Software:cdparanoia
| Stable release | III 10.2
/ September 11, 2008 |
|---|---|
| Operating system | Linux |
| Type | CD ripper |
| License | GNU General Public License |
| Website | xiph.org/paranoia |
cdparanoia is a command-line compact disc ripper for Unix-like operating systems and BeOS developed by Xiph.org. It is designed to be a minimalistic CD ripper which would compensate for sub-par hardware to produce an accurate rip.[1]
libparanoia is a portable and platform-independent library which was made from important components from from the Linux/gcc-only program cdparanoia. Libparanoia is part of the cdrtools suite.
Design
libparanoia is the foundation of the project and does most of the work; the application cdparanoia is its frontend. (The current stable release of the library is Paranoia III.) cdparanoia is by design slow and thorough in ripping every bit from a CD, with the maximum number of default passes or reads being 20.[2] A live output shows the progress and status denoted by emoticons.[3][4] It can save the audio from discs as WAV, AIFF, AIFF-C, or raw format files.
Several programs provide a graphical frontend to cdparanoia itself, among them RubyRipper[5] and Sound Juicer.[6]
Status indicators
One of the quirks of cdparanoia, in keeping with its minimalist design, is that the ripping status is indicated with an emoticon.
:-) Normal operation, low/no jitter :-| Normal operation, considerable jitter :-/ Read drift :-P Unreported loss of streaming in atomic read operation 8-| Finding read problems at same point during re-read; hard to correct :-0 SCSI/ATAPI transport error :-( Scratch detected ;-( Gave up trying to perform a correction 8-X Aborted read due to known, uncorrectable error :^D Finished extracting
See also
- Compact disc digital audio
- Cdrtools
- cdrkit
- Exact Audio Copy
- Sound Juicer
Notes
- ↑ Emms, Steve (2023-10-19). "cdparanoia - extracts audio from compact discs directly as data" (in en-GB). https://www.linuxlinks.com/cdparanoia/.
- ↑ Oxer, Jonathan; Rankin, Kyle; Childers, Bill (2006-06-14) (in en). Ubuntu Hacks: Tips & Tools for Exploring, Using, and Tuning Linux. "O'Reilly Media, Inc.". pp. 125. ISBN 978-0-596-55146-9. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Ubuntu_Hacks/HZ37FT3unW8C.
- ↑ Siever, Ellen; Figgins, Stephen; Love, Robert; Robbins, Arnold (2009-09-19) (in en). Linux in a Nutshell: A Desktop Quick Reference. "O'Reilly Media, Inc.". pp. 69. ISBN 978-1-4493-7920-9. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Linux_in_a_Nutshell/gBG7z8smAcsC.
- ↑ Rankin, Kyle (2006) (in en). Linux Multimedia Hacks: Tips & Tools for Taming Images, Audio, and Video. "O'Reilly Media, Inc.". pp. 67. ISBN 978-0-596-10076-6. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Linux_Multimedia_Hacks/MaebAgAAQBAJ.
- ↑ Serrano, Matt (2009-01-06). "Audio Archiving Guide: Part 2 – CD Ripping – Techgage" (in en-US). https://techgage.com/article/audio_archiving_guide_part_2_-_cd_ripping/3/.
- ↑ Garrison, Justin (2010-06-23). "Rip Audio CDs in Linux with Sound Juicer" (in en). https://www.howtogeek.com/20126/rip-audio-cds-with-sound-juicer/.
External links
