Ogg Vorbis comment field specification
Last update to this document: October 2, 2001
The text comment header is the second (of three) header packets that
begin a Vorbis bitstream. It is meant for short, text comments,
not arbitrary metadata; arbitrary metadata belongs in a separate
logical bitream (usually an XML stream type) that provides greater
structure and machine parseability.
Comment use rationale
The comment field is meant to be used much like someone jotting a
quick note on the bottom of a CDR. It should be a little information to
remember the disc by and explain it to others; a short, to-the-point
text note that need not only be a couple words, but isn't going to be
more than a short paragraph. The essentials, in other words, whatever
they turn out to be, eg:
"Honest Bob and the Factory-to-Dealer-Incentives, _I'm Still Around_,
opening for Moxy Fruvous, 1997"
Structure
The comment header logically is a list of eight-bit-clean vectors; the
number of vectors is bounded to 2^32-1 and the length of each vector
is limited to 2^32-1 bytes. The vector length is encoded; the vector
is not null terminated. In addition to the vector list, there is a
single vector for vendor name (also 8 bit clean, length encoded in 32
bits). Libvorbis currently sets the vendor string to "Xiphophorus
libVorbis I 20010910".
The comment vectors are structured similarly to a UNIX environment variable.
That is, comment fields consist of a field name and a field value and
look like:
comment[0]="ARTIST=me";
comment[1]="TITLE=the sound of vorbis";
Content vector format
- A case-insensitive field name that may consist of ASCII 0x20 through
0x7D, 0x3D ('=') excluded. ASCII 0x41 through 0x5A inclusive (A-Z) is
to be considered equivalent to ASCII 0x61 through 0x7A inclusive
(a-z).
- The field name is immediately followed by ASCII 0x3D ('='); this
equals sign is used to terminate the field name.
- 0x3D is followed by 8 bit clean UTF-8 encoded field contents
to the end of the field.
Field names
Below is a proposed, minimal list of standard filed names with a
description of intended use. No single or group of field names is
mandatory; a comment header may contain one, all or none of the names
in this list.
- TITLE
- Track name
- VERSION
- The version field may be used to differentiate multiple
versions of the same track title in a single collection. (e.g. remix info)
- ALBUM
- The collection name to which this track belongs
- TRACKNUMBER
- The track number of this piece if part of a specific larger collection or album
- ARTIST
- The artist generally considered responsible for the work. In popular music this is usually the performing band or singer. For classical music it would be the composer. For an audio book it would be the author of the original text.
- PERFORMER
- The artist(s) who performed the work. In classical music this would be the conductor, orchestra, soloists. In an audio book it would be the actor who did the reading. In popular music this is typically the same as the ARTIST and is ommitted.
- ORGANIZATION
- Name of the organization producing the track (i.e.
the 'record label')
- DESCRIPTION
- A short text description of the contents
- GENRE
- A short text indication of music genre
- DATE
- Date the track was recorded
- LOCATION
- Location where track was recorded
- COPYRIGHT
- Copyright and license information (e.g. '(c) 2001 Nobody's Band. All rights reserved' or '(c) 1999 Jack Moffit, distributed under the terms of the Open Audio License. see http://www.eff.org/IP/Open_licenses/eff_oal.html for details')
- CONTACT
- Contact information for the creators or distributors of the track. This could be a URL, an email address, the physical address of the producing label.
- ISRC
- ISRC number for the track; see the ISRC intro page for more information on ISRC numbers.
- DISCID
- Table of contents hash from an associated disc, generally used to index the track in published music databases. See http://freedb.org/ for and example of such a hash.
Implications
Encoding
The comment header comprises the entirety of the second bitstream
header packet. Unlike the first bitstream header packet, it is not
generally the only packet on the second page and may not be restricted
to within the second bitstream page. The length of the comment header
packet is [practically] unbounded. The comment header packet is not
optional; it must be present in the bitstream even if it is
effectively empty.
The comment header is encoded as follows (as per Ogg's standard
bitstream mapping which renders least-significant-bit of the word to be
coded into the least significant available bit of the current
bitstream octet first):
-
Vendor string length (32 bit unsigned quantity specifying number of octets)
-
Vendor string ([vendor string length] octets coded from beginning of string to end of string, not null terminated)
- Number of comment fields (32 bit unsigned quantity specifying number of fields)
- Comment field 0 length (if [Number of comment fields]>0; 32 bit unsigned quantity specifying number of octets)
-
Comment field 0 ([Comment field 0 length] octets coded from beginning of string to end of string, not null terminated)
- Comment field 1 length (if [Number of comment fields]>1...)...
This is actually somewhat easier to describe in code; implementation of the above can be found in vorbis/lib/info.c:_vorbis_pack_comment(),_vorbis_unpack_comment()
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