cannam@90: /* libFLAC - Free Lossless Audio Codec library cannam@90: * Copyright (C) 2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007 Josh Coalson cannam@90: * cannam@90: * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without cannam@90: * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions cannam@90: * are met: cannam@90: * cannam@90: * - Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright cannam@90: * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright cannam@90: * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the cannam@90: * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * - Neither the name of the Xiph.org Foundation nor the names of its cannam@90: * contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from cannam@90: * this software without specific prior written permission. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS cannam@90: * ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT cannam@90: * LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR cannam@90: * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE FOUNDATION OR cannam@90: * CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, cannam@90: * EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, cannam@90: * PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR cannam@90: * PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF cannam@90: * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING cannam@90: * NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS cannam@90: * SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. cannam@90: */ cannam@90: cannam@90: #ifndef FLAC__ALL_H cannam@90: #define FLAC__ALL_H cannam@90: cannam@90: #include "export.h" cannam@90: cannam@90: #include "assert.h" cannam@90: #include "callback.h" cannam@90: #include "format.h" cannam@90: #include "metadata.h" cannam@90: #include "ordinals.h" cannam@90: #include "stream_decoder.h" cannam@90: #include "stream_encoder.h" cannam@90: cannam@90: /** \mainpage cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \section intro Introduction cannam@90: * cannam@90: * This is the documentation for the FLAC C and C++ APIs. It is cannam@90: * highly interconnected; this introduction should give you a top cannam@90: * level idea of the structure and how to find the information you cannam@90: * need. As a prerequisite you should have at least a basic cannam@90: * knowledge of the FLAC format, documented cannam@90: * here. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \section c_api FLAC C API cannam@90: * cannam@90: * The FLAC C API is the interface to libFLAC, a set of structures cannam@90: * describing the components of FLAC streams, and functions for cannam@90: * encoding and decoding streams, as well as manipulating FLAC cannam@90: * metadata in files. The public include files will be installed cannam@90: * in your include area (for example /usr/include/FLAC/...). cannam@90: * cannam@90: * By writing a little code and linking against libFLAC, it is cannam@90: * relatively easy to add FLAC support to another program. The cannam@90: * library is licensed under Xiph's BSD license. cannam@90: * Complete source code of libFLAC as well as the command-line cannam@90: * encoder and plugins is available and is a useful source of cannam@90: * examples. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * Aside from encoders and decoders, libFLAC provides a powerful cannam@90: * metadata interface for manipulating metadata in FLAC files. It cannam@90: * allows the user to add, delete, and modify FLAC metadata blocks cannam@90: * and it can automatically take advantage of PADDING blocks to avoid cannam@90: * rewriting the entire FLAC file when changing the size of the cannam@90: * metadata. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * libFLAC usually only requires the standard C library and C math cannam@90: * library. In particular, threading is not used so there is no cannam@90: * dependency on a thread library. However, libFLAC does not use cannam@90: * global variables and should be thread-safe. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * libFLAC also supports encoding to and decoding from Ogg FLAC. cannam@90: * However the metadata editing interfaces currently have limited cannam@90: * read-only support for Ogg FLAC files. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \section cpp_api FLAC C++ API cannam@90: * cannam@90: * The FLAC C++ API is a set of classes that encapsulate the cannam@90: * structures and functions in libFLAC. They provide slightly more cannam@90: * functionality with respect to metadata but are otherwise cannam@90: * equivalent. For the most part, they share the same usage as cannam@90: * their counterparts in libFLAC, and the FLAC C API documentation cannam@90: * can be used as a supplement. The public include files cannam@90: * for the C++ API will be installed in your include area (for cannam@90: * example /usr/include/FLAC++/...). cannam@90: * cannam@90: * libFLAC++ is also licensed under cannam@90: * Xiph's BSD license. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \section getting_started Getting Started cannam@90: * cannam@90: * A good starting point for learning the API is to browse through cannam@90: * the modules. Modules are logical cannam@90: * groupings of related functions or classes, which correspond roughly cannam@90: * to header files or sections of header files. Each module includes a cannam@90: * detailed description of the general usage of its functions or cannam@90: * classes. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * From there you can go on to look at the documentation of cannam@90: * individual functions. You can see different views of the individual cannam@90: * functions through the links in top bar across this page. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * If you prefer a more hands-on approach, you can jump right to some cannam@90: * example code. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \section porting_guide Porting Guide cannam@90: * cannam@90: * Starting with FLAC 1.1.3 a \link porting Porting Guide \endlink cannam@90: * has been introduced which gives detailed instructions on how to cannam@90: * port your code to newer versions of FLAC. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \section embedded_developers Embedded Developers cannam@90: * cannam@90: * libFLAC has grown larger over time as more functionality has been cannam@90: * included, but much of it may be unnecessary for a particular embedded cannam@90: * implementation. Unused parts may be pruned by some simple editing of cannam@90: * src/libFLAC/Makefile.am. In general, the decoders, encoders, and cannam@90: * metadata interface are all independent from each other. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * It is easiest to just describe the dependencies: cannam@90: * cannam@90: * - All modules depend on the \link flac_format Format \endlink module. cannam@90: * - The decoders and encoders depend on the bitbuffer. cannam@90: * - The decoder is independent of the encoder. The encoder uses the cannam@90: * decoder because of the verify feature, but this can be removed if cannam@90: * not needed. cannam@90: * - Parts of the metadata interface require the stream decoder (but not cannam@90: * the encoder). cannam@90: * - Ogg support is selectable through the compile time macro cannam@90: * \c FLAC__HAS_OGG. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * For example, if your application only requires the stream decoder, no cannam@90: * encoder, and no metadata interface, you can remove the stream encoder cannam@90: * and the metadata interface, which will greatly reduce the size of the cannam@90: * library. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * Also, there are several places in the libFLAC code with comments marked cannam@90: * with "OPT:" where a #define can be changed to enable code that might be cannam@90: * faster on a specific platform. Experimenting with these can yield faster cannam@90: * binaries. cannam@90: */ cannam@90: cannam@90: /** \defgroup porting Porting Guide for New Versions cannam@90: * cannam@90: * This module describes differences in the library interfaces from cannam@90: * version to version. It assists in the porting of code that uses cannam@90: * the libraries to newer versions of FLAC. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * One simple facility for making porting easier that has been added cannam@90: * in FLAC 1.1.3 is a set of \c #defines in \c export.h of each cannam@90: * library's includes (e.g. \c include/FLAC/export.h). The cannam@90: * \c #defines mirror the libraries' cannam@90: * libtool version numbers, cannam@90: * e.g. in libFLAC there are \c FLAC_API_VERSION_CURRENT, cannam@90: * \c FLAC_API_VERSION_REVISION, and \c FLAC_API_VERSION_AGE. cannam@90: * These can be used to support multiple versions of an API during the cannam@90: * transition phase, e.g. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \code cannam@90: * #if !defined(FLAC_API_VERSION_CURRENT) || FLAC_API_VERSION_CURRENT <= 7 cannam@90: * legacy code cannam@90: * #else cannam@90: * new code cannam@90: * #endif cannam@90: * \endcode cannam@90: * cannam@90: * The the source will work for multiple versions and the legacy code can cannam@90: * easily be removed when the transition is complete. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * Another available symbol is FLAC_API_SUPPORTS_OGG_FLAC (defined in cannam@90: * include/FLAC/export.h), which can be used to determine whether or not cannam@90: * the library has been compiled with support for Ogg FLAC. This is cannam@90: * simpler than trying to call an Ogg init function and catching the cannam@90: * error. cannam@90: */ cannam@90: cannam@90: /** \defgroup porting_1_1_2_to_1_1_3 Porting from FLAC 1.1.2 to 1.1.3 cannam@90: * \ingroup porting cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \brief cannam@90: * This module describes porting from FLAC 1.1.2 to FLAC 1.1.3. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * The main change between the APIs in 1.1.2 and 1.1.3 is that they have cannam@90: * been simplified. First, libOggFLAC has been merged into libFLAC and cannam@90: * libOggFLAC++ has been merged into libFLAC++. Second, both the three cannam@90: * decoding layers and three encoding layers have been merged into a cannam@90: * single stream decoder and stream encoder. That is, the functionality cannam@90: * of FLAC__SeekableStreamDecoder and FLAC__FileDecoder has been merged cannam@90: * into FLAC__StreamDecoder, and FLAC__SeekableStreamEncoder and cannam@90: * FLAC__FileEncoder into FLAC__StreamEncoder. Only the cannam@90: * FLAC__StreamDecoder and FLAC__StreamEncoder remain. What this means cannam@90: * is there is now a single API that can be used to encode or decode cannam@90: * streams to/from native FLAC or Ogg FLAC and the single API can work cannam@90: * on both seekable and non-seekable streams. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * Instead of creating an encoder or decoder of a certain layer, now the cannam@90: * client will always create a FLAC__StreamEncoder or cannam@90: * FLAC__StreamDecoder. The old layers are now differentiated by the cannam@90: * initialization function. For example, for the decoder, cannam@90: * FLAC__stream_decoder_init() has been replaced by cannam@90: * FLAC__stream_decoder_init_stream(). This init function takes cannam@90: * callbacks for the I/O, and the seeking callbacks are optional. This cannam@90: * allows the client to use the same object for seekable and cannam@90: * non-seekable streams. For decoding a FLAC file directly, the client cannam@90: * can use FLAC__stream_decoder_init_file() and pass just a filename cannam@90: * and fewer callbacks; most of the other callbacks are supplied cannam@90: * internally. For situations where fopen()ing by filename is not cannam@90: * possible (e.g. Unicode filenames on Windows) the client can instead cannam@90: * open the file itself and supply the FILE* to cannam@90: * FLAC__stream_decoder_init_FILE(). The init functions now returns a cannam@90: * FLAC__StreamDecoderInitStatus instead of FLAC__StreamDecoderState. cannam@90: * Since the callbacks and client data are now passed to the init cannam@90: * function, the FLAC__stream_decoder_set_*_callback() functions and cannam@90: * FLAC__stream_decoder_set_client_data() are no longer needed. The cannam@90: * rest of the calls to the decoder are the same as before. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * There are counterpart init functions for Ogg FLAC, e.g. cannam@90: * FLAC__stream_decoder_init_ogg_stream(). All the rest of the calls cannam@90: * and callbacks are the same as for native FLAC. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * As an example, in FLAC 1.1.2 a seekable stream decoder would have cannam@90: * been set up like so: cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \code cannam@90: * FLAC__SeekableStreamDecoder *decoder = FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_new(); cannam@90: * if(decoder == NULL) do_something; cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_md5_checking(decoder, true); cannam@90: * [... other settings ...] cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_read_callback(decoder, my_read_callback); cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_seek_callback(decoder, my_seek_callback); cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_tell_callback(decoder, my_tell_callback); cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_length_callback(decoder, my_length_callback); cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_eof_callback(decoder, my_eof_callback); cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_write_callback(decoder, my_write_callback); cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_metadata_callback(decoder, my_metadata_callback); cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_error_callback(decoder, my_error_callback); cannam@90: * FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_set_client_data(decoder, my_client_data); cannam@90: * if(FLAC__seekable_stream_decoder_init(decoder) != FLAC__SEEKABLE_STREAM_DECODER_OK) do_something; cannam@90: * \endcode cannam@90: * cannam@90: * In FLAC 1.1.3 it is like this: cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \code cannam@90: * FLAC__StreamDecoder *decoder = FLAC__stream_decoder_new(); cannam@90: * if(decoder == NULL) do_something; cannam@90: * FLAC__stream_decoder_set_md5_checking(decoder, true); cannam@90: * [... other settings ...] cannam@90: * if(FLAC__stream_decoder_init_stream( cannam@90: * decoder, cannam@90: * my_read_callback, cannam@90: * my_seek_callback, // or NULL cannam@90: * my_tell_callback, // or NULL cannam@90: * my_length_callback, // or NULL cannam@90: * my_eof_callback, // or NULL cannam@90: * my_write_callback, cannam@90: * my_metadata_callback, // or NULL cannam@90: * my_error_callback, cannam@90: * my_client_data cannam@90: * ) != FLAC__STREAM_DECODER_INIT_STATUS_OK) do_something; cannam@90: * \endcode cannam@90: * cannam@90: * or you could do; cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \code cannam@90: * [...] cannam@90: * FILE *file = fopen("somefile.flac","rb"); cannam@90: * if(file == NULL) do_somthing; cannam@90: * if(FLAC__stream_decoder_init_FILE( cannam@90: * decoder, cannam@90: * file, cannam@90: * my_write_callback, cannam@90: * my_metadata_callback, // or NULL cannam@90: * my_error_callback, cannam@90: * my_client_data cannam@90: * ) != FLAC__STREAM_DECODER_INIT_STATUS_OK) do_something; cannam@90: * \endcode cannam@90: * cannam@90: * or just: cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \code cannam@90: * [...] cannam@90: * if(FLAC__stream_decoder_init_file( cannam@90: * decoder, cannam@90: * "somefile.flac", cannam@90: * my_write_callback, cannam@90: * my_metadata_callback, // or NULL cannam@90: * my_error_callback, cannam@90: * my_client_data cannam@90: * ) != FLAC__STREAM_DECODER_INIT_STATUS_OK) do_something; cannam@90: * \endcode cannam@90: * cannam@90: * Another small change to the decoder is in how it handles unparseable cannam@90: * streams. Before, when the decoder found an unparseable stream cannam@90: * (reserved for when the decoder encounters a stream from a future cannam@90: * encoder that it can't parse), it changed the state to cannam@90: * \c FLAC__STREAM_DECODER_UNPARSEABLE_STREAM. Now the decoder instead cannam@90: * drops sync and calls the error callback with a new error code cannam@90: * \c FLAC__STREAM_DECODER_ERROR_STATUS_UNPARSEABLE_STREAM. This is cannam@90: * more robust. If your error callback does not discriminate on the the cannam@90: * error state, your code does not need to be changed. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * The encoder now has a new setting: cannam@90: * FLAC__stream_encoder_set_apodization(). This is for setting the cannam@90: * method used to window the data before LPC analysis. You only need to cannam@90: * add a call to this function if the default is not suitable. There cannam@90: * are also two new convenience functions that may be useful: cannam@90: * FLAC__metadata_object_cuesheet_calculate_cddb_id() and cannam@90: * FLAC__metadata_get_cuesheet(). cannam@90: * cannam@90: * The \a bytes parameter to FLAC__StreamDecoderReadCallback, cannam@90: * FLAC__StreamEncoderReadCallback, and FLAC__StreamEncoderWriteCallback cannam@90: * is now \c size_t instead of \c unsigned. cannam@90: */ cannam@90: cannam@90: /** \defgroup porting_1_1_3_to_1_1_4 Porting from FLAC 1.1.3 to 1.1.4 cannam@90: * \ingroup porting cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \brief cannam@90: * This module describes porting from FLAC 1.1.3 to FLAC 1.1.4. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * There were no changes to any of the interfaces from 1.1.3 to 1.1.4. cannam@90: * There was a slight change in the implementation of cannam@90: * FLAC__stream_encoder_set_metadata(); the function now makes a copy cannam@90: * of the \a metadata array of pointers so the client no longer needs cannam@90: * to maintain it after the call. The objects themselves that are cannam@90: * pointed to by the array are still not copied though and must be cannam@90: * maintained until the call to FLAC__stream_encoder_finish(). cannam@90: */ cannam@90: cannam@90: /** \defgroup porting_1_1_4_to_1_2_0 Porting from FLAC 1.1.4 to 1.2.0 cannam@90: * \ingroup porting cannam@90: * cannam@90: * \brief cannam@90: * This module describes porting from FLAC 1.1.4 to FLAC 1.2.0. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * There were only very minor changes to the interfaces from 1.1.4 to 1.2.0. cannam@90: * In libFLAC, \c FLAC__format_sample_rate_is_subset() was added. cannam@90: * In libFLAC++, \c FLAC::Decoder::Stream::get_decode_position() was added. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * Finally, value of the constant \c FLAC__FRAME_HEADER_RESERVED_LEN cannam@90: * has changed to reflect the conversion of one of the reserved bits cannam@90: * into active use. It used to be \c 2 and now is \c 1. However the cannam@90: * FLAC frame header length has not changed, so to skip the proper cannam@90: * number of bits, use \c FLAC__FRAME_HEADER_RESERVED_LEN + cannam@90: * \c FLAC__FRAME_HEADER_BLOCKING_STRATEGY_LEN cannam@90: */ cannam@90: cannam@90: /** \defgroup flac FLAC C API cannam@90: * cannam@90: * The FLAC C API is the interface to libFLAC, a set of structures cannam@90: * describing the components of FLAC streams, and functions for cannam@90: * encoding and decoding streams, as well as manipulating FLAC cannam@90: * metadata in files. cannam@90: * cannam@90: * You should start with the format components as all other modules cannam@90: * are dependent on it. cannam@90: */ cannam@90: cannam@90: #endif