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lastmp(1) [debian man page]

lastfm(1)						      General Commands Manual							 lastfm(1)

NAME
lastmp, lastcd - clients for lastfmsubmitd SYNOPSIS
lastmp [--debug] [--no-daemon] lastcd [--debug] [--stdout] DESCRIPTION
lastmp and lastcd are clients which send song information to lastfmsubmitd. lastmp connects to MPD and periodically checks for new songs and how long the current song has been played. lastcd reads a serialized list of songs that were played on an offline CD player, such as a car or home stereo, and sends them with estimated timestamps directly to lastfmsubmitd. Such lists can be generated with mbget(1). OPTIONS
-d, --debug Log debugging information. -n, --no-daemon Do not fork into the background. -o, --stdout Write the serialized song information to standard output. FILES
/etc/lastfmsubmitd.conf The configuration file. SEE ALSO
mpd(1). AUTHOR
Decklin Foster <decklin@red-bean.com>. lastfm(1)

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MPD-DYNAMIC(1p) 					User Contributed Perl Documentation					   MPD-DYNAMIC(1p)

NAME
mpd-dynamic - a dynamic playlist for mpd VERSION
version 1.120610 DESCRIPTION
This program implements a dynamic playlist for MPD, build on top of the Audio::MPD perl module. MPD (music player daemon) is a cool music player, but it lacks a dynamic playlist. A dynamic playlist is a playlist that will change automatically over time. In particular, it will remove already played songs (keeping at most a given number of songs) and add new songs to the playlist so it never fall short of songs. Note that since mpd is a daemon needing no gui to work, "mpd-dynamic" is also a daemon. That is, it will fork and do all its work from the background. This way, you can fire "mpd" and "mpd-dynamic" and forget completely about your music (especially since "mpd-dynamic" is a low-resource program): it will just be there! :-) USAGE
mpd-dynamic [options] OPTIONS
General behaviour You can customize the usage of mpd-dynamic with the following options: -o[ld] <old> Number of old tracks to keep in the backlog. Defaults to 10. -n[ew] <new> Number of new tracks to keep in the to-be-played playlist. Defaults to 10. -s[leep] <sleep> Time spent sleeping (in seconds) before checking if playlist should be updated. Default to 5 seconds. -d[ebug] Run mpd-dynamic in debug mode. In particular, the program will not daemonize itself. Default to false. -e[ncoding] <encoding> Print debug messages with this encoding. Since mpd-dynamic is meant to be a silent daemon, this option will not be used outside of debug mode. Default to "utf-8". --version --usage --help --man Print the usual program information Note however that those flags are optional: since "mpd-dynamic" comes with some sane defaults, you can fire "mpd-dynamic" as is. Ratings You can also take advantage of ratings if you want. With those options, songs need to have at least a given rating (or no rating yet) to be inserted: this way, you will only listen to your favorite songs! Ratings can be created / updated with "mpd-rate". Note that if you supply a non-existant rating db-file, the rating mechanism will be ignored. The following options control the rating mechanism: -r[atings] <ratings> The path of a db file with the ratings per song. The keys are the song path (relative to MPD root), and the value is an integer (the rating). Default to "~/.mpd/ratings.db". -m[in[imum]] <min> The minimum rating for a song to be inserted in the playlist. Default to 4. AUTHOR
Jerome Quelin COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2007 by Jerome Quelin. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-03-01 MPD-DYNAMIC(1p)
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