Fernando Rodriguez <frodriguez.develo...@outlook.com> wrote: > On Monday, September 07, 2015 7:45:47 PM cov...@ccs.covici.com wrote: > > Alex Corkwell <i.am.the.mem...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Wed, Aug 26, 2015 at 04:06:10PM -0400, Walter Dnes wrote: > > > > I went to the CNE (Canadian National Exhibition) yesterday and > > > > indulged in a buying spree of 18 CD sets of my fave music (basically > > > > anything pop/rock/country pre-Beatles). I now have over 20 CDs that I > > > > want to rip to flac eventually. I dread the gruntwork in renaming > > > > tracks like track01.cdda.wav, etc. What Gentoo ebuilds are there for > > > > stuff that'll get ahold of track titles? Is it in the form of metadata > > > > on the CD? > > > > > > I personally like using morituri [1] for ripping my CDs. > > > It's a little bit slower than some, but very accurate (I believe it > > > compares several reads, just to make sure there were no errors). > > > It's not available in the main portage tree, but it's in the dev-zero > > > overlay as media-sound/morituri. > > > > > > It can rip to flac (with optional cue files) and works from the > > > terminal, if you prefer that. > > > Additionally, it can adjust for drive read offsets when writing files, > > > and is one of the few Linux things I've found which check the rips > > > against AccurateRip. > > > > > > What's particularly nice about it is that it uses what little metadata > > > and such it can get from the CD to look it up in MusicBrainz and add in > > > the title, artist, etc. > > > It also uses this to name the files according to album, artist, song > > > title, etc. > > > The template it uses to name the files and directories is relatively > > > configurable, as well. > > > > > > If you need more configurable tagging, cover art downloading, and such, > > > then look into Picard [2], which is in the main portage tree as > > > media-sound/picard. > > > It uses MusicBrainz [3] to get a whole bunch of metadata, tags, cover > > > art, and other stuff, and can rename files much more flexibly than > > > morituri. > > > > > > This is especially nice in combination with morituri, since morituri > > > saves the MusicBrainz ID into the metadata of the ripped files. > > > Normally, Picard looks files up by either the available metadata, or by > > > the acoustic fingerprint. > > > Since the MusicBrainz ID is already there, it immediately knows which > > > album it is (although it may have the wrong release if you want to be > > > that precise). > > > > > > The only caveats with Picard that I know of are that it's GUI only, it > > > can't embed full size cover art if the image is above some large > > > resolution, and I think that submitting extra fingerprints requires you > > > to register with AcoustID [4]. > > > Also, it's not an actual ripper. > > > It just works on the metadata and tags of flac, mp3, and maybe a few > > > other types. > > > > > > I personally like to rip with morituri, then polish the tagging and get > > > the cover art with Picard. > > > > > > [1] http://thomas.apestaart.org/morituri/trac/wiki > > > [2] https://picard.musicbrainz.org/ > > > [3] https://musicbrainz.org/ > > > [4] https://acoustid.org/ > > > > In trying to emerge morituri from the overlay I get the folloing: > > > > make[1]: Entering directory > > '/var/tmp/portage/media-sound/morituri-0.2.3/work/morituri-0.2.3' > > if test -e ./.git; then make REVISION; fi > > make[1]: Leaving directory > > '/var/tmp/portage/media-sound/morituri-0.2.3/work/morituri-0.2.3' > > ** Message: pygobject_register_sinkfunc is deprecated (GstObject) > > Progress: > > 00:10 > > (null)*(null) (null)ACCESS DENIED(null): mkstemp: > > > /run/user/0/orcexec.XXXXXX-------------------------------------------------------------------------] > > Building documentation: morituri.common.checksum > > (/var/tmp/portage/media- > sound/morituri-0.2.3/work/morituri-0.2.3/morituri/common/checksum.py) > > (gst-plugin-scanner:3783): GStreamer-CRITICAL **: > > gst_structure_empty_new: assertion 'gst_structure_validate_name (name)' > > failed > > > > (gst-plugin-scanner:3783): Clutter-CRITICAL **: Unable to initialize > > Clutter: Could not initialize Gdk > > ** Message: pygobject_register_sinkfunc is deprecated (GstObject) > > Warning: Unable to extract the base list for > > twisted.trial.unittest.TestDecorator: Bad dotted name > > Warning: Module gobject._gobject is shadowed by a variable with the same > > name. > > Warning: 18 markup errors were found while processing docstrings. Use > > the verbose switch (-v) to display markup errors. > > >>> Source compiled. > > (null)*(null) --------------------------- ACCESS VIOLATION SUMMARY > > --------------------------- > > (null)*(null) LOG FILE: "/var/log/sandbox/sandbox-3700.log" > > (null)*(null) > > VERSION 1.0 > > FORMAT: F - Function called > > FORMAT: S - Access Status > > FORMAT: P - Path as passed to function > > FORMAT: A - Absolute Path (not canonical) > > FORMAT: R - Canonical Path > > FORMAT: C - Command Line > > > > F: mkstemp > > S: deny > > P: /run/user/0/orcexec.XXXXXX > > A: /run/user/0/orcexec.XXXXXX > > R: /run/user/0/orcexec.XXXXXX > > C: /usr/lib64/gstreamer-0.10/gst-plugin-scanner -l > > (null)*(null) > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > > > >>> Failed to emerge media-sound/morituri-0.2.3, Log file: > > > > >>> '/var/log/portage/media-sound:morituri-0.2.3:20150907-233836.log' > > > > > > So, how can I fix or is this a dead package i.e. no maintainance? > > > > Thanks in advance for any ideas. > > > > > > > > If you trust the ebuild you can try emerging it with FEATURES="-sandbox" or > add an exception for the temp directory on the ebuild. > > https://devmanual.gentoo.org/function-reference/sandbox-functions/
But what is it really complaining about? I don't want to do this arbitrarily, it is there for a reason. -- Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: How do you spend it? John Covici cov...@ccs.covici.com