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authorWynn Wolf Arbor2020-01-11 23:14:56 +0100
committerWynn Wolf Arbor2020-01-11 23:14:56 +0100
commit482ddccda5bd5cadda154930cd78b2be1d8f6622 (patch)
tree1bc0c4e012d3680836e91bdfd2ba1f9374628e85 /posts
parentbcb6c6972dcd9e34c7b38c01e7b20365dc6c711a (diff)
downloadsite-482ddccda5bd5cadda154930cd78b2be1d8f6622.tar.gz
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+title: Debugging adventures: ncmpcpp and taglib
+date: 2020-01-11
+author: Wolf
+
+I have a pretty extensive music library which I manage with
+[mpd(1)](https://www.musicpd.org/) and
+[ncmpcpp(1)](https://github.com/arybczak/ncmpcpp). Whilst I would love to
+find a standalone tag editor that is easily usable from the command line
+(or alternatively a nicely designed GUI one), ncmpcpp's built-in tag
+editor has always been enough for my needs.
+
+About two weeks ago I was in the process of adding a new album to my
+collection. This always includes a quick glance at the tags and some
+cleanup. This time, however, after I saved my changes, the following
+happened:
+
+![ncmpcpp displaying duplicate entries](img/ncmpcpp-double-tag.png)
+
+Every time I saved my changes, another duplicate entry would be added to
+each tag. I had not updated `ncmpcpp(1)` in a while and was initially
+confused as to why it failed suddenly. I left it, removed all tags using
+`metaflac(1)`, and tagged it manually. Then I decided that I could not
+be bothered but still wanted to investigate it at a later point, so I
+added an entry to my to-do list.
+
+## Diving in
+
+Today I decided to look into this finally. First stop: the `ncmpcpp(1)`
+source code. I already knew that it used `taglib` to access and modify
+Vorbis comments, so I quickly found the [part of the
+code](https://github.com/arybczak/ncmpcpp/blob/master/src/tags.cpp#L173)
+that was responsible for saving changes:
+
+```cpp
+void writeXiphComments(const MPD::MutableSong &s, TagLib::Ogg::XiphComment *tag)
+{
+ auto writeXiph = [&](const TagLib::String &type, const TagLib::StringList &list) {
+ tag->removeField(type);
+ for (auto it = list.begin(); it != list.end(); ++it)
+ tag->addField(type, *it, false);
+ };
+ // remove field previously used as album artist
+ tag->removeField("ALBUM ARTIST");
+ // remove field TRACK, some taggers use it as TRACKNUMBER
+ tag->removeField("TRACK");
+ // remove field DISC, some taggers use it as DISCNUMBER
+ tag->removeField("DISC");
+ // remove field DESCRIPTION, it's displayed as COMMENT
+ tag->removeField("DESCRIPTION");
+ writeXiph("TITLE", tagList(s, &MPD::Song::getTitle));
+ // [...]
+}
+```
+
+Here, `ncmpcpp(1)` calls `removeField(type)` before adding a tag, which
+looked fine. Maybe the list contains more than one entry? Stepping
+through this code in `gdb(1)` revealed that `addField` was only called
+once per tag, meaning it was only added once. At this point I remembered
+that I was pretty sure `ncmpcpp(1)` had not been updated in a while, so
+I refocused on `taglib` instead: Maybe `removeField` stopped working for
+some reason.
+
+## Unorthodox packaging decisions
+
+A quick query against the Gentoo package database revealed that I was
+using `taglib-1.11.1_p20190920-r1` which looked very suspicious already.
+The latest stable version on the [website](https://taglib.org/) is
+`1.11.1` from __October 24, 2016__.
+
+```sh
+nabokov ~$ eix taglib
+[I] media-libs/taglib (1.11.1_p20190920-r1@11/01/20)
+```
+
+So what is going on here? `taglib` is still under active development,
+but there has not been a stable release for about four years. Gentoo
+instead decided to
+[package](https://gitweb.gentoo.org/repo/gentoo.git/tree/media-libs/taglib/taglib-1.11.1_p20190920-r1.ebuild#n7)
+the [latest
+commit](https://github.com/taglib/taglib/commit/54508df30bc888c4d2359576ceb0cc8f2fa8dbdf)
+(at time of writing) as a "stable" version. For projects that have some
+kind of stability guarantee regarding their API, this is a very
+dangerous and strange choice on the part of the packagers; quite
+frankly, it is inviting random breakage.
+
+## Exploring taglib
+
+Digging around in `taglib`'s [github
+repo](https://github.com/taglib/taglib) revealed that `removeField` had
+been [marked](https://github.com/taglib/taglib/issues/651) deprecated
+internally in mid-2015 because of an apparent linking error when using
+`String::null`. Let's have a look at the prototype of `removeField` from
+[back then](https://github.com/taglib/taglib/blob/84e3582332eb593497912d055f15827a57815478/taglib/ogg/xiphcomment.h#L188):
+
+```cpp
+void removeField(const String &key, const String &value = String::null);
+```
+
+This method removes a tag entry of a specific type and optionally
+matches it against a given value. For example, `removeField("TITLE")`
+removes all `TITLE` tags, and `removeField("TITLE",
+"Garbagemx36")` only removes `TITLE` entries if they match
+"Garbagemx36".
+
+The [issue](https://github.com/taglib/taglib/issues/651) mentions that
+changing the default parameter for `value` to an empty string would
+change the behaviour of the method. Suddenly, `removeField("TITLE")`
+would only remove `TITLE` entries if they matched the empty string -
+leaving everything else intact.
+
+Sounds like we found our culprit. But didn't the issue say that they
+would not make this change? What gives?
+
+## Enter GDB
+
+At this point I started doubting the correctness of five year old issue
+comments, and decided to have a look at things myself. Thankfully,
+Gentoo makes it very easy to add debugging information to packages and
+have the source code installed alongside binaries and library files. A
+single addition to `/etc/portage/package.env` later and I was debugging
+`removeField` in `gdb(1)`.
+
+Stepping ahead to [where the method
+checks](https://github.com/taglib/taglib/blob/84e3582332eb593497912d055f15827a57815478/taglib/ogg/xiphcomment.cpp#L267)
+whether `value` is null or not, I printed its contents:
+
+```
+(gdb) p value
+$1 = (const TagLib::String &) @0x7fffffffc240: {
+ _vptr.String = 0x7ffff5be83b8 <vtable for TagLib::String+16>, static null = {
+ _vptr.String = 0x7ffff5be83b8 <vtable for TagLib::String+16>,
+ static null = <same as static member of an already seen type>,
+ static WCharByteOrder = TagLib::String::UTF16LE, d = 0x5555559a95c0},
+ static WCharByteOrder = TagLib::String::UTF16LE, d = 0x555555b9f700}
+```
+
+Ah, like any good project, `taglib` is using a custom string type. Let's convert it to a C
+string:
+
+```
+(gdb) print value.toCString(false)
+$5 = 0x555555b9f740 ""
+```
+
+And there it was. `taglib` indeed was using an empty string (and not
+`null`) as the default for `value` in `removeField`.
+
+## Closing Blame
+
+One question remained: Why was this changed after all? It seemed pretty
+clear back then that the developers did not want to break the API.
+Perhaps there was a different bug at work here?
+
+As I had learnt earlier, the default value for a parameter is found in
+the header file, so I used `git-blame(1)` to find commits that introduced
+changes to the prototype. Surprisingly, what I found was a very [recent
+change](https://github.com/taglib/taglib/commit/c05fa78406fd8ce7382a11c1f63a17c4bfbe83fa#diff-b48915d5a31d8a598dc1f3e92810bbd1L189)
+from September that added actual deprecation warnings... and
+quietly changed `String::null` to `String()`. I was not able to find a
+reason for this; to my knowledge, no commit or issue mentions this
+change.
+
+So in the end, whilst wanting to keep up API promises, the behaviour of
+an already deprecated method was changed in what can only be called the
+"development branch" of the project, and it hit me because Gentoo
+decided that it was a good idea to use work-in-progress code as a stable
+candidate for a package.
+
+Around the time I discovered this, someone else had already opened an
+[issue](https://github.com/arybczak/ncmpcpp/issues/371) on GitHub. I
+shared my findings and later opened a [pull
+request](https://github.com/arybczak/ncmpcpp/pull/373). I am pondering
+bringing this to the package maintainer's attention, but am not
+confident it will result in any positive change.
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