Fluendo mp3 decoder: Difference between revisions
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Once it is copied over, verify that gstreamer recognises the plugin by doing a 'gst-inspect-0.10 flump3dec'. |
Once it is copied over, verify that gstreamer recognises the plugin by doing a 'gst-inspect-0.10 flump3dec'. |
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Unless this command reports back 'No such element or plugin 'flump3dec' the plugin should be sucessfully installed and you should have access to playing back MP3 files using GStreamer applications. |
Unless this command reports back 'No such element or plugin 'flump3dec' the plugin should be sucessfully installed and you should have access to playing back MP3 files using [[GStreamer]] applications. |
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== To playback a file == |
== To playback a file == |
Revision as of 20:26, 19 July 2008
The majority of podcasts are made available as mp3 files, which cannot be viewed by the OLPC by default. To enable mp3 playback, an extra codec has to be installed.
Fluendo has made available a free (as in beer) codec, with a free (as in speech) implementation with a paid up license for the Gstreamer code framework. This requires execution of a license agreement for redistribution; unfortunately, the agreement does not permit sub-licensing, so while including it would be convenient and OLPC may choose to execute this agreement in the future, those redistributing our software would still have to execute this agreement to legally redistribute the codec.
Scripted Installation
This script should be shipped with the stock software...
su mkdir tempmp3 cd tempmp3 wget "http://shop.fluendo.com/pub/fluendo-mp3-1.i386.tar.bz2" tar -jxvf fluendo-mp3-1.i386.tar.bz2 mv fluendo-mp3-i386/libgstflump3dec.so /usr/lib/gstreamer-0.10/ cd - rm -r tempmp3
Installation
In order to download the codec you have to "buy" the Fluendo mp3 decoder from their store for $0.00 from here.
You are then allowed to download the file fluendo-mp3-2.i386.tar.bz2
It is easier to use a web browser such as Opera that allows you to save files to the filesystem, instead of saving to the Journal. Nevertheless, you can retrieve it from the Journal if you download with the default web browser Browse:
Go to the datastore:
cd ~/.sugar/default/datastore/store/
and find out which filename is the plugin:
file * | grep bzip2
It's highly likely that you will only get one result. Copy the file to your home directory, while giving it a more sensible name:
cp filename_found_in_datastore ~/fluendo-mp3.tar.bz2
Having the file now, unzip it with bunzip2 and tar:
bunzip2 filename.tar.bz2 tar xvf filename.tar
Create a plugins directory for gstreamer:
mkdir ~/.gstreamer-0.10/plugins
and copy the file libgstflump3dec.so to it:
cp ~/fluendo-mp3-i386/libgstflump3dec.so ~/.gstreamer-0.10/plugins
Or you can instead copy it to
/usr/lib/gstreamer-0.10
If you use this second position then the plugin will be lost the next time you upgrade to a new OS build.
Once it is copied over, verify that gstreamer recognises the plugin by doing a 'gst-inspect-0.10 flump3dec'.
Unless this command reports back 'No such element or plugin 'flump3dec' the plugin should be sucessfully installed and you should have access to playing back MP3 files using GStreamer applications.
To playback a file
gst-launch-0.10 playbin uri=file:///path/to/file.mp3