From 9c922a4ae52d0b67ee4552d5e6c3aee8d6f71195 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Darrell Anderson Date: Thu, 6 Feb 2014 18:02:20 -0600 Subject: Reorganize tdeioslave help handbooks, fix related protocol files and issues, update and add handbooks. --- .../tdeioslave/audiocd/CMakeLists.txt | 7 + .../tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/Makefile.am | 4 + .../tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/index.docbook | 204 +++++++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 215 insertions(+) create mode 100644 tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/CMakeLists.txt create mode 100644 tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/Makefile.am create mode 100644 tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/index.docbook (limited to 'tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia') diff --git a/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/CMakeLists.txt b/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/CMakeLists.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..8cdb53c3f15 --- /dev/null +++ b/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/CMakeLists.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +# This file is genereted by trinity-automake-cmake-convert script by Fat-Zer + +tde_create_handbook( + DESTINATION tdeioslave/audiocd + NOINDEX + LANG tr +) diff --git a/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/Makefile.am b/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/Makefile.am new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..4de5edba7c4 --- /dev/null +++ b/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/Makefile.am @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +KDE_LANG = tr +SUBDIRS = $(AUTODIRS) +KDE_DOCS = tdeioslave/audiocd +KDE_MANS = AUTO diff --git a/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/index.docbook b/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/index.docbook new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..3a62204c180 --- /dev/null +++ b/tde-i18n-tr/docs/tdemultimedia/tdeioslave/audiocd/index.docbook @@ -0,0 +1,204 @@ + + + +]> + +
+audiocd + + +RikHemsley +
rik@kde.org
+
+
+ +2001-07-14 +2.20.00 + +
+ +Allows treating audio CDs like a +real filesystem, where tracks are represented as files +and, when copied from the directory, are digitally extracted from the +CD. This ensures a perfect copy of the audio +data. + +To see how this slave works, insert an audio CD +in your &CD-ROM; drive and type audiocd:/ into +&konqueror;. Within a few seconds you should see a list of tracks and +some directories. + +Audio CDs don't really have directories, but +the audiocd slave provides them as a convenience. If you look inside +these directories you will see that they all contain the same number of +tracks. If you are connected to the Internet, some directories will have +the actual track titles shown as the filenames. + +The reason that these separate directories exist are so that you +can choose in which format you would like to listen to (or copy) the +tracks on the CD. + +If you drag a track from the Ogg +Vorbis directory and drop it on another &konqueror; window +open at your home directory, you should see a progress window showing +you that the track is being extracted from the CD and +saved to a file. Note that Ogg Vorbis is a compressed format, so the +file in your home directory will appear a great deal smaller than it +would have been if you had copied the raw data. + +The mechanism behind this is quite simple. When the audiocd slave +is asked to retrieve a track from the Ogg +Vorbis directory, it starts extracting the digital audio data +from the CD. As it sends the data over to the file in +your home directory, it simultaneously encodes it in Ogg Vorbis format +(CD audio isn't in any particular format to start +with, it's just raw binary data.) + +You could also try dragging a file ending in .wav and dropping it on the &kde; Media +Player, &noatun;. In this case, the procedure that happens behind the +scenes is similar, except that instead of encoding the audio data in Ogg +Vorbis format, it is put through a very simple conversion, from raw +binary data (which the .cda files in +the toplevel directory represent) to RIFF WAV format, a +non-compressed format that most media players understand. + +&noatun; should quite happily play the .wav file, but if it has trouble, you may +consider using the option, explained +below. + + +Options + + + +Set the path to the audio CD device, e.g. +audiocd:/=/dev/sdc. +Normally, the slave will try to find a CD drive with +an audio CD inserted, but if it fails or you have +more than one CD drive, you may want to try this +option. Note that the configuration dialog allows you to set a default +value for this option. + + + + + + +Set the amount of error detection and correction used when +extracting data. + + + +Level 0 + +No detection or correction. Only useful if you have a perfect +CD drive (unlikely). + + + + +Level 1 + +Enable basic error checking and correction. + + + + +Level 2 + +Default. Specifies that only a perfect extraction will be +accepted. + + + + +Note that there is a disadvantage to level 2. Extraction can be +very slow, so real-time digital playback may not work properly. If you +have a good quality CD drive (note that more +expensive does not necessarily mean better quality) then you probably +won't experience very slow extraction, but a poor drive may take days +(!) to extract the audio from one CD. + + + + + + + +Specify that track names for the inserted CD +will be looked up on the Internet CD Database. Audio +CDs don't have track names, but the Internet +CD Database is a clever system which uses a special +unique identifier generated from the number and length of tracks on each +CD to cross-reference a track listing. Track listings +are contributed by the Internet community and made available to +all. + +You can submit your own track listings using &kscd;, the &kde; +CD player. + +This option is on by default. If your Internet connection is not +set up correctly, you may find that your CD tracks +don't appear. In this case, you can try +audiocd:/?=0 +to switch this option off. + + + + + + +Set the Internet CD Database server to +contact. By default, this is +freedb.freedb.org:888, which means server +freedb.freedb.org at port 888. + + + + + +Examples + +audiocd:/?device=/dev/scd0?paranoia_level=0&use_cddb=0 + +Gives a listing of the tracks on the audio CD +inserted in /dev/scd0, which on +&Linux; specifies the first SCSI &CD-ROM; device. If +you copy tracks from the CD, digital extraction will +be performed without error correction or detection. No Internet +CD Database will be contacted. + + + + + +Frequently Asked Question + + +I get The file or directory / does not +exist. How do I fix that? I have an audio +CD in my drive! + + + +Try running cdparanoia + as yourself (not root). Do you see a track list? If not, +make sure you have permission to access the CD +device. If you're using SCSI emulation (possible if +you have an IDE CD writer) then +make sure you check permissions on the generic SCSI +device, which is probably /dev/sg0, /dev/sg1, etc. If it still doesn't work, +try typing audiocd:/?device=/dev/sg0 (or similar) +to tell tdeio_audiocd which device your &CD-ROM; is. + + + + + +
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