2 SF: afs.c aft.c attribute.c
3 SN: list of afs commands
9 U: ls [-l=mode] [-p] [-a] [-r] [-d] [-s=order] [pattern...]
10 H: Print a list of all audio files matching pattern.
14 H: -l=mode Change listing mode. Defaults to short listing if not given.
17 H: s: short listing mode
18 H: l: long listing mode (equivalent to -l)
19 H: v: verbose listing mode
20 H: p: parser-friendly mode
21 H: m: mbox listing mode
22 H: c: chunk-table listing mode
24 H: -F List full paths. If this option is not specified, only the basename
25 H: of each file is printed.
26 H: -p Synonym for -F. Deprecated.
28 H: -b Print only the basename of each matching file. This is the default, so
29 H: the option is currently a no-op. It is recommended to specify this option,
30 H: though, as the default might change in a future release.
32 H: -a List only files that are admissible with respect to the current mood or
35 H: -r Reverse sort order.
37 H: -d Print dates as seconds after the epoch.
40 H: Change sort order. Defaults to alphabetical path sort if not given.
42 H: Possible values for order:
44 H: l: by last played time
45 H: s: by score (implies -a)
46 H: n: by num played count
48 H: c: by number of channels
56 P: AFS_READ | AFS_WRITE
57 D: Add new attribute(s).
58 U: addatt attribute1...
59 H: This adds new attributes to the attribute table. At most 64
60 H: attributes may be defined.
63 P: AFS_READ | AFS_WRITE
64 D: Remove entries from the audio file table.
65 U: rm [-v] [-f] [-p] pattern...
66 H: Delete all entries in the audio file table that match any given pattern. Note
67 H: that this affects the table entries only; the command won't touch your audio
72 H: -v Verbose mode. Explain what is being done.
74 H: -f Force mode. Ignore nonexistent files. Don't complain if nothing
77 H: -p Pathname match. Match a slash in the path only with a slash
78 H: in pattern and not by an asterisk (*) or a question mark
79 H: (?) metacharacter, nor by a bracket expression ([]) containing
80 H: a slash (see fnmatch(3)).
83 P: AFS_READ | AFS_WRITE
84 D: Manipulate the afs entry of audio files.
85 U: touch [-n=numplayed] [-l=lastplayed] [-y=lyrics_id] [-i=image_id] [-a=amp] [-v] [-p] pattern
86 H: If no option is given, the lastplayed field is set to the current time
87 H: and the value of the numplayed field is increased by one. Otherwise,
88 H: only the given options are taken into account.
92 H: -n Set the numplayed count, i.e. the number of times this audio
93 H: file was selected for streaming so far.
95 H: -l Set the lastplayed time, i.e. the last time this audio file was
96 H: selected for streaming. The argument must be a number of seconds
97 H: since the epoch. Example:
99 H: touch -l=$(date +%s) file
101 H: sets the lastplayed time of 'file' to the current time.
103 H: -y Set the lyrics ID which specifies the lyrics data file associated
104 H: with the audio file.
106 H: -i Like -y, but sets the image ID.
108 H: -a Set the amplification value (0-255). This determines a scaling
109 H: factor by which the amplitude should be multiplied in order to
110 H: normalize the volume of the audio file. A value of zero means
111 H: no amplification, 64 means the amplitude should be multiplied
112 H: by a factor of two, 128 by three and so on.
114 H: This value is used by the amp filter.
116 H: -v Verbose mode. Explain what is being done.
118 H: -p Pathname match. Match a slash in the path only with a slash
119 H: in pattern and not by an asterisk (*) or a question mark
120 H: (?) metacharacter, nor by a bracket expression ([]) containing
121 H: a slash (see fnmatch(3)).
124 P: AFS_READ | AFS_WRITE
125 D: Activate a mood or a playlist.
126 U: select specifier/name
127 H: The specifier is either 'm' or 'p' to indicate whether a playlist or
128 H: a mood should be activated. Example:
132 H: loads the mood named 'foo'.
136 O: int com_add@member@(struct command_context *cc);
137 P: AFS_READ | AFS_WRITE
138 D: Add stdin as a blob to the @member@ table.
139 U: add@member@ @member@_name
140 H: Read from stdin and ask the audio file selector to create a blob in the
141 H: corresponding osl table. If the named blob already exists, it gets replaced
142 H: with the new data.
146 O: int com_cat@member@(struct command_context *cc);
148 D: Dump the contents of a blob of type @member@ to stdout.
149 U: cat@member@ @member@_name
150 H: Retrieve the named blob and write it to stdout.
154 O: int com_ls@member@(struct command_context *cc);
156 D: List blobs of type @member@ which match a pattern.
157 U: ls@member@ [-i] [-l] [-r] [pattern]
158 H: Print the list of all blobs which match the given pattern. If no
159 H: pattern is given, the full list is printed.
163 H: -i Sort by identifier. The default is to sort alphabetically by name.
165 H: -l Print identifier and name. The default is to print only the name.
167 H: -r Reverse sort order.
171 O: int com_rm@member@(struct command_context *cc);
172 P: AFS_READ | AFS_WRITE
173 D: Remove blob(s) of type @member@ from the @member@ table.
174 U: rm@member@ pattern...
175 H: Remove all blobs whose name matches any of the given patterns.
179 O: int com_mv@member@(struct command_context *cc);
180 P: AFS_READ | AFS_WRITE
181 D: Rename a blob of type @member@.
182 U: mv@member@ source_@member@_name dest_@member@_name
183 H: Rename the blob identified by the source blob name to the destination blob
184 H: name. The command fails if the source does not exist, or if the destination