File : README.md
Maintainer : Felix C. Stegerman <flx@obfusk.net>
Date : 2018-09-16
Copyright : Copyright (C) 2018 Felix C. Stegerman
Version : v0.4.2
License : GPLv3+
m - minimalistic media manager
m keeps track of which files you've played (or are still playing) and thus allows you to easily continue playing the next file (using vlc or mpv).
- Supports importing existing playing/watched data from Kodi.
- Stores its data in JSON files (one per directory) in
~/.obfusk-m; you can put this directory in git if you want a changelog :)
NB: extracting the timestamp from the vlc config and mpv output is a little hacky :(
NB: m uses $PWD to make sure it sees the current path the same as
the shell it is run from (i.e. it does not resolve the path by
following symlinks, allowing the link targets to be relocated);
unfortunately, this means that it does not see two directories as
identical if they are accessed using different paths, even if the
resolved path is the same. So you may want to avoid using different
paths to the same directory (and --dir).
$ cd /some/media/dir
$ m ls # list files ([*] = skip, [x] = done, [>] = playing, [ ] = new)
[x] Something - 01.mkv
[x] Something - 02.mkv
[x] Something - 03.mkv
[x] Something - 04.mkv
[x] Something - 05.mkv
[x] Something - 06.mkv
[>] Something - 07.mkv 0:04:04
[ ] Something - 08.mkv
[ ] Something - 09.mkv
$ m next # plays current/next episode (i.e. #7) w/ vlc$ m ld # list dirs (shows #playing, #new for indexed subdirectories)
( 2!) Dir A
( ) Dir B
(1> 0!) Dir C
( 0!) Dir DCommands include: list/ls, list-dirs/ld, list-all/la,
next, play FILE, mark FILE, unmark FILE, skip FILE, index,
playing, watched, skipped, todo.
See also the tests in the source code (also available as m examples)
for more examples.
m is designed to work well with other command-line tools:
$ m --colour ld | column
$ m --colour ls | tail
$ cat "$( m db-file )" | jq .dirIn situations where you prefer simple keybindings to typing on the command-line, you can use the m-gui wrapper.
$ m --help # global options & subcommands
$ m ls --help # subcommand (ls in this case) options & argument(s)
$ m examples # show some examples (from the tests)Python >= 3.5.
You can just put m.py somewhere on your $PATH (in e.g. ~/bin; I
suggest calling it m, but you're free to choose another name).
You may want to clone the repository instead of just downloading
m.py to be able to get new versions easily.
Alternatively, you can install m using pip (the Python package manager) or build and install a Debian package.
NB: the pip and Debian packages are called mmm instead of m.
$ cd /some/convenient/dir
$ git clone https://github.com/obfusk/m.git obfusk-m
$ cd ~/bin # or some other dir on your $PATH
$ ln -s /some/convenient/dir/obfusk-m/m.py mUpdating:
$ cd /some/convenient/dir/obfusk-m
$ git pull$ pip3 install --user mmm # for Debian; on other OS's you may need
# pip instead of pip3 and/or no --user$ sudo apt install debhelper dh-python pandoc # install build dependencies
$ cd /some/convenient/dir
$ git clone https://github.com/obfusk/m.git obfusk-m
$ cd obfusk-m
$ dpkg-buildpackage
$ sudo dpkg -i ../mmm_*_all.debYou can set/override some defaults in ~/.obfusk-m/config.json; for
example:
{
"add_exts": [".mp3", ".ogg"],
"colour": true,
"exts": [".avi", ".m4v", ".mkv", ".mp4", ".ogv", ".webm"],
"ignorecase": true,
"numbers": true,
"numeric_sort": true,
"only_indexed": true,
"player": "mpv",
"show_hidden": true
}- update README + version (4x + dch) + package (deb + pip)!
ack TODO- debian Tag:?
- use markdown for README now that pypi supports it
- as soon as I have wheel >= 0.31.0 in Debian
- no need to build
README.rst setup.py:with_name("README.md"),long_description_content_type = "text/markdown"
- more file extensions!
- document
safe()vs--zero _pty_run: also minimize output if not a tty?- fix
m _testwhen run via wrapper (m.MErrorvsMError)?
m --virtual foo/bar {ls,...}+m virt [--update] [--title]* [--url]* [--url-template] [--episodes] [--browser]+VIRTUAL:/foo/bar+virt__*.json+m {watching,...} --include-virtual?
- test edge cases/failures?
--config-dir?- test
END_SECS? - note usage of dyn vars?
- bash completion?
m mv?--treeforplayingetc.?--json?- kodi db export/sync?
- sign pypi package?
- fix
.exist()race conditions? - use
locale.strcollvs--ignorecase?
Because the alias command uses symlinks internally, you should
probably not create symlinks named dir__*.json in ~/.obfusk-m
unless you know what you are doing.
