shithub: riscv

ref: 8dfdc38f952b708732e605641bd9cc64b126cbdc
dir: /sys/man/1/zuke/

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.TH ZUKE 1
.SH NAME
mkplist, zuke \- graphical music player
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B audio/mkplist
[
.B -s
]
.I directory/file/URL [...]
.br
.B audio/readtags
[
.B -i
]
.I [file ...]
.br
.B audio/zuke
[
.B -s
] [
.B -c
.I columns
]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
.I Zuke
is a graphical music player that reads a playlist from standard input
and presents an interface to play music.
.PP
Playlists are generated by
.IR mkplist ,
which accepts files, directories, and URLs as its arguments,
and writes the resulting playlist to standard output. Option
.B -s
enables "simple" sorting of the entries of the playlist, where only
full paths are compared.
.PP
Formats supported by
.I zuke
are: MP3, OGG/Vorbis, FLAC, and WAV.  With additional programs, Opus,
modules and M4A (AAC) can be played.
.I Zuke
also supports network streams, such as IceCast.
Option
.B -s
enables ``shuffle'' mode on start.
.PP
The columns (and their order) displayed can be changed by passing the
following letters along
.B -c
option:
.RS
.TF "c"
.TP
.B A
Artist (displays composer if no artist has been set)
.TP
.B a
Album
.TP
.B b
File basename
.TP
.B C
Composer
.TP
.B t
Title
.TP
.B D
Duration
.TP
.B d
Date
.TP
.B T
Track number
.TP
.B p
Full file path
.PD
.RE
.PP
By default, artist, album, title, and duration are displayed, which
corresponds to
.B "-c AatD."
.PP
.I Zuke
can be controlled with a mouse, keyboard, and plumber.  Button 1
selects a track, button 2 plays a track.  Clicking on the seek bar
changes the playback position accordingly.  On the right of the seek
bar, current position, track duration and volume are displayed.  ``∫''
is shown if shuffle mode is enabled.
.PP
Plumbing a file with
.B .plist
extension loads the playlist in
.IR zuke .
This is useful with a collection of playlists displayed aside.
.PP
.I Zuke
provides a number of keyboard controls:
.RS
.TF "↑ ↓ Pgup Pgdown Home End"
.TP
.B -
Lower volume.
.TP
.B + =
Increase volume.
.TP
.B ↑ ↓ Pgup Pgdown Home End
Move within the playlist.
.TP
.B o i
Jump to current track.
.TP
.B Enter
Play selected track.
.TP
.B > b
Skip to next track.
.TP
.B < z
Skip to previous track.
.TP
.B ← →
Seek 10 seconds back/forward.
.TP
.B , .
Seek 60 seconds back/forward.
.TP
.B v
Stop
.TP
.B p c Space
Pause/Resume.
.TP
.B r
Toggle ``repeat one''.
.TP
.B g
Switch between no gain, track gain, and album gain applied.
.TP
.B s
Toggle ``shuffle''.
.TP
.B q Del
Quit.
.TP
.B /
Search forward.
.TP
.B ?
Search backwards.
.TP
.B n
Repeat search forward.
.TP
.B N
Repeat search backwards.
.RE
.PD
.PP
Typing any digit initiates a "Seek to" prompt. Minutes, hours and
seconds can be separated with a colon, if needed, otherwise the
position is taken as seconds from the beginning of the track.
.PP
.I Zuke
can be controlled by emulating key presses via the plumber port
.IR audio .
.PP
Files present in the current playlist can be plumbed too, and will be
played immediately.
.PP
When a new track starts playing,
.I zuke
will write its tags to
.BR stdout ,
each column separated by a tab character.  If playback is stopped, an
empty line is written instead.  This can be used for scrobbling or
displaying the current track in another window.
.PP
.I Readtags
prints tags stored within audio files. When option
.B -i
is specified, it will try to extract the cover image and write it to
standard output as a Plan 9 image instead.
.SH EXAMPLES
Generate a playlist:
.IP
.EX
audio/mkplist /usr/glenda/music \\
	file.mp3 \\
	http://anonradio.net:8000/anonradio > music.plist
.EE
.PP
Playing a playlist:
.IP
.EX
audio/zuke < music.plist
.EE
.PP
Append to a playlist:
.IP
.EX
audio/mkplist /n/moremusic >> music.plist
.EE
.PP
Skip to the next track using plumber:
.IP
.EX
plumb -d audio 'key >'
.EE
.SH SEE ALSO
.IR play (1)
.SH SOURCE
.B /sys/src/cmd/audio/zuke
.br
.B /sys/src/cmd/audio/libtags
.SH HISTORY
.I Zuke
first appeared in 9front (April, 2021).