Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view test/loopwave.c @ 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 | 74212992fb08 |
children | be9c9c8f6d53 |
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/* Program to load a wave file and loop playing it using SDL sound */ /* loopwaves.c is much more robust in handling WAVE files -- This is only for simple WAVEs */ #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <signal.h> #include "SDL.h" #include "SDL_audio.h" struct { SDL_AudioSpec spec; Uint8 *sound; /* Pointer to wave data */ Uint32 soundlen; /* Length of wave data */ int soundpos; /* Current play position */ } wave; void fillerup(void *unused, Uint8 *stream, int len) { Uint8 *waveptr; int waveleft; /* Set up the pointers */ waveptr = wave.sound + wave.soundpos; waveleft = wave.soundlen - wave.soundpos; /* Go! */ while ( waveleft <= len ) { SDL_MixAudio(stream, waveptr, waveleft, SDL_MIX_MAXVOLUME); stream += waveleft; len -= waveleft; waveptr = wave.sound; waveleft = wave.soundlen; wave.soundpos = 0; } SDL_MixAudio(stream, waveptr, len, SDL_MIX_MAXVOLUME); wave.soundpos += len; } static int done = 0; void poked(int sig) { done = 1; } int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { char name[32]; /* Load the SDL library */ if ( SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_AUDIO) < 0 ) { fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't initialize SDL: %s\n",SDL_GetError()); exit(1); } atexit(SDL_Quit); if ( argv[1] == NULL ) { fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <wavefile>\n", argv[0]); exit(1); } /* Load the wave file into memory */ if ( SDL_LoadWAV(argv[1], &wave.spec, &wave.sound, &wave.soundlen) == NULL ) { fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't load %s: %s\n", argv[1], SDL_GetError()); exit(1); } wave.spec.callback = fillerup; /* Set the signals */ #ifdef SIGHUP signal(SIGHUP, poked); #endif signal(SIGINT, poked); #ifdef SIGQUIT signal(SIGQUIT, poked); #endif signal(SIGTERM, poked); /* Initialize fillerup() variables */ if ( SDL_OpenAudio(&wave.spec, NULL) < 0 ) { fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't open audio: %s\n", SDL_GetError()); SDL_FreeWAV(wave.sound); exit(2); } SDL_PauseAudio(0); /* Let the audio run */ printf("Using audio driver: %s\n", SDL_AudioDriverName(name, 32)); while ( ! done && (SDL_GetAudioStatus() == SDL_AUDIO_PLAYING) ) SDL_Delay(1000); /* Clean up on signal */ SDL_CloseAudio(); SDL_FreeWAV(wave.sound); return(0); }