Beets has an extensive configuration system that lets you customize nearly every
aspect of its operation. To configure beets, you create a file called
config.yaml. The location of the file depends on your platform (type beet
config -p to see the path on your system):
- On Unix-like OSes, write
~/.config/beets/config.yaml. - On Windows, use
%APPDATA%\beets\config.yaml. This is usually in a directory likeC:\Users\You\AppData\Roaming. - On OS X, you can use either the Unix location or
~/Library/Application Support/beets/config.yaml.
You can launch your text editor to create or update your configuration by typing
beet config -e. (See the :ref:`config-cmd` command for details.) It is also
possible to customize the location of the configuration file and even use
multiple layers of configuration. See Configuration Location, below.
The config file uses YAML syntax. You can use the full power of YAML, but most configuration options are simple key/value pairs. This means your config file will look like this:
option: value
another_option: foo
bigger_option:
key: value
foo: bar
In YAML, you will need to use spaces (not tabs!) to indent some lines. If you have questions about more sophisticated syntax, take a look at the YAML documentation.
The rest of this page enumerates the dizzying litany of configuration options available in beets. You might also want to see an :ref:`example <config-example>`.
- Global Options
- library
- directory
- plugins
- include
- pluginpath
- ignore
- ignore_hidden
- replace
- path_sep_replace
- asciify_paths
- art_filename
- threaded
- format_item
- format_album
- sort_item
- sort_album
- sort_case_insensitive
- original_date
- overwrite_null
- artist_credit
- multi_value_genres
- genre_separator
- per_disc_numbering
- aunique
- sunique
- terminal_encoding
- clutter
- max_filename_length
- id3v23
- va_name
- UI Options
- Importer Options
- write
- copy
- move
- link
- hardlink
- reflink
- resume
- incremental
- incremental_skip_later
- from_scratch
- quiet
- quiet_fallback
- none_rec_action
- timid
- log
- default_action
- languages
- ignored_alias_types
- detail
- group_albums
- autotag
- duplicate_keys
- duplicate_action
- duplicate_verbose_prompt
- bell
- set_fields
- singleton_album_disambig
- Autotagger Matching Options
- Path Format Configuration
- Configuration Location
- Example
These options control beets' global operation.
Path to the beets library file. By default, beets will use a file called
library.db alongside your configuration file.
The directory to which files will be copied/moved when adding them to the
library. Defaults to a folder called Music in your home directory.
A space-separated list of plugin module names to load. See :ref:`using-plugins`.
A space-separated list of extra configuration files to include. Filenames are
relative to the directory containing config.yaml.
Directories to search for plugins. Each Python file or directory in a plugin
path represents a plugin and should define a subclass of |BeetsPlugin|. A plugin
can then be loaded by adding the plugin name to the plugins configuration.
The plugin path can either be a single string or a list of strings---so, if you
have multiple paths, format them as a YAML list like so:
pluginpath:
- /path/one
- /path/two
A list of glob patterns specifying file and directory names to be ignored when
importing. By default, this consists of .*, *~, System Volume
Information, lost+found (i.e., beets ignores Unix-style hidden files,
backup files, and directories that appears at the root of some Linux and Windows
filesystems).
Either yes or no; whether to ignore hidden files when importing. On
Windows, the "Hidden" property of files is used to detect whether or not a file
is hidden. On OS X, the file's "IsHidden" flag is used to detect whether or not
a file is hidden. On both OS X and other platforms (excluding Windows), files
(and directories) starting with a dot are detected as hidden files.
A set of regular expression/replacement pairs to be applied to all filenames
created by beets. Typically, these replacements are used to avoid confusing
problems or errors with the filesystem (for example, leading dots, which hide
files on Unix, and trailing whitespace, which is illegal on Windows). To
override these substitutions, specify a mapping from regular expression to
replacement strings. For example, [xy]: z will make beets replace all
instances of the characters x or y with the character z.
If you do change this value, be certain that you include at least enough substitutions to avoid causing errors on your operating system. Here are the default substitutions used by beets, which are sufficient to avoid unexpected behavior on all popular platforms:
replace:
'[\\/]': _
'^\.': _
'[\x00-\x1f]': _
'[<>:"\?\*\|]': _
'\.$': _
'\s+$': ''
'^\s+': ''
'^-': _
These substitutions remove forward and back slashes, leading dots, and control characters—all of which is a good idea on any OS. The fourth line removes the Windows "reserved characters" (useful even on Unix for compatibility with Windows-influenced network filesystems like Samba). Trailing dots and trailing whitespace, which can cause problems on Windows clients, are also removed.
When replacements other than the defaults are used, it is possible that they will increase the length of the path. In the scenario where this leads to a conflict with the maximum filename length, the default replacements will be used to resolve the conflict and beets will display a warning.
Note that paths might contain special characters such as typographical quotes
(“”). With the configuration above, those will not be replaced as they don't
match the typewriter quote ("). To also strip these special characters, you
can either add them to the replacement list or use the :ref:`asciify-paths`
configuration option below.
A string that replaces the path separator (for example, the forward slash /
on Linux and MacOS, and the backward slash \\ on Windows) when generating
filenames with beets. This option is related to :ref:`replace`, but is distinct
from it for technical reasons.
Warning
Changing this option is potentially dangerous. For example, setting it to the actual path separator could create directories in unexpected locations. Use caution when changing it and always try it out on a small number of files before applying it to your whole library.
Default: _.
Convert all non-ASCII characters in paths to ASCII equivalents.
For example, if your path template for singletons is singletons/$title and
the title of a track is "Café", then the track will be saved as
singletons/Cafe.mp3. The changes take place before applying the
:ref:`replace` configuration and are roughly equivalent to wrapping all your
path templates in the %asciify{} :ref:`template function
<template-functions>`.
This uses the unidecode module which is language agnostic, so some characters may be transliterated from a different language than expected. For example, Japanese kanji will usually use their Chinese readings.
Default: no.
When importing album art, the name of the file (without extension) where the
cover art image should be placed. This is a template string, so you can use any
of the syntax available to :doc:`/reference/pathformat`. Defaults to cover
(i.e., images will be named cover.jpg or cover.png and placed in the
album's directory).
Either yes or no, indicating whether the autotagger should use multiple
threads. This makes things substantially faster by overlapping work: for
example, it can copy files for one album in parallel with looking up data in
MusicBrainz for a different album. You may want to disable this when debugging
problems with the autotagger. Defaults to yes.
Format to use when listing individual items with the :ref:`list-cmd` command
and other commands that need to print out items. Defaults to $artist - $album
- $title. The -f command-line option overrides this setting.
It used to be named list_format_item.
Format to use when listing albums with :ref:`list-cmd` and other commands.
Defaults to $albumartist - $album. The -f command-line option overrides
this setting.
It used to be named list_format_album.
Default sort order to use when fetching items from the database. Defaults to
artist+ album+ disc+ track+. Explicit sort orders override this default.
Default sort order to use when fetching albums from the database. Defaults to
albumartist+ album+. Explicit sort orders override this default.
Either yes or no, indicating whether the case should be ignored when
sorting lexicographic fields. When set to no, lower-case values will be
placed after upper-case values (e.g., Bar Qux foo), while yes would result
in the more expected Bar foo Qux. Default: yes.
Either yes or no, indicating whether matched albums should have their
year, month, and day fields set to the release date of the
original version of an album rather than the selected version of the release.
That is, if this option is turned on, then year will always equal
original_year and so on. Default: no.
This confusingly-named option indicates which fields have meaningful null
values. If an album or track field is in the corresponding list, then an
existing value for this field in an item in the database can be overwritten with
null. By default, however, null is interpreted as information about the
field being unavailable, so it would not overwrite existing values. For example:
overwrite_null:
album: ["albumid"]
track: ["title", "date"]
Either yes or no, indicating whether matched tracks and albums should
use the artist credit, rather than the artist. That is, if this option is turned
on, then artist will contain the artist as credited on the release.
Either yes or no (default: yes), controlling whether to use native
support for multiple genres per album/track. When enabled, the genres field
stores genres as a list and writes them to files as multiple individual genre
tags (e.g., separate GENRE tags for FLAC/MP3). The single genre field is
maintained as a joined string for backward compatibility. When disabled, only
the first genre is used (preserving the old behavior).
Default: ", ".
The separator string used when joining multiple genres into the single genre
field. This setting is only used when :ref:`multi_value_genres` is enabled. For
example, with the default separator, a track with genres ["Rock",
"Alternative", "Indie"] will have genre set to "Rock, Alternative,
Indie". You can customize this to match your preferred format (e.g., "; "
or " / ").
The default (", ") matches the :doc:`lastgenre plugin's
</plugins/lastgenre>` default separator for seamless migration. When
:ref:`multi_value_genres` is enabled, this global separator takes precedence
over the lastgenre plugin's separator option to ensure consistency across
all genre-related operations.
Custom separator migration: If you previously used a custom (non-default)
separator in the lastgenre plugin, set genre_separator to match your
custom value. You can check your existing format by running beet ls -f
'$genre' | head -20. Alternatively, set multi_value_genres: no to preserve
the old behavior entirely.
A boolean controlling the track numbering style on multi-disc releases. By
default (per_disc_numbering: no), tracks are numbered per-release, so the
first track on the second disc has track number N+1 where N is the number of
tracks on the first disc. If this per_disc_numbering is enabled, then the
first (non-pregap) track on each disc always has track number 1.
If you enable per_disc_numbering, you will likely want to change your
:ref:`path-format-config` also to include $disc before $track to make
filenames sort correctly in album directories. For example, you might want to
use a path format like this:
paths:
default: $albumartist/$album%aunique{}/$disc-$track $title
When this option is off (the default), even "pregap" hidden tracks are numbered from one, not zero, so other track numbers may appear to be bumped up by one. When it is on, the pregap track for each disc can be numbered zero.
These options are used to generate a string that is guaranteed to be unique among all albums in the library who share the same set of keys.
The defaults look like this:
aunique:
keys: albumartist album
disambiguators: albumtype year label catalognum albumdisambig releasegroupdisambig
bracket: '[]'
See :ref:`aunique` for more details.
Like :ref:`config-aunique` above for albums, these options control the generation of a unique string to disambiguate singletons that share similar metadata.
The defaults look like this:
sunique:
keys: artist title
disambiguators: year trackdisambig
bracket: '[]'
See :ref:`sunique` for more details.
The text encoding, as known to Python, to use for messages printed to the standard output. It's also used to read messages from the standard input. By default, this is determined automatically from the locale environment variables.
When beets imports all the files in a directory, it tries to remove the
directory if it's empty. A directory is considered empty if it only contains
files whose names match the glob patterns in clutter, which should be a list
of strings. The default list consists of "Thumbs.DB" and ".DS_Store".
The importer only removes recursively searched subdirectories---the top-level directory you specify on the command line is never deleted.
Set the maximum number of characters in a filename, after which names will be truncated. By default, beets tries to ask the filesystem for the correct maximum.
By default, beets writes MP3 tags using the ID3v2.4 standard, the latest version of ID3. Enable this option to instead use the older ID3v2.3 standard, which is preferred by certain older software such as Windows Media Player.
Sets the albumartist for various-artist compilations. Defaults to 'Various
Artists' (the MusicBrainz standard). Affects other sources, such as
:doc:`/plugins/discogs`, too.
The options that allow for customization of the visual appearance of the console interface.
Either yes or no; whether to use color in console output. Turn this off
if your terminal doesn't support ANSI colors.
The colors that are used throughout the user interface. These are only used if
the color option is set to yes. See the default configuration:
ui:
colors:
text_success: ['bold', 'green']
text_warning: ['bold', 'yellow']
text_error: ['bold', 'red']
text_highlight: ['bold', 'red']
text_highlight_minor: ['white']
action_default: ['bold', 'cyan']
action: ['bold', 'cyan']
# New colors after UI overhaul
text_faint: ['faint']
import_path: ['bold', 'blue']
import_path_items: ['bold', 'blue']
changed: ['yellow']
text_diff_added: ['bold', 'green']
text_diff_removed: ['bold', 'red']
action_description: ['white']Available attributes:
- Foreground colors
black,red,green,yellow,blue,magenta,cyan,white- Background colors
bg_black,bg_red,bg_green,bg_yellow,bg_blue,bg_magenta,bg_cyan,bg_white- Text styles
normal,bold,faint,underline,reverse
Controls line wrapping on non-Unix systems. On Unix systems, the width of the
terminal is detected automatically. If this fails, or on non-Unix systems, the
specified value is used as a fallback. Defaults to 80 characters:
ui:
terminal_width: 80Beets compares the length of the imported track with the length the metadata
source provides. If any tracks differ by at least length_diff_thresh
seconds, they will be colored with text_highlight. Below this threshold,
different track lengths are colored with text_highlight_minor.
length_diff_thresh does not impact which releases are selected in autotagger
matching or distance score calculation (see :ref:`match-config`,
distance_weights and :ref:`colors`):
ui:
length_diff_thresh: 10.0When importing, beets will read several options to configure the visuals of the
import dialogue. There are two layouts controlling how horizontal space and line
wrapping is dealt with: column and newline. The indentation of the
respective elements of the import UI can also be configured. For example setting
2 for match_header will indent the very first block of a proposed match
by two characters in the terminal:
ui:
import:
indentation:
match_header: 2
match_details: 2
match_tracklist: 5
layout: columnThe options that control the :ref:`import-cmd` command are indented under the
import: key. For example, you might have a section in your configuration
file that looks like this:
import:
write: yes
copy: yes
resume: no
These options are available in this section:
Either yes or no, controlling whether metadata (e.g., ID3) tags are
written to files when using beet import. Defaults to yes. The -w and
-W command-line options override this setting.
Either yes or no, indicating whether to copy files into the library
directory when using beet import. Defaults to yes. Can be overridden
with the -c and -C command-line options.
The option is ignored if move is enabled (i.e., beets can move or copy files
but it doesn't make sense to do both).
Either yes or no, indicating whether to move files into the library
directory when using beet import. Defaults to no.
The effect is similar to the copy option but you end up with only one copy
of the imported file. ("Moving" works even across filesystems; if necessary,
beets will copy and then delete when a simple rename is impossible.) Moving
files can be risky—it's a good idea to keep a backup in case beets doesn't do
what you expect with your files.
This option overrides copy, so enabling it will always move (and not copy)
files. The -c switch to the beet import command, however, still takes
precedence.
Either yes or no, indicating whether to use symbolic links instead of
moving or copying files. (It conflicts with the move, copy and
hardlink options.) Defaults to no.
This option only works on platforms that support symbolic links: i.e., Unixes. It will fail on Windows.
It's likely that you'll also want to set write to no if you use this
option to preserve the metadata on the linked files.
Either yes or no, indicating whether to use hard links instead of
moving, copying, or symlinking files. (It conflicts with the move, copy,
and link options.) Defaults to no.
As with symbolic links (see :ref:`link`, above), this will not work on Windows
and you will want to set write to no. Otherwise, metadata on the
original file will be modified.
Either yes, no, or auto, indicating whether to use copy-on-write
file clones (a.k.a. "reflinks") instead of copying or moving files. The
auto option uses reflinks when possible and falls back to plain copying when
necessary. Defaults to no.
This kind of clone is only available on certain filesystems: for example, btrfs
and APFS. For more details on filesystem support, see the pyreflink
documentation. Note that you need to install pyreflink, either through
python -m pip install beets[reflink] or python -m pip install reflink.
The option is ignored if move is enabled (i.e., beets can move or copy files
but it doesn't make sense to do both).
Either yes, no, or ask. Controls whether interrupted imports should
be resumed. "Yes" means that imports are always resumed when possible; "no"
means resuming is disabled entirely; "ask" (the default) means that the user
should be prompted when resuming is possible. The -p and -P flags
correspond to the "yes" and "no" settings and override this option.
Either yes or no, controlling whether imported directories are recorded
and whether these recorded directories are skipped. This corresponds to the
-i flag to beet import.
Either yes or no, controlling whether skipped directories are recorded
in the incremental list. When set to yes, skipped directories won't be
recorded, and beets will try to import them again later. When set to no,
skipped directories will be recorded, and skipped later. Defaults to no.
Either yes or no (default), controlling whether existing metadata is
discarded when a match is applied. This corresponds to the --from-scratch
flag to beet import.
Either yes or no (default), controlling whether to ask for a manual
decision from the user when the importer is unsure how to proceed. This
corresponds to the --quiet flag to beet import.
Either skip (default) or asis, specifying what should happen in quiet
mode (see the -q flag to import, above) when there is no strong
recommendation.
Either ask (default), asis or skip. Specifies what should happen
during an interactive import session when there is no recommendation. Useful
when you are only interested in processing medium and strong recommendations
interactively.
Either yes or no, controlling whether the importer runs in timid mode,
in which it asks for confirmation on every autotagging match, even the ones that
seem very close. Defaults to no. The -t command-line flag controls the
same setting.
Specifies a filename where the importer's log should be kept. By default, no log
is written. This can be overridden with the -l flag to import.
One of apply, skip, asis, or none, indicating which option
should be the default when selecting an action for a given match. This is the
action that will be taken when you type return without an option letter. The
default is apply.
A list of locale names to search for preferred aliases. For example, setting
this to en uses the transliterated artist name "Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky"
instead of the Cyrillic script for the composer's name when tagging from
MusicBrainz. You can use a space-separated list of language abbreviations, like
en jp es, to specify a preference order. Defaults to an empty list, meaning
that no language is preferred.
A list of alias types to be ignored when importing new items.
See the MusicBrainz Documentation for more information on aliases.
.._MusicBrainz Documentation: https://musicbrainz.org/doc/Aliases
Whether the importer UI should show detailed information about each match it
finds. When enabled, this mode prints out the title of every track, regardless
of whether it matches the original metadata. (The default behavior only shows
changes.) Default: no.
By default, the beets importer groups tracks into albums based on the directories they reside in. This option instead uses files' metadata to partition albums. Enable this option if you have directories that contain tracks from many albums mixed together.
The --group-albums or -g option to the :ref:`import-cmd` command is
equivalent, and the G interactive option invokes the same workflow.
Default: no.
By default, the beets importer always attempts to autotag new music. If most of
your collection consists of obscure music, you may be interested in disabling
autotagging by setting this option to no. (You can re-enable it with the
-a flag to the :ref:`import-cmd` command.)
Default: yes.
The fields used to find duplicates when importing. There are two sub-values
here: album and item. Each one is a list of field names; if an existing
object (album or item) in the library matches the new object on all of these
fields, the importer will consider it a duplicate.
Default:
album: albumartist album item: artist title
Either skip, keep, remove, merge or ask. Controls how
duplicates are treated in import task. "skip" means that new item(album or
track) will be skipped; "keep" means keep both old and new items; "remove" means
remove old item; "merge" means merge into one album; "ask" means the user should
be prompted for the action each time. The default is ask.
Usually when duplicates are detected during import, information about the existing and the newly imported album is summarized. Enabling this option also lists details on individual tracks. The :ref:`format_item setting <format_item>` is applied, which would, considering the default, look like this:
This item is already in the library!
Old: 1 items, MP3, 320kbps, 5:56, 13.6 MiB
Artist Name - Album Name - Third Track Title
New: 2 items, MP3, 320kbps, 7:18, 17.1 MiB
Artist Name - Album Name - First Track Title
Artist Name - Album Name - Second Track Title
[S]kip new, Keep all, Remove old, Merge all?Default: no.
Ring the terminal bell to get your attention when the importer needs your input.
Default: no.
A dictionary indicating fields to set to values for newly imported music. Here's an example:
set_fields:
genre: 'To Listen'
collection: 'Unordered'
Other field/value pairs supplied via the --set option on the command-line
override any settings here for fields with the same name.
Values support the same template syntax as beets' :doc:`path formats <pathformat>`.
Fields are set on both the album and each individual track of the album. Fields are persisted to the media files of each track.
Default: {} (empty).
During singleton imports and if the metadata source provides it, album names are
appended to the disambiguation string of matching track candidates. For example:
The Artist - The Title (Discogs, Index 3, Track B1, [The Album]. This
feature is currently supported by the :doc:`/plugins/discogs` and the
:doc:`/plugins/spotify`.
Default: yes.
You can configure some aspects of the logic beets uses when automatically
matching MusicBrainz results under the match: section. To control how
tolerant the autotagger is of differences, use the strong_rec_thresh
option, which reflects the distance threshold below which beets will make a
"strong recommendation" that the metadata be used. Strong recommendations are
accepted automatically (except in "timid" mode), so you can use this to make
beets ask your opinion more or less often.
The threshold is a distance value between 0.0 and 1.0, so you can think of it as the opposite of a similarity value. For example, if you want to automatically accept any matches above 90% similarity, use:
match:
strong_rec_thresh: 0.10
The default strong recommendation threshold is 0.04.
The medium_rec_thresh and rec_gap_thresh options work similarly. When a
match is below the medium recommendation threshold or the distance between it
and the next-best match is above the gap threshold, the importer will suggest
that match but not automatically confirm it. Otherwise, you'll see a list of
options to choose from.
As mentioned above, autotagger matches have recommendations that control how the UI behaves for a certain quality of match. The recommendation for a certain match is based on the overall distance calculation. But you can also control the recommendation when a specific distance penalty is applied by defining maximum recommendations for each field:
To define maxima, use keys under max_rec: in the match section. The
defaults are "medium" for missing and unmatched tracks and "strong" (i.e., no
maximum) for everything else:
match:
max_rec:
missing_tracks: medium
unmatched_tracks: medium
If a recommendation is higher than the configured maximum and the indicated
penalty is applied, the recommendation is downgraded. The setting for each field
can be one of none, low, medium or strong. When the maximum
recommendation is strong, no "downgrading" occurs. The available penalty
names here are:
- data_source
- artist
- album
- media
- mediums
- year
- country
- label
- catalognum
- albumdisambig
- album_id
- tracks
- missing_tracks
- unmatched_tracks
- track_title
- track_artist
- track_index
- track_length
- track_id
In addition to comparing the tagged metadata with the match metadata for similarity, you can also specify an ordered list of preferred countries and media types.
A distance penalty will be applied if the country or media type from the match metadata doesn't match. The specified values are preferred in descending order (i.e., the first item will be most preferred). Each item may be a regular expression, and will be matched case insensitively. The number of media will be stripped when matching preferred media (e.g. "2x" in "2xCD").
You can also tell the autotagger to prefer matches that have a release year closest to the original year for an album.
Here's an example:
match:
preferred:
countries: ['US', 'GB|UK']
media: ['CD', 'Digital Media|File']
original_year: yes
By default, none of these options are enabled.
You can completely avoid matches that have certain penalties applied by adding
the penalty name to the ignored setting:
match:
ignored: missing_tracks unmatched_tracks
The available penalties are the same as those for the :ref:`max_rec` setting.
For example, setting ignored: missing_tracks will skip any album matches
where your audio files are missing some of the tracks. The importer will not
attempt to display these matches. It does not ignore the fact that the album is
missing tracks, which would allow these matches to apply more easily. To do
that, you'll want to adjust the penalty for missing tracks.
You can avoid matches that lack certain required information. Add the tags you
want to enforce to the required setting:
match:
required: year label catalognum country
No tags are required by default.
A list of media (i.e., formats) in metadata databases to ignore when matching music. You can use this to ignore all media that usually contain video instead of audio, for example:
match:
ignored_media: ['Data CD', 'DVD', 'DVD-Video', 'Blu-ray', 'HD-DVD',
'VCD', 'SVCD', 'UMD', 'VHS']
No formats are ignored by default.
By default, audio files contained in data tracks within a release are included
in the album's tracklist. If you want them to be included, set it no.
Default: yes.
By default, video tracks within a release will be ignored. If you want them to
be included (for example if you would like to track the audio-only versions of
the video tracks), set it to no.
Default: yes.
You can also configure the directory hierarchy beets uses to store music. These
settings appear under the paths: key. Each string is a template string that
can refer to metadata fields like $artist or $title. The filename
extension is added automatically. At the moment, you can specify three special
paths: default for most releases, comp for "various artist" releases
with no dominant artist, and singleton for non-album tracks. The defaults
look like this:
paths:
default: $albumartist/$album%aunique{}/$track $title
singleton: Non-Album/$artist/$title
comp: Compilations/$album%aunique{}/$track $title
Note the use of $albumartist instead of $artist; this ensures that
albums will be well-organized. For more about these format strings, see
:doc:`pathformat`. The aunique{} function ensures that identically-named
albums are placed in different directories; see :ref:`aunique` for details.
In addition to default, comp, and singleton, you can condition path
queries based on beets queries (see :doc:`/reference/query`). This means that a
config file like this:
paths:
albumtype:soundtrack: Soundtracks/$album/$track $title
will place soundtrack albums in a separate directory. The queries are tested in the order they appear in the configuration file, meaning that if an item matches multiple queries, beets will use the path format for the first matching query.
Note that the special singleton and comp path format conditions are, in
fact, just shorthand for the explicit queries singleton:true and
comp:true. In contrast, default is special and has no query equivalent:
the default format is only used if no queries match.
The beets configuration file is usually located in a standard location that depends on your OS, but there are a couple of ways you can tell beets where to look.
First, you can set the BEETSDIR environment variable to a directory
containing a config.yaml file. This replaces your configuration in the
default location. This also affects where auxiliary files, like the library
database, are stored by default (that's where relative paths are resolved to).
This environment variable is useful if you need to manage multiple beets
libraries with separate configurations.
Alternatively, you can use the --config command-line option to indicate a
YAML file containing options that will then be merged with your existing options
(from BEETSDIR or the default locations). This is useful if you want to keep
your configuration mostly the same but modify a few options as a batch. For
example, you might have different strategies for importing files, each with a
different set of importer options.
In the absence of a BEETSDIR variable, beets searches a few places for your
configuration, depending on the platform:
- On Unix platforms, including OS X:
~/.config/beetsand then$XDG_CONFIG_DIR/beets, if the environment variable is set. - On OS X, we also search
~/Library/Application Support/beetsbefore the Unixy locations. - On Windows:
~\AppData\Roaming\beets, and then%APPDATA%\beets, if the environment variable is set.
Beets uses the first directory in your platform's list that contains
config.yaml. If no config file exists, the last path in the list is used.
Here's an example file:
directory: /var/mp3
import:
copy: yes
write: yes
log: beetslog.txt
art_filename: albumart
plugins: bpd
pluginpath: ~/beets/myplugins
ui:
color: yes
paths:
default: $genre/$albumartist/$album/$track $title
singleton: Singletons/$artist - $title
comp: $genre/$album/$track $title
albumtype:soundtrack: Soundtracks/$album/$track $title
.. only:: man
See Also
--------
``https://beets.readthedocs.org/``
:manpage:`beet(1)`