Mercurial > SDL_sound_CoreAudio
view mixer/tutorial.txt @ 562:7e08477b0fc1
MP3 decoder upgrade work.
Ripped out SMPEG and mpglib support, replaced it with "mpg123.c" and libmpg123.
libmpg123 is a much better version of mpglib, so it should solve all the
problems about MP3's not seeking, or most modern MP3's not playing at all,
etc. Since you no longer have to make a tradeoff with SMPEG for features, and
SMPEG is basically rotting, I removed it from the project.
There is still work to be done with libmpg123...there are MMX, 3DNow, SSE,
Altivec, etc decoders which we don't have enabled at the moment, and the
build system could use some work to make this compile more cleanly, etc.
Still: huge win.
author | Ryan C. Gordon <icculus@icculus.org> |
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date | Fri, 30 Jan 2009 02:44:47 -0500 |
parents | 3a3807dcf57f |
children |
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SDL_sound version 2.0: Your Mixer, And Welcome To It. SDL_sound v2's major addition is a software mixer. There are some other new features, but this is the Big New Thing. Some notable features of this mixer: - No clamping at mix time. Most SDL-based mixing is done via SDL_MixAudio(), which mixes two samples together, clamping to 16-bits, and then mixes the next sample into this already-clamped buffer. This can lead to audio distortion. SDL_sound mixes all samples into a 32-bit floating point buffer before passing it to the audio device, which means no unnecessary clamping. It also means it can be more optimized for MacOS X's CoreAudio and other next-gen audio subsystems, which require you to feed it float32 data. - Optimized mixing: MMX, SSE, 3DNow!, and Altivec are used internally where appropriate. (er...they WILL be, at least!) - Multiple "music" files. SDL_mixer is notorious for making a distinction between "sound" and "music" files (that is, things that can be trivially decoded to a waveform without bloating the memory footprint vs. things that can't), and only allows mixing of one music file at a time. SDL_sound doesn't bother with this distinction, which means you are free to mix any combination of audio formats at the same time. - No "channels". If you want to mix 1,000 audio files and have the hardware to cover it, you can. You don't have to manage playback channels. There isn't a seperate "music" channel, since "music" isn't treated differently from any other audio. - Lots of formats. SDL_sound already decodes a huge number of audio formats. As the mixer is layered on top of this, all of the format support comes for free. - Can handle non-power-of-two resampling. If your samples are at 8000Hz and the audio hardware is at 11000Hz, this doesn't cause output problems. - Control over buffering and mixing. SDL_sound already lets you control how much audio is prebuffered and predecoded; this carries over to the mixer, so you can customize how your resources are being used on the fly. - Flexible enough for those that need to micromanage mixing, but dirt simple to for those that just want to make some noise. - It can be compiled out if you just want the 1.0 API for decoding formats. (initializing the mixer subsystem in this case will fail, but for binary compatibility, the entry points will still exist). A brief tutorial follows. Example #1: Play a sound and get the heck out of there. #include "SDL_sound.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { Sound_MixInit(NULL); // start the mixer; don't care what format. Sound_Sample *hello = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("hello.wav", NULL, 10240); Sound_MixPlay(hello); while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around; mixing is in a seperate thread! Sound_FreeSample(hello); Sound_MixDeinit(); return(0); } Every tutorial needs a "Hello World" example. That will play hello.wav, wait for it to finish, and terminate the program. But that's not really mixing! To qualify, you'd need to play two sounds at once. So let's do that: Example #2: Mixing two sounds. #include "SDL_sound.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { Sound_MixInit(NULL); // start the mixer; don't care what format. Sound_Sample *hello = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("hello.wav", NULL, 10240); Sound_Sample *music = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("icculus.ogg", NULL, 10240); Sound_MixPlay(music); while (Sound_MixPlaying(music)) { if (!Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) { Sound_Rewind(hello); Sound_MixPlay(hello); } SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. } Sound_FreeSample(music); Sound_FreeSample(hello); // will stop if it happens to still be playing. Sound_MixDeinit(); return(0); } Same deal, but we play some music ("Icculus in San Jose" from the talented Emmett Plant, in this case). We also load our "hello" sound from the previous example. While the music is playing, we check if "hello" is playing, and if not, we set it up to play again. Note that the two sounds are playing at the same time, mixed together. Cool, huh? You might notice that we called Sound_Rewind() on the hello sample. This isn't part of the mixer itself, and is a function from SDL_sound v1, before there was a mixer at all. This illustrates that you can use the usual SDL_sound methods to manipulate a sample in the mixer, including seeking and predecoding. These are safe operations even while the sample is playing. That's about all you need to know to effectively use the mixer. Everything after that is extra credit. Extra credit #1: Mixer Attributes. An API's got to know its limitations. SDL_sound isn't meant to be a robust 3D spatialization library. For that, one should look to the excellent OpenAL API at http://www.openal.org/. Still, for many reasons, OpenAL might not be a good fit: it doesn't support many audio formats (and all formats except uncompressed integer PCM are optional extensions to the API), it is less likely to support your platform and audio output target than SDL, and it is more complicated to feed it streamed audio. While not as robust as AL's feature set, SDL_sound v2 provides a handful of useful attributes you can set on a sample to alter its playback. Basic Attribute #1: Looping. Checking a sample's playing state in a loop just so you know when to restart it has two problems: first, it's a pain in the butt, and second, there may be a gap in the audio between when the sound starts and when you're able to restart it. To remedy this, SDL_sound lets you flag a sample as "looping" so you don't have to micromanage it. It will continue to rewind and play until you explicitly stop it. Let's take our last example and do this right: Example #3: Mixing two sounds with better looping. #include "SDL_sound.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { Sound_MixInit(NULL); // start the mixer; don't care what format. Sound_Sample *hello = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("hello.wav", NULL, 10240); Sound_Sample *music = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("icculus.ogg", NULL, 10240); Sound_SetAttribute(hello, SOUND_ATTR_LOOPING, 1); // turn on looping. Sound_MixPlay(music); Sound_MixPlay(hello); while (Sound_MixPlaying(music)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_FreeSample(music); Sound_FreeSample(hello); // will stop now. Sound_MixDeinit(); return(0); } ...it's that easy. Basic attribute #2: Fire and forget You'll notice in previous examples that we are taking the pains to explicitly free the resources associated with a sample via the Sound_FreeSample() call. In a small program like this, it's easy to be tidy and sweep up after one or two hardcoded sounds, but when you are managing a lot of different sounds, or a lot of copies of the same sound, this can become tedious. Case in point: laser beams. Let's say you've got a space fighter game, with a bunch of ships flying around and shooting at each other. Every time they fire a laser, do you really want to take the effort to decide when it is done and clean it up? You want to, quite literally in this case, "fire and forget" the sound...that is, you want the mixer to playback the audio and then clean it up without further action or intervention from you. So let's take our previous example and adjust it to clean up after us. Example #4: Fire and forget playback. #include "SDL_sound.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { Sound_MixInit(NULL); // start the mixer; don't care what format. Sound_Sample *hello = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("hello.wav", NULL, 10240); Sound_Sample *music = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("icculus.ogg", NULL, 10240); Sound_SetAttribute(hello, SOUND_ATTR_FIREANDFORGET, 1); Sound_SetAttribute(music, SOUND_ATTR_FIREANDFORGET, 1); Sound_MixPlay(music); // play once, then call Sound_FreeSample() for you. Sound_MixPlay(hello); // play once, then call Sound_FreeSample() for you. while (Sound_MixPlayingCount() > 0) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. // Don't need Sound_FreeSample() here anymore! Sound_MixDeinit(); return(0); } So everything was deallocated automatically, and your mother didn't even have to come along and tell you to clean up this pig sty! She is very proud of you right now, I assure you. You'll note that we call Sound_MixPlayingCount() to see if the music finished. You have to do this because the "music" sample is invalid once it gets pushed through Sound_FreeSample(), which will happen as soon as the mixer is done with it. To avoid touching deallocated memory, we just ask the mixer if anything is still playing. Also, common sense dictates that looping sounds never get to the "forget" part of "fire and forget", since they don't stop playing. You can either manually halt them or turn off the looping, though, and then they'll clean themselves up. Basic attribute #3: Per-channel Gain. If you can tweak the volume of the left or right channel on a sample, you can accomplish (or at least fake) a surprising number of simple sound effects. Therefore the mixer allows you to do just this, and then builds a few features on top of this magic. This is accomplished by tweaking the "gain" of a given channel. "Gain" is just a fancy way of saying "volume". You specify it as a floating point number, usually in the range of 0.0f to 2.0f. If you set the gain to 0.0f, it results in silence, and 1.0f results in no change at all. 0.5f halves the volume and 2.0f doubles it. As you might have guessed, the sample gets multiplied by this value. SDL_sound's mixer lets you tweak each channel in a sample individually. Right now we're limited to mono (one channel) and stereo (two channel) sounds, but this will probably be enhanced at some point. It's worth noting that this refers not to the sample itself but to the speakers where they play. This means you can set the left and right channels of a sample, even though the sample itself only has one. Since a 2-speaker setup will promote a mono sound to stereo (same waveform is fed to each speaker), you can tweak it to play at different volumes in the left and right. So to rehash our tired hello world example again... Example #5: Per-channel gain. #include "SDL_sound.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { Sound_MixInit(NULL); // start the mixer; don't care what format. Sound_Sample *hello = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("hello.wav", NULL, 10240); // Every channel's gain defaults to 1.0f, or no adjustment. Sound_SetAttribute(hello, SOUND_ATTRGAIN0, 0.0f); // left chan==silence. Sound_MixPlay(hello); // plays just right channel. while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_SetAttribute(hello, SOUND_ATTRGAIN0, 1.0f); // left chan==normal Sound_SetAttribute(hello, SOUND_ATTRGAIN1, 0.0f); // right chan==silence Sound_MixPlay(hello); // plays just left channel. while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_FreeSample(hello); Sound_MixDeinit(); return(0); } This played the hello sound twice, once in each speaker. Simple. Well, almost simple. If you only have mono output (one speaker), then this will play silence the first time (channel 0 set to silence), then the sound at normal volume the second time (channel 0, the only speaker, set to normal). In a 1-speaker setup, screwing with the second channel is ignored. If this is going to be a pain for you to track yourself, you can use Sound_MixInit() to set up a stereo environment and let it dither everything down to one speaker behind the scenes if need be. Generally, this isn't a huge concern, though. Extra Credit #2: Fading Sometimes you want to fade out (or fade in) a sound over time...this is handy when ending a game level. It's a nicer effect to silence everything over some small amount of time than to abruptly kill all the noise. This is more pleasant for the end-user. You could accomplish this by tweaking each channel of all your samples' gain over time, but this is another one of those things that are annoying to micromanage. The mixer has to constantly pay attention to these samples anyhow, why should you do it, too? SDL_sound gives you a means to instruct the mixer to take care of this. Example #6: Fading a sound. #include "SDL_sound.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { Sound_MixInit(NULL); // start the mixer; don't care what format. Sound_Sample *music = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("icculus.ogg", NULL, 10240); Sound_MixPlay(music); // Start music playing. Sound_SetAttribute(music, SOUND_ATTR_FADEOUT, 10000); SDL_Delay(10000); Sound_SetAttribute(music, SOUND_ATTR_FADEIN, 10000); SDL_Delay(10000); Sound_FreeSample(music); Sound_MixDeinit(); return(0); } So this starts our favorite song playing, and tells it to fade to silence smoothly over 10000 milliseconds (that is, 10 seconds). Since we know how long we want this to take, we lazily call SDL_Delay() to wait that long; the mixer works in another thread, so we have the luxury of doing nothing here. Then we fade it back in over another 10 seconds before exiting. It's worth noting a few things here: First, the FADEOUT attribute uses the same mechanism as SetGain() under the hood when mixing, but the two attributes exist seperately: if you double the gain (2.0f), the sound will drop in volume twice as much each time the fading updates, but it's still going to go from twice-as-loud to silence in the same amount of time (10000 milliseconds in this case). When a sample is totally silent, either because it faded out or you set its gain to 0.0f, it is still playing! If you were to turn the volume back up 30 seconds after the fade completes, you'd hear the sound as it would be at that 30 second moment as if you hadn't silenced it at all. This has a few important ramifications: 1) It's still taking CPU time. Maybe not as much, since we can choose not to mix when the gain is 0.0f, but in order to keep the sound "playing" we might need to decode more of it, which means CPU time and memory usage and such. Best to halt a silent sound if you aren't going to need it. 2) Sound_MixPlayingCount() might be > 0 even though you don't hear noise. 3) A sound might not be where you left it. Keep better track of your things! You might also notice that we called Sound_FreeSample() on a playing sample. This is legal. If a sample is playing when you free it, the mixer knows to halt it first. Extra Credit #3: Halting SDL_sound's mixer is a little different than most, in that there aren't seperate playing states. "Halting" a mixing sample means you took it out of the mixing list. "Playing" it means you put it back in, and it picks up the mixing with the sample as it found it. If you want something anologous to that "stop" button in WinAmp, you would halt the sample and then call Sound_Rewind() on it. Next time you start it playing, it'll be playing from the start of the sample. If you didn't call Sound_Rewind() first, it'll be playing from where you halted it. That's more like clicking WinAmp's "pause" button. However, there are times when you want everything to stop at once. Just looping over every sample and halting them isn't any good, since some might play just a tiny bit longer...it's a lovely bug called a "race condition". And, as I'm sure you've heard me say before, why do a lot of work to manage stuff that the mixer has to manage itself anyhow? You should learn to delegate more, you control freak. Example #7: Halting. #include "SDL_sound.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { Sound_MixInit(NULL); // start the mixer; don't care what format. Sound_Sample *hello = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("hello.wav", NULL, 10240); Sound_Sample *chatter = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("chatter.wav", NULL, 10240); Sound_Sample *music = Sound_NewSampleFromFile("icculus.ogg", NULL, 10240); Sound_MixPlay(music); Sound_MixPlay(hello); while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_MixPlay(hello); while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_MixPlay(hello); while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_MixHalt(music); // halt the music. Sound_MixPlay(hello); while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_MixPlay(hello); while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_MixPlay(hello); while (Sound_MixPlaying(hello)) SDL_Delay(100); // wait around. Sound_MixPlay(music); // start the music where it left off. Sound_MixPlay(chatter); // start the chatter. SDL_Delay(3000); // let them play. Sound_MixHalt(NULL); // halt _everything_ that's playing. SDL_Delay(3000); // waste some time. Sound_MixPlay(music); // start the music where it left off. Sound_MixPlay(chatter); // start the chatter where it left off. SDL_Delay(3000); // waste some more time. Sound_FreeSample(music); // clean up and quit. Sound_FreeSample(chatter); Sound_FreeSample(hello); Sound_MixDeinit(); return(0); } Ok, you following? That plays the music, plays "hello" three times while the music is playing, halts the music and plays hello three times without anything else, restarts the music where it left off mixed with "chatter" for three seconds, stops everything (music and chatter in this case), waits three more seconds of silence, restarts the music and chatter where it left off and lets them play for three more seconds. Then it shuts it all down and goes home. Fun, huh? There are some notable exceptions to this rule. When a sound gets to the end of its mixing, it either halts or (if set looping) rewinds and starts playing again without missing a beat. For these, you don't have to manually halt (or manually restart, as it were). You now have everything you need to make a game with robust audio. But for some of you, that's not enough. You're never satisfied. You need the section of this tutorial written for... THE HARDCORE. (These sections are brief and lack full examples. If you're hardcore, you probably don't read wussy tutorials anyhow.) Hardcore #1: low-overhead copying of a sample. Let's say you've got a sound file that represents a laser blast. Everytime a shot is fired in your game, you don't want to have the overhead of reloading it from disk, decoding and mixing it on the fly! Here are some tips for your efficiency: - Opt for an uncompressed format, such as a standard .WAV file or even raw PCM. For small, frequently used sounds, the bigger memory footprint is usually an acceptable tradeoff to constant redecoding. In some cases, we've found that compressing to, say, .ogg format actually makes the file bigger if it's a very short sound. - Put your sound into a memory block and point multiple memory RWOPS at it: one per playing sound. There are functions in SDL_sound 2 for allocating these from a pool, which reduces allocation overhead and memory fragmentation, and eliminates multiple trips to the disk when you "read" the sound. - Sound_Sample structures are allocated in a pool, too, so throwaway sounds (specifically, ones using pooled RWOPS) don't thrash system resources. Good for those fire-and-forget effects. - It's trivial to roll a reference-counting RWOPS that lets you use the same memory block for several playing sounds, and when the last one closes it (all related Sound_Samples go through Sound_FreeSample()), it deletes the original memory block. Handy if you only want to loosely manage those buffers. - Cull samples if you're playing too many. The app can decide which sounds are important and assign them a priority, and let only the first X highest priority sounds actually mix. - Alternately, if you can swallow the memory: take a highly-compressed file and put it into a Sound_Sample, call Sound_DecodeAll. Now, use the sample's "decoded" field as raw PCM for other Sound_Samples using above tricks. When you are done, clean up the other samples first, then call Sound_FreeSample() on this one. This is extremely useful if you want to reduce CPU usage for one sound that is otherwise compressed. Memory usage doesn't grow exponentially with each simulataneous mixing of this sound, because everyone is feeding from the same memory block, so each new sample instance adds some bytes for the structures (which might have been allocated in the pool already anyhow). Hardcore #2: Predecoding and buffer sizes. Take advantage of the 1.0 API for predecoding and altering the decode buffer size. This gives you control over the memory/CPU tradeoff at mix time, as the mixer will call Sound_Decode() when it needs more data from a playing sample. How much decoding is done at that point depends on how much buffering is available. If you predecode the whole thing with Sound_DecodeAll(), then the mixer can focus on mixing and not spend time decoding. Hardcore #3: Global gain, global fade. Most attributes that apply to one sample can be applied to all by passing a NULL for the first argument to Sound_SetAttribute(). Gain and fade are examples of this. If you want everything to fade out at once, this is the best, race-condition free way to do it. Note that global attributes don't override (or overwrite) per-sample attributes. If you set a sample's gain to 2.0 and the global gain to 0.5, the sound plays at normal (1.0) gain...the sample's gain is still 2.0 when you change the global gain thereafter. Hardcore #4: Postmix callbacks. You can register a callback function per-sample that is called when the mixer has finished its work and is about to send the data to the audio hardware. These generally run in seperate threads on most platforms, and as such must be protected from your main code with mutexes. These are useful if you are are writing a media player and want to show some sort of visual feedback based on the playing audio data, or if you want to tweak the sound with your own special effects. Hardcore #5: Sample finished callback. You can register a callback function per-sample that is called when the mixer has completely finished mixing a non-looping sample. This is largely a nod to SDL_mixer, where this was the most convenient way to clean up fire-and-forget sounds, but most people will want to let SDL_sound handle those. This has other good uses: it lets you know when sound events are complete if you are adding cinematics/cut-scenes to your program, or perhaps when it's safe for characters to speak again (it's strange when one actor is speaking two overlapping lines of dialogue, for example). Hardcore #6: Procedural samples. !!! WRITEME: Hook up a RAW Sound_Sample to a RWOPS that generates sound on !!! WRITEME: read, so you can mix in a procedural sample instead of just !!! WRITEME: pre/post mixing. Hardcore #7: Your suggestion here! The goal is to try and make audio work fairly painless for the game developer, which means that if there is a good way to generalize functionality into the mixer layer, we probably should. Comments are welcome! It's worth noting that this tutorial covers common usage patterns and the Big Important Things, so a lot of support API isn't covered here. For example, important things like being able to query sample attributes weren't important enough to mention here, but that doesn't mean you can't do it). // end of mixer.txt ...