view docs/html/cdrom.html @ 968:4675910b0b7b

Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2004 15:17:27 +0300 (EEST) From: Hannu Savolainen Subject: Re: SDL uses obsolete OSS features I did some work on getting OSS to work better with SDL. There have been some problems with select which should be fixed now. I'm having some problems in understanding what is the purpose of the DSP_WaitAudio() routine. I added a return to the very beginning of this routine and commendted out the define for USE_BLOCKING_WRITES. At least lbreakout2 seems to work as well as earlier. The latencies are the same. An ordinary blocking write does exactly the same thing than DSP_WaitAudio does. So I would recommend using the USE_BLOCKING_WRITES approach and removing everything from the DSP_WaitAudio routine. Also enabling USE_BLOCKING_WRITES makes it possible to simplify DSP_PlayAudio() because you don't need to handle the partial writes (the do-while loop). Attached is a patch against SDL-1.2.7. After these changes SDL will use OSS as it's designed to be used (make it as simple as possible). This code should work with all OSS implementations because it uses only the very fundamental features that have been there since the jurassic times.
author Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
date Fri, 12 Nov 2004 21:39:04 +0000
parents 355632dca928
children
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<HTML
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><TITLE
>CD-ROM</TITLE
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><DIV
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><H1
><A
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></A
>Chapter 11. CD-ROM</H1
><DIV
CLASS="TOC"
><DL
><DT
><B
>Table of Contents</B
></DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdnumdrives.html"
>SDL_CDNumDrives</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Returns the number of CD-ROM drives on the system.</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdname.html"
>SDL_CDName</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Returns a human-readable, system-dependent identifier for the CD-ROM.</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdopen.html"
>SDL_CDOpen</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Opens a CD-ROM drive for access.</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdstatus.html"
>SDL_CDStatus</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Returns the current status of the given drive.</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdplay.html"
>SDL_CDPlay</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Play a CD</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdplaytracks.html"
>SDL_CDPlayTracks</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Play the given CD track(s)</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdpause.html"
>SDL_CDPause</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Pauses a CDROM</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdresume.html"
>SDL_CDResume</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Resumes a CDROM</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdstop.html"
>SDL_CDStop</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Stops a CDROM</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdeject.html"
>SDL_CDEject</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Ejects a CDROM</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdclose.html"
>SDL_CDClose</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;Closes a SDL_CD handle</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcd.html"
>SDL_CD</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;CDROM Drive Information</DT
><DT
><A
HREF="sdlcdtrack.html"
>SDL_CDtrack</A
>&nbsp;--&nbsp;CD Track Information Structure</DT
></DL
></DIV
><P
>SDL supports audio control of up to 32 local CD-ROM drives at once.</P
><P
>You use this API to perform all the basic functions of a CD player,
including listing the tracks, playing, stopping, and ejecting the CD-ROM.
(Currently, multi-changer CD drives are not supported.)</P
><P
>Before you call any of the SDL CD-ROM functions, you must first call
"<TT
CLASS="FUNCTION"
>SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_CDROM)</TT
>", which scans the system for
CD-ROM drives, and sets the program up for audio control.  Check the 
return code, which should be <SPAN
CLASS="RETURNVALUE"
>0</SPAN
>, to see if there 
were any errors in starting up.</P
><P
>After you have initialized the library, you can find out how many drives
are available using the <TT
CLASS="FUNCTION"
>SDL_CDNumDrives()</TT
> function.  
The first drive listed is the system default CD-ROM drive.  After you have 
chosen a drive, and have opened it with <TT
CLASS="FUNCTION"
>SDL_CDOpen()</TT
>, 
you can check the status and start playing if there's a CD in the drive.</P
><P
>A CD-ROM is organized into one or more tracks, each consisting of a certain
number of "frames".  Each frame is ~2K in size, and at normal playing speed,
a CD plays 75 frames per second.  SDL works with the number of frames on a
CD, but this can easily be converted to the more familiar minutes/seconds
format by using the <TT
CLASS="FUNCTION"
>FRAMES_TO_MSF()</TT
> macro.</P
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