squeezelite(1) Lightweight headless Squeezebox emulator

SYNOPSIS

squeezelite [options]

DESCRIPTION

Squeezelite is a small headless Logitech Squeezebox emulator. It is aimed at supporting high quality audio including USB DAC based output at multiple sample rates.

The player is controlled using, and media is streamed from, a Logitech Media Server instance running somewhere on the local network.

OPTIONS

This program supports the following options:
-?
Show a summary of the available command-line options.
-s <server>[:<port>]
Connect to the specified Logitech Media Server, otherwise uses automatic discovery to find server on the local network. This option should only be needed if automatic discovery does not work, or the server is not on the local network segment (e.g. behind a router).
-o <output device>
Specify the audio output device; the default value is default. Use the -l option to list available output devices. - can be used to output raw samples to standard output.
-l
List available audio output devices to stdout and exit. These device names can be passed to the -o option in order to select a particular device or configuration to use for audio playback.
-a <params>
Specify parameters used when opening an audio output device. For ALSA, the format <b>:<p>:<f>:<m> is used where <b> is the buffer time in milliseconds (values less than 500) or size in bytes (default 40ms); <p> is the period count (values less than 50) or size in bytes (default 4 periods); <f> is the sample format (possible values: 16, 24, 24_3 or 32); <m> is whether to use mmap (possible values: 0 or 1). For PortAudio, the value is simply the target latency in milliseconds. When the output is sent to standard output, the value can be 16, 24 or 32, which denotes the sample size in bits.
-b <stream>:<output>
Specify internal stream and output buffer sizes in kilobytes.
-c <codec1>,...
Restrict codecs to those specified, otherwise load all available codecs. Use squeezelite -h to obtain the list of codecs built into squeezelite.
-C <timeout>
Close the output device after <timeout> seconds of the player being idle; the default is to always keep the device open as long as the payer is "on".
-d <category>=<level>
Set logging level. Categories are: all, slimproto, stream, decode, output or ir. Levels can be: info, debug or sdebug. The option can be repeated to set different log levels for different categories.
-e <codec1>,...
Explicitly exclude native support of one or more codecs. See also -c, above.
-f <logfile>
Send logging output to a log file instead of standard output or standard error.
-i [<filename>]
Enable LIRC remote control support. If the optional <filename> is not provided, ~/.lircrc is used instead.
-m <mac addr>
Override the player's MAC address. The format must be colon-delimited hexadecimal, for example: ab:cd:ef:12:34:56. This is usually automatically detected, and should not need to be provided in most circumstances.
-M <modelname>
Override the player's hardware model name. The default value is SqueezeLite.
-n <name>
Set the player name. This name is used by the Logitech Media Server to refer to the player by name. This option is mututally exclusive with -N.
-N <filename>
Allow the server to set the player's name. The player name is stored in the file pointed to by <filename> so that it can persist between restarts. This option is mututally exclusive with -n.
-p <priority>
Set real time priority of output thread (1-99; default 45). Not applicable when using PortAudio.
-P <filename>
Write the process ID (PID) number to the given <filename>. This may be useful when running squeezelite as a daemon.
-r <rates>[:<delay>]
Specify sample rates supported by the output device; this is required if the output device is switched off when squeezelite is started. The format is either a single maximum sample rate, a range of sample rates in the format <min>-<max>, or a comma-separated list of available rates. Delay is an optional time to wait when switching sample rates between tracks, in milliseconds.
-u|-R [params]
Enable upsampling of played audio. The argument is optional; see RESAMPLING (below) for more information. The options -u and -R are synonymous.
-D [delay]
Output device supports DSD over PCM (DoP). DSD streams will be converted to DoP before output. If this option is not supplied, DSD streams will be converted to PCM and resampled, so they can be played on a PCM DAC. Delay is an optional time to wait when switching between PCM and DoP between tracks, in milliseconds.
-v
Enable visualiser support. This creates a shared memory segment that contains some of the audio being played, so that an external visualiser can read and process this to create visualisations.
-L
List available volume controls for the output device. Only applicable when using ALSA output.
-U <control>
Unmute the given ALSA <control> at daemon startup and set it to full volume. Use software volume adjustment for playback. This option is mutually exclusive with the -V option. Only applicable when using ALSA output.
-V <control>
Use the given ALSA <control> for volume adjustment during playback. This prevents the use of software volume control within squeezelite. This option is mutually exclusive with the -V option. If neither -U nor -V options are provided, no ALSA controls are adjusted while running squeezelite and software volume control is used instead. Only applicable when using ALSA output.
-z
Cause squeezelite to run as a daemon. That is, it detaches itself from the terminal and runs in the background.
-t
Display version and license information.

RESAMPLING

Audio can be resampled or upsampled before being sent to the output device. This can be enabled simply by passing the -u option to squeezelite, but further configuration can be given as an argument to the option.

Resampling is performed using the SoX Resampler library; the documentation for that library and the SoX rate effect many be helpful when configuring upsampling for squeezelite.

The format of the argument is <recipe>:<flags>:<attenuation>:<precision>:<passband_end>:<stopband_start>:<phase_response>

recipe

This part of the argument string is made up of a number of single-character flags: [v|h|m|l|q][L|I|M][s][E|X]. The default value is hL.
v, h, m, l or q
are mutually exclusive and correspond to very high, high, medium, low or quick quality.
L, I or M
correspond to linear, intermediate or minimum phase.
s
changes resampling bandwidth from the default 95% (based on the 3dB point) to 99%.
E
exception - avoids resampling if the output device supports the playback sample rate natively.
X
resamples to the maximum sample rate for the output device ("asynchronous" resampling).
Examples
-u vLs would use very high quality setting, linear phase filter and steep cut-off.
-u hM would specify high quality, with the minimum phase filter.
-u hMX would specify high quality, with the minimum phase filter and async upsampling to max device rate.

flags

The second optional argument to -u allows the user to specify the following arguments (taken from the soxr.h header file), in hex:

#define SOXR_ROLLOFF_SMALL 0u /* <= 0.01 dB */
#define SOXR_ROLLOFF_MEDIUM 1u /* <= 0.35 dB */
#define SOXR_ROLLOFF_NONE 2u /* For Chebyshev bandwidth. */

#define SOXR_MAINTAIN_3DB_PT 4u /* Reserved for internal use. */
#define SOXR_HI_PREC_CLOCK 8u /* Increase 'irrational' ratio accuracy. */
#define SOXR_DOUBLE_PRECISION 16u /* Use D.P. calcs even if precision <= 20. */
#define SOXR_VR 32u /* Experimental, variable-rate resampling. */

Examples
-u :2 would specify SOXR_ROLLOFF_NONE.

NB: In the example above the first option, <quality>, has not been specified so would default to hL. Therefore, specifying -u :2 is equivalent to having specified -u hL:2.

attenuation

Internally, data is passed to the SoX resample process as 32 bit integers and output from the SoX resample process as 32 bit integers. Why does this matter? There is the possibility that integer samples, once resampled may be clipped (i.e. exceed the maximum value). By default, if you do not specify an attenuation value, it will default to -1db. A value of 0 on the command line, i.e. -u ::0 will disable the default -1db attenuation being applied.

NB: Clipped samples will be logged. Keep an eye on the log file.

Examples
-u ::6 specifies to apply -6db (ie. halve the volume) prior to the resampling process.

precision

The internal 'bit' precision used in the re-sampling calculations (ie. quality).

NB: HQ = 20, VHQ = 28.

Examples
-u :::28 specifies 28-bit precision.

passband_end

A percentage value between 0 and 100, where 100 is the Nyquist frequency. The default if not explicitly set is 91.3.
Examples
-u ::::98 specifies passband ends at 98 percent of the Nyquist frequency.

stopband_start

A percentage value between 0 and 100, where 100 is the Nyquist frequency. The default if not explicitly set is 100.
Examples
-u :::::100 specifies that the stopband starts at the Nyquist frequency.

phase_response

A value between 0-100, where 0 is equivalent to the recipe M flag for minimum phase, 25 is equivalent to the recipe I flag for intermediate phase and 50 is equivalent to the recipe L flag for linear phase.
Examples
-u ::::::50 specifies linear phase.