forked-daapd is a Linux/FreeBSD DAAP (iTunes), MPD (Music Player Daemon) and RSP (Roku) media server.
It supports AirPlay devices/speakers, Apple Remote (and compatibles), MPD clients, Chromecast, network streaming, internet radio, Spotify and LastFM.
It does not support streaming video by AirPlay nor Chromecast.
DAAP stands for Digital Audio Access Protocol which is the protocol used by iTunes and friends to share/stream media libraries over the network.
forked-daapd is a complete rewrite of mt-daapd (Firefly Media Server).
Before you continue, make sure you know what version of forked-daapd you have, and what features it was built with (e.g. Spotify support).
How to find out? Go to the web interface and check. No web interface? Then check the top of forked-daapd's log file (usually /var/log/forked-daapd.log).
Note that you are viewing a snapshot of the instructions that may or may not match the version of forked-daapd that you are using. Go to references to find instructions for previous versions of forked-daapd.
If you are looking for help on building forked-daapd (not using it), then please see the INSTALL file.
- Getting started
- Supported clients
- Web interface
- Using Remote
- AirPlay devices/speakers
- Chromecast
- Local audio through ALSA
- Local audio, Bluetooth and more through Pulseaudio
- MP3 network streaming (streaming to iOS)
- Remote access
- Supported formats
- Playlists and internet radio
- Artwork
- Library
- Command line
- Spotify
- LastFM
- MPD clients
- References
After installation (see INSTALL) do the following:
- Edit the configuration file (usually
/etc/forked-daapd.conf
) to suit your needs - Start or restart the server (usually
/etc/init.d/forked-daapd restart
) - Go to the web interface http://forked-daapd.local:3689, or, if that won't work, to http://[your_server_address_here]:3689
- Wait for the library scan to complete
- If you will be using a remote, e.g. Apple Remote: Start the remote, go to Settings, Add Library
- Enter the pair code in the web interface (update the page with F5 if it does not automatically pick up the pairing request)
forked-daapd supports these kinds of clients:
- DAAP clients, like iTunes or Rhythmbox
- Remote clients, like Apple Remote or compatibles for Android/Windows Phone
- AirPlay devices, like AirPort Express, Shairport and various AirPlay speakers
- Chromecast devices
- MPD clients, like mpc (see mpd-clients)
- MP3 network stream clients, like VLC and almost any other music player
- RSP clients, like Roku Soundbridge
Like iTunes, you can control forked-daapd with Remote and stream your music to AirPlay devices.
A single forked-daapd instance can handle several clients concurrently, regardless of the protocol.
By default all clients on 192.168.* (and the ipv6 equivalent) are allowed to connect without authentication. You can change that in the configuration file.
Here is a list of working and non-working DAAP and Remote clients. The list is probably obsolete when you read it :-)
Client | Developer | Type | Platform | Working (vers.) |
---|---|---|---|---|
iTunes | Apple | DAAP | Win, OSX | Yes (12.7) |
Rhythmbox | Gnome | DAAP | Linux | Yes |
Diapente | diapente | DAAP | Android | Yes |
WinAmp DAAPClient | WardFamily | DAAP | WinAmp | Yes |
Amarok w/DAAP plugin | KDE | DAAP | Linux/Win | Yes (2.8.0) |
Banshee | DAAP | Linux/Win/OSX | No (2.6.2) | |
jtunes4 | DAAP | Java | No | |
Firefly Client | (DAAP) | Java | No | |
Remote | Apple | Remote | iOS | Yes (4.3) |
Retune | SquallyDoc | Remote | Android | Yes (3.5.23) |
TunesRemote+ | Melloware | Remote | Android | Yes (2.5.3) |
Remote for iTunes | Hyperfine | Remote | Android | Yes |
Remote for Windows Phone | Komodex | Remote | Windows Phone | Yes (2.2.1.0) |
TunesRemote SE | Remote | Java | Yes (r108) | |
rtRemote for Windows | bizmodeller | Remote | Windows | Yes (1.2.0.67) |
You can find forked-daapd's web interface at http://forked-daapd.local:3689 or alternatively at http://[your_server_address_here]:3689.
Use the web interface to control playback, trigger manual library rescans, pair with remotes, select speakers, authenticate with Spotify, etc.
You can find some screenshots and build instructions in README_PLAYER_WEBINTERFACE.md.
Remote gets a list of output devices from the server; this list includes any and all devices on the network we know of that advertise AirPlay: AirPort Express, Apple TV, ... It also includes the local audio output, that is, the sound card on the server (even if there is no soundcard).
If no output is selected when playback starts, forked-daapd will try to autoselect a device.
forked-daapd remembers your selection and the individual volume for each output device; selected devices will be automatically re-selected, except if they return online during playback.
- Open the web interface
- Start Remote, go to Settings, Add Library
- Enter the pair code in the web interface (update the page with F5 if it does not automatically pick up the pairing request)
If Remote doesn't connect to forked-daapd after you entered the pairing code something went wrong. Check the log file to see the error message. Here are some common reasons:
You will see an error in the log about pairing failure with a HTTP response code that is not 0. Solution: Try again.
If you see an error in the log with either:
- a HTTP response code that is 0
- "Empty pairing request callback" it means that forked-daapd could not establish a connection to Remote. This might be a network issue, your router may not be allowing multicast between the Remote device and the host forked-daapd is running on. Solution 1: Sometimes it resolves the issue if you force Remote to quit, restart it and do the pairing proces again. Another trick is to establish some other connection (eg SSH) from the iPod/iPhone/iPad to the host. Solution 2: Check your router settings if you can whitelist multicast addresses under IGMP settings. For Apple Bonjour, setting a multicast address of 224.0.0.251 and a netmask of 255.255.255.255 should work.
Otherwise try using avahi-browse for troubleshooting:
- in a terminal, run
avahi-browse -r -k _touch-remote._tcp
- start Remote, goto Settings, Add Library
- after a couple seconds at most, you should get something similar to this:
+ ath0 IPv4 59eff13ea2f98dbbef6c162f9df71b784a3ef9a3 _touch-remote._tcp local
= ath0 IPv4 59eff13ea2f98dbbef6c162f9df71b784a3ef9a3 _touch-remote._tcp local
hostname = [Foobar.local]
address = [192.168.1.1]
port = [49160]
txt = ["DvTy=iPod touch" "RemN=Remote" "txtvers=1" "RemV=10000" "Pair=FAEA410630AEC05E" "DvNm=Foobar"]
Hit Ctrl-C to terminate avahi-browse.
To check for network issues you can try to connect to address and port with telnet.
forked-daapd will discover the AirPlay devices available on your network. For devices that are password-protected, the device's AirPlay name and password must be given in the configuration file. See the sample configuration file for the syntax.
If your Apple TV requires device verification (always required by Apple TV4 with tvOS 10.2) then you can do that through the web interface: Select the device and then enter the PIN that the Apple TV displays.
For troubleshooting, see using Remote.
forked-daapd will discover Chromecast devices available on your network. There is no configuration to be done. This feature relies on streaming the audio in mp3 to your Chromecast device, which means that mp3 encoding must be supported by your ffmpeg/libav. See MP3 network streaming.
In the config file, you can select ALSA for local audio. This is the default.
When using ALSA, the server will try to syncronize playback with AirPlay. You can adjust the syncronization in the config file.
In the config file, you can select Pulseaudio for local audio. In addition to local audio, Pulseaudio also supports an array of other targets, e.g. Bluetooth or DLNA. However, Pulseaudio does require some setup, so here is a separate page with some help on that: README_PULSE.md
Note that if you select Pulseaudio the "card" setting in the config file has no effect. Instead all soundcards detected by Pulseaudio will be listed as speakers by forked-daapd.
You can adjust the latency of Pulseaudio playback in the config file.
You can listen to audio being played by forked-daapd by opening this network stream address in pretty much any music player:
http://[your hostname/ip address]:3689/stream.mp3
This is currently the only way of listening to your audio on iOS devices, since Apple does not allow AirPlay receiver apps, and because Apple Home Sharing cannot be supported by forked-daapd. So what you can do instead is install a music player app like VLC, connect to the stream and control playback with Remote. You can also use MPoD in "On the go"-mode, where control and playback is integrated in one app (see (#mpd-clients)).
Note that MP3 encoding must be supported by ffmpeg/libav for this to work. If it is not available you will see a message in the log file. In Debian/Ubuntu you get MP3 encoding support by installing the package "libavcodec-extra".
It is possible to access a shared library over the internet from a DAAP client like iTunes. You must have remote access to the host machine.
First log in to the host and forward port 3689 to your local machine. You now need to broadcast the daap service to iTunes on your local machine. On macOS the command is:
dns-sd -P iTunesServer _daap._tcp local 3689 localhost.local 127.0.0.1 "ffid=12345"
The ffid
key is required but its value does not matter.
Your library will now appear as 'iTunesServer' in iTunes.
forked-daapd should support pretty much all audio formats. It relies on libav (or ffmpeg) to extract metadata and decode the files on the fly when the client doesn't support the format.
Formats are attributed a code, so any new format will need to be explicitely added. Currently supported:
- MPEG4: mp4a, mp4v
- AAC: alac
- MP3 (and friends): mpeg
- FLAC: flac
- OGG VORBIS: ogg
- Musepack: mpc
- WMA: wma (WMA Pro), wmal (WMA Lossless), wmav (WMA video)
- AIFF: aif
- WAV: wav
- Monkey's audio: ape
forked-daapd supports M3U and PLS playlists. Just drop your playlist somewhere in your library with an .m3u or .pls extension and it will pick it up.
If the playlist contains an http URL it will be added as an internet radio station, and the URL will be probed for Shoutcast (ICY) metadata. If the radio station provides artwork, forked-daapd will download it during playback and send it to any remotes or AirPlay devices requesting it.
Instead of downloading M3U's from your radio stations, you can also make an empty M3U file and in it insert links to the M3U's of your radio stations.
Support for iTunes Music Library XML format is available as a compile-time option. By default, metadata from our parsers is preferred over what's in the iTunes DB; use itunes_overrides = true if you prefer iTunes' metadata.
forked-daapd has support for smart playlists. How to create a smart playlist is documented in README_SMARTPL.md.
forked-daapd has support for PNG and JPEG artwork which is either:
- embedded in the media files
- placed as separate image files in the library
- made available online by the radio station
For media in your library, forked-daapd will try to locate album and artist artwork (group artwork) by the following procedure:
- if a file {artwork,cover,Folder}.{png,jpg} is found in one of the directories containing files that are part of the group, it is used as the artwork. The first file found is used, ordering is not guaranteed;
- failing that, if [directory name].{png,jpg} is found in one of the directories containing files that are part of the group, it is used as the artwork. The first file found is used, ordering is not guaranteed;
- failing that, individual files are examined and the first file found with an embedded artwork is used. Here again, ordering is not guaranteed.
{artwork,cover,Folder} are the default, you can add other base names in the configuration file. Here you can also enable/disable support for individual file artwork (instead of using the same artwork for all tracks in an entire album).
For playlists in your library, say /foo/bar.m3u, then for any http streams in the list, forked-daapd will look for /foo/bar.{jpg,png}.
You can use symlinks for the artwork files.
forked-daapd caches artwork in a separate cache file. The default path is
/var/cache/forked-daapd/cache.db
and can be configured in the configuration
file. The cache.db file can be deleted without losing the library and pairing
informations.
The library is scanned in bulk mode at startup, but the server will be available even while this scan is in progress. You can follow the progress of the scan in the log file or via the web interface. When the scan is complete you will see the log message: "Bulk library scan completed in X sec".
The very first scan will take longer than subsequent startup scans, since every file gets analyzed. At the following startups the server looks for changed files and only analyzis those.
Updates to the library are reflected in real time after the initial scan, so you do not need to manually start rescans. The directories are monitored for changes and rescanned on the fly. Note that if you have your library on a network mount then real time updating may not work. Read below about what to do in that case.
If you change any of the directory settings in the library section of the configuration file a rescan is required before the new setting will take effect. You can do this by using "Update library" from the web interface.
Symlinks are supported and dereferenced, but it is best to use them for directories only.
Some programs, like for instance Shairport-sync, can be configured to output audio to a named pipe. If this pipe is placed in the library, forked-daapd will automatically detect that it is there, and when there is audio being written to it, playback of the audio will be autostarted (and stopped).
Using this feature, forked-daapd can act as an AirPlay multiroom "router": You can have an AirPlay source (e.g. your iPhone) send audio Shairport-sync, which forwards it to forked-daapd through the pipe, which then plays it on whatever speakers you have selected (through Remote).
The format of the audio being written to the pipe must be PCM16.
You can also start playback of pipes manually. You will find them in remotes listed under "Unknown artist" and "Unknown album". The track title will be the name of the pipe.
Shairport-sync can write metadata to a pipe, and forked-daapd can read this. This requires that the metadata pipe has the same filename as the audio pipe plus a ".metadata" suffix. Say Shairport-sync is configured to write audio to "/foo/bar/pipe", then the metadata pipe should be "/foo/bar/pipe.metadata".
Most network filesharing protocols do not offer notifications when the library is changed. So that means forked-daapd cannot update its database in real time. Instead you can schedule a cron job to update the database.
The first step in doing this is to add two entries to the 'directories' configuration item in forked-daapd.conf:
directories = { "/some/local/dir", "/your/network/mount/library" }
Now you can make a cron job that runs this command:
touch /some/local/dir/trigger.init-rescan
When forked-daapd detects a file with filename ending .init-rescan it will perform a bulk scan similar to the startup scan.
If you place a file with the filename ending .full-rescan in your library, you can trigger a full rescan of your library. This will clear all music and playlists from forked-daapd's database and initiate a fresh bulk scan. Pairing and speaker information will be kept. Only use this for troubleshooting, it is not necessary during normal operation.
You can choose between:
- a MPD command line client (easiest) like
mpc
- curl with forked-daapd's JSON API (see README_JSON_API.md)
- curl with DAAP/DACP commands (hardest)
Here is an example of how to use curl with DAAP/DACP. Say you have a playlist with a radio station, and you want to make a script that starts playback of that station:
- Run
sqlite3 [your forked-daapd db]
. Useselect id,title from files
to get the id of the radio station, and useselect id,title from playlists
to get the id of the playlist. - Convert the two ids to hex.
- Put the following lines in the script with the relevant ids inserted (also observe that you must use a session-id < 100, and that you must login and logout):
curl "http://localhost:3689/login?pairing-guid=0x1&request-session-id=50"
curl "http://localhost:3689/ctrl-int/1/playspec?database-spec='dmap.persistentid:0x1'&container-spec='dmap.persistentid:0x[PLAYLIST-ID]'&container-item-spec='dmap.containeritemid:0x[FILE ID]'&session-id=50"
curl "http://localhost:3689/logout?session-id=50"
forked-daapd has support for playback of the tracks in your Spotify library.
- Go to the web interface and check that your version of forked-daapd was built with Spotify support.
- You must have a Spotify premium account. If you normally log into Spotify with your Facebook account you must first go to Spotify's web site where you can get the Spotify username and password that matches your account.
- Make sure you have
libspotify
installed. Unfortunately, it is no longer available from Spotify, and at the time of writing this they have not provided an alternative. However, on most Debian-based platforms, you can still get it like this:- Add the mopidy repository, see instructions
- Install with
apt install libspotify-dev
Once the above is in order you can login to Spotify via the web interface. The procedure for logging in to Spotify is a two-step procedure due to the current state of libspotify, but the web interface makes both steps available to you.
Spotify will automatically notify forked-daapd about playlist updates, so you should not need to restart forked-daapd to syncronize with Spotify. However, Spotify only notifies about playlist updates, not new saved tracks/albums, so you need to manually trigger a rescan to get those.
forked-daapd will not store your password, but will still be able to log you in automatically afterwards, because libspotify saves a login token. You can configure the location of your Spotify user data in the configuration file.
To permanently logout and remove credentials, delete the contents of
/var/cache/forked-daapd/libspotify
(while forked-daapd is stopped).
Limitations: You will not be able to do any playlist management through forked-daapd - use a Spotify client for that. You also can only listen to your music by letting forked-daapd do the playback - so that means you can't stream from forked-daapd to iTunes.
You can have forked-daapd scrobble the music you listen to. To set up scrobbling go to the web interface and authorize forked-daapd with your LastFM credentials.
forked-daapd will not store your LastFM username/password, only the session key. The session key does not expire.
You can - to some extent - use clients for MPD to control forked-daapd.
By default forked-daapd listens on port 6600 for MPD clients. You can change this in the configuration file.
Currently only a subset of the commands offered by MPD (see MPD protocol documentation) are supported by forked-daapd.
Due to some differences between forked-daapd and MPD not all commands will act the same way they would running MPD:
- crossfade, mixrampdb, mixrampdelay and replaygain will have no effect
- single, repeat: unlike MPD forked-daapd does not support setting single and repeat separately on/off, instead repeat off, repeat all and repeat single are supported. Thus setting single on will result in repeat single, repeat on results in repeat all.
The following table shows what is working for a selection of MPD clients:
Client | Type | Status |
---|---|---|
mpc | CLI | Working commands: mpc, add, crop, current, del (ranges are not yet supported), play, next, prev (behaves like cdprev), pause, toggle, cdprev, seek, clear, outputs, enable, disable, playlist, ls, load, volume, repeat, random, single, search, find, list, update (initiates an init-rescan, the path argument is not supported) |
ympd | Web | Everything except "add stream" should work |
The source for this version of forked-daapd can be found here:
https://github.com/ejurgensen/forked-daapd.git
The original (now unmaintained) source can be found here:
http://git.debian.org/?p=users/jblache/forked-daapd.git
README's for previous versions of forked-daapd: