Rubyripper and OggOpus: Difference between revisions
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== Software Needed == | == Software Needed == | ||
; [[rubyripper]]: | ; [[rubyripper]]: may be the most mature secure cd ripping application for GNU/Linux systems. See [[rubyripper#Installation]] for installation instructions. | ||
; opus-tools: Get it via package manager from your distributor's standard repositories if you're using something like Ubuntu 12.10 or later already. Otherwise install from source. (You'll have to install opus first.) | ; opus-tools: Get it via package manager from your distributor's standard repositories if you're using something like Ubuntu 12.10 or later already. Otherwise install from source. (You'll have to install opus first.) | ||
; cdrdao: Not strictly necessary but you may want to be able to rip to images with [[cue sheet]] and detect pregaps and pre-emphasis. cdrdao should be available from your distribution's default package repositories. | ; cdrdao: Not strictly necessary but you may want to be able to rip to images with [[cue sheet]] and detect pregaps and pre-emphasis. cdrdao should be available from your distribution's default package repositories. |
Revision as of 11:12, 14 September 2012
This page describes how to securely rip audio cds to the lossy compression format Opus on GNU/Linux operating systems.
Software Needed
- rubyripper
- may be the most mature secure cd ripping application for GNU/Linux systems. See rubyripper#Installation for installation instructions.
- opus-tools
- Get it via package manager from your distributor's standard repositories if you're using something like Ubuntu 12.10 or later already. Otherwise install from source. (You'll have to install opus first.)
- cdrdao
- Not strictly necessary but you may want to be able to rip to images with cue sheet and detect pregaps and pre-emphasis. cdrdao should be available from your distribution's default package repositories.
Configuration
- Look up the reading offset of your CD-ROM drive in AccurateRip offset database. (Command line tool
lshw
may help you find out what cd drive you have.) - Click "Preferences" and insert the drive offset.
- Go to the "Codecs" tab and tick the "Other" box (and maybe untick other boxes like the preselected "Vorbis" box). (You may or may not need to "create m3u playlist" files...)
- Enter the path to the Opus encoder followed by
--bitrate 160 -o "%o.opus" %i
in the field behind the "Other" box. - Enter a cd into the drive and then "Rip cd now!".
After the ripping process is finished you'll find the files in a subfolder inside your home directory.