Difference between revisions of "K3b and Nero AAC"

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(Modified script to use a pipe: the percentage bar now is pretty accurate. Added note about versions used. Added note in limitations about complete tags.)
(Changed so that Sox is no longer required. K3b 1.0 allows for writing wave headers and swapping of the byte order.)
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* '''Linux''' (I'm using Ubuntu Dapper Drake 6.06)
 
* '''Linux''' (I'm using Ubuntu Dapper Drake 6.06)
 
* '''Wine''' (0.9.9-0ubuntu2 .deb package from Synaptic/apt-get).<br />Wine must be set up and installed - you at least need a 'Windows' and a 'Windows\System32' directory. The encoder itself doesn't require any extra DLLs.
 
* '''Wine''' (0.9.9-0ubuntu2 .deb package from Synaptic/apt-get).<br />Wine must be set up and installed - you at least need a 'Windows' and a 'Windows\System32' directory. The encoder itself doesn't require any extra DLLs.
* '''Sox''' (12.17.9-1 .deb package from Synaptic/apt-get)
+
* '''K3b''' (1.0 or higher. Previous versions do not support the correct byte order or write wave headers.)
* '''K3b''' (0.12.17 compiled from source at http://k3b.plainblack.com/download )
+
 
* '''Nero Digital Audio Reference MPEG-4 & 3GPP Audio Encoder''' (1.0.0.2 downloaded from http://www.nero.com/nerodigital/eng/Nero_Digital_Audio.html )
 
* '''Nero Digital Audio Reference MPEG-4 & 3GPP Audio Encoder''' (1.0.0.2 downloaded from http://www.nero.com/nerodigital/eng/Nero_Digital_Audio.html )
* '''/dev/shm''' filesystem (this is often installed by default - you can get by without it, but your hard disk will end up doing more work)
 
  
 
==Instructions==
 
==Instructions==
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  #!/bin/bash
 
  #!/bin/bash
TEMPFILE=/dev/shm/neroaac-$RANDOM
+
  cd /home/chris/nero/win32
  cd /home/chris/winec/nero/win32
+
  wine neroAacEnc.exe -if "$1" -of "$2"
  sox -V -x -s -w -t raw -r 44100 -c 2 "$1" -t wav - | wine neroAacEnc.exe -ignorelength -if - -of $TEMPFILE.mp4
+
  wine neroAacTag.exe "$2" -meta:title="$3" -meta:artist="$4" -meta:comment="$5" -meta:track="$6" -meta:album="$7" -meta:year="$8"
  wine neroAacTag.exe $TEMPFILE.mp4 -meta:title="$3" -meta:artist="$4" -meta:comment="$5" -meta:track="$6" -meta:album="$7" -meta:year="$8"
+
mv $TEMPFILE.mp4 "$2"
+
rm $TEMPFILE.wav
+
  
 
'''IMPORTANT:''' Change the line that reads <code>cd /home/chris/winec/nero/win32</code> to be the directory where you have neroAacEnc.exe and neroAacTag.exe located.
 
'''IMPORTANT:''' Change the line that reads <code>cd /home/chris/winec/nero/win32</code> to be the directory where you have neroAacEnc.exe and neroAacTag.exe located.
Line 59: Line 54:
 
Just in case you are interested, this program will take in the following parameters:
 
Just in case you are interested, this program will take in the following parameters:
  
# Source filename (or '-' for stdin).<br />The data this script takes in will be RAW 16 bit, 44.1kHz, big endian, stereo to match the format that k3b outputs.
+
# Source filename (or '-' for stdin).<br />The data this script takes in will be RAW 16 bit, 44.1kHz, little endian, stereo and with a WAVE header. We will make sure k3b outputs the correct format later.
 
# Output filename. e.g. "myfile.mp4"
 
# Output filename. e.g. "myfile.mp4"
 
# Track Title
 
# Track Title
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# Album
 
# Album
 
# Year
 
# Year
 
It's a bit hard to test this script on its own because of the format of the input file. K3b itself doesn't even export RAW audio in this format when you have RAW selected as a format!
 
  
 
===Configure K3b to use 'neroaac' as an External Plugin===
 
===Configure K3b to use 'neroaac' as an External Plugin===
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# Load up K3b and go to the 'Settings' menu and select 'Configure K3b'. Select 'Plugins' and then 'K3b External Audio Encoder'. Hit the 'Configure' button: <br/>[[Image:Settings-configure-k3b.png]]<br/>
 
# Load up K3b and go to the 'Settings' menu and select 'Configure K3b'. Select 'Plugins' and then 'K3b External Audio Encoder'. Hit the 'Configure' button: <br/>[[Image:Settings-configure-k3b.png]]<br/>
 
# In the next dialog box add a new program to the list and enter the following values in the 'Configure Plugin' box:[[Image:k3b-add-external-plugin.png]]<br/>The command line here is:<br/><code>neroaac - %f %t %a %c %n %m %y</code>
 
# In the next dialog box add a new program to the list and enter the following values in the 'Configure Plugin' box:[[Image:k3b-add-external-plugin.png]]<br/>The command line here is:<br/><code>neroaac - %f %t %a %c %n %m %y</code>
 +
# Ensure you select 'Swap Byte Order' and 'Write Wave Header' so that the neroaac script gets the right format.
 
# Close the 'Configure Plugin' and 'Options' boxes.
 
# Close the 'Configure Plugin' and 'Options' boxes.
  

Revision as of 04:28, 1 August 2007

K3b is a multi-purpose burning/ripping/transcoding tool for Linux under the KDE graphical environment (it can be run under GNOME as well so long as the correct libraries are installed). It is generally pretty stable and does a good job of keeping the meta-data (e.g. title, album, etc) for tracks. The MP4 file format is therefore well matched to be outputted from K3b.

This guide was originally posted on the Hydrogen Audio forum here.

Note that this only allows you to create .MP4 files - it does not allow you to decode them so that they can be burnt to a CD.

Requirements

(In parentheses the versions used by the author)

  • Linux (I'm using Ubuntu Dapper Drake 6.06)
  • Wine (0.9.9-0ubuntu2 .deb package from Synaptic/apt-get).
    Wine must be set up and installed - you at least need a 'Windows' and a 'Windows\System32' directory. The encoder itself doesn't require any extra DLLs.
  • K3b (1.0 or higher. Previous versions do not support the correct byte order or write wave headers.)
  • Nero Digital Audio Reference MPEG-4 & 3GPP Audio Encoder (1.0.0.2 downloaded from http://www.nero.com/nerodigital/eng/Nero_Digital_Audio.html )

Instructions

These instructions assume you have installed all the required items above.

Configure Wine

I won't go into too much detail about this here, but it's important that Wine can access all the files on your drive. I usually do this by keeping the default of Z:\ to be the 'root' (i.e. '/') filesystem. The program winecfg is very useful in setting up this.

Install Nero Digital Audio executables

This bit is pretty easy. You just unzip the files to a directory somewhere. You might want to test out that the executables can run by doing something like:

$ wine neroAacEnc.exe

in the win32 directory of the extracted files. You should see some output like this:

err:font:ReadFontDir Can't open directory "/home/chris/.wine/dosdevices/c:/windows/Fonts"
*************************************************************
*
*  Nero Digital Audio Reference MPEG-4 & 3GPP Audio Encoder
*  Copyright (C) 2006 Nero AG
*  All Rights Reserved Worldwide
*
*  Package build date: May 26 2006
*
*  See -help for a complete list of available parameters.
*
*************************************************************
ERROR: no input file specified

My Wine isn't set up for GUI stuff for Wine too well yet, hence the error message at the top. We don't have to worry about that though, because this is just a command line application.

Create 'neroaac' wrapper script

So I made a wrapper script around neroAacEnc.exe and neroAacTag.exe. The code for it is below. Copy the code into a file /usr/local/bin/neroaac. Make sure you chmod it to something like 755.

#!/bin/bash
cd /home/chris/nero/win32
wine neroAacEnc.exe -if "$1" -of "$2"
wine neroAacTag.exe "$2" -meta:title="$3" -meta:artist="$4" -meta:comment="$5" -meta:track="$6" -meta:album="$7" -meta:year="$8"

IMPORTANT: Change the line that reads cd /home/chris/winec/nero/win32 to be the directory where you have neroAacEnc.exe and neroAacTag.exe located.

Just in case you are interested, this program will take in the following parameters:

  1. Source filename (or '-' for stdin).
    The data this script takes in will be RAW 16 bit, 44.1kHz, little endian, stereo and with a WAVE header. We will make sure k3b outputs the correct format later.
  2. Output filename. e.g. "myfile.mp4"
  3. Track Title
  4. Track Artist
  5. Track Comment
  6. Track Number
  7. Album
  8. Year

Configure K3b to use 'neroaac' as an External Plugin

I'll do this with the aid of some screenshots.

  1. Load up K3b and go to the 'Settings' menu and select 'Configure K3b'. Select 'Plugins' and then 'K3b External Audio Encoder'. Hit the 'Configure' button:
    Settings-configure-k3b.png
  2. In the next dialog box add a new program to the list and enter the following values in the 'Configure Plugin' box:K3b-add-external-plugin.png
    The command line here is:
    neroaac - %f %t %a %c %n %m %y
  3. Ensure you select 'Swap Byte Order' and 'Write Wave Header' so that the neroaac script gets the right format.
  4. Close the 'Configure Plugin' and 'Options' boxes.

Usage

You can now use the 'Convert Audio Project' to convert any files that K3b can read into .MP4 files. This is the 'arrow' button in the screenshot below:

K3b-audiocd-project.png

Note that if you want all the meta tags (e.g. "Album") set, you will have to open the 'Burn' dialog for the Audio project and enter the CD Text information and then hit the "Save" button.

You will also be able to rip to .MP4 by selecting your CD reader/recorder in the tree and using the following button:

K3b-ripping.png

Known flaws/limitations

  • The progress bar goes to 100% before tagging (so it takes a little bit more to really complete the work). This is because K3b judges the completeness of the operation by how much of the file it has fed to the program.
  • Does not support decoding of MP4 files. This would require the development of a proper Audio Decoding plugin for K3b.
  • Note the remark above to get complete meta tags.

See also

Notes and references

External links