view data/osc/sv-command @ 537:3cc4b7cd2aa5

* Merge from one-fftdataserver-per-fftmodel branch. This bit of reworking (which is not described very accurately by the title of the branch) turns the MatrixFile object into something that either reads or writes, but not both, and separates the FFT file cache reader and writer implementations separately. This allows the FFT data server to have a single thread owning writers and one reader per "customer" thread, and for all locking to be vastly simplified and concentrated in the data server alone (because none of the classes it makes use of is used in more than one thread at a time). The result is faster and more trustworthy code.
author Chris Cannam
date Tue, 27 Jan 2009 13:25:10 +0000
parents 32e50b620a6c
children
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#!/bin/sh
#
# A very simple command shell for Sonic Visualiser.
# 
# This provides a wrapper for the sv-osc-send program, which is a
# generic OSC sending program (not specific to SV, despite its name).
# This script attempts to guess the OSC port number for an SV
# process running on the local host, and then composes a method name
# and arguments into a complete OSC call.
# 
# You can either run this with the method and its arguments on the
# command line, e.g. "sv-command set layer Frequency-Scale Log", or
# you can provide a series of method + argument commands on stdin.
# 
# Unless you use the -q option, this script will echo the OSC URL
# and arguments that it is sending for each command.
#
# Note that the method and arguments may not contain spaces.
# 
# Chris Cannam, Nov 2006

quiet=
if [ "$1" = "-q" ]; then
    quiet=true; shift;
fi

# The yucky bit

port=`lsof -c sonic- | \
          grep UDP | \
          sed -e 's/^.*[^0-9]\([0-9][0-9]*\) *$/\1/' | \
          grep -v ' ' | \
          head -1 `

host=127.0.0.1
scheme=osc.udp

if [ -z "$port" ]; then
    echo "Sonic Visualiser OSC port not found"
    exit 1
fi

if [ -n "$1" ]; then
    command=$1; shift
    [ -z "$quiet" ] && echo "$scheme://$host:$port/$command" "$@"
    sv-osc-send "$scheme://$host:$port/$command" "$@"
else
    while read command a1 a2 a3 a4 a5; do
        [ -z "$command" ] && continue
	[ -z "$quiet" ] && echo "$scheme://$host:$port/$command" $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5
	sv-osc-send "$scheme://$host:$port/$command" $a1 $a2 $a3 $a4 $a5
    done
fi

exit 0