1. Add, finish or improve an OO API. Some work has been done to extend the API to Python, and Perl (via SWIG), Ruby and C++. With the exception of Ruby these are OO interfaces as well. However most languages do not cover the full language. In particular handling MMC (Multi-media) commands is missing and a CD-Paranoia interface (OO or not) is missing. Pick one of these existing API's or extend to a new API (e.g. Java), preferably an OO one. All of the OO API's are fairly new, so if you feel you want to improve on the API, that's okay too. 2. Add, finish a CD-image format parser. Use it say to write a CD-image format converter. The existing CD-image format parsers are ad hoc. Several image (cdrdao or bin/cue) have a text file and currently libcdio uses C strstr and strtok to parse this. In some cases image reading is incomplete: * cdrdao can only handle reading from one file * CD-Text doesn't allow specification of the encoding * handling "silence" in CUE/BIN Some work has been done to create Bison grammars for cdrdao and cue/bin image formats; some basic tests of these parser has been done, but no semantic actions have been added to integrate this into the library. Add the semantic actions. Feel free to add other (preferably non-proprietary) CD-Image formats. Use the parsers to write a translator between the image formats. Standard good practice is to translate into an intermediate language for the N "languages" and then the generate output language from that. This requires 2N for the N*N combinations (rather than N*N individual translators). 3. Finish UDF and/or ISO 9660 handling. UDF (Universal Data File) is used for example in DVD discs and Data. It will be used by in the new Blue-Ray technology. Think of it as a modernized Unicode version of the old ISO 9660 standard. UDF support is probably the most often requested missing feature of libcdio. Some work has been done to define the UDF structures and there is some UDF handling in the current version (0.77) and even more in will appear in the next 0.78. The full UDF specification is much more than currently will exist even in 0.78. Fill out UDF support. 4. write a "tar" command for ISO 9660 and/or UDF images. There is an ISO 9660 library. An often requested feature is to add something like a "tar" command for ISO 9660 images or UDF images. For ISO 9660, currently there are commands to list the contents of an ISO 9660 image file and extract a single file. In version the next version of libcdio 0.78, there will probably be corresponding commands for UDF. Take GNU tar and extend it to ISO 9660 or UDF images. 5. Add EAC (exact audio copy) features, possibly on top of cd-paranoia. Fix possible cd-paranoia bugs. EAC (http://www.exactaudiocopy.de/) is a freeware program for Microsoft Windows and is used to copy audio data from an audio CD to a stereo WAV file. It is similar to cdparanoia (http://www.xiph.org/paranoia/) and libcdio has a multi-OS port of this. The concensus seems to be that EAC does a better job. cdparanoia can probably be extended to do better, more like EAC. There may be bugs in cdparanoia especially with silence which is confused with the silence that appears in a track gap. More or better regression tests should be done for medium and large jittering. [Peter Creath may want to mentor this.] 6. Modify libcdio to handle CD-ROM drive customization. Some programs which work with CD-ROMs allow for a database of CD-ROM drives capabilities. Most notably xmcd (http://www.amb.org/xmcd/). cdparanoia has such a capability although it is not user-configurable like xmcd. Add a CD-ROM capability database with user customization and modify libcdio to use that for various operations. CD-ROM capabilities might include how to get drive capabilities (e.g. MMC MODE-SENSE page 2A command in either the 6 or 10 byte version or via MMC GET-CONFIGURATION command.) For other capibilities listed those listed in xmcd. 7. Wide character support for CD-Text. [Burkhard Plaum has might want to mentor this. If so he should write a more detailed description than given above] [8. libcdio API overhaul removed. This may not be too difficult for a student project. But if someone is really interested, look in CVS revision 1.1. for what this might entail.] 9. Revise to use glib rather than home-grown routines. libcdio has it's own list-processing, byte swapping routines. In particular the routines in bytesex.h and ds.h. Replace these with the corresponding glib routines. $Id: 2006-summer-of-code.txt,v 1.2 2006/04/17 13:24:56 rocky Exp $