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     73 <h1>Ogg Vorbis I format specification: comment field and header specification</h1>
     74 
     75 <h1>Overview</h1>
     76 
     77 <p>The Vorbis text comment header is the second (of three) header
     78 packets that begin a Vorbis bitstream. It is meant for short, text
     79 comments, not arbitrary metadata; arbitrary metadata belongs in a
     80 separate logical bitstream (usually an XML stream type) that provides
     81 greater structure and machine parseability.</p>
     82 
     83 <p>The comment field is meant to be used much like someone jotting a
     84 quick note on the bottom of a CDR. It should be a little information to
     85 remember the disc by and explain it to others; a short, to-the-point
     86 text note that need not only be a couple words, but isn't going to be
     87 more than a short paragraph. The essentials, in other words, whatever
     88 they turn out to be, eg:</p>
     89 
     90 <blockquote><p>
     91 "Honest Bob and the Factory-to-Dealer-Incentives, _I'm Still Around_,
     92 opening for Moxy Fr&uuml;vous, 1997"
     93 </p></blockquote>
     94 
     95 <h1>Comment encoding</h1>
     96 
     97 <h2>Structure</h2>
     98 
     99 <p>The comment header logically is a list of eight-bit-clean vectors; the
    100 number of vectors is bounded to 2^32-1 and the length of each vector
    101 is limited to 2^32-1 bytes. The vector length is encoded; the vector
    102 contents themselves are not null terminated. In addition to the vector
    103 list, there is a single vector for vendor name (also 8 bit clean,
    104 length encoded in 32 bits). For example, the 1.0 release of libvorbis 
    105 set the vendor string to "Xiph.Org libVorbis I 20020717".</p>
    106 
    107 <p>The comment header is decoded as follows:</p>
    108 
    109 <pre>
    110   1) [vendor_length] = read an unsigned integer of 32 bits
    111   2) [vendor_string] = read a UTF-8 vector as [vendor_length] octets
    112   3) [user_comment_list_length] = read an unsigned integer of 32 bits
    113   4) iterate [user_comment_list_length] times {
    114 
    115        5) [length] = read an unsigned integer of 32 bits
    116        6) this iteration's user comment = read a UTF-8 vector as [length] octets
    117 
    118      }
    119 
    120   7) [framing_bit] = read a single bit as boolean
    121   8) if ( [framing_bit] unset or end of packet ) then ERROR
    122   9) done.
    123 </pre>
    124 
    125 <h2>Content vector format</h2>
    126 
    127 <p>The comment vectors are structured similarly to a UNIX environment variable.
    128 That is, comment fields consist of a field name and a corresponding value and
    129 look like:</p>
    130 
    131 <pre>
    132 comment[0]="ARTIST=me"; 
    133 comment[1]="TITLE=the sound of Vorbis"; 
    134 </pre>
    135 
    136 <ul>
    137 <li>A case-insensitive field name that may consist of ASCII 0x20 through
    138 0x7D, 0x3D ('=') excluded. ASCII 0x41 through 0x5A inclusive (A-Z) is
    139 to be considered equivalent to ASCII 0x61 through 0x7A inclusive
    140 (a-z).</li>
    141 <li>The field name is immediately followed by ASCII 0x3D ('='); 
    142 this equals sign is used to terminate the field name.</li>
    143 <li>0x3D is followed by the 8 bit clean UTF-8 encoded value of the 
    144 field contents to the end of the field.</li>
    145 </ul>
    146 
    147 <h3>Field names</h3>
    148 
    149 <p>Below is a proposed, minimal list of standard field names with a
    150 description of intended use. No single or group of field names is
    151 mandatory; a comment header may contain one, all or none of the names
    152 in this list.</p>
    153 
    154 <dl>
    155 
    156 <dt>TITLE</dt>
    157 <dd>Track/Work name</dd>
    158 
    159 <dt>VERSION</dt>
    160 <dd>The version field may be used to differentiate multiple
    161 versions of the same track title in a single collection.
    162 (e.g. remix info)</dd>
    163 
    164 <dt>ALBUM</dt>
    165 <dd>The collection name to which this track belongs</dd>
    166 
    167 <dt>TRACKNUMBER</dt>
    168 <dd>The track number of this piece if part of a specific larger collection or album</dd>
    169 
    170 <dt>ARTIST</dt>
    171 <dd>The artist generally considered responsible for the work. In popular music
    172 this is usually the performing band or singer. For classical music it would be
    173 the composer. For an audio book it would be the author of the original text.</dd>
    174 
    175 <dt>PERFORMER</dt>
    176 <dd>The artist(s) who performed the work. In classical music this would be the
    177 conductor, orchestra, soloists. In an audio book it would be the actor who did
    178 the reading. In popular music this is typically the same as the ARTIST and
    179 is omitted.</dd>
    180 
    181 <dt>COPYRIGHT</dt>
    182 <dd>Copyright attribution, e.g., '2001 Nobody's Band' or '1999 Jack Moffitt'</dd>
    183 
    184 <dt>LICENSE</dt>
    185 <dd>License information, eg, 'All Rights Reserved', 'Any
    186 Use Permitted', a URL to a license such as a Creative Commons license
    187 ("www.creativecommons.org/blahblah/license.html") or the EFF Open
    188 Audio License ('distributed under the terms of the Open Audio
    189 License. see http://www.eff.org/IP/Open_licenses/eff_oal.html for
    190 details'), etc.</dd>
    191 
    192 <dt>ORGANIZATION</dt>
    193 <dd>Name of the organization producing the track (i.e.
    194 the 'record label')</dd>
    195 
    196 <dt>DESCRIPTION</dt>
    197 <dd>A short text description of the contents</dd>
    198 
    199 <dt>GENRE</dt>
    200 <dd>A short text indication of music genre</dd>
    201 
    202 <dt>DATE</dt>
    203 <dd>Date the track was recorded</dd>
    204 
    205 <dt>LOCATION</dt>
    206 <dd>Location where track was recorded</dd>
    207 
    208 <dt>CONTACT</dt>
    209 <dd>Contact information for the creators or distributors of the track.
    210 This could be a URL, an email address, the physical address of
    211 the producing label.</dd>
    212 
    213 <dt>ISRC</dt>
    214 <dd>ISRC number for the track; see <a href="http://www.ifpi.org/isrc/">the
    215 ISRC intro page</a> for more information on ISRC numbers.</dd>
    216 
    217 </dl>
    218 
    219 <h3>Implications</h3>
    220 
    221 <ul>
    222 <li>Field names should not be 'internationalized'; this is a
    223 concession to simplicity not an attempt to exclude the majority of
    224 the world that doesn't speak English. Field <emph>contents</emph>, 
    225 however, use the UTF-8 character encoding to allow easy representation 
    226 of any language.</li>
    227 <li>We have the length of the entirety of the field and restrictions on
    228 the field name so that the field name is bounded in a known way. Thus
    229 we also have the length of the field contents.</li>
    230 <li>Individual 'vendors' may use non-standard field names within
    231 reason. The proper use of comment fields should be clear through
    232 context at this point. Abuse will be discouraged.</li>
    233 <li>There is no vendor-specific prefix to 'nonstandard' field names.
    234 Vendors should make some effort to avoid arbitrarily polluting the
    235 common namespace. We will generally collect the more useful tags
    236 here to help with standardization.</li>
    237 <li>Field names are not required to be unique (occur once) within a
    238 comment header. As an example, assume a track was recorded by three
    239 well know artists; the following is permissible, and encouraged:
    240 <pre>
    241               ARTIST=Dizzy Gillespie 
    242               ARTIST=Sonny Rollins 
    243               ARTIST=Sonny Stitt 
    244 </pre></li>
    245 </ul>
    246 
    247 <h2>Encoding</h2> 
    248 
    249 <p>The comment header comprises the entirety of the second bitstream
    250 header packet. Unlike the first bitstream header packet, it is not
    251 generally the only packet on the second page and may not be restricted
    252 to within the second bitstream page. The length of the comment header
    253 packet is (practically) unbounded. The comment header packet is not
    254 optional; it must be present in the bitstream even if it is
    255 effectively empty.</p>
    256 
    257 <p>The comment header is encoded as follows (as per Ogg's standard
    258 bitstream mapping which renders least-significant-bit of the word to be
    259 coded into the least significant available bit of the current
    260 bitstream octet first):</p>
    261 
    262 <ol>
    263 <li>Vendor string length (32 bit unsigned quantity specifying number of octets)</li>
    264 <li>Vendor string ([vendor string length] octets coded from beginning of string
    265 to end of string, not null terminated)</li>
    266 <li>Number of comment fields (32 bit unsigned quantity specifying number of fields)</li>
    267 <li>Comment field 0 length (if [Number of comment fields]>0; 32 bit unsigned
    268 quantity specifying number of octets)</li>
    269 <li>Comment field 0 ([Comment field 0 length] octets coded from beginning of
    270 string to end of string, not null terminated)</li>
    271 <li>Comment field 1 length (if [Number of comment fields]>1...)...</li>
    272 </ol>
    273 
    274 <p>This is actually somewhat easier to describe in code; implementation of the above
    275 can be found in vorbis/lib/info.c:_vorbis_pack_comment(),_vorbis_unpack_comment()</p>
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