Provided by: shairport-sync_2.8.0-1_amd64 

NAME
shairport-sync - Synchronised Audio Player for iTunes / AirPlay
SYNOPSIS
shairport-sync [-dvw] [-a name] [-A latency] [-B command] [-c configurationfile] [-E command]
[--forkedDaapdLatency=latency] [--get-cover-art] [-i latency] [-L latency] [-m backend] [--meta-
dir=directory] [-o backend] [--password=secret] [-r threshold] [--statistics] [-S mode] [-t timeout]
[--tolerance=frames] [-- audio_backend_options]
shairport-sync -D
shairport-sync -h
shairport-sync -k
shairport-sync -h
shairport-sync -R
shairport-sync -V
DESCRIPTION
shairport-sync plays audio streamed from iTunes or from an AirPlay device to an ALSA-compatible audio
output device.
A feature of shairport-sync is that the audio is played synchronously. This means that if many devices
are playing the same stream at the same time, all the outputs will stay in step with one another. This
allows multiple devices play the same source without getting out of phase with one another, enabling, for
example, simultaneous multi-room operation.
shairport-sync can additionally be compiled and configured to stream raw audio to a pipe or to stdout.
Settings can be made using the configuration file (recommended for all new installations) or by using
command-line options.
CONFIGURATION FILE SETTINGS
You should use the configuration file for setting up shairport-sync. This file is normally
/etc/shairport-sync.conf. You may need to have root privileges to modify it.
Settings are organised into groups, for example, there is a "general" group of standard settings, and
there is an "alsa" group with settings that pertain to the ALSA back end. Here is an example of a typical
configuration file:
general = {
name = "Mike's Boombox";
interpolation = "soxr";
password = "secret";
};
alsa = {
output_device = "hw:0";
mixer_control_name = "PCM";
};
Most settings have sensible default values, so -- as in the example above -- users generally only need to
set (1) the service name, (2) a password (if desired) and (3) the output device. If the output device has
a mixer that can be used for volume control, then (4) the volume control's name should be specificed. It
is highly desirable to use the output device's mixer for volume control, if available -- response time is
reduced to zero and the processor load is reduced. In the example above, "soxr" interpolation was also
enabled.
A sample configuration file with all possible settings, but with all of them commented out, is installed
at /etc/shairport-sync.conf.sample.
To retain backwards compatibility with previous versions of shairport-sync you can use still use command
line options, but any new features, etc. will be available only via configuration file settings.
The configuration file is processed using the libconfig library -- see
http://www.hyperrealm.com/libconfig/libconfig_manual.html.
"GENERAL" SETTINGS
These are the settings available within the general group:
name="service_name";
Use this service_name to identify this player in iTunes, etc. The default name is "Shairport Sync
on <hostname>".
password="password";
Require the password password to connect to the service. If you leave this setting commented out,
no password is needed.
interpolation="mode";
Interpolate, or "stuff", the audio stream using the mode. Interpolation here refers to the process
of adding or removing frames of audio to or from the stream sent to the output device to keep it
exactly in synchrony with the player. The default mode, "basic", is normally almost completely
inaudible. The alternative mode, "soxr", is even less obtrusive but requires much more processing
power. For this mode, support for libsoxr, the SoX Resampler Library, must be selected when
shairport-sync is compiled.
statistics="setting";
Use this setting to enable ("yes") or disable ("no") the output of some statistical information on
the console or in the log. The default is to disable statistics.
mdns_backend="backend";
shairport-sync has a number of modules of code ("backends") for interacting with the mDNS service
to be used to advertise itself. Normally, the first mDNS backend that works is selected. This
setting forces the selection of the specific mDNS backend. The default is "avahi". Perform the
command shairport-sync -h to get a list of available mDNS modules.
output_backend="backend";
shairport-sync has a number of modules of code ("backends") through which audio is output.
Normally, the first audio backend that works is selected. This setting forces the selection of the
specific audio backend. The default is "alsa". Perform the command shairport-sync -h to get a list
of available audio backends. Only the alsa backend supports synchronisation.
port=portnumber;
Use this to specify the portnumber shairport-sync uses to listen for service requests from iTunes,
etc. The default is port 5000.
udp_port_base=portnumber;
When shairport-sync starts to play audio, it establises three UDP connections to the audio source.
Use this setting to specify the starting portnumber for these three ports. It will pick the first
three unused ports starting from portnumber. The default is port 6001.
udp_port_range=range;
Use this in conjunction with the prevous setting to specify the range of ports that can be checked
for availability. Only three ports are needed. The default is 100, thus 100 ports will be checked
from port 6001 upwards until three are found.
drift=frames;
Allow playback to drift up to frames out of exact synchronization before attempting to correct it.
The default is 88 frames, i.e. 2 ms. The smaller the tolerance, the more likely it is that
overcorrection will occur. Overcorrection is when more corrections (insertions and deletions) are
made than are strictly necessary to keep the stream in sync. Use the statistics setting to monitor
correction levels. Corrections should not greatly exceed net corrections.
resync_threshold=threshold;
Resynchronise if timings differ by more than threshold frames. If the output timing differs from
the source timing by more than the threshold, output will be muted and a full resynchronisation
will occur. The default threshold is 2,205 frames, i.e. 50 milliseconds. Specify 0 to disable
resynchronisation.
log_verbosity=0;
Use this to specify how much debugging information should be output or logged. "0" means no debug
information, "3" means most debug information. The default is "0".
ignore_volume_control="choice";
Set this choice to "yes" if you want the volume to be at 100% no matter what the source's volume
control is set to. This might be useful if you want to set the volume on the output device,
independently of the setting at the source. The default is "no".
volume_range_db=dBvalue;
Set this dBvalue to use just a portion of the full range of attenuation offered by a mixer. For
example, if a mixer has a minimum volume of -80 dB and a maximum of +20 dB, you might wish to use
only 60 dB of the 100 dB available. This might be because the sound becomes inaudible at the
lowest setting and unbearably loud at the highest setting -- indeed, many domestic HiFi systmes
have a volume copntrol range of just 60 to 80dB. Another potential use might be where the range
specified by the mixer does not match the capabilities of the device. For example, the Raspberry
Pi's DAC that feeds the built-in audio jack claims a range of 106 dB but has a useful range of
only about 35dB. The setting allows you to specify the maximum range from highest to lowest. The
range suggested for the Raspberry Pi's built-in audio DAC, which feeds the headphone jack, is 35.
Using it in this case gives the volume control a much more useful range of settings. If you omit
this setting, the full "native" range of the mixer is used.
"ALSA" SETTINGS
These settings are for the ALSA back end, used to communicate with audio output devices in the
ALSA system. (By the way, you can use tools such as alsamixer or aplay to discover what devices
are available.) Use these settings to select the output device and the mixer control to be used to
control the output volume. You can additionally set the desired size of the output buffer and you
can adjust overall latency. Here are the alsa group settings:
output_device="output_device";
Use the output device called output_device. The default is the device called "default".
mixer_control_name="name";
Specify the name of the mixer control to be used by shairport-sync to control the volume. The
mixer control must be on the mixer device, which by default is the output device. If you do not
specify a mixer control name, shairport-sync will adjust the volume in software.
mixer_type="mixer_type"; This setting is deprecated and is ignored. For your information, its
functionality has been automatically incorporated in the mixer_control_name setting -- if you
specify a mixer name with the mixer_control_name setting, it is assumed that the mixer is
implemented in hardware.
mixer_device="mixer_device";
By default, the mixer is assumed to be output_device. Use this setting to specify a device other
than the output device.
audio_backend_latency_offset=offset;
Set this offset, in frames, to compensate for a fixed delay in the audio back end. For example, if
the output device delays by 100 ms, set this to -4410.
audio_backend_buffer_desired_length=length;
Use this to set the desired number frames to be in the output device's hardware output buffer. The
default is 6,615 frames, or 0.15 seconds. If set too small, buffer underflow may occur on low-
powered machines. If too large, the response times when using software volume control (i.e. when
not using a mixer control to control volume) become annoying, or it may exceed the hardware buffer
size. It may need to be larger on low-powered machines that are also performing other tasks, such
as processing metadata.
"PIPE" SETTINGS
These settings are for the PIPE backend, used to route audio to a named unix pipe. The audio is in
raw CD audio format: PCM 16 bit little endian, 44,100 samples per second, stereo.
Use the name setting to set the name and location of the pipe.
There are two further settings affecting timing that might be useful if the pipe reader is, for
example, a program to play an audio stream such as aplay. The audio_backend_latency_offset affects
precisely when the first audio packet is sent and the audio_backend_buffer_desired_length setting
affects the nominal output buffer size.
These are the settings available within the pipe group:
name="/path/to/pipe";
Use this to specify the name and location of the pipe. The pipe will be created and opened when
shairport-sync starts up and will be closed upon shutdown. Frames of audio will be sent to the
pipe in packets of 352 frames and will be discarded if the pipe has not have a reader attached.
The sender will wait for up to five seconds for a packet to be written before discarding it.
audio_backend_latency_offset=offset_in_frames;
Packets of audio frames are written to the pipe synchronously -- that is, they are written to at
exactly the time they should be played. You can offset the time of initial audio output relative
to its nominal time using this setting. For example to send an audio stream to the pipe 100
milliseconds before it is due to be played, set this to -4410. Default setting is 0.
audio_backend_buffer_desired_length=buffer_length_in_frames;
Use this setting, in frames, to set the size of the output buffer. It works by determining how
soon the second and subsequent packets of audio frames are sent to the pipe. For example, if you
send the first packet of audio exactly when it is due and, using a
audio_backend_buffer_desired_length setting of 44100, send subsequent packets of audio a second
before they are due to be played, they will be buffered in the pipe reader's buffer, giving it a
nominal buffer size of 44,100 frames. Note that if the pipe reader consumes audio packets faster
or slower than they are supplied, the buffer will eventually empty or overflow -- shairport-sync
performs no stuffing or interpolation when writing to a pipe. Default setting is 44,100 frames.
"STDOUT" SETTINGS
These settings are for the STDOUT backend, used to route audio to standard output ("stdout"). The
audio is in raw CD audio format: PCM 16 bit little endian, 44,100 samples per second, stereo.
There are two settings affecting timing that might be useful if the stdout reader is, for example,
a program to play an audio stream such as aplay. The audio_backend_latency_offset affects
precisely when the first audio packet is sent and the audio_backend_buffer_desired_length setting
affects the nominal output buffer size.
These are the settings available within the stdout group:
audio_backend_latency_offset=offset_in_frames;
Packets of audio frames are written to stdout synchronously -- that is, they are written at
exactly the time they should be played. You can offset the time of initial audio output relative
to its nominal time using this setting. For example to send an audio stream to stdout 100
milliseconds before it is due to be played, set this to -4410. Default setting is 0.
audio_backend_buffer_desired_length=buffer_length_in_frames;
Use this setting, in frames, to set the size of the output buffer. It works by determining how
soon the second and subsequent packets of audio frames are sent to stdout. For example, if you
send the first packet of audio exactly when it is due and, using a
audio_backend_buffer_desired_length setting of 44100, send subsequent packets of audio a second
before they are due to be played, they will be buffered in the stdout reader's buffer, giving it a
nominal buffer size of 44,100 frames. Note that if the stdout reader consumes audio packets faster
or slower than they are supplied, the buffer will eventually empty or overflow -- shairport-sync
performs no stuffing or interpolation when writing to stdout. Default setting is 44,100 frames.
"AO" SETTINGS
These settings are for the AO backend, used for the libao audio library.
There are two settings affecting timing. The audio_backend_latency_offset affects precisely when
the first audio packet is sent and the audio_backend_buffer_desired_length setting affects the
nominal output buffer size.
These are the settings available within the ao group:
audio_backend_latency_offset=offset_in_frames;
Packets of audio frames are written to the libao system synchronously -- that is, they are written
at exactly the time they should be played. You can offset the time of initial audio output
relative to its nominal time using this setting. For example to send an audio stream to stdout 100
milliseconds before it is due to be played, set this to -4410. Default setting is 0.
audio_backend_buffer_desired_length=buffer_length_in_frames;
Use this setting, in frames, to set the size of the output buffer. It works by determining how
soon the second and subsequent packets of audio frames are sent to to the libao system. For
example, if you send the first packet of audio exactly when it is due and, using a
audio_backend_buffer_desired_length setting of 44100, send subsequent packets of audio a second
before they are due to be played, they will be buffered in the stdout reader's buffer, giving it a
nominal buffer size of 44,100 frames. Note that if the libao system consumes audio packets faster
or slower than they are supplied, the buffer will eventually empty or overflow -- shairport-sync
performs no stuffing or interpolation when writing to libao. Default setting is 44,100 frames.
"METADATA" SETTINGS
shairport-sync can process metadata provided by the source, such as Track Number, Album Name,
cover art, etc. and can provide additional metadata such as volume level, pause/resume, etc. It
sends the metadata to a pipe, by default /tmp/shairport-sync-metadata. To process metadata,
shairport-sync must have been compiled with metadata support included. You can check that this is
so by running shairport-sync -V; the identification string will contain the word metadata.
Please note that different sources provide different levels of metadata. Some provide a lot; some
provide almost none.
The metadata group of settings allow you to enable metadata handling and to control certain
aspects of it:
enabled="choice";
Set the choice to "yes" to enable shairport-sync to look for metadata from the audio source and to
forward it, along with metadata generated by shairport-sync itself, to the metadata pipe. The
default is "no".
include_cover_art="choice";
Set the choice to "yes" to enable shairport-sync to look for cover art from the audio source and
to include it in the feed to the metadata pipe. You must also enable metadata (see above). One
reason for not including cover art is that the images can sometimes be very large and may delay
transmission of subsequent metadata through the pipe. The default is "no".
pipe_name="filepathname";
Specify the absolute path name of the pipe through which metadata should be sent The default is
/tmp/shairport-sync-metadata".
"SESSIONCONTROL" SETTINGS
shairport-sync can run programs just before it starts to play an audio stream and just after it
finishes. You specify them using the sessioncontrol group settings run_this_before_play_begins and
run_this_after_play_ends.
run_this_before_play_begins="/path/to/application and args";
Here you can specify a program and its arguments that will be run just before a play session
begins. Be careful to include the full path to the application. The application must be marked as
executable and, if it is a script, its first line must begin with the standard #!/bin/... as
appropriate.
run_this_after_play_ends="/path/to/application and args";
Here you can specify a program and its arguments that will be run just after a play session ends.
Be careful to include the full path to the application. The application must be marked as
executable and, if it is a script, its first line must begin with the standard #!/bin/... as
appropriate.
wait_for_completion="choice";
Set choice to "yes" to make shairport-sync wait until the programs specified in the
run_this_before_play_begins and run_this_after_play_ends have completed execution before
continuing. The default is "no".
allow_session_interruption="choice";
If choice is set to "yes", then another source will be able to interrupt an existing play session
and start a new one. When set to "no" (the default), other devices attempting to interrupt a
session will fail, receiving a busy signal.
session_timeout=seconds;
If a play session has been established and the source disappears without warning (such as a device
going out of range of a network) then wait for seconds seconds before ending the session. Once the
session has terminated, other devices can use it. The default is 120 seconds.
"LATENCIES" SETTINGS
The latencies settings are now deprecated. Do not use them for new installations. They will be
removed from a future version of Shairport Sync.
Latency is the exact time from a sound signal's original timestamp until that signal actually
"appears" on the output of the audio output device, usually a Digital to Audio Converter (DAC),
irrespective of any internal delays, processing times, etc. in the computer.
Shairport Sync now sets latencies automatically using information supplied by the source,
typically either 88,200 or 99,577 frames.
The following relates to the old scheme of using fixed latencies, which ignores the latency
information supplied by the source. There are four default latency settings. One latency matches
the latency used by recent versions of iTunes when playing audio and another matches the latency
used by so-called "AirPlay" devices, including iOS devices and iTunes and Quicktime Player when
they are playing video. A third latency is used when the audio source is forked-daapd. The fourth
latency is the default if no other latency is chosen and is used for older versions of iTunes.
Note: If you are thinking of changing latencies to compensate for a delay in the audio output
device, then instead of changing these individual latencies, consider using the
audio_backend_latency_offset setting in the alsa group (or the appropriate other group if you're
not outputting through the alsa backend).
itunes=latency;
This is the latency, in frames, used for iTunes 10 or later. Default is 99,400.
airplay=latency;
This is the latency, in frames, used for AirPlay devices, including iOS devices and iTunes and
Quicktime Player when they are playing video. Default is 88,200.
forkedDaapd=latency;
This is the latency, in frames, used for forkedDaapd sources. Default is 99,400.
default=latency;
This is the latency, in frames, used when the source is unrecognised. Default is 88,200.
OPTIONS
Note: if you are setting up Shairport Sync for the first time or are updating an existing installation,
you are encouraged to use the configuration file settings described above. Most of the options described
below simply replicate the configuration settings and are retained to provide backward compatibility with
older installations of Shairport Sync.
Many of the options take sensible default values, so you can normally ignore most of them. See the
EXAMPLES section for typical usages.
The command line for shairport-sync can take two kinds of options: regular program options and audio
backend options. Program options are always listed first, followed by any audio backend options, preceded
by a -- symbol.
PROGRAM OPTIONS
These options are used by shairport-sync itself.
-a service name | --name=service name
Use this service name to identify this player in iTunes, etc. The default name is "Shairport Sync
on <hostname>".
-A | --AirPlayLatency=latency
Use this latency, in frames, for audio streamed from an AirPlay device. The default is 88,200
frames, where there are 44,100 frames to the second.
-B program | --on-start=program
Execute program when playback is about to begin. Specify the full path to the program, e.g.
/usr/bin/logger. Executable scripts can be used, but they must have #!/bin/sh (or whatever is
appropriate) in the headline.
If you want shairport-sync to wait until the command has completed before starting to play, select
the -w option as well.
-c filename | --configfile=filename
Read configuration settings from filename. The default is to read them from /etc/shairport-
sync.conf. For information about configuration settings, see the "Configuration File Settings"
section above.
-D | --disconnectFromOutput
Disconnect the shairport-sync daemon from the output device and exit. (Requires that the daemon
has written its PID to an agreed file -- see the -d option).
-d | --daemon
Instruct shairport-sync to demonise itself. It will write its Process ID (PID) to a file, usually
at /var/run/shairport-sync.pid, which is used by the -k, -D and -R options to locate the daemon at
a later time.
-E program | --on-stop=program
Execute program when playback has ended. Specify the full path to the program, e.g.
/usr/bin/logger. Executable scripts can be used, but they must have #!/bin/sh (or whatever is
appropriate) in the headline.
If you want shairport-sync to wait until the command has completed before continuing, select the
-w option as well.
--forkedDaapdLatency=latency
Use this latency, in frames, for audio streamed from a forked-daapd based source. The default is
99,400 frames, where there are 44,100 frames to the second.
--get-coverart
This option requires the --meta-dir option to be set, and enables shairport-sync to request cover
art from the source and to transmit it through the metadata pipe.
Please note that cover art data may be very large, and may place too great a burden on your
network.
-h | --help
Print brief help message and exit.
-i | --iTunesLatency=latency
Use this latency, in frames, for audio streamed from an iTunes source, where iTunes is Version 10
or later. The default is 99,400 frames, where there are 44,100 frames to the second. If the source
is iTunes but is earler than Version 10, the default latency is used (see the -L option). Some
third party programs masquerade as older versions of iTunes.
-k | --kill
Kill the shairport-sync daemon and exit. (Requires that the daemon has written its PID to an
agreed file -- see the -d option).
-L | --latency=latency
Use this to set the default latency, in frames, for audio coming from an unidentified source or
from an iTunes Version 9 or earlier source. The standard value for the default latency is 88,200
frames, where there are 44,100 frames to the second.
--meta-dir=directory
Listen for metadata coming from the source and send it, along with metadata from shairport-sync
itself, to a pipe called shairport-sync-metadata in the directory you specify. If you add the
--get-cover-art then cover art will be sent through the pipe too. See
https://github.com/mikebrady/shairport-sync-metadata-reader for a sample metadata reader.
-m mdnsbackend | --mdns=mdnsbackend
Force the use of the specified mDNS backend to advertise the player on the network. The default is
to try all mDNS backends until one works.
-o outputbackend | --output=outputbackend
Force the use of the specified output backend to play the audio. The default is to try the first
one. (This is not used at present.)
-p port | --port=port
Listen for play requests on port. The default is to use port 5000.
--password=secret
Require the password secret to be able to connect and stream to the service.
-R | --reconnectToOutput
Reconnect the shairport-sync daemon to the output device and exit. It may take a few seconds to
synchronise. (Requires that the daemon has written its PID to an agreed file -- see the -d
option).
-r threshold | --resync=threshold
Resynchronise if timings differ by more than threshold frames. If the output timing differs from
the source timing by more than the threshold, output will be muted and a full resynchronisation
will occur. The default threshold is 2,205 frames, i.e. 50 milliseconds. Specify 0 to disable
resynchronisation.
--statistics
Print some statistics in the standard output, or in the logfile if in daemon mode.
-S mode | --stuffing=mode
Stuff the audio stream using the mode. "Stuffing" refers to the process of adding or removing
frames of audio to or from the stream sent to the output device to keep it exactly in synchrony
with the player. The default mode, basic, is normally almost completely inaudible. The alternative
mode, soxr, is even less obtrusive but requires much more processing power. For this mode, support
for libsoxr, the SoX Resampler Library, must be selected when shairport-sync is compiled.
-t timeout | --timeout=timeout
Exit play mode if the stream disappears for more than timeout seconds.
When shairport-sync plays an audio stream, it starts a play session and will return a busy signal
to any other sources that attempt to use it. If the audio stream disappears for longer than
timeout seconds, the play session will be terminated. If you specify a timeout time of 0,
shairport-sync will never signal that it is busy and will not prevent other sources from "barging
in" on an existing play session. The default value is 120 seconds.
--tolerance=frames
Allow playback to be up to frames out of exact synchronization before attempting to correct it.
The default is 88 frames, i.e. 2 ms. The smaller the tolerance, the more likely it is that
overcorrection will occur. Overcorrection is when more corrections (insertions and deletions) are
made than are strictly necessary to keep the stream in sync. Use the --statistics option to
monitor correction levels. Corrections should not greatly exceed net corrections.
-V | --version
Print version information and exit.
-v | --verbose
Print debug information. Repeat up to three times to get more detail.
-w | --wait-cmd
Wait for commands specified using -B or -E to complete before continuing execution.
AUDIO BACKEND OPTIONS
These options are passed to the chosen audio backend. (At present, the only backend implemented is for
ALSA.) The audio backend options are preceded by a -- symbol to introduce them and to separate them from
any program options. In this way, option letters can be used as program options and also as audio backend
options without ambiguity.
In the ALSA backend, audio is sent to an output device which you can specify using the -d option. The
output level (the "volume") is controlled using a level control associated with a mixer. By default, the
mixer is implemented in shairport-sync itself, i.e. the type of the mixer is "software". To use a level
control on a mixer on the sound card, you must (a) specify that the mixer's type is "hardware" with the
-t option; (b) you must specify where the mixer is to be found using the -m option and finally (c) you
must specify the name of the level control you are using with the -c option.
-c controlname
Use the level control called controlname on the hardware mixer for controlling volume. This is
needed if the mixer type is specified, using the -t option, to be hardware. There is no default.
-d device
Use the specified output device. You may specify a card, e.g. hw:0, in which case the default
output device on the card will be chosen. Alternatively, you can specify a specific device on a
card, e.g. hw:0,0. The default is the device named default.
-m mixer
Use the specified hardware mixer for volume control. Use this to specify where the mixer is to be
found. For example, if the mixer is associated with a card, as is often the case, specify the
card, e.g. hw:0. If (unusually) the mixer is associated with a specific device on a card, specify
the device, e.g. hw:0,1. The default is the device named in the -d option, if given, or the device
named default.
-t devicetype
This option is deprecated and is ignored. For your information, its functionality has been
automatically incorporated in the -c option -- if you specify a mixer name with the -c option, it
is assumed that the mixer is implemented in hardware.
EXAMPLES
Here is a slightly contrived but typical example:
shairport-sync -d -a "Joe's Stereo" -S soxr -- -d hw:1,0 -m hw:1 -c PCM
The program will run in daemon mode ( -d ), will be visible as "Joe's Stereo" ( -a "Joe's Stereo" ) and
will use the SoX Resampler Library-based stuffing ( -S soxr ). The audio backend options following the --
separator specify that the audio will be output on output 0 of soundcard 1 ( -d hw:1,0 ) and will take
advantage of the same sound card's mixer ( -m hw:1 ) using the level control named "PCM" ( -c "PCM" ).
The example above is slightly contrived in order to show the use of the -m option. Typically, output 0 is
the default output of a card, so the output device could be written -d hw:1 and then the mixer option
would be unnecessary, giving the following, simpler, command:
shairport-sync -d -a "Joe's Stereo" -S soxr -- -d hw:1 -c PCM
CREDITS
Mike Brady developed Shairport Sync from the original Shairport by James Laird.
Shairport Sync can be found at https://github.com/mikebrady/shairport-sync.
Shairport can be found at https://github.com/abrasive/shairport.
COMMENTS
This man page was written using xml2man(1) by Oliver Kurth.
Manuals User shairport-sync(7)