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- .. MediaGoblin Documentation
- Written in 2011, 2012 by MediaGoblin contributors
- To the extent possible under law, the author(s) have dedicated all
- copyright and related and neighboring rights to this software to
- the public domain worldwide. This software is distributed without
- any warranty.
- You should have received a copy of the CC0 Public Domain
- Dedication along with this software. If not, see
- <http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/>.
- ======================
- Command-line uploading
- ======================
- If you're a site administrator and have access to the server then you
- can use the 'addmedia' task. If you're just a user and want to upload
- media by the command line you can. This can be done with the pump.io
- API. There is `p <https://github.com/xray7224/p/>`_, which will allow you
- to easily upload media from the command line, follow p's docs to do that.
- To use the addmedia command::
- ./bin/gmg addmedia username your_media.jpg
- This will submit the file "your_media.jpg" to be a media entry
- associated with the user "username".
- You can get help on all the available options by running::
- ./bin/gmg addmedia --help
- Here's a longer example that makes use of more options::
- ./bin/gmg addmedia aveyah awesome_spaceship.png \
- --title "My awesome spaceship" \
- --description "Flying my awesome spaceship, since I'm an awesome pilot" \
- --license "http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/" \
- --tags "spaceships, pilots, awesome" \
- --slug "awesome-spaceship"
- You can also pass in the `--celery` option if you would prefer that
- your media be passed over to celery to be processed rather than be
- processed immediately.
- ============================
- Command-line batch uploading
- ============================
- There's another way to submit media, and it can be much more powerful, although
- it is a bit more complex.
- ./bin/gmg batchaddmedia admin /path/to/your/metadata.csv
- This is an example of what a script may look like. The important part here is
- that you have to create the 'metadata.csv' file.::
- media:location,dcterms:title,dcterms:creator,dcterms:type
- "http://www.example.net/path/to/nap.png","Goblin taking a nap",,"Image"
- "http://www.example.net/path/to/snore.ogg","Goblin Snoring","Me","Audio"
- The above is an example of a very simple metadata.csv file. The batchaddmedia
- script would read this and attempt to upload only two pieces of media, and would
- be able to automatically name them appropriately.
- The csv file
- ============
- The location column
- -------------------
- The location column is the one column that is absolutely necessary for
- uploading your media. This gives a path to each piece of media you upload. This
- can either a path to a local file or a direct link to remote media (with the
- link in http format). As you can see in the example above the (fake) media was
- stored remotely on "www.example.net".
- Other internal nodes
- --------------------
- There are other columns which can be used by the script to provide information.
- These are not stored as part of the media's metadata. You can use these columns to
- provide default information for your media entry, but as you'll see below, it's
- just as easy to provide this information through the correct metadata columns.
- - **id** is used to identify the media entry to the user in case of an error in the batchaddmedia script.
- - **license** is used to set a license for your piece a media for mediagoblin's use. This must be a URI.
- - **title** will set the title displayed to mediagoblin users.
- - **description** will set a description of your media.
- Metadata columns
- ----------------
- Other columns can be used to provide detailed metadata about each media entry.
- Our metadata system accepts any information provided for in the
- `RDFa Core Initial Context`_, and the batchupload script recognizes all of the
- resources provided within it.
- .. _RDFa Core Initial Context: http://www.w3.org/2011/rdfa-context/rdfa-1.1
- The uploader may include the metadata for each piece of media, or
- leave them blank if they want to. A few columns from `Dublin Core`_ are
- notable because the batchaddmedia script also uses them to set the default
- information of uploaded media entries.
- .. _Dublin Core: http://wiki.dublincore.org/index.php/User_Guide
- - **dc:title** sets a title for your media entry.
- - **dc:description** sets a description of your media entry.
- If both a metadata column and an internal node for the title are provided, mediagoblin
- will use the internal node as the media entry's display name. This makes it so
- that if you want to display a piece of media with a different title
- than the one provided in its metadata, you can just provide different data for
- the 'dc:title' and 'title' columns. The same is true of the 'description' and
- 'dc:description'.
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