beets
s3fs-fuse
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beets | s3fs-fuse | |
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186 | 57 | |
12,393 | 8,065 | |
0.7% | 1.9% | |
9.7 | 9.0 | |
5 days ago | 10 days ago | |
Python | C++ | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
beets
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Show HN: Synced lyrics database with a free, easy-to-use API
I was always frustrated that there is no solid source for synced lyrics that also offers decent API support. There is good ol' Crintsoft's MiniLyrics that is thankfully free software, was what I used a lot in my childhood, but unfortunately the API is highly obfuscated. Another popular choice is the Musixmatch API, which has a very large database of synced lyrics, but with "free" API that are reverse-engineered from their app, you will quickly run into rate-limit.
That's why I created LRCLIB. It's aimed to provide completely free synchronized lyrics for everyone, especially for FOSS music players, with zero profit intention. It currently has nearly 3,000,000 (not deduplicated) lyrics in database. You can also contribute to the database by adding and syncing lyrics for your favorite songs using the LRCGET client.
I'm trying my best to make LRCLIB server-side code open-source as soon as possible. But right now, full LRCLIB's database dumps have already been uploaded regularly and publicly, which are simply sqlite3 files. Feel free to download, look at or do anything you want with the database at https://lrclib.net/db-dumps.
Many open-source projects have already begun integrating LRCLIB, including:
- beets - music library metadata management (https://github.com/beetbox/beets)
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Finally moving to Navidrome... but how to best manage files and metadata?
I just ssh onto my server and use beets to remotely organize my navidrome collection and edit metadata. Beets has lots of auto-tagging features and I rarely need to edit anything manually. Works great if you are ok with using the command line.
- Beets: The music geek's media organizer
- Manage offline music?
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Musicserver that works with folders, not albums
You could try https://github.com/beetbox/beets but it seemed very manual and extremely slow. I had better luck with Picard.
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Ask HN: Flac/MP3 listeners: How do you store/play your music?
Honestly? I use https://beets.io/ to organise all my FLAC on my NAS.
I expose the /Music directory over NFC.
I use https://kodi.tv/ to stream music to my amp. I manually pick the album I want to listen to.
Kodi also has a fairly reasonable web UI.
Keep it simple.
- How do you keep your music library organized?
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Library Organiser?
If you're technically inclined, there's beets.
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anyone else wish this was still a thing?? scrolling album art - ios 6.1.3
You should check out beets.
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Is there a faster way to organize music torrents into a specific folder?
Yes, you have the torrent client call beets.io on the folder and have beets configured.
s3fs-fuse
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Is Posix Outdated?
The author needs to ask themselves: in this cloud technology stack, is there POSIX involved somewhere lower down, where I can't access it? The answer is, of course, "yes". The sort of cloud storage systems described all run on top of POSIX APIs. They provide convenience (cost efficiency is more debatable) compared to the POSIX alternative, but that's because they exist at an entirely different conceptual layer (hence the presence of POSIX anyway, just buried).
Your point about surfacing a POSIX that's actually there but hidden and thus visible to low-level Amazon employees building the S3 service which makes it invisible to S3 end customers is true but isn't the the point of the article. The author is saying there are motivations for a POSIX-like api visible also the end user.
So your explanation of stack looks like 2 layers: POSIX api <-- AWS S3 built on top of that
Author's essay is actually talking about 3 layers: POSIX <-- AWS S3 <-- POSIX
That's why the blog post has the following links to POSIX-on-top-of-S3-objects :
https://github.com/s3fs-fuse/s3fs-fuse
https://github.com/kahing/goofys
https://www.cuno.io/
- Gcsfuse: A user-space file system for interacting with Google Cloud Storage
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R2 slow PUT file transfer
sudo apt install build-essential libfuse-dev fuse git clone https://github.com/s3fs-fuse/s3fs-fuse.git cd s3fs-fuse sudo apt install libfuse2 sudo apt install libcurl4-openssl-dev sudo apt install libxml2-dev ./autogen.sh ./configure make
- Cloud Backed SQLite
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Podman and S3 Storage Driver (Audiobookshelf)
Don’t know actually. Here is project page.
- Uploading hundreds to thousands of files to S3
- Linux Client for R2
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s3fs-fuse - allows to mount your s3/minio bucket link to your local directory
s3fs-fuse
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AWS Announces Open Source Mountpoint for Amazon S3
How is this different than these other solutions?
https://github.com/kahing/goofys
https://github.com/s3fs-fuse/s3fs-fuse
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Introducing Mountpoint for Amazon S3 - A file client that translates local file system API calls to S3 object API calls like GET and LIST.
I don’t get it. Why not just improve https://github.com/s3fs-fuse/s3fs-fuse
What are some alternatives?
Lidarr - Looks and smells like Sonarr but made for music.
goofys - a high-performance, POSIX-ish Amazon S3 file system written in Go
Navidrome Music Server - 🎧☁️ Modern Music Server and Streamer compatible with Subsonic/Airsonic
rclone - "rsync for cloud storage" - Google Drive, S3, Dropbox, Backblaze B2, One Drive, Swift, Hubic, Wasabi, Google Cloud Storage, Yandex Files
picard - A cross-platform music tagger powered by the MusicBrainz database. Picard organizes your music collection by updating your tags, renaming your files, and sorting them into a folder structure, exactly the way you want it.
mountpoint-s3 - A simple, high-throughput file client for mounting an Amazon S3 bucket as a local file system.
Airsonic - :satellite: :cloud: :notes:Airsonic, a Free and Open Source community driven media server (fork of Subsonic and Libresonic)
jellyfin-webos - WebOS Client for Jellyfin
Ampache - A web based audio/video streaming application and file manager allowing you to access your music & videos from anywhere, using almost any internet enabled device.
jellyfin-tizen - Jellyfin Samsung TV Client
librosa - Python library for audio and music analysis
mediacms - MediaCMS is a modern, fully featured open source video and media CMS, written in Python/Django and React, featuring a REST API.