NAME

Audio::Ecasound - Perl binding to the ecasound sampler, recorder, fx-processor

SYNOPSIS

One function interface:

use Audio::Ecasound qw(:simple);

eci("cs-add play_chainsetup");
eci("c-add 1st_chain");
eci("-i:some_file.wav");
eci("-o:/dev/dsp");
# multiple \n separated commands
eci("cop-add -efl:100
     # with comments
     cop-select 1
     copp-select 1
     cs-connect");
eci("start");
my $cutoff_inc = 500.0;
while (1) {
    sleep(1);
    last if eci("engine-status") ne "running";

    my $curpos = eci("get-position");
    last if $curpos > 15;

    my $next_cutoff = $cutoff_inc + eci("copp-get");
    # Optional float argument
    eci("copp-set", $next_cutoff);
}
eci("stop");
eci("cs-disconnect");
print "Chain operator status: ", eci("cop-status");

Object Interface

use Audio::Ecasound;

my $e = new Audio::Ecasound;
$e->on_error('');
$e->eci("cs-add play_chainsetup");
# etc.

Vanilla Ecasound Control Interface (See Ecasound's Programmer Guide):

use Audio::Ecasound qw(:std);

command("copp-get");
$precise_float = last_float() / 2;
command_float_arg("copp-set", $precise_float);
warn last_error() if error();

IAM Interface, pretend interactive mode commands are functions.

use Audio::Ecasound qw(:iam :simple);

# iam commands as functions with s/-/_/g
my $val = copp_get;
copp_set $val+0.1; # floats are stringified so beware
eci("-i /dev/dsp"); # not all commands are exported

DESCRIPTION

Audio::Ecasound provides perl bindings to the ecasound control interface of the ecasound program. You can use perl to automate or interact with ecasound so you don't have to turn you back on the adoring masses packed into Wembly Stadium.

Ecasound is a software package designed for multitrack audio processing. It can be used for audio playback, recording, format conversions, effects processing, mixing and as a LADSPA plugin host. Version >= 2.0.1 must be installed to use this package. "SEE ALSO" for more info.

INSTALLATION

perl Makefile.PL

If your perl wasn't built with -Dusethreads or -D_REENTRANT you will be prompted whether to continue with the install. It's in your hands... See "THREADING NOTE"

make
make test
make install

THREADING NOTE

The ecasoundc library uses pthreads so will probably only work if your perl was compiled with threading enabled, check with:

% perl -V:usethreads

You are welcome to try using the module with non-threaded perls (perhaps -D_REENTRANT alone would work) but expect problems. On my Linux box it hangs during intialization without threads but if can be made to work let me know.

EXPORT

  • Nothing by default as when going OO.

  • :simple gives eci() which does most everything, also errmsg and on_error. Or you could just import 'eci' and call the others Audio::Ecasound::errmsg()

  • :iam imports many iam commands so that you can use them as perl functions. Basically everything listed by ecasound's 'int-cmd-list' except the single letter commands and hyphens are replaced by underscores. The list is produced at run-time and returned by Audio::Ecasound::get_iam_cmds(). See "IAM COMMANDS";

  • :std to import the full ecasound control interface detailed in the Ecasound Programmer's Guide.

  • :raw and raw_r, C functions with minimal wrapping, _r ones are reentrant and must be passed the object returned by eci_init_r(). I don't know why you would use these, presumably you do. These options may be removed in future.

METHODS AND FUNCTIONS

The procedural and OO interfaces use the same functions, the differences are that when called on an Audio::Ecasound object the reentrant C versions are used so you can have multiple independent engine (with independent options).

new()

Constructor for Audio::Ecasound objects, inherits the on_error and other options from the current package settings (defaults if untouched).

eci('ecasound command string', [$float_argument])

Sends commands to the Ecasound engine. A single command may be called with an optional float argument (to avoid precision loss). Alternatively, multiple commands may be given separated by newlines (with # starting a comment).

If called in non-void context the result of the last command is returned, it may be an integer, float, string (ie. scalar) or a list of strings. Which will depend on the ecasound command, see ecasound-iam for each function's return value.

If there is an error the action given to on_error will be taken. See on_error below for return value caveats when on_error = ''. Error processing is performed for each command in a multiline command.

on_error('die')

Set the action to be taken when an error occurs from and eci command, may be 'die', 'warn' or '' (default is 'warn').

When '' is selected return; is used for an error, that is undef or (). To disamibiguate eci will return '' or ('') for no return value and no string list respectively.

errmsg()

The last error message from an eci command. It is not reset so clear it yourself if required errmsg(''). This shouldn't be necessary as you can use defined or on_error to find out when errors occur.

The remainder of the functions/methods are the standard Ecasound Control Interface methods but they come in three flavours. The bare function name may be called with or without an object:

use Audio::Ecasound ':simple':
command($cmd);
# or
my $e = new Audio::Ecasound;
$e = command($cmd);

The other two flavours are low-level, reentrant and non-reentrant. These are thinly wrapped C functions better documented in the ECI document with the ecasound distribution. Just add 'eci_' to the names below for the non-reentrant version and then add a '_r' to the end for the reentrant version. The reentrant version takes an extra first argument, the object returned by eci_init_r() which must be destroyed with eci_cleanup_r().

command($cmd_string)
eci_command_float_arg($cmd_string, $float_arg)
$bool = eci_error()
$err_str = eci_last_error()
$float = eci_last_float()
$int = eci_last_integer()
$lint = eci_last_long_integer()
$str = eci_last_string()
$n = eci_last_string_list_count()
$str_n = eci_last_string_list_item($n)
$type_str = eci_last_type() 's' 'S' 'i' 'li' 'f' ''

IAM COMMANDS

When the :iam tag is imported most of the commands in ecasounds interactive mode become perl functions. The '-'s become '_'s to become valid perl names ('cop-get' is cop_get, etc.) The list is printed with:

use Audio::Ecasound qw(:iam :simple);
print join ' ', Audio::Ecasound::get_iam_cmds();

The arguments joined together as a string and then sent to ecasound. This means that float precision is lost, unlike with the two argument eci so use it. Also use eci for command-line style commands like eci "-i /dev/dsp". But most other things you can just use the iam command itself (s/-/_/g):

use Audio::Ecasound qw(:iam :simple);
... # setup stuff
print status;
start;
$v = copp_get;
copp_set $v + 1.2;

I would never encourage anyone to use no strict 'subs'; but with :iam you may enjoy a little less discipline.

See the iam_int.pl example file in the eg directory.

EXAMPLES

See the eg/ subdirectory.

TROUBLESHOOTING

The ecasound command 'debug' could be useful, add eci "debug 63" to the top of your program. The argument is various bits OR'd and controls the amount and type of debugging information, see the ecasound documentation of source or just try your favorite powers of two.

FILES

The ecasound library will still process ~/.ecasoundrc and other setup files for default values. See the library documentation.

AUTHOR

(c) 2001 Brad Bowman <eci-perl@bowman.bs> This software may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO

The Ecasound Programmer's Guide and ECI doc, ecasound, ecasound-iam http://eca.cx/, http://www.ladspa.org/