Initial commit
[audio-libsamplerate.git] / lib / Audio / LibSampleRate.pm
1 package Audio::LibSampleRate;
2
3 use 5.008009;
4 use strict;
5 use warnings;
6 use parent qw/Exporter/;
7
8 my @constants;
9 BEGIN { @constants = qw/SRC_SINC_BEST_QUALITY SRC_SINC_MEDIUM_QUALITY SRC_SINC_FASTEST SRC_ZERO_ORDER_HOLD SRC_LINEAR/ }
10 use constant +{ map { $constants[$_] => $_ } 0 .. $#constants };
11
12 our @EXPORT_OK = (qw/src_simple src_get_name src_get_description/, @constants);
13 our @EXPORT = @EXPORT_OK;
14
15 our $VERSION = '0.001';
16
17 use XSLoader;
18 XSLoader::load('Audio::LibSampleRate', $VERSION);
19
20 1;
21 __END__
22
23 =encoding utf-8
24
25 =head1 NAME
26
27 Audio::LibSampleRate - interface to Secret Rabbit Code audio sample rate converter
28
29 =head1 SYNOPSIS
30
31 use Audio::LibSampleRate;
32 use 5.010;
33
34 my @in = (1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5, 5, 6, 6);
35 my @out;
36
37 # High quality sample rate doubling
38 say join ' ', map { sprintf "%.1f", $_ } src_simple \@in, 2;
39 # 1.1 1.1 1.7 1.7 1.9 1.9 2.2 2.2 ...
40
41 # Very low quality sample rate halving
42 say join ' ', src_simple [1 .. 10], 1/2, SRC_LINEAR, 1;
43 # 1 2 4 6 8
44
45 # Halve first half, Double second half. Smooth transition.
46 my $src = Audio::LibSampleRate->new(SRC_ZERO_ORDER_HOLD, 1);
47 say join ' ', $src->process([1 .. 5], 1/2); # 1 2 4
48 say join ' ', $src->process([6 .. 10], 2, 1); # 6 8 9
49 # (the doubling doesn't happen due to the smooth transition)
50
51 # Halve first half, Double second half. Step transition.
52 $src->reset;
53 say join ' ', $src->process([1 .. 5], 1/2); # 1 2 4
54 $src->set_ratio(2);
55 say join ' ', $src->process([6 .. 10], 2, 1); # 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 10
56
57 say src_get_name SRC_SINC_FASTEST; # Fastest sinc interpolator
58 say src_get_description SRC_SINC_FASTEST;
59 # Band limited sinc interpolation, fastest, 97dB SNR, 80% BW.
60
61 =head1 DESCRIPTION
62
63 Secret Rabbit Code (aka libsamplerate) is a Sample Rate Converter for
64 audio. One example of where such a thing would be useful is converting
65 audio from the CD sample rate of 44.1kHz to the 48kHz sample rate used
66 by DAT players.
67
68 SRC is capable of arbitrary and time varying conversions ; from
69 downsampling by a factor of 256 to upsampling by the same factor.
70 Arbitrary in this case means that the ratio of input and output sample
71 rates can be an irrational number. The conversion ratio can also vary
72 with time for speeding up and slowing down effects.
73
74 SRC provides a small set of converters to allow quality to be traded
75 off against computation cost. The current best converter provides a
76 signal-to-noise ratio of 145dB with -3dB passband extending from DC to
77 96% of the theoretical best bandwidth for a given pair of input and
78 output sample rates.
79
80 There are two interfaces: a simple procedural interface which converts
81 a single block of samples in one go, and a more complex object
82 oriented interface which can handle streaming data, for situations
83 where the data is received in small pieces.
84
85 The underlying library also defines a callback interface, which is not
86 yet implemented in Audio::LibSampleRate.
87
88 All functions and methods below die in case of error with a message
89 containing the error number and description, as returned by SRC.
90
91 =head2 The simple interface
92
93 This interface consists of a single function, exported by default:
94
95 B<src_simple>(\I<@interleaved_frames>, I<$ratio>, I<$converter_type>, I<$channels>)
96
97 where I<@interleaved_frames> is an array of frames in interleaved
98 format, I<$ratio> is the conversion ratio
99 (C<output_sample_rate/input_sample_rate>), I<$converter_type> is the
100 converter as described in the L</"Converter types"> section, and
101 I<$channels> is the number of channels.
102
103 If not supplied, the I<$converter_type> defaults to the best available
104 converter and I<$channels> defaults to 2 (stereo sound).
105
106 The function returns a list of samples, the result of the conversion.
107
108 =head2 The object oriented interface
109
110 The following methods are available:
111
112 =over 4
113
114 =item Audio::LibSampleRate->B<new>(I<$converter_type>, I<$channels>)
115
116 Creates a new Audio::LibSampleRate object. I<$converter_type> and
117 I<$channels> have the same meaning and default values as in the
118 previous section.
119
120 =item $self->B<process>(\I<@interleaved_frames>, I<$ratio>, I<$end_of_input>)
121
122 The most important function. I<@interleaved_frames> is an array of
123 frames to be processed in interleaved format, I<$ratio> is the
124 conversion ratio, and I<$end_of_input> is a boolean (defaulting to
125 false) that should be true if this is the last piece of data, false
126 otherwise.
127
128 The function returns a list of samples, the result of the conversion.
129
130 =item $self->B<reset>
131
132 This function resets the internal state of the Audio::LibSampleRate
133 object. It should be called when the sample rate converter is used on
134 two separate, unrelated blocks of audio.
135
136 =item $self->B<set_ratio>($new_ratio)
137
138 Normally, when updating the I<$ratio> argument in B<process> the
139 library tries to smoothly transition between the previous and the
140 current conversion ratios. This function changes the ratio without a
141 smooth transition, achieving a step respone in the conversion ratio.
142
143 =back
144
145 =head2 Converter types
146
147 SRC currently offers 5 converters, numbered from 0 to 4. This module
148 includes constants for the available converters, all of them exported
149 by default.
150
151 =over 4
152
153 =item SRC_SINC_BEST_QUALITY
154
155 This is a bandlimited interpolator derived from the mathematical sinc
156 function and this is the highest quality sinc based converter,
157 providing a worst case Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) of 97 decibels (dB)
158 at a bandwidth of 97%.
159
160 This is the default converter for B<src_simple> and B<new>.
161
162 =item SRC_SINC_MEDIUM_QUALITY
163
164 This is another bandlimited interpolator much like the previous one.
165 It has an SNR of 97dB and a bandwidth of 90%. The speed of the
166 conversion is much faster than the previous one.
167
168 =item SRC_SINC_FASTEST
169
170 This is the fastest bandlimited interpolator and has an SNR of 97dB
171 and a bandwidth of 80%.
172
173 =item SRC_ZERO_ORDER_HOLD
174
175 A Zero Order Hold converter (interpolated value is equal to the last
176 value). The quality is poor but the conversion speed is blindlingly
177 fast.
178
179 =item SRC_LINEAR
180
181 A linear converter. Again the quality is poor, but the conversion
182 speed is blindingly fast.
183
184 =back
185
186 The library also includes two functions that provide human-readable
187 information about converters. Both are exported by default.
188
189 =over
190
191 =item B<src_get_name>(I<$converter_type>)
192
193 Given a converter, returns its human-readable name.
194
195 =item B<src_get_description>(I<$converter_type>)
196
197 Given a converter, returns its human-readable description.
198
199 =back
200
201 =head1 SEE ALSO
202
203 L<http://www.mega-nerd.com/SRC/api.html>
204
205 =head1 AUTHOR
206
207 Marius Gavrilescu, E<lt>marius@ieval.roE<gt>
208
209 =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
210
211 Copyright (C) 2015 by Marius Gavrilescu
212
213 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
214 modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
215 as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
216 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
217
218 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
219 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
220 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
221 GNU General Public License for more details.
222
223 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
224 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
225 Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
226 02110-1301, USA.
227
228
229 =cut
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