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316 lines
10 KiB
Text
316 lines
10 KiB
Text
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# pod source for fIcy/fResync/fPls man page. Build with:
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# pod2man -s1 -r1.0.18 --stderr -nFICY -c'SlackBuilds.org'
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=pod
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=head1 NAME
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fIcy - an icecast/shoutcast stream grabber suite
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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fIcy B<[options]> B<server [port [path]]|url>
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The main program. Takes directly a stream url and dumps the tracks on
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the specified file/s and standard output, depending on the settings.
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fPls B<[options]> B<file|url> B<[fIcy options]>
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Playlist manager. Reads a playlist (local or remote) and manages fIcy
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retries/timeouts/errors, forwarding the specified flags.
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fResync B<[options]> B<file>
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MPEG resyncing utility. Re-aligns head frame headers on dumped or
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broken files. Usually needed for embedded hardware decoders or editing
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software.
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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fIcy is a small icecast/shoutcast stream grabber suite for use under shell
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environment. Its goal is to automatically rip a stream into user customisable
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files. It will work with ICY compatible streams, allowing you to either to save
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the stream to disk or to pipe the output to a media player, or even both. fIcy,
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among other uses, is ideal for batch/unattended recording of radio programs and
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stream debugging.
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The fIcy package includes:
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=over
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=item -
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fIcy itself, a stream separator/multiplexer,
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=item -
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fResync, a fast MPEG-resyncing utility,
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=item -
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fPls, a playlist frontend for fIcy.
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=back
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=head1 OPTIONS
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=head2 fIcy options
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-d Do not dump the output to stdout.
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Useful when only ripping.
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-E num Enumerate files when song title [metadata] changes, starting at
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num. When 0, fIcy will try to find the highest unused file
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number automatically. Uses -o as a prefix.
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-h Help
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-c Do not clobber files.
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-m Use song title [metadata] when naming files. Uses -o as prefix.
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-n If the file exists create new one with .n as suffix.
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-p When dumping to stdout consider writing errors as transient
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(that is: flush the output buffer until stdout is ready).
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Useful when you pipe the output to a media player and want to
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kill it while not interrupting the rip.
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-o file Dump the output to file or use file as a prefix (depending on
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other settings). Hint: to dump without a prefix use "./".
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-s suffix Use sfx as a suffix for new files.
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Hint: the .mp3/.m4a extension is NOT implicit.
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-t Display song title [metadata] while ripping.
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-r Remove/don't save partial chunks. This will skip the first
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chunk and remove the last one upon termination which are
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(supposedly) incomplete. To use in combination with -m or -E.
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-q file Append "file name" sequence to file. The file name is written
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upon file completition. This may be used to trigger events and
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rejoin splitted parts with an external tool without -E.
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fResync will use this file in the future.
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-x regex Save only files whose title (NOT filename) matches against this
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(or one of these) extended regular expressions. Multiple -x can
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be specified on the command line to form OR conditions. Dump
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unaffected. Can be combined with -X.
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-X regex Do NOT save files whose title matches against this extended
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regular expression. Same semantics as -x.
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-I file Load include/exclude REs from file. Each line must be prefixed
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with + or - to indicate whether it's a positive or negative
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expression (-xX).
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-f expr Filter titles through the specified coprocessor expression. The
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raw title is passed to the expression (doesn't include any
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additional prefixes/suffixes). As the result will be used
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internally, some limitations apply. Read carefully the
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Filtering_ section.
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-F file Filter titles through the specified coprocessor script. Same
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semantics as -f, but the expressions are loaded from a file
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instead. Conflicts with -f.
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-C path Specify the path of the external title rewriting coprocessor.
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Defaults to "sed". The executable must support the '-e', '-f'
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flags and operate through stdin/out, like "sed".
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-M time Maximum recording time. See Notes_.
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-i time Maximum network idle time. Stops recording after the specified
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amount of time is passed without network activity. Defaults to
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0 (default tcp timeout).
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-a file Read authentication credentials from file (the file must
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contain a line of the form user:password). Note that only the
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Basic HTTP authentication scheme is supported.
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-l num Redirect follow limit. Defaults to 1. 0 disables redirection
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entirely.
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=head2 fResync options
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-b By default fResync maps the entire file into memory when
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operating. However this can create problems on loaded systems
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with large files or when simulating. This reverts to a
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buffered I/O mode. This flag is also implicit when simulating.
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-s Simulate the process. Print on the standard output the starting
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sync offset and stream length, but don't modify the source
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file.
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-v Verbose.
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-n frames Require/decode at least n valid consecutive frames to validate
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the sync offset. Defaults to 6.
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-m len Maximum frame length. Defaults to 1597. fResync uses this value
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to determine the maximal region of the file to be checked.
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=head2 fPls options
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-P path Specify a different name or full path for the fIcy executable
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(defaults to "fIcy").
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-v Verbose.
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-R max Specifies the maximal number of retries to do for each stream
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upon connection/read failure.
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-L max Specifies the maximal number of loops to do for the entire
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playlist (-1 for infinite).
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-T time Wait time to pause after each failure.
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-M time Maximum cumulative recording time. See Notes_.
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-i time Maximum network idle time. Same as fIcy's when loading a
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playlist via http. Forwarded to fIcy.
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-a file Read authentication credentials from file. Same as fIcy's when
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loading a playlist via http. The credentials are automatically
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forwarded to fIcy, but you can override them when needed.
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-l num Redirect follow limit. Same as fIcy's when loading a playlist
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via http. Forwarded to fIcy.
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-d file Run as a daemon, redirecting messages to file. fIcy's -d
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option is enforced. As the process is chdir-ed to the root
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directory you also have to specify absolute paths for all
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options, including fIcy's ones.
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=head1 EXAMPLES
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Use fIcy to display ICY titles while playing::
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fPls http://example.com:8080/listen.pls -t | mpg123 -
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Rip a station until stopped::
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fPls -L-1 http://netradio.invalid/listen.pls -s.mp3 -o./ -cmrd
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Connect directly to the stream with server:port and /path::
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fIcy -s .mp3 -o ./ -md 123.123.123.123 8080 /path/to/stream
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Rip an .mp3 stream while playing, but allows the player to be restarted later
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by using a named fifo (note that you can re/open "fifo" with any player)::
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$ mkfifo fifo
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$ fIcy -p ... > fifo
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$ mpg123 fifo
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Record your favourite program "XYZ" usually on-air between 16:30-17:00::
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at 16:30
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fPls -M 30m http://example.com/listen.pls -o program.mp3 -x XYZ
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^D
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Cleanup a ripped and/or damaged mp3 file::
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fResync file.mp3
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=head1 NOTES
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The output files produced by fIcy may miss audio framing information and
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headers since the separation does not consider the audio data. For this reason,
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your player 'may' (but should not) fail to reproduce the dump or output some
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initial noise: this is expected. fResync can be used to cleanup MPEG files
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after processing.
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You can also use other tools such as mpgedit for cutting the file in arbitrary
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positions without diminishing the quality. Assuming that your song spans across
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three files (use -q to know which ones), that's how to proceed::
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cat 1.mp3 2.mp3 3.mp3 > temp.mp3 && xmpgedit temp.mp3
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Do *not* resync the files if you're going to post-process them this way:
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fResync would remove at least one boundary frame on each file, while other
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tools could also insert extra empty frames to silence the decoder!
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The -M flag supported by both fIcy and fPls accepts a time specification in
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seconds, `HH:MM` or `N minutes/hours/days`. Time starts just after the
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connection has been established, but without counting further delays. Also
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beware that -M specified in fPls means `cumulative recording time` (time
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accumulates across retries/timeouts), while -M specified in fIcy means `single
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stream recording time` (recording stops at the first error or when the
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specified time has elapsed).
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=head1 FILTERING
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Most online radio stations tend to put banners in the title that will be shown
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in the player, and eventually result in the filename. To overcome to this (and
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more), fIcy offers the possibility to rewrite each title through a normal sed
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script via the "-fF" flags. A real sed coprocess is used along the execution so
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all of sed's power is available, but some limitations apply:
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* Each line of input should result in one output line, and ONE ONLY.
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* Two consecutive identical titles will result in the second one
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being ignored (thus NOT splitting the stream). Consider this rule,
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as removing carefully the banner could result in a better separation.
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* The resulting title will still apply for -xXI as usual.
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* Please note that the *title* is filtered, not the filename (which may
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still have some characters removed/modified). Use -tv to see what is
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actually sent to the filter.
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You can actually use any executable that works as a stream editor by specifying
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the path with '-C'. The executable must support the '-e' (inline expression)
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and '-f' (script file) flags or, at least, ignore them. This allows for any
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script or custom executable to be used when a "sed" script is considered
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inadequate.
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=head2 Filtering examples
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As an example, suppose your titles look like this::
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Artist - Title (radiobanner)
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You can write a sed expression or script containing::
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s/ (radiobanner)$//
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to remove the trailing part. This facility can also be used to uniform file
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names, invert Artist/Title positions and so on. Clever use of the pattern space
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can also be used to merge albums. sed alone can be used to debug expressions,
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eg::
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echo "test title" | sed -e 'expr'
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Refer to the sed(1) manual for a complete list of commands you can use.
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=head1 DISCLAIMER
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We would like to remind you that saving streams containing copyrighted material
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without explicit consent is *ILLEGAL*. For stream administrators, please see
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our statement in the FAQ.
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=head1 SEE ALSO
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bfr <http://www.glines.org/software/bfr>
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Audio-oriented rebuffering tool. Ideal for lousy streams.
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mpgedit <http://www.mpgedit.org/>
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Frame-level mp3 cutting tool.
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=head1 AUTHORS
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fIcy was written by Yuri D'Elia (I<wavexx@users.sf.net>) and
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David Leonardi (I<david@mediavitamin.com>)
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This manual page by B. Watson for the SlackBuilds.org project. It may
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be used by anyone.
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