Mercurial > hg > vamp-plugin-sdk
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author | cannam |
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date | Wed, 17 May 2006 16:41:37 +0000 |
parents | b4043af42278 |
children | 13eae6cc6bac |
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Vamp ==== An API for audio analysis and feature extraction plugins. Vamp is an API for C and C++ plugins that process sampled audio data to produce descriptive output (measurements or semantic observations). The principal differences between Vamp and a real-time audio processing plugin system such as VST are: * Vamp plugins may output complex multidimensional data with labels. As a consequence, they are likely to work best when the output data has a much lower sampling rate than the input. (This also means it is usually desirable to implement them in C++ using the high-level base class provided rather than use the raw C API.) * While Vamp plugins receive data block-by-block, they are not required to return output immediately on receiving the input. A Vamp plugin may be non-causal, preferring to store up data based on its input until the end of a processing run and then return all results at once. * Vamp plugins have more control over their inputs than a typical real-time processing plugin. For example, they can indicate to the host their preferred processing block and step sizes, and these may differ. * Vamp plugins may ask to receive data in the frequency domain instead of the time domain. The host takes the responsibility for converting the input data using an FFT of windowed frames. This simplifies plugins that do straightforward frequency-domain processing and permits the host to cache frequency-domain data when possible. * A Vamp plugin is configured once before each processing run, and receives no further parameter changes during use -- unlike real time plugin APIs in which the input parameters may change at any time. This also means that fundamental properties such as the number of values per output or the preferred processing block size may depend on the input parameters. Vamp reuses some ideas from several existing systems, notably DSSI (http://dssi.sourceforge.net) and FEAPI (http://feapi.sourceforge.net). About this SDK ============== This Software Development Kit contains the following: * vamp/vamp.h The formal C language plugin API for Vamp plugins. A Vamp plugin is a dynamic library (.so, .dll or .dylib depending on platform) exposing one C-linkage entry point (vampGetPluginDescriptor) which returns data defined in the rest of this C header. Although this is the official API for Vamp, we don't recommend that you program directly to it. The C++ abstraction in the SDK directory (below) is likely to be preferable for most purposes, and is better documented. * vamp-sdk C++ classes for straightforwardly implementing Vamp plugins and hosts. Plugins should subclass Vamp::Plugin and then use a Vamp::PluginAdapter to expose the correct C API for the plugin. Read vamp-sdk/PluginBase.h and Plugin.h for code documentation. Hosts may use the Vamp::PluginHostAdapter to convert the loaded plugin's C API back into a Vamp::Plugin object. * examples Example plugins implemented using the C++ classes. ZeroCrossing calculates the positions and density of zero-crossing points in an audio waveform; SpectralCentroid calculates the centre of gravity of the frequency domain representation of each block of audio. * host A simple command-line Vamp host, capable of loading a plugin and using it to process a complete audio file, with its default parameters. Requires libsndfile. Building the SDK ================ Edit the Makefile to suit your platform according to the comments in it. Type "make". Licensing ========= This plugin SDK is freely redistributable under a "new-style BSD" licence. See the file COPYING for more details. In short, you are permitted to reuse the SDK and example plugins in any commercial or non-commercial, proprietary or open-source application or plugin under almost any conditions provided you retain the original copyright note. See Also ======== Sonic Visualiser, an interactive open-source graphical audio inspection, analysis and visualisation tool supporting Vamp plugins. Chris Cannam Centre for Digital Music Queen Mary, University of London