From 0343ed41ab7b71d28d4421727572ae1b8f1c43e3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: xiphmont Date: Mon, 12 May 2008 18:35:13 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Relicense libs to LGPL3, update main license to GPL3 git-svn-id: http://svn.xiph.org/trunk@14872 0101bb08-14d6-0310-b084-bc0e0c8e3800 --- cdparanoia/COPYING-GPL | 677 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ cdparanoia/COPYING-LGPL | 168 ++++++++ cdparanoia/FAQ.txt | 620 ----------------------------- cdparanoia/GPL | 339 ---------------- cdparanoia/README | 6 + cdparanoia/cdparanoia.1 | 2 +- cdparanoia/header.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/header.h | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/cdda_interface.h | 6 +- cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.h | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/cooked_interface.c | 2 +- cdparanoia/interface/interface.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/low_interface.h | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/scan_devices.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/scsi_interface.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/smallft.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/smallft.h | 4 +- cdparanoia/interface/test_interface.c | 2 +- cdparanoia/interface/toc.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/main.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/cdda_paranoia.h | 2 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.c | 4 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.h | 2 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.c | 2 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.h | 2 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.c | 2 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.h | 2 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/p_block.h | 2 +- cdparanoia/paranoia/paranoia.c | 2 +- cdparanoia/version.h | 2 +- 31 files changed, 892 insertions(+), 1000 deletions(-) create mode 100644 cdparanoia/COPYING-GPL create mode 100644 cdparanoia/COPYING-LGPL delete mode 100644 cdparanoia/FAQ.txt delete mode 100644 cdparanoia/GPL diff --git a/cdparanoia/COPYING-GPL b/cdparanoia/COPYING-GPL new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b12ddb213 --- /dev/null +++ b/cdparanoia/COPYING-GPL @@ -0,0 +1,677 @@ +The cdparanoia command line tool is covered by the GNU General Public +Licence v3. + + GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE + Version 3, 29 June 2007 + + Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies + of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. + + Preamble + + The GNU General Public License is a free, copyleft license for +software and other kinds of works. + + The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed +to take away your freedom to share and change the works. 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If your program is a subroutine library, you +may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with +the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General +Public License instead of this License. But first, please read +. diff --git a/cdparanoia/COPYING-LGPL b/cdparanoia/COPYING-LGPL new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6161c82c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/cdparanoia/COPYING-LGPL @@ -0,0 +1,168 @@ +The cdda-interface and cdda-paranoia libraries are covered by the GNU +Lesser General Public License v3. + + GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE + Version 3, 29 June 2007 + + Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies + of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. + + + This version of the GNU Lesser General Public License incorporates +the terms and conditions of version 3 of the GNU General Public +License, supplemented by the additional permissions listed below. + + 0. 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If the Library as you +received it does not specify a version number of the GNU Lesser +General Public License, you may choose any version of the GNU Lesser +General Public License ever published by the Free Software Foundation. + + If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide +whether future versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall +apply, that proxy's public statement of acceptance of any version is +permanent authorization for you to choose that version for the +Library. diff --git a/cdparanoia/FAQ.txt b/cdparanoia/FAQ.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 5a099d736..000000000 --- a/cdparanoia/FAQ.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,620 +0,0 @@ - -CDDA Paranoia FAQ - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - "Suspicion Breeds Confidence!" - --Brazil - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- - -August 20, 1999 - -For those new to Paranoia and cdparanoia, this is the -best, first place to look for information and answers to -your questions. - -More information can be found on the cdparanoia homepage: - -http://www.xiph.org/paranoia/ - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -Table of Contents - -1. Questions about the Paranoia and cdparanoia projects - 1. What is cdparanoia? - 2. Why use cdparanoia? - 3. What is Paranoia? - 4. Is cdparanoia / Paranoia portable? - 5. What is Paranoia's history? - 6. Is cdparanoia/Paranoia related to cdda2wav? - 7. What are the differences between Paranoia II, III and IV? - 8. Are there cdparanoia mailing lists for users or developers? - 9. What is Paranoia IV's current development status? - 10. Will cdparanoia, and cdda2wav or xcdroast merge anytime in the future? - -2. Questions about using Paranoia and cdparanoia - 1. Requirements to run cdparanoia (as of alpha 3) - 2. Does Cdparanoia support ATAPI drives? SCSI Emulation? Parallel port - drives? - 3. I can play audio CDs perfectly; why is reading the CD into a file so - difficult and prone to errors? - 4. Does cdparanoia lose quality from the CD recording? - 5. Can cdparanoia detect pregaps? Can it remove the two second gaps - between tracks? - 6. Why don't you implement CDDB? A GUI? Four million other features I want? - 7. The progress meter: What is that weird bargraph during ripping? - 8. How can I tell if my drive would be OK with regular cdda2wav? - 9. What is the biggest value of SG_BIG_BUFF I can use? - 10. Why do the binary files from two reads differ when compared? - 11. Why does CDParanoia rip files off into WAV format (and other sample - formats) but not CDDA format? - -------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - Questions about the Paranoia and cdparanoia projects - - What is cdparanoia? - - Cdparanoia is a Compact Disc Digital Audio (CDDA) extraction tool, - commonly known on the net as a 'ripper'. The application is built on - top of the Paranoia library, which is doing the real work (the - Paranoia source is included in the cdparanoia source distribution). - Like the original cdda2wav, cdparanoia package reads audio from the - CDROM directly as data, with no analog step between, and writes the - data to a file or pipe in WAV, AIFC or raw 16 bit linear PCM. - - Cdparanoia is a bit different than most other CDDA extration tools. It - contains few-to-no 'extra' features, concentrating only on the ripping - process and knowing as much as possible about the hardware performing - it. Cdparanoia will read correct, rock-solid audio data from - inexpensive drives prone to misalignment, frame jitter and loss of - streaming during atomic reads. Cdparanoia will also read and repair - data from CDs that have been damaged in some way. - - At the same time, however, cdparanoia turns out to be easy to use and - administrate; It has no compile time configuration, happily - autodetecting the CDROM, its type, its interface and other aspects of - the ripping process at runtime. A single binary can serve the diverse - hardware of the do-it-yourself computer laboratory from Hell... - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Why use cdparanoia? - - All CDROM drives are not created equal. You'll need cdparanoia if - yours is a little less equal than others-- or maybe you just keep your - CD collection in a box of full of gravel. Jewel cases are for wimps; - you know what I'm talking about. - - Unfortunately, cdda2wav and readcdda cannot work properly with a large - number of CDROM drives in the desktop world today. The most common - problem is sporadic or regular clicks and pops in the read sample, - regardless of 'nsector' or 'overlap' settings. Cdda2wav also cannot do - anything about scratches (and they can cause cdda2wav to break). - Cdparanoia is also smarter about probing CDDA support from SCSI and - IDE-SCSI drives; many drives that do not work at all with cdda2wav, - readcdda, tosha, etc, will work just fine with cdparanoia. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - What is Paranoia? - - Paranoia is a library project that provides a platform independent, - unified, robust interface for packet-command based devices. In the - case of CDROM drives for example, handling and programming cdrom - drives becomes identical whether on Solaris or Linux, or if the Linux - drive is SCSI, ATAPI or on the parallel port. In this way, Paranoia is - similar to Joerg Schilling's SCG library. - - In addition to device/platform unification, the library provides tools - for automatically identifying devices, and intelligent - handling/correction of errors at all levels of the interface. On top - of a generic low-level packet command layer, Paranoia implements - high-level error-correcting interfaces for tasks such as CDDA where - broken or vastly non-standard devices are the rule, rather than the - exception. - - The Paranoia libraries are incomplete; the first release for use will - be Paranoia IV, to be bundled with cdparanoia alpha release 10. - Programming documentation for Paranoia IV will appear shortly on the - documentation page as Programming with Paranoia IV. Programmers - interested in contributing to Paranoia IV should read the heading - Paranoia IV development information. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Is cdparanoia / Paranoia portable? - - Paranoia III is Linux only (although it runs on all the flavors of - linux with a 2.0 or later kernel. It is not only for x86). - - Paranoia IV (cdparanoia alpha 10 and later) is a port to other UNIX - flavors and uses a substantially revised infrastructure. NetBSD and - Solaris will be first; others will be added as time and outside - assistance allow. - - Suggestions on the proper way to handle each OS's native configuration - idioms are welcome. I want Rhapsody cdparanoia to look just like other - Rhapsody apps just as much as I want Linux cdparanoia to look like a - Linux app. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - What is Paranoia's history? - - Is cdparanoia/Paranoia related to cdda2wav? - - Paranoia I/II and cdparanoia began life as a set of patches to Heiko - Eissfeldt's 'cdda2wav' application. Cdparanoia gained its own life as - a rewrite of cdda2wav in January of 1998 as "Paranoia III". Paranoia - III proved to have an inadequate structure for extention and use on - other platforms, so Paranoia IV began to take form in fall of 1998. - - Modern Paranoia no longer has any relation to cdda2wav aside from - general cooperation in sharing details between the two projects. In - fact, cdda2wav itself doesn't look much like the cdda2wav of a year or - two ago. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - What are the differences between Paranoia II, III and IV? - - Paranoia I and II were a set of patches to Heiko Eissfeldt's cdda2wav - 0.8. These patches did nothing more than add some error checks to the - standard cdda2wav. They were inefficient and only worked with some - drives. - - Paranoia III was the first version to be written seperately from - cdda2wav in the form of a standalone library. It was not terribly - portable, however, and the API proved to be inadequate for extension. - - Paranoia IV is the upcoming new generation of CDDA Paranoia. It is - both portable and more capable than Paranoia III. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Are there cdparanoia mailing lists for users or developers? - - Yes. In addition to the mailing lists below, read-only CVS access to - Paranoia III and IV will be availble from xiph.org soon (Paranoia IV - is not yet under CVS). See http://www.xiph.org/paranoia/ for upto - date information and automated ways of subscribing. - - Mailing list for Paranoia and Cdparanoia users (paranoia@xiph.org): - - To join: send a message containing only the one-word line - 'subscribe' in the body to paranoia-request@xiph.org. Do not send - subscription requests directly to the main list. The list server at - xiph.org should respond fairly quickly with a welcome message. - - Mailing list for Paranoia IV developers: paranoia-dev@xiph.org - - The developers list is intended for focused development discussion - amongst the core Paranoia development team and outside groups - developing their own applications using Paranoia. Of course, anyone is - welcome to read. - - To join: send a message containing only the one-word line - 'subscribe' in the body to paranoia-dev-request@xiph.org. Do not - send subscription requests directly to the main list. - - List for general CDROM tools - - There's also a general mailing list for those using/developing CDDA - extraction and CD writing tools - (cdwrite@other.debian.org). Subscribe by sending mail to - other-cdwrite-request@lists.debian.org containing only the word - subscribe in the body. Do not send subscription requests directly to - the main list. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - What is Paranoia IV's current development status? - - Paranoia IV code will soon be available for internal evaluation, - testing and development work to the developers involved in the - Paranoia project; read-only CVS access should also be available soon. - A public release does not yet set for any firm date. - - Those interested in contributing to the development of Paranoia, or - who wich to contribute to porting to other platforms, please contact - us. Paranoia IV prerelease code will be available to porters soon; I - prefer to be in contact with those porting to other platforms so that - Paranoia development has consistent quality across platforms. - - At the moment, volunteers have contacted me for most major platforms, - but more help is still welcome on every OS. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Will cdparanoia, and cdda2wav or xcdroast merge anytime in the future? - - Probably not beyond the point it already has. Versions of XCDRoast - (and other GUI frontends; see the links page) that make use of - cdparanoia already exist. - - Although the cdrecord/cdda2wav and Paranoia projects cooperate, - they're likely to remain seperate as the former is committed to Joerg - Schilling's libscg (part of the cdrecord package), just as cdparanoia - is committed to using Paranoia IV. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Questions about using Paranoia and cdparanoia - - Requirements to run cdparanoia (as of alpha 3) - - 1. A CDDA capable CDROM drive - 2. Linux 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 or 2.3 - 1. kernel support for the particular CDROM in use - 2. kernel support for the generic SCSI interface (if using a - SCSI CDROM drive) and proper device (/dev/sg?) files (get - them with the MAKEDEV script) in /dev. Most distributions - already have the /dev/sg? files. - - The cdparanoia binary will likely work with Linux 1.2 and 1.3, but I - do not actively support kernels older than 2.0 I do know for a fact - that the source will not build on kernel installs older than 2.0, but - the problems are mostly related to the ever-changing locations of - proprietary cdrom include files. - - Also, although a 2.0 stock SCSI setup will work, performance will be - better if linux/include/scsi/sg.h defines SG_BIG_BUFF to 65536 (it - can't be bigger). Recent kernels (2.0.30+?) already set it to 32768; - that's OK. Cdparanoia will tell you how big your generic SCSI buffer - is. 2.2+ does not use a static DMA pool for SG, so there is nothing - to tune. - - Unlike cdda2wav, cdparanoia does not require threading, IPC or - (optionally) sound card support. /proc filesystem support is no longer - required (but encouraged!), and /dev/sr? or /dev/scd? devices are not - required for SCSI, although they do add functionality if present. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Does Cdparanoia support ATAPI drives? SCSI Emulation? Parallel port - drives? - - Alpha 9 supports the full ATAPI, IDE-SCSI and SCSI generic interfaces - under Linux. - - Note that the native ATAPI driver is supported, but that IDE-SCSI - emulation works better with ATAPI drives. This is an issue of control; - the emulation interface gives cdparanoia complete control over the - drive whereas the native ATAPI driver insists on hiding the device - under an abstraction layer with poor error handling capabilities. Note - also that a number of ATAPI drives that do not work at all with the - ATAPI driver (error 006: Could not read audio) *will* work with - IDE-SCSI emulation. - - Parallel port based CDROM (paride) drives are not yet supported; - support for these drives in Linux will appear in alpha release 10 - (Paranoia IV). - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - I can play audio CDs perfectly; why is reading the CD into a file so - difficult and prone to errors? It's just the same thing. - - Unfortunately, it isn't that easy. - - The audio CD is not a random access format. It can only be played from - some starting point in sequence until it is done, like a vinyl LP. - Unlike a data CD, there are no synchronization or positioning headers - in the audio data (a CD, audio or data, uses 2352 byte sectors. In a - data CD, 304 bytes of each sector is used for header, sync and error - correction. An audio CD uses all 2352 bytes for data). The audio CD - *does* have a continuous fragmented subchannel, but this is only good - for seeking +/-1 second (or 75 sectors or ~176kB) of the desired area, - as per the SCSI spec. - - When the CD is being played as audio, it is not only moving at 1x, the - drive is keeping the media data rate (the spin speed) exactly locked - to playback speed. Pick up a portable CD player while it's playing and - rotate it 90 degrees. Chances are it will skip; you disturbed this - delicate balance. In addition, a player is never distracted from what - it's doing... it has nothing else taking up its time. Now add a - non-realtime, (relatively) high-latency, multitasking kernel into the - mess; it's like picking up the player and constantly shaking it. - - CDROM drives generally assume that any sort of DAE will be linear and - throw a readahead buffer at the task. However, the OS is reading the - data as broken up, seperated read requests. The drive is doing - readahead buffering and attempting to store additional data as it - comes in off media while it waits for the OS to get around to reading - previous blocks. Seeing as how, at 36x, data is coming in at - 6.2MB/second, and each read is only 13 sectors or ~30k (due to DMA - restrictions), one has to get off 208 read requests a second, minimum - without any interruption, to avoid skipping. A single swap to disc or - flush of filesystem cache by the OS will generally result in loss of - streaming, assuming the drive is working flawlessly. Oh, and virtually - no PC on earth has that kind of I/O throughput; a Sun Enterprise - server might, but a PC does not. Most don't come within a factor of - five, assuming perfect realtime behavior. - - To keep piling on the difficulties, faster drives are often prone to - vibration and alignment problems; some are total fiascos. They lose - streaming *constantly* even without being interrupted. Philips - determined 15 years ago that the CD could only be spun up to 50-60x - until the physical CD (made of polycarbonate) would deform from - centripetal force badly enough to become unreadable. Today's players - are pushing physics to the limit. Few do so terribly reliably. - - Note that CD 'playback speed' is an excellent example of advertisers - making numbers lie for them. A 36x cdrom is generally not spinning at - 36x a normal drive's speed. As a 1x drive is adjusting velocity - depending on the access's distance from the hub, a 36x drive is - probably using a constant angular velocity across the whole surface - such that it gets 36x max at the edge. Thus it's actually spinning - slower, assuming the '36x' isn't a complete lie, as it is on some - drives. - - Because audio discs have no headers in the data to assist in picking - up where things got lost, most drives will just guess. - - This doesn't even *begin* to get into stupid firmware bugs. Even - Plextors have occasionally had DAE bugs (although in every case, - Plextor has fixed the bug *and* replaced/repaired drives for free). - Cheaper drives are often complete basket cases. - - Rant Update (for those in the know): - - Several folks, through personal mail and on Usenet, have pointed out - that audio discs do place absolute positioning information for (at - least) nine out of every ten sectors into the Q subchannel, and that - my original statement of +/-75 sectors above is wrong. I admit to it - being misleading, so I'll try to clarify. - - The positioning data certainly is in subchannel Q; the point is moot - however, for a couple of reasons. - - 1. The SCSI and ATAPI specs (there are a couple of each, pick one) - don't give any way to retrieve the subchannel from a desired - sector. The READ SUB-CHANNEL command will hand you Q all right, - you just don't have any idea where exactly that Q came from. The - command was intended for getting rough positioning information - from audio discs that are paused or playing. This is audio; - missing by several sectors is a tiny fraction of a second. - - 2. Older CDROM drives tended not to expect 'READ SUB-CHANNEL' unless - the drive was playing audio; calling it during data reads could - crash the drive and lock up the system. I had one of these drives - (Apple 803i, actually a repackaged Sony CD-8003). - - 3. MMC-2 *does* give a way to retrieve the Q subchannel along with - user data in the READ CD command. Although the drive is required - to recognize the fetaure, it is allowed to simply return zeroes - (effectively leaving the feature unimplemented). Guess how many - drives actually implement this feature: not many. - - 4. Assuming you *can* get back the subchannel, most CDROM drives - seem to understand audio discs primarily at the "little frame" - level; thus sector-level structures aren't reliable. One might - get a reassembled subQ, but if the read began in the middle of a - sector (or dropped a little frame in the middle; many do), the - subQ is likely corrupt and useless. - - As reassembling uncorrupted frames is easy without the subchannel, and - corrupted reads likely result in a corrupted subchannel too, - cdparanoia treats the subchannel as more trouble than it's worth - (during verification). - - At least one other package (Exact Audio Copy for Win32) manages to use - the subchannel to enhance the Table of Contents information. I don't - know if this only works on MMC-2 drives that support returning Q with - READ CD, but I think I'm going to revisit using the subchannel for - extra TOC information. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Does cdparanoia lose quality from the CD recording? Does it just - re-record the analog signal played from the CDROM drive? - - No to both. Cdparanoia (and all other true CD digital audio extraction - tools) reads the values off the CDROM in digital form. The data never - comes anywhere near the soundcard, and does not pass through any - conversion to analog first. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Can cdparanoia detect pregaps? Can it remove the two second gaps - between tracks - - Not yet. This feature is slated to appear in a release of alpha 10 - (Paranoia IV). - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Why don't you implement CDDB? A GUI? Four million other features I - want? - - Too many features spoil the broth. "Software is not perfect when there - is nothing left to add, but rather when there is nothing extraneous - left to take away." The goal of cdparanoia is perfect, rock-solid - audio from every capable cdrom on every platform. As this goal has not - yet been met, I'm uninterested in adding unrelated capability to the - core engine. - - Several GUIs that incorporate cdparanoia already exist; I'm in the - process of compiling a list (see the links page). Other software that - implements new features by wrapping around cdpar anoia (like CDDB - lookup) also exist. - - 'Cdparanoia' will not play to sound cards (you can always pipe the - output to a WAV player), do MD5 signatures, read CD catalog or serial - numbers (this *is* a feature I plan to add), search indexes, do rate - reduction (use Sox, Ogg or a million others), or generally make use of - the maximum speed available from a CDROM drive. - - If your CDROM drive is *not* prone to jitter and you don't have - scratched discs to worry about, you might want to look at the original - cdda2wav for features cdparanoia does not have. Keep in mind however - that even the really good drives do occasionally stumble. I know of at - least one cdparanoia user who insists on using full paranoia with his - Plextor UltraPlex because it once botched a single sector from a rip; - he'd already burned the track to several CD-Rs before noticing... - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - The progress meter: What is that weird bargraph during ripping? - - It's a progress/status indicator. There's a completion bargraph, a - number indicating the last sector number completely verified of the - read currently happening, an overlap indicator, a gratuitous smilie, - and a heartbeat indicator to show if the process is still alive, hung, - or spinning. - - The bargraph also marks points during the read with characters to - indicate where various 'paranoia' features were tripped into action. - Different bargraph characters indicate different things occurred - during that part of the read. The letters are heirarchical; for - example if a trasport error occurs in the same sector as jitter, the - bargraph will print 'e' instead of '-'. - - Legend of - characters - A hyphen indicates that two blocks overlapped properly, - - but they were skewed (frame jitter). This case is - completely corrected by Paranoia and is not a cause for - concern. - A plus indicates not only frame jitter, but an - unreported, uncorrected loss of streaming in the middle - + of an atomic read operation. That is, the drive lost - its place while reading data, and restarted in some - random incorrect location without alerting the kernel. - This case is also corrected by Paranoia. - An 'e' indicates that a transport level SCSI or ATAPI - e error was caught and corrected. Paranoia will - completely repair such an error without audible - defects. - An "X" indicates a scratch was caught and corrected. - X Cdparanoia wil interpolate over any missing/corrupt - samples. - An asterisk indicates a scratch and jitter both - * occurred in this general area of the read. Cdparanoia - wil interpolate over any missing/corrupt samples. - A ! indicates that a read error got through the stage - one of error correction and was caught by stage two. - Many '!' are a cause for concern; it means that the - drive is making continuous silent errors that look - ! identical on each re-read, a condition that can't - always be detected. Although the presence of a '!' - means the error was corrected, it also means that - similar errors are probably passing by unnoticed. - Upcoming releases of cdparanoia will address this - issue. - A V indicates a skip that could not be repaired or a - V sector totally obliterated on the medium (hard read - error). A 'V' marker generally results in some audible - defect in the sample. - - The smilie is actually relevant. It makes different faces depending on - the current errors it's correcting. - - Legend of - smilies - - :-) Normal operation. No errors to report; if any jitter is - present, it's small. - :-| Normal operation, but average jitter is quite large. - A rift was found in the middle of an atomically read - block; in other words, the drive lost streaming in the - :-P middle of a read and did not abort, alert the kernel , or - restart in the proper location. The drive silently - continued reading in so me random location. - - :-/ The read appears to be drifting; cdparanoia is shifting - all of its reads to make up for it. - Two matching vectors were found to disagree even after - first stage verification; this is an indication that the - drive is reliably dropping/adding bytes at consistent - locations. Because the verification algorithm is partially - 8-| based on rereading and comparing vectors, if two vectors - read incorrectly but identically, cdparanoia may never - detect the problem. This smilie indicates that such a - situation *was* detected; other instances may be slipping - through. - Transport or drive error. This is normally not a cause for - concern; cdparanoia can repair just about any error that - :-0 it actually detects. For more information about these - errors, run cdparanoia with the -v option. Any all all - errors and a description will dump to stderr. - :-( Cdparanoia detected a scratch. - Cdparanoia gave up trying to repair a sector; it could not - read consistent enough information from the drive to do - ;-( so. At this point cdparanoia will make the best guess it - has available and continue (a V appears in the bargraph at - this point). This often results in an audible defect. - Cdparanoia displays this smilie both when finished reading - :^D a track and also if no error correction mechanism has been - tripped so far reading a new track. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - How can I tell if my drive would be OK with regular cdda2wav? - - Easy. Run cdparanoia; if the progress meter never shows any characters - but the little arrow going across the screen, the CDROM drive is - probably one of the (currently) few drives that can read a pristine - stream of data off an audio disc regardless of circumstances. This - drive will work quite well with cdda2wav (or cdparanoia using the '-Z' - option) - - A drive that results in a bargraph of all hyphens would *likely* work - OK with cdda2wav, but it's less certain. - - Any other characters in the bargraph (colons, semicolons, pluses, Xs, - etc..) indicate that a fixups had to be performed at that point during - the read; that read would have failed or 'popped' using cdda2wav. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - What is the biggest value of SG_BIG_BUFF I can use? - - This is relevant only to 2.0 kernels and early 2.2 kernels. - Modern Linux kernels no longer have a single static SG DMS pool. - - For 2.0, 65536 (64 kilobytes). Some motherboards can use 128kB - DMA, but attempting to use 128kB DMA on a machine that can't do - it will crash the machine. Cdparanoia will not use larger than - 64kB requests. - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Why do the binary files from two reads differ when compared? - - The problem is the beginning point of the read. Cdparanoia enforces - consistency from whatever the drive considers to be the starting point - of the data, and the drive is returning a slightly different beginning - point each time. The beginning point should not vary by much, and if - this shift is accounted for when comparing the files, they should - indeed turn out to be the same (aside from errors duly reported during - the read; scratch correction or any reported skips will very likely - also result in different files). - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ - - Why do CDParanoia, CDDA2WAV et al. rip files off into WAV format (and - other sample formats) but not CDDA format? - - WAV and AIFC are simply convenient formats that include enough header - information such that multipurpose audio software can uniquely - identify the form of the data in the sample. In raw form, mulaw, SND - and CDDA look exactly alike to a program like xplay, and are very - likely to blow your ears (and stereo) out when played! Header formats - are more versatile and safer. By default, cdparanoia and cdda2wav - write WAV files. - - That said, cdparanoia (and cdda2wav) will write raw, headerless - formats if explicitly told to. Cdparanoia writes headerless, signed 16 - bit, 44.1kHz stero files in little endian format (LSB first) when - given the -r option, and the same in big endian (MSB) format when - given -R. All files written by cdparanoia are a multiple of 2352 bytes - long (minus the header, if any) as required by cd writer software. - - -Cdparanoia and the Laser-Playback-Head-of-Omniscience logo are -trademarks (tm) of Xiphophorus (xiph.org). This document copyright (C) -1994-1999 Xiphophorus. All rights reserved. Comments and questions -are welcome. diff --git a/cdparanoia/GPL b/cdparanoia/GPL deleted file mode 100644 index a43ea2126..000000000 --- a/cdparanoia/GPL +++ /dev/null @@ -1,339 +0,0 @@ - GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE - Version 2, June 1991 - - Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. - 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA - Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies - of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. - - Preamble - - The licenses for most software are designed to take away your -freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public -License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free -software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This -General Public License applies to most of the Free Software -Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to -using it. 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Of course, the commands you use may -be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be -mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program. - -You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your -school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if -necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names: - - Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program - `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker. - - , 1 April 1989 - Ty Coon, President of Vice - -This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into -proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may -consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the -library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General -Public License instead of this License. diff --git a/cdparanoia/README b/cdparanoia/README index f1524cfd1..51fdc2fd9 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/README +++ b/cdparanoia/README @@ -12,6 +12,12 @@ information, see: http://www.xiph.org/paranoia/ +COPYING +======= + +cdparanoia (the command line tool) is released under the GPLv3. The +interface and paranoia libraries are covered by the LGPLv3. + Requirements ============ diff --git a/cdparanoia/cdparanoia.1 b/cdparanoia/cdparanoia.1 index 1981878ce..1703536a8 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/cdparanoia.1 +++ b/cdparanoia/cdparanoia.1 @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -.TH CDPARANOIA 1 "29 Aug 2006" +.TH CDPARANOIA 1 "12 May 2008" .SH NAME cdparanoia 10.0 (Paranoia release III) \- an audio CD reading utility which includes extra data verification features .SH SYNOPSIS diff --git a/cdparanoia/header.c b/cdparanoia/header.c index 38a362710..341b49057 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/header.c +++ b/cdparanoia/header.c @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * and Heiko Eissfeldt heiko@escape.colossus.de * * Writes wav and aifc headers diff --git a/cdparanoia/header.h b/cdparanoia/header.h index e2ffa77da..1e9747198 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/header.h +++ b/cdparanoia/header.h @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu ******************************************************************/ #include diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/cdda_interface.h b/cdparanoia/interface/cdda_interface.h index ccc41c47c..fa19322e9 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/cdda_interface.h +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/cdda_interface.h @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 2001 Xiph.org - * and Heiko Eissfeldt heiko@escape.colossus.de + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 2001-2008 Xiph.org + * Original version by Heiko Eissfeldt heiko@escape.colossus.de * * Toplevel interface header; applications include this * diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.c b/cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.c index a87906aa6..16170c865 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.c +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.c @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998, 2002 Monty monty@xiph.org + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty monty@xiph.org * * CDROM communication common to all interface methods is done here * (mostly ioctl stuff, but not ioctls specific to the 'cooked' diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.h b/cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.h index c62571f7b..9ea80764e 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.h +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/common_interface.h @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * ******************************************************************/ diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/cooked_interface.c b/cdparanoia/interface/cooked_interface.c index 7fce734b0..606a8f4ae 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/cooked_interface.c +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/cooked_interface.c @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * * CDROM code specific to the cooked ioctl interface diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/interface.c b/cdparanoia/interface/interface.c index 1c3557366..576ca5c3b 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/interface.c +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/interface.c @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * * Top-level interface module for cdrom drive access. SCSI, ATAPI, etc * specific stuff are in other modules. Note that SCSI does use diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/low_interface.h b/cdparanoia/interface/low_interface.h index 86651420c..514d9aef6 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/low_interface.h +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/low_interface.h @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * * internal include file for cdda interface kit for Linux * diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/scan_devices.c b/cdparanoia/interface/scan_devices.c index 7e020d7c2..9f67b9f94 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/scan_devices.c +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/scan_devices.c @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 2006 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * * Autoscan for or verify presence of a cdrom device * diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/scsi_interface.c b/cdparanoia/interface/scsi_interface.c index e2cb20f10..d47825b71 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/scsi_interface.c +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/scsi_interface.c @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Original interface.c Copyright (C) 1994-1997 * Eissfeldt heiko@colossus.escape.de - * Current blenderization Copyright (C) 1998-2006 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * Current incarnation Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * * Generic SCSI interface specific code. * diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/smallft.c b/cdparanoia/interface/smallft.c index e3b92fa70..2e5d23e97 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/smallft.c +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/smallft.c @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * * FFT implementation from OggSquish, minus cosine transforms, * minus all but radix 2/4 case diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/smallft.h b/cdparanoia/interface/smallft.h index cc3a2242b..5e99a8f30 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/smallft.h +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/smallft.h @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * * FFT implementation from OggSquish, minus cosine transforms. * Only convenience functions exposed diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/test_interface.c b/cdparanoia/interface/test_interface.c index c89d88616..5935baeec 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/test_interface.c +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/test_interface.c @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lessger General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * * Fake interface backend for testing paranoia layer diff --git a/cdparanoia/interface/toc.c b/cdparanoia/interface/toc.c index 688bea589..9b90b72d3 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/interface/toc.c +++ b/cdparanoia/interface/toc.c @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies - * Copyright (C) 1998 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies + * Copyright (C) 1998-2008 Monty xiphmont@mit.edu * derived from code (C) 1994-1996 Heiko Eissfeldt * * Table of contents convenience functions diff --git a/cdparanoia/main.c b/cdparanoia/main.c index 4ad0947fe..77d54478a 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/main.c +++ b/cdparanoia/main.c @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /* - * Copyright: GNU Public License 2 applies + * Copyright: GNU Public License 3 applies * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by @@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software * Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. * - * cdparanoia (C) 2006 Monty + * cdparanoia (C) 2008 Monty * */ diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/cdda_paranoia.h b/cdparanoia/paranoia/cdda_paranoia.h index d2988111f..833282d11 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/cdda_paranoia.h +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/cdda_paranoia.h @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) * ***/ diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.c b/cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.c index 868f9f8b6..385d69572 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.c +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.c @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) * - * Gapa analysis support code for paranoia + * Gap analysis support code for paranoia * ***/ diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.h b/cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.h index dd3d4c9a6..e3e3e2bcc 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.h +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/gap.h @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) ***/ diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.c b/cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.c index 1289269de..8a3efd46b 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.c +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.c @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) * * sorted vector abstraction for paranoia diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.h b/cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.h index d0337bcc1..a9c9896a1 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.h +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/isort.h @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) ***/ diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.c b/cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.c index 97bd27483..1d7072bf7 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.c +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.c @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) * * Statistic code and cache management for overlap settings diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.h b/cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.h index 48d25af28..f38e22cbc 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.h +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/overlap.h @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) ***/ diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/p_block.h b/cdparanoia/paranoia/p_block.h index a5ea79ee8..42939cba0 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/p_block.h +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/p_block.h @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) ***/ diff --git a/cdparanoia/paranoia/paranoia.c b/cdparanoia/paranoia/paranoia.c index 5e9f13388..8c3886647 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/paranoia/paranoia.c +++ b/cdparanoia/paranoia/paranoia.c @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /*** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Lesser General Public License 3 applies * Copyright (C) by Monty (xiphmont@mit.edu) * * Toplevel file for the paranoia abstraction over the cdda lib diff --git a/cdparanoia/version.h b/cdparanoia/version.h index ee6ae809b..69ed13766 100644 --- a/cdparanoia/version.h +++ b/cdparanoia/version.h @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ /****************************************************************** - * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 2 applies + * CopyPolicy: GNU Public License 3 applies * * cdda_paranoia generation III release 10.0 * Copyright (C) 2008 Monty monty@xiph.org -- 2.11.4.GIT