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Multi-user software jukebox
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DisOrder
========
DisOrder is a multi-user software jukebox.
* It can play either selected tracks or pick tracks at random.
* It supports OGG, MP3, FLAC and WAV files, and can be configured to support
anything you can supply a player for (up to a point).
* It supports both ALSA and OSS and can also broadcast an RTP stream over a
LAN; a player for the latter is included.
* Tracks may be selected either via a hierarchical interface or by a fast
word or tag search.
* It has a web interface (allowing access from graphical web browsers) and a
GTK+ interface that runs on Linux and Mac systems.
* Playing tracks can be paused or cancelled ("scratched").
See CHANGES.html for details of recent changes to DisOrder and
README.upgrades.html for upgrade instructions.
Platform support:
Linux Well tested on Debian
Mac OS X Disobedience well tested, server somewhat tested; use fink
FreeBSD Scantily tested; use ports for dependencies
It could probably be ported to some other UNIX variants without too much
effort.
Build dependencies:
Name Tested Notes
libdb 5.3.20 also 5.1; not 4.6; 4.[578] seem to be ok
libgc 7.4.2
libvorbisfile 1.3.5
libpcre 10.22 or 7.6 need UTF-8 support
libmad 0.15.1b
libgcrypt 1.7.6
libasound 1.1.3
libFLAC 1.3.2
libsamplerate 0.1.8 currently optional but strongly recommended
GStreamer 1.10.4 or 0.10.36 currently optional
GNU C 6.4.0 }
GNU Make 4.1 } Non-GNU versions will NOT work
GNU Sed 4.4 }
Python 2.7.13 (optional, 2.5.2 onwards OK; 2.4 won't work)
GTK+ 2.12.12 (for the GTK+ client; 2.10 & older will NOT work)
GLIB 2.16.6 (for the GTK+ client)
"Tested" means I've built against that version; earlier or later versions will
often work too.
If you don't have libsamplerate then DisOrder will try to run sox(1) to do
sample-rate and channel conversion. Unfortunately, sox has a tendency to
change its command-line options incompatibly every few years. Rather than
chase this moving target by supporting the new options introduced in 14.2,
I'm declaring DisOrder's sox support to be deprecated -- though (unlike
sox's policy) it won't actually go away until the next major version.
Alternatives include building against libsamplerate, or using GStreamer's
audio decoding instead of DisOrder's built-in decoders.
For the web interface to work you will additionally need a web server. I've
had both Apache 1.3.x and 2.x working. Anything that supports CGI should be
OK.
Bug tracker, etc:
https://github.com/ewxrjk/disorder
Mailing lists:
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/sgo-software-discuss
- discussion of DisOrder (and other software), bug reports, etc
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/sgo-software-announce
- announcements of new versions of DisOrder
Developers should read README.developers.
Installation
============
"This place'd be a paradise tomorrow, if every department had a supervisor
with a machine-gun"
IMPORTANT: If you are upgrading from an earlier version, see
README.upgrades.html.
Debian/Ubuntu: steps 1 to 6 are dealt with automatically if you use the .deb
files.
OX X/FreeBSD/other Linux: after installation (step 1 and 2), running
'sudo bash scripts/setup' will cover steps 3 to 6. If it doesn't work on your
platform, please get in touch.
1. Build the software. Do something like this:
./configure
make # on FreeBSD use gmake
See INSTALL or ./configure --help for more details about driving configure.
If you only want to build a subset of DisOrder, specify one or more of the
following options:
--without-server Don't build server or web interface
--without-gtk Don't build GTK+ client (Disobedience)
--without-python Don't build Python support
If configure cannot guess where your web server keeps its HTML documents and
CGI programs, you may have to tell it, for instance:
./configure cgiexecdir=/whatever/cgi-bin httpdir=/whatever/htdocs
See README.client for setting up a standalone client (or read the
disobedience man page).
To build .debs on Debian/Ubuntu, use:
fakeroot debian/rules binary
2. Install it. Most of the installation is done via the install target:
make installdirs install
NB steps 3 to 6 are covered by scripts/setup. It should work on FreeBSD, OS
X and Linux and could be adapted to other platforms.
3. Create a 'jukebox' user and group, with the jukebox group being the default
group of the jukebox user. The server will run as this user and group.
Check that this user can read your music files and write to the audio
device, e.g. by playing a track. The exact name doesn't matter, it could be
'jukebox' or 'disorder' or 'fred' or whatever.
Do not use a general-purpose user or group, you must create ones
specifically for DisOrder.
4. Create /etc/disorder/config. Start from examples/config.sample and adapt it
to your own requirements. The things you MUST do are:
* edit the 'collection' command to identify the location(s) of your own
digital audio files. These commands also specify the encoding of
filenames, which you should be sure to get right as recovery from an
error here can be painful (see BUGS).
Optionally you may also want to do the following:
* add 'player' and 'tracklength' commands for any file formats not
supported natively
* edit the 'scratch' commands to supply scratch sounds (or delete them if
you don't want any).
* add extra 'stopword' entries as necessary (these words won't take part in
track name searches from the web interface).
See disorder_config(5) for more details.
See README.streams for how to set up network play.
If adding new 'player' commands, see disorder(3) for details on setting up
"raw format" players. Non-raw players are still supported but not in all
configurations and they cannot support pausing and gapless play. If you
want additional formats to be supported natively please point the author at
a GPL-compatible library that can decode them.
5. Make sure the server is started at boot time.
On many Linux systems, examples/disorder.init should be more or less
suitable; install it in /etc/init.d, adapting it as necessary, and make
appropriate links from /etc/rc[0-6].d.
6. Start the server.
On Linux systems with sysv-style init:
/etc/init.d/disorder start
By default disorderd logs to daemon.*; check your syslog.conf to see where
this ends up and look for log messages from disorderd there. If it didn't
start up correctly there should be an error message. Correct the problem
and try again.
7. After a short while it should start to play something. Try scratching it
(as root):
disorder scratch
The track should stop playing, and (if you set any up) a scratch sound play.
8. Add any other users you want. These easiest way to do this is (still as
root):
disorder authorize USERNAME
This will automatically choose a random password and create
~USERNAME/.disorder/passwd.
Those users should now be able to access the server from the same host as it
runs on, either via the disorder command or Disobedience. To run
Disobedience from some other host, File->Login allows hostnames, passwords
etc to be configured.
Alternatively, after setting up the web interface (below), it's possible to
allow users to register themselves without operator involvement.
9. Optionally source completion.bash from /etc/profile or similar, for
example:
. /usr/local/share/disorder/completion.bash
This provides completion over disorder command and option names.
Web Interface
=============
"Thought I was a gonner baby, but I'm bullet proof"
Debian/Ubuntu: the .deb files will do the setup here automatically.
OS X/FreeBSD/other Linux: scripts/setup as referred to above will do the setup
here automatically.
You need to configure a number of things to make this work:
1. If you want online registration to work then set mail_sender in
/etc/disorder/config to the email address that communications from the web
interface will appear to be sent. If this is not a valid, deliverable email
address then the results are not likely to be reliable.
mail_sender [email protected]
By default the web interface sends mail via the system sendmail executable
(typically /usr/sbin/sendmail or /usr/lib/sendmail). You can override this
with the sendmail directive, for example:
sendmail /usr/sbin/my-sendmail
The executable you choose must support the -bs option. Alternatively you
can tell it to connect to an SMTP server via TCP, with the smtp_server
directive. For example:
smtp_server mail.example.com
Use 'disorder reconfigure' to make sure the server knows these settings.
2. The web interface depends on a 'guest' user existing. You can create this
with the following command:
disorder setup-guest
If you don't want to allow online registration instead use:
disorder setup-guest --no-online-registration
3. Try it out. The url will be (something like):
http://localhost/cgi-bin/disorder
You should be able to perform read-only operations straight away, and after
visiting the 'Login' page to authenticate, perform other operations like
adding a track to the queue.
4. If you run into problems, always look at the appropriate error log; the
message you see in your web browser will usually not be sufficient to
diagnose the problem all by itself.
5. If you have a huge number of top level directories, then you might find
that the 'Choose' page is unreasonably large. If so add the following line
to /etc/disorder/options.user:
label sidebar.choosewhich choosealpha
This will make 'Choose' be a link for each letter of the 26-letter Roman
alphabet; follow the link and you just get the directories which start with
that letter. The "*" link at the end gives you directories which don't
start with a letter.
You can copy choosealpha.html to /etc/disorder and edit it to change the
set of initial choices to anything that can be expressed with regexps. The
regexps must be URL-encoded UTF-8 PCRE regexps.
If you want to give DisOrder its own virtual host, see README.vhost.
Copyright
=========
"Nothing but another drug, a licence that you buy and sell"
DisOrder - select and play digital audio files
Copyright (C) 2003-2013 Richard Kettlewell
Portions copyright (C) 2007 Ross Younger
Portions copyright (C) 2007, 2013, 2015-2017 Mark Wooding
Portions extracted from MPG321, http://mpg321.sourceforge.net/
Copyright (C) 2001 Joe Drew
Copyright (C) 2000-2001 Robert Leslie
Portions Copyright (C) 1997-2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Portions Copyright (C) 2000 Red Hat, Inc., Jonathan Blandford <[email protected]>
Unicode test files Copyright (C) 1991-2017 Unicode Inc.; see
libtests/COPYING.unicode-tests for details.
Binaries may derive extra copyright owners through linkage (binary distributors
are expected to do their own legwork)
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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