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JACK(1) General Commands Manual JACK(1)

NAME

Jack - rip and encode CDs with one command

SYNOPSIS

jack [options]

DESCRIPTION

Jack transforms your audio-CDs to FLAC, MP3 or Ogg Vorbis files. It uses several helper programs in order to achieve things like ripping, encoding and ID3-tagging. Ripping is either done via cdparanoia (in which case the ripping status is displayed by Jack as well) or cdda2wav. Jack works with several encoders, namely oggenc, flac, lame, gogo, bladeenc, l3enc, mp3enc and xing. Any time during operation (and even when everything is finished and the original CD lost) you can let Jack look up the track names at freedb.org and rename the tracks accordingly. ID3-tagging of MP3s (or insertion of equivalent comment fields in Ogg Vorbis files) is performed as well.

If no freedb-lookup has been performed, Jack drops all files in a directory ~/jack/jack-xxxxxxxx, with xxxxxxxx representing the CD's CDDB/FreeDB disc ID. This directory is renamed by Jack when the appropriate information is known.

Most options like ripper, encoder, preferred FreeDB-Server, directory and MP3-filename format, etc. can be user defined by changing the defaults in /etc/jackrc or by saving them to ~/.jack3rc.

While Jack is running, these keyboard commands are available:

quit
disable ripping (for example, if you need the CD drive)
resume ripping
pause/continue all encoders
pause/continue all rippers.
?
toggle the copyright/help box

OPTIONS

Different options need different data-types as arguments:

can be "yes" or "no", like in --vbr=yes
can be anything, like in --rename-fmt "%n.%t"
an integer number, like in --bitrate 192 (or --bitrate=192 )
multiple strings, delimited by the final ";". Example: --guess-toc file1.mp3 file2.mp3 ... fileN.mp3 \;

Jack understands the following options:

if known, append the year to dir in the format " (%y)"
target bitrate (in kbit/s, default is 160).
convert file names using a python method
charset of filenames (defaults to your locale).
compare toc-file and cd-toc, then exit. Jack caches the TOC of a CD in a file ("jack.toc"). If you want to know if the inserted CD matches the toc-file in the current directory, use this option.
rename directories even if they were was not created by Jack.
continue without FreeDB data if query fails.
tells Jack to create sub-directories in which Jack puts all the files for the current CD. If no FreeDB data is available, i.e. when not using -Q , these directories will be named "jack-xxxxxxxx" where "xxxxxxxx" stands for the CD's FreeDB ID. Otherwise dir_template (see above) will be used. This option is turned on by default.
The device-name of your cdrom-drive. The default is /dev/cdrom
if directories are renamed, this is the format used (default "%a/%l")
don't do DAE, encoding, tagging or renaming. This may be useful if you only want to do a FreeDB query, e.g. while another jack is running.
open an editor to change the CDDB information which has been obtained previously (only useful with -Q).
use which encoder (default "oggenc")
encode how many files in parallel. If you have a SMP machine or simply want to stress your system, you can have Jack encode several files at once.
run predefined command when finished.
the artist is contained in the EXTT fields. The EXTT fields are lines in the FreeDB file which contain additional data for each track. As it's the submitting user's choice what to use them for, Jack can't determine by itself what they were intended for. You have to provide this information.
the track title is contained in the EXTT fields.
a track comment is contained in the EXTT fields.
do not ask. Like when deleting incomplete files.
rip from a cdrdao created CD image on hd. The specified toc-file contains the name of the image file. Use -F if jack can't find the image file.
read audio data from image file. Like --from-tocfile, but the image itself is specified instead of the tocfile. If you do not have a toc-file (or don't specify a toc-file), the TOC is read from the CD itself.
make up a TOC from the MP3 file given in mp3_files. Format is track_01.mp3 ... track_nn.mp3 ; Note that the trailing " ; " is only necessary if you want to append more options to your command line. You can use it to do a FreeDB query based on MP3s alone - no need for the CD. Very useful if you have no idea which CD the MP3s are from. The MP3s must be given in the same order as they were on their CD. The generated TOC file is similar, but not identical to the TOC of the CD - do not submit these!
set ID3 genre. Use 'help' to get a list of all known genres. (You can also specify the ID3v1 genre as an int)
set ID3 year.
Show summary of options.
do not delete WAVs after encoding them.
submit FreeDB entry via e-mail. HTTP submission is preferred. You will have to enter the category of the CD.
only start new encoders if your system's load is below the specified value. /proc/loadavg must be readable by you for this to work.
try to query FreeDB for all dirs in searchdirs which have no FreeDB data.
your e-mail address, needed for FreeDB submissions.
nice-level with which the encoders are started. Default is 12 which shouldn't hurt your system much.
overwrite existing files, i.e. do not check if already ripped WAVs or an already encoded file seem to be OK. Use this if you know something went wrong last time. This is off by default.
only produce WAVs, implies --keep-wavs. This is off by default.
On-the-fly operation. Only on some encoders/rippers. Do not create WAVs, pipe ripper output through the encoder. Default is no as it's a torture for the CDROM drive.
overwrite existing files.
vbr encoding quality. -1 is lowest, 10 highest (default 6). You can also specify a float.
do FreeDB query when all is done. This is useful if Jack was previously run without a FreeDB query. If all tracks are done you don't even have to have a CD inserted as the TOC is cached by Jack. After having finished ripping and encoding, Jack will rename the files and tag them.
like --query-now, but only if FreeDB data hasn't been successfully queried before.
do FreeDB query when starting. Use this if you are connected to the Internet when starting Jack. Know that the query may need user-interaction. After having finished ripping and encoding, Jack will rename the files and tag them.
read how many WAVs in advance. At most read_ahead + num_encoders WAVs are ripped before a track has completely been encoded. Default is 99 which will read the whole CD, provided there is enough disk space.
have Jack remove its temp jack*-files. Be careful - don't delete them too early!
rename and tag files according to FreeDB file. On startup, Jack creates a blank FreeDB entry file (except if --query-now is used, then the file is queried from your FreeDB server). If you have changed its contents (e.g. because the CD was unknown to FreeDB) and want to rename and tag your MP3s accordingly, use this option. Give all other needed options too, like -t , -E , ...
rename directory as well (default).
format of normal files (default "%n - %t")
format of Various Artists files (default "%n - %a - %t")
format of the track number (%n, printf() style) used to rename the files (default "%02d")
optimize track-order for disk space. This can save you some peak disk space during the encoding process; this may make it possible to do a CD which would otherwise fail to be encoded.
unusable chars are replaced by the corresponding list item (default "%").
which program to use for extracting the audio data (default "cdparanoia").
save options to ~/.jack3rc file and exit.
Scan this many levels from the current working directory for a matching toc-file (0 to disable, default 2).
add these directories to the list of directories searched when looking for the workdir (default ".").
which FreeDB server to use. Don't forget to set your HTTP proxy. Currently either "freedb" (default) or "freedb-de".
be quiet (no screen output).
forcibly set usable disk space, in bytes. This option lets you limit the disk space Jack uses, maybe you need it for something else? Be careful: if set too high or too low, ripping and encoding will probably fail. The default is to look how much is free and to use this value.
submit FreeDB entry via HTTP. You will have to enter the category of the CD.
swap byte order from image file. As cdrdao momentarily only outputs "raw" .cdr files, you quite likely want to swap the byte order. Try this option if your WAVs and encoded files contain only noise. This is on by default as cdrdao currently generates .cdr files that are "wrong".
print what would be done and exit.
limit ripping and encoding to the specified tracks, use comma to separate tracks. Ranges are also possible; 5-9 is equivalent to 5,6,7,8,9; 12- is like specifying track 12,...,last_track. The default is to process the whole CD.
undo file renaming and exit. If you don't like how Jack renamed your files, use this option to restore the previous state. Several levels of undo are possible. Note that ID3 tags are not restored.
characters which can't be used in filenames (default "/").
have Jack re-create its temp files. Use this if you deleted them too early.
update the FreeDB info and exit.
show the help screen while running.
Generate variable bitrate files, only on encoders which support this. Default is no.
when parsing FreeDB data, Jack assumes that if the disc´s artist is set to "Various" the track titles have the format "[artist] - [title]". If the disc title is set to something else and you still want the above behaviour, use --various.
exchange artist and title, many FreeDB entries have them wrong.
wait for key press before quitting.
where to create directories and put the files.
write a smart id3v1 tag to the encoded file.
write an id3v2 tag to the encoded file.
create a playlist in .m3u format. This has bugs, don't rely on it.

EXAMPLES

Insert a CD, fire up jack:

jack

Now watch it work. It's fun for a while. After having finished, you have the following files on your HD: track_01.mp3, track_02.mp3, ..., track_nn.mp3 plus jack.toc, jack.freedb, jack.progress. The last three are used to store the state jack is in so it can resume work when interrupted.

Jack will create a directory called jack-xxxxxxxx for you, there it stores all the file for the CD whose id is xxxxxxxx. After a FreeDB query this directory is renamed to something human readable, like "Artist - Title".

When jack is interrupted, call it again using the same command line as before to resume work, in this case

jack

Now let's try a FreeDB query:

jack -q
If the query is successful the files will be renamed to something more readable and will be tagged accordingly using ID3 or Vorbis tags. The file jack.freedb will contain the queried FreeDB entry, and the original file will be backed up as jack.freedb.bak.

You can use the --rename-fmt option in order to specify the format of the name which will be given to your audio tracks. A list of valid options can be found below. You may also want to specify a set of characters which are not usable and should be replaced. For example, on Unix systems the slash (/) should most certainly be replaced with something else. The VFAT filesystem also does not support double quotes ("). In order to replace such characters, you can specify the options unusable_chars together with replacement_chars. For example,

jack -Q --rename-fmt "%n-%t" --unusable-chars A I ; --replacement-chars a i ;
will query the FreeDB server, rip and encode all tracks of the CD and save the files in a format which will contain the track number and the title. All occurances of the letters A and I will be replaced with their lower-case versions. These options can also be put in one's configuration file using the following format:
unusable_chars:[' ', '/']
replacement_chars:['_', '_']
This will replace whitespace and slashes with underscores. If you want to convert all characters to lower-case, you don't have to manually specify all of them but can use the following option instead:
char_filter:.lower()

All in one: query, rip, encode, cleanup:

jack -Q --remove-files

Editing / normalizing / stripping the WAV files before encoding:

jack -O --remove-files ; gnoise *wav ; jack -g *wav ; jack
Just replace gnoise by the operation you'd like to perform.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

There are several environment variables which can be used in jack's exec hooks:

lists jack's base directory in which files are stored.
lists the current directory of jack in which files of the current album are put.
lists all track names which have just been encoded.
lists all track names which have just been ripped.

FORMAT STRINGS

%n
Track number
%a
Artist
%t
Track title
%l
Album title
%y
Album release year
%g
Album genre

FILES

/etc/jackrc
Site-wide configuration file.
~/.jack3rc
User-specific configuration file. Use the --save option to save your configuration to this file.

AUTHOR

Arne Zellentin <zarne@users.sf.net> is the author of Jack.

SEE ALSO

cdparanoia(1), cdda2wav(1), flac(1), oggenc(1) and lame(1)

November 22, 2004