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XHIPPO(1)                       Audio Software                       XHIPPO(1)

NAME

xhippo - A GTK-based playlist manager for various UNIX sound players.

SYNOPSIS

xhippo [options] [dir | file ...]

INTRODUCTION

GNU `xhippo' is a generic playlist manager program for a variety of UNIX sound players. It's been shown to work with `mpg123', `madplay', `bplay', `s3mod', `tracker', `xmp', `mtvp', `splay', `ogg123' and `timidity', and should work with more-or-less anything that can take a filename on the command line. It is capable of automatically deciding which player to use depending on a file's extension; the defaults are set in a config file. It uses textual playlist files, which are easily generated with the `find' or `locate' utilities. The interface of `xhippo' is very loosely modelled on the shareware `HippoPlayer' player for the Amiga. `xhippo' 3 is firmly in maintainance mode; I will continue to fix bugs if anyone finds any, but new users are strongly advised to try out the rewritten `Potamus' branch which will eventually become `xhippo' 4, available from http://offog.org/code/potamus.html. `xhippo' was developed under GNU/Linux, but it contains nothing Linux- specific, so it will probably work on any UNIX-like system where gcc, glib and GTK are available. (Additionally, it supports GNU long options where getopt_long is available.) If you're using NetBSD or FreeBSD, a port is available---see See Installation. `xhippo' can be compiled as a GNOME 1 application, and it can be compiled against GTK+ 1.2, 2.0 or 2.2. `xhippo' supports standard drag-and-drop (which works with the GNOME, KDE and ROX file managers, and any other supporting the standard protocol). `xhippo' comes with NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. You may redistribute copies of GNU `xhippo' under the terms of the GNU General Public License. For more information about these matters, see the file named COPYING. If you've installed a previous version of `xhippo', read the ChangeLog for information on what's changed recently. `xhippo' uses GNU gettext for internationalisation; you can pick the language you want by setting your LANG environment variable. If your C library's gettext support doesn't work, you can give the --with- included-gettext option to the configure script to make it use the copy of gettext included in the package. If you've downloaded `xhippo', please send me some mail to tell me what you think of it. Suggestions for improvements will be gratefully received.

INSTALLATION

Before reading this section, check that your operating system distribution doesn't already contain a package for `xhippo'. If it does, then you will probably be best off using that rather than building it by hand. If it doesn't, or if you want to use a more recent version, then read on. `xhippo' uses `GTK+', and requires `GTK+ 1.2' or higher; it needs `gtk- config' in your path in order to build. It uses GNU `automake' and `autoconf', so it will automatically detect some features of your system that can affect `xhippo''s performance. If you have `libid3tag' from the `libmad' package installed (available along with the `madplay' MPEG audio player, which works well with `xhippo', from http://mad.sourceforge.net/), `xhippo' will use it to read ID3 tags. (If you don't have it installed, `xhippo' will use its own simple implementation which only understands ID3v1.) To compile, change to the source directory and do ./configure make If you want (minimal) GNOME 1 support, do ./configure --with-gnome instead of ./configure. If you wish to use `GTK+ 2.0' or higher, do ./configure --with-gtk2. If you encounter problems finding GTK while building, do ./configure --help to find out how to specify where GTK files are stored. If you want to install into a different place, do ./configure --prefix=/usr/local/xhippo or wherever. Several other options are available; try ./configure --help for more information. To install the program, do make install Each user who wants to use `xhippo' should create a .xhippo directory in their home directory. `xhippo' will look for the config and gtkrc files there, and will save its window state into the winstate file there if configured to. Playlists should be kept in a .xhippo/playlists/ directory. `xhippo' finds your home directory by looking for the HOME environment variable. If this is not set by default, you should add a line of the form export HOME=`pwd` or your shell's equivalent to your profile script.

INVOCATION

To use `xhippo', you need to give it at least one playlist. You can either load a playlist by specifying it on the command line or in the config file, or you can build a playlist by dropping files from a file manager into the `xhippo' window or using the "Add Song" option on the pop-up menu. Playlists are files containing names of files to play, one per line. This is compatible with XMMS's playlist format, so if you have an XMMS playlist called Nice, you could do xhippo $HOME/.x11amp/Nice to use it. (GQmpeg can also import `xhippo' playlists.) Alternately, you can generate them with the `find' command; for instance, if you keep your .ogg files in your $HOME/sound directory, you could do find $HOME/sound -name *.ogg | sort >$HOME/.xhippo/playlists/ogg xhippo $HOME/.xhippo/playlists/ogg to make a playlist and play it. (With a little trickery, `xhippo' can be persuaded to automatically build playlists from a directory on startup; see the example config file for more information.) Playlists can also include other playlists by name; to do this, put a line of the form !foo in the playlist. `xhippo' will then try to load the file foo as a playlist, inserting its entries into the list at that point. If the -i command-line option or readid3 config-file option are enabled, `xhippo' will try to find ID3 tags in the listed files and will put them in the list rather than the filenames if found. To start playing automatically once a playlist is loaded, use the -a option anywhere on the command line (or the autostart command in the config file). You can specify multiple playlists on the command line. Alternatively, you can specify the -f option to make `xhippo' treat command-line arguments as files to be added to the playlist rather than playlists to load (for instance, xhippo -f *.ogg), or -D to make `xhippo' treat command-line arguments as directories to be searched for playable files. xhippo -h or xhippo --help will give you some simple help instructions.

GUI

The status line shows a little information about the player; it shows the number of playlist entries upon startup, and what player is being used to play the current song (and the PID of the player process, if you use -p or showpid:1 in the config file). To start a song, click on it in the list, or click "Next" to pick either a random song (see the mustplayall config file option below to find out how to control this), or the next song in the playlist, depending on the setting of the "Random" checkbox. Clicking on "Prev" will play the previous song (if the "Random" checkbox is enabled, the last random song picked). To restart the current song from the beginning, click "Restart". To stop, click "Stop". `xhippo' supports a number of keyboard accelerators: `r' for Restart, `s' or keypad `/' for Stop, `p' or keypad `*' for Pause, `n', keypad `*' or keypad `-' for Next, `b' for Prev, ``' for Mini, `h' for Random, `a' for Add File, `d' for Add Directory, `l' for Load Playlist, `v' for Save Playlist, `o' for Sort By Name, `w' for Sort By Swapped Name, `t' for Sort By Mtime, `c' for Clear Playlist, `0' to `9' for user-defined menu entries and `q' for quit. When the end of a song is reached, `xhippo' will pick either a random one or the next one from the list depending on whether the "Random" checkbox is set or not. Optionally, `xhippo' can scroll the list so that the randomly-picked song is at the top of the visible section; to enable this, use the -s command-line option, or the scroll:1 config- file option below. To quit, use your window manager's close button, pick Quit from the pop-up menu or send `xhippo' a `SIGINT' `Ctrl-C'. If you check the "Mini" checkbox, the list of files will disappear, making the window smaller; unchecking it will make it reappear. You can make `xhippo' start up in this "minified" state by using the -t switch or the startmini:1 option in your config file. You can drop `file:' URLs (such as files from your file manager) onto the `xhippo' window to add songs to the playlist (if you drop a directory, it will search the directory for files to add). Other URLs (such as `http:') are not supported, as there's no simple mechanism that all players understand to stream a file from a network connection. Right-clicking on the playlist or the status bar will bring up a pop-up menu, which allows you to bring up an information window for a song showing the song's size, location and the date it was last modified, move songs up and down within the playlist, remove songs from the playlist, add songs or directories to the playlist, sort the playlist by song name, swapped song name (the part after the first - in the name) or song mtime, load and save playlists, or bring up the preferences dialog. The default directory for loading and saving playlists is $HOME/.xhippo/playlists. Left-clicking on the status bar will bring up the information window for the song that is currently playing. If you use the -w switch or the savewinstate config file option, `xhippo' will save its window position and size to your $HOME/.xhippo/winstate file when you close the window, and will reload it on startup.

CONFIG FILE

`xhippo' searches for its config file as /usr/local/etc/xhippo.config (or wherever you specified with the --prefix option to `configure'), $HOME/.xhippo/config and xhippo.config (in the current directory); all that are present will be read. Most config-file options have a command-line equivalent; these support both traditional (-x) and GNU-style long (--extended) options. The long options have the same name as the config-file options; --option is equivalent to option:1 in the config file (i.e. it forces the option on). The command-line options override the config file. Invoke `xhippo' as xhippo --help for more information. Many config-file options are alterable from within the GUI at runtime through the Preferences dialog, which can be brought up from the context menu. A config file line starting with a # will be ignored. Lines have the format command:arg1:arg2.... Arguments can be of several types: booleans, integers, strings and sort types. Booleans represent on/off conditions; yes, on, true or any non-zero integer will enable the attribute, and any other value will disable it. For sort types, none (or any other unrecognised value) means don't sort, name (or, for backwards compatibility, any non-zero numeric value) means sort by name, swapped means sort by swapped name, mtime means sort by mtime. The following configuration commands are accepted: `type:extension:command[:options]' When `xhippo' encounters a file whose name ends in .extension, it will use command file to play it. The extension is case- insensitive. options is optional and controls how the player will be started by `xhippo'; if it contains g then the player will be started in its own process group (necessary to properly kill some multithreaded players); if it contains i then the player will be started with stdin connected to `/dev/null'. Examples: type:mp3:mpg123 -b 1024, type:ogg:ogg123:i About the only requirement that `xhippo' has on the players that it uses is that they must quit cleanly when sent a `SIGTERM', and be pauseable with `SIGSTOP' and `SIGCONT'. Some versions of the multithreaded `ogg123' have the problem that, when sent a `SIGTERM', the main thread exits immediately but the audio device isn't closed until the buffer is empty (which could be up to a couple of seconds later). This means that `xhippo' thinks the player has exited before the audio device is available again. This is merely annoying if your operating system and hardware permits the audio device to be opened by multiple processes at once, but if it doesn't, then when a song finishes xhippo will attempt to start the next and fail, and do this repeatedly until the audio device is available again. One solution is to use another Vorbis player instead of `ogg123' (such as the somewhat-more-heavyweight `mplayer'). `autostart:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will play a random song on startup. This is equivalent to -a on the command line. `scroll:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will scroll the list when a random item is selected so that the selected song is visible. This is equivalent to -s on the command line. `mustplayall:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will always pick an item that it hasn't played before from the playlist when asked to pick a random entry. This continues until it has played all the entries, at which point it will just pick a random one as before. This is equivalent to -m on the command line. `readid3:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will try to read ID3 tags from the files listed in the playlists and will use them as the playlist entries if found. This slows down `xhippo' startup considerably, so it's disabled by default. This is equivalent to -i on the command line. `exec:command' command will be executed as a shell command (using /bin/sh) before any further config commands are parsed. For an example of why I included this, look at the example config file (xhippo.config). `load:playlist' playlist will be loaded as a playlist file. This is equivalent to including playlist on the command line. `savewinstate:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will save its window position, size and state (whether it is minified or not) between sessions in the $HOME/.xhippo/winstate file. If it is zero, `xhippo' will allow your window manager to place it, will start with a "standard" (small) size, and won't start minified (unless the next option is specified). This is equivalent to -w on the command line. `startmini:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will start up in the "minified" state, as if you'd clicked the "Mini" button (even if the winstate file says that the window wasn't tinified). This is equivalent to -t (for "tiny") on the command line. `showpid:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will show the PID of its player process in the status line when not in mini mode. This is equivalent to -p on the command line. `ordered:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will start with the "Random" checkbox turned off. This is equivalent to -o on the command line. `stripextension:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will strip the extensions from the filenames displayed in the playlist. This is equivalent to -S on the command line. `leftscroll:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will place the vertical scrollbar on the left side of the playlist. This looks better with NeXTStep-like themes. This is equivalent to -l on the command line. `hideplayeroutput:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will redirect the output (stdout and stderr) of child player processes to /dev/null. This is equivalent to -q on the command line. `sortonload:sorttype' sorttype specifies how `xhippo' should sort playlists when they are loaded. -O on the command line is equivalent to sortonload:name. `playlistdir:dir' Use dir as the default directory for loading or saving playlists. `demanglenames:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will replace _ (underscores) and %20s in song names with spaces on the display. This is equivalent to -d on the command line. `onetime:boolean' If enabled and either ordered or mustplayall are turned on, `xhippo' will stop when all the items in the playlist have been played. This is equivalent to -1 on the command line. `playlisttitle:boolean' If enabled, then `xhippo' will set the window title to include the name of the current playlist. This is equivalent to -T on the command line. `titlebasename:boolean' If enabled, then `xhippo' will use the basename of the playlist name when setting the window title if playlisttitle is set. This is equivalent to -b on the command line. `nocheckfiles:boolean' Normally, when a playlist is loaded, `xhippo' will check to see whether all the listed files exist and discard them if they don't. If enabled, then `xhippo' won't bother checking, which will make startup significantly faster on large playlists. This is equivalent to -c on the command line. Note that `xhippo' will read the information if it's needed at a later time, so if you sort the playlist by mtime then it'll need to scan all the files to get the mtimes. `writeplaying:boolean' If enabled, then `xhippo' will write the name of the song that is currently playing to $HOME/.xhippo/current_song. (If the file cannot be written, `xhippo' will silently ignore it.) This is equivalent to -W on the command line. `skippath:integer' Normally when displaying song names in the playlist, `xhippo' will use the basename of the file (i.e. it will strip off the path to the file). If integer is set to something other than zero, `xhippo' will only strip the first integer elements of the path; this could be useful if you sort your music collection into albums and want to display the album names in the playlist. This is equivalent to -k integer on the command line. `usercommand:description:command' Define a user command. This will add an entry titled description to the context menu (and assign it a numerical accelerator starting from `0'); when the entry is picked, command will be run (with a single instance of %s in the command replaced by the full filename of the selected song, or the empty string if the menu is invoked while not over a song). `commandlinesongs:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will treat command-line arguments as songs to add to the playlist rather than playlists to load. This is equivalent to -f on the command line; you can therefore do something like xhippo -f *.ogg to start `xhippo' listing all the `.ogg' files in the current directory. `commandlinedirs:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will treat command-line arguments as directories to search for songs to add to the playlist. This is equivalent to -D on the command line. `deletewhenplayed:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will remove songs from the playlist once they have been played. This is equivalent to -x on the command line. `persistplaylist:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will attempt to load a playlist from $HOME/.xhippo/saved_playlist on startup (if no other files are given on the command line), and will save the current playlist to that file on exit. This is equivalent to -P on the command line. `commandlineguess:boolean' If enabled, `xhippo' will attempt to guess what the command-line arguments are. If they have a known extension (one specified with type above) then they are assumed to be songs; if they are directories they are assumed to be directories; otherwise they are assumed to be playlists. You probably want this turned on unless you're in the habit of calling your playlist playlist.ogg. This is equivalent to -g on the command line. `persistfrequently:boolean' If enabled and persistplaylist is also enabled, `xhippo' will save the current playlist whenever a new song is started. You may want this if you're in the habit of killing xhippo randomly.

GTKRC

To allow for customised GTK appearances, `xhippo' reads a standard gtkrc file in $HOME/.xhippo/gtkrc. For more information about gtkrc files, consult the GTK documentation.

DISTRIBUTION

If you want an archive to give to somebody else, invoke make dist in the `xhippo' source directory. This will produce the same xhippo- VERSION.tar.gz file that I distribute. If you wish to mail me a modified version, do exactly the same (after removing the doc directory); I can then `diff' it against my last release to see what you've changed. (Alternately, just send me a diff -Naur between a clean distributed `xhippo' and your modified version.)

CONTACT

`xhippo' is far from perfect. Please contact <bug-xhippo@gnu.org> if you discover any bugs, or have any suggestions. `xhippo' was written by me, Adam Sampson, <ats@offog.org>. My other software can always be found at http://offog.org/; `xhippo' is now a GNU (http://www.gnu.org/) application and is distributed from ftp://ftp.gnu.org/ or from mirror sites. The original German translation was done by Volker Assmann, <volka@bigfoot.de>, who was also responsible for betatesting. Hubert Feyrer first alerted me to the problems with GTK+-1.0 and 1.1 compatibility, and created the NetBSD package. Rod Taylor created the FreeBSD port, and Kevin Lo created the OpenBSD port. Craig Knudsen provided a routine to read ID3 tags. Joseph Turian suggested the idea of file inclusion in playlists. Jeff Covey supplied a Perl script which provided the functionality of the current "Load" button, which encouraged me build the feature in. Kevin Everets implemented the Pause button, the leftscroll option, translated the documentation to texinfo and provided patches for or suggested various other features. Several other people who contributed are credited in the ChangeLog file.

AUTHOR

Adam Sampson <ats@offog.org> and others; see the section ChangeLog for details.

SEE ALSO

mpg123(1), ogg123(1), bplay(1), xmp(1), mtvp(5), s3mod(5), tracker(5), madplay(5) Version 3.5 27th August 2007 XHIPPO(1)

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