RYGEL.CONF(5) | Rygel User Manual | RYGEL.CONF(5) |
NAME¶
rygel.conf - Rygel configuration file
SYNOPSIS¶
$XDG_CONFIG_DIR/rygel.conf
/etc/rygel.conf
DESCRIPTION¶
rygel reads its configuration values from the file $XDG_CONFIG_DIR/rygel.conf or a file given on command line with the --config option. If that file does not exist it uses the file /etc/rygel.conf.
Most of the options may be overriden by commandline arguments or envronment variables. See rygel(1) for details on those.
GENERAL DIRECTIVES¶
Lists in the configuration files are separated by a semicolon (;). Boolean values may be either true or false.
ipv6
interface=INTERFACE
port=PORT
enable-transcoding
log-level=DOMAIN:LEVEL[,DOMAIN:LEVEL,...]
plugin-path=PATH
engine-path=PATH
media-engine=ENGINE
allow-upload
allow-deletion
video-upload-folder
music-upload-folder
picture-upload-folder
force-downgrade-for
Warning
Only use this parameter if you know what your're doing or are being told to do so; overriding the default value might cause incompatibilites. If you find that adding your device here enables its usage with Rygel, please file an IOP bug[1] so we can include it into the default configuration.
acl-fallback-policy
strict-dlna
DATABASE SETTINGS¶
The settings in the [Database]section are for the database support library.
debug
GSTREAMER MEDIA ENGINE SETTINGS¶
The settings in the [GstMediaEngine] section are specific to the GStreamer media engine, which is the default media engine. See the media-engine setting. These following options are available for the GStreamer[2] media engine.
transcoders
PLUGIN-SPECIFIC SETTINGS¶
Sections for plugins are denoted with [PluginName] and can contain options specific to a plugin (see below) as well these common options:
title=TITLE
enabled
energy-management
diagnostics
server-name
ENERGYMANAGEMENT SETTINGS¶
The settings in [EnergyManagement-IFACENAME] sections specify the settings that relate to EnergyManagement services on this interface. Example: [EnergyManagement-eth0].
mode-on-suspend
supported-transport
password
TRACKER PLUGIN¶
The tracker plugin uses the centralized database of meta information from the tracker project. See the tracker project website[3] for more information about tracker.
share-pictures
share-videos
share-music
MEDIAEXPORT PLUGIN¶
The MediaExport plugin is an alternative to the tracker-backed media export. It extracts meta-data by itself and stores it in a SQLite[4] database in $XDG_CACHE_DIR/rygel/media-export.db on UNIX platforms.
Note
If both plugins, Tracker as well as MediaExport are enabled, MediaExport will disable itself in favour of the Tracker plugin.
There are several options supported by this plugin:
uris
Note
If you enter a normal path that contains whitespace there is no need to escape them with either a backslash or putting the string in quotes.
Note
It is strongly advised against using an exported folder as a target for downloads when extract-metadata is enabled. Rygel will most likely ignore the files then because they will fail to extract.
Example 1. Possible values for uris
uris=@MUSIC@;/home/user/My Pictures;file:///home/user/My%20Videos
extract-metadata
monitor-changes
monitor-grace-timeout
virtual-folders
PLAYBIN PLUGIN¶
The Playbin plugin implements a media renderer (Digtal Media Renderer, DMR in DLNA terms). This plugin was known as GstRenderer.
It is highly recommended to leave the sink choice to playbin. If, however, the default choices don't work for you they can be reconfigured as follows
audio-sink
video-sink
LIGHTMEDIASCANNER PLUGIN¶
The LightMediaScanner plugin exports the contents of the lightmediascanner daemon[5]
This plugin does not have any special options.
GSTLAUNCH PLUGIN¶
The GstLaunch plugin allows to expose GStreamer pipelines using the same syntax as the gst-launch utilty. You can configure several items in this plugins.
launch-items
identifier-title
identifier-mime
identifier-launch
identifier-dlnaprofile
An example configuration is available in the distributed configuration file /etc/rygel.conf.
EXTERNAL¶
The External plugin is an consumer of the MediaServer2 DBus interface specification[6]. This allows external programs to share their data via UPnP by implementing this DBus specification. The plugin picks up any implementation of this interface on the session bus and exposes the presented media via UPnP. Known implementors of this spec are gnome-dvb-daemon[7], Rhythmbox[8] and Grilo[9] via the grilo-ms2 project.
You can disable the whole functionality by setting enabled=false in the [External] section of the configuration file.
Individual peers may be enabled or disabled by creating sections corresponding to the D-Bus names of the peer:
[org.gnome.UPnP.MediaServer2.Rhythmbox] enabled=false
This plugin has no additional options.
MPRIS¶
The MPRIS plugin is a consumer of the MPRIS2 DBus interface specification[10]. The implementation conforms to version 2.0 of the standard.
rygel exposes media players that implement the provider side of this DBus specification as DLNA Digital Media Renderers (DMR) similar to the Playbin plugin. This means that you can easily turn your media player into a DMR by implementing this DBus specification.
Players that implement this spec and are known to work with rygel are Banshee[11], Rhythmbox[8] and GNOME Videos (previously known as Totem)[12]
You can disable the whole functionality by setting enabled=false in the [MRPIS] section of the configuration file.
The configuration of this plugin is special. Plugin configuration is not done on the plugin but rather per peer that is found providing the MPRIS2 interface. See the following example to set the title for Banshee on MPRIS:
[org.mpris.MediaPlayer2.banshee] title=@REALNAME@'s Banshee on @HOSTNAME@
This plugin has no additional options.
SEE ALSO¶
rygel(1), gst-launch(1)
AUTHOR¶
Jens Georg <mail@jensge.org>
NOTES¶
- 1.
- file an IOP bug
- 2.
- GStreamer
- 3.
- tracker project website
- 4.
- SQLite
- 5.
- lightmediascanner daemon
- 6.
- MediaServer2 DBus interface specification
- 7.
- gnome-dvb-daemon
- 8.
- Rhythmbox
- 9.
- Grilo
- 10.
- MPRIS2 DBus interface specification
- 11.
- Banshee
- 12.
- GNOME Videos (previously known as Totem)
10/12/2024 | rygel |