- new PARAMETERS
- Creates a high-level interface to a cddbp server, returning a handle to
it. The handle is not a filehandle. It is an object. The new()
constructor provides defaults for just about everything, but everything is
overrideable if the defaults aren't appropriate.
The interface will not actually connect to a cddbp server
until it's used, and a single cddbp interface may actually make several
connections (to possibly several servers) over the course of its
use.
The new() constructor accepts several parameters, all
of which have reasonable defaults.
Host and Port describe the cddbp server to
connect to. These default to 'freedb.freedb.org' and 8880, which is a
multiplexor for all the other freedb servers.
Utf8 is a boolean flag. If true, utf-8 will be used
when submitting CD info, and for interpreting the data reveived. This
requires the Encode module (and probably perl version at least 5.8.0).
The default is true if the Encode module can be loaded. Otherwise, it
will be false, meaning we fall back to ASCII.
Protocol_Version sets the cddbp version to use. CDDB.pm
will not connect to servers that don't support the version specified
here. The requested protocol version defaults to 1 if Utf8 is
off, and to 6 if it is on.
Login is the login ID you want to advertise to the
cddbp server. It defaults to the login ID your computer assigns you, if
that can be determined. The default login ID is determined by the
presence of a LOGNAME or USER environment variable, or by the
getpwuid() function. On Windows systems, it defaults to
"win32usr" if no default method can be found and no Login
parameter is set.
Submit_Address is the e-mail address where new disc
submissions go. This defaults to 'freedb-submit@freedb.org'. Note, that
testing submissions should be done via
"test-submit@freedb.org".
Client_Name and Client_Version describe the
client software used to connect to the cddbp server. They default to
'CDDB.pm' and CDDB.pm's version number. If developers change this,
please consult freedb's web site for a list of client names already in
use.
Debug enables verbose operational information on STDERR
when set to true. It's normally not needed, but it can help explain why
a program is failing. If someone finds a reproduceable bug, the Debug
output and a test program would be a big help towards having it fixed.
In case of submission, if this flag is on, a copy of the submission
e-mail will be sent to the From address.
- get_genres
- Takes no parameters. Returns a list of genres known by the cddbp server,
or undef if there is a problem retrieving them.
- calculate_id TOC
- The cddb protocol defines an ID as a hash of track lengths and the number
of tracks, with an added checksum. The most basic information required to
calculate this is the CD table of contents (the CD-i track offsets, in
"MSF" [Minutes, Seconds, Frames] format).
Note however that there is no standard way to acquire this
information from a CD-ROM device. Therefore this module does not try to
read the TOC itself. Instead, developers must combine CDDB.pm with a CD
library which works with their system. The AudioCD suite of modules is
recommended: it has system specific code for MacOS, Linux and FreeBSD.
CDDB.pm's author has used external programs like dagrab to fetch the
offsets. Actual CDs aren't always necessary: the author has heard of
people generating TOC information from mp3 file lengths.
That said, see parse_cdinfo() for a routine to parse
"cdinfo" output into a table of contents list suitable for
calculate_id().
calculate_id() accepts TOC information as a list of
strings. Each string contains four fields, separated by whitespace:
offset 0: the track number
Track numbers start with 1 and run sequentially through the
number of tracks on a disc. Note: data tracks count on hybrid audio/data
CDs.
CDDB.pm understands two special track numbers. Track 999 holds
the lead-out information, which is required by the cddb protocol. Track
1000 holds information about errors which have occurred while physically
reading the disc.
offset 1: the track start time, minutes field
Tracks are often addressed on audio CDs using "MSF"
offsets. This stands for Minutes, Seconds, and Frames (fractions of a
second). The combination pinpoints the exact disc frame where a song
starts.
Field 1 contains the M part of MSF. It is ignored for error
tracks, but it still must contain a number. Zero is suggested.
offset 2: the track start time, seconds field
This field contains the S part of MSF. It is ignored for error
tracks, but it still must contain a number. Zero is suggested.
offset 3: the track start time, frames field
This field contains the F part of MSF. For error tracks, it
contains a description of the error.
Example track file. Note: the comments should not appear in
the file.
1 0 2 37 # track 1 starts at 00:02 and 37 frames
2 1 38 17 # track 2 starts at 01:38 and 17 frames
3 11 57 30 # track 3 starts at 11:57 and 30 frames
...
999 75 16 5 # leadout starts at 75:16 and 5 frames
Track 1000 should not be present if everything is okay:
1000 0 0 Error reading TOC: no disc in drive
In scalar context, calculate_id() returns just the
cddbp ID. In a list context, it returns an array containing the
following values:
(
$cddbp_id,
$track_numbers,
$track_lengths,
$track_offsets,
$total_seconds
) = $cddbp->calculate_id(@toc);
print(
"cddbp ID = $cddbp_id\n", # b811a20c
"track numbers = @$track_numbers\n", # 001 002 003 ...
"track lengths = @$track_lengths\n", # 01:36 10:19 04:29 ...
"track offsets = @$track_offsets\n", # 187 7367 53805 ...
"total seconds = $total_seconds\n", # 4514
);
CDDBP_ID
The 0th returned value is the hashed cddbp ID, required for
any queries or submissions involving this disc.
TRACK_NUMBERS
The 1st returned value is a reference to a list of track
numbers, one for each track (excluding the lead-out), padded to three
characters with leading zeroes. These values are provided for
convenience, but they are not required by cddbp servers.
TRACK_LENGTHS
The 2nd returned value is a reference to a list of track
lengths, one for each track (excluding the lead-out), in HH:MM format.
These values are returned as a convenience. They are not required by
cddbp servers.
TRACK_OFFSETS
The 3rd returned value is a reference to a list of absolute
track offsets, in frames. They are calculated from the MSF values, and
they are required by get_discs() and submit_disc().
TOTAL_SECONDS
The 4th and final value is the total playing time for the CD,
in seconds. The get_discs() function needs it.
- get_discs CDDBP_ID, TRACK_OFFSETS, TOTAL_SECONDS
- get_discs() asks the cddbp server for a summary of all the CDs
matching a given cddbp ID, track offsets, and total playing time. These
values can be retrieved from calculade_id().
my @id_info = $cddbp->calculate_id(@toc);
my $cddbp_id = $id_info->[0];
my $track_offsets = $id_info->[3];
my $total_seconds = $id_info->[4];
get_discs() returns an array of matching discs, each of
which is represented by an array reference. It returns an empty array if
the query succeeded but did not match, and it returns undef on
error.
my @discs = $cddbp->get_discs( $cddbp_id, $track_offsets, $total_seconds );
foreach my $disc (@discs) {
my ($disc_genre, $disc_id, $disc_title) = @$disc;
print(
"disc id = $disc_id\n",
"disc genre = $disc_genre\n",
"disc title = $disc_title\n",
);
}
DISC_GENRE is the genre this disc falls into, as determined by
whoever submitted or last edited the disc. The genre is required when
requesting a disc's details. See get_genres() for how to retrieve
a list of cddbp genres.
CDDBP_ID is the cddbp ID of this disc. Cddbp servers perform
fuzzy matches, returning near misses as well as direct hits on a cddbp
ID, so knowing the exact ID for a disc is important when submitting
changes or requesting a particular near-miss' details.
DISC_TITLE is the disc's title, which may help a human to pick
the correct disc out of several close mathches.
- get_discs_by_toc TOC
- This function acts as a macro, combining calculate_id() and
get_discs() calls into one function. It takes the same parameters
as calculate_id(), and it returns the same information as
get_discs().
- get_discs_by_query QUERY_STRING
- Fetch discs by a pre-built cddbp query string. Some disc querying programs
report this string, and get_discs_by_query() is a convenient way to
use that.
Cddb protocol query strings look like:
cddb query $cddbp_id $track_count @offsets $total_seconds
- get_disc_details DISC_GENRE, CDDBP_ID
- This function fetches a disc's detailed information from a cddbp server.
It takes two parameters: the DISC_GENRE and the CDDP_ID. These parameters
usually come from a call to get_discs().
The disc's details are returned in a reference to a fairly
complex hash. It includes information normally stored in comments. The
most common entries in this hash include:
$disc_details = get_disc_details( $disc_genre, $cddbp_id );
$disc_details->{"disc
length"}
The disc length is commonly stored in the form "###
seconds", where ### is the disc's total playing time in seconds. It
may hold other time formats.
$disc_details->{discid}
This is a rehash (get it?) of the cddbp ID. It should match
the CDDBP_ID given to get_disc_details().
$disc_details->{dtitle}
This is the disc's title. I do not know whether it will match
the one returned by get_discs().
$disc_details->{offsets}
This is a reference to a list of absolute disc track offsets,
similar to the TRACK_OFFSETS returned by calculate_id().
$disc_details->{seconds}
This is a reference to a list of track length, in seconds.
$disc_details->{ttitles}
This is a reference to a list of track titles. These are the
droids you are looking for.
$disc_details->{"processed
by"}
This is a comment field identifying the name and version of
the cddbp server which accepted and entered the disc record into the
database.
$disc_details->{revision}
This is the disc record's version number, used as a sanity
check (semaphore?) to prevent simultaneous revisions. Revisions start at
0 for new submissions and are incremented for every correction. It is
the responsibility of the submitter (be it a person or a program using
CDDB.pm) to provide a correct revision number.
$disc_details->{"submitted
via"}
This is the name and version of the software that submitted
this cddbp record. The main intention is to identify records that are
submitted by broken software so they can be purged or corrected.
$disc_details->{xmcd_record}
The xmcd_record field contains a copy of the entire
unprocessed cddbp response that generated all the other fields.
$disc_details->{genre}
This is merely a copy of DISC_GENRE, since it's otherwise not
possible to determine it from the hash.
- parse_xmcd_file XMCD_FILE_CONTENTS, [GENRE]
- Parses an array ref of lines read from an XMCD file into the disc_details
hash described above. If the GENRE parameter is set it will be included in
disc_details.
- can_submit_disc
- Returns true or false, depending on whether CDDB.pm has enough dependent
modules to submit discs. If it returns false, you are missing
Mail::Internet, Mail::Header, or MIME::QuotedPrint.
- get_mail_address
- Returns what CDDB.pm thinks your e-mail address is, or what it was last
set to. It was added to fetch the default e-mail address so users can see
it and have an opportunity to correct it.
my $mail_from = $cddb->get_mail_address();
print "New e-mail address (or blank to keep <$mail_from>): ";
my $new_mail_from = <STDIN>;
$new_mail_from =~ s/^\s+//;
$new_mail_from =~ s/\s+$//;
$new_mail_from =~ s/\s+/ /g;
$mail_from = $new_mail_from if length $new_mail_from;
$cddbp->submit_disc(
...,
From => $mail_from,
);
- get_mail_host
- Returns what CDDB.pm thinks your SMTP host is, or what it was last set to.
It was added to fetch the default e-mail transfer host so users can see it
and have an opportunity to correct it.
my $mail_host = $cddb->get_mail_host();
print "New e-mail host (or blank to keep <$mail_host>): ";
my $new_mail_host = <STDIN>;
$new_mail_host =~ s/^\s+//;
$new_mail_host =~ s/\s+$//;
$new_mail_host =~ s/\s+/ /g;
$mail_host = $new_mail_host if length $new_mail_host;
$cddbp->submit_disc(
...,
Host => $mail_host,
);
- parse_cdinfo CDINFO_FILE
- Generates a table of contents suitable for calculate_id() based on
the output of a program called "cdinfo". CDINFO_FILE may either
be a text file, or it may be the cdinfo program itself.
my @toc = parse_cdinfo("cdinfo.txt"); # read cdinfo.txt
my @toc = parse_cdinfo("cdinfo|"); # run cdinfo directly
The table of contents can be passed directly to
calculate_id().
- submit_disc DISC_DETAILS
- submit_disc() submits a disc record to a cddbp server. Currently it
only uses e-mail, although it will try different ways to send that. It
returns true or false depending on whether it was able to send the
submission e-mail.
The rest of CDDB.pm will work without the ability to submit
discs. While cddbp submissions are relatively rare, most CD collections
will have one or two discs not present in the system. Please submit new
discs to the system: the amazing number of existing discs got there
because others submitted them before you needed them.
submit_disc() takes six required parameters and two
optional ones. The parameters are named, like hash elements, and can
appear in any order.
Genre => DISC_GENRE
This is the disc's genre. It must be one of the genres that
the server knows. See get_genres().
Id => CDDBP_ID
This is the cddbp ID that identifies the disc. It should come
from calculate_id() if this is a new submission, or from
get_disc_details() if this is a revision.
Artist => DISC_ARTIST
This is the disc's artist, a freeform text field describing
the party responsible for the album. It will need to be entered from the
disc's notes for new submissions, or it can come from
get_disc_details() on subsequent revisions.
DiscTitle => DISC_TITLE
This is the disc's title, a freeform text field describing the
album. It must be entered from the disc's notes for new submissions. It
can come from get_disc_details() on subsequent revisions.
Offsets => TRACK_OFFSETS
This is a reference to an array of absolute track offsets, as
provided by calculate_id().
TrackTitles => TRACK_TITLES
This is a reference to an array of track titles, either
entered by a human or provided by get_disc_details().
From => EMAIL_ADDRESS
This is the disc submitter's e-mail address. It's not
required, and CDDB.pm will try to figure one out on its own if an
address is omitted. It may be more reliable to provide your own,
however.
The default return address may not be a deliverable one,
especially if CDDB.pm is being used on a dial-up machine that isn't
running its own MTA. If the current machine has its own MTA, problems
still may occur if the machine's Internet address changes.
Host => SMTP_HOST
This is the SMTP host to contact when sending mail. It's not
required, and CDDB.pm will try to figure one out on its own. It will
look at the SMTPHOSTS environment variable is not defined, it will try
'mail' and 'localhost' before finally failing.
Revision => REVISION
The revision number. Should be 1 for new submissions, and one
higher than the previous one for updates. The previous revision number
is available as the "revision" field
in the hash returned by get_disc_details().