nTunes is an HTTP-based API for interacting with your iTunes installation (currently only for Mac OSX), written with NodeJS.
In other words, it's the foundation for writing web applications based on your iTunes library. You could potentially write a website that:
- Remotely controls the volume of the iTunes on your computer.
- Acts as a remote interface for selecting music to play on your computer.
- Accesses and plays back your library from the web interface itself (through
<audio>
?). - Automatically adds files added from a watched folder into your library.
- Don't let this list decide for you! Be creative!
If you're lazy, just use the awesome npm of course!
npm install -g nTunes
Otherwise feel free to check out this repo and inspect as you will.
nTunes itself is presented with the familiar function(req, res, next)
signature. This means it can be used in your Node code with the standard
Node HTTP server with a one-liner like this:
require("http").createServer(require("nTunes")()).listen(80);
Or it can be used as a layer in connect:
var connect = require("connect");
connect.createServer(
connect.logger(),
connect.staticProvider(__dirname),
require("nTunes")()
).listen(80);
Combining nTunes with connect is the recommend practice.
If you're only interested in seeing the examples nTunes comes packaged with, then it comes with a convenient executable file to easily start the demonstration HTTP server for you to play with. Once you've installed via npm, simply invoke:
nTunes
This starts nTunes as a stand-alone HTTP server in demonstration mode. While the server is running you can experiment with the nTunes API through simple HTTP requests sent to your computer. Here are some examples:
To get the name
of the current track
with a GET request:
curl localhost:8888/current%20track/name
// Returns "Lateralus"
To set your iTunes' volume to 50% with through a POST request:
curl -d value=50 localhost:8888/sound%20volume
// Returns 50
The API mostly returns JSON encoded values, and is mostly intended to be used
with the XMLHttpRequest
object and JSON.parse
function in the web browser,
or http.Client
in Node.