# This is a default autogenerated MLC config # The syntax goes like this: # key value # Only the first occasion of the valid key value pair is taken to consideration # # Use # sign for comments # # All printed comented out values are default values # # You should have one of this files as ~/.config/mlc.conf, # if you have started mlc at least once. # This is going to be used every time you launch mlc, # so, edit it if you wish to change default behaviour. # # Alternatively, you can launch `mlc -c customConfig.conf` # if you wish to override ~/.config/mlc.conf file # Log level, regulates minimal message severity to be printed # Allowed values are: [debug, info, minor, major, warning, error, fatal] #level info # Output type # Allowed values are: [mp3] (more comming soon) #type mp3 # Source collection path # This is a default path to your music collection source. # It's usefull to set it when you always encode the same collection # Leaving this empty (as it is by default) will make you always # specify source in the command line #source # Destingation path # This is a default path for your encoding destination # It's usefull to set it when you often encode your collection # to the same output # Leaving this empty (as it is by default) will make you always # specify destination in the command line #destination # Parallel tasks # Defines how many threads are going to be started in parralel # Allowed values are [0, 1, 2, 3 ...] etc # If it's set to 0 - amount of threads is going to be # as high as your processor can effectively handle #parallel 0 # Non music files # MLC copies any non-music file it finds in source directory # if it matches the following regex # Allowed value are: [all, none] or regex without any additional syntax, # for example: filesToCopy cover\.jpe?g #filesToCopy all # Encoding quality # Sets up encoding quality (NOT OUTPUT QUALITY) # The higher quality the slower the encoding process # 0 is the highest quality and slowest process # 9 is the lowest quality and the fastest process fastest # Allowed values are: [0, 1, 2, ... 9] #encodingQuality 0 # Output quality # Sets up output quality # The higher quality the less information is lonst in compression # 0 is the highest possible quality for selected mode and type and results in the biggest file # 9 is the lowest quality but results in the smalest file # Allowed values are [0, 1, 2, ... 9] # For the constant bitrate modes (CBR) the following table is valid # Quality | MP3 | # --------+-----+-- # 0 | 320 | # --------+-----+-- # 1 | 288 | # --------+-----+-- # 2 | 256 | # --------+-----+-- # 3 | 224 | # --------+-----+-- # 4 | 192 | # --------+-----+-- # 5 | 160 | # --------+-----+-- # 6 | 128 | # --------+-----+-- # 7 | 96 | # --------+-----+-- # 8 | 64 | # --------+-----+-- # 9 | 32 | #outputQuality 0 # Variable bitrate # Switches on or off variable bitrate # VBR files are usually smaller, but not supped to be worse # in terms of quality. VBR files might be a bit more tricky for the player # Allowedvalues are: [true, false] #vbr true