From: Hugo Villeneuve Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2014 01:33:25 +0000 (-0400) Subject: Move documentation images from C to images folder X-Git-Url: http://gitweb.hugovil.com/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=959fd8dec4cebda6f1e46e1e4f306ab5ee53493b;p=hvgrip.git Move documentation images from C to images folder --- diff --git a/configure.ac b/configure.ac index ec261fd..0e1d0e4 100644 --- a/configure.ac +++ b/configure.ac @@ -143,6 +143,6 @@ src/Makefile po/Makefile.in pixmaps/Makefile doc/Makefile -doc/C/Makefile +doc/images/Makefile contrib/Makefile ]) diff --git a/doc/C/Makefile.am b/doc/C/Makefile.am deleted file mode 100644 index e283787..0000000 --- a/doc/C/Makefile.am +++ /dev/null @@ -1,13 +0,0 @@ -grip_helpdir = $(datadir)/gnome/help/grip/C - -grip_help_DATA = \ - grip.xml \ - *.png - -EXTRA_DIST = \ - grip.xml \ - *.png - -CLEANFILES = *~ - -MAINTAINERCLEANFILES = Makefile.in diff --git a/doc/C/cdconfig.png b/doc/C/cdconfig.png deleted file mode 100644 index 863dd3d..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/cdconfig.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/cdplayer.png b/doc/C/cdplayer.png deleted file mode 100644 index 16fdd10..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/cdplayer.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/cdplayersmall.png b/doc/C/cdplayersmall.png deleted file mode 100644 index dd76033..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/cdplayersmall.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/cdscan.png b/doc/C/cdscan.png deleted file mode 100644 index 54c9f4c..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/cdscan.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/discdb.png b/doc/C/discdb.png deleted file mode 100644 index d2c1a8a..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/discdb.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/discdbconfig.png b/doc/C/discdbconfig.png deleted file mode 100644 index e424c1a..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/discdbconfig.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/editing.png b/doc/C/editing.png deleted file mode 100644 index a650264..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/editing.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/eject.png b/doc/C/eject.png deleted file mode 100644 index 73613cb..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/eject.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/encprog.png b/doc/C/encprog.png deleted file mode 100644 index cf6f418..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/encprog.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/ffwd.png b/doc/C/ffwd.png deleted file mode 100644 index 53dfd36..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/ffwd.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/grip-logo.png b/doc/C/grip-logo.png deleted file mode 100644 index 3299db6..0000000 Binary files a/doc/C/grip-logo.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/doc/C/grip.xml b/doc/C/grip.xml deleted file mode 100644 index acaaceb..0000000 --- a/doc/C/grip.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1361 +0,0 @@ - - -
- - Grip User's Guide - - - Mike Oliphant - -
- grip@nostatic.org -
-
-
-
- - 2004 Mike Oliphant - - - This documentation is free software; you can redistribute - it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public - License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either - version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later - version. - - This program is distributed in the hope that it will be - useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied - warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. - See the GNU General Public License for more details. - - You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public - License along with this program; if not, write to the Free - Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, - MA 02111-1307 USA - - For more details see the file COPYING in the source - distribution of GNOME. - -
- - - Introduction - - - - - - - Grip is a cd-player and cd-ripper for the Gnome desktop. It has - the ripping capabilities of cdparanoia builtin, but can also use - external rippers (such as cdda2wav). It also provides an automated - frontend for MP3 (and other audio format) encoders, letting you take a - disc and transform it easily straight into MP3s. Internet disc lookups - are supported for retrieving track information from disc database - servers. Grip works with DigitalDJ to provide a unified "computerized" - version of your music collection. - - - - Playing CDs with Grip - Grip functions as a full-featured CD player, as can be seen in - . Tracks can be selected by clicking on - them with the left mouse button. Double-clicking will select the track, - and begin playing it. - -
- Grip as a CD Player - - - - -
- - - CD Player Controls - - Underneath the "LCD" display is a panel of buttons that allow - you to control CD playing in Grip. These buttons function as - follows: - - - - - - Play/Pause — Causes the selected track - to play if it is stopped or paused. If a track is currently - playing, it will go into pause mode. - - - - - - Rewind — While this button is held - down, Grip will move backward in the currently playing track. - - - - - - - FastForward — While this button is - held down, Grip will more forward in the currently playing - track. - - - - - - Previous track — If a track is - currently playing near the beginning of a track, this will - rewind to the beginning. Otherwise, it will skip to the previous - track. - - - - - - - Next track — This will skip to the next - track. - - - - - - Track Mode — This brings up the track - mode interface, described in . - - - - - - - Stop — Stops track playback. - - - - - - Eject — Opens or closes the cdrom - tray. - - - - - - Scan disc contents — Causes Grip to - force a scan of the current CD as if it were just inserted (useful - if you have polling for a new disc turned off). - - - - - - Volume — Toggles display of the - volume control slider interface. - - - - - - Track Edit — This brings up the track - editing interface described in ... - - - - - - DiscDB — This initiates lookup of the - CD over the network, or aborts a disc lookup currently in - progress. - - - - - - Min/Max — Toggles between the "full" - and "cd-only" (shown in ) display - modes. - - -
- Grip in "cd-only" mode. - - - - -
-
- -
- - - - - Quit — Exits Grip. - - -
-
- - - Track Mode Selector - -
- The Play Mode Interface - - - - -
-
- - The track mode selection interface (shown in ) allows you to control how Grip plays the - tracks on a CD. The following options are available: - - - - - Normal Mode — In this mode, - tracks will be played in normal, numbered order. - - - - - - Random Mode — In this mode, - tracks will be played in a random order. - - - - - - Playlist Mode — In this mode, - track will be played in an order you specify. In the text - entry box, entry a list of comma separated list of the - tracks you wish to play. - - - - - - Loop Mode — In loop mode, when - playback finishes it will then resume at the beginning - again. - - - - - - Single Play Mode — In this mode, - when playback finishes it will not begin again. - - -
- -
- - - Ripping CDs with Grip - - Playing CDs is great, but what Grip is really designed for is - ripping CDs and creating encoded versions of the tracks. - - - Selecting Tracks To Rip - Before ripping, you need to select the tracks that you would - like to rip. This can be done by right-clicking on tracks in the - "Tracks" tab, or left clicking on a track when your mouse is under the - "Rip" column. In addtion, you can quickly select/deselect all tracks - for ripping by clicking on the "Rip" column label. - - - - Ripping CDs -
- The ripping interface - - - - -
- - There are number of buttons in the interface under the "Rip" - tab. They function as follows: - - - - Rip+Encode — This will cause Grip - to rip and then encode all selected tracks. - - - - Rip Only — This will cause Grip - to rip all selected tracks, but not encode them. - - - - Abort Rip and Encode — Clicking - this button will abort all active rip and encode - processes. - - - - Abort Ripping Only — Clicking - this button will abort ripping, but will leave encoding - running. - - - - DDJ Scan — Clicking this button - will insert all track information for the current disc into - DigitalDJ's database (if it is installed) - - - - Rip partial track — If selected, - Grip will configured to rip a portion of a single track (as - specified by the "Start sector" and "End sector" values). The - "Play" button can be used preview the selected portion. - - - - - In the bottom portion of the interface, Grip displays progress - bars for the rip and encode processes. It also computes the speed of - the processes as a function of normal playback speed (so 2.0x, for - example, means that processing is running twice as fast as normal - playback, on average). In addition, if Grip is using builtin - cdparanoia to rip, there will be a "smilie" indicator next to the - progress bar that reflects how much trouble Grip is having ripping - the CD. The meaning of the different smiles are as follows: - - - - - - Normal operation, low/no jitter - - - - - Normal operation, considerable jitter - - - - - Read drift - - - - - Unreported - loss of streaming in atomic read operation - - - - - Finding - read problems at same point during reread; hard to correct - - - - - SCSI/ATAPI transport error - - - - - Scratch detected - - - - - Gave up trying to perform a correction - - - - - In addition to the individual track rip/encode progress bars, - Grip displays overall progress bars that indicate the overall progress - of a multi-track rip. - - Grip also places an indicator for both ripping and encoding the - the LCD display. They show progress in %25 intervals, as can be seen - in this example of Grip in "small" mode. In this case, we are almost - finished ripping a track, and have encoded about a quarter of a - track. - - -
- Ripping in "small" mode - - - - -
-
- - - Increasing Ripping Performance - - If you are using an IDE CDrom drive, using SCSI emulation can - give a significant performance increase. Apparently, dma is not used - by the IDE driver (at least in 2.4 kernels). To enable SCSI - emulation, add "hdx=ide-scsi" (where the "x" in "hdx" is is replaced - with the appropriate letter for your CDRom device) to end of the - "kernel" line in /etc/grub.conf (if you are using grub), or as a - line after "root=/dev/something" in /etc/lilo.conf (if you are using - lilo) - - You can also disable paranoia to get approximately a 2x - speedup. This is not recommended, however, unless you are very - confident in the ability of your drive to do rock-solid CDDA - extraction (or unles you enjoy having pops in your audio) - - - - Using a SCSI drive - - If you are using a SCSI drive, or an IDE drive under SCSI - emulation, Grip needs to access the generic scsi device in - addition to the cdrom device. On most systems, the generic scsi - device will be /dev/sgx, where 'x' is a number. Unless you have - multiple scsi devices, the device would be /dev/sg0. Ensure that - your user account has access to this device, and that this device - is specified in your rip configuration (see ). - - -
- - - Configuring Grip - - The "Config" tab gives you access to a series of sub-tabs that - allow you to configure the various functions of Grip. Each of these - sub-tabs is described in detail in the following sections. - - - The "CD" config tab -
- The "CD" config tab - - - - -
- - This tab allows to you configure options associated with your - cdrom device and CD playback. The options are: - - - - - CDRom device — Specifies the - CDRom device to be used for CD playback. - - - - Don't interrupt playback on - exit/startup — If this option is checked, Grip - will not stop a playing track when it is shut down. Also, if a CD - is already playing when Grip starts, it will keep playing. - - - - Rewind when stopped — If this - option is checked, Grip will rewind to the beginning of the disc - whenever playback is stopped. - - - - Startup with first track if not playing - — If this option is checked, Grip will always make the first - track on the CD the current track if the CD is not currently - playing. Otherwise, Grip will start with whatever track is - currently set with the CDRom device. - - - - Reshuffle before each playback — - If this option is checked, randomized playback will be - re-randomized each time playback is restarted. Otherwise, the same - random sequence will be reused. - - - - Work around faulty eject — If - this option is set, Grip will not rely on querying the open/closed - status of the CDRom tray. - - - - Poll disc drive for new disc — If - this option is set, Grip will poll the disc drive to check if a - new disc has been inserted. - - - - Poll interval — This specifies - the number of seconds Grip waits between checks for a new - disc. - - - - -
- - - The "Rip" config tab - - This tab allows to you configure Grip's ripping - capabilities. - -
- The "Rip" config tab - - - - -
- - - - Ripper — This allows you to - select from various presets configured for various Rippers. By - default, "grip (cdparanoia)" is used, which rips with Grip's - builtin version of cdparanoia. - - - - Disable paranoia — If this option - is checked, Grip will disable cdparanoia's verification - system. This will make ripping approximately twice as fast, but - can result in errors. Unless you are very confident that your - drive is rock solid, it is recommended that you do not select this - option. - - - - Disable extra paranoia — If this - option is selected, Grip will only do overlap checking to ensure - proper alignment of reads. It will not verify reads for - errors. - - - - Disable scratch detection / repair - — These options allow you to determine whether Grip attempts - to detect scratches on the CD, and whether or not it attempts to - repair the scratches it detects. - - - - Calculate gain adjustment - — If this option is checked, Grip will calculate a suggested - gain adjustment for tracks as it rips. Computed values can then be - passed to external programs via the '%r' and '%R' switches. - - - - Rip file format — This allows to - you configure the filename and path that Grip rips files to. The - list of available switches can be found in . - - - - Generic SCSI device — If you are - using a SCSI drive, or an IDE drive under SCSI emulation, you need - to specify the generic SCSI device to be used. Form more - information on using a SCSI drive, see - - - - - - If you select a ripper other than Grip's builtin cdparanoia, the - configuration dialog will look slightly different: - -
- Configuring an external ripper - - - - -
- - - - Ripping executable — This is the - full path to the executable to be used for ripping - - - - Rip command-line — This is the - command-line to be passed to the ripping program. The list of - available switches can be found in . - - - - - The second sub-tab contains addition options that you can - specify to configure the ripping process. - -
- Additional ripping options - - - - -
- - - - Rip 'nice' value — This allows - you to set the 'nice' level to run the ripping process at. This - changes the scheduling priorty of the process. The range goes from - -20 (highest priority) to 19 (lowest). - - - - Max non-encoded .wav's — This - allows you to specify the maximum number of ripped wave files that - can accumulate if ripping is proceding faster than encoding can - keep up. It is useful to keep unencoded .wav files from taking up - too much disk space. - - - - Auto-rip on insert — If this - option is checked, Grip will automatically begin ripping all - tracks on a disc when it is inserted. - - - - Beep after rip — If this option - is checked, Grip will emit a beep when ripping is finished. - - - - Auto-eject after rip — If this - option is checked, Grip will eject the disc after ripping is - finished. - - - - Auto-eject delay — This allows - you to specify a delay (in seconds) before auto-ejection will - happen. This is useful on some drives that need time to spin down - before ejection can occur. - - - - Delay before ripping — If this is - selected, grip will delay 5 seconds before starting to rip. This - can help with some drives (particularly some dvd drives) that take - a while to spin up. - - - - Stop cdrom drive between tracks — - If this is selected, grip will spin down the cdrom drive between - ripping tracks. - - - - Wav filter command — This allows - you to specify a program (full path to executable, followed by - the command-line) to run after a file has been ripped, but - before it is encoded. This is useful for such tasks as - normalization. The list of available switches can be found in - . - - - - Disc filter command — This - operates much like the Wav filter command, except that it is run - once after an entire disc has finished ripping. - - - - -
- - - The "Encode" config tab - - This tab allows to you configure Grip's encoding - capabilities. - -
- The "Encode" config tab - - - - -
- - - - Encoder — This allows - you to select an encoder preset. - - - - Encoder executable — This specifies - the full path to the executable program you wish to use for - encoding. - - - - Encoder command-line — This is the - command-line to be passed to the encoding program. The list of - available switches can be found in . - - - - Encode file format — This allows to - you configure the filename and path that Grip encodes to. The - list of available switches can be found in . - - - - The second sub-tab contains addition options that you can - specify to configure the encoding process. - -
- Additional encoding options - - - - -
- - - - Delete .wav after encoding — If - this option is checked, Grip will delete wav files after it has - finished encoding them. - - - - Insert info into SQL database — If - this option is checked, Grip will insert track meta-data into the - DigitalDJ database (if it is installed). - - - - Create .m3u files — If - this option is checked, Grip will create .m3u playlist listing the - tracks on a CD when it is ripped. - - - - Use relative paths in .m3u files - — If this option is checked, filename is .m3u files will be - relative to the directory the .m3u file is in (otherwise, full - paths will be used). - - - - M3U file format — This specifies - the filename format to be used when writing .m3u files. The list - of available switches can be found in . - - - - Encoding bitrate — This is the - encoding bitrate (kilobits per second) to be used. This value is - passed to the encoder using the '%b' switch. - - - - Number of CPUs to use — On - SMP systems, Grip can encode using multiple processors. This value - specifies the number of simultaneous encode processes to run. Grip - needs to be restarted for a change to take effect. - - - - Encode 'nice' value — This allows - you to set the 'nice' level to run encoding at. This changes the - scheduling priorty of the process. The range goes from -20 - (highest priority) to 19 (lowest). - - - - Encode filter command — This allows - you to specify a program (full path to executable, followed by - the command-line) to run after a file has been encoded. The list - of available switches can be found in . - - -
- - - The "ID3" config tab - - This tab allows to you customize Grip's use of ID3 tags. - -
- The "ID3" config tab - - - - -
- - - - Add ID3 tags to encoded files — - If this option is checked, Grip will add ID3v1 tags to the files - it encodes. ID3 tags are used to put song meta-data into an - encoded file. You will want to disable this if you are encoding - with a format other than MP3. - - - - Add ID3v2 tags to encoded files — - This option is only displayed if Grip has been compiled with ID3v2 - support. If it is checked, Grip will add ID3v2 tags to the files - it encodes. ID3v2 tags remove the 20-character field length - limitation imposed by ID3v1. - - - - ID3 comment field — This allows - you to specify the format of the ID3 comment field. The list of - available switches can be found in . - - - - ID3v1 Character set encoding — - The character encoding to be used for ID3v1 tags. ISO_8859_1 is - recommended. - - - - ID3v2 Character set encoding — - The character encoding to be used for ID3v1 tags. ISO_8859_1 or UTF-8 - are the most likely options. - - - -
- - - The "DiscDB" config tab - - This tab allows to you customize how Grip talks to disc - information servers (such as freedb) to obtain disc meta-data. - -
- The "DiscDB" config tab - - - - -
- - - - Primary/Secondary Server — Grip - allows you to configure a primary and secondary disc database - server. If information cannot be found using the primary server, - Grip will then try using the secondary server. - - - - DB server — This is the http - address of the disc database server. - - - - DB server — This is the path to - the CGI to be used on the disc database server. It is generally - "~cddb/cddb.cgi". - - - - DB Character set encoding — The - character encoding to use when tranferring data to/from the - server. This should generally be set to UTF-8. - - - - DB Submit email — This allows you - to specify the email address to send disc database submissions - to. - - - - Use freedb extensions — If - checked, Grip will make use of extensions to the disc database - format used by freedb. Otherwise, it will use an older - format. - - - - Perform disc lookups automatically - — If this option is checked, Grip will automatically query - the disc database server when a disc is inserted that does not - already have meta-data stored. - - -
- - - The "Proxy" config tab - - This tab allows to you configure Grip to communicate through a - proxy server. - -
- The "Proxy" config tab - - - - -
- - - - Use proxy server — Indicates - whether or not Grip should do disc lookups via a proxy server. - - - - - Get server from 'http_proxy' env. var - — If this option is checked, Grip will check the - 'http_proxy' environment variable, and use its value as the name - of the proxy server. - - - - - Proxy server — The name of the - proxy server to use. - - - - - Proxy port — The port to use on - the proxy server (usually 8000). - - - - - Proxy username — Some proxies - require user authentication. This field is the username you wish - to authenticte with. - - - - - Proxy password — This is the - password that goes along with the username for proxy - authentication. - - - - -
- - - The "Misc" config tab - - This tab allows contains various additional configuration - options. - -
- The "Misc" config tab - - - - -
- - - - Email address — A valid email - addres where you can be reached. This is used with disc database - submissions to allow the disc database server to contact you if - there are problems with a submission. - - - - - CD update program — This allows - you to specify a program (full path to executable, followed by - the command-line) to run when a new disc is inserted. This is - useful for such tasks as normalization. The list of available - switches can be found in . - - - - - Do not lowercase filenames — By - default, Grip lowercases the strings used when translating the '%' - switches. If this option is checked, it will not do this. - - - - - Allow high bits in filename — By - default, Grip strips high-bit characters in the strings used when - translating the '%' switches. If this option is checked, it will - not do this. - - - - - Do not change spaces to underscores - — By default, Grip replaces spaces with underscores in the - strings used when translating the '%' switches. If this option is - checked, it will not do this. - - - - - Characters to not strip in filenames - — Grip strips all non-alphanumeric characters in the - strings used when translating the '%' switches. Any characters - entered here will explicity not be stripped. - - - - - -
- - - Configuration (%) switches - - Here is a list of the '%' switches used in command-lines. - - - b — The bitrate that files - are being encoded at. - - c — The CDrom device - being used. - - C — The generic scsi - device being used (note that this will be substituted with the - CDrom device if no generic scsi device has been - specified). - - w — The filename of the - wave file being ripped. - - m — The filename of the - file being encoded. - - t — The track - number,beginning at 1, and zero-filled (ie: '03' for the third - track). - - s — The start sector of - the track. - - e — The end sector of the - track. - - n — The name of the - track. - - a — The artist name for - the track. - - A — The artist name for - the disc. - - - d — The name of the disc. - - - i — The disc database id - (in hex) for the disc. - - y — The year of the disc. - - - g — The ID3 genre id of - the disc. - - G — The ID3 genre string - of the disc. - - r — The recommended - replay gain for the track (in dB). Note that this is only applicable - if you have enabled gain calculation. You can find more information - on this gain adjustment at www.replaygain.org - - - R — The recommended - replay gain for the entire album (in dB). This value is only valide - after an entire disc has been ripped (it is designed to be used with - the disc filter command). - - - x — The encoded file - extension (ie "mp3") - - - - Any of the '%' switches can optionally be preceded by a '*' or - '!' modifier (for example, '%*a'). '*' prevents Grip from doing any - stripping of characters from the string. '!' forces Grip to strip - characters from the string. If neither modifier is used, Grip will - do what it thinks is best (generally, it will only munge strings if - it knows they are part of a filename). - -
- - - FAQ - - - Q: When I try to rip a track, I get X I/O errors. What - gives? - - A: This seems to be a problem with non-thread-safe - systems. Make sure your system is safe for threads. This often - seems to be associated with libc5. - - - Q: I just get a message saying that the program can't - access my drive. This makes it hard to do much. Help! - - A: Your user account must have access to the cdrom device. - - - - Q: I can play cd's fine, but my ripper can't access - the drive. Why not? - - A: On scsi systems, rippers (cdparanoia, at least) need access - to the generic scsi device as well. - - - Q: The progress bar doesn't seem to be completely - accurate when encoding. Why can't it get it right? - - A: The progress bar is done based on the size of the output - file. If you have the kbits/sec set properly, Grip should estimate - the size properly. Note that if you use variable bitrate encoding - (supported by encoders like LAME and xing) Grip has no way to - accurately guess the file size. - - Q: When I try to rip, Grip skips some of the tracks I - have selected. That's not nice -- how can I make it stop? - - A: Some drives (particularly some dvd drives) take a while to - spin up, and get confused if ripping starts before they are - ready. Try enabling the "Delay before ripping" setting in . - - Q: When I encode tracks, the progress bar never - does anything. What happened to progress? - - A: If your encoder doesn't accept an output filename (like - BladeEnc), or you haven't passed it one on the command-line, then - it might not be outputting to the file Grip expects. Make sure - that your encoded file format is set to what your encoder is - actually producing. - - - Q: When Grip looks up disc information, it works, but - says "Error saving disc data". Why? - - A: Grip saves local copies of disc track information in the - directory "~/.cddb". It must be able to create or access this - directory. - - - Q: How come I don't get any scrollbars in the track - display? - - A: You are using a version of Grip compiled for gtk+ v1.0.x on - a system that has gtk+ v1.2.x installed. You need to either get a - binary compiled for the development series of gtk+, or compile - Grip yourself. - - - Q: When my buddy runs Grip, he gets those nifty LCD - icons showing rip/encode/DiscDB status, but I don't. What makes him - so special? - - A: He's using a more recent version of gtk+ than you are. Due - to bugs in gtk+ v1.0.x, I don't support the icons under - it. Upgrade your gtk+! - - - Q: I can't get Grip to rip any tracks! This makes it - less than useful... - - A: Grip won't rip tracks unless you tell it what to rip. Use - the right mouse button to select tracks for - ripping. - - - Q: I was listening to a CD in Grip and it sounded - horrible! What's up? - - A: Perhaps you are listening to country - music... - - - - - - Getting More Help If you need more help with Grip, - your best resource is the Grip mailing list. You will find it - here. Be sure to check the mailing list archives for answers to - any questions you may have. - - - - Reporting Bugs / Sumitting Patches - - To report a bug with Grip, or to submit a patch. Please do so at - the Grip - section on sourceforge.net. - - - - CDDB notes I have declined to sign a license - agreement with Escient, the company who owns "www.cddb.com" and runs - the CDDB server "us.cddb.com". Their license would (among other - things) have required me to place advertisements in Grip and restrict - you, the user, to use only their databases. I am against this - commercial use of the track information submitted by users such as - yourself. For this reason, I encourage you to use free servers, such - as freedb.org. - - - - License and Disclaimer Grip is Copyright - &copy 2002 by Mike Oliphant. Grip may be used and distributed - under the terms of the GNU General Public License. All other brand and - product names are trademarks, registered trademarks or service marks of - their respective holders. - - These programs are distributed in the hope that it will be useful, - but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of - MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU - General Public License for more details. - - You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License - along with this distribution; if not, write to the Free Software - Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111, - USA. - - - - Acknowledgments - - Thanks go to: - - - - Everyone involved in GTK development for a wonderful - GUI - - Tony Arcieri, for libcdaudio, which formed the basis - of Grip's low-level cd control and disc database access - routines - - Monty, for cdparanoia and the paranoia - library - - Heiko Eissfeldt for cdda2wav - - Mike Cheng, Mark Taylor and all the others who have - worked on LAME - - Tord Jansson for BladeEnc - - Michael Kaiser and everyone else who has helped out - with freedb - - Ti Kan, for the xmcd button bitmaps, many of which I - use in modified form (shame on you for the cddb fiasco, - however) - - mp3.com for hosting nostatic.org - - David Robinson and Glen Sawyer for - ReplayGain - - Everyone else who has given me feedback, contributed - code, and helped test Grip (see the ChangeLog and CREDITS for - specific contributions) - - - - - -
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+ + Grip User's Guide + + + Mike Oliphant + +
+ grip@nostatic.org +
+
+
+
+ + 2004 Mike Oliphant + + + This documentation is free software; you can redistribute + it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public + License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either + version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later + version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be + useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied + warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. + See the GNU General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public + License along with this program; if not, write to the Free + Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, + MA 02111-1307 USA + + For more details see the file COPYING in the source + distribution of GNOME. + +
+ + + Introduction + + + + + + + Grip is a cd-player and cd-ripper for the Gnome desktop. It has + the ripping capabilities of cdparanoia builtin, but can also use + external rippers (such as cdda2wav). It also provides an automated + frontend for MP3 (and other audio format) encoders, letting you take a + disc and transform it easily straight into MP3s. Internet disc lookups + are supported for retrieving track information from disc database + servers. Grip works with DigitalDJ to provide a unified "computerized" + version of your music collection. + + + + Playing CDs with Grip + Grip functions as a full-featured CD player, as can be seen in + . Tracks can be selected by clicking on + them with the left mouse button. Double-clicking will select the track, + and begin playing it. + +
+ Grip as a CD Player + + + + +
+ + + CD Player Controls + + Underneath the "LCD" display is a panel of buttons that allow + you to control CD playing in Grip. These buttons function as + follows: + + + + + + Play/Pause — Causes the selected track + to play if it is stopped or paused. If a track is currently + playing, it will go into pause mode. + + + + + + Rewind — While this button is held + down, Grip will move backward in the currently playing track. + + + + + + + FastForward — While this button is + held down, Grip will more forward in the currently playing + track. + + + + + + Previous track — If a track is + currently playing near the beginning of a track, this will + rewind to the beginning. Otherwise, it will skip to the previous + track. + + + + + + + Next track — This will skip to the next + track. + + + + + + Track Mode — This brings up the track + mode interface, described in . + + + + + + + Stop — Stops track playback. + + + + + + Eject — Opens or closes the cdrom + tray. + + + + + + Scan disc contents — Causes Grip to + force a scan of the current CD as if it were just inserted (useful + if you have polling for a new disc turned off). + + + + + + Volume — Toggles display of the + volume control slider interface. + + + + + + Track Edit — This brings up the track + editing interface described in ... + + + + + + DiscDB — This initiates lookup of the + CD over the network, or aborts a disc lookup currently in + progress. + + + + + + Min/Max — Toggles between the "full" + and "cd-only" (shown in ) display + modes. + + +
+ Grip in "cd-only" mode. + + + + +
+
+ +
+ + + + + Quit — Exits Grip. + + +
+
+ + + Track Mode Selector + +
+ The Play Mode Interface + + + + +
+
+ + The track mode selection interface (shown in ) allows you to control how Grip plays the + tracks on a CD. The following options are available: + + + + + Normal Mode — In this mode, + tracks will be played in normal, numbered order. + + + + + + Random Mode — In this mode, + tracks will be played in a random order. + + + + + + Playlist Mode — In this mode, + track will be played in an order you specify. In the text + entry box, entry a list of comma separated list of the + tracks you wish to play. + + + + + + Loop Mode — In loop mode, when + playback finishes it will then resume at the beginning + again. + + + + + + Single Play Mode — In this mode, + when playback finishes it will not begin again. + + +
+ +
+ + + Ripping CDs with Grip + + Playing CDs is great, but what Grip is really designed for is + ripping CDs and creating encoded versions of the tracks. + + + Selecting Tracks To Rip + Before ripping, you need to select the tracks that you would + like to rip. This can be done by right-clicking on tracks in the + "Tracks" tab, or left clicking on a track when your mouse is under the + "Rip" column. In addtion, you can quickly select/deselect all tracks + for ripping by clicking on the "Rip" column label. + + + + Ripping CDs +
+ The ripping interface + + + + +
+ + There are number of buttons in the interface under the "Rip" + tab. They function as follows: + + + + Rip+Encode — This will cause Grip + to rip and then encode all selected tracks. + + + + Rip Only — This will cause Grip + to rip all selected tracks, but not encode them. + + + + Abort Rip and Encode — Clicking + this button will abort all active rip and encode + processes. + + + + Abort Ripping Only — Clicking + this button will abort ripping, but will leave encoding + running. + + + + DDJ Scan — Clicking this button + will insert all track information for the current disc into + DigitalDJ's database (if it is installed) + + + + Rip partial track — If selected, + Grip will configured to rip a portion of a single track (as + specified by the "Start sector" and "End sector" values). The + "Play" button can be used preview the selected portion. + + + + + In the bottom portion of the interface, Grip displays progress + bars for the rip and encode processes. It also computes the speed of + the processes as a function of normal playback speed (so 2.0x, for + example, means that processing is running twice as fast as normal + playback, on average). In addition, if Grip is using builtin + cdparanoia to rip, there will be a "smilie" indicator next to the + progress bar that reflects how much trouble Grip is having ripping + the CD. The meaning of the different smiles are as follows: + + + + + + Normal operation, low/no jitter + + + + + Normal operation, considerable jitter + + + + + Read drift + + + + + Unreported + loss of streaming in atomic read operation + + + + + Finding + read problems at same point during reread; hard to correct + + + + + SCSI/ATAPI transport error + + + + + Scratch detected + + + + + Gave up trying to perform a correction + + + + + In addition to the individual track rip/encode progress bars, + Grip displays overall progress bars that indicate the overall progress + of a multi-track rip. + + Grip also places an indicator for both ripping and encoding the + the LCD display. They show progress in %25 intervals, as can be seen + in this example of Grip in "small" mode. In this case, we are almost + finished ripping a track, and have encoded about a quarter of a + track. + + +
+ Ripping in "small" mode + + + + +
+
+ + + Increasing Ripping Performance + + If you are using an IDE CDrom drive, using SCSI emulation can + give a significant performance increase. Apparently, dma is not used + by the IDE driver (at least in 2.4 kernels). To enable SCSI + emulation, add "hdx=ide-scsi" (where the "x" in "hdx" is is replaced + with the appropriate letter for your CDRom device) to end of the + "kernel" line in /etc/grub.conf (if you are using grub), or as a + line after "root=/dev/something" in /etc/lilo.conf (if you are using + lilo) + + You can also disable paranoia to get approximately a 2x + speedup. This is not recommended, however, unless you are very + confident in the ability of your drive to do rock-solid CDDA + extraction (or unles you enjoy having pops in your audio) + + + + Using a SCSI drive + + If you are using a SCSI drive, or an IDE drive under SCSI + emulation, Grip needs to access the generic scsi device in + addition to the cdrom device. On most systems, the generic scsi + device will be /dev/sgx, where 'x' is a number. Unless you have + multiple scsi devices, the device would be /dev/sg0. Ensure that + your user account has access to this device, and that this device + is specified in your rip configuration (see ). + + +
+ + + Configuring Grip + + The "Config" tab gives you access to a series of sub-tabs that + allow you to configure the various functions of Grip. Each of these + sub-tabs is described in detail in the following sections. + + + The "CD" config tab +
+ The "CD" config tab + + + + +
+ + This tab allows to you configure options associated with your + cdrom device and CD playback. The options are: + + + + + CDRom device — Specifies the + CDRom device to be used for CD playback. + + + + Don't interrupt playback on + exit/startup — If this option is checked, Grip + will not stop a playing track when it is shut down. Also, if a CD + is already playing when Grip starts, it will keep playing. + + + + Rewind when stopped — If this + option is checked, Grip will rewind to the beginning of the disc + whenever playback is stopped. + + + + Startup with first track if not playing + — If this option is checked, Grip will always make the first + track on the CD the current track if the CD is not currently + playing. Otherwise, Grip will start with whatever track is + currently set with the CDRom device. + + + + Reshuffle before each playback — + If this option is checked, randomized playback will be + re-randomized each time playback is restarted. Otherwise, the same + random sequence will be reused. + + + + Work around faulty eject — If + this option is set, Grip will not rely on querying the open/closed + status of the CDRom tray. + + + + Poll disc drive for new disc — If + this option is set, Grip will poll the disc drive to check if a + new disc has been inserted. + + + + Poll interval — This specifies + the number of seconds Grip waits between checks for a new + disc. + + + + +
+ + + The "Rip" config tab + + This tab allows to you configure Grip's ripping + capabilities. + +
+ The "Rip" config tab + + + + +
+ + + + Ripper — This allows you to + select from various presets configured for various Rippers. By + default, "grip (cdparanoia)" is used, which rips with Grip's + builtin version of cdparanoia. + + + + Disable paranoia — If this option + is checked, Grip will disable cdparanoia's verification + system. This will make ripping approximately twice as fast, but + can result in errors. Unless you are very confident that your + drive is rock solid, it is recommended that you do not select this + option. + + + + Disable extra paranoia — If this + option is selected, Grip will only do overlap checking to ensure + proper alignment of reads. It will not verify reads for + errors. + + + + Disable scratch detection / repair + — These options allow you to determine whether Grip attempts + to detect scratches on the CD, and whether or not it attempts to + repair the scratches it detects. + + + + Calculate gain adjustment + — If this option is checked, Grip will calculate a suggested + gain adjustment for tracks as it rips. Computed values can then be + passed to external programs via the '%r' and '%R' switches. + + + + Rip file format — This allows to + you configure the filename and path that Grip rips files to. The + list of available switches can be found in . + + + + Generic SCSI device — If you are + using a SCSI drive, or an IDE drive under SCSI emulation, you need + to specify the generic SCSI device to be used. Form more + information on using a SCSI drive, see + + + + + + If you select a ripper other than Grip's builtin cdparanoia, the + configuration dialog will look slightly different: + +
+ Configuring an external ripper + + + + +
+ + + + Ripping executable — This is the + full path to the executable to be used for ripping + + + + Rip command-line — This is the + command-line to be passed to the ripping program. The list of + available switches can be found in . + + + + + The second sub-tab contains addition options that you can + specify to configure the ripping process. + +
+ Additional ripping options + + + + +
+ + + + Rip 'nice' value — This allows + you to set the 'nice' level to run the ripping process at. This + changes the scheduling priorty of the process. The range goes from + -20 (highest priority) to 19 (lowest). + + + + Max non-encoded .wav's — This + allows you to specify the maximum number of ripped wave files that + can accumulate if ripping is proceding faster than encoding can + keep up. It is useful to keep unencoded .wav files from taking up + too much disk space. + + + + Auto-rip on insert — If this + option is checked, Grip will automatically begin ripping all + tracks on a disc when it is inserted. + + + + Beep after rip — If this option + is checked, Grip will emit a beep when ripping is finished. + + + + Auto-eject after rip — If this + option is checked, Grip will eject the disc after ripping is + finished. + + + + Auto-eject delay — This allows + you to specify a delay (in seconds) before auto-ejection will + happen. This is useful on some drives that need time to spin down + before ejection can occur. + + + + Delay before ripping — If this is + selected, grip will delay 5 seconds before starting to rip. This + can help with some drives (particularly some dvd drives) that take + a while to spin up. + + + + Stop cdrom drive between tracks — + If this is selected, grip will spin down the cdrom drive between + ripping tracks. + + + + Wav filter command — This allows + you to specify a program (full path to executable, followed by + the command-line) to run after a file has been ripped, but + before it is encoded. This is useful for such tasks as + normalization. The list of available switches can be found in + . + + + + Disc filter command — This + operates much like the Wav filter command, except that it is run + once after an entire disc has finished ripping. + + + + +
+ + + The "Encode" config tab + + This tab allows to you configure Grip's encoding + capabilities. + +
+ The "Encode" config tab + + + + +
+ + + + Encoder — This allows + you to select an encoder preset. + + + + Encoder executable — This specifies + the full path to the executable program you wish to use for + encoding. + + + + Encoder command-line — This is the + command-line to be passed to the encoding program. The list of + available switches can be found in . + + + + Encode file format — This allows to + you configure the filename and path that Grip encodes to. The + list of available switches can be found in . + + + + The second sub-tab contains addition options that you can + specify to configure the encoding process. + +
+ Additional encoding options + + + + +
+ + + + Delete .wav after encoding — If + this option is checked, Grip will delete wav files after it has + finished encoding them. + + + + Insert info into SQL database — If + this option is checked, Grip will insert track meta-data into the + DigitalDJ database (if it is installed). + + + + Create .m3u files — If + this option is checked, Grip will create .m3u playlist listing the + tracks on a CD when it is ripped. + + + + Use relative paths in .m3u files + — If this option is checked, filename is .m3u files will be + relative to the directory the .m3u file is in (otherwise, full + paths will be used). + + + + M3U file format — This specifies + the filename format to be used when writing .m3u files. The list + of available switches can be found in . + + + + Encoding bitrate — This is the + encoding bitrate (kilobits per second) to be used. This value is + passed to the encoder using the '%b' switch. + + + + Number of CPUs to use — On + SMP systems, Grip can encode using multiple processors. This value + specifies the number of simultaneous encode processes to run. Grip + needs to be restarted for a change to take effect. + + + + Encode 'nice' value — This allows + you to set the 'nice' level to run encoding at. This changes the + scheduling priorty of the process. The range goes from -20 + (highest priority) to 19 (lowest). + + + + Encode filter command — This allows + you to specify a program (full path to executable, followed by + the command-line) to run after a file has been encoded. The list + of available switches can be found in . + + +
+ + + The "ID3" config tab + + This tab allows to you customize Grip's use of ID3 tags. + +
+ The "ID3" config tab + + + + +
+ + + + Add ID3 tags to encoded files — + If this option is checked, Grip will add ID3v1 tags to the files + it encodes. ID3 tags are used to put song meta-data into an + encoded file. You will want to disable this if you are encoding + with a format other than MP3. + + + + Add ID3v2 tags to encoded files — + This option is only displayed if Grip has been compiled with ID3v2 + support. If it is checked, Grip will add ID3v2 tags to the files + it encodes. ID3v2 tags remove the 20-character field length + limitation imposed by ID3v1. + + + + ID3 comment field — This allows + you to specify the format of the ID3 comment field. The list of + available switches can be found in . + + + + ID3v1 Character set encoding — + The character encoding to be used for ID3v1 tags. ISO_8859_1 is + recommended. + + + + ID3v2 Character set encoding — + The character encoding to be used for ID3v1 tags. ISO_8859_1 or UTF-8 + are the most likely options. + + + +
+ + + The "DiscDB" config tab + + This tab allows to you customize how Grip talks to disc + information servers (such as freedb) to obtain disc meta-data. + +
+ The "DiscDB" config tab + + + + +
+ + + + Primary/Secondary Server — Grip + allows you to configure a primary and secondary disc database + server. If information cannot be found using the primary server, + Grip will then try using the secondary server. + + + + DB server — This is the http + address of the disc database server. + + + + DB server — This is the path to + the CGI to be used on the disc database server. It is generally + "~cddb/cddb.cgi". + + + + DB Character set encoding — The + character encoding to use when tranferring data to/from the + server. This should generally be set to UTF-8. + + + + DB Submit email — This allows you + to specify the email address to send disc database submissions + to. + + + + Use freedb extensions — If + checked, Grip will make use of extensions to the disc database + format used by freedb. Otherwise, it will use an older + format. + + + + Perform disc lookups automatically + — If this option is checked, Grip will automatically query + the disc database server when a disc is inserted that does not + already have meta-data stored. + + +
+ + + The "Proxy" config tab + + This tab allows to you configure Grip to communicate through a + proxy server. + +
+ The "Proxy" config tab + + + + +
+ + + + Use proxy server — Indicates + whether or not Grip should do disc lookups via a proxy server. + + + + + Get server from 'http_proxy' env. var + — If this option is checked, Grip will check the + 'http_proxy' environment variable, and use its value as the name + of the proxy server. + + + + + Proxy server — The name of the + proxy server to use. + + + + + Proxy port — The port to use on + the proxy server (usually 8000). + + + + + Proxy username — Some proxies + require user authentication. This field is the username you wish + to authenticte with. + + + + + Proxy password — This is the + password that goes along with the username for proxy + authentication. + + + + +
+ + + The "Misc" config tab + + This tab allows contains various additional configuration + options. + +
+ The "Misc" config tab + + + + +
+ + + + Email address — A valid email + addres where you can be reached. This is used with disc database + submissions to allow the disc database server to contact you if + there are problems with a submission. + + + + + CD update program — This allows + you to specify a program (full path to executable, followed by + the command-line) to run when a new disc is inserted. This is + useful for such tasks as normalization. The list of available + switches can be found in . + + + + + Do not lowercase filenames — By + default, Grip lowercases the strings used when translating the '%' + switches. If this option is checked, it will not do this. + + + + + Allow high bits in filename — By + default, Grip strips high-bit characters in the strings used when + translating the '%' switches. If this option is checked, it will + not do this. + + + + + Do not change spaces to underscores + — By default, Grip replaces spaces with underscores in the + strings used when translating the '%' switches. If this option is + checked, it will not do this. + + + + + Characters to not strip in filenames + — Grip strips all non-alphanumeric characters in the + strings used when translating the '%' switches. Any characters + entered here will explicity not be stripped. + + + + + +
+ + + Configuration (%) switches + + Here is a list of the '%' switches used in command-lines. + + + b — The bitrate that files + are being encoded at. + + c — The CDrom device + being used. + + C — The generic scsi + device being used (note that this will be substituted with the + CDrom device if no generic scsi device has been + specified). + + w — The filename of the + wave file being ripped. + + m — The filename of the + file being encoded. + + t — The track + number,beginning at 1, and zero-filled (ie: '03' for the third + track). + + s — The start sector of + the track. + + e — The end sector of the + track. + + n — The name of the + track. + + a — The artist name for + the track. + + A — The artist name for + the disc. + + + d — The name of the disc. + + + i — The disc database id + (in hex) for the disc. + + y — The year of the disc. + + + g — The ID3 genre id of + the disc. + + G — The ID3 genre string + of the disc. + + r — The recommended + replay gain for the track (in dB). Note that this is only applicable + if you have enabled gain calculation. You can find more information + on this gain adjustment at www.replaygain.org + + + R — The recommended + replay gain for the entire album (in dB). This value is only valide + after an entire disc has been ripped (it is designed to be used with + the disc filter command). + + + x — The encoded file + extension (ie "mp3") + + + + Any of the '%' switches can optionally be preceded by a '*' or + '!' modifier (for example, '%*a'). '*' prevents Grip from doing any + stripping of characters from the string. '!' forces Grip to strip + characters from the string. If neither modifier is used, Grip will + do what it thinks is best (generally, it will only munge strings if + it knows they are part of a filename). + +
+ + + FAQ + + + Q: When I try to rip a track, I get X I/O errors. What + gives? + + A: This seems to be a problem with non-thread-safe + systems. Make sure your system is safe for threads. This often + seems to be associated with libc5. + + + Q: I just get a message saying that the program can't + access my drive. This makes it hard to do much. Help! + + A: Your user account must have access to the cdrom device. + + + + Q: I can play cd's fine, but my ripper can't access + the drive. Why not? + + A: On scsi systems, rippers (cdparanoia, at least) need access + to the generic scsi device as well. + + + Q: The progress bar doesn't seem to be completely + accurate when encoding. Why can't it get it right? + + A: The progress bar is done based on the size of the output + file. If you have the kbits/sec set properly, Grip should estimate + the size properly. Note that if you use variable bitrate encoding + (supported by encoders like LAME and xing) Grip has no way to + accurately guess the file size. + + Q: When I try to rip, Grip skips some of the tracks I + have selected. That's not nice -- how can I make it stop? + + A: Some drives (particularly some dvd drives) take a while to + spin up, and get confused if ripping starts before they are + ready. Try enabling the "Delay before ripping" setting in . + + Q: When I encode tracks, the progress bar never + does anything. What happened to progress? + + A: If your encoder doesn't accept an output filename (like + BladeEnc), or you haven't passed it one on the command-line, then + it might not be outputting to the file Grip expects. Make sure + that your encoded file format is set to what your encoder is + actually producing. + + + Q: When Grip looks up disc information, it works, but + says "Error saving disc data". Why? + + A: Grip saves local copies of disc track information in the + directory "~/.cddb". It must be able to create or access this + directory. + + + Q: How come I don't get any scrollbars in the track + display? + + A: You are using a version of Grip compiled for gtk+ v1.0.x on + a system that has gtk+ v1.2.x installed. You need to either get a + binary compiled for the development series of gtk+, or compile + Grip yourself. + + + Q: When my buddy runs Grip, he gets those nifty LCD + icons showing rip/encode/DiscDB status, but I don't. What makes him + so special? + + A: He's using a more recent version of gtk+ than you are. Due + to bugs in gtk+ v1.0.x, I don't support the icons under + it. Upgrade your gtk+! + + + Q: I can't get Grip to rip any tracks! This makes it + less than useful... + + A: Grip won't rip tracks unless you tell it what to rip. Use + the right mouse button to select tracks for + ripping. + + + Q: I was listening to a CD in Grip and it sounded + horrible! What's up? + + A: Perhaps you are listening to country + music... + + + + + + Getting More Help If you need more help with Grip, + your best resource is the Grip mailing list. You will find it + here. Be sure to check the mailing list archives for answers to + any questions you may have. + + + + Reporting Bugs / Sumitting Patches + + To report a bug with Grip, or to submit a patch. Please do so at + the Grip + section on sourceforge.net. + + + + CDDB notes I have declined to sign a license + agreement with Escient, the company who owns "www.cddb.com" and runs + the CDDB server "us.cddb.com". Their license would (among other + things) have required me to place advertisements in Grip and restrict + you, the user, to use only their databases. I am against this + commercial use of the track information submitted by users such as + yourself. For this reason, I encourage you to use free servers, such + as freedb.org. + + + + License and Disclaimer Grip is Copyright + &copy 2002 by Mike Oliphant. Grip may be used and distributed + under the terms of the GNU General Public License. All other brand and + product names are trademarks, registered trademarks or service marks of + their respective holders. + + These programs are distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU + General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + along with this distribution; if not, write to the Free Software + Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111, + USA. + + + + Acknowledgments + + Thanks go to: + + + + Everyone involved in GTK development for a wonderful + GUI + + Tony Arcieri, for libcdaudio, which formed the basis + of Grip's low-level cd control and disc database access + routines + + Monty, for cdparanoia and the paranoia + library + + Heiko Eissfeldt for cdda2wav + + Mike Cheng, Mark Taylor and all the others who have + worked on LAME + + Tord Jansson for BladeEnc + + Michael Kaiser and everyone else who has helped out + with freedb + + Ti Kan, for the xmcd button bitmaps, many of which I + use in modified form (shame on you for the cddb fiasco, + however) + + mp3.com for hosting nostatic.org + + David Robinson and Glen Sawyer for + ReplayGain + + Everyone else who has given me feedback, contributed + code, and helped test Grip (see the ChangeLog and CREDITS for + specific contributions) + + + + + +
+ + + + + diff --git a/doc/images/Makefile.am b/doc/images/Makefile.am new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a680518 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/images/Makefile.am @@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ +imagedir = $(docdir)/images + +image_DATA = \ + cdconfig.png \ + cdplayer.png \ + cdplayersmall.png \ + cdscan.png \ + discdb.png \ + discdbconfig.png \ + editing.png \ + eject.png \ + encprog.png \ + ffwd.png \ + grip-logo.png \ + id3config.png \ + minmax.png \ + miscconfig.png \ + modeinterface.png \ + mp3config.png \ + mp3config2.png \ + multiartist.png \ + nexttrk.png \ + playloop.png \ + playnormal.png \ + playonce.png \ + playpause.png \ + playplaylist.png \ + playrandom.png \ + prevtrk.png \ + progtrack.png \ + proxyconfig.png \ + quit.png \ + rewind.png \ + ripconfig.png \ + ripconfig2.png \ + ripconfig3.png \ + ripping.png \ + ripprog.png \ + ripsmall.png \ + smile1.png \ + smile2.png \ + smile3.png \ + smile4.png \ + smile5.png \ + smile6.png \ + smile7.png \ + smile8.png \ + stop.png \ + trkedit.png \ 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