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Live Metadata Output

David Hernández edited this page Aug 7, 2018 · 51 revisions

Live metadata output

Author: David Hernández (davidhm)

Email: [email protected]

GSoC 2018 recap

Working in this community has been a lot of fun. It has given me valuable experience in coding on collaborative projects. Previously, almost all my work has been individual or with a group of 4/5 students, but it has never been of this scale. I've learned about the way open source projects work, with pull requests, code review, bug tracking, etc. and I've deepened my knowledge of C++ and the Qt framework. I've also learned that IDEs are invaluable when it comes to handling this scale of code otherwise it becomes cumbersome to navigate and read the necessary code.

I thank my mentor @daschuer for his help, especially for his comments on the code and the patience to deal with my schedule issues. Overall, it's been an intense project, but a rewarding one. Coding is always fun, but it is yet more fun when you see the (hopefully correct) results of your code.

Work done

Further below the original proposal with the full details of the project is found. The whole code is in the following github pull request:

https://github.com/mixxxdj/mixxx/pull/1675

In hindsight, perhaps the pull request should have been split in several PRs to keep comments and reviews of the code focused on only one topic.

Future work

Clearly, one of the things that remains to be done is the Last.fm API, which I will finish when I find the time. Beyond that, perhaps what needs to be done is further testing with more broadcasting products suggested in https://bugs.launchpad.net/mixxx/+bug/1775095 and mantain the code generated.

Original proposal

In this project I will write the code foundation that will broadcast the tracks currently being played in the Mixxx app to various services (online or not) dedicated to compile this information and display it for everyone. First I will implement a proof-of-concept text file displaying the current track. Then I will work on a Listenbrainz listener. Afterwards, I will make a MPRIS broadcaster with QtDbus so that other apps can receive this info. I originally intended to include a Last.fm API scrobbler but I didn't have the time.

Proposed schedule

Modified as of 16/07/2018.

First week: May 14th to May 20th

During this week I added the necessary signals to track when a track is paused, resumed, loaded and unloaded. I also created some timers to count the played time, necessary to know when a track is scrobbable. I wrote some tests for the Track object, which was intended to hold this information.

Second week: May 21st to May 27th

During this week I moved all the metadata management to a separate class, instead of the Player Manager, moved the timers away from the Track object to this class, introduced the total volume as a factor to take into account besides whether if a track is being played or not and redid the implementation of the timer to use GuiTick50ms as I was told the waveforms conflict with the use of QTimer's timeout signal.

Third week: May 28th to June 3rd

This week I finished the scrobbling manager and wrote some automatic tests for it. I also started working on the file listener.

Fourth week: June 4th to June 10th

This week I refactored the file listener into a factory and template to accommodate for the various file formats admitted by the broadcasting APPS. I also refactored the scrobbling manager to allow for dependency injection and changed the isTrackAudible function into a strategy pattern.

Fifth week: June 11th to June 17th

I've decided to start with the user settings before programming the API client that will interact with Last.fm. I wrote a new tab in the user settings and refactored the file listener so it uses those settings (a previous version).

Sixth week: June 18th to June 24th

This week I refactored the metadata settings dialog, deleting the table view and moved the file settings to a new class. I added a work in progress concurrency for the file listener and I removed the factory and template method.

Seventh week: June 25th to July 1st

This week I refactored the file listener class to use a dedicated thread and started implementing the ListenBrainz API interaction.

Eighth week: July 2nd to July 8th

This week I finished the ListenBrainz interaction and fixed the metadata preferences tab.

Ninth week: July 9th to July 15th

This week I started implementing the MPRIS interface. It took a while because Qt's DBus implementation is incomplete and I didn't realize.

Tenth week: July 16th to July 22nd

This week I wrote a dedicated class to implement the MPRIS MediaPlayer2Player logic.

Eleventh week: July 23rd to July 29th

This week I finished the MPRIS implementation.

Twelfth week: July 30th to August 5th

This week I refactored the code to meet some propositions on github as well as simplifying implementations and changing UIs.

Proposed deadline goals

First deadline: 11th June

For this deadline, I will have a solid code base and a proof of concept of a scrobbler in the form of a txt file.

Second deadline: 9th July

For this deadline, I will have the full interaction with the ListenBrainz API. Including the option added to the preferences, the authentication process and the uploading of the scrobbles. As well as solving any bugs that come up.

Third deadline: 6th August

For this date, I will have finished the interaction with the MPRIS interface, and if I have time I will implement a Last.fm interaction.

Project outline

Here's a rough outline of the intention of the project. This is far from complete.

A track counts as a new listen when:

  • The track has a duration greater than 30 seconds and has been listened to (through master, see definition of audible below) for half of its duration or 4 minutes, whichever is shorter. This played time is paused while the song is not audible. And it gets reset if the track is unloaded.
  • The time between the last unload and the current load of the track is greater than 5 minutes. Not counting application resets (it is assumed that the user will not keep restarting the app and playing the same track over and over again).

A track is audible if its final volume is above 20% (including pregain and faders).

For the "now listening" signal (i.e much less restrictive than the full listen), every second the track with the most overall volume is the one selected.

Weekly blog

1st week
2nd week
3rd week
4th week
5th week
6th week
7th week
8th week
9th week
10th week
11th week
12th week

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