The hmp3
music player, written in Haskell, dates to 2005, and has a
curses interface for use in a text terminal. However, it has become
abandonware: the last update was in June 2008, and it no longer builds
with today’s Haskell and standard libraries.
This repository is an effort to resurrect this software.
The original Darcs repo has vanished from the Internet. However, I have a copy I checked out in 2008 (to hack on!) with all the patches through version 1.5.1 (the latest is 1.5.2.1), and Hackage has tarballs for the later versions.
-
I used darcs-to-git to port to Git. I manually added commits for the two later published versions, which were only minor changes, mostly the automated regeneration of a
configure
file (now gone). -
The code has been updated to compile under recent GHC (tested through 9.10) and libraries. This required rewriting or entirely replacing large sections, mainly low-level optimizations.
-
I added support for building with Stack. It can also be installed from Nix.
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There is a public GitHub issue tracker, and a GitHub action to continuously test builds.
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I try to avoid “Not Invented Here” by using established, up-to-date packages from Hackage. Much old code has now been “outsourced” and simplified.
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All C code is removed, replaced with libraries from Hackage. There is still some use of the FFI.
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Unicode is supported in titles and filenames, and Unicode glyphs are utilized in the interface.
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It is much more stable. The app used to crash frequently and require restart, but I’ve had
hmp3-ng
running multiple times continuously for more than a year with heavy use without any problems. -
Several additions and changes have been made to the feature set and the UI. A few of the key bindings have been modified per my preference.
-
Work on other features and changes, and documentation, is ongoing.
This is still a work in progress. Let me know if there are problems.
Either cabal install
or stack install
will build a binary.
You will need to have mpg123
installed, which is free software and
widely available in package managers. Alternatively, mpg321
can
be used by compiling with the -DMPG321
option. In my experience,
the latter worked better, but it has not been updated since 2012 and
is no longer available on many systems.
The build depends on the package hscurses
, which in turn requires
curses dev files. In Ubuntu/Debian, for example, these can be obtained
by installing libncurses-dev
.
The hmp3
executable is invoked with a list of mp3 files or
directories of mp3 files. With no arguments, it will use the
playlist from the last time it was run, which is stored in an XDG
cache directory, usually ~/.cache/hmp3/playlist.db
.
$ hmp3 ~/Music ~/Downloads/La-La.mp3
$ hmp3
Once running, hmp3
is controlled by fairly intuitive key commands.
h
shows a help menu, and q
quits. hmp3 -h
prints a simple help
message with command line options.
A color scheme can be specified by writing out a Config { .. }
value in ~/.config/hmp3/style.conf
(or wherever your XDG config is).
See Style.hs
for the definition. The l
command hot-reloads this
configuration.
License:
GPL
Author:
Don Stewart, Tue Jan 15 15:16:55 PST 2008
Contributors:
Samuel Bronson
Stefan Wehr
Tomasz Zielonka
David Himmelstrup