Rockbox and this manual is the collaborative effort of the Rockbox team and
its contributors. See the appendix for a complete list of contributors.
c
2003-2013 The Rockbox Team and its contributors,c 2004 Christi Alice
Scarborough,c 2003 José Maria Garcia-Valdecasas Bernal & Peter Schlenker.
Version 3.14. Built using pdfLATEX.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under
the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later
version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license
is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”.
I.2. The GNU General Public License . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 1. Introduction11
1. Introduction
1.1. Welcome
This is the manual for Rockbox. Rockbox is an open source firmware replacement
for a growing number of digital audio players. Rockbox aims to be considerably more
functional and efficient than your device’s stock firmware while remaining easy to use
and customisable. Rockbox is written by users, for users. Not only is it free to use, it
is also released under the GNU General Public License (GPL), which means that it will
always remain free both to use and to change.
Rockbox has been in development since 2001, and receives new features, tweaks and
fixes each day to provide you with the best possible experience on your digital audio
player. A major goal of Rockbox is to be simple and easy to use, yet remain very
customisable and configurable. We believe that you should never need to go through a
series of menus for an action you perform frequently. We also believe that you should
be able to configure almost anything about Rockbox you could want, pertaining to
functionality. Another top priority of Rockbox is audio playback quality – Rockbox,
for most models, includes a wider range of sound settings than the device’s original
firmware. A lot of work has been put into making Rockbox sound the best it can, and
improvements are constantly being made. All models have access to a large number
of plugins, including many games, applications, and graphical “demos”. You can load
different configurations quickly for different purposes (e.g. a large font for in your car,
different sound settings for at home). Rockbox features a very wide range of languages,
and all supported models also have the ability to talk to you – menus can be voiced and
filenames spelled out or spoken.
1.2. Getting more help
This manual is intended to be a comprehensive introduction to the Rockbox firmware.
There is, however, more help available. The Rockbox website at http://www.rockbox.org/
contains very extensive documentation and guides written by members of the Rockbox
community and this should be your first port of call when looking for further help.
If you cannot find the information you are searching for on the Rockbox website there
are a number of support channels you should have a look at. You can try the Rockbox
forums located at http://forums.rockbox.org/. The mailing lists are another option, and
can be found at http://www.rockbox.org/mail/. From that page you can subscribe to
the lists and browse the archives. To search the list archives simply use the search field
that is located on the left side of the website. Furthermore, you can ask on IRC. The
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 1. Introduction12
main channel for Rockbox is #rockbox on irc://irc.freenode.net. Many helpful developers
and users are usually around. Just join and ask your question (don’t ask to ask!) – if
someone knows the answer you’ll usually get an answer pretty quickly. More information
including IRC logs can be found at http://www.rockbox.org/irc/. We also have a web
client so that you can join the Rockbox IRC channel without needing to install additional
software onto your computer.
If you think you have found a bug please make sure it actually is a bug and is still
present in the most recent version of Rockbox. You should try to confirm that by using
the above mentioned support channels first. After that you can submit that issue to our
tracker. Refer to section G (page 199) for details on how to use the tracker.
1.3. Naming conventions and marks
We have some conventions (especially for naming) that are intended to be consistent
throughout this manual.
Manufacturer and product names are formatted in accordance with the standard rules
of English grammar, e.g. “Sansa playback is currently unsupported”. Manufacturer and
model names are proper nouns, and thus are written beginning with a capital letter.
This manual has some parts that are marked with icons on the margin to help you
finding important parts or parts you could skip. The following icons are used:
Note: This indicates a note. A note starts always with the text “Note”. In order to
make finding notes easier each one is accompanied by an icon in the margin as here.
Notes are used to mark useful information that may help you to get the most out of
Rockbox.
Warning: This is a warning. In contrast to notes mentioned above, a warning should
be taken more seriously. Whereas ignoring notes will not cause any serious damage,
ignoring warnings could cause serious damage to your player. You really should read the
warnings, especially if you are new to Rockbox.
This icon marks a section that is intended especially for the blind and visually impaired. As they cannot read the manual in the same way sighted people do we have
added some additional descriptions. If you are not blind or visually impaired you can
probably completely skip these blocks. To make this easier, there is an icon shown in
the margin on the right.
Links to the wiki are abbreviated by the name of the wiki page. Those names are still
linked so you can simply follow them like any other link in this manual. If you want to
access a wiki page manually go to Z http://www.rockbox.org/wiki/ and type the page
name in the “Go” box at the top of the page. Links to wiki pages are also indicated by
the symbol Z in front of the page name.
b
!
¸
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 2. Installation13
2. Installation
Installing Rockbox is generally a quick and easy procedure. However before beginning
there are a few important things to know.
2.1. Before Starting
Supported hardware versions. The Clip v2 is available in multiple versions, and you
need to make sure which you have by checking the Sandisk firmware version number
under Settings → Info. The v1 firmware is named 01.xx.xx, while the v2 firmware
begins with 02. Make sure that you are following the instructions from the correct
manual.
DRM capability. It is possible that installation of the bootloader may lead to you per-
manently losing the ability to playback files with DRM.
USB connection. To transfer Rockbox to your player you need to connect it to your
computer. For manual installation/uninstallation, or should autodetection fail
during automatic installation, you need to know where to access the player. On
Windows this means you need to know the drive letter associated with the player.
On Linux you need to know the mount point of your player. On Mac OS X you
need to know the volume name of your player.
Note: The following steps require you to change the setting in Settings → USB
Mode to MSC from within the original firmware.
2.2. Installing Rockbox
There are two ways to install Rockbox: automated and manual. The automated way is
the preferred method of installing Rockbox for the majority of people. Rockbox Utility
is a graphical application that does almost everything for you. However, should you
encounter a problem, then the manual way is still available to you.
There are two separate components which need to be installed in order to run Rockbox:
The Rockbox bootloader. The bootloader is the program that tells your player how
to load and start other components of Rockbox and for providing the dual boot
function. This is the component of Rockbox that is installed to the flash memory
of your Sansa.
b
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 2. Installation14
The Rockbox firmware. Unlike the Sansa firmware, which runs entirely from flash mem-
ory,most of the Rockbox code is contained in a “build” that resides on your
player’s drive. This makes it easy to update Rockbox. The build consists of a
directory called .rockbox which contains all of the Rockbox files, and is located
in the root of your player’s drive.
Apart from the required parts there are some addons you might be interested in
installing.
Fonts. Rockbox can load custom fonts. The fonts are distributed as a separate package
and thus need to be installed separately. They are not required to run Rockbox
itself but a lot of themes require the fonts package to be installed.
Themes. The appearance of Rockbox can be customised by themes. Depending on your
taste you might want to install additional themes to change the look of Rockbox.
2.2.1. Automated Installation
To automatically install Rockbox, download the official installer and housekeeping tool
Rockbox Utility. It allows you to:
• Automatically install all needed components for using Rockbox (“Minimal Installation”).
• Automatically install all suggested components (“Complete Installation”).
• Selectively install optional components.
• Install additional fonts and themes.
• Install voice files and generate talk clips.
• Uninstall all components you installed using Rockbox Utility.
Prebuilt binaries for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X are available at the ZRockboxUtility
wiki page.
When first starting Rockbox Utility run “Autodetect”, found in the configuration
dialog (File → Configure). Autodetection can detect most player types. If autodetection
fails or is unable to detect the mountpoint, make sure to enter the correct values. The
mountpoint indicates the location of the player in your filesystem. On Windows, this is
the drive letter the player gets assigned, on other systems this is a path in the filesystem.
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 2. Installation15
Choosing a Rockbox version
There are three different versions of Rockbox available from the Rockbox website: Release version, current build and archived daily build. You need to decide which one you
want to install and get the appropriate version for your player. If you select either “Minimal Installation” or “Complete Installation” from the “Quick Start” tab, then Rockbox
Utility will automatically install the release version of Rockbox. Using the “Installation”
tab will allow you to select which version you wish to install.
Release. The release version is the latest stable release, free of known critical bugs.
For a manual install, the current stable release of Rockbox is available at http:
//www.rockbox.org/download/.
Development Build. The development build is built at each change to the Rockbox
source code repository and represents the current state of Rockbox development.
This means that the build could contain bugs but most of the time is safe to use.
For a manual install, you can download the current build from http://build.rockbox.
org/.
Archived Build. In addition to the release version and the current build, there is also
an archive of daily builds available for download. These are built once a day from
the latest source code in the repository. For a manual install, you can download
archived builds from http://www.rockbox.org/daily.shtml.
Note: Because current and archived builds are development versions that change frequently, they may behave differently than described in this manual, or they may introduce new (and potentially annoying) bugs. Unless you wish to try the latest and
greatest features at the price of possibly greater instability, or you wish to help with
development, you should stick with the release.
Please now go to section 2.2.5 (page 17) to complete the installation procedure.
2.2.2. Manual Installation
The manual installation method is still available to you, should you need or desire it by
following the instructions below. If you have used Rockbox Utility to install Rockbox,
then you do not need to follow the next section and can skip straight to section 2.2.5
(page 17)
Installing the firmware
1. Download your chosen version of Rockbox from the links in the previous section.
2. Connect your player to the computer via USB in MSC mode as described in the
manual that came with your player.
b
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 2. Installation16
3. Take the .zip file that you downloaded and use the “Extract all” command of
your unzip program to extract the files ontoyour player.
Note: The entire contents of the .zip file should be extracted directly to the root of
your player’s drive. Do not try to create a separate directory on your player for the
Rockbox files! The .zip file already contains the internal structure that Rockbox needs.
If the contents of the .zip file are extracted correctly, you will have a directory called
.rockbox, which contains all the files needed by Rockbox, in the main directory of your
player’s drive.
Installing the bootloader
In order to install the bootloader, you will need to download the following files:
• An original firmware (OF) from http://forums.sandisk.com/t5/Clip-Clip/Sansa-
If mkamsboot.exe does not report success, then retry or abort.
4. Copy the output file (“patched.bin” in the example given above) to the root of
the device and rename it to the same name as the OF file you downloaded earlier
(“m30pa.bin”above).
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Code
Chapter 2. Installation17
2.2.4. Bootloader installation from Mac OS X and Linux
1. Create a folder called “rbinstall” in your home directory, and then extract the OF,
the bootloader and mkamsboot into it.
2. Open a new terminal, and navigate to the “rbinstall” folder.
3. Run mkamsboot, passing the name of the OF and bootloader files that you downloaded, in addition to a name for the output file.
If mkamsboot does not report success, then retry or abort.
4. Copy the output file (“patched.bin” in the example given above) to the root of
the device and rename it to the same name as the OF file you downloaded earlier
(“m30pa.bin”above).
Code
2.2.5. Finishing the install
Safely eject the device, unplug USB and wait for the firmware update to finish. Don’t
try to power off the device, it will shutdown by itself after a minute.
2.2.6. Enabling Speech Support (optional)
If you wish to use speech support you will also need a voice file. Voice files allow Rockbox
to speak the user interface to you. Rockbox Utility can install an English voice file, or
you can download it from http://www.rockbox.org/daily.shtml and unzip it to the root
of your player. Rockbox Utility can also aid you in the creation of voice files with
different voices or in other languages if you have a suitable speech engine installed on
your computer. Voice menus are enabled by default and will come into effect after a
reboot. See section 8.10 (page 74) for details on voice settings. Rockbox Utility can also
aid in the production of talk files, which allow Rockbox to speak file and folder names.
2.3. Running Rockbox
When you turn the unit on, Rockbox should load.
2.4. Updating Rockbox
Rockbox can be easily updated with Rockbox Utility. You can also update Rockbox
manually – download a Rockbox build as detailed above, and unzip the build to the root
directory of your player as in the manual installation stage. If your unzip program asks
you whether to overwrite files, choose the “Yes to all” option. The new build will be
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 2. Installation18
installed over your current build.
The bootloader only changes rarely, and should not normally need to be updated.
Note: If you use Rockbox Utility be aware that it cannot detect manually installed
components.
2.5. Uninstalling Rockbox
Note: The Rockbox bootloader allows you to choose between Rockbox and the original
firmware. (See section 3.1.3 (page 20) for more information.)
2.5.1. Automatic Uninstallation
You can uninstall Rockbox automatically by using Rockbox Utility. If you installed
Rockbox manually you can still use Rockbox Utility for uninstallation but will not be
able to do this selectively.
2.5.2. Manual Uninstallation
Copy an unmodified original firmware to your player, and then reboot into the Sandisk
firmware. See section 3.1.3 (page 20) for more information.
If you wish to clean up your disk, you may also wish to delete the .rockbox directory
and its contents. Turn the Sansa off. Turn the player back on and the original Sansa
software will load.
b
b
2.6. Troubleshooting
“File Not Found” If you receive a “File Not Found” from the bootloader, then the
bootloader cannot find the Rockbox firmware. This is usually a result of not
extracting the contents of the .zip file to the proper location, and should not
happen when Rockbox has been installed with Rockbox Utility.
To fix this, either install Rockbox with the Rockbox Utility which will take care
of this for you, or recheck the Manual Install section to see where the files need to
be located.
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 3. Quick Start19
Hold
Power
Home
Volume down
Volume up
Select
Play
Left
Right
3. Quick Start
3.1. Basic Overview
3.1.1. The player’s controls
Throughout this manual, the buttons on the player are labelled according to the
picture above. Whenever a button name is prefixed by “Long”, a long press of approximately one second should be performed on that button. The buttons are described in
detail in the following paragraph. Additional information for blind users is available on
the Rockbox website at ZBlindFAQ.
Hold the player with the controls on the bottom and the screen on the top. The main
controls are a four-way pad with a button in the centre; pressing this centre button
functions as Select. Going clockwise from the top, the four-way pad contains the Play,
Right, Submenu, and Left buttons. Immediately above and to the right of the fourway pad is the Home button.On the left hand panel is a two way switch. Pressing
this switch up acts as Power, and clicking it down until it locks acts as the Hold switch.
When the Hold switch is on, none of the other buttons have any effect. Immediately
above the switch is a mini-USB port to connect the player to a computer.
On the right hand panel is a two-way button that acts as Volume Down when
pressed on the bottom, and Volume Up when pressed on the top. Immediately above
this button is the headphone socket.
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
¸
Chapter 3. Quick Start20
3.1.2. Turning the player on and off
To turn on and off your Rockbox enabled player use the following keys:
KeyAction
PowerStart Rockbox
Long PowerShutdown Rockbox
On shutdown, Rockbox automatically saves its settings.
3.1.3. Starting the original firmware
Rockbox has a dual-boot feature. To boot into the original firmware, press and hold the
Left button while turning on the player.
Note: Rockbox does not boot into the original firmware when powered by a USB con-
nection. Older versions of Rockbox do not provide USB support. If you have such a
version installed you need to manually boot into the original firmware for data transfer
via USB.
3.1.4. Putting music on your player
Note: Due to a bug in some OS X versions, the player can not be mounted, unless the
USB HID feature is disabled. See section 8.5.8 (page 68) for more information.
With the player connected to the computer as an MSC/UMS device (like a USB
Drive), music files can be put on the player via any standard file transfer method that
you would use to copy files between drives (e.g. Drag-and-Drop). Files may be placed
wherever you like on the player, but it is strongly suggested NOT to put them in the
/.rockbox folder and instead put them in any other folder, e.g. /, /music or /audio.
The default directory structure that is assumed by some parts of Rockbox (missing-tag
fallback in some WPSes) uses the parent directory of a song as the Album name, and
the parent directory of that folder as the Artist name. WPSes may display information
incorrectly if your files are not properly tagged, and you have your music organized in a
way different than they assume when attempting to guess the Artist and Album names
from your filetree. See section B.1 (page 169) for a list of supported audio formats.
b
b
3.1.5. The first contact
After you have first started the player, you’ll be presented by the Main Menu. From
this menu you can reach every function of Rockbox, for more information (see section 5.1
(page 38)). To browse the files on your player, select Files (see section 4.1 (page 23)),
and to browse in a view that is based on the meta-data1of your audio files, select
1
ID3 Tags, Vorbis comments, etc.
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 3. Quick Start21
Database (see section 4.2 (page 26)).
3.1.6. Basic controls
When browsing files and moving through menus you usually get a list view presented.
The navigation in these lists are usually the same and should be pretty intuitive. In the
tree view use Submenu and Play to move around the selection. Use Select or Right to
select an item. When browsing the file system selecting an audio file plays it. The view
switches to the “While playing screen”, usually abbreviated as “WPS” (see section 4.3
(page 29). The dynamic playlist gets replaced with the contents of the current directory.
This way you can easily treat directories as playlists. The created dynamic playlist can
be extended or modified while playing. This is also known as “on-the-fly playlist”. To
go back to the File Browser stop the playback with the Power button or return to
the file browser while keeping playback running using Select. In list views you can go
back one step with Left.
3.1.7. Basic concepts
Playlists
Rockbox is playlist oriented. This means that every time you play an audio file, a socalled “dynamic playlist” is generated, unless you play a saved playlist. You can modify
the dynamic playlist while playing and also save it to a file. If you do not want to use
playlists you can simply play your files directory based. Playlists are covered in detail
in section 4.4 (page 34).
Menu
From the menu you can customise Rockbox. Rockbox itself is very customisable. Also
there are some special menus for quick access to frequently used functions.
Context Menu
Some views, especially the file browser and the WPS have a context menu. From the file
browser this can be accessed with Long Select. The contents of the context menu vary,
depending on the situation it gets called. The context menu itself presents you with
some operations you can perform with the currently highlighted file. In the file browser
this is the file (or directory) that is highlighted by the cursor. From the WPS this is
the currently playing file. Also there are some actions that do not apply to the current
file but refer to the screen from which the context menu gets called. One example is the
playback menu, which can be called using the context menu from within the WPS.
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 3. Quick Start22
3.2. Customising Rockbox
Rockbox’ User Interface can be customised using “Themes”. Themes usually only affect
the visual appearance, but an advanced user can create a theme that also changes various
other settings like file view, LCD settings and all other settings that can be modified
using .cfg files. This topic is discussed in more detail in section 13.3 (page 163). The
Rockbox distribution comes with some themes that should look nice on your player.
Note: Some of the themes shipped with Rockbox need additional fonts from the fonts
package, so make sure you installed them. Also, if you downloaded additional themes
from the Internet make sure you have the needed fonts installed as otherwise the theme
may not display properly.
3.3. USB Charging
To charge your player over USB, hold any button while plugging it in. This will prevent
it from connecting to your computer and let you continue to use it normally. Your player
must already be in Rockbox for this to function.
Note: Be aware that this button may still perform its normal function, so it is recommended to use a button without harmful side effects, such as Select.
b
b
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 4. Browsing and playing23
4. Browsing and playing
4.1. File Browser
Figure 4.1.: The file browser
Rockbox lets you browse your music in either of two ways. The File Browser lets
you navigate through the files and directories on your player, entering directories and
executing the default action on each file. To help differentiate files, each file format is
displayed with an icon.
The Database Browser, on the other hand, allows you to navigate through the
music on your player using categories like album, artist, genre, etc.
You can select whether to browse using the File Browser or the Database Browser
by selecting either Files or Database in the Main Menu. If you choose the FileBrowser, the Show Files setting lets you select what types of files you wish to view.
See section 8.2 (page 62) for more information on the Show Files setting.
Note: The File Browser allows you to manipulate your files in ways that are not
available within the Database Browser. Read more about Database in section 4.2
(page 26). The remainder of this section deals with the File Browser.
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
b
Chapter 4. Browsing and playing24
4.1.1. File Browser Controls
KeyAction
Play/SubmenuGo to previous/next item in list. If you
are on the first/last entry, the cursor will
wrap to the last/first entry.
LeftGo to the parent directory.
Select or RightExecute the default action on the selected
file or enter a directory.
Home + SelectIf there is an audio file playing, return
to the While Playing Screen (WPS)
without stopping playback.
PowerStop audio playback.
Long SelectEnter the Context Menu.
HomeEnter the Main Menu.
Long HomeSwitch to the Quick Screen (see sec-
tion 5.13 (page 44)).
4.1.2. Context Menu
Figure 4.2.: The Context Menu
The Context Menu allows you to perform certain operations on files or directories.
To access the Context Menu, position the selector over a file or directory and access
the context menu with Long Select.
Note: The Context Menu is a context sensitive menu. If the Context Menu is
invoked on a file, it will display options available for files. If the Context Menu is
invoked on a directory, it will display options for directories.
The Context Menu contains the following options (unless otherwise noted, each
option pertains both to files and directories):
Playlist. Enters the Playlist Submenu (see section 4.4.3 (page 35)).
b
Playlist Catalogue. Enters the Playlist Catalogue Submenu (see section 4.4.2 (page 35)).
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 4. Browsing and playing25
Rename. This function lets the user modify the name of a file or directory.
Cut. Copies the name of the currently selected file or directory to the clipboard and
marks it to be ‘cut’.
Copy. Copies the name of the currently selected file or directory to the clipboard and
marks it to be ‘copied’.
Paste. Only visible if a file or directory name is on the clipboard. When selected it will
move or copy the clipboard to the current directory.
Delete. Deletes the currently selected file. This option applies only to files, and not to
directories. Rockbox will ask for confirmation before deleting a file. Press Select
to confirm deletion or any other key to cancel.
Delete Directory. Deletes the currently selected directory and all of the files and subdi-
rectories it may contain. Deleted directories cannot be recovered. Use this feature
with caution!
Open with. Runs a viewer plugin on the file. Normally, when a file is selected in Rock-
box, Rockbox automatically detects the file type and runs the appropriate plugin.
The Open With function can be used to override the default action and select a
viewer by hand. For example, this function can be used to view a text file even if
the file has a non-standard extension (i.e., the file has an extension of something
other than .txt). See section 12.3 (page 118) for more details on viewers.
Create Directory. Create a new directory in the current directory on the disk.
Properties. Shows properties such as size and the time and date of the last modification
for the selected file. If used on a directory, the number of files and subdirectories
will be shown, as well as the total size.
Set As Recording Directory. Save recordings in the selected directory.
Start File Browser Here. This option allows users to set the currently selected directory
as the default start directory for the file browser. This option is not available for
files.
Note: If you have Auto-Change Directory and Constrain Auto-Change
enabled, the directories returned will be constrained to the directory you have
chosen here and those below it. See section 7.11 (page 59)
Add to Shortcuts. Adds a link to the selected item in the shortcuts.link file. If the
file does not already exist it will be created in the root directory. Note that if you
create a shortcut to a file, Rockbox will not open it upon selecting, but simply
bring you to its location in the File Browser.
b
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 4. Browsing and playing26
4.1.3. Virtual Keyboard
Figure 4.3.: The virtual keyboard
This is the virtual keyboard that is used when entering text in Rockbox, for example
when renaming a file or creating a new directory. The virtual keyboard can be easily
changed by making a text file with the required layout. More information on how to
achieve this can be found on the Rockbox website at ZLoadableKeyboardLayouts.
Note: When the cursor is on the input line, Select deletes the preceding character
KeyAction
Left / RightMove the cursor on the virtual keyboard.
If you move out of the picker area, you
get the previous/next page of characters
(if there is more than one).
Play / SubmenuMove the cursor on the virtual keyboard.
If you move out of the picker area you get
to the line edit mode.
Flip to the next page of characters (if
there is more than one).
SelectInsert the selected keyboard letter at the
current line cursor position.
Long SelectExit the virtual keyboard and save any
changes.
PowerExit the virtual keyboard without saving
any changes.
b
4.2. Database
4.2.1. Introduction
This chapter describes the Rockbox music database system. Using the information
contained in the tags (ID3v1, ID3v2, Vorbis Comments, Apev2, etc.) in your audio
files, Rockbox builds and maintains a database of the music files on your player and
allows you to browse them by Artist, Album, Genre, Song Name, etc. The criteria the
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 4. Browsing and playing27
database uses to sort the songs can be completely customised. More information on how
to achieve this can be found on the Rockbox website at ZDataBase.
4.2.2. Initializing the Database
The first time you use the database, Rockbox will scan your disk for audio files. This can
take quite a while depending on the number of files on your player. This scan happens
in the background, so you can choose to return to the Main Menu and continue to listen
to music. If you shut down your player, the scan will continue next time you turn it on.
After the scan is finished you may be prompted to restart your player before you can
use the database.
Ignoring Directories During Database Initialization
You may have directories on your player whose contents should not be added to the
database. Placing a file named database.ignore in a directory will exclude the files in
that directory and all its subdirectories from scanning their tags and adding them to the
database. This will speed up the database initialization.
If a subdirectory of an ‘ignored’ directory should still be scanned, place a file named
database.unignore in it.The files in that directory and its subdirectories will be
scanned and added to the database.
4.2.3. The Database Menu
Load To RAM The database can either be kept on flash storage (to save memory), or
loaded into RAM (for fast browsing). Setting this to Yes loads the database to
RAM, allowing faster browsing and searching. Setting this option to No keeps the
database on the flash storage, meaning slower browsing but it does not use extra
RAM and saves some battery on boot up.
Auto Update If Auto update is set to on, each time the player boots, the database
will automatically be updated.
Initialize Now You can force Rockbox to rescan your disk for tagged files by using the
Initialize Now function in the Database Menu.
Warning: Initialize Now removes all database files (removing runtimedb data
also) and rebuilds the database from scratch.
Update Now Update now causes the database to detect new and deleted files
Note: Unlike the Auto Update function, Update Now will update the database
regardless of whether the Directory Cache is enabled. Thus, an update using
Update now may take a long time.
Unlike Initialize Now, the Update Now function does not remove runtime
database information.
!
b
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 4. Browsing and playing28
Gather Runtime Data When enabled, rockbox will record how often and how long a
track is being played, when it was last played and its rating. This information can
be displayed in the WPS and is used in the database browser to, for example, show
the most played, unplayed and most recently played tracks.
Export Modifications This allows for the runtime data to be exported to the file
/.rockbox/database_changelog.txt, which backs up the runtime data in ASCII
format. This is needed when database structures change, because new code cannot
read old database code. But, all modifications exported to ASCII format should
be readable by all database versions.
Import Modifications. Allows the /.rockbox/database_changelog.txt backup to be
conveniently loaded into the database. If Auto Update is enabled this is per-
formed automatically when the database is initialized.
4.2.4. Using the Database
Once the database has been initialized, you can browse your music by Artist, Album, Genre, Song Name, etc. To use the database, go to the Main Menu and select
Database.
Note: You may need to increase the value of the Max Entries in File Browser
setting (Settings → General Settings → System → Limits) in order to view long
lists of tracks in the ID3 database browser.
There is no option to turn off database completely. If you do not want to use it just
do not do the initial build of the database and do not load it to RAM.
b
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 4. Browsing and playing29
TagTypeOrigin
filenamestringsystem
albumstringid tag
albumartiststringid tag
artiststringid tag
commentstringid tag
composerstringid tag
genrestringid tag
groupingstringid tag
titlestringid tag
bitratenumericid tag
discnumnumericid tag
yearnumericid tag
tracknumnumericid tag/filename
autoscorenumericruntime db
lastplayednumericruntime db
playcountnumericruntime db
Pm (play time min)
Ps (play time - sec)numericruntime db
ratingnumericruntime db
commitidnumericsystem
entryagenumericsystem
lengthnumericsystem
Lm (tracklenmin)
Ls (track len - sec)numericsystem
numericruntime db
numericsystem
4.3. While Playing Screen
The While Playing Screen (WPS) displays various pieces of information about the currently playing audio file. The appearance of the WPS can be configured using WPS
configuration files. The items shown depend on your configuration – all items can be
turned on or off independently. Refer to section D (page 177) for details on how to
change the display of the WPS.
• Status bar: The Status bar shows Battery level, charger status, volume, play mode,
repeat mode, shuffle mode and clock. In contrast to all other items, the status bar
is always at the top of the screen.
• (Scrolling) path and filename of the current song.
• The ID3 track name.
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Chapter 4. Browsing and playing30
• The ID3 album name.
• The ID3 artist name.
• Bit rate. VBR files display average bitrate and “(avg)”
• Elapsed and total time.
• A slidebar progress meter representing where in the song you are.
• Peak meter.
See section 13.2 (page 158) for details of customising your WPS (While Playing
Screen).
4.3.1. WPS Key Controls
KeyAction
Volume Up /
Volume Down
LeftGo to beginning of track, or if pressed
Long LeftRewind in track.
RightGo to the next track.Long RightFast forward in track.
PlayToggle play/pause.
PowerStop playback.
SelectReturntotheFileBrowser/
Long SelectEnter WPS Context Menu.
HomeEnter Main Menu.
Long HomeSwitch to the Quick Screen (see sec-
Long SubmenuShow current Playlist.Power + Right
or Short Right +
Long RightPower + Left or
Short Left + Long
Left
Volume up/down.
while in the first seconds of a track, go
to the previous track.
Database.
tion 5.13 (page 44)).
Skip to the next directory.
Skip to the previous directory.
The Rockbox manual (version 3.14)Sansa Clip v2
Loading...
+ 189 hidden pages
You need points to download manuals.
1 point = 1 manual.
You can buy points or you can get point for every manual you upload.