| :mod:`ossaudiodev` --- Access to OSS-compatible audio devices |
| ============================================================= |
| |
| .. module:: ossaudiodev |
| :platform: Linux, FreeBSD |
| :synopsis: Access to OSS-compatible audio devices. |
| |
| |
| This module allows you to access the OSS (Open Sound System) audio interface. |
| OSS is available for a wide range of open-source and commercial Unices, and is |
| the standard audio interface for Linux and recent versions of FreeBSD. |
| |
| .. Things will get more complicated for future Linux versions, since |
| ALSA is in the standard kernel as of 2.5.x. Presumably if you |
| use ALSA, you'll have to make sure its OSS compatibility layer |
| is active to use ossaudiodev, but you're gonna need it for the vast |
| majority of Linux audio apps anyway. |
| |
| Sounds like things are also complicated for other BSDs. In response |
| to my python-dev query, Thomas Wouters said: |
| |
| > Likewise, googling shows OpenBSD also uses OSS/Free -- the commercial |
| > OSS installation manual tells you to remove references to OSS/Free from the |
| > kernel :) |
| |
| but Aleksander Piotrowsk actually has an OpenBSD box, and he quotes |
| from its <soundcard.h>: |
| > * WARNING! WARNING! |
| > * This is an OSS (Linux) audio emulator. |
| > * Use the Native NetBSD API for developing new code, and this |
| > * only for compiling Linux programs. |
| |
| There's also an ossaudio manpage on OpenBSD that explains things |
| further. Presumably NetBSD and OpenBSD have a different standard |
| audio interface. That's the great thing about standards, there are so |
| many to choose from ... ;-) |
| |
| This probably all warrants a footnote or two, but I don't understand |
| things well enough right now to write it! --GPW |
| |
| |
| .. seealso:: |
| |
| `Open Sound System Programmer's Guide <http://www.opensound.com/pguide/oss.pdf>`_ |
| the official documentation for the OSS C API |
| |
| The module defines a large number of constants supplied by the OSS device |
| driver; see ``<sys/soundcard.h>`` on either Linux or FreeBSD for a listing . |
| |
| :mod:`ossaudiodev` defines the following variables and functions: |
| |
| |
| .. exception:: OSSAudioError |
| |
| This exception is raised on certain errors. The argument is a string describing |
| what went wrong. |
| |
| (If :mod:`ossaudiodev` receives an error from a system call such as |
| :c:func:`open`, :c:func:`write`, or :c:func:`ioctl`, it raises :exc:`IOError`. |
| Errors detected directly by :mod:`ossaudiodev` result in :exc:`OSSAudioError`.) |
| |
| (For backwards compatibility, the exception class is also available as |
| ``ossaudiodev.error``.) |
| |
| |
| .. function:: open([device, ]mode) |
| |
| Open an audio device and return an OSS audio device object. This object |
| supports many file-like methods, such as :meth:`read`, :meth:`write`, and |
| :meth:`fileno` (although there are subtle differences between conventional Unix |
| read/write semantics and those of OSS audio devices). It also supports a number |
| of audio-specific methods; see below for the complete list of methods. |
| |
| *device* is the audio device filename to use. If it is not specified, this |
| module first looks in the environment variable :envvar:`AUDIODEV` for a device |
| to use. If not found, it falls back to :file:`/dev/dsp`. |
| |
| *mode* is one of ``'r'`` for read-only (record) access, ``'w'`` for |
| write-only (playback) access and ``'rw'`` for both. Since many sound cards |
| only allow one process to have the recorder or player open at a time, it is a |
| good idea to open the device only for the activity needed. Further, some |
| sound cards are half-duplex: they can be opened for reading or writing, but |
| not both at once. |
| |
| Note the unusual calling syntax: the *first* argument is optional, and the |
| second is required. This is a historical artifact for compatibility with the |
| older :mod:`linuxaudiodev` module which :mod:`ossaudiodev` supersedes. |
| |
| .. XXX it might also be motivated |
| by my unfounded-but-still-possibly-true belief that the default |
| audio device varies unpredictably across operating systems. -GW |
| |
| |
| .. function:: openmixer([device]) |
| |
| Open a mixer device and return an OSS mixer device object. *device* is the |
| mixer device filename to use. If it is not specified, this module first looks |
| in the environment variable :envvar:`MIXERDEV` for a device to use. If not |
| found, it falls back to :file:`/dev/mixer`. |
| |
| |
| .. _ossaudio-device-objects: |
| |
| Audio Device Objects |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Before you can write to or read from an audio device, you must call three |
| methods in the correct order: |
| |
| #. :meth:`setfmt` to set the output format |
| |
| #. :meth:`channels` to set the number of channels |
| |
| #. :meth:`speed` to set the sample rate |
| |
| Alternately, you can use the :meth:`setparameters` method to set all three audio |
| parameters at once. This is more convenient, but may not be as flexible in all |
| cases. |
| |
| The audio device objects returned by :func:`.open` define the following methods |
| and (read-only) attributes: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.close() |
| |
| Explicitly close the audio device. When you are done writing to or reading from |
| an audio device, you should explicitly close it. A closed device cannot be used |
| again. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.fileno() |
| |
| Return the file descriptor associated with the device. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.read(size) |
| |
| Read *size* bytes from the audio input and return them as a Python string. |
| Unlike most Unix device drivers, OSS audio devices in blocking mode (the |
| default) will block :func:`read` until the entire requested amount of data is |
| available. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.write(data) |
| |
| Write the Python string *data* to the audio device and return the number of |
| bytes written. If the audio device is in blocking mode (the default), the |
| entire string is always written (again, this is different from usual Unix device |
| semantics). If the device is in non-blocking mode, some data may not be written |
| ---see :meth:`writeall`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.writeall(data) |
| |
| Write the entire Python string *data* to the audio device: waits until the audio |
| device is able to accept data, writes as much data as it will accept, and |
| repeats until *data* has been completely written. If the device is in blocking |
| mode (the default), this has the same effect as :meth:`write`; :meth:`writeall` |
| is only useful in non-blocking mode. Has no return value, since the amount of |
| data written is always equal to the amount of data supplied. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.2 |
| Audio device objects also support the context manager protocol, i.e. they can |
| be used in a :keyword:`with` statement. |
| |
| |
| The following methods each map to exactly one :func:`ioctl` system call. The |
| correspondence is obvious: for example, :meth:`setfmt` corresponds to the |
| ``SNDCTL_DSP_SETFMT`` ioctl, and :meth:`sync` to ``SNDCTL_DSP_SYNC`` (this can |
| be useful when consulting the OSS documentation). If the underlying |
| :func:`ioctl` fails, they all raise :exc:`IOError`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.nonblock() |
| |
| Put the device into non-blocking mode. Once in non-blocking mode, there is no |
| way to return it to blocking mode. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.getfmts() |
| |
| Return a bitmask of the audio output formats supported by the soundcard. Some |
| of the formats supported by OSS are: |
| |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | Format | Description | |
| +=========================+=============================================+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_MU_LAW` | a logarithmic encoding (used by Sun ``.au`` | |
| | | files and :file:`/dev/audio`) | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_A_LAW` | a logarithmic encoding | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_IMA_ADPCM` | a 4:1 compressed format defined by the | |
| | | Interactive Multimedia Association | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_U8` | Unsigned, 8-bit audio | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_S16_LE` | Signed, 16-bit audio, little-endian byte | |
| | | order (as used by Intel processors) | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_S16_BE` | Signed, 16-bit audio, big-endian byte order | |
| | | (as used by 68k, PowerPC, Sparc) | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_S8` | Signed, 8 bit audio | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_U16_LE` | Unsigned, 16-bit little-endian audio | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| | :const:`AFMT_U16_BE` | Unsigned, 16-bit big-endian audio | |
| +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| Consult the OSS documentation for a full list of audio formats, and note that |
| most devices support only a subset of these formats. Some older devices only |
| support :const:`AFMT_U8`; the most common format used today is |
| :const:`AFMT_S16_LE`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.setfmt(format) |
| |
| Try to set the current audio format to *format*---see :meth:`getfmts` for a |
| list. Returns the audio format that the device was set to, which may not be the |
| requested format. May also be used to return the current audio format---do this |
| by passing an "audio format" of :const:`AFMT_QUERY`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.channels(nchannels) |
| |
| Set the number of output channels to *nchannels*. A value of 1 indicates |
| monophonic sound, 2 stereophonic. Some devices may have more than 2 channels, |
| and some high-end devices may not support mono. Returns the number of channels |
| the device was set to. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.speed(samplerate) |
| |
| Try to set the audio sampling rate to *samplerate* samples per second. Returns |
| the rate actually set. Most sound devices don't support arbitrary sampling |
| rates. Common rates are: |
| |
| +-------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | Rate | Description | |
| +=======+===========================================+ |
| | 8000 | default rate for :file:`/dev/audio` | |
| +-------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | 11025 | speech recording | |
| +-------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | 22050 | | |
| +-------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | 44100 | CD quality audio (at 16 bits/sample and 2 | |
| | | channels) | |
| +-------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| | 96000 | DVD quality audio (at 24 bits/sample) | |
| +-------+-------------------------------------------+ |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.sync() |
| |
| Wait until the sound device has played every byte in its buffer. (This happens |
| implicitly when the device is closed.) The OSS documentation recommends closing |
| and re-opening the device rather than using :meth:`sync`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.reset() |
| |
| Immediately stop playing or recording and return the device to a state where it |
| can accept commands. The OSS documentation recommends closing and re-opening |
| the device after calling :meth:`reset`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.post() |
| |
| Tell the driver that there is likely to be a pause in the output, making it |
| possible for the device to handle the pause more intelligently. You might use |
| this after playing a spot sound effect, before waiting for user input, or before |
| doing disk I/O. |
| |
| The following convenience methods combine several ioctls, or one ioctl and some |
| simple calculations. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.setparameters(format, nchannels, samplerate [, strict=False]) |
| |
| Set the key audio sampling parameters---sample format, number of channels, and |
| sampling rate---in one method call. *format*, *nchannels*, and *samplerate* |
| should be as specified in the :meth:`setfmt`, :meth:`channels`, and |
| :meth:`speed` methods. If *strict* is true, :meth:`setparameters` checks to |
| see if each parameter was actually set to the requested value, and raises |
| :exc:`OSSAudioError` if not. Returns a tuple (*format*, *nchannels*, |
| *samplerate*) indicating the parameter values that were actually set by the |
| device driver (i.e., the same as the return values of :meth:`setfmt`, |
| :meth:`channels`, and :meth:`speed`). |
| |
| For example, :: |
| |
| (fmt, channels, rate) = dsp.setparameters(fmt, channels, rate) |
| |
| is equivalent to :: |
| |
| fmt = dsp.setfmt(fmt) |
| channels = dsp.channels(channels) |
| rate = dsp.rate(channels) |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.bufsize() |
| |
| Returns the size of the hardware buffer, in samples. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.obufcount() |
| |
| Returns the number of samples that are in the hardware buffer yet to be played. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_audio_device.obuffree() |
| |
| Returns the number of samples that could be queued into the hardware buffer to |
| be played without blocking. |
| |
| Audio device objects also support several read-only attributes: |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: oss_audio_device.closed |
| |
| Boolean indicating whether the device has been closed. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: oss_audio_device.name |
| |
| String containing the name of the device file. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: oss_audio_device.mode |
| |
| The I/O mode for the file, either ``"r"``, ``"rw"``, or ``"w"``. |
| |
| |
| .. _mixer-device-objects: |
| |
| Mixer Device Objects |
| -------------------- |
| |
| The mixer object provides two file-like methods: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.close() |
| |
| This method closes the open mixer device file. Any further attempts to use the |
| mixer after this file is closed will raise an :exc:`IOError`. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.fileno() |
| |
| Returns the file handle number of the open mixer device file. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.2 |
| Mixer objects also support the context manager protocol. |
| |
| |
| The remaining methods are specific to audio mixing: |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.controls() |
| |
| This method returns a bitmask specifying the available mixer controls ("Control" |
| being a specific mixable "channel", such as :const:`SOUND_MIXER_PCM` or |
| :const:`SOUND_MIXER_SYNTH`). This bitmask indicates a subset of all available |
| mixer controls---the :const:`SOUND_MIXER_\*` constants defined at module level. |
| To determine if, for example, the current mixer object supports a PCM mixer, use |
| the following Python code:: |
| |
| mixer=ossaudiodev.openmixer() |
| if mixer.controls() & (1 << ossaudiodev.SOUND_MIXER_PCM): |
| # PCM is supported |
| ... code ... |
| |
| For most purposes, the :const:`SOUND_MIXER_VOLUME` (master volume) and |
| :const:`SOUND_MIXER_PCM` controls should suffice---but code that uses the mixer |
| should be flexible when it comes to choosing mixer controls. On the Gravis |
| Ultrasound, for example, :const:`SOUND_MIXER_VOLUME` does not exist. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.stereocontrols() |
| |
| Returns a bitmask indicating stereo mixer controls. If a bit is set, the |
| corresponding control is stereo; if it is unset, the control is either |
| monophonic or not supported by the mixer (use in combination with |
| :meth:`controls` to determine which). |
| |
| See the code example for the :meth:`controls` function for an example of getting |
| data from a bitmask. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.reccontrols() |
| |
| Returns a bitmask specifying the mixer controls that may be used to record. See |
| the code example for :meth:`controls` for an example of reading from a bitmask. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.get(control) |
| |
| Returns the volume of a given mixer control. The returned volume is a 2-tuple |
| ``(left_volume,right_volume)``. Volumes are specified as numbers from 0 |
| (silent) to 100 (full volume). If the control is monophonic, a 2-tuple is still |
| returned, but both volumes are the same. |
| |
| Raises :exc:`OSSAudioError` if an invalid control was is specified, or |
| :exc:`IOError` if an unsupported control is specified. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.set(control, (left, right)) |
| |
| Sets the volume for a given mixer control to ``(left,right)``. ``left`` and |
| ``right`` must be ints and between 0 (silent) and 100 (full volume). On |
| success, the new volume is returned as a 2-tuple. Note that this may not be |
| exactly the same as the volume specified, because of the limited resolution of |
| some soundcard's mixers. |
| |
| Raises :exc:`OSSAudioError` if an invalid mixer control was specified, or if the |
| specified volumes were out-of-range. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.get_recsrc() |
| |
| This method returns a bitmask indicating which control(s) are currently being |
| used as a recording source. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: oss_mixer_device.set_recsrc(bitmask) |
| |
| Call this function to specify a recording source. Returns a bitmask indicating |
| the new recording source (or sources) if successful; raises :exc:`IOError` if an |
| invalid source was specified. To set the current recording source to the |
| microphone input:: |
| |
| mixer.setrecsrc (1 << ossaudiodev.SOUND_MIXER_MIC) |
| |