X-Git-Url: http://git.tuebingen.mpg.de/?a=blobdiff_plain;ds=sidebyside;f=README.afs;h=ca01df6ac678a7cb3b1be14ac5957a1ddb1a4137;hb=64481cad8a69c526a3da1dad5c0383316984be2e;hp=dd80914495d32569fa05e997e5a3a35d1e9da824;hpb=b75c3c8433836003652edc71a11458abc064e42f;p=paraslash.git
diff --git a/README.afs b/README.afs
index dd809144..ca01df6a 100644
--- a/README.afs
+++ b/README.afs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
The audio file selector
=======================
-Paraslash comes with a sophisticated audio file selector called afs.
+Paraslash comes with a sophisticated audio file selector called *afs*.
In the
<<
installation notes,
@@ -31,12 +31,12 @@ an audio file by executing
para_client setatt test+ /path/to/the/audio/file
-Similarly, the "test" bit can be removed from a audio file with
+Similarly, the "test" bit can be removed from an audio file with
para_client setatt test- /path/to/the/audio/file
-Instead of a path you can also use a pattern, and the attribute is
-applied to all audio files matching that pattern:
+Instead of a path you may use a shell wildcard pattern. The attribute
+is applied to all audio files matching that pattern:
para_client setatt test+ '/test/directory/*'
@@ -53,9 +53,9 @@ you find this annoying, just say
alias para='para_client --'
-and be happy. In the remainder part this alias is being used.
+and be happy. In what follows we shall use this alias.
-Drop the test attribute entirely from the database with
+The "test" attribute can be dropped from the database with
para rmatt test
@@ -74,13 +74,14 @@ Abstract mood nonsense
[skip this part if you don't like formal definitions]
-A mood consists of a unique name and its *mood definition*, which is a set of
-*mood lines* containing expressions in terms of attributes and other data
-contained in the database.
+A mood consists of a unique name and its *mood definition*, which is
+a set of *mood lines* containing expressions in terms of attributes
+and other data contained in the database.
-A mood defines a subset of audio files called the *admissible audio files*
-for that mood. A mood can be *active* which means that para_server
-is going to select only files from that subset of admissible files.
+A mood defines a subset of audio files called the *admissible audio
+files* for that mood. At any time, at most one mood can be *active*
+which means that para_server is going to select only files from that
+subset of admissible files.
So in order to create a mood definition one has to write a set of
mood lines. Mood lines come in three flavours: Accept lines, deny
@@ -99,7 +100,7 @@ a random score to all matching files. The score value changes the
order in which admissible files are going to be selected, but is of
minor importance for this introduction.
-So we concentrate on the first two forms, that is accept and deny
+So we concentrate on the first two forms, i.e. accept and deny
lines. As usual, everything in square brackets is optional, i.e.
accept/deny lines take the following form when ignoring scores:
@@ -121,12 +122,12 @@ or
The set of admissible files for the whole mood is now defined as those
files which match at least one accept mood line, but no deny mood line.
-More formally, a file is admissible if and only if
+More formally, an audio file F is admissible if and only if
(F ~ AL1 or F ~ AL2...) and not (F ~ DL1 or F ~ DN2 ...)
-where F is the file, AL1, AL2... are the accept lines, DL1, DL2... are
-the deny lines and "~" means "matches".
+where AL1, AL2... are the accept lines, DL1, DL2... are the deny
+lines and "~" means "matches".
The cases where no mood lines of accept/deny type are defined need
special treatment:
@@ -192,7 +193,7 @@ the catmood command to get it back:
A mood can be activated by executing
- para chmood my_mood
+ para select m/my_mood
Once active, the list of admissible files is shown by the ls command
if the "-a" switch is given:
@@ -223,12 +224,33 @@ songs is
---------
Troubles?
---------
-If something went wrong, look at the output. If that does not give
-you a clue, use loglevel one (option -l 1 for most commands) to show
+
+Use the debug loglevel (option -l debug for most commands) to show
debugging info. Almost all paraslash executables have a brief online
-help which is displayed by using the -h switch.
+help which is displayed by using the -h switch. The --detailed-help
+option prints the full help text.
+
+para_fsck tries to fix your database. Use --force (even if your name
+isn't Luke) to clean up after a crash. However, first make sure
+para_server isn't running before executing para_fsck if para_fsck
+complains about busy (dirty) tables. para_fsck also contains an option
+to dump the contents of the database to the file system.
+
+If you don't mind to recreate your database you can start
+from scratch by removing the entire database directory, i.e.
+
+ rm -rf ~/.paraslash/afs_database
+
+Note that this removes all tables, in particular attribute definitions
+and data, and all playlist and mood definitions.
+
+para_fsck operates on the osl-layer, i.e. it fixes inconsistencies
+in the database but doesn't know about the contents of the tables
+contained therein. Use
+
+ para_client check
+
+to print out bad entries, e.g.missing audio files or invalid mood
+definitions.
-Still not working? Mail the author Andre Noll
-(english, german, or spanish language). Please provide enough info
-such as the version of paraslash you are using and relevant parts of
-the logs.
+Still having problems? mailto: Andre Noll