1
0
mirror of https://github.com/mbirth/wiki.git synced 2024-09-20 06:33:24 +01:00
wiki.mbirth.de/know-how/software/linux/_posts/2009-12-05-rip-cd-track.md

28 lines
1.1 KiB
Markdown

---
created: 2009-02-16 22:24:06 +0100
layout: redirect
layout_old: default
redirect_to: https://blog.mbirth.de/archives/2009/02/16/rip-cd-track.html
tags:
- know-how
- software
- linux
title: Rip CD Track
toc: false
updated: 2009-12-05 00:46:23 +0100
---
The default tool for CD ripping under Gnome is *Sound Juicer*, found under *Applications**Sound & Video*
*Audio CD Extractor*. But this tool had severe problems recognizing my custom configuration for LAME encoding (I
changed `vbr-quality` from `6` to `2` but the tool ignored it) also you had to restart it for every configuration
change which means you have to re-enter all CD information.
So I tried [abcde](http://code.google.com/p/abcde/).
After installing the package [abcde](apt://abcde) and some other utilities (`id3`, `id3v2`, `flac`, `oggconvert`,
etc.), I copied the file `/etc/abcde.conf` to `~/.abcde.conf` and modified it according to [Andrew Strong's examples](http://www.andrews-corner.org/abcde.html)
and my own preference.
Now ripping a CD is as simple as typing `abcde` at the prompt.
* **Download my config:** [abcde.conf]({{ site.url }}/assets/abcde.conf)