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Developer docs

📝 Prerequisites

  • ffmpeg (minimum version 4, version 5 recommended), must be available in the path so install at OS level
  • Python 3.11 is minimal required (or check the pyproject for current required version)
  • Python venv

It is recommended to use Visual Studio Code as your IDE, since launch files to start Music Assistant are provided as part of the repository. Furthermore, the current code base is not verified to work on a native Windows machine. If you would like to develop on a Windows machine, install WSL2 to increase your swag-level 🤘.

🚀 Setting up your development environment

With this repository cloned locally, execute the following commands in a terminal from the root of your repository:

  • python -m venv .venv (create a new separate virtual environment to nicely separate the project dependencies)
  • source .venv/bin/activate (activate the virtual environment)
  • pip install -r requirements_all.txt (install the project's dependencies)
  • Hit (Fn +) F5 to start Music Assistant locally
  • The pre-compiled UI of Music Assistant will be available at localhost:8095 🎉

All code is linted and verified using pre-commit. To make sure that all these checks are executed successfully before you push your code:

  • pip install pre-commit
  • pre-commit install This ensures that the pre-commit checks kick in when you create a commit locally.

The Music Assistant server is fully built in Python. The Python language has no real supported for multi-threading. This is why Music Assistant heavily relies on asyncio to handle blocking IO. It is important to get a good understanding of asynchronous programming before building your first provider. This video is an excellent first step in the world of asyncio.

🎵 Building your own Music Provider

A Music Provider is one of the provider types that adds support for a 'source of music' to Music Assistant. Spotify and Youtube Music are examples of a Music Provider, but also Filesystem and SMB can be put in the Music Provider category. All Music Providers can be found in the music_assistant/server/providers folder.

Adding the necessary files for a new Music Provider

Add a new folder to the providers folder with the name of provider. Add two files inside:

  1. __init__.py. This file contains the Python code of your provider.
  2. manifest.json. This file contains metadata and configuration for your provider.

Configuring the manifest.json file

The easiest way to get start is to copy the contents of the manifest of an existing Music Provider, e.g. Spotify or Youtube Music. See the manifest section for all available properties.

Creating the provider

Create a file called __init__.py inside the folder of your provider. This file will contain the logic for the provider. All Music Providers must inherit from the MusicProvider base class and override the necessary functions where applicable. A few things to note:

  • The setup() function is called by Music Assistant upon initialization of the provider. It gives you the opportunity the prepare the provider for usage. For example, logging in a user or obtaining a token can be done in this function.
  • A provider should let Music Assistant know which ProviderFeatures it supports by implementing the property supported_features, which returns a list of ProviderFeatures.
  • The actual playback of audio in Music Assistant happens in two phases:
    1. get_stream_details() is called to obtain information about the audio, like the quality, format, # of channels etc.
    2. get_audio_stream() is called to stream raw bytes of audio to the player. There are a few helpers to help you with this. Note that this function is not applicable to direct url streams.
  • Examples:
    1. Streaming raw bytes using an external executable (librespot) to get audio, see the Spotify provider as an example
    2. Streaming a direct URL, see the Youtube Music provider as an example
    3. Streaming an https stream that uses an expiring URL, see the Qobuz provider as an example

▶️ Building your own Player Provider

Will follow soon™

💽 Building your own Metadata Provider

Will follow soon™

🔌 Building your own Plugin Provider

Will follow soon™

⚙️ Manifest file

The manifest file contains metadata and configuration about a provider. The supported properties are:

Name Description Type
type music, player, metadata or plugin string
domain The internal unique id of the provider, e.g. spotify or ytmusic string
name The full name of the provider, e.g. Spotify or Youtube Music string
description The full description of the provider string
codeowners List of Github names of the codeowners of the provider array[string]
config_entries List of configurable properties for the provider, e.g. username or password*. array[object]
config_entries.key The unique key of the config entry, used to obtain the value in the provider code string
config_entries.type The type of the config entry. Possible values: string, secure_string (for passwords), boolean, float, integer, label (for a single line of text in the settings page) string
config_entries.label The label of the config entry. Used in the settings page string
requirements List of requirements for the provider in pip string format. Supported values are package==version and git+https://gitrepoforpackage array[string]
documentation URL to the Github discussion containing the documentation for the provider. string
multi_instances Whether multiple instances of the configuration are supported, e.g. multiple user accounts for Spotify boolean

* These config_entries are used to automatically generate the settings page for the provider in the front-end. The values can be obtained via self.config.get_value(key).