4.1 KiB
nncmpp(1)
Name
nncmpp - MPD client
Synopsis
nncmpp [OPTION]… [URL | PATH]…
Description
nncmpp is a hybrid terminal/X11 MPD client. On start up it will welcome you with an overview of all key bindings and the actions they’re assigned to. Individual tabs can be switched to either using the mouse or by pressing M-1 through M-9, corresponding to the order they appear in.
As a convenience utility, any program arguments are added to the MPD queue. Note that to add files outside the database, you need to connect to MPD using a socket file.
Options
- -d, --debug
-
Adds a "Debug" tab showing all MPD communication and other information that help debug various issues.
- -x, --x11
-
Use an X11 interface even when run from a terminal. Note that the application may be built with this feature disabled.
- -h, --help
-
Display a help message and exit.
- -V, --version
-
Output version information and exit.
Configuration
Unless you run MPD on a remote machine, on an unusual port, protected by a password, or only accessible through a Unix socket, the client doesn’t need a configuration file to work. It is, however, likely that you’ll want to customize the looks or add some streams. You can start off with the following snippet:
settings = { address = "~/.mpd/mpd.socket" password = "<your password>" pulseaudio = on x11_font = "sans\\-serif-11" } colors = { normal = "" highlight = "bold" elapsed = "reverse" remains = "ul" tab_bar = "reverse" tab_active = "ul" even = "" odd = "" selection = "reverse" multiselect = "-1 6" defocused = "ul" scrollbar = "" } streams = { "dnbradio.com" = "http://www.dnbradio.com/hi.m3u" "BassDrive.com" = "http://bassdrive.com/v2/streams/BassDrive.pls" }
Terminal attributes also apply to the GUI, and are accepted in a format similar to that of git-config(1), only named colours aren’t supported. The distribution contains example colour schemes in the contrib directory.
Spectrum visualiser
When built against the FFTW library, nncmpp can make use of MPD’s "fifo" output plugin to show the audio spectrum. This has some caveats, namely that it may not be properly synchronized, only one instance of a client can read from a given named pipe at a time, it will cost you some CPU time, and finally you’ll need to set it up manually to match your MPD configuration, e.g.:
settings = { ... spectrum_path = "~/.mpd/mpd.fifo" # "path" spectrum_format = "44100:16:2" # "format" (samplerate:bits:channels) spectrum_bars = 8 # beware of exponential complexity ... }
The sample rate should be greater than 40 kHz, the number of bits 8 or 16, and the number of channels doesn’t matter, as they’re simply averaged together.
PulseAudio
If you find standard MPD volume control useless, you may instead configure nncmpp to show and control the volume of any PulseAudio sink MPD is currently connected to.
This feature may be enabled with the settings.pulseaudio configuration option, as in the snippet above. To replace the default volume control bindings, use:
normal = { "M-PageUp" = "pulse-volume-up" "M-PageDown" = "pulse-volume-down" }
The respective actions may also be invoked from the help tab directly.
For this to work, nncmpp needs to access the right PulseAudio daemon—in case your setup is unusual, consult the list of environment variables in pulseaudio(1). MPD-compatibles are currently unsupported.
Files
nncmpp follows the XDG Base Directory Specification.
- ~/.config/nncmpp/nncmpp.conf
-
The configuration file.
Reporting bugs
Use https://git.janouch.name/p/nncmpp to report bugs, request features, or submit pull requests.
See also
mpd(1), pulseaudio(1)