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1464 lines
57 KiB
1464 lines
57 KiB
/* |
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Simple DirectMedia Layer |
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Copyright (C) 1997-2022 Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
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This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied |
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warranty. In no event will the authors be held liable for any damages |
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arising from the use of this software. |
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Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose, |
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including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it |
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freely, subject to the following restrictions: |
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1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not |
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claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software |
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in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be |
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appreciated but is not required. |
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2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be |
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misrepresented as being the original software. |
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3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. |
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*/ |
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|
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/* !!! FIXME: several functions in here need Doxygen comments. */ |
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/** |
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* \file SDL_audio.h |
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* |
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* Access to the raw audio mixing buffer for the SDL library. |
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*/ |
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#ifndef SDL_audio_h_ |
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#define SDL_audio_h_ |
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#include "SDL_stdinc.h" |
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#include "SDL_error.h" |
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#include "SDL_endian.h" |
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#include "SDL_mutex.h" |
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#include "SDL_thread.h" |
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#include "SDL_rwops.h" |
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#include "begin_code.h" |
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/* Set up for C function definitions, even when using C++ */ |
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#ifdef __cplusplus |
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extern "C" { |
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#endif |
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/** |
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* \brief Audio format flags. |
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* |
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* These are what the 16 bits in SDL_AudioFormat currently mean... |
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* (Unspecified bits are always zero). |
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* |
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* \verbatim |
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++-----------------------sample is signed if set |
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|| |
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|| ++-----------sample is bigendian if set |
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|| || |
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|| || ++---sample is float if set |
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|| || || |
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|| || || +---sample bit size---+ |
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|| || || | | |
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15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00 |
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\endverbatim |
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* |
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* There are macros in SDL 2.0 and later to query these bits. |
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*/ |
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typedef Uint16 SDL_AudioFormat; |
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/** |
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* \name Audio flags |
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*/ |
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/* @{ */ |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_MASK_BITSIZE (0xFF) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_MASK_DATATYPE (1<<8) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_MASK_ENDIAN (1<<12) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_MASK_SIGNED (1<<15) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_BITSIZE(x) (x & SDL_AUDIO_MASK_BITSIZE) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ISFLOAT(x) (x & SDL_AUDIO_MASK_DATATYPE) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ISBIGENDIAN(x) (x & SDL_AUDIO_MASK_ENDIAN) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ISSIGNED(x) (x & SDL_AUDIO_MASK_SIGNED) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ISINT(x) (!SDL_AUDIO_ISFLOAT(x)) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ISLITTLEENDIAN(x) (!SDL_AUDIO_ISBIGENDIAN(x)) |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ISUNSIGNED(x) (!SDL_AUDIO_ISSIGNED(x)) |
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/** |
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* \name Audio format flags |
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* |
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* Defaults to LSB byte order. |
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*/ |
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/* @{ */ |
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#define AUDIO_U8 0x0008 /**< Unsigned 8-bit samples */ |
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#define AUDIO_S8 0x8008 /**< Signed 8-bit samples */ |
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#define AUDIO_U16LSB 0x0010 /**< Unsigned 16-bit samples */ |
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#define AUDIO_S16LSB 0x8010 /**< Signed 16-bit samples */ |
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#define AUDIO_U16MSB 0x1010 /**< As above, but big-endian byte order */ |
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#define AUDIO_S16MSB 0x9010 /**< As above, but big-endian byte order */ |
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#define AUDIO_U16 AUDIO_U16LSB |
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#define AUDIO_S16 AUDIO_S16LSB |
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/* @} */ |
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/** |
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* \name int32 support |
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*/ |
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/* @{ */ |
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#define AUDIO_S32LSB 0x8020 /**< 32-bit integer samples */ |
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#define AUDIO_S32MSB 0x9020 /**< As above, but big-endian byte order */ |
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#define AUDIO_S32 AUDIO_S32LSB |
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/* @} */ |
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/** |
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* \name float32 support |
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*/ |
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/* @{ */ |
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#define AUDIO_F32LSB 0x8120 /**< 32-bit floating point samples */ |
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#define AUDIO_F32MSB 0x9120 /**< As above, but big-endian byte order */ |
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#define AUDIO_F32 AUDIO_F32LSB |
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/* @} */ |
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/** |
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* \name Native audio byte ordering |
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*/ |
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/* @{ */ |
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#if SDL_BYTEORDER == SDL_LIL_ENDIAN |
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#define AUDIO_U16SYS AUDIO_U16LSB |
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#define AUDIO_S16SYS AUDIO_S16LSB |
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#define AUDIO_S32SYS AUDIO_S32LSB |
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#define AUDIO_F32SYS AUDIO_F32LSB |
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#else |
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#define AUDIO_U16SYS AUDIO_U16MSB |
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#define AUDIO_S16SYS AUDIO_S16MSB |
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#define AUDIO_S32SYS AUDIO_S32MSB |
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#define AUDIO_F32SYS AUDIO_F32MSB |
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#endif |
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/* @} */ |
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/** |
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* \name Allow change flags |
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* |
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* Which audio format changes are allowed when opening a device. |
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*/ |
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/* @{ */ |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FREQUENCY_CHANGE 0x00000001 |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FORMAT_CHANGE 0x00000002 |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_CHANNELS_CHANGE 0x00000004 |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_SAMPLES_CHANGE 0x00000008 |
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#define SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_ANY_CHANGE (SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FREQUENCY_CHANGE|SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FORMAT_CHANGE|SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_CHANNELS_CHANGE|SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_SAMPLES_CHANGE) |
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/* @} */ |
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|
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/* @} *//* Audio flags */ |
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/** |
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* This function is called when the audio device needs more data. |
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* |
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* \param userdata An application-specific parameter saved in |
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* the SDL_AudioSpec structure |
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* \param stream A pointer to the audio data buffer. |
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* \param len The length of that buffer in bytes. |
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* |
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* Once the callback returns, the buffer will no longer be valid. |
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* Stereo samples are stored in a LRLRLR ordering. |
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* |
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* You can choose to avoid callbacks and use SDL_QueueAudio() instead, if |
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* you like. Just open your audio device with a NULL callback. |
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*/ |
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typedef void (SDLCALL * SDL_AudioCallback) (void *userdata, Uint8 * stream, |
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int len); |
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/** |
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* The calculated values in this structure are calculated by SDL_OpenAudio(). |
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* |
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* For multi-channel audio, the default SDL channel mapping is: |
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* 2: FL FR (stereo) |
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* 3: FL FR LFE (2.1 surround) |
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* 4: FL FR BL BR (quad) |
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* 5: FL FR FC BL BR (quad + center) |
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* 6: FL FR FC LFE SL SR (5.1 surround - last two can also be BL BR) |
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* 7: FL FR FC LFE BC SL SR (6.1 surround) |
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* 8: FL FR FC LFE BL BR SL SR (7.1 surround) |
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*/ |
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typedef struct SDL_AudioSpec |
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{ |
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int freq; /**< DSP frequency -- samples per second */ |
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SDL_AudioFormat format; /**< Audio data format */ |
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Uint8 channels; /**< Number of channels: 1 mono, 2 stereo */ |
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Uint8 silence; /**< Audio buffer silence value (calculated) */ |
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Uint16 samples; /**< Audio buffer size in sample FRAMES (total samples divided by channel count) */ |
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Uint16 padding; /**< Necessary for some compile environments */ |
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Uint32 size; /**< Audio buffer size in bytes (calculated) */ |
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SDL_AudioCallback callback; /**< Callback that feeds the audio device (NULL to use SDL_QueueAudio()). */ |
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void *userdata; /**< Userdata passed to callback (ignored for NULL callbacks). */ |
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} SDL_AudioSpec; |
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struct SDL_AudioCVT; |
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typedef void (SDLCALL * SDL_AudioFilter) (struct SDL_AudioCVT * cvt, |
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SDL_AudioFormat format); |
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/** |
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* \brief Upper limit of filters in SDL_AudioCVT |
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* |
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* The maximum number of SDL_AudioFilter functions in SDL_AudioCVT is |
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* currently limited to 9. The SDL_AudioCVT.filters array has 10 pointers, |
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* one of which is the terminating NULL pointer. |
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*/ |
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#define SDL_AUDIOCVT_MAX_FILTERS 9 |
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/** |
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* \struct SDL_AudioCVT |
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* \brief A structure to hold a set of audio conversion filters and buffers. |
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* |
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* Note that various parts of the conversion pipeline can take advantage |
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* of SIMD operations (like SSE2, for example). SDL_AudioCVT doesn't require |
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* you to pass it aligned data, but can possibly run much faster if you |
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* set both its (buf) field to a pointer that is aligned to 16 bytes, and its |
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* (len) field to something that's a multiple of 16, if possible. |
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*/ |
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#if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__CHERI_PURE_CAPABILITY__) |
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/* This structure is 84 bytes on 32-bit architectures, make sure GCC doesn't |
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pad it out to 88 bytes to guarantee ABI compatibility between compilers. |
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This is not a concern on CHERI architectures, where pointers must be stored |
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at aligned locations otherwise they will become invalid, and thus structs |
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containing pointers cannot be packed without giving a warning or error. |
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vvv |
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The next time we rev the ABI, make sure to size the ints and add padding. |
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*/ |
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#define SDL_AUDIOCVT_PACKED __attribute__((packed)) |
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#else |
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#define SDL_AUDIOCVT_PACKED |
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#endif |
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/* */ |
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typedef struct SDL_AudioCVT |
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{ |
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int needed; /**< Set to 1 if conversion possible */ |
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SDL_AudioFormat src_format; /**< Source audio format */ |
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SDL_AudioFormat dst_format; /**< Target audio format */ |
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double rate_incr; /**< Rate conversion increment */ |
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Uint8 *buf; /**< Buffer to hold entire audio data */ |
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int len; /**< Length of original audio buffer */ |
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int len_cvt; /**< Length of converted audio buffer */ |
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int len_mult; /**< buffer must be len*len_mult big */ |
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double len_ratio; /**< Given len, final size is len*len_ratio */ |
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SDL_AudioFilter filters[SDL_AUDIOCVT_MAX_FILTERS + 1]; /**< NULL-terminated list of filter functions */ |
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int filter_index; /**< Current audio conversion function */ |
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} SDL_AUDIOCVT_PACKED SDL_AudioCVT; |
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/* Function prototypes */ |
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/** |
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* \name Driver discovery functions |
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* |
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* These functions return the list of built in audio drivers, in the |
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* order that they are normally initialized by default. |
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*/ |
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/* @{ */ |
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/** |
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* Use this function to get the number of built-in audio drivers. |
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* |
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* This function returns a hardcoded number. This never returns a negative |
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* value; if there are no drivers compiled into this build of SDL, this |
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* function returns zero. The presence of a driver in this list does not mean |
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* it will function, it just means SDL is capable of interacting with that |
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* interface. For example, a build of SDL might have esound support, but if |
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* there's no esound server available, SDL's esound driver would fail if used. |
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* |
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* By default, SDL tries all drivers, in its preferred order, until one is |
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* found to be usable. |
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* |
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* \returns the number of built-in audio drivers. |
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* |
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* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
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* |
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* \sa SDL_GetAudioDriver |
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*/ |
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extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_GetNumAudioDrivers(void); |
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|
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/** |
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* Use this function to get the name of a built in audio driver. |
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* |
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* The list of audio drivers is given in the order that they are normally |
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* initialized by default; the drivers that seem more reasonable to choose |
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* first (as far as the SDL developers believe) are earlier in the list. |
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* |
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* The names of drivers are all simple, low-ASCII identifiers, like "alsa", |
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* "coreaudio" or "xaudio2". These never have Unicode characters, and are not |
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* meant to be proper names. |
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* |
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* \param index the index of the audio driver; the value ranges from 0 to |
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* SDL_GetNumAudioDrivers() - 1 |
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* \returns the name of the audio driver at the requested index, or NULL if an |
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* invalid index was specified. |
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* |
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* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
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* |
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* \sa SDL_GetNumAudioDrivers |
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*/ |
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extern DECLSPEC const char *SDLCALL SDL_GetAudioDriver(int index); |
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/* @} */ |
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|
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/** |
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* \name Initialization and cleanup |
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* |
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* \internal These functions are used internally, and should not be used unless |
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* you have a specific need to specify the audio driver you want to |
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* use. You should normally use SDL_Init() or SDL_InitSubSystem(). |
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*/ |
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/* @{ */ |
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|
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/** |
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* Use this function to initialize a particular audio driver. |
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* |
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* This function is used internally, and should not be used unless you have a |
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* specific need to designate the audio driver you want to use. You should |
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* normally use SDL_Init() or SDL_InitSubSystem(). |
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* |
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* \param driver_name the name of the desired audio driver |
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* \returns 0 on success or a negative error code on failure; call |
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* SDL_GetError() for more information. |
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* |
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* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
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* |
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* \sa SDL_AudioQuit |
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*/ |
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extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_AudioInit(const char *driver_name); |
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|
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/** |
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* Use this function to shut down audio if you initialized it with |
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* SDL_AudioInit(). |
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* |
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* This function is used internally, and should not be used unless you have a |
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* specific need to specify the audio driver you want to use. You should |
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* normally use SDL_Quit() or SDL_QuitSubSystem(). |
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* |
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* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
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* |
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* \sa SDL_AudioInit |
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*/ |
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extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_AudioQuit(void); |
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/* @} */ |
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|
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/** |
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* Get the name of the current audio driver. |
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* |
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* The returned string points to internal static memory and thus never becomes |
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* invalid, even if you quit the audio subsystem and initialize a new driver |
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* (although such a case would return a different static string from another |
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* call to this function, of course). As such, you should not modify or free |
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* the returned string. |
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* |
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* \returns the name of the current audio driver or NULL if no driver has been |
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* initialized. |
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* |
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* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
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* |
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* \sa SDL_AudioInit |
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*/ |
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extern DECLSPEC const char *SDLCALL SDL_GetCurrentAudioDriver(void); |
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|
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/** |
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* This function is a legacy means of opening the audio device. |
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* |
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* This function remains for compatibility with SDL 1.2, but also because it's |
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* slightly easier to use than the new functions in SDL 2.0. The new, more |
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* powerful, and preferred way to do this is SDL_OpenAudioDevice(). |
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* |
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* This function is roughly equivalent to: |
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* |
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* ```c |
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* SDL_OpenAudioDevice(NULL, 0, desired, obtained, SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_ANY_CHANGE); |
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* ``` |
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* |
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* With two notable exceptions: |
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* |
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* - If `obtained` is NULL, we use `desired` (and allow no changes), which |
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* means desired will be modified to have the correct values for silence, |
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* etc, and SDL will convert any differences between your app's specific |
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* request and the hardware behind the scenes. |
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* - The return value is always success or failure, and not a device ID, which |
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* means you can only have one device open at a time with this function. |
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* |
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* \param desired an SDL_AudioSpec structure representing the desired output |
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* format. Please refer to the SDL_OpenAudioDevice |
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* documentation for details on how to prepare this structure. |
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* \param obtained an SDL_AudioSpec structure filled in with the actual |
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* parameters, or NULL. |
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* \returns 0 if successful, placing the actual hardware parameters in the |
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* structure pointed to by `obtained`. |
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* |
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* If `obtained` is NULL, the audio data passed to the callback |
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* function will be guaranteed to be in the requested format, and |
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* will be automatically converted to the actual hardware audio |
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* format if necessary. If `obtained` is NULL, `desired` will have |
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* fields modified. |
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* |
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* This function returns a negative error code on failure to open the |
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* audio device or failure to set up the audio thread; call |
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* SDL_GetError() for more information. |
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* |
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* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
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* |
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* \sa SDL_CloseAudio |
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* \sa SDL_LockAudio |
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* \sa SDL_PauseAudio |
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* \sa SDL_UnlockAudio |
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*/ |
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extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_OpenAudio(SDL_AudioSpec * desired, |
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SDL_AudioSpec * obtained); |
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|
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/** |
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* SDL Audio Device IDs. |
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* |
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* A successful call to SDL_OpenAudio() is always device id 1, and legacy |
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* SDL audio APIs assume you want this device ID. SDL_OpenAudioDevice() calls |
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* always returns devices >= 2 on success. The legacy calls are good both |
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* for backwards compatibility and when you don't care about multiple, |
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* specific, or capture devices. |
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*/ |
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typedef Uint32 SDL_AudioDeviceID; |
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|
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/** |
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* Get the number of built-in audio devices. |
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* |
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* This function is only valid after successfully initializing the audio |
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* subsystem. |
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* |
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* Note that audio capture support is not implemented as of SDL 2.0.4, so the |
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* `iscapture` parameter is for future expansion and should always be zero for |
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* now. |
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* |
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* This function will return -1 if an explicit list of devices can't be |
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* determined. Returning -1 is not an error. For example, if SDL is set up to |
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* talk to a remote audio server, it can't list every one available on the |
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* Internet, but it will still allow a specific host to be specified in |
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* SDL_OpenAudioDevice(). |
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* |
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* In many common cases, when this function returns a value <= 0, it can still |
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* successfully open the default device (NULL for first argument of |
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* SDL_OpenAudioDevice()). |
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* |
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* This function may trigger a complete redetect of available hardware. It |
|
* should not be called for each iteration of a loop, but rather once at the |
|
* start of a loop: |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
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* // Don't do this: |
|
* for (int i = 0; i < SDL_GetNumAudioDevices(0); i++) |
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* |
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* // do this instead: |
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* const int count = SDL_GetNumAudioDevices(0); |
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* for (int i = 0; i < count; ++i) { do_something_here(); } |
|
* ``` |
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* |
|
* \param iscapture zero to request playback devices, non-zero to request |
|
* recording devices |
|
* \returns the number of available devices exposed by the current driver or |
|
* -1 if an explicit list of devices can't be determined. A return |
|
* value of -1 does not necessarily mean an error condition. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
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* \sa SDL_GetAudioDeviceName |
|
* \sa SDL_OpenAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_GetNumAudioDevices(int iscapture); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get the human-readable name of a specific audio device. |
|
* |
|
* This function is only valid after successfully initializing the audio |
|
* subsystem. The values returned by this function reflect the latest call to |
|
* SDL_GetNumAudioDevices(); re-call that function to redetect available |
|
* hardware. |
|
* |
|
* The string returned by this function is UTF-8 encoded, read-only, and |
|
* managed internally. You are not to free it. If you need to keep the string |
|
* for any length of time, you should make your own copy of it, as it will be |
|
* invalid next time any of several other SDL functions are called. |
|
* |
|
* \param index the index of the audio device; valid values range from 0 to |
|
* SDL_GetNumAudioDevices() - 1 |
|
* \param iscapture non-zero to query the list of recording devices, zero to |
|
* query the list of output devices. |
|
* \returns the name of the audio device at the requested index, or NULL on |
|
* error. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_GetNumAudioDevices |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC const char *SDLCALL SDL_GetAudioDeviceName(int index, |
|
int iscapture); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get the preferred audio format of a specific audio device. |
|
* |
|
* This function is only valid after a successfully initializing the audio |
|
* subsystem. The values returned by this function reflect the latest call to |
|
* SDL_GetNumAudioDevices(); re-call that function to redetect available |
|
* hardware. |
|
* |
|
* `spec` will be filled with the sample rate, sample format, and channel |
|
* count. All other values in the structure are filled with 0. When the |
|
* supported struct members are 0, SDL was unable to get the property from the |
|
* backend. |
|
* |
|
* \param index the index of the audio device; valid values range from 0 to |
|
* SDL_GetNumAudioDevices() - 1 |
|
* \param iscapture non-zero to query the list of recording devices, zero to |
|
* query the list of output devices. |
|
* \param spec The SDL_AudioSpec to be initialized by this function. |
|
* \returns 0 on success, nonzero on error |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.16. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_GetNumAudioDevices |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_GetAudioDeviceSpec(int index, |
|
int iscapture, |
|
SDL_AudioSpec *spec); |
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|
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Open a specific audio device. |
|
* |
|
* SDL_OpenAudio(), unlike this function, always acts on device ID 1. As such, |
|
* this function will never return a 1 so as not to conflict with the legacy |
|
* function. |
|
* |
|
* Please note that SDL 2.0 before 2.0.5 did not support recording; as such, |
|
* this function would fail if `iscapture` was not zero. Starting with SDL |
|
* 2.0.5, recording is implemented and this value can be non-zero. |
|
* |
|
* Passing in a `device` name of NULL requests the most reasonable default |
|
* (and is equivalent to what SDL_OpenAudio() does to choose a device). The |
|
* `device` name is a UTF-8 string reported by SDL_GetAudioDeviceName(), but |
|
* some drivers allow arbitrary and driver-specific strings, such as a |
|
* hostname/IP address for a remote audio server, or a filename in the |
|
* diskaudio driver. |
|
* |
|
* An opened audio device starts out paused, and should be enabled for playing |
|
* by calling SDL_PauseAudioDevice(devid, 0) when you are ready for your audio |
|
* callback function to be called. Since the audio driver may modify the |
|
* requested size of the audio buffer, you should allocate any local mixing |
|
* buffers after you open the audio device. |
|
* |
|
* The audio callback runs in a separate thread in most cases; you can prevent |
|
* race conditions between your callback and other threads without fully |
|
* pausing playback with SDL_LockAudioDevice(). For more information about the |
|
* callback, see SDL_AudioSpec. |
|
* |
|
* Managing the audio spec via 'desired' and 'obtained': |
|
* |
|
* When filling in the desired audio spec structure: |
|
* |
|
* - `desired->freq` should be the frequency in sample-frames-per-second (Hz). |
|
* - `desired->format` should be the audio format (`AUDIO_S16SYS`, etc). |
|
* - `desired->samples` is the desired size of the audio buffer, in _sample |
|
* frames_ (with stereo output, two samples--left and right--would make a |
|
* single sample frame). This number should be a power of two, and may be |
|
* adjusted by the audio driver to a value more suitable for the hardware. |
|
* Good values seem to range between 512 and 8096 inclusive, depending on |
|
* the application and CPU speed. Smaller values reduce latency, but can |
|
* lead to underflow if the application is doing heavy processing and cannot |
|
* fill the audio buffer in time. Note that the number of sample frames is |
|
* directly related to time by the following formula: `ms = |
|
* (sampleframes*1000)/freq` |
|
* - `desired->size` is the size in _bytes_ of the audio buffer, and is |
|
* calculated by SDL_OpenAudioDevice(). You don't initialize this. |
|
* - `desired->silence` is the value used to set the buffer to silence, and is |
|
* calculated by SDL_OpenAudioDevice(). You don't initialize this. |
|
* - `desired->callback` should be set to a function that will be called when |
|
* the audio device is ready for more data. It is passed a pointer to the |
|
* audio buffer, and the length in bytes of the audio buffer. This function |
|
* usually runs in a separate thread, and so you should protect data |
|
* structures that it accesses by calling SDL_LockAudioDevice() and |
|
* SDL_UnlockAudioDevice() in your code. Alternately, you may pass a NULL |
|
* pointer here, and call SDL_QueueAudio() with some frequency, to queue |
|
* more audio samples to be played (or for capture devices, call |
|
* SDL_DequeueAudio() with some frequency, to obtain audio samples). |
|
* - `desired->userdata` is passed as the first parameter to your callback |
|
* function. If you passed a NULL callback, this value is ignored. |
|
* |
|
* `allowed_changes` can have the following flags OR'd together: |
|
* |
|
* - `SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FREQUENCY_CHANGE` |
|
* - `SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FORMAT_CHANGE` |
|
* - `SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_CHANNELS_CHANGE` |
|
* - `SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_ANY_CHANGE` |
|
* |
|
* These flags specify how SDL should behave when a device cannot offer a |
|
* specific feature. If the application requests a feature that the hardware |
|
* doesn't offer, SDL will always try to get the closest equivalent. |
|
* |
|
* For example, if you ask for float32 audio format, but the sound card only |
|
* supports int16, SDL will set the hardware to int16. If you had set |
|
* SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_FORMAT_CHANGE, SDL will change the format in the `obtained` |
|
* structure. If that flag was *not* set, SDL will prepare to convert your |
|
* callback's float32 audio to int16 before feeding it to the hardware and |
|
* will keep the originally requested format in the `obtained` structure. |
|
* |
|
* The resulting audio specs, varying depending on hardware and on what |
|
* changes were allowed, will then be written back to `obtained`. |
|
* |
|
* If your application can only handle one specific data format, pass a zero |
|
* for `allowed_changes` and let SDL transparently handle any differences. |
|
* |
|
* \param device a UTF-8 string reported by SDL_GetAudioDeviceName() or a |
|
* driver-specific name as appropriate. NULL requests the most |
|
* reasonable default device. |
|
* \param iscapture non-zero to specify a device should be opened for |
|
* recording, not playback |
|
* \param desired an SDL_AudioSpec structure representing the desired output |
|
* format; see SDL_OpenAudio() for more information |
|
* \param obtained an SDL_AudioSpec structure filled in with the actual output |
|
* format; see SDL_OpenAudio() for more information |
|
* \param allowed_changes 0, or one or more flags OR'd together |
|
* \returns a valid device ID that is > 0 on success or 0 on failure; call |
|
* SDL_GetError() for more information. |
|
* |
|
* For compatibility with SDL 1.2, this will never return 1, since |
|
* SDL reserves that ID for the legacy SDL_OpenAudio() function. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_CloseAudioDevice |
|
* \sa SDL_GetAudioDeviceName |
|
* \sa SDL_LockAudioDevice |
|
* \sa SDL_OpenAudio |
|
* \sa SDL_PauseAudioDevice |
|
* \sa SDL_UnlockAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC SDL_AudioDeviceID SDLCALL SDL_OpenAudioDevice( |
|
const char *device, |
|
int iscapture, |
|
const SDL_AudioSpec *desired, |
|
SDL_AudioSpec *obtained, |
|
int allowed_changes); |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/** |
|
* \name Audio state |
|
* |
|
* Get the current audio state. |
|
*/ |
|
/* @{ */ |
|
typedef enum |
|
{ |
|
SDL_AUDIO_STOPPED = 0, |
|
SDL_AUDIO_PLAYING, |
|
SDL_AUDIO_PAUSED |
|
} SDL_AudioStatus; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This function is a legacy means of querying the audio device. |
|
* |
|
* New programs might want to use SDL_GetAudioDeviceStatus() instead. This |
|
* function is equivalent to calling... |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
|
* SDL_GetAudioDeviceStatus(1); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* ...and is only useful if you used the legacy SDL_OpenAudio() function. |
|
* |
|
* \returns the SDL_AudioStatus of the audio device opened by SDL_OpenAudio(). |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_GetAudioDeviceStatus |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC SDL_AudioStatus SDLCALL SDL_GetAudioStatus(void); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Use this function to get the current audio state of an audio device. |
|
* |
|
* \param dev the ID of an audio device previously opened with |
|
* SDL_OpenAudioDevice() |
|
* \returns the SDL_AudioStatus of the specified audio device. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_PauseAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC SDL_AudioStatus SDLCALL SDL_GetAudioDeviceStatus(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev); |
|
/* @} *//* Audio State */ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* \name Pause audio functions |
|
* |
|
* These functions pause and unpause the audio callback processing. |
|
* They should be called with a parameter of 0 after opening the audio |
|
* device to start playing sound. This is so you can safely initialize |
|
* data for your callback function after opening the audio device. |
|
* Silence will be written to the audio device during the pause. |
|
*/ |
|
/* @{ */ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This function is a legacy means of pausing the audio device. |
|
* |
|
* New programs might want to use SDL_PauseAudioDevice() instead. This |
|
* function is equivalent to calling... |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
|
* SDL_PauseAudioDevice(1, pause_on); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* ...and is only useful if you used the legacy SDL_OpenAudio() function. |
|
* |
|
* \param pause_on non-zero to pause, 0 to unpause |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_GetAudioStatus |
|
* \sa SDL_PauseAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_PauseAudio(int pause_on); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Use this function to pause and unpause audio playback on a specified |
|
* device. |
|
* |
|
* This function pauses and unpauses the audio callback processing for a given |
|
* device. Newly-opened audio devices start in the paused state, so you must |
|
* call this function with **pause_on**=0 after opening the specified audio |
|
* device to start playing sound. This allows you to safely initialize data |
|
* for your callback function after opening the audio device. Silence will be |
|
* written to the audio device while paused, and the audio callback is |
|
* guaranteed to not be called. Pausing one device does not prevent other |
|
* unpaused devices from running their callbacks. |
|
* |
|
* Pausing state does not stack; even if you pause a device several times, a |
|
* single unpause will start the device playing again, and vice versa. This is |
|
* different from how SDL_LockAudioDevice() works. |
|
* |
|
* If you just need to protect a few variables from race conditions vs your |
|
* callback, you shouldn't pause the audio device, as it will lead to dropouts |
|
* in the audio playback. Instead, you should use SDL_LockAudioDevice(). |
|
* |
|
* \param dev a device opened by SDL_OpenAudioDevice() |
|
* \param pause_on non-zero to pause, 0 to unpause |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_LockAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_PauseAudioDevice(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev, |
|
int pause_on); |
|
/* @} *//* Pause audio functions */ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Load the audio data of a WAVE file into memory. |
|
* |
|
* Loading a WAVE file requires `src`, `spec`, `audio_buf` and `audio_len` to |
|
* be valid pointers. The entire data portion of the file is then loaded into |
|
* memory and decoded if necessary. |
|
* |
|
* If `freesrc` is non-zero, the data source gets automatically closed and |
|
* freed before the function returns. |
|
* |
|
* Supported formats are RIFF WAVE files with the formats PCM (8, 16, 24, and |
|
* 32 bits), IEEE Float (32 bits), Microsoft ADPCM and IMA ADPCM (4 bits), and |
|
* A-law and mu-law (8 bits). Other formats are currently unsupported and |
|
* cause an error. |
|
* |
|
* If this function succeeds, the pointer returned by it is equal to `spec` |
|
* and the pointer to the audio data allocated by the function is written to |
|
* `audio_buf` and its length in bytes to `audio_len`. The SDL_AudioSpec |
|
* members `freq`, `channels`, and `format` are set to the values of the audio |
|
* data in the buffer. The `samples` member is set to a sane default and all |
|
* others are set to zero. |
|
* |
|
* It's necessary to use SDL_FreeWAV() to free the audio data returned in |
|
* `audio_buf` when it is no longer used. |
|
* |
|
* Because of the underspecification of the .WAV format, there are many |
|
* problematic files in the wild that cause issues with strict decoders. To |
|
* provide compatibility with these files, this decoder is lenient in regards |
|
* to the truncation of the file, the fact chunk, and the size of the RIFF |
|
* chunk. The hints `SDL_HINT_WAVE_RIFF_CHUNK_SIZE`, |
|
* `SDL_HINT_WAVE_TRUNCATION`, and `SDL_HINT_WAVE_FACT_CHUNK` can be used to |
|
* tune the behavior of the loading process. |
|
* |
|
* Any file that is invalid (due to truncation, corruption, or wrong values in |
|
* the headers), too big, or unsupported causes an error. Additionally, any |
|
* critical I/O error from the data source will terminate the loading process |
|
* with an error. The function returns NULL on error and in all cases (with |
|
* the exception of `src` being NULL), an appropriate error message will be |
|
* set. |
|
* |
|
* It is required that the data source supports seeking. |
|
* |
|
* Example: |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
|
* SDL_LoadWAV_RW(SDL_RWFromFile("sample.wav", "rb"), 1, &spec, &buf, &len); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* Note that the SDL_LoadWAV macro does this same thing for you, but in a less |
|
* messy way: |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
|
* SDL_LoadWAV("sample.wav", &spec, &buf, &len); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* \param src The data source for the WAVE data |
|
* \param freesrc If non-zero, SDL will _always_ free the data source |
|
* \param spec An SDL_AudioSpec that will be filled in with the wave file's |
|
* format details |
|
* \param audio_buf A pointer filled with the audio data, allocated by the |
|
* function. |
|
* \param audio_len A pointer filled with the length of the audio data buffer |
|
* in bytes |
|
* \returns This function, if successfully called, returns `spec`, which will |
|
* be filled with the audio data format of the wave source data. |
|
* `audio_buf` will be filled with a pointer to an allocated buffer |
|
* containing the audio data, and `audio_len` is filled with the |
|
* length of that audio buffer in bytes. |
|
* |
|
* This function returns NULL if the .WAV file cannot be opened, uses |
|
* an unknown data format, or is corrupt; call SDL_GetError() for |
|
* more information. |
|
* |
|
* When the application is done with the data returned in |
|
* `audio_buf`, it should call SDL_FreeWAV() to dispose of it. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_FreeWAV |
|
* \sa SDL_LoadWAV |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC SDL_AudioSpec *SDLCALL SDL_LoadWAV_RW(SDL_RWops * src, |
|
int freesrc, |
|
SDL_AudioSpec * spec, |
|
Uint8 ** audio_buf, |
|
Uint32 * audio_len); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Loads a WAV from a file. |
|
* Compatibility convenience function. |
|
*/ |
|
#define SDL_LoadWAV(file, spec, audio_buf, audio_len) \ |
|
SDL_LoadWAV_RW(SDL_RWFromFile(file, "rb"),1, spec,audio_buf,audio_len) |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Free data previously allocated with SDL_LoadWAV() or SDL_LoadWAV_RW(). |
|
* |
|
* After a WAVE file has been opened with SDL_LoadWAV() or SDL_LoadWAV_RW() |
|
* its data can eventually be freed with SDL_FreeWAV(). It is safe to call |
|
* this function with a NULL pointer. |
|
* |
|
* \param audio_buf a pointer to the buffer created by SDL_LoadWAV() or |
|
* SDL_LoadWAV_RW() |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_LoadWAV |
|
* \sa SDL_LoadWAV_RW |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_FreeWAV(Uint8 * audio_buf); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Initialize an SDL_AudioCVT structure for conversion. |
|
* |
|
* Before an SDL_AudioCVT structure can be used to convert audio data it must |
|
* be initialized with source and destination information. |
|
* |
|
* This function will zero out every field of the SDL_AudioCVT, so it must be |
|
* called before the application fills in the final buffer information. |
|
* |
|
* Once this function has returned successfully, and reported that a |
|
* conversion is necessary, the application fills in the rest of the fields in |
|
* SDL_AudioCVT, now that it knows how large a buffer it needs to allocate, |
|
* and then can call SDL_ConvertAudio() to complete the conversion. |
|
* |
|
* \param cvt an SDL_AudioCVT structure filled in with audio conversion |
|
* information |
|
* \param src_format the source format of the audio data; for more info see |
|
* SDL_AudioFormat |
|
* \param src_channels the number of channels in the source |
|
* \param src_rate the frequency (sample-frames-per-second) of the source |
|
* \param dst_format the destination format of the audio data; for more info |
|
* see SDL_AudioFormat |
|
* \param dst_channels the number of channels in the destination |
|
* \param dst_rate the frequency (sample-frames-per-second) of the destination |
|
* \returns 1 if the audio filter is prepared, 0 if no conversion is needed, |
|
* or a negative error code on failure; call SDL_GetError() for more |
|
* information. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_ConvertAudio |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_BuildAudioCVT(SDL_AudioCVT * cvt, |
|
SDL_AudioFormat src_format, |
|
Uint8 src_channels, |
|
int src_rate, |
|
SDL_AudioFormat dst_format, |
|
Uint8 dst_channels, |
|
int dst_rate); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Convert audio data to a desired audio format. |
|
* |
|
* This function does the actual audio data conversion, after the application |
|
* has called SDL_BuildAudioCVT() to prepare the conversion information and |
|
* then filled in the buffer details. |
|
* |
|
* Once the application has initialized the `cvt` structure using |
|
* SDL_BuildAudioCVT(), allocated an audio buffer and filled it with audio |
|
* data in the source format, this function will convert the buffer, in-place, |
|
* to the desired format. |
|
* |
|
* The data conversion may go through several passes; any given pass may |
|
* possibly temporarily increase the size of the data. For example, SDL might |
|
* expand 16-bit data to 32 bits before resampling to a lower frequency, |
|
* shrinking the data size after having grown it briefly. Since the supplied |
|
* buffer will be both the source and destination, converting as necessary |
|
* in-place, the application must allocate a buffer that will fully contain |
|
* the data during its largest conversion pass. After SDL_BuildAudioCVT() |
|
* returns, the application should set the `cvt->len` field to the size, in |
|
* bytes, of the source data, and allocate a buffer that is `cvt->len * |
|
* cvt->len_mult` bytes long for the `buf` field. |
|
* |
|
* The source data should be copied into this buffer before the call to |
|
* SDL_ConvertAudio(). Upon successful return, this buffer will contain the |
|
* converted audio, and `cvt->len_cvt` will be the size of the converted data, |
|
* in bytes. Any bytes in the buffer past `cvt->len_cvt` are undefined once |
|
* this function returns. |
|
* |
|
* \param cvt an SDL_AudioCVT structure that was previously set up by |
|
* SDL_BuildAudioCVT(). |
|
* \returns 0 if the conversion was completed successfully or a negative error |
|
* code on failure; call SDL_GetError() for more information. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_BuildAudioCVT |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_ConvertAudio(SDL_AudioCVT * cvt); |
|
|
|
/* SDL_AudioStream is a new audio conversion interface. |
|
The benefits vs SDL_AudioCVT: |
|
- it can handle resampling data in chunks without generating |
|
artifacts, when it doesn't have the complete buffer available. |
|
- it can handle incoming data in any variable size. |
|
- You push data as you have it, and pull it when you need it |
|
*/ |
|
/* this is opaque to the outside world. */ |
|
struct _SDL_AudioStream; |
|
typedef struct _SDL_AudioStream SDL_AudioStream; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Create a new audio stream. |
|
* |
|
* \param src_format The format of the source audio |
|
* \param src_channels The number of channels of the source audio |
|
* \param src_rate The sampling rate of the source audio |
|
* \param dst_format The format of the desired audio output |
|
* \param dst_channels The number of channels of the desired audio output |
|
* \param dst_rate The sampling rate of the desired audio output |
|
* \returns 0 on success, or -1 on error. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.7. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamPut |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamGet |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamAvailable |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamFlush |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamClear |
|
* \sa SDL_FreeAudioStream |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC SDL_AudioStream * SDLCALL SDL_NewAudioStream(const SDL_AudioFormat src_format, |
|
const Uint8 src_channels, |
|
const int src_rate, |
|
const SDL_AudioFormat dst_format, |
|
const Uint8 dst_channels, |
|
const int dst_rate); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Add data to be converted/resampled to the stream. |
|
* |
|
* \param stream The stream the audio data is being added to |
|
* \param buf A pointer to the audio data to add |
|
* \param len The number of bytes to write to the stream |
|
* \returns 0 on success, or -1 on error. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.7. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_NewAudioStream |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamGet |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamAvailable |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamFlush |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamClear |
|
* \sa SDL_FreeAudioStream |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_AudioStreamPut(SDL_AudioStream *stream, const void *buf, int len); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get converted/resampled data from the stream |
|
* |
|
* \param stream The stream the audio is being requested from |
|
* \param buf A buffer to fill with audio data |
|
* \param len The maximum number of bytes to fill |
|
* \returns the number of bytes read from the stream, or -1 on error |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.7. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_NewAudioStream |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamPut |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamAvailable |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamFlush |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamClear |
|
* \sa SDL_FreeAudioStream |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_AudioStreamGet(SDL_AudioStream *stream, void *buf, int len); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get the number of converted/resampled bytes available. |
|
* |
|
* The stream may be buffering data behind the scenes until it has enough to |
|
* resample correctly, so this number might be lower than what you expect, or |
|
* even be zero. Add more data or flush the stream if you need the data now. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.7. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_NewAudioStream |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamPut |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamGet |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamFlush |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamClear |
|
* \sa SDL_FreeAudioStream |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_AudioStreamAvailable(SDL_AudioStream *stream); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Tell the stream that you're done sending data, and anything being buffered |
|
* should be converted/resampled and made available immediately. |
|
* |
|
* It is legal to add more data to a stream after flushing, but there will be |
|
* audio gaps in the output. Generally this is intended to signal the end of |
|
* input, so the complete output becomes available. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.7. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_NewAudioStream |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamPut |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamGet |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamAvailable |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamClear |
|
* \sa SDL_FreeAudioStream |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_AudioStreamFlush(SDL_AudioStream *stream); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Clear any pending data in the stream without converting it |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.7. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_NewAudioStream |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamPut |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamGet |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamAvailable |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamFlush |
|
* \sa SDL_FreeAudioStream |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_AudioStreamClear(SDL_AudioStream *stream); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Free an audio stream |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.7. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_NewAudioStream |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamPut |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamGet |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamAvailable |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamFlush |
|
* \sa SDL_AudioStreamClear |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_FreeAudioStream(SDL_AudioStream *stream); |
|
|
|
#define SDL_MIX_MAXVOLUME 128 |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This function is a legacy means of mixing audio. |
|
* |
|
* This function is equivalent to calling... |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
|
* SDL_MixAudioFormat(dst, src, format, len, volume); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* ...where `format` is the obtained format of the audio device from the |
|
* legacy SDL_OpenAudio() function. |
|
* |
|
* \param dst the destination for the mixed audio |
|
* \param src the source audio buffer to be mixed |
|
* \param len the length of the audio buffer in bytes |
|
* \param volume ranges from 0 - 128, and should be set to SDL_MIX_MAXVOLUME |
|
* for full audio volume |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_MixAudioFormat |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_MixAudio(Uint8 * dst, const Uint8 * src, |
|
Uint32 len, int volume); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Mix audio data in a specified format. |
|
* |
|
* This takes an audio buffer `src` of `len` bytes of `format` data and mixes |
|
* it into `dst`, performing addition, volume adjustment, and overflow |
|
* clipping. The buffer pointed to by `dst` must also be `len` bytes of |
|
* `format` data. |
|
* |
|
* This is provided for convenience -- you can mix your own audio data. |
|
* |
|
* Do not use this function for mixing together more than two streams of |
|
* sample data. The output from repeated application of this function may be |
|
* distorted by clipping, because there is no accumulator with greater range |
|
* than the input (not to mention this being an inefficient way of doing it). |
|
* |
|
* It is a common misconception that this function is required to write audio |
|
* data to an output stream in an audio callback. While you can do that, |
|
* SDL_MixAudioFormat() is really only needed when you're mixing a single |
|
* audio stream with a volume adjustment. |
|
* |
|
* \param dst the destination for the mixed audio |
|
* \param src the source audio buffer to be mixed |
|
* \param format the SDL_AudioFormat structure representing the desired audio |
|
* format |
|
* \param len the length of the audio buffer in bytes |
|
* \param volume ranges from 0 - 128, and should be set to SDL_MIX_MAXVOLUME |
|
* for full audio volume |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_MixAudioFormat(Uint8 * dst, |
|
const Uint8 * src, |
|
SDL_AudioFormat format, |
|
Uint32 len, int volume); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Queue more audio on non-callback devices. |
|
* |
|
* If you are looking to retrieve queued audio from a non-callback capture |
|
* device, you want SDL_DequeueAudio() instead. SDL_QueueAudio() will return |
|
* -1 to signify an error if you use it with capture devices. |
|
* |
|
* SDL offers two ways to feed audio to the device: you can either supply a |
|
* callback that SDL triggers with some frequency to obtain more audio (pull |
|
* method), or you can supply no callback, and then SDL will expect you to |
|
* supply data at regular intervals (push method) with this function. |
|
* |
|
* There are no limits on the amount of data you can queue, short of |
|
* exhaustion of address space. Queued data will drain to the device as |
|
* necessary without further intervention from you. If the device needs audio |
|
* but there is not enough queued, it will play silence to make up the |
|
* difference. This means you will have skips in your audio playback if you |
|
* aren't routinely queueing sufficient data. |
|
* |
|
* This function copies the supplied data, so you are safe to free it when the |
|
* function returns. This function is thread-safe, but queueing to the same |
|
* device from two threads at once does not promise which buffer will be |
|
* queued first. |
|
* |
|
* You may not queue audio on a device that is using an application-supplied |
|
* callback; doing so returns an error. You have to use the audio callback or |
|
* queue audio with this function, but not both. |
|
* |
|
* You should not call SDL_LockAudio() on the device before queueing; SDL |
|
* handles locking internally for this function. |
|
* |
|
* Note that SDL2 does not support planar audio. You will need to resample |
|
* from planar audio formats into a non-planar one (see SDL_AudioFormat) |
|
* before queuing audio. |
|
* |
|
* \param dev the device ID to which we will queue audio |
|
* \param data the data to queue to the device for later playback |
|
* \param len the number of bytes (not samples!) to which `data` points |
|
* \returns 0 on success or a negative error code on failure; call |
|
* SDL_GetError() for more information. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.4. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_ClearQueuedAudio |
|
* \sa SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_QueueAudio(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev, const void *data, Uint32 len); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Dequeue more audio on non-callback devices. |
|
* |
|
* If you are looking to queue audio for output on a non-callback playback |
|
* device, you want SDL_QueueAudio() instead. SDL_DequeueAudio() will always |
|
* return 0 if you use it with playback devices. |
|
* |
|
* SDL offers two ways to retrieve audio from a capture device: you can either |
|
* supply a callback that SDL triggers with some frequency as the device |
|
* records more audio data, (push method), or you can supply no callback, and |
|
* then SDL will expect you to retrieve data at regular intervals (pull |
|
* method) with this function. |
|
* |
|
* There are no limits on the amount of data you can queue, short of |
|
* exhaustion of address space. Data from the device will keep queuing as |
|
* necessary without further intervention from you. This means you will |
|
* eventually run out of memory if you aren't routinely dequeueing data. |
|
* |
|
* Capture devices will not queue data when paused; if you are expecting to |
|
* not need captured audio for some length of time, use SDL_PauseAudioDevice() |
|
* to stop the capture device from queueing more data. This can be useful |
|
* during, say, level loading times. When unpaused, capture devices will start |
|
* queueing data from that point, having flushed any capturable data available |
|
* while paused. |
|
* |
|
* This function is thread-safe, but dequeueing from the same device from two |
|
* threads at once does not promise which thread will dequeue data first. |
|
* |
|
* You may not dequeue audio from a device that is using an |
|
* application-supplied callback; doing so returns an error. You have to use |
|
* the audio callback, or dequeue audio with this function, but not both. |
|
* |
|
* You should not call SDL_LockAudio() on the device before dequeueing; SDL |
|
* handles locking internally for this function. |
|
* |
|
* \param dev the device ID from which we will dequeue audio |
|
* \param data a pointer into where audio data should be copied |
|
* \param len the number of bytes (not samples!) to which (data) points |
|
* \returns the number of bytes dequeued, which could be less than requested; |
|
* call SDL_GetError() for more information. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.5. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_ClearQueuedAudio |
|
* \sa SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC Uint32 SDLCALL SDL_DequeueAudio(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev, void *data, Uint32 len); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get the number of bytes of still-queued audio. |
|
* |
|
* For playback devices: this is the number of bytes that have been queued for |
|
* playback with SDL_QueueAudio(), but have not yet been sent to the hardware. |
|
* |
|
* Once we've sent it to the hardware, this function can not decide the exact |
|
* byte boundary of what has been played. It's possible that we just gave the |
|
* hardware several kilobytes right before you called this function, but it |
|
* hasn't played any of it yet, or maybe half of it, etc. |
|
* |
|
* For capture devices, this is the number of bytes that have been captured by |
|
* the device and are waiting for you to dequeue. This number may grow at any |
|
* time, so this only informs of the lower-bound of available data. |
|
* |
|
* You may not queue or dequeue audio on a device that is using an |
|
* application-supplied callback; calling this function on such a device |
|
* always returns 0. You have to use the audio callback or queue audio, but |
|
* not both. |
|
* |
|
* You should not call SDL_LockAudio() on the device before querying; SDL |
|
* handles locking internally for this function. |
|
* |
|
* \param dev the device ID of which we will query queued audio size |
|
* \returns the number of bytes (not samples!) of queued audio. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.4. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_ClearQueuedAudio |
|
* \sa SDL_QueueAudio |
|
* \sa SDL_DequeueAudio |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC Uint32 SDLCALL SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Drop any queued audio data waiting to be sent to the hardware. |
|
* |
|
* Immediately after this call, SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() will return 0. For |
|
* output devices, the hardware will start playing silence if more audio isn't |
|
* queued. For capture devices, the hardware will start filling the empty |
|
* queue with new data if the capture device isn't paused. |
|
* |
|
* This will not prevent playback of queued audio that's already been sent to |
|
* the hardware, as we can not undo that, so expect there to be some fraction |
|
* of a second of audio that might still be heard. This can be useful if you |
|
* want to, say, drop any pending music or any unprocessed microphone input |
|
* during a level change in your game. |
|
* |
|
* You may not queue or dequeue audio on a device that is using an |
|
* application-supplied callback; calling this function on such a device |
|
* always returns 0. You have to use the audio callback or queue audio, but |
|
* not both. |
|
* |
|
* You should not call SDL_LockAudio() on the device before clearing the |
|
* queue; SDL handles locking internally for this function. |
|
* |
|
* This function always succeeds and thus returns void. |
|
* |
|
* \param dev the device ID of which to clear the audio queue |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.4. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize |
|
* \sa SDL_QueueAudio |
|
* \sa SDL_DequeueAudio |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_ClearQueuedAudio(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev); |
|
|
|
|
|
/** |
|
* \name Audio lock functions |
|
* |
|
* The lock manipulated by these functions protects the callback function. |
|
* During a SDL_LockAudio()/SDL_UnlockAudio() pair, you can be guaranteed that |
|
* the callback function is not running. Do not call these from the callback |
|
* function or you will cause deadlock. |
|
*/ |
|
/* @{ */ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This function is a legacy means of locking the audio device. |
|
* |
|
* New programs might want to use SDL_LockAudioDevice() instead. This function |
|
* is equivalent to calling... |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
|
* SDL_LockAudioDevice(1); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* ...and is only useful if you used the legacy SDL_OpenAudio() function. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_LockAudioDevice |
|
* \sa SDL_UnlockAudio |
|
* \sa SDL_UnlockAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_LockAudio(void); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Use this function to lock out the audio callback function for a specified |
|
* device. |
|
* |
|
* The lock manipulated by these functions protects the audio callback |
|
* function specified in SDL_OpenAudioDevice(). During a |
|
* SDL_LockAudioDevice()/SDL_UnlockAudioDevice() pair, you can be guaranteed |
|
* that the callback function for that device is not running, even if the |
|
* device is not paused. While a device is locked, any other unpaused, |
|
* unlocked devices may still run their callbacks. |
|
* |
|
* Calling this function from inside your audio callback is unnecessary. SDL |
|
* obtains this lock before calling your function, and releases it when the |
|
* function returns. |
|
* |
|
* You should not hold the lock longer than absolutely necessary. If you hold |
|
* it too long, you'll experience dropouts in your audio playback. Ideally, |
|
* your application locks the device, sets a few variables and unlocks again. |
|
* Do not do heavy work while holding the lock for a device. |
|
* |
|
* It is safe to lock the audio device multiple times, as long as you unlock |
|
* it an equivalent number of times. The callback will not run until the |
|
* device has been unlocked completely in this way. If your application fails |
|
* to unlock the device appropriately, your callback will never run, you might |
|
* hear repeating bursts of audio, and SDL_CloseAudioDevice() will probably |
|
* deadlock. |
|
* |
|
* Internally, the audio device lock is a mutex; if you lock from two threads |
|
* at once, not only will you block the audio callback, you'll block the other |
|
* thread. |
|
* |
|
* \param dev the ID of the device to be locked |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_UnlockAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_LockAudioDevice(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This function is a legacy means of unlocking the audio device. |
|
* |
|
* New programs might want to use SDL_UnlockAudioDevice() instead. This |
|
* function is equivalent to calling... |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
|
* SDL_UnlockAudioDevice(1); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* ...and is only useful if you used the legacy SDL_OpenAudio() function. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_LockAudio |
|
* \sa SDL_UnlockAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_UnlockAudio(void); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Use this function to unlock the audio callback function for a specified |
|
* device. |
|
* |
|
* This function should be paired with a previous SDL_LockAudioDevice() call. |
|
* |
|
* \param dev the ID of the device to be unlocked |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_LockAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_UnlockAudioDevice(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev); |
|
/* @} *//* Audio lock functions */ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* This function is a legacy means of closing the audio device. |
|
* |
|
* This function is equivalent to calling... |
|
* |
|
* ```c |
|
* SDL_CloseAudioDevice(1); |
|
* ``` |
|
* |
|
* ...and is only useful if you used the legacy SDL_OpenAudio() function. |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_OpenAudio |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_CloseAudio(void); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Use this function to shut down audio processing and close the audio device. |
|
* |
|
* The application should close open audio devices once they are no longer |
|
* needed. Calling this function will wait until the device's audio callback |
|
* is not running, release the audio hardware and then clean up internal |
|
* state. No further audio will play from this device once this function |
|
* returns. |
|
* |
|
* This function may block briefly while pending audio data is played by the |
|
* hardware, so that applications don't drop the last buffer of data they |
|
* supplied. |
|
* |
|
* The device ID is invalid as soon as the device is closed, and is eligible |
|
* for reuse in a new SDL_OpenAudioDevice() call immediately. |
|
* |
|
* \param dev an audio device previously opened with SDL_OpenAudioDevice() |
|
* |
|
* \since This function is available since SDL 2.0.0. |
|
* |
|
* \sa SDL_OpenAudioDevice |
|
*/ |
|
extern DECLSPEC void SDLCALL SDL_CloseAudioDevice(SDL_AudioDeviceID dev); |
|
|
|
/* Ends C function definitions when using C++ */ |
|
#ifdef __cplusplus |
|
} |
|
#endif |
|
#include "close_code.h" |
|
|
|
#endif /* SDL_audio_h_ */ |
|
|
|
/* vi: set ts=4 sw=4 expandtab: */
|
|
|