Provided by: libnet-daap-dmap-perl_1.27-1_all bug

NAME

       Net::DAAP::DMAP - Perl module for reading and writing DAAP structures

   SYNOPSIS
         use Net::DAAP::DMAP qw(:all);

         $hash_ref = dmap_to_hash_ref($dmap);       # crude
         $array_ref = dmap_to_array_ref($dmap);     # crude

         $array_ref = dmap_unpack($dmap);           # knows about data types
         $node      = dmap_seek($array_ref, $path);

         $flattened = dmap_flatten($array_ref);     # convert to path = data formta
         $flat_list = dmap_flat_list($array_ref);   # convert to [ path, data ] format
         $xml       = dmap_to_xml($dmap);           # convert to XML fragment
         $dmap      = dmap_pack($dmap);             # convert to DMAP packet
         update_content_codes($unpacked_content_codes_response);

DESCRIPTION

   WARNING!
       Until 2.0, I reserve the right to change the interface.  In particular, I think
       "dmap_flatten", "dmap_to_hash_ref", and "dmap_to_array_ref" are likely to disappear.  And
       I suspect the hive brain of Perl can come up with a better data structure than I have.

   Back to the Description
       A DMAP structure is a binary record used in Apple's DAAP protocol.  A DMAP structure may
       contain other DMAP structures.  Fields in a DMAP structure are identified by a short name
       ("msdc").  The short name is what's in the binary record, but a content codes list gives a
       long name ("dmap.databasescount") and a data type for the record (32-bit integer).

       A parsed DMAP structure is built out of arrays.  For example:

         [
           [
             'dmap.loginresponse',
             [
                [
                  'dmap.status',
                  200
                ],
                [
                  'dmap.sessionid',
                   2393
                ]
             ]
           ]
         ]

       ("dmap_unpack" returns this kind of structure)

       There are two rules here: a field is wrapped in an array, and a container's values are
       wrapped in an array.  So the structure is programmatically built as:

         $status_field = [ 'dmap.status', 200 ];
         $session_id_field = [ 'dmap.sessionid', 2393 ];
         $response_value = [ $status_field, $session_id_field ];
         $login_response_field = [ 'dmap.loginresponse', $response_value ];
         $entire_response = [ $login_response_field ];

       The outer array is necessary because not every response has only one top-level container
       as this does.

       In XML you'd write the response as:

         <dmap.loginresponse>
             <dmap.status>200</dmap.status>
             <dmap.sessionid>2393</dmap.sessionid>
         </dmap.loginresponse>

       This is what "dmap_to_xml" returns.

       A much more convenient structure for representing this data would be:

         {
           'dmap.loginresponse' => {
             { 'dmap.status' => 200,
               'dmap.sessionid' => 2393,
             },
         }

       This is the output of "dmap_to_hash_ref", but beware!  This isn't suitable for every
       response.  The hash is indexed by field name and a structure may contain many elements of
       the same name.  For example, requesting the content codes list gives you a list of records
       that have the field name "dmap.dictionary".

       The array structure returned by "dmap_to_array_ref" is complex, but the "dmap_seek"
       function makes it easier.  This takes a structure and a path expressed as a slash-
       separated list of field names:

         dmap.loginresponse/dmap.sessionid

       The return value is the the value of the first "dmap.sessionid" found in the first
       "dmap.loginresponse" structure.  In the case of the sample record above, it would be 2393.

       Another way to handle these complex arrays is to "dmap_flatten" them.  This returns an
       array of "path = value" lines, where path is a slash-separated path.  For example:

         [
           '/dmap.loginresponse/dmap.status = 200',
           '/dmap.loginresponse/dmap.sessionid = 2393'
         ]

       You can use "grep" and regexps to find data if that's the way your mind works.

       "dmap_flatten" has a similar looking cousin called "dmap_flat_list", which returns an
       array of "path => value" pairs.  For example:

         [
           '/dmap.loginresponse/dmap.status' => 200,
           '/dmap.loginresponse/dmap.sessionid' => 2393,
         ]

       You can then turn this into a hash (which may of course lose you the first elements), or
       iterate over it in pairs, if that's easier.

       You can, but don't have to, update the tables of field names ("content codes") and data
       types.  DAAP offers a request that returns a packet of content codes.  Feed that packet to
       "update_content_codes".

   Implementation Details
       It's all implementation details.  Here are the various data types.

        1, 3, 5, 7 = ints, size 8,16,32,64 bit
        9 = string, 10 = time_t-style time
        11 = version (two 16-bit ints, I think)
        12 = container

       This uses Math::BigInt for 64-bit quantities, as not every platform has 64-bit int support
       available.

       There's no support for types 2, 4, 6, 8 yet because nobody'd found examples of them in the
       field: are they endian changes, or signedness changes.  The assumption is that all numbers
       are unsigned (why allow the possibility of a negative number of songs?).

AUTHOR

       Nathan Torkington, <nathan AT torkington.com>.  For support, join the DAAP developers
       mailing list by sending mail to <daap-dev-subscribe AT develooper.com>.

       Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net> is the current maintainer, and took over in July
       2004.