MusicPlayerPlus to get started integrating album art in MusicPlayerPlus.
An album cover art downloader is included in MusicPlayerPlus. To download cover art for all of the albums in your MPD music directory, run the command:
mpplus -D art
Cover art for each album is saved as the file cover.jpg
in the album folder.
Existing cover art is preserved. If an album has incorrect album cover art and
Beets library management has been activated with mppinit import
, update the
album cover art for that album with the command beet fetchart -f <query>
where <query>
is a Beets query that identifies that album. For example,
to update the album cover art for the album "Eldorado" by Electric Light
Orchestra, issue the command beet fetchart -f electric eldorado
.
A few custom key bindings are configured during MusicPlayerPlus initialization
with the mppinit
command. These are purely for convenience and can be altered
or removed if desired.
Tmux custom key bindings are defined in $HOME/.tmux.conf
.
MusicPlayerPlus custom key bindings for tmux sessions include the following:
[ Alt-PgDn ]
- Next window[ Shift-Right ]
- Next window[ Alt-PgUp ]
- Previous window[ Shift-Left ]
- Previous window[ Alt-x ]
- Prompt to kill session[ Alt-X ]
- Kill session[ Alt-Left ]
- Move pane focus to left[ Alt-Right ]
- Move pane focus to right[ Alt-Up ]
- Move pane focus up[ Alt-Down ]
- Move pane focus down[ Prefix q ]
- Prompt to kill session[ Prefix Q ]
- Kill session
The tmux prefix key is remapped from Ctrl-b
to Ctrl-a
and the status bar
is configured to display a Ctrl
message when the prefix key is pressed.
The MusicPlayerPlus tmux customization enables tmux mouse mode. The mouse can be used to select and resize tmux panes and windows.
There are hundreds of tmux key bindings. To view the currently configured
tmux key bindings, execute the command tmux list-keys
.
Custom key bindings are also defined for the mpcplus
music player client
command. Mpcplus custom key bindings are defined in
$HOME/.config/mpcplus/bindings
. MusicPlayerPlus custom key bindings for
mpcplus
include the following:
[ Alt-c ]
- Display album cover art for currently playing song[ Alt-f ]
- Open the fuzzy finder to search/select media[ Alt-m ]
- Open the MPD monitor in a terminal window[ Alt-r ]
- Raise/lower the spectrum visualizer window
In addition to the Alt-x
and Alt-X
key bindings above to kill the current
tmux session, MusicPlayerPlus tmux key bindings include Ctrl-a q
and
Ctrl-a Q
which also are mapped to kill-session
in a similar manner. This
is because some terminal emulators, in particular iTerm2, may already have key
bindings for the Alt
key or the Meta key may be something other than Alt
.
In a MusicPlayerPlus tmux session, if Alt-x
and Alt-X
do not initiate
a kill-session
then use the configured tmux prefix key (e.g. Ctrl-a
)
followed by q
or Q
to exit the current tmux session.
If a MusicPlayerPlus tmux session has been initiated over SSH using the
Terminal app on macOS then it may be necessary to configure the Terminal
profile in use to "Use Option as Meta key" in order to recognize the custom
tmux key bindings using the Alt
key. To configure the Terminal app profile
in this manner, go to Terminal -> Preferences -> Profiles
. Select the
profile you are using (usually "Basic Default") and select the Keyboard
tab.
Click the "Use Option as Meta key" checkbox and exit Terminal preferences.
On Debian based Linux systems where the MusicPlayerPlus package was installed using the MusicPlayerPlus Debian format package, remove the MusicPlayerPlus package by executing the command:
sudo apt remove musicplayerplus
or
sudo dpkg -r musicplayerplus
On RPM based Linux systems where the MusicPlayerPlus package was installed using the MusicPlayerPlus RPM format package, remove the MusicPlayerPlus package by executing the command:
sudo dnf remove MusicPlayerPlus
or
sudo rpm -e MusicPlayerPlus
On Arch based Linux systems where the MusicPlayerPlus package was installed using the MusicPlayerPlus Pacman format package, remove the MusicPlayerPlus package by executing the command:
sudo pacman -Rs musicplayerplus
The MusicPlayerPlus package can be removed by executing the "Uninstall" script in the MusicPlayerPlus source directory:
git clone https://github.com/doctorfree/MusicPlayerPlus.git
cd MusicPlayerPlus
./Uninstall
Many problems encountered with MusicPlayerPlus often resolve to problems with the underlying Linux audio configuration. As a first step in troubleshooting, verify the audio subsystem is functioning properly. Most systems use either ALSA or PulseAudio and there are numerous audio test guides available.
MusicPlayerPlus includes a convenience script to test the ALSA audio subsystem.
The command alsa_audio_test
can be run to test your ALSA audio setup.
If successful you will hear the test output of the aplay
command.
To view a alsa_audio_test
usage message and current ALSA configuration
settings, run the command alsa_audio_test -u
Another source of problems to investigate is the Music Player Daemon (MPD).
This is the music streaming server that MusicPlayerPlus connects to. MPD
is run as a system service that runs automatically. You can check the status
of the MPD service by running the command systemctl --user status mpd
.
You can restart the MPD service with systemctl --user restart mpd.service
.
If the issue is not resolved by a restart or reboot, check the MPD log file
at $HOME/.config/mpd/log
looking for recent failures and exceptions.
It may be the case that the root of a problem is a missing dependency. MusicPlayerPlus should have installed any missing dependencies but one may have been overlooked, improperly installed, or subsequently removed. If the system logs or error output indicates something was "not found" then check for its existence. On Debian based systems there is a nice repository package index maintained. If a command was not found, it is often possible to simply type that command at a shell prompt and the Debian packaging system will be searched for any packages that contain a command with that name. If a likely looking package is returned, the problem may be solved by installing that package.
Finally, see the Troubleshooting section of the MusicPlayerPlus Wiki. for additional troubleshooting techniques and commonly resolved issues.
If an issue cannot be resolved and all troubleshooting efforts have failed, open an issue at MusicPlayerPlus issues. Even if you do manage to resolve an issue, it may still be helpful to report the issue at https://github.com/doctorfree/MusicPlayerPlus/issues so that a fix may be incorporated in the next release.
The iTerm2
terminal emulator has built-in support for tmux. Several of
the iTerm2 built-in tmux key bindings conflict with and override the default
tmux key bindings and the MusicPlayerPlus custom tmux key bindings.
Unless you are quite familiar with iTerm2 and its tmux implementation, we do not recommend using iTerm2 with MusicPlayerPlus when running tmux sessions.
MusicPlayerPlus support for iTerm2 may be forthcoming in future releases but at this time iTerm2 is not a supported MusicPlayerPlus terminal emulator.
A tmux session initiated over SSH to a Fedora Linux system may size the
tmux panes incorrectly. This issue is not yet understood but will hopefully
be addressed in a future release of MusicPlayerPlus. If, for example, a
mpplus
or mpcplus-tmux
tmux session displays the mpcplus
pane with
a small height while the spectrum visualizer pane consumes most of the session
window, then the mpcplus
pane will need to be resized manually.
Tmux panes can be resized either using keyboard shortcuts or with the mouse.
To resize the mpcplus
tmux pane using the mouse, click and drag the bottom
of the upper pane in the session window. Drag the pane border down until the
mpcplus
display of music media appears.
To resize the mpcplus
tmux pane using keyboard shortcuts, use one of the
default tmux key bindings:
bind-key -r -T prefix M-Up resize-pane -U 5
bind-key -r -T prefix M-Down resize-pane -D 5
bind-key -r -T prefix M-Left resize-pane -L 5
bind-key -r -T prefix M-Right resize-pane -R 5
bind-key -r -T prefix C-Up resize-pane -U
bind-key -r -T prefix C-Down resize-pane -D
bind-key -r -T prefix C-Left resize-pane -L
bind-key -r -T prefix C-Right resize-pane -R
This means you can resize a pane by <prefix>
Alt ↓
(tmux prefix followed
by "Alt-DownArrow"). The default MusicPlayerPlus tmux prefix is Ctrl-a
so in
order to resize the mpcplus
pane using the keyboard, type Ctrl-a
then type
Alt ↓
. You can repeat Alt ↓
several times without needing to re-type the
Ctrl-a
prefix if you type it fast enough (about a second). If the display of
Ctrl
on the tmux status line disappears and you still need to resize the
mpcplus
pane, then you will need to re-type the prefix key Ctrl-a
.
This issue has only been detected on Fedora Linux over SSH. However, it may occur with other systems and may not be exclusive to either SSH or Fedora.
Advanced users may wish to add remote control capabilities to MusicPlayerPlus. Getting IR remote control of MPD working is pretty geeky and fun. Also cool.
This can be accomplished on most Linux systems using LIRC (Linux Infrared Remote Control). LIRC setup and usage is described at https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/LIRC
To get started, see the ArchLinux Step-by-step LIRC setup guide for USB IR receiver with universal remote control.
The only prerequisites are a USB IR receiver, preferably an MCE model, and an old universal remote control you have lying around the house.
A long list of LIRC supported remotes with corresponding LIRC configurations can be found at the LIRC Remotes Databass.
The hard part is getting the remote control device talking to the IR receiver since there are a number of different protocols and devices supported. The LIRC setup guide linked above has pretty good step-by-step procedures for establishing communication between the remote and the receiver.
Once the hardware is successfully communicating, you can control MPD with lirc
and mpc
by configuring lirc. For example, add the following to ~/.lircrc
:
## irexec
begin
prog = irexec
button = play_pause
config = mpc toggle
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = stop
config = mpc stop
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = previous
config = mpc prev
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = next
config = mpc next
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = volup
config = mpc volume +2
repeat = 1
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = voldown
config = mpc volume -2
repeat = 1
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = pbc
config = mpc random
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = pdvd
config = mpc update
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = right
config = mpc seek +00:00:05
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = left
config = mpc seek -00:00:05
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = up
config = mpc seek +1%
repeat = 0
end
begin
prog = irexec
button = down
config = mpc seek -1%
repeat = 0
end
A guide for configuring lirc
to control MPD using mpc
can be found at
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Music_Player_Daemon/Tips_and_tricks#Control_MPD_with_lirc
MusicPlayerPlus can be packaged and installed from the source code
repository. This should be done as a normal user with sudo
privileges:
# Retrieve the source code from the repository
git clone https://github.com/doctorfree/MusicPlayerPlus.git
# Enter the MusicPlayerPlus source directory
cd MusicPlayerPlus
# Create an installation package
./mkpkg
# Install MusicPlayerPlus and its dependencies
./Install
These steps are detailed below.
git clone https://github.com/doctorfree/MusicPlayerPlus.git
cd MusicPlayerPlus
[Note:] The mkpkg
script in the top level of the MusicPlayerPlus
repository can be used to build an installation package on all supported
platforms. After cloning, cd MusicPlayerPlus
and ./mkpkg
. The resulting
installation package(s) will be found in ./releases/<version>/
.
MusicPlayerPlus components have packaging dependencies on the following:
On Debian based systems like Ubuntu Linux, install packaging dependencies via:
sudo apt install dpkg
On RPM based systems like Fedora Linux, install packaging dependencies via:
sudo dnf install rpm-build rpm-devel rpmlint rpmdevtools
To build and package MusicPlayerPlus, execute the command:
./mkpkg
On Debian based systems like Ubuntu Linux, the mkpkg
scripts executes
scripts/mkdeb.sh
.
On RPM based systems like Fedora Linux, the mkpkg
scripts executes
scripts/mkrpm.sh
.
On PKGBUILD based systems like Arch Linux, the mkpkg
scripts executes
scripts/mkaur.sh
.
After successfully building and packaging MusicPlayerPlus with ./mkpkg
,
install the MusicPlayerPlus package with the command:
./Install
There are a variety of ways to contribute to the MusicPlayerPlus project. All forms of contribution are appreciated and valuable. Also, it's fun to collaborate. Here are a few ways to contribute to the further improvement and evolution of MusicPlayerPlus:
MusicPlayerPlus is fairly complex with many components, features, options, configurations, and use cases. Although currently only supported on Linux platforms, there are a plethora of Linux platforms on which MusicPlayerPlus can be deployed. Testing all of the above is time consuming and tedious. If you have a Linux platform on which you can install MusicPlayerPlus and you have the time and will to put it through its paces, then issue reports on problems you encounter would greatly help improve the robustness and quality of MusicPlayerPlus. Open issue reports at https://github.com/doctorfree/MusicPlayerPlus/issues
MusicPlayerPlus is completely free and open source software. All of the MusicPlayerPlus components are freely licensed and may be copied, modified, and redistributed freely. Nobody gets paid, nobody is making any money, it's a project fully motivated by curiousity and love of music. However, it does take some money to procure development and testing resources. Right now MusicPlayerPlus needs a multi-boot test platform to extend support to a wider variety of Linux platforms and potentially Mac OS X.
If you have the means and you would like to sponsor MusicPlayerPlus development, testing, platform support, and continued improvement then your monetary support could play a very critical role. A little bit goes a long way in MusicPlayerPlus. For example, a bootable USB SSD device could serve as a means of porting and testing support for additional platforms. Or, a decent cup of coffee could be the difference between a bug filled release and a glorious musical adventure.
Sponsor the MusicPlayerPlus project at https://github.com/sponsors/doctorfree
If you have programming skills and find the management and ease-of-use of digital music libraries to be an interesting area, you can contribute to MusicPlayerPlus development through the standard Github "fork, clone, pull request" process. There are many guides to contributing to Github hosted open source projects on the Internet. A good one is available at https://www.dataschool.io/how-to-contribute-on-github/. Another short succinct guide is at https://gist.github.com/MarcDiethelm/7303312.
Once you have forked and cloned the MusicPlayerPlus repository, it's time to setup a development environment. Although many of the MusicPlayerPlus commands are Bash shell scripts, there are also applicatons written in C and C++ along with documentation in Markdown format, configuration files in a variety of formats, examples, screenshots, video demos, build scripts, packaging, and more.
The development environment consists of several packages needed to build, package, and test MusicPlayerPlus components. These include:
build-essential libeigen3-dev libfftw3-dev clang
libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libavutil-dev libswresample-dev
libsamplerate0-dev libtag1-dev libchromaprint-dev libmpdclient-dev
autotools-dev autoconf libtool libboost-all-dev fftw-dev
libiniparser-dev libyaml-dev swig python3-dev pkg-config
libncurses-dev libasound2-dev libreadline-dev libpulse-dev
libcurl4-openssl-dev qtbase5-dev qtchooser qt5-qmake qtbase5-dev-tools
libavfilter-dev libavdevice-dev libsqlite3-dev
On Debian (e.g. Ubuntu), PKGBUILD (e.g. Arch) and RPM (e.g. Fedora) based
systems the MusicPlayerPlus installation package can be created with the
mkpkg
scripts. The mkpkg
script determines which platform it is on
and executes the appropriate build and packaging script in the scripts/
directory. These scripts invoke the build scripts for each of the projects
included with MusicPlayerPlus, populate a distribution tree, and call the
respective packaging utilities. Packages are saved in the
./releases/<version>/
folder. Once a package has been created
it can be installed with the Install
script.
It's not necessary to have C/C++ expertise to contribute to MusicPlayerPlus
development. Many of the MusicPlayerPlus commands are Bash scripts and require
no compilaton. Script commands reside in the bin
and share/scripts
directories. To modify a shell script, install MusicPlayerPlus and edit the
bin/<script>
or share/scripts/<script.sh>
you wish to improve. After making
your changes simply copy the revised script to /usr/bin
and test your changes.
Modifying the configuration files is a little more tricky. Configuration
files generally live in the config
directory but each has its own installation
location and some are modified by the mppinit
command during installation.
If you are just modifying the shell scripts or configuration files then
you don't need to worry about the extensive list of dependencies listed above.
Feel free to email me at github@ronrecord.com with questions or comments.