DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
SHNTOOL(1) local SHNTOOL(1)
NAME
shntool - a multi-purpose WAVE data processing and reporting utility
SYNOPSIS
shntool mode ...
shntool [CORE OPTION]
DESCRIPTION
shntool is a command-line utility to view and/or modify WAVE data and
properties. It runs in several different operating modes, and supports
various lossless audio formats.
shntool is comprised of three parts - its core, mode modules, and
format modules. This helps to make the code easier to maintain, as
well as aid other programmers in developing new functionality. The
distribution archive contains a file named 'modules.howto' that
describes how to create a new mode or format module, for those so
inclined.
Mode modules
shntool performs various functions on WAVE data through the use of mode
modules. The core of shntool is simply a wrapper around the mode
modules. In fact, when shntool is run with a valid mode as its first
argument, it essentially runs the main procedure for the specified
mode, and quits. shntool comes with several built-in modes, described
below:
len Displays length, size and properties of PCM WAVE data
fix Fixes sector-boundary problems with CD-quality PCM WAVE
data
hash Computes the MD5 or SHA1 fingerprint of PCM WAVE data
pad Pads CD(hyquality files not aligned on sector boundaries
with silence
join Joins PCM WAVE data from multiple files into one
split Splits PCM WAVE data from one file into multiple files
cat Writes PCM WAVE data from one or more files to the
terminal
cmp Compares PCM WAVE data in two files
cue Generates a CUE sheet or split points from a set of files
conv Converts files from one format to another
info Displays detailed information about PCM WAVE data
strip Strips extra RIFF chunks and/or writes canonical headers
gen Generates CD-quality PCM WAVE data files containing
silence
trim Trims PCM WAVE silence from the ends of files
For more information on the meaning of the various command-line options
for each mode, see the MODE-SPECIFIC OPTIONS section below.
For convenience, each mode can specify an alternate name or alias that
will invoke it (this feature is currently only available on systems
that support symbolic or hard linking). In particular, each mode is
aliased to 'shn<mode>'. For instance, running shnlen is equivalent to
running shntool len - thus saving a few keystrokes.
Format modules
File formats are abstracted from shntool through the use of format
modules. They provide a means for shntool to tranparently read and/or
write different file formats. This abstraction allows shntool to
concentrate on its job without worrying about the details of each file
format.
The following formats are currently supported:
wav RIFF WAVE file format
aiff Audio Interchange File Format (AIFF and uncompressed/sowt
AIFF-C only) (via 'sox'):
<http://sox.sourceforge.net/>
shn Shorten low complexity waveform coder (via 'shorten'):
<http://www.softsound.com/Shorten.html>
<http://www.etree.org/shnutils/shorten/>
flac Free Lossless Audio Codec (via 'flac'):
<http://flac.sourceforge.net/>
ape Monkey's Audio Compressor (via 'mac'):
<http://www.monkeysaudio.com/>
<http://supermmx.org/linux/mac/>
alac Apple Lossless Audio Codec (via 'alac'):
<http://craz.net/programs/itunes/alac.html>
tak (T)om's lossless (A)udio (K)ompressor (via 'takc'):
<http://www.thbeck.de/Tak/Tak.html>
ofr OptimFROG Lossless WAVE Audio Coder (via 'ofr'):
<http://www.losslessaudio.org/>
tta TTA Lossless Audio Codec (via 'ttaenc'):
<http://tta.sourceforge.net/>
als MPEG-4 Audio Lossless Coding (via 'mp4als'):
<http://www.nue.tu-berlin.de/forschung/projekte/ -
lossless/mp4als.html>
wv WavPack Hybrid Lossless Audio Compression (via 'wavpack'
and 'wvunpack'):
<http://www.wavpack.com/>
lpac Lossless Predictive Audio Compression (via 'lpac'):
<http://www.nue.tu-berlin.de/wer/liebchen/lpac.html>
la Lossless Audio (via 'la'):
<http://www.lossless-audio.com/>
bonk Bonk lossy/lossless audio compressor (via 'bonk'):
<http://www.logarithmic.net/pfh/bonk>
kxs Kexis lossless WAV file compressor (via 'kexis'):
<http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/kexis/>
mkw MKW Audio Compression format (via 'mkwcon'):
<http://www.etree.org/shnutils/mkwcon/>
cust Custom output format module (output only, useful for
encoding to a format that shntool does not yet support)
term sends output to the terminal
null sends output to /dev/null (output only, useful for
dry-runs in several modes, such as fix mode or strip
mode)
When reading files for input, shntool automatically discovers which, if
any, format module handles each file. In modes where files are created
as output, you can specify what the output format should be -
otherwise, shntool decides for you by selecting the first format module
it finds that supports output (in a default installation, this will be
the wav format).
CORE OPTIONS
Modeless
When run without a mode, shntool takes these options:
-m Show detailed mode module information
-f Show detailed format module information
-a Show default format module arguments
-v Show version information
-h Show a help screen
GLOBAL OPTIONS
All modes
All modes support the following options:
-D Print debugging information
-F file
Specify a file containing a list of filenames to process. This
overrides any files specified on the command line or on the
terminal.
NOTE: Most modes will accept input filenames from a single
source, according to the following order of precedence: file
specified by the -F option, otherwise filenames on the command
line, otherwise filenames read from the terminal.
-H Print times in h:mm:ss.{ff,nnn} format, instead of m:ss.{ff,nnn}
-P type
Specify progress indicator type. type is one of: {pct, dot,
spin, face, none}. pct shows the completion percentage of each
operation. dot shows the progress of each operation by
displaying a '.' after each 10% step toward completion. spin
shows a spinning progress indicator. face shows the progress of
each operation by displaying six emoticons that become
increasingly happy as the operation nears completion. none
prevents any progress completion information from being
displayed. The default is pct.
-h Show the help screen for this mode
-i fmt Specify input file format decoder and/or arguments. The format
is: "fmt decoder [arg1 ... argN]", and must be surrounded by
quotes. If arguments are given, then one of them must contain
"%f", which will be replaced with the input filename. Examples:
-i 'shn shorten-2.3b' (use official shorten-2.3b instead of
later versions; leave default arguments untouched)
-i 'shn shorten -x -d 2048 %f -' (force shorten to skip the
first 2048 bytes of each file)
-q Suppress non-critical output (quiet mode). Output that normally
goes to stderr will not be displayed, other than errors or
debugging information (if specified).
-r val Reorder input files? val is one of: {ask, ascii, natural,
none}. The default is natural.
-v Show version information
-w Suppress warnings
-- Indicates that everything following it is a filename
Output modes
Additionally, any mode that creates output files supports the the
following options:
-O val Overwrite existing files? val is one of: {ask, always, never}.
The default is ask.
-a str Prefix str to base part of output filenames
-d dir Specify output directory
-o str Specify output file format extension, encoder and/or arguments.
Format is: "fmt [ext=abc] [encoder [arg1 ... argN (%f =
filename)]]", and must be surrounded by quotes. If arguments
are given, then one of them must contain "%f", which will be
replaced with the output filename. Examples:
-o 'shn shorten -v2 - %f' (create shorten files without seek
tables)
-o 'flac flake - %f' (use alternate flac encoder)
-o 'aiff ext=aif' (override default aiff extension of 'aiff'
with 'aif')
-o 'cust ext=mp3 lame --quiet - %f' (create mp3 files using
lame)
-z str Postfix str to base part of output filenames
MODE-SPECIFIC OPTIONS
len mode options
-U unit
Specifies the unit in which the totals will be printed. unit is
one of: {b, kb, mb, gb, tb}. The default is b.
-c Do not show column names
-t Do not show totals line
-u unit
Specifies the unit in which each file will be printed. unit is
one of: {b, kb, mb, gb, tb}. The default is b.
len mode output
The output of len mode may seem cryptic at first, because it
attempts to convey a lot of information in just a little bit of
space. But it is quite easy to read once you know what the
columns represent; and in certain columns, what each character
in the column means. Each column is explained below.
length Shows the length of the WAVE data, in m:ss.nnn
(millisecond) format. If the data is CD-quality, then
m:ss.ff is shown instead, where ff is a number from 00 to
74 that best approximates the number of frames (2352-byte
blocks) remaining after m:ss. If all files are
CD-quality, the total length will be shown in m:ss.ff
format; otherwise it will be in m:ss.nnn format. NOTE:
CD-quality files are rounded to the nearest frame; all
other files are rounded to the nearest millisecond.
expanded size
Shows the total size of all WAVE chunks within the file
(header, data and any extra RIFF chunks). Essentially
this is the size that the file would be if it were
converted to .wav format, e.g. with shntool conv.
NOTE: Do not rely on this field for audio size! If you
simply want to know how many bytes of audio are in a
file, run it through info mode, and look at the "data
size" field in its output.
cdr Shows properties related to CD-quality files. A 'c' in
the first slot indicates that the WAVE data is not
[C]D-quality. A 'b' in the second slot indicates that
the CD-quality WAVE data is not cut on a sector
[b]oundary. An 's' in the third slot indicates that the
CD-quality WAVE data is too [s]hort to be burned.
A '-' in any of these slots indicates that the particular
property is OK or normal. An 'x' in any of these slots
indicates that the particular property does not apply to
this file, or cannot be determined.
WAVE Shows properties of the WAVE data. An 'h' in the first
slot indicates that the WAVE [h]eader is not canonical.
An 'e' in the second slot indicates that the WAVE file
contains [e]xtra RIFF chunks.
A '-' in any of these slots indicates that the particular
property is OK or normal. An 'x' in any of these slots
indicates that the particular property does not apply to
this file, or cannot be determined.
problems
Shows problems detected with the WAVE header, WAVE data,
or the file itself. A '3' in the first slot indicates
that the file contains an ID[3]v2 header. An 'a' in the
second slot indicates that the audio data is not
block-[a]ligned. An 'i' in the third slot indicates that
the WAVE header is [i]nconsistent about data size and/or
file size. A 't' in the fourth slot indicates that the
WAVE file seems to be [t]runcated. A 'j' in the fifth
slot indicates that the WAVE file seems to have [j]unk
appended to it.
A '-' in any of these slots indicates that the particular
problem was not detected. An 'x' in any of these slots
indicates that the particular problem does not apply to
this file, or cannot be determined.
fmt Shows which file format handled this file.
ratio Shows the compression ratio for this file.
filename
Shows the name of the file that's being inspected.
fix mode options
NOTE: file names for files created in fix mode will be based on the
input file name with the string '-fixed' appended to it, and the
extension will be the default extension of the output file format. For
example, with an output file format of shn the file 'foo.wav' would
become 'foo-fixed.shn'. This can be overridden with the -a and/or -z
global options described above.
-b Shift track breaks backward to the previous sector boundary.
This is the default.
-c Check whether fixing is needed, without actually fixing
anything. shntool will exit with status 0 if fixing is needed,
and status 1 otherwise. This can be useful in shell scripts,
e.g.: "if shntool fix -c *; then shntool fix *; else ...; fi"
-f Shift track breaks forward to the next sector boundary.
-k Specifies that all files should be processed, even if the first
several of them wouldn't be altered, aside from a possible file
format change. The default is to skip the first N files that
wouldn't be changed from a WAVE data perspective in order to
avoid unnecessary work.
-n Specifies that the last file created should not be padded with
silence to make its WAVE data size a multiple of 2352 bytes.
The default is to pad the last file.
-u Round track breaks to the nearest sector boundary.
hash mode options
-c Specifies that the composite fingerprint for all input files
should be generated, instead of the default of one fingerprint
per file. The composite fingerprint is simply the fingerprint
of the WAVE data from all input files taken as a whole in the
order given, and is identical to the one that would be generated
from the joined file if the same files were joined into one
large file, with no padding added. This option can be used to
fingerprint file sets, or to identify file sets in which track
breaks have been moved around, but no audio has been modified in
any way (e.g. no padding added, no resampling done, etc.).
-m Generate MD5 fingerprints. This is the default.
-s Generate SHA1 fingerprints.
pad mode options
NOTE: file names for files created in pad mode will be based on the
input file name with the string '-prepadded' or '-postpadded' appended
to it, and the extension will be the default extension of the output
file format. For example, with an output file format of shn and
pre-padding specified on the command line, the file 'foo.wav' would
become 'foo-prepadded.shn'. This can be overridden with the -a and/or
-z global options described above.
Be aware that some output format encoders (e.g. flac, ape)
automatically strip headers and/or extra RIFF chunks.
-b Specifies that the file created should be padded at the
beginning with silence to make its WAVE data size a multiple of
2352 bytes.
-e Specifies that the file created should be padded at the end with
silence to make its WAVE data size a multiple of 2352 bytes.
This is the default action.
join mode options
NOTE: file names for files created in join mode will be prefixed with
'joined.', and the extension will be the default extension of the
output file format. For example, with an output file format of wav the
files 'files*.wav' would become 'joined.wav'. This can be overridden
with the -a and/or -z global options described above.
-b Specifies that the file created should be padded at the
beginning with silence to make its WAVE data size a multiple of
2352 bytes. Note that this option does not apply if the input
files are not CD-quality, since padding is undefined in that
case.
-e Specifies that the file created should be padded at the end with
silence to make its WAVE data size a multiple of 2352 bytes.
This is the default action. Note that this option does not
apply if the input files are not CD-quality, since padding is
undefined in that case.
-n Specifies that the file created should not be padded with
silence to make its WAVE data size a multiple of 2352 bytes.
Note that this option does not apply if the input files are not
CD-quality, since padding is undefined in that case.
split mode options
NOTE: file names for files created in split mode are of the form
prefixNNN.ext, where NNN is the output file number, and 'ext' is the
default extension of the output file format. If an output file format
of 'wav' is used, and the prefix is not altered via the -n switch
described below, then the output file names will be
"split-track01.wav", "split-track02.wav", etc. This can be overridden
with the -a and/or -z global options described above.
For information on specifying split points, see the Specifying split
points section below.
-c num Specifies the number to start counting from when naming output
files. The default is 1.
-e len Prefix each track with len amount of lead-in taken from the
previous track. len must be given in bytes, m:ss, m:ss.ff or
m:ss.nnn format.
-f file
Specifies a file from which to read split point data. If not
given, then split points are read from the terminal.
-l len Specifies that the input file should be split into smaller files
based on multiples of the len time interval. len must be given
in bytes, m:ss, m:ss.ff or m:ss.nnn format.
-m str Specifies a character manipulation string for filenames
generated from CUE sheets. These characters, taken one-by-one,
represent from/to character translation. They must always be in
pairs. Some examples:
:- Translate all instances of ':' to '-'
:-/- Translate both ':' and '/' to '-'
:-/_*x Translate ':' to '-', '/' to '_', and '*' to 'x'
-n fmt Specifies the file count output format. The default is %02d,
which gives two-digit zero-padded numbers (01, 02, 03, ...).
-t fmt Name output files in user-specified format based on CUE sheet
fields. The following formatting strings are recognized:
%p Performer
%a Album
%t Track title
%n Track number
-u len Postfix each track with len amount of lead-out taken from the
next track. len must be given in bytes, m:ss, m:ss.ff or
m:ss.nnn format.
-x list
Only extract tracks in list (comma separated, may contain
ranges). Examples include:
7 Only extract track 7
3-5 Only extract tracks 3 through 5
2-6,9,11-13
Only extract tracks 2 through 6, 9, and 11 through 13
Specifying split points
Split points simply mark places within the WAVE data of the
input file where tracks will be split. They can be specified in
any combination of the following formats:
bytes where bytes is a specific byte offset
m:ss where m = minutes and ss = seconds
m:ss.ff
where m = minutes, ss = seconds and ff = frames (75 per
second, so ff ranges from 00 to 74)
m:ss.nnn
where m = minutes, ss = seconds and nnn = milliseconds
(will be rounded to closest sector boundary, or the first
sector boundary if the closest one happens to be the
beginning of the file)
CUE sheet
- a simple CUE sheet, in which each "INDEX 01 m:ss:ff"
line is converted to a m:ss.ff split point
Split points must be given in increasing order, and must appear
one per line. If the byte offset calculated from the final
split point equals the input file's WAVE data size, then it is
ignored. Since split points specify locations within the input
file where tracks will be split, N split points will create N+1
output files. All m:ss formats will create splits on sector
boundaries whenever the input file is CD-quality; to force
non-sector-aligned splits, use the exact byte format.
cat mode options
-c Specifies that extra RIFF chunks should be suppressed from the
output. The default is to write the extra RIFF chunks.
-d Specifies that the WAVE data should be suppressed from the
output. The default is to write the data.
-e Specifies that the WAVE header should be suppressed from the
output. The default is to write the header.
-n Specifies that the NULL pad byte at end of odd-sized data chunks
should be suppressed from the output, if present. The default
is to write the NULL pad byte. This option only applies when
WAVE data is also written, otherwise it is ignored.
cmp mode options
-c secs
Sets the number of seconds of audio to use for the byte-shift
comparison buffer. This option only makes sense with the -s
option. The default is 3 seconds.
-f fuzz
Sets the "fuzz factor" for determining whether byte-shifted data
is identical. fuzz is a positive integer that represents the
maximum number of allowable byte mismatches between the two
files in the area searched by the -s option. This allows one to
check for differing bytes between to files that (a) are
byte-shifted and (b) contain at least one error in the area
searched by the -s option. The higher the fuzz factor, the
longer the search takes, so set it low to begin with (8 or so),
and increase it in small steps if needed. NOTE: this switch can
only be used with the -s switch.
-l List offsets and values of all differing bytes. Output is
similar to 'cmp -l'; in particular, offsets are 1-based. Can be
used with the -s switch.
-s Check to see whether the WAVE data contained in the input files
are identical modulo a byte-shift. Currently, this will only
detect differences up to the first 529200 bytes (equal to 3
seconds of CD-quality data). This can be used to compare WAVE
data within a pre-burned file to WAVE data in the corresponding
track ripped from the burned CD, which is useful if the ripped
track came from a CD burned TAO, and thus might have a 2-second
gap of silence at the beginning. This option can also help
identify a CD burner/CD reader combined read/write offset.
cue mode options
-c Specifies that a simple CUE sheet should be output. This is the
default action. NOTE: all input files must be CD-quality for
CUE sheets to be valid.
-s Specifies that split points in explicit byte-offset format
should be output.
conv mode options
NOTE: file names for files created in conv mode will be named based on
the input file name. Specifically, if the input file name ends with
the default file extension for that file's format, then the default
extension for the desired output format will replace it; otherwise, it
will be appended to it. For example, for an output format of shn and a
wav input file named 'file.wav', the converted file will be named
'file.shn', since '.wav' is the default extension for the wav format.
On the other hand, given the same situation above, but with an input
file named 'file.wave', the converted file will be named
'file.wave.shn', since '.wave' does not match '.wav'. This can be
overridden with the -a and/or -z global options described above.
Be aware that some output format encoders (e.g. flac, ape)
automatically strip headers and/or extra RIFF chunks, while others
(e.g. sox) might adjust WAVE data sizes in rare instances in order to
align the audio on a block boundary.
-t Read WAVE data from the terminal.
info mode options
This mode doesn't support any additional options.
strip mode options
NOTE: file names for files created in strip mode will be based on the
input file name with the string '-stripped' appended to it, and the
extension will be the default extension of the output file format. For
example, with an output file format of wav the file 'bar.shn' would
become 'bar-stripped.wav'. This can be overridden with the -a and/or
-z global options described above.
Be aware that some output format encoders (e.g. flac, ape)
automatically strip headers and/or extra RIFF chunks, while others
(e.g. sox) might adjust WAVE data sizes in rare instances in order to
align the audio on a block boundary.
-c Specifies that extra RIFF chunks should not be stripped. The
default is to remove everything that appears after the first
data chunk.
-e Specifies that WAVE headers should not be made canonical. The
default is to canonicalize headers.
gen mode options
NOTE: file names for files created in gen mode will be prefixed with
'silence.', and the extension will be the default extension of the
output file format. For example, with an output file format of wav the
generated file would become 'silence.wav'. This can be overridden with
the -a and/or -z global options described above.
-l len Generate files containing len amount of silence. len must be
given in bytes, m:ss, m:ss.ff or m:ss.nnn format.
trim mode options
NOTE: file names for files created in trim mode will be based on the
input file name with the string '-trimmed' appended to it, and the
extension will be the default extension of the output file format. For
example, with an output file format of shn the file 'foo.wav' would
become 'foo-trimmed.shn'. This can be overridden with the -a and/or -z
global options described above.
-b Only trim silence from the beginning of files
-e Only trim silence from the end of files
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
ST_DEBUG
If set, shntool will print debugging information. This is
analogous to the -D global option, with the exception that
debugging is enabled immediately, instead of when the
command-line is parsed.
ST_<FORMAT>_DEC
Specify input file format decoder and/or arguments. Replace
<FORMAT> with the format you wish to modify, e.g. ST_SHN_DEC.
The format of this variable is analagous to the -i global
option, except that the initial format is not included.
Examples:
ST_SHN_DEC='shorten-2.3b'
ST_SHN_DEC='shorten -x -d 2048 %f -'
ST_<FORMAT>_ENC
Specify output file format extension, encoder and/or arguments.
Replace <FORMAT> with the format you wish to modify, e.g.
ST_SHN_ENC. The format of this variable is analagous to the -o
global option, except that the initial format is not included.
Examples:
ST_SHN_ENC='shorten -v2 - %f'
ST_FLAC_ENC='flake - %f'
ST_AIFF_ENC='ext=aif'
ST_CUST_ENC='ext=mp3 lame --quiet - %f'
Note that command-line options take precedence over any of these
environment variables.
EXIT STATUS
Generally speaking, shntool will exit with status 0 upon success, and
status 1 if it encounters an error. The only exception is when the
'quit' option is selected from within the interactive file reordering
menu, in which case the exist status will be 255.
NOTES
shntool is a misnomer, since it processes WAVE data, not shorten data.
The name is a holdover from its early days as 'shnlen', a program
created specifically to extract information about WAVE data stored
within .shn files.
Aliases for shntool are prefixed with 'shn' instead of 'wav' to avoid
possible collisions with existing programs.
AUTHOR
Jason Jordan <shnutils at freeshell dot org>
Please send all bug reports to the above address.
The latest version of shntool can always be found at
<http://www.etree.org/shnutils/> or <http://shnutils.freeshell.org/>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2000-2009 Jason Jordan
This is free software. You may redistribute copies of it under the
terms of the GNU General Public License
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. There is NO WARRANTY, to the
extent permitted by law.
REVISION
$Id: shntool.1,v 1.140 2009/03/30 05:59:25 jason Exp $
shntool 3.0.10 March 2009 SHNTOOL(1)