SYNOPSIS

cmus [options]

DESCRIPTION

cmus is a small ncurses based music player. It supports various output methods by output-plugins. It has got completely configurable keybindings and it can be controlled from the outside via cmus-remote(1).

OPTIONS

--listen ADDR

Listen to ADDR (UNIX socket) instead of ~/.cmus/socket. ADDR is either a UNIX socket or host[:port].

WARNING: Using host[:port] is insecure even with password! It might be useful though in LAN if you want multiple local users to able to control cmus. Never make cmus listen to the internet.

NOTE: Don't use this option to run multiple instances as same user. That would corrupt the track metadata cache.

--plugins

List available plugins and exit.

--show-cursor

Keep cursor always visible. This is useful for screen readers.

--help

Display usage information and exit.

--version

Display version information and exit.

VIEWS

There are 7 views in cmus. Press keys 1-7 to change active view.

Library view (1)

Display all tracks in so-called library. Tracks are sorted artist/album tree. Artist sorting is done alphabetically. Albums are sorted by year.

Sorted library view (2)

Displays same content as view 1, but as a simple list which is automatically sorted by user criteria.

Playlist view (3)

Displays editable playlist with optional sorting.

Play Queue view (4)

Displays queue of tracks which are played next. These tracks are played before anything else (i.e. the playlist or library).

Browser (5)

Directory browser. In this view, music can be added to either the library, playlist or queue from the filesystem.

Filters view (6)

Lists user defined filters.

Settings view (7)

Lists keybindings, unbound commands and options. Remove bindings with D or del, change bindings and variables with enter and toggle variables with space.

COMMAND LINE

Everything in cmus is implemented as commands which can be typed at command line or bound to a key. To enter command mode type :. To execute a command press ENTER or to cancel press ESC. Use up/down arrows to browse command history. Use TAB to complete commands and parameters, you can tab complete almost anything. You don't need to type full command names if the command is unambiguous (no other commands starting with the same characters).

Examples:

# add files, short for ':add ~/music'
:a ~/music

# change output plugin
:set output_plugin=oss

# start playing
# you could just press 'x' which is the default
# binding for this command
:player-play

# clear current view (library, playlist or play queue)
:clear

SEARCHING

Search mode works like the command mode, to enter search mode press / and then type the search words and press ENTER. Press n to search next or N to search previous match using the same search words. Type ? to search backwards.

In views 1-4 words are compared to artist, album and title tags. Type //WORDS or ??WORDS to search only artists/albums in view 1 or titles in views 2-4. If the file doesn't have tags words are compared to filename without path.

Searching works in views 5-7 too and its logic should be pretty obvious.

PLAYLIST EDITING

Selecting Tracks

Editing commands affect the currently marked tracks or if there are no marked tracks the currently selected track (or selected artist/album in view 1).

Mark selected track by pressing SPACE. Marked tracks appear with a gray background. You can only mark tracks in the list views (2-4).

Copying Tracks Between Views

You can copy marked or selected tracks from views 1-5.

a

copy tracks to the library (1-2)

y

copy tracks to the playlist (3)

e

append tracks to the play queue (4)

E

prepend tracks to the play queue (4)

Moving Tracks

In views 2-4 you can move tracks withing the list. Note that moving is disabled if the view is auto-sorted (see lib_sort and pl_sort options).

Pressing p moves marked tracks to the position immediately after the selected track. P moves them to the position immediately before the selected track. If there are no marked tracks then the selected track is moved down (p) or up (P).

NOTE: Changing active filters reloads view 2 so it isn't a good idea to manually order tracks in the view.

Removing Tracks

Press D or delete to remove marked or selected tracks in the current view (1-4). The tracks will be removed immediately from the view without asking for confirmation. In the browser and filters views the same keys are used to remove a file or filter (will ask for confirmation).

STATUS LINE

Right hand side of the status line (second row from the bottom, black text on a grey background) consists of the following fields:

aaa_mode & play_sorted & play_library | continue repeat shuffle

NOTE: aaa_mode and play_sorted will be displayed only if play_library is true because these are meaningless when playing the playlist (view 3).

Pressing m, o, M, C, r and s keys should make it easier to understand what all those fields mean.

See CONFIGURATION OPTIONS section for more information about these options.

KEYBINDINGS

Here's list of default keybindings. See unbind and bind commands in the COMMANDS section.

Common Context

q              quit -i
^C             echo Type :quit<enter> to exit cmus.
I              echo {}
b              player-next
c              player-pause
x              player-play
z              player-prev
v              player-stop
^L             refresh
n              search-next
N              search-prev
.              seek +1m
l, right       seek +5
,              seek -1m
h, left        seek -5
m              toggle aaa_mode
C              toggle continue
M              toggle play_library
o              toggle play_sorted
r              toggle repeat
^R             toggle repeat_current
t              toggle show_remaining_time
s              toggle shuffle
F              push filter<space>
L              push live-filter<space>
u              update-cache
1              view tree
2              view sorted
3              view playlist
4              view queue
5              view browser
6              view filters
7              view settings
!              push shell<space>
]              vol +0 +1
[              vol +1 +0
+, =           vol +10%
}              vol -0 -1
{              vol -1 -0
-              vol -10%
enter          win-activate
E              win-add-Q
a              win-add-l
y              win-add-p
e              win-add-q
G, end         win-bottom
down, j        win-down
p              win-mv-after
P              win-mv-before
tab            win-next
^F, page_down  win-page-down
^B, page_up    win-page-up
D, delete      win-remove
i              win-sel-cur
space          win-toggle
g, home        win-top
k, up          win-up

Browser Context

space          win-activate
backspace      browser-up
i              toggle show_hidden
u              win-update

LIBRARY VIEW SORTING

The library view (the tree-like one; not the sorted library view, for which the sorting is controlled by the user by setting lib_sort - see CONFIGURATION OPTIONS), is sorted automatically by cmus using the information found in the tagging information provided by the audio files.

Generally, in the library view cmus uses three levels of sorting: the first level would be the artist name, the second one the album and finally the actual track.

At first, cmus checks if the "filename" looks like an URL, if it does, the item is given the special artist and album name <Stream>.

If it is a file, it is checked if the artist and album tags are set. If not, cmus assigns the special name <No Name> for the unset tag.

As the first level, cmus sorts alphanumerically by the value of the artist tag. (<Stream> and <No Name> will be used as if they where normal names.) If a special sorting tag is available, it's value will be used instead.

For album names, alphanumerical sorting is not the primary method, though. To decide, how the second level should be sorted, cmus looks at the date of the first track of each album. Sorting is done from young to old. Of course, if one artist happens to have more then one album from one year, alphanumerical sorting will be used after sorting by date.

If the date header is not set, the album will be placed on top of the list (in fact, the internal integer value for unset album tags is -1).

The method for third sorting level (the track) is very similar to album sorting. First two numerical values are checked (discnumber and tracknumber). If sorting is still ambiguous, sorting will be done alphanumerically by the value of the track's filename (not track name!).

For simple albums, that is it. There is a special case, though. Albums, that feature various artists, also known as samplers or compilations.

If a track belongs to a compilation is again decided by the existence and value of special tagging information. First, it is checked if cmus should use a special artist name (e.g.: 'Fatboy Slim' for a DJ set). If so, that one will be used instead of the real artist name.

If that special name tag is not set, cmus checks if another tag is set. If that is the case, the album will be given the special artist name <Various Artists>. Albums filed under <Various Artists> are sorted alphanumerically by album name instead of by date.

That way, you do not end up with compilation tracks scattered around your library view.

The problem with compilation tagging is, that there is no generic tag or method, that can be regarded as a standard across all different formats, supported by cmus.

For mp3, the special-name tag would be the id3v2 TPE2 frame. The mark-as-compilation tag is the TCMP frame (which is a user defined id3v2.3 frame, used at least by amarok and apple's iTunes[tm]).

For vorbis style tags (for example in ogg vorbis and flac files), the special-name tag is ALBUMARTIST and the mark-as-compilation tag is COMPILATION. Vorbis tags names are case insensitive.

COMMANDS

This section describes cmus' commands. You can bind a key to any of these commands, put these commands to configuration files and execute them in command mode. Also cmus-remote uses these commands in its protocol.

Optional parameters are in brackets, obligatory parameters in angle brackets and default key bindings in parenthesis.

add [-l] [-p] [-q] [-Q] <file|dir|url|playlist>

Add file/dir/url/playlist to the specified view or the current view.

-l

add to library

-p

add to playlist

-q

add play queue

-Q

prepend to play queue

URL is a Shoutcast stream (http://...) or a CDDA URL (cdda://...) (see PLAYING AUDIO DISCS).

Supported playlist: plain, .m3u, .pls.

bind [-f] <context> <key> <command>

Add a key binding.

-f

overwrite existing binding

Use tab to expand contexts, keys and commands. Command is any command listed in this section.

Valid key contexts

common, library (1-2), playlist (3), queue (4), browser (5), filters (6)

There's one context for each view. Common is a special context on which bound keys work in every view.

You can override specific keys in common context for a view. For example i selects the current track in views 1-3 but in browser it is overridden to toggle showing of hidden files.

browser-up (backspace)

Change to parent directory in browser view (5). This command only makes sense to be bound to the browser key context although it's possible to use this even if browser view is not active.

cd [directory]

Changes the current working directory. Changes the directory displayed in browser view too.

clear [-l] [-p] [-q]

Remove all tracks from the specified view or the current view.

-l

clear library

-p

clear playlist

-q

clear play queue

colorscheme <name>

Change color scheme. Color schemes are found in /usr/share/cmus/ or ~/.cmus/ and have .theme filename extension.

echo <arg>...

Display arguments on the command line.

If the arguments contain {} it is replaced with file name of the first selected track.

NOTE: unlike with run the {} is replaced with only the first selected filename.

Default bindings:

common  I   echo {}
common  ^C  echo Type :quit<enter> to exit cmus.

factivate <user-defined-filter>...

Select and activate the given user defined filters (displayed in the filters view). Filter names are separated by spaces. This command is mostly useful when bound to a key, to change active filters very quickly. If no arguments given then all filters are unactivated.

If you prefix a filter name with "!" then the filter value is negated before activation.

filter <filter-expression>

Use this command when you want to temporarily filter contents of the library views without having separately define (fset) and activate the filter. The filter is not saved.

fset <name>=<filter-expression>

Define (or replace existing) filter and add it to filters view (6).

invert

Invert the marking of tracks in playlist and queue views. See mark and unmark.

live-filter <simple-filter-expression|short-filter-expression>

Use this command when you want to temporarily filter contents of the library views without having separately define (fset) and activate the filter. The filter is not saved.

load [-l] [-p] <playlist>

Load a playlist to the specified view or to the current view.

-l

load to library views

-p

load to playlist view

lqueue [NUM]

Queue NUM (default 1) random albums from the library. See also tqueue.

mark <filter-expression>

Mark tracks in playlist and queue view by using a filter expression.

player-next (b)

Skip to the next track.

player-pause (c)

Toggle pause.

player-play [filename] (x)

Play the given track, or, if none is specified, [re]play the current track from the beginning.

player-prev (z)

Skip to the previous track.

player-stop (v)

Stop playback.

prev-view

Go to previously used view.

push <text>

Enter command mode with the command line pre-set to text. Example:

bind common w push filter artist=

Text can contain spaces and even trailing spaces will be honored. This command can only be bound to a key but not used in the command line directly.

quit [-i] (q, :wq)

Exit cmus.

-i

ask before exiting

refresh (^L)

Redraw the terminal window.

run <command>

Run command for the marked tracks OR the selected one if none marked.

By default file names are appended to the command. If the command contains {} it is replaced with list of filenames.

NOTE: In view 1 you can run a command for all files in the selected album or artist.

save [-e] [-l] [-L] [-p] [-q] [file] (:w)

Save the specified view's or the current view's contents to a playlist file. In extended mode (-e), also save metadata.

-l

save library views

-L

save filtered library views

-p

save playlist view

-q

save queue view

If no filename given the old filename is used. "-" outputs to stdout (works only remotely).

search-next (n)

If a search pattern has been entered before, search forward for the next match in the current view. See SEARCHING above.

search-prev (N)

If a search pattern has been entered before, search backwards for the previous match in the current view. See SEARCHING above.

seek [+-](<num>[mh] | [HH:]MM:SS)

Seek to absolute or relative position. Position can be given in seconds, minutes (m), hours (h) or HH:MM:SS format where HH: is optional.

Seek 1 minute backward

:seek -1m

Seek 5 seconds forward

:seek +5

Seek to absolute position 1h

:seek 1h

Seek 90 seconds forward

:seek +1:30

Default bindings:

common  ,      :seek -1m
common  .      :seek +1m
common  l      :seek +5
common  h      :seek -5
common  right  :seek +5
common  left   :seek -5

set <option>=<value>

Set value of an option. See OPTIONS.

set <option>

Display option value. Vim compatible set <option>? is also supported.

shell <command>

Execute a command via /bin/sh.

showbind <context> <key>

Show key binding.

shuffle

Reshuffle the shuffle lists for both library and playlist views.

source <filename>

Read and execute commands from <filename>.

toggle <option>

Toggle value of a toggle-able option (all booleans and tristate aaa_mode).

tqueue [NUM]

Queue NUM (default 1) random tracks from the library. See also lqueue.

unbind [-f] <context> <key>

Remove a key binding. Use tab to cycle through bound keys.

-f

Don't throw an error if the binding is not known

unmark

Unmark all tracks (see mark).

update-cache [-f]

Update track metadata cache (~/.cmus/cache). Only files with changed modification time or removed files are considered.

-f

Update all files. Same as quit, rm -f ~/.cmus/cache, start cmus.

view <name or 1-7>

Switches active view.

vol [+-]NUM[%] [[+-]NUM[%]]

Set, increase or decrease volume.

If you give vol just one argument it changes both channels. Two values make it possible to change the left and right channel independently.

To increase or decrease volume prefix the value with - or +, otherwise value is treated as absolute volume.

Both absolute and relative values can be given as percentage units (suffixed with %) or as internal values (hardware may have volume in range 0-31 for example).

Default bindings:

common  =  :vol +10%
common  +  :vol +10%
common  -  :vol -10%
common  [  :vol +1% +0%
common  ]  :vol +0% +1%
common  {  :vol -1% -0%
common  }  :vol -0% -1%

win-activate (enter)

In views 1-3 start playing the selected track. In view 5 start playing the selected track or change to the selected directory. In view 6 activate the selected filters. In settings view (7) change binding or variable.

win-add-l (a)

Add the currently marked or selected track(s) (views 3-4), or the currently selected file or directory (view 5) to the library.

Analogous to :add -l

win-add-p (y)

Add the currently marked or selected track(s) (views 1-2, 4), or the currently selected file or directory (view 5) to the playlist.

Analogous to :add -p

win-add-Q (E)

Prepend the currently marked or selected track(s) (views 1-3), or the currently selected file or directory (view 5) to the play queue.

Analogous to :add -Q

win-add-q (e)

Add the currently marked or selected track(s) (views 1-3), or the currently selected file or directory (view 5) to the play queue.

Analogous to :add -q

win-bottom (G, end)

Goto bottom of the current window.

win-down (j, down)

Goto down one row in the current window.

win-mv-after (p)

If no tracks are marked, move the selected track down one row. If any tracks are marked, move the marked tracks after the currently selected track. This command works in unsorted playlist and play queue view.

win-mv-before (P)

If no tracks are marked, move the selected track up one row. If any tracks are marked, move the marked tracks before the currently selected track. This command works in unsorted playlist and play queue view.

win-next (tab)

Activate next window. Only relevant in view 1.

win-page-bottom

Goto the bottom of the visible part of the current window.

win-page-down (^F, page_down)

Goto down one page in the current window.

win-page-middle

Goto the middle of the visible part of the current window.

win-page-top

Goto the top of the visible part of the current window.

win-page-up (^B, page_up)

Goto up one page in the current window.

win-remove (D, delete)

Remove the selected entry. For tracks no confirmations are made. For files (view 5), filters (view 6) and bindings (view 7) user has to confirm the action.

win-sel-cur (i)

Select the current track (position in library or playlist, not necessarily same as the currently playing track). Works only in views 1-3, does nothing in other views.

win-toggle (space)

Expand albums in library view (1), mark tracks in views 2-4, toggle selection of a filter in view 6, toggle variable value in view 7.

win-top (g, home)

Goto top of the current window.

win-up (k, up)

Goto up one row in the current window.

win-update (u)

Checks the modification time of the files in the library, and updates metadata for changed files. Removes non-existent files from the library.

Reloads contents of directory in the browser view.

Only works in views 1-2 and 5, does nothing in other views.

win-update-cache [-f]

Same as update-cache, but only for marked / selected tracks. Only works in views 1-2, does nothing in other views.

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS

This section describes cmus' options that can be altered with the set and toggle commands. Default values are in parenthesis, possible values in brackets.

auto_reshuffle (true)

Reshuffle playlist when end of shuffle list is reached.

aaa_mode (all) [all, artist, album]

Defines what tracks should be played in the library view. Not used in the other views. For example if set to artist the player behaves like there were only the files of the currently playing artist in the library.

altformat_current [Format String]

Alternative format string for the line displaying currently playing track.

altformat_playlist [Format String]

Alternative format string for the list views (2-4).

altformat_title [Format String]

Alternative format string for terminal title. NOTE: not all terminals support changing window title.

altformat_trackwin [Format String]

Alternative format string for the tree view's (1) track window.

buffer_seconds (10) [1-300]

Size of player buffer in seconds.

color_cmdline_bg (default) [Color]

Command line background color.

color_cmdline_fg (default) [Color]

Command line foreground color.

color_cmdline_attr (default) [Attributes]

Command line attributes.

color_error (lightred) [Color]

Color of error messages displayed on the command line.

color_info (lightyellow) [Color]

Color of informational messages displayed on the command line.

color_separator (blue) [Color]

Color of the separator line between windows in view (1).

color_statusline_bg (gray) [Color]

Status line background color.

color_statusline_fg (black) [Color]

Status line foreground color.

color_statusline_attr (default) [Attributes]

Status line attributes.

color_titleline_bg (blue) [Color]

Background color of the line displaying currently playing track.

color_titleline_fg (white) [Color]

Foreground color of the line displaying currently playing track.

color_titleline_attr (default) [Attributes]

Attributes of the line displaying currently playing track.

color_win_bg (default) [Color]

Window background color.

color_win_cur (lightyellow) [Color]

Color of currently playing track.

color_win_cur_sel_bg (blue) [Color]

Background color of the selected row which is also the currently playing track in active window.

color_win_cur_sel_fg (lightyellow) [Color]

Foreground color of the selected row which is also the currently playing track in active window.

color_win_cur_sel_attr (default) [Attributes]

Attributes of the selected row which is also the currently playing track in active window.

color_win_dir (lightblue) [Color]

Color of directories in browser.

color_win_fg (default) [Color]

Window foreground color.

color_win_attr (default) [Attributes]

Window attributes.

color_win_inactive_cur_sel_bg (gray) [Color]

Background color of the selected row which is also the currently playing track in inactive window.

color_win_inactive_cur_sel_fg (lightyellow) [Color]

Foreground color of the selected row which is also the currently playing track in inactive window.

color_win_inactive_cur_sel_attr (default) [Attributes]

Attributes of the selected row which is also the currently playing track in inactive window.

color_win_inactive_sel_bg (gray) [Color]

Background color of selected row in inactive window.

color_win_inactive_sel_fg (black) [Color]

Foreground color of selected row in inactive window.

color_win_inactive_sel_attr (default) [Attributes]

Attributes of selected row in inactive window.

color_win_sel_bg (blue) [Color]

Background color of selected row in active window.

color_win_sel_fg (white) [Color]

Foreground color of selected row in active window.

color_win_sel_attr (default) [Attributes]

Attributes of selected row in active window.

color_win_title_bg (blue) [Color]

Background color of window titles (topmost line of the screen).

color_win_title_fg (white) [Color]

Foreground color of window titles (topmost line of the screen).

color_win_title_attr (default) [Attributes]

Attributes of window titles (topmost line of the screen).

confirm_run (true)

Ask for confirmation before executing :run

continue (true)

Continue playing after current track finishes.

device (/dev/cdrom)

CDDA device file.

display_artist_sort_name (false)

If enabled, always displays artist names used for sorting instead of regular ones in tree view (e.g. "Artist, The" instead of "The Artist"), so that artists column looks alphabetically sorted.

format_current [Format String]

Format string for the line displaying currently playing track.

format_playlist [Format String]

Format string for the list views (2-4).

format_playlist_va [Format String]

Format string for the list views (2-4), if a track is assumed to be a part of compilation (see LIBRARY VIEW SORTING for details).

format_title [Format String]

Format string for terminal title.

NOTE: not all terminals support changing window title.

format_trackwin [Format String]

Format string for the tree view's (1) track window.

format_trackwin_va [Format String]

Format string for the tree view's (1) track window, if a track is assumed to be a part of compilation (see LIBRARY VIEW SORTING for details).

smart_artist_sort (true)

If enabled, makes tree view sorting ignore "The" in front of artist names, preventing artists starting with "The" from clumping together. Real artistsort tags override this option, when present.

id3_default_charset (ISO-8859-1)

Default character set to use for ID3v1 and broken ID3v2 tags.

NOTE: This is used only if the tag is not valid UTF-8.

icecast_default_charset (ISO-8859-1)

Default character set to use for non-UTF-8 icecast stream metadata.

NOTE: This is used only if the metadata is not valid UTF-8.

lib_sort (artist album discnumber tracknumber title filename) [Sort Keys]

Sort keys for the sorted library view (2).

output_plugin [roar, pulse, alsa, arts, oss, sun]

Name of output plugin.

pl_sort () [Sort Keys]

Sort keys for the playlist view (3). Empty value disables sorting and enables manually moving tracks.

play_library (true)

Play tracks from the library instead of playlist.

play_sorted (false)

Play tracks from the library in the sorted view (2) order instead of tree view (1) order. Used only when play_library is true.

repeat (false)

Repeat after all tracks played.

repeat_current (false)

Repeat current track forever.

replaygain (disabled)

Enable Replay Gain. Default is "disabled". Set to "track", "album", "track-preferred" or "album-preferred".

replaygain_limit (true)

Use replay gain limiting when clipping.

replaygain_preamp (6.0)

Replay gain preamplification in decibels.

resume (false)

Resume playback on startup.

scroll_offset (2) [0-9999]

Minimal number of screen lines to keep above and below the cursor.

show_hidden (false)

Display hidden files in browser.

show_current_bitrate (false)

Display current bitrate in the status lines.

show_remaining_time (false)

Display remaining time instead of elapsed time.

shuffle (false)

Play in shuffled order. Shuffle works in the library views (1-2) and playlist view (3).

skip_track_info (false)

Don't load metadata when adding tracks. Useful when using network file system and having huge amount of files. Tags can be loaded using 'update-cache' or 'win-update-cache' commands.

softvol (false)

Use software volume control.

NOTE: You should probably set this to false when using ao as output_plugin to output to wav files.

softvol_state (100 100)

Used to save left and right channel values for software volume control. Two integers in range 0..100 separated by a space. This option is not usually changed directly since vol command does same thing if softvol is true.

status_display_program () [command]

This command, if not empty, is run every time cmus' status changes. It can be used to display currently playing track on desktop background or panel for example. See /usr/share/doc/cmus/examples/cmus-status-display.

wrap_search (true)

Controls whether the search wraps around the end.

Colors

Color is integer in range -1..255.

The following color names are recognized:

Terminal's default color, -1

default

Fg & bg, 0..7

black, red, green, yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, gray

Fg, 8..15

darkgray, lightred, lightgreen, lightyellow, lightblue, lightmagenta, lightcyan, white

Attributes

Attributes is a set of names "standout|bold":

default does nothing, if you put it with other attributes the other attributes will be used.

standout makes the text standout.

bold makes the text bold.

reverse reverses the text colors.

underline underlines the text.

blink makes the text blink.

Format Strings

Format strings control display of tracks in library, playlist and play queue views.

NOTE: altformat_* options are used when there are no tags available.

Special Keys:

%a %{artist}

%A %{albumartist}

%l %{album}

%D %{discnumber}

%n %{tracknumber}

%t %{title}

%g %{genre}

%c %{comment}

%y %{date}

%d %{duration}

%f %{path}

%F %{filename}

    %{originaldate}
    %{bitrate}
    %{codec}
    %{codec_profile}
    %{rg_track_gain}
    %{rg_track_peak}
    %{rg_album_gain}
    %{rg_album_peak}
    %{arranger}
    %{composer}
    %{conductor}
    %{lyricist}
    %{performer}
    %{remixer}
    %{label}
    %{publisher}
    %{work}
    %{opus}
    %{partnumber}
    %{part}
    %{subtitle}
    %{media}

%=

start align right (use at most once)

%%

literal %

You can use printf style formatting (width, alignment, padding). As an extension, the width can have a %-suffix, to specify a percentage of the terminal width.

To see current value of an option type :set option=<TAB>.

Note: With %{bitrate}, you'll have to append the unit yourself, as mentioned in the example below.

Examples:

:set format_trackwin= %02n. %t (%y)%= %d
:set format_current= %n. %-30t %40F (%y)%= %d
:set format_current= %a - %l - %02n. %t%= %{bitrate}Kbps %g %y
:set format_playlist= %f%= %6{rg_track_gain} dB  %8{rg_track_peak}
:set format_playlist= %-25%a %-15%l %3n. %t%= %y %d

Sort Keys

Sort option (lib_sort, pl_sort) value is space separated list of the following sort keys:

artist, album, title, tracknumber, discnumber, date, originaldate, genre, comment, albumartist, filename, filemtime, bitrate, codec, media, codec_profile, rg_track_gain, rg_track_peak, rg_album_gain, rg_album_peak

PLUGIN OPTIONS

dsp.alsa.device

PCM device for ALSA plugin, usually "default".

mixer.alsa.channel

Mixer channel for ALSA Plugin, usually "pcm", "master" or "headphone". To see all possible values run "alsamixer" or "amixer".

mixer.alsa.device

Mixer device for ALSA plugin, usually "default".

mixer.pulse.restore_volume

Restore the volume at startup using PulseAudio. Otherwise, cmus sets the volume to 100%, which does not mix well with "flat volumes" feature of PA. Defaults to "1"; set to "0" to turn off.

dsp.ao.buffer_size

Buffer size, default is 16kB (but you may want to try bigger values if you experience buffer under-runs).

dsp.ao.driver

Output driver for libao plugin. Example values: "alsa09", "esd", "irix", "oss", "sun", "aixs", "wav".

NOTE: of the file output drivers only "wav" is supported.

dsp.ao.wav_counter

Counter used for making filename. Used only if dsp.ao.driver is "wav". For example if this is 1 and dsp.ao.wav_dir is "/home/user" then PCM data is outputted to "/home/user/01.wav". This counter is incremented every time playback is stopped.

NOTE: you probably want to set continue to false (press C), otherwise playback is not stopped between tracks and all PCM data is outputted to one wav file (useful if you want to join files). Also unsetting shuffle and repeat might be good idea.

dsp.ao.wav_dir

Output directory for libao plugin, default is your home directory. Used only if dsp.ao.driver is "wav".

input.cdio.cddb_url

CDDB URL (default: freedb.freedb.org:8880). Use HTTP protocol if prefixed with "http://" (e.g.: http://freedb.musicbrainz.org:80/~cddb/cddb.cgi). Set to an empty string to disable CDDB lookup completely.

dsp.oss.device

PCM device for OSS plugin, usually /dev/dsp.

mixer.oss.channel

Mixer channel for OSS Plugin, "pcm" or "master".

mixer.oss.device

Mixer device for OSS plugin, usually /dev/mixer.

dsp.roar.server

Address of RoarAudio server. Defaults to internal defaults. Can be UNIX, TCP/IP or DECnet address.

dsp.roar.role [music, background_music, ...]

Role for stream. May be used by the server to apply additional defaults.

dsp.sun.device

PCM device for Sun plugin, usually /dev/audio.

mixer.sun.channel

Mixer channel for Sun Plugin, usually "master".

mixer.sun.device

Mixer device for Sun plugin, usually /dev/mixer.

PLAYING AUDIO DISCS

With the cdio input plugin enabled, it is possible to play Audio CDs and CD images. Just set the device option to either a device file (e.g. /dev/cdrom) or an image file (e.g. ~/cd.cue). Then add a new track using the CDDA URL scheme, e.g.:

:add cdda://2

To add the whole disc, use cdda:// (without track number). This is currently only working for audio discs, not images. Adding track ranges is also possible (cdda://1-3). To add images without changing the device option, it is possible to include the image path in the URL, e.g.:

:add cdda:///path/to/cd.cue/2-5

The metadata will be read from CD-Text, and if not available, looked up from a CDDB server (see input.cdio.cddb_url).

FILTERS

Filters are used mostly for filtering contents of library views (1 & 2). Filters do not change the actual library content, i.e. :save command will still save all tracks to playlist file whether they are visible or not.

Types

There are three types of filter expressions, each offering more expressiveness:

simple

e.g. beatles

short

e.g. ~a beatles (!~y1960-1965 | ~d>600)

long

e.g. artist="*beatles*"&album="R*"

Simple expressions are only available using live-filter. For other filter commands the type is auto-detected, so both short and long expressions can be used.

Long expressions are lists of built-in filters or user defined filters separated with & (and) or | (or). Parenthesis can be used group subexpressions and ! negates result of the expression following it. Same is true for short expressions, but they can only be made of built-in filters. Also (and)-grouping is done implicitly.

Strings

long

filename, artist, albumartist, album, title, genre, comment, codec, codec_profile, media

Comparators: = and != (not equal)

short

~f, ~a, ~A, ~l, ~t, ~g, ~c

Comparators: none

Integers

long

discnumber, tracknumber, date (year), originaldate (year), duration (seconds), bitrate

Comparators: <, <=, =, >=, >, !=

short

~D, ~n, ~y, ~d

Comparators: <, >

Ranges: a-b (>=a&<=b), -b (<=b), a- (>=a)

Booleans

tag (true if track has tags), stream (true if track is a stream)

For short expressions: ~T and ~s

Defining Filters

Filters can be defined with fset command. User defined filters appear in the filters view (6).

Create a new filter which name is ogg and value filename="*.ogg"

:fset ogg=filename="*.ogg"

Filter ogg and mp3 files from the 90s. Note the use of user defined filter ogg

:fset 90s-ogg-mp3=date>=1990&date<2000&(ogg|filename="*.mp3")

Activating Filters

factivate changes visible contents of the library (views 1-2).

Activate user defined filters ogg and missing-tags

:factivate ogg missing-tags

Like above but negate value of ogg filter.

:factivate !ogg missing-tags

Alternatively you can select the filters by pressing space in view 6 and then activate the selected filters by pressing enter.

Throw-away Filters

live-filter and filter commands are useful when you want to use a filter only once and not save it. It changes visible contents of the library (views 1-2). filter unactivates all filters in the filters view, while live-filter is applied in addition to all currently activated filters.

Filter all rock (anything with rock in genre tag) music from 80s-

:filter date>=1980&genre="*rock*"

:filter ~y1980-~grock

Filter all artists/albums/titles containing "sleepwalking"

:live-filter sleepwalking

Selecting Tracks Matching a Filter

Mark (select) all tracks with duration less than 2 minutes

:mark duration<120

This command works in views 2-4.

FILES

cmus reads its configuration from 3 different places.

~/.cmus/autosave

This is the first file cmus loads. cmus saves its state on exit to this file so you shouldn't edit it.

/usr/share/cmus/rc

If the autosave file didn't exist, this file is read instead.

~/.cmus/rc

Static config file. This file is read immediately after the autosave file, and is never modified by cmus. You can override auto-saved settings in this file. This file is not limited to options, it can contain other commands too.

Color Schemes

There are some color schemes (*.theme) in /usr/share/cmus. You can switch them using the :colorscheme command. You can put your own color schemes to ~/.cmus.

Examples

Example status display script (See status_display_program option) can be found in /usr/share/doc/cmus/examples.

ENVIRONMENT

CMUS_CHARSET

Override cmus character set (default: `locale charmap`).

CMUS_HOME

Override cmus config directory (default: $HOME/.cmus).

HOME

Full path of the user's home directory.

http_proxy

URI of the proxy to use for HTTP requests.

USER

Name of the user running cmus.

USERNAME

Fallback for USER.

BUGS

After a crash last lines of ~/cmus-debug.txt might contain useful information. The file exists only if you configured cmus with maximum debug level (./configure DEBUG=2).

Feature requests and bug reports should go to the cmus-devel mailing list:

http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/cmus-devel

RELATED TO cmus…

AUTHORS

cmus was mainly written by Timo Hirvonen <[email protected]>. Other contributers are listed in the AUTHORS file.

This man page was written by Frank Terbeck <[email protected]>, Timo Hirvonen <[email protected]>, and Clay Barnes <[email protected]>.