![]() and fix dragging selected song not dragging all selected elements but rather only those that pass current filter/search, which was not intended. |
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musicdb-client | ||
musicdb-filldb | ||
musicdb-lib | ||
musicdb-server | ||
.gitignore | ||
README.md |
musicdb
custom music player which can be controlled from other WiFi devices (phone/pc)
should perform pretty well (it runs well on my Pine A64 with 10k+ songs)
https://github.com/Dummi26/musicdb/assets/67615357/8ba85f00-27a5-4e41-8688-4816b8aaaff4
why???
server/client
allows you to play music on any device you want while controlling playback from anywhere. you can either run the client and server on the same machine or have them be in the same network so that they can connect using TCP.
if one client makes a change, all other clients will be notified of it and update almost instantly.
it is also possible for a fake "client" to mirror the main server's playback, so you could sync up your entire house if you wanted to.
complicated queue
- allows more customization of playback (loops, custom shuffles, etc.)
- is more organized (adding an album doesn't add 10-20 songs, it creates a folder so you can (re)move the entire album in/from the queue)
caching of songs
for (almost) gapless playback, even when the data is stored on a NAS or cloud
custom database file
when storing data on a cloud, it would take forever to load all songs and scan them for metadata. you would also run into issues with different file formats and where to store the cover images. a custom database speeds up server startup and allows for more features.
usage
build
build musicdb-server
and musicdb-client
(and musicdb-filldb
) using cargo.
Note: the client has a config file in ~/.config/musicdb-client/, which includes the path to a font. You need to set this manually or the client won't start. The file and directory will be created when you first run the client in gui mode.
setup
prep
You need some directory where your music is located (mp3 files).
I will assume this is /music
for simplicity.
You will also need a file that will hold your database.
I will assume this is dbfile
.
Note: Instead of adding the executables (musicdb-client
and musicdb-server
) to your $PATH
, you can run cargo run --release --
followed by the arguments.
Since this is using cargo, you need to be in the source directory for whatever you want to run.
database
musicdb-filldb
will read all files in the /music directory and all of its subdirectories, read their metadata and try to figure out as much about these songs as possible. It will then generate a dbfile
which musicdb-server
can read.
You can make changes to the database later, but this should be the easiest way to get started:
musicdb-filldb /music
starting the server
Copy the musicdb-server/assets
directory to ./assets
, then run:
musicdb-server dbfile /music --tcp 127.0.0.1:26314 --web 127.0.0.1:8080
Note: If you don't care about the HTML site, you can leave out the --web 127.0.0.1:8080
.
You also won't need the assets
then.
And that's it - the rest should just work.
You can now open 127.0.0.1:8080 in a browser or use musicdb-client
:
musicdb-client 127.0.0.1:26314 gui
syncplayer
musicdb-client
has a syncplayer mode, where it will play back songs in sync with the server.
It's usually easier to use syncplayer-network, which will get the song files from the server,
but syncplayer-local may be more stable and responsive, because it assumes you have a local copy of the server's music files (/music
) somewhere, for example at ~/music
:
musicdb-client 127.0.0.1:26314 syncplayer-network
musicdb-client 127.0.0.1:26314 syncplayer-local ~/music
TODOs
If the server can't play a song, it seems to get stuck. It should instead send a notification to all clients about the error and skip to the next song. The clients should then display this notification to the user. TODO: Figure out what to do when no user acknowledges the notification. Send it again later or just pretend nothing happened?