Orochi is a command line client for 8tracks.com written in Python.
Yamata no Orochi (八岐の大蛇) is a legendary 8-headed and 8-tailed Japanese dragon. The name translates to "8-branched giant snake". I chose the name because it both refers to the number eight (as in 8tracks) and to snakes (as in Python).
Using pip:
$ sudo pip install -U orochi
If you're an ArchLinux user, you can also install orochi or orochi-git from AUR:
$ yaourt -S orochi
Prerequisites:
- Python 2.7+ and 3.3+
- mplayer (at least r27665, released in 1.0rc3)
Start:
$ orochi
Available commands (main menu):
search: Syntax: search <searchterm> Search for a mix by keyword. You can then play a mix with the "play" command. Press enter to show next page results. search_tags: Syntax: search <tag1>, <tag2> Search for a mix by tag(s), separated by comma. You can then play a mix with the "play" command. Press Enter to show next page results. search_user: Syntax: search <username> Search for a mix by user. You can then play a mix with the "play" command. Press Enter to show next page results. search_user_liked: Syntax: search <username> Search for a mix liked by user. You can then play a mix with the "play" command. Press Enter to show next page results. set: Syntax: set <setting> <param> Configure settings. Available settings: - autologin yes|no Toggle autologin on start (no by default) WARNING: password will be saved in plain text. - sorting recent|popular|hot (hot by default) Configure search results sorting order. - results_per_page <n> Set number of results per page showed. - terminal_title yes|no (yes by default) Toggle setting terminal title to song status. - log_current_song yes|no (no by default) Toggle whether to log current song information to file `~/.cache/orochi/current_song.txt` To get help for each setting, press Enter with no <param>. play: Syntax: play <mix> Play the nth mix from the last search results. The <mix> argument can also be a mix ID or an URL. exit: Exit the interpreter. You can also use the Ctrl-D shortcut. login: Syntax: login <username> Log in to your 8tracks account. liked_mixes: List liked mixes (login required). Press Enter to show next page results.
Available commands (play mode menu):
pause / p: Pause or resume the playback. stop: Stop the playback and exit play mode. next_song / n: Skip to next song. next_mix: Skip to next mix. status / s: Show the status of the currently playing song. mix_info: Show information about the currently playing mix. volume / v: Syntax: volume <amount> Change playback volume. The argument must be a number between 0 and 100. like_mix / l: Like the currently playing mix (login required). unlike_mix / ul: Un-like the currently playing mix (login required). fav_track / f: Favorite the currently playing track (login required). unfav_track / uf: Un-favorite the currently playing track (login required).
The first time Orochi is started, it creates the config.json
configfile in
the ~/.config/orochi/
directory. The following configurations can be
changed:
mplayer_extra_args: Extra arguments that are passed on to the mplayer instance.
Example configuration:
{ "mplayer_extra_args": "-ao alsa:device=hw=1.0" }
Install requirements.txt
(with pip install -r
). Then start orochi the
following way:
$ python -m orochi.client
For development and testing purposes, you can also pass in the --pdb
argument. Then a debug session should be started if orochi crashes.
PEP8 via flake8 with max-line-width set to 99 and E126-E128 ignored.
Install requirements-dev.txt
, then run py.test
in the main directory.
Violations of the coding guidelines above will be counted as test fails.
Please refer to the Contributors Guidelines. Thanks!
Copyright (C) 2013–2016 Danilo Bargen and contributors
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 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.