Send a signal to a `festivald` running on the same machine
This will not start a new `festivald`, but send a
signal to an already running one. This only works
if there's a `festivald` already running on the
same machine.
The flag `--disable-watch` disables this feature.
Usage: festivald signal OPTION [ARG]
Options:
--play
Start playback
--pause
Pause playback
--toggle
Toggle playback (play/pause)
--next
Skip to next track
--previous
Play previous track
--stop
Clear queue and stop playback
--clear
Clear queue but don't stop playback
--shuffle
Shuffle the current queue and reset to the first song
--repeat-song
Turn on single `Song` track repeat
--repeat-queue
Turn on queue repeat
--repeat-off
Turn off repeating
--volume <VOLUME>
Set the volume to `VOLUME` (0-100)
--seek <SECOND>
Seek to the absolute `SECOND` second in the current song
--seek-forward <SECOND>
Seek `SECOND` seconds forwards in the current song
--seek-backward <SECOND>
Seek `SECOND` seconds backwards in the current song
--index <NUMBER>
Set the current song to the index `NUMBER` in the queue.
NOTE:
The queue index starts from 1 (first song is `--index 1`).
Providing an index that is out-of-bounds
will end the queue (even if repeat is turned on).
--skip <NUMBER>
Skip `NUMBER` amount of songs
If the last song in the queue is skipped over,
and queue repeat is turned on, this will reset
the current song to the 1st in the queue.
--back <NUMBER>
Go backwards in the queue by `NUMBER` amount of songs
If `NUMBER` is greater than the amount of songs we can
skip backwards, this will reset the current song to
the 1st in the queue.
-h, --help
Print help (see a summary with '-h')