PyRadio comes with a client to be used in conjunction with the Remote Control Server provided by the program, using the server’s text command set.
The client is created with maximum ease in mind; the user does not even have to provide the IP and PORT.
The following is the output of the “pyradio -h” command:
Usage: pyradio-client [-h] [--address] [-s SERVER_AND_PORT] [-r] [-t TIMEOUT] [command] PyRadio Remote Control Client General options: -h, --help Show this help message and exit --address List available servers Server Parameters: -s SERVER_AND_PORT, --server_and_port SERVER_AND_PORT Set the server IP and PORT (format: IP:PORT) -r, --reverse-detection Reverse server detection (when no server IP and PORT specified); detect headless server last, instead of headless server first -t TIMEOUT, --timeout TIMEOUT Set the timeout (default = 1.0) command The command to send to the server
The client will auto-detect the PyRadio Servers running on the system, when the “-s” command line parameter is not used.
The auto-detection functionality is based on parsing the “server files” (residing in the STATE directory).
If both a headless and a normal instance of PyRadio are detected, the headless server will be used to send the requested command, unless the “-r” (“–reverse-detection”) command line parameter is used.
Note: A normal server is a server started by a PyRadio instance which is executed on a real terminal, without the “–headless” command line parameter.
A list of available commands will be displayed when no command has been specified.
A list of detected servers (and their address) can be obtained using the command:
$ pyradio-client --addr PyRadio Remote Control Server Headless server: 127.0.0.1:11111 Server: 127.0.0.1:9998
Then, the address reported can be used to contact a specific server:
pyradio-client -s 127.0.0.1:9998 i
The previous command will get the info page of the normal instance of a server.