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Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001:mod:`ossaudiodev` --- Access to OSS-compatible audio devices
2=============================================================
3
4.. module:: ossaudiodev
5 :platform: Linux, FreeBSD
6 :synopsis: Access to OSS-compatible audio devices.
7
8
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00009This module allows you to access the OSS (Open Sound System) audio interface.
10OSS is available for a wide range of open-source and commercial Unices, and is
11the standard audio interface for Linux and recent versions of FreeBSD.
12
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000013.. Things will get more complicated for future Linux versions, since
14 ALSA is in the standard kernel as of 2.5.x. Presumably if you
15 use ALSA, you'll have to make sure its OSS compatibility layer
16 is active to use ossaudiodev, but you're gonna need it for the vast
Éric Araujo59e387e2011-07-26 16:53:17 +020017 majority of Linux audio apps anyway.
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000018
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000019 Sounds like things are also complicated for other BSDs. In response
20 to my python-dev query, Thomas Wouters said:
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000021
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000022 > Likewise, googling shows OpenBSD also uses OSS/Free -- the commercial
23 > OSS installation manual tells you to remove references to OSS/Free from the
24 > kernel :)
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000025
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000026 but Aleksander Piotrowsk actually has an OpenBSD box, and he quotes
27 from its <soundcard.h>:
28 > * WARNING! WARNING!
29 > * This is an OSS (Linux) audio emulator.
30 > * Use the Native NetBSD API for developing new code, and this
31 > * only for compiling Linux programs.
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000032
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000033 There's also an ossaudio manpage on OpenBSD that explains things
34 further. Presumably NetBSD and OpenBSD have a different standard
35 audio interface. That's the great thing about standards, there are so
36 many to choose from ... ;-)
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +000037
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000038 This probably all warrants a footnote or two, but I don't understand
39 things well enough right now to write it! --GPW
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000040
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +020041.. versionchanged:: 3.3
42 Operations in this module now raise :exc:`OSError` where :exc:`IOError`
43 was raised.
44
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000045
46.. seealso::
47
48 `Open Sound System Programmer's Guide <http://www.opensound.com/pguide/oss.pdf>`_
49 the official documentation for the OSS C API
50
51 The module defines a large number of constants supplied by the OSS device
52 driver; see ``<sys/soundcard.h>`` on either Linux or FreeBSD for a listing .
53
54:mod:`ossaudiodev` defines the following variables and functions:
55
56
57.. exception:: OSSAudioError
58
59 This exception is raised on certain errors. The argument is a string describing
60 what went wrong.
61
62 (If :mod:`ossaudiodev` receives an error from a system call such as
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +020063 :c:func:`open`, :c:func:`write`, or :c:func:`ioctl`, it raises :exc:`OSError`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000064 Errors detected directly by :mod:`ossaudiodev` result in :exc:`OSSAudioError`.)
65
66 (For backwards compatibility, the exception class is also available as
67 ``ossaudiodev.error``.)
68
69
70.. function:: open([device, ]mode)
71
72 Open an audio device and return an OSS audio device object. This object
73 supports many file-like methods, such as :meth:`read`, :meth:`write`, and
74 :meth:`fileno` (although there are subtle differences between conventional Unix
75 read/write semantics and those of OSS audio devices). It also supports a number
76 of audio-specific methods; see below for the complete list of methods.
77
78 *device* is the audio device filename to use. If it is not specified, this
79 module first looks in the environment variable :envvar:`AUDIODEV` for a device
80 to use. If not found, it falls back to :file:`/dev/dsp`.
81
82 *mode* is one of ``'r'`` for read-only (record) access, ``'w'`` for
83 write-only (playback) access and ``'rw'`` for both. Since many sound cards
84 only allow one process to have the recorder or player open at a time, it is a
85 good idea to open the device only for the activity needed. Further, some
86 sound cards are half-duplex: they can be opened for reading or writing, but
87 not both at once.
88
89 Note the unusual calling syntax: the *first* argument is optional, and the
90 second is required. This is a historical artifact for compatibility with the
91 older :mod:`linuxaudiodev` module which :mod:`ossaudiodev` supersedes.
92
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +000093 .. XXX it might also be motivated
94 by my unfounded-but-still-possibly-true belief that the default
95 audio device varies unpredictably across operating systems. -GW
96
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000097
98.. function:: openmixer([device])
99
100 Open a mixer device and return an OSS mixer device object. *device* is the
101 mixer device filename to use. If it is not specified, this module first looks
102 in the environment variable :envvar:`MIXERDEV` for a device to use. If not
103 found, it falls back to :file:`/dev/mixer`.
104
105
106.. _ossaudio-device-objects:
107
108Audio Device Objects
109--------------------
110
111Before you can write to or read from an audio device, you must call three
112methods in the correct order:
113
114#. :meth:`setfmt` to set the output format
115
116#. :meth:`channels` to set the number of channels
117
118#. :meth:`speed` to set the sample rate
119
120Alternately, you can use the :meth:`setparameters` method to set all three audio
121parameters at once. This is more convenient, but may not be as flexible in all
122cases.
123
Georg Brandl502d9a52009-07-26 15:02:41 +0000124The audio device objects returned by :func:`.open` define the following methods
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000125and (read-only) attributes:
126
127
128.. method:: oss_audio_device.close()
129
130 Explicitly close the audio device. When you are done writing to or reading from
131 an audio device, you should explicitly close it. A closed device cannot be used
132 again.
133
134
135.. method:: oss_audio_device.fileno()
136
137 Return the file descriptor associated with the device.
138
139
140.. method:: oss_audio_device.read(size)
141
142 Read *size* bytes from the audio input and return them as a Python string.
143 Unlike most Unix device drivers, OSS audio devices in blocking mode (the
144 default) will block :func:`read` until the entire requested amount of data is
145 available.
146
147
148.. method:: oss_audio_device.write(data)
149
150 Write the Python string *data* to the audio device and return the number of
151 bytes written. If the audio device is in blocking mode (the default), the
152 entire string is always written (again, this is different from usual Unix device
153 semantics). If the device is in non-blocking mode, some data may not be written
154 ---see :meth:`writeall`.
155
156
157.. method:: oss_audio_device.writeall(data)
158
159 Write the entire Python string *data* to the audio device: waits until the audio
160 device is able to accept data, writes as much data as it will accept, and
161 repeats until *data* has been completely written. If the device is in blocking
162 mode (the default), this has the same effect as :meth:`write`; :meth:`writeall`
163 is only useful in non-blocking mode. Has no return value, since the amount of
164 data written is always equal to the amount of data supplied.
165
Georg Brandl1e908af2010-10-23 17:31:52 +0000166.. versionchanged:: 3.2
167 Audio device objects also support the context manager protocol, i.e. they can
168 be used in a :keyword:`with` statement.
169
170
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000171The following methods each map to exactly one :func:`ioctl` system call. The
172correspondence is obvious: for example, :meth:`setfmt` corresponds to the
173``SNDCTL_DSP_SETFMT`` ioctl, and :meth:`sync` to ``SNDCTL_DSP_SYNC`` (this can
174be useful when consulting the OSS documentation). If the underlying
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +0200175:func:`ioctl` fails, they all raise :exc:`OSError`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000176
177
178.. method:: oss_audio_device.nonblock()
179
180 Put the device into non-blocking mode. Once in non-blocking mode, there is no
181 way to return it to blocking mode.
182
183
184.. method:: oss_audio_device.getfmts()
185
186 Return a bitmask of the audio output formats supported by the soundcard. Some
187 of the formats supported by OSS are:
188
189 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
190 | Format | Description |
191 +=========================+=============================================+
192 | :const:`AFMT_MU_LAW` | a logarithmic encoding (used by Sun ``.au`` |
193 | | files and :file:`/dev/audio`) |
194 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
195 | :const:`AFMT_A_LAW` | a logarithmic encoding |
196 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
197 | :const:`AFMT_IMA_ADPCM` | a 4:1 compressed format defined by the |
198 | | Interactive Multimedia Association |
199 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
200 | :const:`AFMT_U8` | Unsigned, 8-bit audio |
201 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
202 | :const:`AFMT_S16_LE` | Signed, 16-bit audio, little-endian byte |
203 | | order (as used by Intel processors) |
204 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
205 | :const:`AFMT_S16_BE` | Signed, 16-bit audio, big-endian byte order |
206 | | (as used by 68k, PowerPC, Sparc) |
207 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
208 | :const:`AFMT_S8` | Signed, 8 bit audio |
209 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
210 | :const:`AFMT_U16_LE` | Unsigned, 16-bit little-endian audio |
211 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
212 | :const:`AFMT_U16_BE` | Unsigned, 16-bit big-endian audio |
213 +-------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
214
215 Consult the OSS documentation for a full list of audio formats, and note that
216 most devices support only a subset of these formats. Some older devices only
217 support :const:`AFMT_U8`; the most common format used today is
218 :const:`AFMT_S16_LE`.
219
220
221.. method:: oss_audio_device.setfmt(format)
222
223 Try to set the current audio format to *format*---see :meth:`getfmts` for a
224 list. Returns the audio format that the device was set to, which may not be the
225 requested format. May also be used to return the current audio format---do this
226 by passing an "audio format" of :const:`AFMT_QUERY`.
227
228
229.. method:: oss_audio_device.channels(nchannels)
230
231 Set the number of output channels to *nchannels*. A value of 1 indicates
232 monophonic sound, 2 stereophonic. Some devices may have more than 2 channels,
233 and some high-end devices may not support mono. Returns the number of channels
234 the device was set to.
235
236
237.. method:: oss_audio_device.speed(samplerate)
238
239 Try to set the audio sampling rate to *samplerate* samples per second. Returns
240 the rate actually set. Most sound devices don't support arbitrary sampling
241 rates. Common rates are:
242
243 +-------+-------------------------------------------+
244 | Rate | Description |
245 +=======+===========================================+
246 | 8000 | default rate for :file:`/dev/audio` |
247 +-------+-------------------------------------------+
248 | 11025 | speech recording |
249 +-------+-------------------------------------------+
250 | 22050 | |
251 +-------+-------------------------------------------+
252 | 44100 | CD quality audio (at 16 bits/sample and 2 |
253 | | channels) |
254 +-------+-------------------------------------------+
255 | 96000 | DVD quality audio (at 24 bits/sample) |
256 +-------+-------------------------------------------+
257
258
259.. method:: oss_audio_device.sync()
260
261 Wait until the sound device has played every byte in its buffer. (This happens
262 implicitly when the device is closed.) The OSS documentation recommends closing
263 and re-opening the device rather than using :meth:`sync`.
264
265
266.. method:: oss_audio_device.reset()
267
268 Immediately stop playing or recording and return the device to a state where it
269 can accept commands. The OSS documentation recommends closing and re-opening
270 the device after calling :meth:`reset`.
271
272
273.. method:: oss_audio_device.post()
274
275 Tell the driver that there is likely to be a pause in the output, making it
276 possible for the device to handle the pause more intelligently. You might use
277 this after playing a spot sound effect, before waiting for user input, or before
278 doing disk I/O.
279
280The following convenience methods combine several ioctls, or one ioctl and some
281simple calculations.
282
283
284.. method:: oss_audio_device.setparameters(format, nchannels, samplerate [, strict=False])
285
286 Set the key audio sampling parameters---sample format, number of channels, and
287 sampling rate---in one method call. *format*, *nchannels*, and *samplerate*
288 should be as specified in the :meth:`setfmt`, :meth:`channels`, and
289 :meth:`speed` methods. If *strict* is true, :meth:`setparameters` checks to
290 see if each parameter was actually set to the requested value, and raises
291 :exc:`OSSAudioError` if not. Returns a tuple (*format*, *nchannels*,
292 *samplerate*) indicating the parameter values that were actually set by the
293 device driver (i.e., the same as the return values of :meth:`setfmt`,
294 :meth:`channels`, and :meth:`speed`).
295
296 For example, ::
297
298 (fmt, channels, rate) = dsp.setparameters(fmt, channels, rate)
299
300 is equivalent to ::
301
302 fmt = dsp.setfmt(fmt)
303 channels = dsp.channels(channels)
304 rate = dsp.rate(channels)
305
306
307.. method:: oss_audio_device.bufsize()
308
309 Returns the size of the hardware buffer, in samples.
310
311
312.. method:: oss_audio_device.obufcount()
313
314 Returns the number of samples that are in the hardware buffer yet to be played.
315
316
317.. method:: oss_audio_device.obuffree()
318
319 Returns the number of samples that could be queued into the hardware buffer to
320 be played without blocking.
321
322Audio device objects also support several read-only attributes:
323
324
325.. attribute:: oss_audio_device.closed
326
327 Boolean indicating whether the device has been closed.
328
329
330.. attribute:: oss_audio_device.name
331
332 String containing the name of the device file.
333
334
335.. attribute:: oss_audio_device.mode
336
337 The I/O mode for the file, either ``"r"``, ``"rw"``, or ``"w"``.
338
339
340.. _mixer-device-objects:
341
342Mixer Device Objects
343--------------------
344
345The mixer object provides two file-like methods:
346
347
348.. method:: oss_mixer_device.close()
349
350 This method closes the open mixer device file. Any further attempts to use the
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +0200351 mixer after this file is closed will raise an :exc:`OSError`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000352
353
354.. method:: oss_mixer_device.fileno()
355
356 Returns the file handle number of the open mixer device file.
357
Georg Brandl1e908af2010-10-23 17:31:52 +0000358.. versionchanged:: 3.2
359 Mixer objects also support the context manager protocol.
360
361
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000362The remaining methods are specific to audio mixing:
363
364
365.. method:: oss_mixer_device.controls()
366
367 This method returns a bitmask specifying the available mixer controls ("Control"
368 being a specific mixable "channel", such as :const:`SOUND_MIXER_PCM` or
369 :const:`SOUND_MIXER_SYNTH`). This bitmask indicates a subset of all available
370 mixer controls---the :const:`SOUND_MIXER_\*` constants defined at module level.
371 To determine if, for example, the current mixer object supports a PCM mixer, use
372 the following Python code::
373
374 mixer=ossaudiodev.openmixer()
375 if mixer.controls() & (1 << ossaudiodev.SOUND_MIXER_PCM):
376 # PCM is supported
377 ... code ...
378
379 For most purposes, the :const:`SOUND_MIXER_VOLUME` (master volume) and
380 :const:`SOUND_MIXER_PCM` controls should suffice---but code that uses the mixer
381 should be flexible when it comes to choosing mixer controls. On the Gravis
382 Ultrasound, for example, :const:`SOUND_MIXER_VOLUME` does not exist.
383
384
385.. method:: oss_mixer_device.stereocontrols()
386
387 Returns a bitmask indicating stereo mixer controls. If a bit is set, the
388 corresponding control is stereo; if it is unset, the control is either
389 monophonic or not supported by the mixer (use in combination with
390 :meth:`controls` to determine which).
391
392 See the code example for the :meth:`controls` function for an example of getting
393 data from a bitmask.
394
395
396.. method:: oss_mixer_device.reccontrols()
397
398 Returns a bitmask specifying the mixer controls that may be used to record. See
399 the code example for :meth:`controls` for an example of reading from a bitmask.
400
401
402.. method:: oss_mixer_device.get(control)
403
404 Returns the volume of a given mixer control. The returned volume is a 2-tuple
405 ``(left_volume,right_volume)``. Volumes are specified as numbers from 0
406 (silent) to 100 (full volume). If the control is monophonic, a 2-tuple is still
407 returned, but both volumes are the same.
408
409 Raises :exc:`OSSAudioError` if an invalid control was is specified, or
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +0200410 :exc:`OSError` if an unsupported control is specified.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000411
412
413.. method:: oss_mixer_device.set(control, (left, right))
414
415 Sets the volume for a given mixer control to ``(left,right)``. ``left`` and
416 ``right`` must be ints and between 0 (silent) and 100 (full volume). On
417 success, the new volume is returned as a 2-tuple. Note that this may not be
418 exactly the same as the volume specified, because of the limited resolution of
419 some soundcard's mixers.
420
421 Raises :exc:`OSSAudioError` if an invalid mixer control was specified, or if the
422 specified volumes were out-of-range.
423
424
425.. method:: oss_mixer_device.get_recsrc()
426
427 This method returns a bitmask indicating which control(s) are currently being
428 used as a recording source.
429
430
431.. method:: oss_mixer_device.set_recsrc(bitmask)
432
433 Call this function to specify a recording source. Returns a bitmask indicating
Antoine Pitrou62ab10a02011-10-12 20:10:51 +0200434 the new recording source (or sources) if successful; raises :exc:`OSError` if an
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000435 invalid source was specified. To set the current recording source to the
436 microphone input::
437
438 mixer.setrecsrc (1 << ossaudiodev.SOUND_MIXER_MIC)
439