mt-daapd
Cosa può fare?
Avendo un cartella piena di file audio, può accettare connessione dalla rete sia interna sia dal web avviando lo streaming dalla musica verso chiunque la richieda.
Nel dettaglio?
Ecco un sempio molto esaurinte...
INGREDINTI.
fonera 2.0, hd collegato alla fonera tramite la porta usb, qualche Gb di musica.
SITUAZIONE.
Nella pausa pranzo, dal poli voglio ascoltare l'album di lady gaga scaricato la notte prima da transmission dalla mi fonerina.
COME FACCIO?
Basta avere un client daapd come SONGBIRD (macchine WINDOWS), per Linux c'è..vabbe poi lo scrivo non mi ricordo...Quindi digito l'indirizzo della mia fonera ed ecco che mi compare l'intera mia libreria multimediale di casa.
Che cosa è
daap
Come lo installo??
opkg update
opkg install mt-daapd
Di seguito qualche esempio cioe qualche screan schoot. Em songbird ha bisogno dell pluging per daapd, è come firefox lo enstendi e lo tamarri come ti pare, in casa ho 3 pc co l'interaccia sempre divrersa perche non mi ricordo mai quale installo.....

CONFIGURAZIONE:
Nel codice sotto riportato sono Indacate con XXXXXX i campi personalizzabili, in rosso i punti fondamentali che in teoria non cambiamo a seguito di una installazione esuita come precedentemente indicato. Se installarete mt-daapd in un posto diverso dovrete riadattare tutto il testo in rosso per il funzionamento.
Le xxxxx in rosso sono gli unici campi che dovete modificare:
-->admin_pw xxxxxxx esempio -> admin_pw miapsw
--> mp3_dir xxxxxxx esemepio -> mp3_dir /mnt/HD/mp3/
-->servername xxxxxxx esemepio -> servername MUSICA
Per modificare il file ?
nano /etc/mt-daapd.conf
Codice:
# $Id: mt-daapd.conf 454 2004-12-29 06:20:26Z rpedde $
#
# This is the mt-daapd config file.
#
# If you have problems or questions with the format of this file,
# direct your questions to rpedde@users.sourceforge.net.
#
# You can also check the website at http://mt-daapd.sourceforge.net,
# as there is a growing documentation library there, peer-supported
# forums and possibly more.
#
#
# web_root (required)
#
# Location of the admin web pages.
#
# If you installed from .RPM, .deb, or tarball with --prefix=/usr, then
# this is correct.
#
# If you installed from tarball without --prefix=/usr, then the correct
# path is probably /usr/local/share/mt-daapd/admin-root.
#
web_root /usr/share/mt-daapd/admin-root
#
# port (required)
#
# What port to listen on. It is possible to use a different
# port, but this is the default iTunes port
#
port 3689
#
# admin_pw (required)
#
# This is the password to the administrative pages
#
admin_pw xxxxxxxx
#
# db_dir (required)
#
# This is where mt-daapd stores its database of song information.
#
# If you installed from .RPM or .deb, then this directory already
# exists. If not, then YOU MUST CREATE THIS DIRECTORY!
#
db_dir /var/cache/mt-daapd
#
# mp3_dir (required)
#
# Location of the mp3 files to share. Note that because the
# files are stored in the database by inode, these must be
# in the same physical filesystem.
#
mp3_dir /xxxxxx
#
# servername (required)
#
# This is both the name of the server as advertised
# via rendezvous, and the name of the database
# exported via DAAP. Also know as "What shows up in iTunes".
#
servername xxxxxxxxxxx
#
# runas (required)
#
# This is the user to drop privs to if running as
# root. If mt-daapd is not started as root, this
# configuration option is ignored. Notice that this
# must be specified whether the server is running
# as root or not.
#
runas nobody
#
# playlist (optional)
#
# This is the location of a playlist file.
# This is for Apple-style "Smart Playlists"
# See the mt-daapd.playlist file in the
# contrib directory for syntax and examples
#
# This doesn't control static playlists... these
# are controlled with the "process_m3u" directive
# below.
#
playlist /etc/mt-daapd.playlist
#
# password (optional)
#
# This is the password required to listen to MP3 files
# i.e. the password that iTunes prompts for
#
#password mp3
#
# extensions (optional)
#
# These are the file extensions that the daap server will
# try to index and serve. By default, it only indexes and
# serves .mp3 files. It can also server .m4a and .m4p files,
# and just about any other files, really. Unfortunately, while
# it can *attempt* to serve other files (.ogg?), iTunes won't
# play them. Perhaps this would be useful on Linux with
# Rhythmbox, once it understands daap. (hurry up!)
#
#
extensions .mp3,.m4a,.m4p,.ogg,.wma
#
# logfile (optional)
#
# This is the file to log to. If this is not configured,
# then it will log to the syslog.
#
# Not that the -d <level> switch will control the log verbosity.
# By default, it runs at log level 1. Log level 9 will churn
# out scads of useless debugging information. Values in between
# will vary the amount of logging you get.
#
logfile /var/log/mt-daapd.log
#
# art_filename (optional)
#
# There is experimental support thanks to Hiren Joshi
# (hirenj@mooh.org) for dynamically adding art to the id3v2
# header as it is streamed (!!). If you were using a music system
# like zina or andromeda, for example, with cover art called
# "_folderOpenImage.jpg", you could use the parameter
# art_file _folderOpenImage.jpg and if the file _folderOpenImage.jpg
# was located in the same folder as the .mp3 file, it would appear
# in iTunes. Cool, eh?
#
art_filename _folderOpenImage.jpg
#
# rescan_interval
#
# How often to check the file system to see if any mp3 files
# have been added or removed.
#
# if not specified, the default is 0, which disables background scanning.
#
# If background rescanning is disabled, a scan can still be forced from the
# "status" page of the administrative web interface
#
# Setting a rescan_interval lower than the time it takes to rescan
# won't hurt anything, it will just waste CPU, and make connect times
# to the daap server longer.
#
#
rescan_interval 300
# always_scan
#
# The default behavior is not not do background rescans of the
# filesystem unless there are clients connected. The thought is to
# allow the drives to spin down unless they are in use. This might be
# of more importance in IDE drives that aren't designed to be run
# 24x7. Forcing a scan through the web interface will always work
# though, even if no users are connected.
# always_scan 0
#
# process_m3u
#
# By default m3u processing is turned off, since most m3u files
# sitting around in peoples mp3 directories have bad paths, and
# I hear about it. :)
#
# If you are sure your m3u files have good paths (i.e. unixly pathed,
# with relative paths relative to the directory the m3u is in), then
# you can turn on m3u processing by setting this directive to 1.
#
# I'm not sure "unixly" is a word, but you get the idea.
#
process_m3u 0
#
# scan_type
#
#
# This sets how aggressively mp3 files should be scanned to determine
# file length. There are three values:
#
#
# 0 (Normal)
# Just scan the first mp3 frame to try and calculate size. This will
# be accurate for most files, but VBR files without an Xing tag will
# probably have wildly inaccurate file times. This is the default.
#
# 1 (Aggressive)
# This checks the bitrates of 10 frames in the middle of the song.
# This will still be inaccurate for VBR files without an Xing tag,
# but they probably won't be quite as inaccurate as 0. This takes
# more time, obviously, although the time hit will only happen the
# first time you scan a particular file.
#
# 2 (Painfully aggressive)
# This walks through the entire song, counting the number of frames.
# This should result in accurate song times, but will take the most
# time. Again, this will only have to be incurred the first time
# the file is indexed.
#
scan_type 2
#
# compress
# compress
#
# Whether to use gzip content-encoding when transferring playlists etc.
# This was contributed as a patch by Ciamac Moallemi just prior to the 0.2.1
# release, and as such, hasn't gotten as much testing as other features.
#
# This feature should substantially speed up transfers of large databases
# and playlists.
#
# It will eventually default to 1, but currently it defaults to 0.
#
# compress 0
and! by giuseppe TIPALDI!