music123(1) | General Commands Manual | music123(1) |
NAME¶
music123 - plays various sound files (usually including MP3, Ogg and Wav).SYNOPSIS¶
music123 [ -hqrvz ] file ...DESCRIPTION¶
music123 is a shell around various command line programs to play music files. It will descend directories trees with -r, and randomize file lists with -z. The programs used and the options given them are listed in /etc/music123rc or ~/.music123rc.OPTIONS¶
- -h
- Show command help and exit;
- -q
- Quiet mode. No messages are displayed.
- -r
- Recurse into directories, instead of ignoring them.
- -v
- Display version information and exit.
- -z
- Play files in random order.
- -Z
- Play the files randomly and endlessly.
- -l
- Loop. -z -l differs from -Z in that -z -l will randomize, play through the song list (without repetition) in random order once, and repeat the songs in that order over and over; -Z will randomly play the songs, without any order, and will possibly play a song right after itself.
- -i
- Ignore extension case.
- -L
- List files and exit.
- -T
- Start a task that handle commands, only one command supported : quit, using q or Q will quit the application at the end of the current song.
- -D
- Set music123 not to delay between songs. (May make music123 harder to kill).
- -d
- Customize the time music123 delays between songs. -d takes one argument, expressed in seconds, which may have a fractional part.
- -@
- Play the files listed in the mandatory argument of -@. Other files can be added on the command line, and this option can be given several times. Note that music123 doesn't yet play URLs.
- --
- End option list.
EXAMPLES¶
Play three songs:music123 test1.ogg test2.mp3 test3.wav
Play a couple of directories and other songs at random:
music123 -z -r Rock/ test1.ogg Pop/
test4.wav
FILES¶
- /etc/music123rc
- Describes which programs music123 uses, which files types it supports, and which options it passes those programs.
- ~/.music123rc
- Per-user config file to override the system wide settings.
AUTHORS¶
- Authors:
-
David Starner <dvdeug@debian.org>
July 24, 2002 |