NAME
MP3::Find - Search and sort MP3 files based on their ID3 tags
SYNOPSIS
# select with backend you want
use MP3::Find qw(Filesystem);
print "$_\n" foreach find_mp3s(
dir => '/home/peter/cds',
query => {
artist => 'ilyaimy',
title => 'deep in the am',
},
ignore_case => 1,
match_words => 1,
sort => [qw(year album tracknum)],
printf => '%2n. %a - %t (%b: %y)',
);
DESCRIPTION
This module allows you to search for MP3 files by their ID3 tags. You can ask for the results to be sorted by one or more of those tags, and return either the list of filenames (the deault), a printf
-style formatted string for each file using its ID3 tags, or the actual Perl data structure representing the results.
There are currently two backends to this module: MP3::Find::Filesystem and MP3::Find::DB. You choose which one you want by passing its name as the argument to you use
statement; MP3::Find will look for a MP3::Find::$BACKEND module. If no backend name is given, it will default to using MP3::Find::Filesystem.
Note: I'm still working out some kinks in the DB backend, so it is currently not as stable as the Filesystem backend.
Note the second: This whole project is still in the alpha stage, so I can make no guarentees that there won't be significant interface changes in the next few versions or so. Also, comments about what about the API rocks (or sucks!) are appreciated.
REQUIRES
File::Find, MP3::Info, and Scalar::Util are needed for the filesystem backend (MP3::Find::Filesystem).
DBI, DBD::SQLite, and SQL::Abstract are needed for the database backend (MP3::Find::DB).
EXPORTS
find_mp3s
my @results = find_mp3s(%options);
Takes the following options:
dir
-
Arrayref or scalar; tell
find_mp3s
where to start the search. Directories in the arrayref are searched sequentially. query
-
Hashref of search parameters. Recognized fields are anything that MP3::Info knows about. Field names can be given in either upper or lower case;
find_mp3s
will convert them into upper case for you. Value may either be strings, which are converted into regular exporessions, or may beqr/.../
regular expressions already. ignore_case
-
Boolean, default false; set to a true value to ignore case when matching search strings to the ID3 tag values.
exact_match
-
Boolean, default false; set to a true value to add an implicit
^
and$
around each query string. Does nothing if the query term is already a regular expression. sort
-
What field or fields to sort the results by. Can either be a single scalar field name to sort by, or an arrayref of field names. Again, acceptable field names are anything that MP3::Info knows about; field names will be converted to upper case as with the
query
option. printf
-
By default,
find_mp3s
just returns the list of filenames. Theprintf
option allows you to provide a formatting string to apply to the data for each file. The style is roughly similar to Perl'sprintf
format strings. The following formatting codes are recognized:%a - artist %t - title %b - album %n - track number %y - year %g - genre %% - literal '%'
Numeric modifers may be used in the same manner as with
%s
in Perl'sprintf
. no_format
-
Boolean, default false; set to a true value to have
find_mp3s
to return an array of hashrefs instead of an array of (formatted) strings. Each hashref consists of the key-value pairs fromMP3::Info::get_mp3_tag
andMP3::Info::get_mp3_info
, plus the keyFILENAME
(with the obvious value ;-)@results = ( { FILENAME => ..., TITLE => ..., ARTIST => ..., ... SECS => ..., BITRATE => ..., ... }, ... );
BUGS
There are probably some in there; let me know if you find any (patches welcome).
TODO
Better tests, using some actual sample mp3 files.
Other backends (a caching filesystem backend, perhaps?)
SEE ALSO
MP3::Find::Filesystem, MP3::Find::DB
mp3find is the command line frontend to this module (it currently only uses the filesystem backend).
See MP3::Info for more information about the fields you can search and sort on.
File::Find::Rule::MP3Info is another way to search for MP3 files based on their ID3 tags.
AUTHOR
Peter Eichman <peichman@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2006 by Peter Eichman. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.