ARver 1.3.0

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Description:

ARver 1.3.0

ARver
ARver is a command-line program for verifying audio tracks ripped from a CD
against checksums stored in AccurateRip database.
The idea behind AccurateRip verification is that it's virtually impossible to
get exact same errors when ripping different copies of the same CD on various
CD drives. If the copies are scratched or otherwise degraded, read errors will
occur in different disc sectors. CD drive defects are unlikely to manifest in
the same way on different machines. Essentially, all read errors are expected
to be unique, but in absence of errors only a single correct result exists.
AccurateRip database stores track checksums submitted by multiple users. When
many users rip the same disc without errors, same checksums are submitted to
the database repeatably, boosting their "confidence" statistic. If a checksum
of a ripped track is not found in the database, it indicates that the track has
not been ripped correctly. Since the result is unique, disc read errors likely
occurred while ripping.
ARver calculates the AccurateRip checksums of local files, fetches checksums
for a given CD from the database, and displays a report which compares them.
Features
The package provides following command-line tools:


arver: the main program. It determines the AccurateRip disc ID, fetches
AccurateRip data, calculates checksums of ripped audio files, compares them
with downloaded AccurateRip data and displays the result.


arver-discinfo: displays disc IDs and the Table of Contents, fetches and
displays all AccurateRip track checksums.


arver-ripinfo: calculates checksums of audio files (ARv1, ARv2 and CRC32)
and presents them as a table.


arver-bin-parser: parses cached binary AccurateRip response and displays
all AccurateRip track checksums.


Usage example
This example demonstrates the typical use case of arver: verification of
files just ripped from a CD.

The tracks have been ripped using cdparanoia prior to running arver.
AccurateRip disc ID is calculated based on the TOC of the CD which still is
in the drive. arver fetches the checksums from the database, and compares
checksums of local files with database entries.
In this case arver found that the last track was not ripped correctly, and
reports an error. The CD is affected by disc rot, and cdparanoia reported
multiple issues toward the end of the third track.
Installation
For typical use:
python3 -m pip install arver

Wheels are provided for x86_64 architecture CPython versions from 3.7 to
3.11. For other platforms and Python versions only installation from the source
distribution is supported (see "Dependencies" section below).
For development:
git clone https://github.com/arcctgx/ARver
cd ARver
python3 -m pip install --editable .

For packaging:
git clone https://github.com/arcctgx/ARver
cd ARver
python3 setup.py install --root=/tmp/pkg-arver
# use contents of /tmp/pkg-arver to create a package.

Dependencies
ARver depends on following Python packages at runtime:

discid
musicbrainzngs
pycdio
requests

They will be installed automatically by pip install if needed. Alternatively,
one can install them using provided requirements.txt file.
The source code includes a C extension which depends on libsndfile, so
building from source requires a C compiler (gcc) and libsndfile headers.
This makes libsndfile both compile-time and runtime dependency when ARver
is installed from the source distribution.
Restrictions
CD read offset corrections
Audio files must be corrected for CD drive read offset (e.g. by using -O
option in cdparanoia). This is crucial for AccurateRip verification: without
it the checksums of ripped tracks cannot be directly compared with database
entries. ARver expects the input files to have zero offset, i.e. it assumes
that required offset corrections were applied by the CD ripper. If this is not
the case, all tracks will be reported as failing verification.
Hidden Track One Audio ("pregap track")
In some discs audio content is hidden in the pregap of track one. Many CD
rippers (e.g. EAC or cdparanoia) can detect and rip it. Unfortunately,
AccurateRip database does not store checksums of such tracks, so they can't
be verified.
ARver will detect the presence of track one pregap, and will display it in
CD TOC summary. If your ripper did extract the pregap track, do not pass its
file name as argument to arver. It will change the track sequence and cause
verification errors in other tracks. If you used a wildcard to specify audio
files, use -x/--exclude option to ignore the pregap track.
Verifying Mixed Mode CDs
AccurateRip database does not store checksums of last audio tracks in Mixed
Mode CDs. These tracks cannot be verified and their verification status will
always show as N/A in the results summary.
Verifying Copy Controlled CDs
Copy Controlled CDs were designed specifically to prevent ripping. The way it
is achieved makes these discs more sensitive to normal wear, and makes them
not compliant with CD audio standard. Such CDs can often be ripped, but are
much more likely to produce errors.
These CDs appear to arver and arver-discinfo as ordinary Enhanced CDs
(multisession with data track in the end). It is not possible to distinguish
them from normal Enhanced CDs based on the table of contents alone. If your
disc bears "Copy Controlled CD" logo, verification problems are expected.
Using MusicBrainz disc IDs instead of physical discs
The regular use case of ARver is to verify a set of audio files right after
they have been ripped, while the CD they have been ripped from is still in the
drive.
Commands arver and arver-discinfo support an alternative mode of operation,
where disc information is downloaded from MusicBrainz by disc ID lookup. While
this can be useful, it is reliable only for Audio CDs. Information about data
tracks is not encoded in MusicBrainz disc ID, but it is necessary to calculate
AccurateRip disc ID. Attempts to verify discs with data tracks (Enhanced or
Mixed Mode CDs) using disc ID lookup may not work at all, result in false
negatives or low confidence values.
Acknowledgements
AccurateRip database is (c) Illustrate. Used with permission.
Thanks to the following people and projects for source code and inspiration:

leo-bogert/accuraterip-checksum
whipper-team/whipper
cyanreg/cyanrip

License:

For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.

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