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I have just found an awesome tool to change id3v2 tags in the shell - id3v2.
Now I need a tool to mass rename my files based on their id3 tags. A tool that simply renames all files in one folder based on the scheme i provide would be sufficient.
Is there something like that out there?
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i don't know of any tools to do it for you, but why not write a bash script? a for-each loop against each of your mp3s that uses id3v2 to get the tag values into variable names and then something like 'mv ${oldfilename} $artist/$album/$tracknum.$title.mp3'.
this would actually be a really good intro to bash project. in fact... i just might do it for me own collection... hmmm.
[23:00:16] dr_kludge | i want to invent an olfactory human-computer interface, integrate it into the web standards, then produce my own forked browser.
[23:00:32] dr_kludge | can you guess what i'd call it?
[23:01:16] dr_kludge | nosilla.
[23:01:32] dr_kludge | i really should be going to bed. i'm giggling madly about that.
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I wrote a simple Python script to clean up my collection last year. Try it on for size!
It requires the mutagen package, and only works with MP3s and OGGs at the moment. I've wanted to keep developing it for a while now, but I only have MP3s and OGGs in my collection, so there hasn't been much motivation on my part to expand its functionality.
#! /usr/bin/env python
#
# Desmond Cox
# April 10, 2008
"""Project Music
Renames audio files based on metadata
Usage: projectmusic.py [options]
Options:
-d ..., --directory=... Specify which directory to work in
(default is the current directory)
-f ..., --format=... Specify the naming format
-l, --flatten Move all files into the same root
directory
-r, --recursive Work recursively on the specified
directory
-t, --test Only display the new file names; nothing
will be renamed
-h, --help Display this help
Formatting:
The following information is available to be used in the file name:
album artist title track
To specify a file name format, enter the desired format enclosed in quotation
marks. The words album, artist, title, and track will be replaced by values
retrieved from the audio file's metadata.
For example, --format="artist - album [track] title" will rename music files
with the name format:
Sample Artist - Sample Album [1] Sample Title
The following characters are of special importance to the operating system
and cannot be used in the file name:
\ / : * ? " < > |
(=) is replaced by the directory path separator, so to move files into
artist and album subdirectories, the following format can be used:
"artist(=)album(=)track - title"
If no format is provided, the default format is the same as used in the above
example.
Examples:
projectmusic.py Renames music files in the current
directory
projectmusic.py -d /music/path/ Renames music files in /music/path/
projectmusic.py -f "title -- artist" Renames music files in the current
directory with the name format:
Sample Title -- Sample Artist.mp3"""
### Imports ###
import time
import re
import os
import sys
import getopt
import mutagen.easyid3
import mutagen.oggvorbis
### Exceptions ###
class FormatError(Exception):
"""
Exception raised due to improper formatting
"""
pass
class DirectoryError(Exception):
"""
Exception raised due to a non-existent directory
"""
pass
### Definitions ###
def scanDirectory(directory, fileExtList, recursive=False):
"""
Generate a list of files with the specified extension(s) in the specified
directory (and its subdirectories, if the recursive option is enabled)
"""
fileList = []
for dirPath, dirNames, fileNames in os.walk(directory):
for name in fileNames:
if os.path.splitext(name)[1].lower() in fileExtList:
# lower() is necessary here; otherwise ".MP3" is not considered
# a valid extension and files will be skipped. The extension's
# case is preserved when renaming the file, however
fileList.append(os.path.normcase(os.path.join(dirPath, name)))
if not recursive:
break # do not continue to the next "dirPath"
return fileList
class AudioFile:
"""
A generic audio file
"""
def __init__(self, fileName):
self.fileName = fileName
self.fileExt = os.path.splitext(fileName)[1].lower()
self.filePath = os.path.split(fileName)[0] + os.path.sep
self.data = getattr(self, "parse_%s" % self.fileExt[1:])()
# call the appropriate method based on the file type
self.generate()
def generate(self):
def lookup(key, default):
return self.data[key][0] if ( self.data.has_key(key) and
self.data[key][0] ) else default
self.artist = lookup("artist", "No Artist")
self.album = lookup("album", "No Album")
self.title = lookup("title", "No Title")
self.track = lookup("tracknumber", "0")
if self.track != "0":
self.track = self.track.split("/")[0].lstrip("0")
# In regards to track numbers, self.data["tracknumber"] returns numbers
# in several different formats: 1, 1/10, 01, or 01/10. Wanting a
# consistent format, the returned string is split at the "/" and leading
# zeros are stripped.
def parse_mp3(self):
return mutagen.easyid3.EasyID3(self.fileName)
def parse_ogg(self):
return mutagen.oggvorbis.Open(self.fileName)
def rename(self, newFileName, flatten=False):
def uniqueName(newFileName, count=0):
"""
Returns a unique name if a file already exists with the supplied
name
"""
c = "_(%s)" % str(count) if count else ""
prefix = directory + os.path.sep if flatten else self.filePath
testFileName = prefix + newFileName + c + self.fileExt
if os.path.isfile(testFileName):
count += 1
return uniqueName(newFileName, count)
else:
return testFileName
os.renames(self.fileName, uniqueName(newFileName))
# Note: this function is quite simple at the moment; it does not support
# multiple file extensions, such as "sample.txt.backup", which would
# only retain the ".backup" file extension.
def cleanFileName(self, format):
"""
Generate a clean file name based on metadata
"""
rawFileName = format % {"artist": self.artist,
"album": self.album,
"title": self.title,
"track": self.track}
rawFileName.encode("ascii", "replace")
# encode is used to override the default encode error-handing mode;
# which is to raise a UnicodeDecodeError
cleanFileName = re.sub(restrictedCharPattern, "+", rawFileName)
# remove restricted filename characters (\, /, :, *, ?, ", <, >, |) from
# the supplied string
return cleanFileName.replace("(=)", os.path.sep)
### Main ###
def main(argv):
global directory
directory = os.getcwd()
format = "%(artist)s - %(album)s [%(track)s] %(title)s"
flatten = False
recursive = False
test = False
def verifyFormat(format):
"""
Verify the supplied filename format
"""
if re.search(restrictedCharPattern, format):
raise FormatError, "supplied format contains restricted characters"
if not re.search(formatPattern, format):
raise FormatError, "supplied format does not contain any metadata keys"
# the supplied format must contain at least one of "artist",
# "album", "title", or "track", or all files will be named
# identically
format = format.replace("artist", "%(artist)s")
format = format.replace("album", "%(album)s")
format = format.replace("title", "%(title)s")
format = format.replace("track", "%(track)s")
return format
def verifyDirectory(directory):
"""
Verify the supplied directory path
"""
if os.path.isdir(directory):
return os.path.abspath(directory)
else:
raise DirectoryError, "supplied directory cannot be found"
def usage():
print __doc__
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(argv, "d:f:hlrt", ["directory=",
"format=",
"help",
"flatten",
"recursive",
"test"])
except getopt.error, error:
usage()
print "\n***Error: %s***" % error
sys.exit(1)
for opt, arg in opts:
if opt in ("-h", "--help"):
usage()
sys.exit()
elif opt in ("-f", "--format"):
try:
format = verifyFormat(arg)
except FormatError, error:
print "\n***Error: %s***" % error
sys.exit(2)
elif opt in ("-d", "--directory"):
try:
directory = verifyDirectory(arg)
except DirectoryError, error:
print "\n***Error: %s***" % error
sys.exit(3)
elif opt in ("-l", "--flatten"):
flatten = True
elif opt in ("-r", "--recursive"):
recursive = True
elif opt in ("-t", "--test"):
test = True
work(directory, format, flatten, recursive, test)
def safety(message):
print "\n***Attention: %s***" % message
safety = raw_input("Enter 'ok' to continue (any other response will abort): ")
if safety.lower().strip() != "ok":
print "\n***Attention: aborting***"
sys.exit()
def work(directory, format, flatten, recursive, test):
fileList = scanDirectory(directory, [".mp3", ".ogg"], recursive)
try:
if test:
safety("testing mode; nothing will be renamed")
print "\n***Attention: starting***"
for f in fileList:
current = AudioFile(f)
print current.cleanFileName(format)
else:
count = 0
total = len(fileList)
safety("all audio files in %s will be renamed" % directory)
print "\n***Attention: starting***"
start = time.time()
for f in fileList:
count += 1
current = AudioFile(f)
current.rename(current.cleanFileName(format), flatten)
message = "Renamed %d of %d" % (count, total)
sys.stdout.write("\r" + message)
print "\n%d files renamed in %f seconds" % (len(fileList),
time.time() - start)
except StandardError:
print "\n***Error: %s***" % f
raise
if __name__ == "__main__":
restrictedCharPattern = re.compile('[\\\\/:\*\?"<>\|]')
formatPattern = re.compile('artist|album|title|track')
main(sys.argv[1:])
M*cr*s*ft: Who needs quality when you have marketing?
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tried it with a few files, worked.
just copiing my music to another backup directory to test it there with all the files.
edit: hmmm, it stops if a title has no id3 tag. is there a way to skip this song?
Last edited by koch (2009-02-05 16:01:26)
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Care to post the error message? If a file is missing a specifc tag, it should fill in with "No Title", "No Album", or "No Artist", respectively.
M*cr*s*ft: Who needs quality when you have marketing?
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Awesome little script. Works well but yes... get the same error as koch -
here is the error:
-------------------------------------------------
***Error: /home/user/Documents/HDD Dump/Music/f44240416.mp3***
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "mp3.py", line 316, in <module>
main(sys.argv[1:])
File "mp3.py", line 267, in main
work(directory, format, flatten, recursive, test)
File "mp3.py", line 300, in work
current = AudioFile(f)
File "mp3.py", line 111, in __init__
self.data = getattr(self, "parse_%s" % self.fileExt[1:])()
File "mp3.py", line 135, in parse_mp3
return mutagen.easyid3.EasyID3(self.fileName)
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/mutagen/easyid3.py", line 167, in __init__
self.load(filename)
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/mutagen/id3.py", line 113, in load
self.__load_header()
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/mutagen/id3.py", line 211, in __load_header
raise ID3NoHeaderError("'%s' doesn't start with an ID3 tag" % fn)
mutagen.id3.ID3NoHeaderError: '/home/user/Documents/HDD Dump/Music/f44240416.mp3' doesn't start with an ID3 tag
------------------------------------------
and sorry for resurrecting such an old post....
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I had this very problem and put together the following script python script https://gitlab.com/tomleo/id3_folder_rename. Hope this script is helpful to others who might google upon this page
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Thanks for sharing, hopefully OP isn't still looking for a solution seven years on, but someone may find your post helpful. Still, I'm going to take this opportunity to close this old thread.
Closing.
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