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NAMEmp3info2 - get/set MP3 tags; uses MP3::Tag to get default values.SYNOPSIS# Print the information in tags and autodeduced info mp3info2 *.mp3 # In addition, set the year field to 1981 mp3info2 -y 1981 *.mp3 # Same without printout of info, recursively in the current directory mp3info2 -R -p "" -y 1981 . # Do not deduce any field, print (normalized) info from the tags only mp3info2 -C autoinfo=ID3v2,ID3v1 *.mp3 # As above, but without normalization/autofill, the raw information in tags mp3info2 -N *.mp3 # As above, but only with ID2v1 tag read mp3info2 -NC autoinfo=ID3v1 *.mp3 # Get artist from CDDB_File, autodeduce other info, write it to tags mp3info2 -C artist=CDDB_File -u *.mp3 # For title, prefer information from .inf file; autodeduce rest, update mp3info2 -C title=Inf,ID3v2,ID3v1,filename -u *.mp3 # Same, and get the artist from CDDB file mp3info2 -C title=Inf,ID3v2,ID3v1,filename -C artist=CDDB_File -u *.mp3 # Write a script for conversion of .wav to .mp3, autodeducing tags mp3info2 -p "lame -h --vbr-new --tt '%t' --tn %n --ta '%a' --tc '%c' --tl '%l' --ty '%y' '%f'\n" *.wav >xxx.sh DESCRIPTIONThe program prints a message summarizing tag info (obtained via MP3::Tag module) for specified files.It may also update the information in ID3 tags. This happens in three different cases.
(All these ways are disabled by "-D" option.) ID3v2 tag is written if needed, or if "-2" option is given. (Automatic fill-in of deduceable fields (via the method id3v2_frames_autofill()) is performed unless "-d" or "-N" options are given.) The option "-u" writes ("u"pdates) the fetched information to the MP3 ID3 tags. This option is assumed if there are command-line options which explicitly set tag elements ("-a", "-t" etc., and "-F", "-d"). (Effects of this option may be overridden by giving "-D" option.) If "-2" option is also given, forces write of ID3v2 tag even if the info fits the ID3v1 tag (in addition, this option enables auto-update of "personal name" fields, and corresponding titles according to values of "translate_person", "person_frames" etc. configuration settings; see "Normalization of fields"). This option is ignored if no change to tags is detected; however, one can force an update by repeating this option (useful if you expect the change the "format" of the tag, as opposed to its "content"). The option "-p" prints a message using the next argument as format (by default "\\", "\t", "\n" are replaced by backslash, tab and newline; governed by the value of "-E" option); see "interpolate" in MP3::Tag for details of the format of sprintf()-like escapes. If no option "-p" is given, message in default format will be emitted. The value of option "-e" is the encoding used for the output; if the value is a number, system-specific encoding is guessed (and used for the output if bit 0x1 is set); if bit 0x2 is set, then, command line options are assumed to be in the guessed encoding; if bit 0x4 is set, then, command line arguments are assumed to be in the guessed encoding. Use the value "binary" to do binary output. With option "-D" (dry run) no update is performed, no matter what the other options are. With this option, no parsing of tags is performed unless needed. Use options t a l y g c n to overwrite the information (title artist album year genre comment track-number) obtained via "MP3::Tag" heuristics ("-u" switch is implied if any one of these arguments differs from what would be found otherwise; use "-D" switch to disable auto-update). By default, the values of these options are not "%"-interpolated; this may be changed by "-E" option. The option "-d" should contain the comma-separated list of ID3v2 frames to delete. A frame specification is the same as what might be given to "%{...}" frame interpolation command, e.g., "TIT3", "COMM03", "COMM(fra)[short title]"; the difference with modify-access is that ALL (and not the first of) matching frames are deleted. (Option -d may be repeated.) For example, "-d APIC" would remove all picture frames. In addition, if the list contains "ID3v1" or "ID3v2", whole tags will be deleted. Likewise, the option "-F" allows setting of arbitrary "ID3v2" frames: if one needs to set one frame, use the directive "FRAME_spec=VALUE": -F TIT2=The_new_Title Again, on modify, ALL matching frames are deleted first, so be carefull with -F COMM=MyComment Option "-F" may be repeated to set more than one frame. If configuration variable "empty-F-deletes" is TRUE (default), empty arguments will delete the frame. One can replace "FRAME_spec=VALUE" by "FRAME_spec < FILE"; in this case the value to set is read from the file named FILE; if the frame is text-only (meaning: at most "[encoded]Text URL Language Description" fields are present), the file is read in text mode (and with starting/trailing whitespace stripped), otherwise it is read in binary mode. (Whitespace is required about the "<" signs.) If "<" is replaced by "?<", the value is set only if frame is not yet present, and if the file exists; if replaced by ">", the value (if present) is written to FILE (creation of intermediate directories is controlled by configuration option "frames_write_creates_dirs", the default is FALSE). Additionally, "FRAME_spec" may be one of "ID3v1" or "ID3v2" or "TAGS"; in this case, whole tags are written or read. For example, for "TAGS < FILE", "title artist album year genre comment track" info is calculated from FILE, which may be raw tags, as produced with ">", or a valid MP3 file; if Image::ExifTool is present, the data may be read from arbitrary multimedia file. (Likewise, for "ID3v1 < FILE", the same info is extracted from "ID3v1" tag only.) After this, in case of "ID3v2" or "TAGS", "ID3v2" frames are copied from the "ID3v2" tag one-by-one. (With suitable modifications for "?<".) By default, the "VALUE" for "-F" is "%"-interpolated; this can be changed by option "-E". For user convenience, human-friendlier forms "composer, text_by, orchestra, conductor, disk_n" can be used instead of "TCOM, TEXT, TPE2, TPE3, TPOS". The option "-P RECIPE" is a very powerful generalization of what can be done by options "-F", "-d", and "-t -a -l -y -g -c -n". It may be repeated; the values should contain the parse recipes. They become the configuration item "parse_data" of "MP3::Tag"; eventually this information is processed by MP3::Tag::ParseData module (if the latter is present in the chain of heuristics; see option "-C"). The "RECIPE" is split into "$flags, $string, @patterns" on its first non-alphanumeric character; the first of @patterns which matches $string is going to be executed (for side effects). (See examples: "EXAMPLES: parse rules".) If option "-G" is specified, the file names on the command line are considered as glob patterns. This may be useful if the maximal command-line length is too low. With the option "-R" arguments can be directories, which are searched recursively for audio (default *.mp3) files to process; use option "-r" to reset the regular expression to look for (the default is "(?i:\.mp3$)"). The option "-E" controls expansion of escape characters. It should contain the letters of the command-line options where "\\, \n, \t" are interpolated; one can append the letters of "t a l y g c n F" options requiring "%"-interpolation after the separator "/i:" (for "-F", only the values are interpolated). The default value is "p/i:Fp": only "-p" is "\"-interpolated, and only "-F" and "-p" are subject to "%"-interpolation. If all one wants is to add to the defaults, preceed the value of "-E" (containing added options) by "+". (Some parts of the value of option "-P" are interpolated, but this should be governed by flags, not "-E"; do NOT put "P" into the "%"-interpolated part of "-E".) If the option "-@" is given, all characters "@" in the options are replaced by "%". This may be convenient if the shell treats "%" specially (e.g., DOSISH shells). If option "-I" is given, no guessworking for artist field is performed on typeout. The option "-C CONFIG_OPT=VALUE1,VALUE2..." sets "MP3::Tag" configuration data the same way as "MP3::Tag-"config()> would do (recall that the value is an array; separate elements by commas if more than one). The option may be repeated to set more than one value. Note that since "ParseData" is used to process "-P" parse recipes, it should be better be kept in the "autoinfo" configuration (and related fields "author" etc) in presence of "-P". If the option "-x" is given, the technical information about the audio file is printed (MP3 level, duration, number of frames, padding, copyright, and the list of ID3v2 frame names in format suitable to "%{...}" escapes). If "-x" is repeated, content of frames is also printed out (may output non-printable chars, if it is repeated more than twice). If option "-N" is given, all the "smarts" are disabled - no normalization of fields happens, and (by default) no attempt to deduce the values of fields from non-ID3 information is done. This option is (currently) equivalent to having "-C autoinfo=ParseData,ID3v2,ID3v1" as the first directive, to having no Normalize::Text::Music_Fields.pm present on @INC path, and not calling autofill() method. Normalization of fields(The loading of normalization module and all subsequent operations may be disabled by the option "-N", or by setting the environment variable "MP3TAG_NORMALIZE_FIELDS" to be FALSE. If not prohibited, the module is attempted to be loaded if directory ~/.music_fields is present, or "MP3TAG_NORMALIZE_FIELDS" is set and TRUE.)If loading of the module "Normalize::Text::Music_Fields" is successful, the following is applicable: If the value of "MP3TAG_NORMALIZE_FIELDS" is defined and not 1, this value is broken into directories as a PATH, and load path of "Normalize::Text::Music_Fields" is set to be this list of directories. Then MP3::Tag is instructed (via corresponding configuration settings) to use "normalize_artist" (etc.) methods defined by this module. These methods may normalize certain tag data. The current version defines methods for "normalization" of personal names, and titles (based on the composer). This normalization is driven through user-editable configuration tables. In addition to automatical normalization of MP3 tag data, one can use "fake MP3 files" to manually access some features of this module. For this, use an empty file name, and "-D" option. E.g, mp3info2 -D -a beethoven -p "%a\n" "" mp3info2 -D -a beethoven -p "%{shP[%a]}\n" "" mp3info2 -D -a beethoven -t "sonata #28" -p "%t\n" "" mp3info2 -D -a beethoven -t "allegretto, Bes" -@p "@t\n" "" mp3info2 -D -a beethoven -t "op93" -@p "@t\n" "" will print the normalized person-name for "beethoven", the corresponding normalized short person-name, and the normalized title for "sonata #28" of composer "beethoven". E.g., with the shipped normalization tables, it will print Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) L. van Beethoven Piano Sonata No. 28 in A major; Op. 101 (1816) Allegretto for Piano Trio in B flat major; WoO 39 (1812) Symphony No. 8 in F major; Op. 93 (comp. 1812, f.p. Vienna, 1814-02-27, cond. Beethoven; pubd. 1816) The order of operationCurrently, the operations are done in the following order
Usage strategy: escalation of complexityThe purpose of this script is to to make handling of ID3 tags as simple as possible.On one end of the scale, one can perform arbitrarily complex manipulations with tags using "MP3::Tag" Perl module. On the other end, it is much more convenient to handle simplest manipulations with tags using this script's options "-t -a -l -y -g -c -n" and "-p -F -d". For slightly more complicated tasks, one may need to use the more elaborate method of parse rules, provided to this script by the option "-P"; the rules depend heavily on interpolation, see "interpolate" in MP3::Tag, "interpolate_with_flags" in MP3::Tag. To simplify upgrade from "simplest manipulations" to "more elaborate ones", here we provide "parse rule" synonyms to the simplest options. So if you start with "-t -a -l -y -g -c -n" and "-p -F -d" options which "almost work" for you, you have a good chance to be able to fully achieve your aim by modifying the synonyms described below. (Below we assume that "-E" option is set to its default value, so "-F -p" are "%"-interpolated, other options are not. Note also that if your TTY's encoding is recognized by Perl, it is highly recommended to set "-e 3" option; on DOSISH shells, better use "-@", and replace "%"'s by "@"'s below.)
For details on "parse rules", see "EXAMPLES: parse rules" and "DESCRIPTION" in MP3::Tag::ParseData. EXAMPLES: parse rulesOnly the "-P" option is complicated enough to deserve comments... For full details on parse rules, see "DESCRIPTION" in MP3::Tag::ParseData; for full details on interpolation, see "interpolate" in MP3::Tag, "interpolate_with_flags" in MP3::Tag.For a (silly) example, one can replace "-a Homer -t Iliad" by -P mz=Homer=%a -P mz=Iliad=%t A less silly example is forcing a particular way of parsing a file name via -P "im=%{d0}/%f=%a/%n %t.%e" It is broken into flags string pattern1 "im" "%{d0}/%f" "%a/%n %t.%e" The flag letters stand for interpolate, must_match. This interpolates the string "%{d0}/%f" and parses the result (which is the file name with one level of the directory part preserved) using the given pattern; thus the directory name becomes the artist, the leading numeric part - the track number, and the rest of the file name (without extension) - the title. Note that since multiple patterns are allowed, one can similarly allow for multiple formats of the names, e.g. -P "im=%{d0}/%f=%a/%n %t.%e=%a/%t (%y).%e" allows for the file basename to be also of the form "TITLE (YEAR)". An alternative way to obtain the same results is -P "im=%{d0}=%a" -P "im=%f=%n %t.%e=%t (%y).%e" which corresponds to two recipies: flags string pattern1 pattern2 "im" "%{d0}" "%a" "im" "%f" "%n %t.%e" "%t (%y).%e" Of course, one could use "im" "%B" "%n %t" "%t (%y)" as a replacement for the second one. Note that it may be more readable to set artist to "%{d0}" by an explicit asignment, with arguments similar to -E "p/i:Fpa" -a "%{d0}" (this value of "-E" requests "%"-interpolation of the option "-a" in addition to the default "\"-interpolation of "-p", and "%"-interpolation of "-F" and "-p"; one can shortcut it with "-E +/i:a"). To give more examples, -P "if=%D/.comment=%c" will read comment from the file .comment in the directory of the audio file; -P "ifn=%D/.comment=%c" has similar effect if the file .comment has one-line comments, one per track (this assumes the the track number can be found by other means). Suppose that a file Parts in a directory of MP3 files has the following format: it has a preamble, then has a short paragraph of information per audio file, preceded by the track number and dot: ... 12. Rezitativ. (Pizarro, Rocco) 13. Duett: jetzt, Alter, jetzt hat es Eile, (Pizarro, Rocco) ... The following command puts this info into the title of the ID3 tag (provided the audio file names are informative enough so that MP3::Tag can deduce the track number): mp3info2 -u -C parse_split='\n(?=\d+\.)' -P 'fl;Parts;%=n. %t' If this paragraph of information has the form "TITLE (COMMENT)" with the "COMMENT" part being optional, then use mp3info2 -u -C parse_split='\n(?=\d+\.)' -P 'fl;Parts;%=n. %t (%c);%=n. %t' If you want to remove a dot or a comma got into the end of the title, use mp3info2 -u -C parse_split='\n(?=\d+\.)' \ -P 'fl;Parts;%=n. %t (%c);%=n. %t' -P 'iR;%t;%t[.,]$' The second pattern of this invocation is converted to ['iR', '%t' => '%t[.,]$'] which essentially applies the substitution "s/(.*)[.,]$/$1/s" to the title. Now suppose that in addition to Parts, we have a text file Comment with additional info; we want to put this info into the comment field after what is extracted from "TITLE (COMMENT)"; separate these two parts of the comment by an empty line: mp3info2 -E C -C 'parse_split=\n(?=\d+\.)' -C 'parse_join=\n\n' \ -P 'f;Comment;%c' -P 'fl;Parts;%=n. %t' \ -P 'i;%t///%c;%t (%c)///%c' -P 'iR;%t;%t[.,]$' This assumes that the title and the comment do not contain '///' as a substring. Explanation: the first pattern of "-P", ['f', 'Comment' => '%c'], reads comment from the file "Comment" into the comment field; the second, ['fl', 'Parts' => '%=n. %t'], reads a chunk of "Parts" into the title field. The third one ['i', '%t///%c' => '%t (%c)///%c'] rearranges the title and comment provided the title is of the form "TITLE (COMMENT)". (The configuration option "parse_join" takes care of separating two chunks of comment corresponding to two occurences of %c on the right hand side.) Finally, the fourth pattern is the same as in the preceding example; it removes spurious punctuation at the end of the title. More examples: removing string "with violin" from the start of the comment field (removing comment altogether if nothing remains): mp3info2 -u -P 'iz;%c;with violin%c' *.mp3 setting the artist field without letting auto-update feature deduce other fields from other sources; mp3info2 -C autoinfo=ParseData -a "A. U. Thor" *.mp3 setting a comment field unless it it already present: mp3info2 -u -P 'i;%c///with piano;///%c' *.mp3 The last example shows how to actually write "programs" in the language of the "-P" option: the example gives a conditional assignment. With user variables (as in "%{U8}") for temporaries, and a possibility to use regular expressions, one could provide arbitrary programmatic logic. Of course, at some level of complexity one should better switch to direct interfacing with "MP3::Tag" Perl module (use the code of this Perl script as an example!). Here is a typical task setting "advanced" id3v2 frames: composer ("TCOM"), orchestra ("TPE2"), conductor ("TPE3"). We assume a directory tree which contains MP3 files tagged with the following conventions: "artist" is actually a composer; "comment" is of one of two forms: Performers; Orchestra; Conductor Orchestra; Conductor To set the specific MP3 frames via "-P" rules, use mp3info2 -@P "mi/@a/@{TCOM}" \ -P "mi/@c/@{U1}; @{TPE2}; @{TPE3}/@{TPE2}; @{TPE3}" -R . With "-F" options, this can be simplified as mp3info2 -@F "TCOM=@a" -P "mi/@c/@{U1}; @{TPE2}; @{TPE3}/@{TPE2}; @{TPE3}" -R . or mp3info2 -@F "composer=@a" -P "mi/@c/@{U1}; @{TPE2}; @{TPE3}/@{TPE2}; @{TPE3}" -R . To copy ID3 tags of MP3 files in the current directory to files in directory /tmp/mp3 with the extension .tag (and print "progress report"), use mp3info2 -p "@N@E\n" -@P "bODi,@{ID3v2}@{ID3v1},/tmp/mp3/@N.tag" -DNR . Since we did not use "z" flag, MP3 files without tags are skipped. Now suppose that there are two parallel file hierarchies of audio files, and of lyrics: audio files are in audio/dir_name/audio_name.mp3 with corresponding lyrics file in text/dir_name/audio_name.mp3. To attach lyrics to MP3 files (in "COMM" frame with description "lyrics" in language "eng" - this is a non-standard location, see below!), call mp3info2 -@P "fim;../text/@{d0}/@B.txt;@{COMM(eng)[lyrics]}" -Ru . inside the directory audio. (Change "fim" to "Ffim" to ignore the audio files for which the corresponding text file does not exist.) (Of course, to follow the specifications, one should have used the field "%{USLT(eng)[]}" instead of "%{COMM(eng)[lyrics]}"; see below for variations). Finish by a very simple example: all what the pattern -P 'i;%t;%t' does is removal of trailing and leading blanks from the title (which is deduced by other means). More examplesWith "-F" option, one could set the "USLT" frame asmp3info2 -@F "USLT(eng)[] < ../text/@{d0}/@B.txt" -Ru . Print out such a frame (in any language) with mp3info2 -@p "@{USLT[]}\n" file.mp3 Similarly, to print out the APIC frame with empty description, use mp3info2 -e binary -@p "@{APIC[]}" file.mp3 > output_picture_file or (with description "cover") mp3info2 -@P "bOi,@{APIC[cover]},output_picture_file.jpg" audio_07.mp3 To set such a frame from file xxx.gif (with the default "Picture Type", "Cover (front)", and empty description), do one of mp3info2 -F "APIC < xxx.gif" file.mp3 mp3info2 -@F "APIC[]=@{I(fimbB)xxx.gif}" file.mp3 The difference of "APIC" and "APIC[]" is that the first removes all "APIC" frames first, and the second removes only all "APIC" frames with empty description - but arbitrary image type. So it may be more suitable to use the full specification, as in "APIC(Cover (front))[]". To remove "APIC" frames with empty descriptions, arbitrary "Picture Type"s (and "MIME type"s which may be correctly calculated by mp3info2, e.g., "TIFF/JPEG/GIF/PNG"), use mp3info2 -d "APIC[]" file.mp3 (note that this wouldn't free disk space, unless "shrink" is forced by configuration variables). To do the same with the "Conductor" picture type only, do mp3info2 -d "APIC(Conductor)[]" file.mp3 To scan through subdirectories, and add file cover.jpg from the directory of the file as a "default" "APIC" frame, but only if there is no "APIC" frame, and a file exists, do mp3info2 -@F "APIC ?< @D/cover.jpg" -R . This deletes empty frames for date, "TCOP, TENC, WXXX[], COMM(eng)[]", and removes the leading 0 from track number from MP3 file in current directory: mp3info2 -@ -E +/i:y -F "TCOP=@{TCOP}" -F "TENC=@{TENC}" -F "WXXX[]=@{WXXX[]}" -F "COMM(eng)[]=@{COMM(eng)[]}" -y "@y" -P "mi/@n/0@n/@n" *.mp3 Examples on dealing with broken encodingsOne of principal weaknesses of ID3 specification was that it required that data is provided in "latin-1" encoding. Since most languages in the world are not expressible in "latin-1", this lead to (majority?) of ID3 tags being not standard-conforming. Newer versions of the specs fixed this shortcoming, but the damage was already done. Fortunately, this script can use abilities of "MP3::Tag" to convert from non-conforming content to a conforming one.The following example converts ID3v2 tags which were written in (non-standard-conforming) encoding "cp1251" to be in standard-conforming encoding. For the purpose of this example, assume that ID3v1 tags are in the same encoding (and that one wants to leave them in the encoding "cp1251"); the files to process are found in the current directory and (recursively) in its subdirectories ("set" syntax for DOSISH shells): set MP3TAG_DECODE_V1_DEFAULT=cp1251 set MP3TAG_DECODE_V2_DEFAULT=cp1251 mp3info2 -C id3v2_fix_encoding_on_write=1 -u2R . For more information, see "ENVIRONMENT" in MP3::Tag, "config" in MP3::Tag, and "CUSTOMIZATION" in MP3::Tag. INCOMPATIBILITIES with mp3infoThis tool is loosely modeled on the program mp3info; it is "mostly" backward compatible (especially when in "naive" mode via "-N"), and allows a very significant superset of functionality. Known backward incompatibilities are:-G -h -r -d -x Missing functionality: -f -F -i Incompatible "%"-escapes: %e %E - absolutely different semantic %v - has no trailing 0s %q - has fractional part %r - is a number, not a word "Variable" for VBR %u - is one less (in presence of descriptor frame only?) Missing "%"-escapes: %b %G Backslash escapes: only "\\", "\n", "\t" supported. "-x" prints data in a different format, not all fields are present, and ID3v2 tag names are output. ENVIRONMENTWith "-e" 1, 2 or 3, this script may consult environment variables "LC_CTYPE, LC_ALL, LANG" to deduce the current encoding. No other environment variables are directly read by this script.Note however, that MP3::Tag module has a rich set of defaults for encoding settings settable by environment variables; see "ENVIRONMENT" in MP3::Tag. So these variables affect (indirectly) how this script works. OBSOLETE INTERFACEIf you do not understand what it is about, it is safe to ignore this announcement:The old, pre-version=1.05 way (by triplication of a separator, without repetition of options) to provide multiple commands to "-F" and <-P> options is still supported, but is strongly discouraged. (It does not conflict with the current interface.) AUTHORIlya Zakharevich <cpan@ilyaz.org>.Utilities to create CDDB fileGood CD reapers (e.g., cdda2wav with option "cddb=0") create a CDDB file with fetched information - as far as an Internet connection is present. However, if not available, other options exist.The scripts (supplied with the distribution in ./examples) can create a "stub" CDDB file basing on:
Passing this stub to the script cddb2cddb.pl, it can be transformed to a "filled" CDDB file via a connection to some online database. Use "-r" option if multiple records in the database match the CD signature. fulltoc2fake_cddb audiocd.toc | cddb2cddb > audio.cddb inf_2fake_cddb | cddb2cddb > audio.cddb dir_mp3_2fake_cddb | cddb2cddb -r3 > audio.cddb # 3rd record When such a CDDB file is present, it will be used by MP3::Tag module to deduce the information about an audio file. This information is (by default, transparently) used by this script. SEE ALSOMP3::Tag, MP3::Tag::ParseData, audio_rename, typeset_audio_dir
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