Internet radio browser GUI for music/video streams from various directory services.

⌈⌋ ⎇ branch:  streamtuner2


Artifact [417246e789]

Artifact 417246e789f1d35598d3d68b785f8bdfd4db7099:


<page	xmlns="http://projectmallard.org/1.0/"
	type="guide"
	id="configuration">

<info>
	<link type="guide" xref="index#configuration"/>
        <desc><key>F12</key> brings up the options window with the Player, Display, System and Plugin sections.</desc>
</info>

	<title>Settings dialog</title>

	<p>There are multiple behaviour options in streamtuner2.
        You can find the settings dialog in the edit menu as "Preferences" (last entry).
        </p>

        <terms>
          <title>It is separated into three main areas.</title>
          <item>
            <title>Player</title>
            <p>Lists audio formats and the audio player applications, or recording tools below.</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <title>Options</title>
            <p>Influences the display of all stream/station lists, and contains some system settings.</p>
          </item>
          <item>
            <title>Channel Plugins</title>
            <p>Every channel tab can have specific options. These are configured here.
            Also you can disable channels you don't need.</p>
          </item>
        </terms>


	<section id="apps">
		<title>Player application settings</title>
		<p>MIME types are elaborate identifiers for file types; audio/mp3 for example represents MP3 files, and audio/ogg
		means just OGG.</p>
		<p>The text entry fields can hold the application name of an audio player. Often the application name
		is just a lower case version of the program title.</p>
		<p>Behind application names a placeholder can be used. On invocation such placeholders
		get replaced with an URL (a http://..-Link) or filename for the selected radio stream.</p>
		<p>It's introduced by a percent sign, and followed by letters. %m3u for example generates a .m3u file,
                which most audio players understand. Otherwise try %pls, which might even be faster because streamtuner2 doesn't
		have to download and preprocess it. Alternatively %srv instead gives a direct stream link.</p>
		<p>Catch-all entries like */* or a generic audio/* entry allow to configure a default player.
		</p>
		<p><title>Recording</title></p>
		<p>The second block of entries in the 'Apps' section specifies recording applications.
                Here streamripper is preconfigured for audio streams, and youtube-dl for Youtube videos for instance.
                To define a target directory, you can add commandline arguments to each. Also it's typically
                helpful to leave the xterm prefix on, so you can follow the processing state. (Alternatively to
                xterm there is x-terminal-emulator, or rxvt, gnome-terminal, xfce4-terminal, etc.)</p>
	</section>


	<section id="gui">
		<title>Display/GUI options</title>
		<p>Most options here a self-explanatory. The options for the favicons define if station entries should
		show little icons. Not all stations have one, so you might as well turn this off to conserve a little
		memory.</p>
		<p>The number of stations setting is not honored by all channel plugins. Often it's not possible to
		load more or fewer station entries. Some plugins have own settings (in the 'Plugins' section) even.
		For the major plugins this however limits how much scroll text appears in the stream lists.</p>
		<p>"Retain deleted stations" keeps old entries, when you reload a category/genre. Shoutcast often
		forgets stations or throws them out. If you keep this option enabled, these entries are kept in
		streamtuner2. Browse down in the stations list to still see them.</p>
		<p>It's possible to select a Gtk+ theme. But not all themes work with all Gtk display engines, and
		not all themes work with streamtuner2. You just have to try it.</p>
		<p>Remembering window states makes streamtuner2 not forget which channel and category was last
		selected. You can however disable this option, and instead manually save the window states/layout
		in the edit menu, if you want.</p>
		<p>Setting another temporary directory might be useful, if you want to keep the temporary .m3u cache
		files. They are created whenever you hit play. For archival or speed-up porposes you might want to keep
		them elsewhere. They don't take a lot of space.</p>
	</section>

	<section id="plugins">
		<title>Plugin and Channel settings</title>
		<p>Each channel plugin can bring its own list of configuration settings. These are collected here.</p>
		<p>The heading for each plugin allows to enable or disable it. To apply changed states you need to restart
                streamtuner2 however.</p>
		<p>If you want to find out more about the short option descriptions (most settings are checkboxes),
		please have a look into the channels directory /usr/share/streamtuner2/channels/ and corresponding
		*.py files. These are readable, and sometimes contain more information.</p>
	</section>
	
	
	
</page>