UNIX port of Open Cubic Player, which is a text-based player with some few graphical views. Visual output can be done through nCurses, Linux console (VCSA + FrameBuffer), X11 or SDL/SDL2. It can be compiled on various different unix based operating systems.
Amiga style modules files with more:
- *.AMS, Velvet Studio and Extreme's Tracker
- *.DMF, X-Tracker
- *.IT, Impulse Tracker or use the modern Schism Tracker
- *.MDL, DigiTrakker, now developed as MilkyTracker
- *.MOD, ProTracker or use the modern ProTracker Clone
- *.MTM, MultiTracker Module Editor
- *.NST, NoiseTracker
- *.OKT, Oktalyzer
- *.PTM, PolyTracker
- *.STM, Scream Tracker 2
- *.S3M, Scream Tracker 3
- *.ULT, Ultra Tracker
- *.WOW, Grave Composer
- *.XM, FastTracker 2 or use the modern FastTracker 2 Clone
- *.669, Composer 669
Code from STYMulator to play music from Atari ST (Yamaha YM2149):
- *.YM
Fork of libsidplayfp to play music from C64 (SID 6581/8580):
- *.SID
- *.RSID
Code from aylet to play music from ZX Spectrum/Amstrad CPC (Yamaha YM2149):
- *.AY
Audio Files (both compressed and PCM styled):
- *.WAV
- *.OGG
- *.FLAC
- *.MP2
- *.MP3
Audio CDs: Linux support only, using digital read out API
- *.CDA
Fork of TiMidity++ is used to play MIDI:
- *.MID
AdPlug can read a wide range of music formats designed for the OPL2/OPL3 Adlib sound chip. Examples:
- *.HSC
- *.SNG
- *.D00
- *.ADL
- *.VGM
- *.RAD Reality Adlib Tracker
HivelyTracker tracked music, using code from the original tracker repository:
- *.HVL Hively Tracker
- *.AHX AHX or use the not yet existant modern AHX Clone
https://manpages.debian.org/testing/opencubicplayer/ocp.1.en.html
escesc: exit the program
alt + k: List the available keyshort-cuts in the current view
Note: if letters are capital, press them with shift
Enter: next file from the playlist, if playlist is empty it opens the file-browser
f: File-browser
a: Text FFT analyzer, A: toggle FFT analyzer, tab, toggle colors
c: Text Channel viewer
t: Text Track viewer
g: Lo-Res FFT analyzer + history G: High-Res FFT analyzer + history
b: Phase viewer
o: Oscilloscope
v: Peak power level
m: Volume control
x / alt + x: Extended mode / normal mode toggle
Backspace: Toggle filter
f1: Online Help
f2: Lower Volume
f3: Increase Volume
f4: Toggle Surround
f5: Panning left
f6: Panning right
f7: Balance left
f8: Balance right
f9: Decrease playback speed
f10: Increase playback speed
\: Toggle pitch/speed lock (if fileformat makes this possible)
f11: Decrease playback pitch
f12: Increase playback pitch
alt + e: Edit meta-information
alt + i: Toggle file-list columns (long filename, title, etc.)
alt + c: Opens a system options list
Insert: Add to playlist
Delete: Remove from playlist
Tab: Move cursor between filelist and playlist
https://repology.org/project/ocp-open-cubic-player/versions
When you compile/install and have enabled X11/SDL/SDL2 support, the unifont TTF files are needed. This is a 8x16 font that has a main goal of being UTF-8/Unicode complete. For special scripts it will look incorrect, but the character-set should be complete.
In most systems this font will be installed in /usr/share/fonts/truetype/unifont/ or /usr/share/fonts/opentype/unifont/ . If this path is different for your system, you can provide the correct path with ./configure --with-unifontdir-ttf=/your/path and/or ./configure --with-unifontdir-otf=/your/path .
If the font-files on your system is not named exactly "unifont.ttf", "unifont_csur.ttf" and "unifont_upper.ttf", you can instruct alternative filenames using ./configure --with-unifont-ttf=/your/path/UniFont.ttf --with-unifont-csur-ttf=/your/path/UniFont-CSUR.ttf --with-unifont-upper-ttf=/your/path/UniFont-Upper.ttf" . Same for opentype version of the files by using --with-unifont-otf --with-unifont-csur-otf and --with-unifont-upper-otf . If the filenames on your system contains version numbers, we ask you to fill a bug-report to your system provider and ask them to add symlinks without version numbers in them.
brew install ocp
If you use liboss, you might need to edit /opt/local/lib/pkgconfig/liboss.pc
and remove -Wno-precomp
(liboss 0.0.1 is known to be broken and crashes, so we discourage the use of liboss)
To configure Darwin, my experience is that you need to run configure like this:
PATH=$PATH:/opt/local/bin LDFLAGS=-L/opt/local/lib CFLAGS=-I/opt/local/include CXXFLAGS=-I/opt/local/include CPPFLAGS=-I/opt/local/include CPPCXXFLAGS=-I/opt/local/include ./configure
and optionally add things like --prefix
etc.
To get curses up and running with colors, you need to run ocp like this
TERM=xterm-color ocp-curses
https://ftp.hornet.org/pub/demos/music/contests/
https://libera.chat in #ocp