Mercurial > hg > vamp-plugin-sdk
view src/doc-overview @ 415:1522e2f6d700
Fix handling of output sample rate in buffering adapter in case where SampleType is Fixed but no sample rate provided (which is invalid behaviour from the plugin, but we might as well do the right thing with it)
author | Chris Cannam |
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date | Fri, 04 Sep 2015 13:48:28 +0100 |
parents | d5c5a52e6c9f |
children |
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/** \mainpage Vamp Plugin SDK \section about About Vamp Vamp is an API for C and C++ plugins that process sampled audio data to produce descriptive output (measurements or semantic observations). Find more information at http://www.vamp-plugins.org/ . Although the official API for Vamp plugins is defined in C for maximum binary compatibility, we strongly recommend using the provided C++ classes in the SDK to implement your own plugins and hosts. \section plugins For Plugins Plugins should subclass Vamp::Plugin, and then use a Vamp::PluginAdapter to expose the correct C API for the plugin. Read the documentation for Vamp::PluginBase and Vamp::Plugin before starting. Plugins should be compiled and linked into dynamic libraries using the usual convention for your platform, and should link (preferably statically) with -lvamp-sdk. Any number of plugins can reside in a single dynamic library. See plugins.cpp in the example plugins directory for the sort of code that will need to accompany your plugin class or classes, to make it possible for a host to look up your plugins properly. Please read the relevant README file for your platform found in the Vamp SDK build/ directory, for details about how to ensure the resulting dynamic library exports the correct linker symbols. The following example plugins are provided. You may legally reuse any amount of the code from these examples in any plugins you write, whether proprietary or open-source. - 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. - PowerSpectrum calculates a power spectrum from the input audio. Actually, it doesn't do any work except calculating power from a cartesian complex FFT output. The work of calculating this frequency domain output is done for it by the host or host SDK; the plugin just needs to declare that it wants frequency domain input. This is the simplest of the example plugins. - AmplitudeFollower is a simple implementation of SuperCollider's amplitude-follower algorithm. - PercussionOnsetDetector estimates the locations of percussive onsets using a simple method described in "Drum Source Separation using Percussive Feature Detection and Spectral Modulation" by Dan Barry, Derry Fitzgerald, Eugene Coyle and Bob Lawlor, ISSC 2005. - FixedTempoEstimator calculates a single beats-per-minute value which is an estimate of the tempo of a piece of music that is assumed to be of fixed tempo, using autocorrelation of a frequency domain energy rise metric. It has several outputs that return intermediate results used in the calculation, and may be a useful example of a plugin having several outputs with varying feature structures. Plugin authors should also read the Programmer's Guide at http://vamp-plugins.org/guide.pdf . \section hosts For Hosts Hosts will normally use a Vamp::PluginHostAdapter to convert each plugin's exposed C API back into a useful Vamp::Plugin C++ object. The Vamp::HostExt namespace contains several additional C++ classes to do this work for them, and make the host's life easier: - Vamp::HostExt::PluginLoader provides a very easy interface for a host to discover, load, and find out category information about the available plugins. Most Vamp hosts will probably want to use this class. - Vamp::HostExt::PluginInputDomainAdapter provides a simple means for hosts to handle plugins that want frequency-domain input, without having to convert the input themselves. - Vamp::HostExt::PluginChannelAdapter provides a simple means for hosts to use plugins that do not necessarily support the same number of audio channels as they have available, without having to apply a channel management / mixdown policy themselves. - Vamp::HostExt::PluginBufferingAdapter provides a means for hosts to avoid having to negotiate the input step and block size, instead permitting the host to use any block size they desire (and a step size equal to it). This is particularly useful for "streaming" hosts that cannot seek backwards in the input audio stream and so would otherwise need to implement an additional buffer to support step sizes smaller than the block size. - Vamp::HostExt::PluginSummarisingAdapter provides summarisation methods such as mean and median averages of output features, for use in any context where an available plugin produces individual values but the result that is actually needed is some sort of aggregate. The PluginLoader class can also use the input domain, channel, and buffering adapters automatically to make these conversions transparent to the host if required. Host authors should also refer to the example host code in the host directory of the SDK. Hosts should link with -lvamp-hostsdk. (The following notes in this section are mostly relevant for developers that are not using the HostExt classes, or that wish to know more about the policy they implement.) The Vamp API does not officially specify how to load plugin libraries or where to find them. However, the SDK does include a function (Vamp::PluginHostAdapter::getPluginPath()) that returns a recommended directory search path that hosts may use for plugin libraries, and a class (Vamp::HostExt::PluginLoader) that implements a sensible cross-platform lookup policy using this path. We recommend using this class in your host unless you have a good reason not to want to. This implementation also permits the user to set the environment variable VAMP_PATH to override the default path if desired. The policy used by Vamp::HostExt::PluginLoader -- and our recommendation for any host -- is to search each directory in this path for .DLL (on Windows), .so (on Linux, Solaris, BSD etc) or .dylib (on OS/X) files, then to load each one and perform a dynamic name lookup on the vampGetPluginDescriptor function to enumerate the plugins in the library. The example host has some code that may help, but this operation will necessarily be system-dependent. Vamp also has an informal convention for sorting plugins into functional categories. In addition to the library file itself, a plugin library may install a category file with the same name as the library but .cat extension. The existence and format of this file are not specified by the Vamp API, but by convention the file may contain lines of the format \code vamp:pluginlibrary:pluginname::General Category > Specific Category \endcode which a host may read and use to assign plugins a location within a category tree for display to the user. The expectation is that advanced users may also choose to set up their own preferred category trees, which is why this information is not queried as part of the Vamp plugin's API itself. The Vamp::HostExt::PluginLoader class also provides support for plugin category lookup using this scheme. \section license License This plugin SDK is freely redistributable under a "new-style BSD" licence. See the file COPYING for more details. In short, you may modify and redistribute the SDK and example plugins within any commercial or non-commercial, proprietary or open-source plugin or application under almost any conditions, with no obligation to provide source code, provided you retain the original copyright note. */