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8 | pmbaty | 1 | /******************************************************************** |
2 | * * |
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3 | * THIS FILE IS PART OF THE libopusfile SOFTWARE CODEC SOURCE CODE. * |
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4 | * USE, DISTRIBUTION AND REPRODUCTION OF THIS LIBRARY SOURCE IS * |
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5 | * GOVERNED BY A BSD-STYLE SOURCE LICENSE INCLUDED WITH THIS SOURCE * |
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6 | * IN 'COPYING'. PLEASE READ THESE TERMS BEFORE DISTRIBUTING. * |
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7 | * * |
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8 | * THE libopusfile SOURCE CODE IS (C) COPYRIGHT 1994-2012 * |
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9 | * by the Xiph.Org Foundation and contributors http://www.xiph.org/ * |
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10 | * * |
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11 | ******************************************************************** |
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12 | |||
13 | function: stdio-based convenience library for opening/seeking/decoding |
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14 | last mod: $Id: vorbisfile.h 17182 2010-04-29 03:48:32Z xiphmont $ |
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15 | |||
16 | ********************************************************************/ |
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17 | #if !defined(_opusfile_h) |
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18 | # define _opusfile_h (1) |
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19 | |||
20 | /**\mainpage |
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21 | \section Introduction |
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22 | |||
23 | This is the documentation for the <tt>libopusfile</tt> C API. |
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24 | |||
25 | The <tt>libopusfile</tt> package provides a convenient high-level API for |
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26 | decoding and basic manipulation of all Ogg Opus audio streams. |
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27 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> is implemented as a layer on top of Xiph.Org's |
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28 | reference |
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29 | <tt><a href="https://www.xiph.org/ogg/doc/libogg/reference.html">libogg</a></tt> |
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30 | and |
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31 | <tt><a href="https://mf4.xiph.org/jenkins/view/opus/job/opus/ws/doc/html/index.html">libopus</a></tt> |
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32 | libraries. |
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33 | |||
34 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> provides several sets of built-in routines for |
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35 | file/stream access, and may also use custom stream I/O routines provided by |
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36 | the embedded environment. |
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37 | There are built-in I/O routines provided for ANSI-compliant |
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38 | <code>stdio</code> (<code>FILE *</code>), memory buffers, and URLs |
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39 | (including <file:> URLs, plus optionally <http:> and <https:> URLs). |
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40 | |||
41 | \section Organization |
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42 | |||
43 | The main API is divided into several sections: |
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44 | - \ref stream_open_close |
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45 | - \ref stream_info |
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46 | - \ref stream_decoding |
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47 | - \ref stream_seeking |
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48 | |||
49 | Several additional sections are not tied to the main API. |
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50 | - \ref stream_callbacks |
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51 | - \ref header_info |
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52 | - \ref error_codes |
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53 | |||
54 | \section Overview |
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55 | |||
56 | The <tt>libopusfile</tt> API always decodes files to 48 kHz. |
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57 | The original sample rate is not preserved by the lossy compression, though |
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58 | it is stored in the header to allow you to resample to it after decoding |
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59 | (the <tt>libopusfile</tt> API does not currently provide a resampler, |
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60 | but the |
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61 | <a href="http://www.speex.org/docs/manual/speex-manual/node7.html#SECTION00760000000000000000">the |
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62 | Speex resampler</a> is a good choice if you need one). |
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63 | In general, if you are playing back the audio, you should leave it at |
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64 | 48 kHz, provided your audio hardware supports it. |
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65 | When decoding to a file, it may be worth resampling back to the original |
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66 | sample rate, so as not to surprise users who might not expect the sample |
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67 | rate to change after encoding to Opus and decoding. |
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68 | |||
69 | Opus files can contain anywhere from 1 to 255 channels of audio. |
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70 | The channel mappings for up to 8 channels are the same as the |
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71 | <a href="http://www.xiph.org/vorbis/doc/Vorbis_I_spec.html#x1-800004.3.9">Vorbis |
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72 | mappings</a>. |
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73 | A special stereo API can convert everything to 2 channels, making it simple |
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74 | to support multichannel files in an application which only has stereo |
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75 | output. |
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76 | Although the <tt>libopusfile</tt> ABI provides support for the theoretical |
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77 | maximum number of channels, the current implementation does not support |
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78 | files with more than 8 channels, as they do not have well-defined channel |
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79 | mappings. |
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80 | |||
81 | Like all Ogg files, Opus files may be "chained". |
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82 | That is, multiple Opus files may be combined into a single, longer file just |
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83 | by concatenating the original files. |
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84 | This is commonly done in internet radio streaming, as it allows the title |
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85 | and artist to be updated each time the song changes, since each link in the |
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86 | chain includes its own set of metadata. |
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87 | |||
88 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> fully supports chained files. |
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89 | It will decode the first Opus stream found in each link of a chained file |
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90 | (ignoring any other streams that might be concurrently multiplexed with it, |
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91 | such as a video stream). |
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92 | |||
93 | The channel count can also change between links. |
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94 | If your application is not prepared to deal with this, it can use the stereo |
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95 | API to ensure the audio from all links will always get decoded into a |
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96 | common format. |
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97 | Since <tt>libopusfile</tt> always decodes to 48 kHz, you do not have to |
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98 | worry about the sample rate changing between links (as was possible with |
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99 | Vorbis). |
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100 | This makes application support for chained files with <tt>libopusfile</tt> |
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101 | very easy.*/ |
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102 | |||
103 | # if defined(__cplusplus) |
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104 | extern "C" { |
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105 | # endif |
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106 | |||
107 | # include <stdarg.h> |
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108 | # include <stdio.h> |
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109 | # include <ogg/ogg.h> |
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110 | # include <opus_multistream.h> |
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111 | |||
112 | /**@cond PRIVATE*/ |
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113 | |||
114 | /*Enable special features for gcc and gcc-compatible compilers.*/ |
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115 | # if !defined(OP_GNUC_PREREQ) |
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116 | # if defined(__GNUC__)&&defined(__GNUC_MINOR__) |
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117 | # define OP_GNUC_PREREQ(_maj,_min) \ |
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118 | ((__GNUC__<<16)+__GNUC_MINOR__>=((_maj)<<16)+(_min)) |
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119 | # else |
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120 | # define OP_GNUC_PREREQ(_maj,_min) 0 |
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121 | # endif |
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122 | # endif |
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123 | |||
124 | # if OP_GNUC_PREREQ(4,0) |
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125 | # pragma GCC visibility push(default) |
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126 | # endif |
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127 | |||
128 | typedef struct OpusHead OpusHead; |
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129 | typedef struct OpusTags OpusTags; |
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130 | typedef struct OpusPictureTag OpusPictureTag; |
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131 | typedef struct OpusServerInfo OpusServerInfo; |
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132 | typedef struct OpusFileCallbacks OpusFileCallbacks; |
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133 | typedef struct OggOpusFile OggOpusFile; |
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134 | |||
135 | /*Warning attributes for libopusfile functions.*/ |
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136 | # if OP_GNUC_PREREQ(3,4) |
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137 | # define OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT __attribute__((__warn_unused_result__)) |
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138 | # else |
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139 | # define OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
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140 | # endif |
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141 | # if OP_GNUC_PREREQ(3,4) |
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142 | # define OP_ARG_NONNULL(_x) __attribute__((__nonnull__(_x))) |
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143 | # else |
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144 | # define OP_ARG_NONNULL(_x) |
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145 | # endif |
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146 | |||
147 | /**@endcond*/ |
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148 | |||
149 | /**\defgroup error_codes Error Codes*/ |
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150 | /*@{*/ |
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151 | /**\name List of possible error codes |
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152 | Many of the functions in this library return a negative error code when a |
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153 | function fails. |
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154 | This list provides a brief explanation of the common errors. |
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155 | See each individual function for more details on what a specific error code |
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156 | means in that context.*/ |
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157 | /*@{*/ |
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158 | |||
159 | /**A request did not succeed.*/ |
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160 | #define OP_FALSE (-1) |
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161 | /*Currently not used externally.*/ |
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162 | #define OP_EOF (-2) |
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163 | /**There was a hole in the page sequence numbers (e.g., a page was corrupt or |
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164 | missing).*/ |
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165 | #define OP_HOLE (-3) |
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166 | /**An underlying read, seek, or tell operation failed when it should have |
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167 | succeeded.*/ |
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168 | #define OP_EREAD (-128) |
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169 | /**A <code>NULL</code> pointer was passed where one was unexpected, or an |
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170 | internal memory allocation failed, or an internal library error was |
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171 | encountered.*/ |
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172 | #define OP_EFAULT (-129) |
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173 | /**The stream used a feature that is not implemented, such as an unsupported |
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174 | channel family.*/ |
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175 | #define OP_EIMPL (-130) |
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176 | /**One or more parameters to a function were invalid.*/ |
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177 | #define OP_EINVAL (-131) |
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178 | /**A purported Ogg Opus stream did not begin with an Ogg page, a purported |
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179 | header packet did not start with one of the required strings, "OpusHead" or |
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180 | "OpusTags", or a link in a chained file was encountered that did not |
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181 | contain any logical Opus streams.*/ |
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182 | #define OP_ENOTFORMAT (-132) |
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183 | /**A required header packet was not properly formatted, contained illegal |
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184 | values, or was missing altogether.*/ |
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185 | #define OP_EBADHEADER (-133) |
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186 | /**The ID header contained an unrecognized version number.*/ |
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187 | #define OP_EVERSION (-134) |
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188 | /*Currently not used at all.*/ |
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189 | #define OP_ENOTAUDIO (-135) |
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190 | /**An audio packet failed to decode properly. |
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191 | This is usually caused by a multistream Ogg packet where the durations of |
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192 | the individual Opus packets contained in it are not all the same.*/ |
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193 | #define OP_EBADPACKET (-136) |
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194 | /**We failed to find data we had seen before, or the bitstream structure was |
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195 | sufficiently malformed that seeking to the target destination was |
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196 | impossible.*/ |
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197 | #define OP_EBADLINK (-137) |
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198 | /**An operation that requires seeking was requested on an unseekable stream.*/ |
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199 | #define OP_ENOSEEK (-138) |
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200 | /**The first or last granule position of a link failed basic validity checks.*/ |
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201 | #define OP_EBADTIMESTAMP (-139) |
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202 | |||
203 | /*@}*/ |
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204 | /*@}*/ |
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205 | |||
206 | /**\defgroup header_info Header Information*/ |
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207 | /*@{*/ |
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208 | |||
209 | /**The maximum number of channels in an Ogg Opus stream.*/ |
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210 | #define OPUS_CHANNEL_COUNT_MAX (255) |
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211 | |||
212 | /**Ogg Opus bitstream information. |
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213 | This contains the basic playback parameters for a stream, and corresponds to |
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214 | the initial ID header packet of an Ogg Opus stream.*/ |
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215 | struct OpusHead{ |
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216 | /**The Ogg Opus format version, in the range 0...255. |
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217 | The top 4 bits represent a "major" version, and the bottom four bits |
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218 | represent backwards-compatible "minor" revisions. |
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219 | The current specification describes version 1. |
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220 | This library will recognize versions up through 15 as backwards compatible |
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221 | with the current specification. |
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222 | An earlier draft of the specification described a version 0, but the only |
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223 | difference between version 1 and version 0 is that version 0 did |
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224 | not specify the semantics for handling the version field.*/ |
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225 | int version; |
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226 | /**The number of channels, in the range 1...255.*/ |
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227 | int channel_count; |
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228 | /**The number of samples that should be discarded from the beginning of the |
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229 | stream.*/ |
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230 | unsigned pre_skip; |
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231 | /**The sampling rate of the original input. |
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232 | All Opus audio is coded at 48 kHz, and should also be decoded at 48 kHz |
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233 | for playback (unless the target hardware does not support this sampling |
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234 | rate). |
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235 | However, this field may be used to resample the audio back to the original |
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236 | sampling rate, for example, when saving the output to a file.*/ |
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237 | opus_uint32 input_sample_rate; |
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238 | /**The gain to apply to the decoded output, in dB, as a Q8 value in the range |
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239 | -32768...32767. |
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240 | The <tt>libopusfile</tt> API will automatically apply this gain to the |
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241 | decoded output before returning it, scaling it by |
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242 | <code>pow(10,output_gain/(20.0*256))</code>. |
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243 | You can adjust this behavior with op_set_gain_offset().*/ |
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244 | int output_gain; |
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245 | /**The channel mapping family, in the range 0...255. |
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246 | Channel mapping family 0 covers mono or stereo in a single stream. |
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247 | Channel mapping family 1 covers 1 to 8 channels in one or more streams, |
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248 | using the Vorbis speaker assignments. |
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249 | Channel mapping family 255 covers 1 to 255 channels in one or more |
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250 | streams, but without any defined speaker assignment.*/ |
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251 | int mapping_family; |
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252 | /**The number of Opus streams in each Ogg packet, in the range 1...255.*/ |
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253 | int stream_count; |
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254 | /**The number of coupled Opus streams in each Ogg packet, in the range |
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255 | 0...127. |
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256 | This must satisfy <code>0 <= coupled_count <= stream_count</code> and |
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257 | <code>coupled_count + stream_count <= 255</code>. |
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258 | The coupled streams appear first, before all uncoupled streams, in an Ogg |
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259 | Opus packet.*/ |
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260 | int coupled_count; |
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261 | /**The mapping from coded stream channels to output channels. |
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262 | Let <code>index=mapping[k]</code> be the value for channel <code>k</code>. |
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263 | If <code>index<2*coupled_count</code>, then it refers to the left channel |
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264 | from stream <code>(index/2)</code> if even, and the right channel from |
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265 | stream <code>(index/2)</code> if odd. |
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266 | Otherwise, it refers to the output of the uncoupled stream |
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267 | <code>(index-coupled_count)</code>.*/ |
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268 | unsigned char mapping[OPUS_CHANNEL_COUNT_MAX]; |
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269 | }; |
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270 | |||
271 | /**The metadata from an Ogg Opus stream. |
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272 | |||
273 | This structure holds the in-stream metadata corresponding to the 'comment' |
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274 | header packet of an Ogg Opus stream. |
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275 | The comment header is meant to be used much like someone jotting a quick |
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276 | note on the label of a CD. |
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277 | It should be a short, to the point text note that can be more than a couple |
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278 | words, but not more than a short paragraph. |
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279 | |||
280 | The metadata is stored as a series of (tag, value) pairs, in length-encoded |
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281 | string vectors, using the same format as Vorbis (without the final "framing |
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282 | bit"), Theora, and Speex, except for the packet header. |
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283 | The first occurrence of the '=' character delimits the tag and value. |
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284 | A particular tag may occur more than once, and order is significant. |
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285 | The character set encoding for the strings is always UTF-8, but the tag |
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286 | names are limited to ASCII, and treated as case-insensitive. |
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287 | See <a href="http://www.xiph.org/vorbis/doc/v-comment.html">the Vorbis |
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288 | comment header specification</a> for details. |
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289 | |||
290 | In filling in this structure, <tt>libopusfile</tt> will null-terminate the |
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291 | #user_comments strings for safety. |
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292 | However, the bitstream format itself treats them as 8-bit clean vectors, |
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293 | possibly containing NUL characters, so the #comment_lengths array should be |
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294 | treated as their authoritative length. |
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295 | |||
296 | This structure is binary and source-compatible with a |
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297 | <code>vorbis_comment</code>, and pointers to it may be freely cast to |
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298 | <code>vorbis_comment</code> pointers, and vice versa. |
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299 | It is provided as a separate type to avoid introducing a compile-time |
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300 | dependency on the libvorbis headers.*/ |
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301 | struct OpusTags{ |
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302 | /**The array of comment string vectors.*/ |
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303 | char **user_comments; |
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304 | /**An array of the corresponding length of each vector, in bytes.*/ |
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305 | int *comment_lengths; |
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306 | /**The total number of comment streams.*/ |
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307 | int comments; |
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308 | /**The null-terminated vendor string. |
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309 | This identifies the software used to encode the stream.*/ |
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310 | char *vendor; |
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311 | }; |
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312 | |||
313 | /**\name Picture tag image formats*/ |
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314 | /*@{*/ |
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315 | |||
316 | /**The MIME type was not recognized, or the image data did not match the |
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317 | declared MIME type.*/ |
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318 | #define OP_PIC_FORMAT_UNKNOWN (-1) |
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319 | /**The MIME type indicates the image data is really a URL.*/ |
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320 | #define OP_PIC_FORMAT_URL (0) |
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321 | /**The image is a JPEG.*/ |
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322 | #define OP_PIC_FORMAT_JPEG (1) |
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323 | /**The image is a PNG.*/ |
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324 | #define OP_PIC_FORMAT_PNG (2) |
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325 | /**The image is a GIF.*/ |
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326 | #define OP_PIC_FORMAT_GIF (3) |
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327 | |||
328 | /*@}*/ |
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329 | |||
330 | /**The contents of a METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE tag.*/ |
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331 | struct OpusPictureTag{ |
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332 | /**The picture type according to the ID3v2 APIC frame: |
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333 | <ol start="0"> |
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334 | <li>Other</li> |
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335 | <li>32x32 pixels 'file icon' (PNG only)</li> |
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336 | <li>Other file icon</li> |
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337 | <li>Cover (front)</li> |
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338 | <li>Cover (back)</li> |
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339 | <li>Leaflet page</li> |
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340 | <li>Media (e.g. label side of CD)</li> |
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341 | <li>Lead artist/lead performer/soloist</li> |
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342 | <li>Artist/performer</li> |
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343 | <li>Conductor</li> |
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344 | <li>Band/Orchestra</li> |
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345 | <li>Composer</li> |
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346 | <li>Lyricist/text writer</li> |
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347 | <li>Recording Location</li> |
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348 | <li>During recording</li> |
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349 | <li>During performance</li> |
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350 | <li>Movie/video screen capture</li> |
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351 | <li>A bright colored fish</li> |
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352 | <li>Illustration</li> |
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353 | <li>Band/artist logotype</li> |
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354 | <li>Publisher/Studio logotype</li> |
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355 | </ol> |
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356 | Others are reserved and should not be used. |
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357 | There may only be one each of picture type 1 and 2 in a file.*/ |
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358 | opus_int32 type; |
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359 | /**The MIME type of the picture, in printable ASCII characters 0x20-0x7E. |
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360 | The MIME type may also be <code>"-->"</code> to signify that the data part |
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361 | is a URL pointing to the picture instead of the picture data itself. |
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362 | In this case, a terminating NUL is appended to the URL string in #data, |
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363 | but #data_length is set to the length of the string excluding that |
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364 | terminating NUL.*/ |
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365 | char *mime_type; |
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366 | /**The description of the picture, in UTF-8.*/ |
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367 | char *description; |
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368 | /**The width of the picture in pixels.*/ |
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369 | opus_uint32 width; |
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370 | /**The height of the picture in pixels.*/ |
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371 | opus_uint32 height; |
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372 | /**The color depth of the picture in bits-per-pixel (<em>not</em> |
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373 | bits-per-channel).*/ |
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374 | opus_uint32 depth; |
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375 | /**For indexed-color pictures (e.g., GIF), the number of colors used, or 0 |
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376 | for non-indexed pictures.*/ |
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377 | opus_uint32 colors; |
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378 | /**The length of the picture data in bytes.*/ |
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379 | opus_uint32 data_length; |
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380 | /**The binary picture data.*/ |
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381 | unsigned char *data; |
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382 | /**The format of the picture data, if known. |
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383 | One of |
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384 | <ul> |
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385 | <li>#OP_PIC_FORMAT_UNKNOWN,</li> |
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386 | <li>#OP_PIC_FORMAT_URL,</li> |
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387 | <li>#OP_PIC_FORMAT_JPEG,</li> |
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388 | <li>#OP_PIC_FORMAT_PNG, or</li> |
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389 | <li>#OP_PIC_FORMAT_GIF.</li> |
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390 | </ul>*/ |
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391 | int format; |
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392 | }; |
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393 | |||
394 | /**\name Functions for manipulating header data |
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395 | |||
396 | These functions manipulate the #OpusHead and #OpusTags structures, |
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397 | which describe the audio parameters and tag-value metadata, respectively. |
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398 | These can be used to query the headers returned by <tt>libopusfile</tt>, or |
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399 | to parse Opus headers from sources other than an Ogg Opus stream, provided |
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400 | they use the same format.*/ |
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401 | /*@{*/ |
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402 | |||
403 | /**Parses the contents of the ID header packet of an Ogg Opus stream. |
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404 | \param[out] _head Returns the contents of the parsed packet. |
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405 | The contents of this structure are untouched on error. |
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406 | This may be <code>NULL</code> to merely test the header |
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407 | for validity. |
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408 | \param[in] _data The contents of the ID header packet. |
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409 | \param _len The number of bytes of data in the ID header packet. |
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410 | \return 0 on success or a negative value on error. |
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411 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT If the data does not start with the "OpusHead" |
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412 | string. |
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413 | \retval #OP_EVERSION If the version field signaled a version this library |
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414 | does not know how to parse. |
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415 | \retval #OP_EIMPL If the channel mapping family was 255, which general |
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416 | purpose players should not attempt to play. |
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417 | \retval #OP_EBADHEADER If the contents of the packet otherwise violate the |
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418 | Ogg Opus specification: |
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419 | <ul> |
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420 | <li>Insufficient data,</li> |
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421 | <li>Too much data for the known minor versions,</li> |
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422 | <li>An unrecognized channel mapping family,</li> |
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423 | <li>Zero channels or too many channels,</li> |
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424 | <li>Zero coded streams,</li> |
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425 | <li>Too many coupled streams, or</li> |
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426 | <li>An invalid channel mapping index.</li> |
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427 | </ul>*/ |
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428 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT int opus_head_parse(OpusHead *_head, |
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429 | const unsigned char *_data,size_t _len) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
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430 | |||
431 | /**Converts a granule position to a sample offset for a given Ogg Opus stream. |
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432 | The sample offset is simply <code>_gp-_head->pre_skip</code>. |
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433 | Granule position values smaller than OpusHead#pre_skip correspond to audio |
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434 | that should never be played, and thus have no associated sample offset. |
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435 | This function returns -1 for such values. |
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436 | This function also correctly handles extremely large granule positions, |
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437 | which may have wrapped around to a negative number when stored in a signed |
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438 | ogg_int64_t value. |
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439 | \param _head The #OpusHead information from the ID header of the stream. |
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440 | \param _gp The granule position to convert. |
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441 | \return The sample offset associated with the given granule position |
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442 | (counting at a 48 kHz sampling rate), or the special value -1 on |
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443 | error (i.e., the granule position was smaller than the pre-skip |
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444 | amount).*/ |
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445 | ogg_int64_t opus_granule_sample(const OpusHead *_head,ogg_int64_t _gp) |
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446 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
447 | |||
448 | /**Parses the contents of the 'comment' header packet of an Ogg Opus stream. |
||
449 | \param[out] _tags An uninitialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
450 | This returns the contents of the parsed packet. |
||
451 | The contents of this structure are untouched on error. |
||
452 | This may be <code>NULL</code> to merely test the header |
||
453 | for validity. |
||
454 | \param[in] _data The contents of the 'comment' header packet. |
||
455 | \param _len The number of bytes of data in the 'info' header packet. |
||
456 | \retval 0 Success. |
||
457 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT If the data does not start with the "OpusTags" |
||
458 | string. |
||
459 | \retval #OP_EBADHEADER If the contents of the packet otherwise violate the |
||
460 | Ogg Opus specification. |
||
461 | \retval #OP_EFAULT If there wasn't enough memory to store the tags.*/ |
||
462 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT int opus_tags_parse(OpusTags *_tags, |
||
463 | const unsigned char *_data,size_t _len) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
464 | |||
465 | /**Performs a deep copy of an #OpusTags structure. |
||
466 | \param _dst The #OpusTags structure to copy into. |
||
467 | If this function fails, the contents of this structure remain |
||
468 | untouched. |
||
469 | \param _src The #OpusTags structure to copy from. |
||
470 | \retval 0 Success. |
||
471 | \retval #OP_EFAULT If there wasn't enough memory to copy the tags.*/ |
||
472 | int opus_tags_copy(OpusTags *_dst,const OpusTags *_src) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
473 | |||
474 | /**Initializes an #OpusTags structure. |
||
475 | This should be called on a freshly allocated #OpusTags structure before |
||
476 | attempting to use it. |
||
477 | \param _tags The #OpusTags structure to initialize.*/ |
||
478 | void opus_tags_init(OpusTags *_tags) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
479 | |||
480 | /**Add a (tag, value) pair to an initialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
481 | \note Neither opus_tags_add() nor opus_tags_add_comment() support values |
||
482 | containing embedded NULs, although the bitstream format does support them. |
||
483 | To add such tags, you will need to manipulate the #OpusTags structure |
||
484 | directly. |
||
485 | \param _tags The #OpusTags structure to add the (tag, value) pair to. |
||
486 | \param _tag A NUL-terminated, case-insensitive, ASCII string containing |
||
487 | the tag to add (without an '=' character). |
||
488 | \param _value A NUL-terminated UTF-8 containing the corresponding value. |
||
489 | \return 0 on success, or a negative value on failure. |
||
490 | \retval #OP_EFAULT An internal memory allocation failed.*/ |
||
491 | int opus_tags_add(OpusTags *_tags,const char *_tag,const char *_value) |
||
492 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2) OP_ARG_NONNULL(3); |
||
493 | |||
494 | /**Add a comment to an initialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
495 | \note Neither opus_tags_add_comment() nor opus_tags_add() support comments |
||
496 | containing embedded NULs, although the bitstream format does support them. |
||
497 | To add such tags, you will need to manipulate the #OpusTags structure |
||
498 | directly. |
||
499 | \param _tags The #OpusTags structure to add the comment to. |
||
500 | \param _comment A NUL-terminated UTF-8 string containing the comment in |
||
501 | "TAG=value" form. |
||
502 | \return 0 on success, or a negative value on failure. |
||
503 | \retval #OP_EFAULT An internal memory allocation failed.*/ |
||
504 | int opus_tags_add_comment(OpusTags *_tags,const char *_comment) |
||
505 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
506 | |||
507 | /**Replace the binary suffix data at the end of the packet (if any). |
||
508 | \param _tags An initialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
509 | \param _data A buffer of binary data to append after the encoded user |
||
510 | comments. |
||
511 | The least significant bit of the first byte of this data must |
||
512 | be set (to ensure the data is preserved by other editors). |
||
513 | \param _len The number of bytes of binary data to append. |
||
514 | This may be zero to remove any existing binary suffix data. |
||
515 | \return 0 on success, or a negative value on error. |
||
516 | \retval #OP_EINVAL \a _len was negative, or \a _len was positive but |
||
517 | \a _data was <code>NULL</code> or the least significant |
||
518 | bit of the first byte was not set. |
||
519 | \retval #OP_EFAULT An internal memory allocation failed.*/ |
||
520 | int opus_tags_set_binary_suffix(OpusTags *_tags, |
||
521 | const unsigned char *_data,int _len) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
522 | |||
523 | /**Look up a comment value by its tag. |
||
524 | \param _tags An initialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
525 | \param _tag The tag to look up. |
||
526 | \param _count The instance of the tag. |
||
527 | The same tag can appear multiple times, each with a distinct |
||
528 | value, so an index is required to retrieve them all. |
||
529 | The order in which these values appear is significant and |
||
530 | should be preserved. |
||
531 | Use opus_tags_query_count() to get the legal range for the |
||
532 | \a _count parameter. |
||
533 | \return A pointer to the queried tag's value. |
||
534 | This points directly to data in the #OpusTags structure. |
||
535 | It should not be modified or freed by the application, and |
||
536 | modifications to the structure may invalidate the pointer. |
||
537 | \retval NULL If no matching tag is found.*/ |
||
538 | const char *opus_tags_query(const OpusTags *_tags,const char *_tag,int _count) |
||
539 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
540 | |||
541 | /**Look up the number of instances of a tag. |
||
542 | Call this first when querying for a specific tag and then iterate over the |
||
543 | number of instances with separate calls to opus_tags_query() to retrieve |
||
544 | all the values for that tag in order. |
||
545 | \param _tags An initialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
546 | \param _tag The tag to look up. |
||
547 | \return The number of instances of this particular tag.*/ |
||
548 | int opus_tags_query_count(const OpusTags *_tags,const char *_tag) |
||
549 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
550 | |||
551 | /**Retrieve the binary suffix data at the end of the packet (if any). |
||
552 | \param _tags An initialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
553 | \param[out] _len Returns the number of bytes of binary suffix data returned. |
||
554 | \return A pointer to the binary suffix data, or <code>NULL</code> if none |
||
555 | was present.*/ |
||
556 | const unsigned char *opus_tags_get_binary_suffix(const OpusTags *_tags, |
||
557 | int *_len) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
558 | |||
559 | /**Get the album gain from an R128_ALBUM_GAIN tag, if one was specified. |
||
560 | This searches for the first R128_ALBUM_GAIN tag with a valid signed, |
||
561 | 16-bit decimal integer value and returns the value. |
||
562 | This routine is exposed merely for convenience for applications which wish |
||
563 | to do something special with the album gain (i.e., display it). |
||
564 | If you simply wish to apply the album gain instead of the header gain, you |
||
565 | can use op_set_gain_offset() with an #OP_ALBUM_GAIN type and no offset. |
||
566 | \param _tags An initialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
567 | \param[out] _gain_q8 The album gain, in 1/256ths of a dB. |
||
568 | This will lie in the range [-32768,32767], and should |
||
569 | be applied in <em>addition</em> to the header gain. |
||
570 | On error, no value is returned, and the previous |
||
571 | contents remain unchanged. |
||
572 | \return 0 on success, or a negative value on error. |
||
573 | \retval #OP_FALSE There was no album gain available in the given tags.*/ |
||
574 | int opus_tags_get_album_gain(const OpusTags *_tags,int *_gain_q8) |
||
575 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
576 | |||
577 | /**Get the track gain from an R128_TRACK_GAIN tag, if one was specified. |
||
578 | This searches for the first R128_TRACK_GAIN tag with a valid signed, |
||
579 | 16-bit decimal integer value and returns the value. |
||
580 | This routine is exposed merely for convenience for applications which wish |
||
581 | to do something special with the track gain (i.e., display it). |
||
582 | If you simply wish to apply the track gain instead of the header gain, you |
||
583 | can use op_set_gain_offset() with an #OP_TRACK_GAIN type and no offset. |
||
584 | \param _tags An initialized #OpusTags structure. |
||
585 | \param[out] _gain_q8 The track gain, in 1/256ths of a dB. |
||
586 | This will lie in the range [-32768,32767], and should |
||
587 | be applied in <em>addition</em> to the header gain. |
||
588 | On error, no value is returned, and the previous |
||
589 | contents remain unchanged. |
||
590 | \return 0 on success, or a negative value on error. |
||
591 | \retval #OP_FALSE There was no track gain available in the given tags.*/ |
||
592 | int opus_tags_get_track_gain(const OpusTags *_tags,int *_gain_q8) |
||
593 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
594 | |||
595 | /**Clears the #OpusTags structure. |
||
596 | This should be called on an #OpusTags structure after it is no longer |
||
597 | needed. |
||
598 | It will free all memory used by the structure members. |
||
599 | \param _tags The #OpusTags structure to clear.*/ |
||
600 | void opus_tags_clear(OpusTags *_tags) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
601 | |||
602 | /**Check if \a _comment is an instance of a \a _tag_name tag. |
||
603 | \see opus_tagncompare |
||
604 | \param _tag_name A NUL-terminated, case-insensitive, ASCII string containing |
||
605 | the name of the tag to check for (without the terminating |
||
606 | '=' character). |
||
607 | \param _comment The comment string to check. |
||
608 | \return An integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero if \a _comment |
||
609 | is found respectively, to be less than, to match, or be greater |
||
610 | than a "tag=value" string whose tag matches \a _tag_name.*/ |
||
611 | int opus_tagcompare(const char *_tag_name,const char *_comment); |
||
612 | |||
613 | /**Check if \a _comment is an instance of a \a _tag_name tag. |
||
614 | This version is slightly more efficient than opus_tagcompare() if the length |
||
615 | of the tag name is already known (e.g., because it is a constant). |
||
616 | \see opus_tagcompare |
||
617 | \param _tag_name A case-insensitive ASCII string containing the name of the |
||
618 | tag to check for (without the terminating '=' character). |
||
619 | \param _tag_len The number of characters in the tag name. |
||
620 | This must be non-negative. |
||
621 | \param _comment The comment string to check. |
||
622 | \return An integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero if \a _comment |
||
623 | is found respectively, to be less than, to match, or be greater |
||
624 | than a "tag=value" string whose tag matches the first \a _tag_len |
||
625 | characters of \a _tag_name.*/ |
||
626 | int opus_tagncompare(const char *_tag_name,int _tag_len,const char *_comment); |
||
627 | |||
628 | /**Parse a single METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE tag. |
||
629 | This decodes the BASE64-encoded content of the tag and returns a structure |
||
630 | with the MIME type, description, image parameters (if known), and the |
||
631 | compressed image data. |
||
632 | If the MIME type indicates the presence of an image format we recognize |
||
633 | (JPEG, PNG, or GIF) and the actual image data contains the magic signature |
||
634 | associated with that format, then the OpusPictureTag::format field will be |
||
635 | set to the corresponding format. |
||
636 | This is provided as a convenience to avoid requiring applications to parse |
||
637 | the MIME type and/or do their own format detection for the commonly used |
||
638 | formats. |
||
639 | In this case, we also attempt to extract the image parameters directly from |
||
640 | the image data (overriding any that were present in the tag, which the |
||
641 | specification says applications are not meant to rely on). |
||
642 | The application must still provide its own support for actually decoding the |
||
643 | image data and, if applicable, retrieving that data from URLs. |
||
644 | \param[out] _pic Returns the parsed picture data. |
||
645 | No sanitation is done on the type, MIME type, or |
||
646 | description fields, so these might return invalid values. |
||
647 | The contents of this structure are left unmodified on |
||
648 | failure. |
||
649 | \param _tag The METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE tag contents. |
||
650 | The leading "METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE=" portion is optional, |
||
651 | to allow the function to be used on either directly on the |
||
652 | values in OpusTags::user_comments or on the return value |
||
653 | of opus_tags_query(). |
||
654 | \return 0 on success or a negative value on error. |
||
655 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT The METADATA_BLOCK_PICTURE contents were not valid. |
||
656 | \retval #OP_EFAULT There was not enough memory to store the picture tag |
||
657 | contents.*/ |
||
658 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT int opus_picture_tag_parse(OpusPictureTag *_pic, |
||
659 | const char *_tag) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
660 | |||
661 | /**Initializes an #OpusPictureTag structure. |
||
662 | This should be called on a freshly allocated #OpusPictureTag structure |
||
663 | before attempting to use it. |
||
664 | \param _pic The #OpusPictureTag structure to initialize.*/ |
||
665 | void opus_picture_tag_init(OpusPictureTag *_pic) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
666 | |||
667 | /**Clears the #OpusPictureTag structure. |
||
668 | This should be called on an #OpusPictureTag structure after it is no longer |
||
669 | needed. |
||
670 | It will free all memory used by the structure members. |
||
671 | \param _pic The #OpusPictureTag structure to clear.*/ |
||
672 | void opus_picture_tag_clear(OpusPictureTag *_pic) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
673 | |||
674 | /*@}*/ |
||
675 | |||
676 | /*@}*/ |
||
677 | |||
678 | /**\defgroup url_options URL Reading Options*/ |
||
679 | /*@{*/ |
||
680 | /**\name URL reading options |
||
681 | Options for op_url_stream_create() and associated functions. |
||
682 | These allow you to provide proxy configuration parameters, skip SSL |
||
683 | certificate checks, etc. |
||
684 | Options are processed in order, and if the same option is passed multiple |
||
685 | times, only the value specified by the last occurrence has an effect |
||
686 | (unless otherwise specified). |
||
687 | They may be expanded in the future.*/ |
||
688 | /*@{*/ |
||
689 | |||
690 | /**@cond PRIVATE*/ |
||
691 | |||
692 | /*These are the raw numbers used to define the request codes. |
||
693 | They should not be used directly.*/ |
||
694 | #define OP_SSL_SKIP_CERTIFICATE_CHECK_REQUEST (6464) |
||
695 | #define OP_HTTP_PROXY_HOST_REQUEST (6528) |
||
696 | #define OP_HTTP_PROXY_PORT_REQUEST (6592) |
||
697 | #define OP_HTTP_PROXY_USER_REQUEST (6656) |
||
698 | #define OP_HTTP_PROXY_PASS_REQUEST (6720) |
||
699 | #define OP_GET_SERVER_INFO_REQUEST (6784) |
||
700 | |||
701 | #define OP_URL_OPT(_request) ((_request)+(char *)0) |
||
702 | |||
703 | /*These macros trigger compilation errors or warnings if the wrong types are |
||
704 | provided to one of the URL options.*/ |
||
705 | #define OP_CHECK_INT(_x) ((void)((_x)==(opus_int32)0),(opus_int32)(_x)) |
||
706 | #define OP_CHECK_CONST_CHAR_PTR(_x) ((_x)+((_x)-(const char *)(_x))) |
||
707 | #define OP_CHECK_SERVER_INFO_PTR(_x) ((_x)+((_x)-(OpusServerInfo *)(_x))) |
||
708 | |||
709 | /**@endcond*/ |
||
710 | |||
711 | /**HTTP/Shoutcast/Icecast server information associated with a URL.*/ |
||
712 | struct OpusServerInfo{ |
||
713 | /**The name of the server (icy-name/ice-name). |
||
714 | This is <code>NULL</code> if there was no <code>icy-name</code> or |
||
715 | <code>ice-name</code> header.*/ |
||
716 | char *name; |
||
717 | /**A short description of the server (icy-description/ice-description). |
||
718 | This is <code>NULL</code> if there was no <code>icy-description</code> or |
||
719 | <code>ice-description</code> header.*/ |
||
720 | char *description; |
||
721 | /**The genre the server falls under (icy-genre/ice-genre). |
||
722 | This is <code>NULL</code> if there was no <code>icy-genre</code> or |
||
723 | <code>ice-genre</code> header.*/ |
||
724 | char *genre; |
||
725 | /**The homepage for the server (icy-url/ice-url). |
||
726 | This is <code>NULL</code> if there was no <code>icy-url</code> or |
||
727 | <code>ice-url</code> header.*/ |
||
728 | char *url; |
||
729 | /**The software used by the origin server (Server). |
||
730 | This is <code>NULL</code> if there was no <code>Server</code> header.*/ |
||
731 | char *server; |
||
732 | /**The media type of the entity sent to the recepient (Content-Type). |
||
733 | This is <code>NULL</code> if there was no <code>Content-Type</code> |
||
734 | header.*/ |
||
735 | char *content_type; |
||
736 | /**The nominal stream bitrate in kbps (icy-br/ice-bitrate). |
||
737 | This is <code>-1</code> if there was no <code>icy-br</code> or |
||
738 | <code>ice-bitrate</code> header.*/ |
||
739 | opus_int32 bitrate_kbps; |
||
740 | /**Flag indicating whether the server is public (<code>1</code>) or not |
||
741 | (<code>0</code>) (icy-pub/ice-public). |
||
742 | This is <code>-1</code> if there was no <code>icy-pub</code> or |
||
743 | <code>ice-public</code> header.*/ |
||
744 | int is_public; |
||
745 | /**Flag indicating whether the server is using HTTPS instead of HTTP. |
||
746 | This is <code>0</code> unless HTTPS is being used. |
||
747 | This may not match the protocol used in the original URL if there were |
||
748 | redirections.*/ |
||
749 | int is_ssl; |
||
750 | }; |
||
751 | |||
752 | /**Initializes an #OpusServerInfo structure. |
||
753 | All fields are set as if the corresponding header was not available. |
||
754 | \param _info The #OpusServerInfo structure to initialize. |
||
755 | \note If you use this function, you must link against <tt>libopusurl</tt>.*/ |
||
756 | void opus_server_info_init(OpusServerInfo *_info) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
757 | |||
758 | /**Clears the #OpusServerInfo structure. |
||
759 | This should be called on an #OpusServerInfo structure after it is no longer |
||
760 | needed. |
||
761 | It will free all memory used by the structure members. |
||
762 | \param _info The #OpusServerInfo structure to clear. |
||
763 | \note If you use this function, you must link against <tt>libopusurl</tt>.*/ |
||
764 | void opus_server_info_clear(OpusServerInfo *_info) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
765 | |||
766 | /**Skip the certificate check when connecting via TLS/SSL (https). |
||
767 | \param _b <code>opus_int32</code>: Whether or not to skip the certificate |
||
768 | check. |
||
769 | The check will be skipped if \a _b is non-zero, and will not be |
||
770 | skipped if \a _b is zero. |
||
771 | \hideinitializer*/ |
||
772 | #define OP_SSL_SKIP_CERTIFICATE_CHECK(_b) \ |
||
773 | OP_URL_OPT(OP_SSL_SKIP_CERTIFICATE_CHECK_REQUEST),OP_CHECK_INT(_b) |
||
774 | |||
775 | /**Proxy connections through the given host. |
||
776 | If no port is specified via #OP_HTTP_PROXY_PORT, the port number defaults |
||
777 | to 8080 (http-alt). |
||
778 | All proxy parameters are ignored for non-http and non-https URLs. |
||
779 | \param _host <code>const char *</code>: The proxy server hostname. |
||
780 | This may be <code>NULL</code> to disable the use of a proxy |
||
781 | server. |
||
782 | \hideinitializer*/ |
||
783 | #define OP_HTTP_PROXY_HOST(_host) \ |
||
784 | OP_URL_OPT(OP_HTTP_PROXY_HOST_REQUEST),OP_CHECK_CONST_CHAR_PTR(_host) |
||
785 | |||
786 | /**Use the given port when proxying connections. |
||
787 | This option only has an effect if #OP_HTTP_PROXY_HOST is specified with a |
||
788 | non-<code>NULL</code> \a _host. |
||
789 | If this option is not provided, the proxy port number defaults to 8080 |
||
790 | (http-alt). |
||
791 | All proxy parameters are ignored for non-http and non-https URLs. |
||
792 | \param _port <code>opus_int32</code>: The proxy server port. |
||
793 | This must be in the range 0...65535 (inclusive), or the |
||
794 | URL function this is passed to will fail. |
||
795 | \hideinitializer*/ |
||
796 | #define OP_HTTP_PROXY_PORT(_port) \ |
||
797 | OP_URL_OPT(OP_HTTP_PROXY_PORT_REQUEST),OP_CHECK_INT(_port) |
||
798 | |||
799 | /**Use the given user name for authentication when proxying connections. |
||
800 | All proxy parameters are ignored for non-http and non-https URLs. |
||
801 | \param _user const char *: The proxy server user name. |
||
802 | This may be <code>NULL</code> to disable proxy |
||
803 | authentication. |
||
804 | A non-<code>NULL</code> value only has an effect |
||
805 | if #OP_HTTP_PROXY_HOST and #OP_HTTP_PROXY_PASS |
||
806 | are also specified with non-<code>NULL</code> |
||
807 | arguments. |
||
808 | \hideinitializer*/ |
||
809 | #define OP_HTTP_PROXY_USER(_user) \ |
||
810 | OP_URL_OPT(OP_HTTP_PROXY_USER_REQUEST),OP_CHECK_CONST_CHAR_PTR(_user) |
||
811 | |||
812 | /**Use the given password for authentication when proxying connections. |
||
813 | All proxy parameters are ignored for non-http and non-https URLs. |
||
814 | \param _pass const char *: The proxy server password. |
||
815 | This may be <code>NULL</code> to disable proxy |
||
816 | authentication. |
||
817 | A non-<code>NULL</code> value only has an effect |
||
818 | if #OP_HTTP_PROXY_HOST and #OP_HTTP_PROXY_USER |
||
819 | are also specified with non-<code>NULL</code> |
||
820 | arguments. |
||
821 | \hideinitializer*/ |
||
822 | #define OP_HTTP_PROXY_PASS(_pass) \ |
||
823 | OP_URL_OPT(OP_HTTP_PROXY_PASS_REQUEST),OP_CHECK_CONST_CHAR_PTR(_pass) |
||
824 | |||
825 | /**Parse information about the streaming server (if any) and return it. |
||
826 | Very little validation is done. |
||
827 | In particular, OpusServerInfo::url may not be a valid URL, |
||
828 | OpusServerInfo::bitrate_kbps may not really be in kbps, and |
||
829 | OpusServerInfo::content_type may not be a valid MIME type. |
||
830 | The character set of the string fields is not specified anywhere, and should |
||
831 | not be assumed to be valid UTF-8. |
||
832 | \param _info OpusServerInfo *: Returns information about the server. |
||
833 | If there is any error opening the stream, the |
||
834 | contents of this structure remain |
||
835 | unmodified. |
||
836 | On success, fills in the structure with the |
||
837 | server information that was available, if |
||
838 | any. |
||
839 | After a successful return, the contents of |
||
840 | this structure should be freed by calling |
||
841 | opus_server_info_clear(). |
||
842 | \hideinitializer*/ |
||
843 | #define OP_GET_SERVER_INFO(_info) \ |
||
844 | OP_URL_OPT(OP_GET_SERVER_INFO_REQUEST),OP_CHECK_SERVER_INFO_PTR(_info) |
||
845 | |||
846 | /*@}*/ |
||
847 | /*@}*/ |
||
848 | |||
849 | /**\defgroup stream_callbacks Abstract Stream Reading Interface*/ |
||
850 | /*@{*/ |
||
851 | /**\name Functions for reading from streams |
||
852 | These functions define the interface used to read from and seek in a stream |
||
853 | of data. |
||
854 | A stream does not need to implement seeking, but the decoder will not be |
||
855 | able to seek if it does not do so. |
||
856 | These functions also include some convenience routines for working with |
||
857 | standard <code>FILE</code> pointers, complete streams stored in a single |
||
858 | block of memory, or URLs.*/ |
||
859 | /*@{*/ |
||
860 | |||
861 | /**Reads up to \a _nbytes bytes of data from \a _stream. |
||
862 | \param _stream The stream to read from. |
||
863 | \param[out] _ptr The buffer to store the data in. |
||
864 | \param _nbytes The maximum number of bytes to read. |
||
865 | This function may return fewer, though it will not |
||
866 | return zero unless it reaches end-of-file. |
||
867 | \return The number of bytes successfully read, or a negative value on |
||
868 | error.*/ |
||
869 | typedef int (*op_read_func)(void *_stream,unsigned char *_ptr,int _nbytes); |
||
870 | |||
871 | /**Sets the position indicator for \a _stream. |
||
872 | The new position, measured in bytes, is obtained by adding \a _offset |
||
873 | bytes to the position specified by \a _whence. |
||
874 | If \a _whence is set to <code>SEEK_SET</code>, <code>SEEK_CUR</code>, or |
||
875 | <code>SEEK_END</code>, the offset is relative to the start of the stream, |
||
876 | the current position indicator, or end-of-file, respectively. |
||
877 | \retval 0 Success. |
||
878 | \retval -1 Seeking is not supported or an error occurred. |
||
879 | <code>errno</code> need not be set.*/ |
||
880 | typedef int (*op_seek_func)(void *_stream,opus_int64 _offset,int _whence); |
||
881 | |||
882 | /**Obtains the current value of the position indicator for \a _stream. |
||
883 | \return The current position indicator.*/ |
||
884 | typedef opus_int64 (*op_tell_func)(void *_stream); |
||
885 | |||
886 | /**Closes the underlying stream. |
||
887 | \retval 0 Success. |
||
888 | \retval EOF An error occurred. |
||
889 | <code>errno</code> need not be set.*/ |
||
890 | typedef int (*op_close_func)(void *_stream); |
||
891 | |||
892 | /**The callbacks used to access non-<code>FILE</code> stream resources. |
||
893 | The function prototypes are basically the same as for the stdio functions |
||
894 | <code>fread()</code>, <code>fseek()</code>, <code>ftell()</code>, and |
||
895 | <code>fclose()</code>. |
||
896 | The differences are that the <code>FILE *</code> arguments have been |
||
897 | replaced with a <code>void *</code>, which is to be used as a pointer to |
||
898 | whatever internal data these functions might need, that #seek and #tell |
||
899 | take and return 64-bit offsets, and that #seek <em>must</em> return -1 if |
||
900 | the stream is unseekable.*/ |
||
901 | struct OpusFileCallbacks{ |
||
902 | /**Used to read data from the stream. |
||
903 | This must not be <code>NULL</code>.*/ |
||
904 | op_read_func read; |
||
905 | /**Used to seek in the stream. |
||
906 | This may be <code>NULL</code> if seeking is not implemented.*/ |
||
907 | op_seek_func seek; |
||
908 | /**Used to return the current read position in the stream. |
||
909 | This may be <code>NULL</code> if seeking is not implemented.*/ |
||
910 | op_tell_func tell; |
||
911 | /**Used to close the stream when the decoder is freed. |
||
912 | This may be <code>NULL</code> to leave the stream open.*/ |
||
913 | op_close_func close; |
||
914 | }; |
||
915 | |||
916 | /**Opens a stream with <code>fopen()</code> and fills in a set of callbacks |
||
917 | that can be used to access it. |
||
918 | This is useful to avoid writing your own portable 64-bit seeking wrappers, |
||
919 | and also avoids cross-module linking issues on Windows, where a |
||
920 | <code>FILE *</code> must be accessed by routines defined in the same module |
||
921 | that opened it. |
||
922 | \param[out] _cb The callbacks to use for this file. |
||
923 | If there is an error opening the file, nothing will be |
||
924 | filled in here. |
||
925 | \param _path The path to the file to open. |
||
926 | On Windows, this string must be UTF-8 (to allow access to |
||
927 | files whose names cannot be represented in the current |
||
928 | MBCS code page). |
||
929 | All other systems use the native character encoding. |
||
930 | \param _mode The mode to open the file in. |
||
931 | \return A stream handle to use with the callbacks, or <code>NULL</code> on |
||
932 | error.*/ |
||
933 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT void *op_fopen(OpusFileCallbacks *_cb, |
||
934 | const char *_path,const char *_mode) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2) |
||
935 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(3); |
||
936 | |||
937 | /**Opens a stream with <code>fdopen()</code> and fills in a set of callbacks |
||
938 | that can be used to access it. |
||
939 | This is useful to avoid writing your own portable 64-bit seeking wrappers, |
||
940 | and also avoids cross-module linking issues on Windows, where a |
||
941 | <code>FILE *</code> must be accessed by routines defined in the same module |
||
942 | that opened it. |
||
943 | \param[out] _cb The callbacks to use for this file. |
||
944 | If there is an error opening the file, nothing will be |
||
945 | filled in here. |
||
946 | \param _fd The file descriptor to open. |
||
947 | \param _mode The mode to open the file in. |
||
948 | \return A stream handle to use with the callbacks, or <code>NULL</code> on |
||
949 | error.*/ |
||
950 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT void *op_fdopen(OpusFileCallbacks *_cb, |
||
951 | int _fd,const char *_mode) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(3); |
||
952 | |||
953 | /**Opens a stream with <code>freopen()</code> and fills in a set of callbacks |
||
954 | that can be used to access it. |
||
955 | This is useful to avoid writing your own portable 64-bit seeking wrappers, |
||
956 | and also avoids cross-module linking issues on Windows, where a |
||
957 | <code>FILE *</code> must be accessed by routines defined in the same module |
||
958 | that opened it. |
||
959 | \param[out] _cb The callbacks to use for this file. |
||
960 | If there is an error opening the file, nothing will be |
||
961 | filled in here. |
||
962 | \param _path The path to the file to open. |
||
963 | On Windows, this string must be UTF-8 (to allow access |
||
964 | to files whose names cannot be represented in the |
||
965 | current MBCS code page). |
||
966 | All other systems use the native character encoding. |
||
967 | \param _mode The mode to open the file in. |
||
968 | \param _stream A stream previously returned by op_fopen(), op_fdopen(), |
||
969 | or op_freopen(). |
||
970 | \return A stream handle to use with the callbacks, or <code>NULL</code> on |
||
971 | error.*/ |
||
972 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT void *op_freopen(OpusFileCallbacks *_cb, |
||
973 | const char *_path,const char *_mode,void *_stream) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) |
||
974 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(2) OP_ARG_NONNULL(3) OP_ARG_NONNULL(4); |
||
975 | |||
976 | /**Creates a stream that reads from the given block of memory. |
||
977 | This block of memory must contain the complete stream to decode. |
||
978 | This is useful for caching small streams (e.g., sound effects) in RAM. |
||
979 | \param[out] _cb The callbacks to use for this stream. |
||
980 | If there is an error creating the stream, nothing will be |
||
981 | filled in here. |
||
982 | \param _data The block of memory to read from. |
||
983 | \param _size The size of the block of memory. |
||
984 | \return A stream handle to use with the callbacks, or <code>NULL</code> on |
||
985 | error.*/ |
||
986 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT void *op_mem_stream_create(OpusFileCallbacks *_cb, |
||
987 | const unsigned char *_data,size_t _size) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
988 | |||
989 | /**Creates a stream that reads from the given URL. |
||
990 | This function behaves identically to op_url_stream_create(), except that it |
||
991 | takes a va_list instead of a variable number of arguments. |
||
992 | It does not call the <code>va_end</code> macro, and because it invokes the |
||
993 | <code>va_arg</code> macro, the value of \a _ap is undefined after the call. |
||
994 | \note If you use this function, you must link against <tt>libopusurl</tt>. |
||
995 | \param[out] _cb The callbacks to use for this stream. |
||
996 | If there is an error creating the stream, nothing will |
||
997 | be filled in here. |
||
998 | \param _url The URL to read from. |
||
999 | Currently only the <file:>, <http:>, and <https:> |
||
1000 | schemes are supported. |
||
1001 | Both <http:> and <https:> may be disabled at compile |
||
1002 | time, in which case opening such URLs will always fail. |
||
1003 | Currently this only supports URIs. |
||
1004 | IRIs should be converted to UTF-8 and URL-escaped, with |
||
1005 | internationalized domain names encoded in punycode, |
||
1006 | before passing them to this function. |
||
1007 | \param[in,out] _ap A list of the \ref url_options "optional flags" to use. |
||
1008 | This is a variable-length list of options terminated |
||
1009 | with <code>NULL</code>. |
||
1010 | \return A stream handle to use with the callbacks, or <code>NULL</code> on |
||
1011 | error.*/ |
||
1012 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT void *op_url_stream_vcreate(OpusFileCallbacks *_cb, |
||
1013 | const char *_url,va_list _ap) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
1014 | |||
1015 | /**Creates a stream that reads from the given URL. |
||
1016 | \note If you use this function, you must link against <tt>libopusurl</tt>. |
||
1017 | \param[out] _cb The callbacks to use for this stream. |
||
1018 | If there is an error creating the stream, nothing will be |
||
1019 | filled in here. |
||
1020 | \param _url The URL to read from. |
||
1021 | Currently only the <file:>, <http:>, and <https:> schemes |
||
1022 | are supported. |
||
1023 | Both <http:> and <https:> may be disabled at compile time, |
||
1024 | in which case opening such URLs will always fail. |
||
1025 | Currently this only supports URIs. |
||
1026 | IRIs should be converted to UTF-8 and URL-escaped, with |
||
1027 | internationalized domain names encoded in punycode, before |
||
1028 | passing them to this function. |
||
1029 | \param ... The \ref url_options "optional flags" to use. |
||
1030 | This is a variable-length list of options terminated with |
||
1031 | <code>NULL</code>. |
||
1032 | \return A stream handle to use with the callbacks, or <code>NULL</code> on |
||
1033 | error.*/ |
||
1034 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT void *op_url_stream_create(OpusFileCallbacks *_cb, |
||
1035 | const char *_url,...) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
1036 | |||
1037 | /*@}*/ |
||
1038 | /*@}*/ |
||
1039 | |||
1040 | /**\defgroup stream_open_close Opening and Closing*/ |
||
1041 | /*@{*/ |
||
1042 | /**\name Functions for opening and closing streams |
||
1043 | |||
1044 | These functions allow you to test a stream to see if it is Opus, open it, |
||
1045 | and close it. |
||
1046 | Several flavors are provided for each of the built-in stream types, plus a |
||
1047 | more general version which takes a set of application-provided callbacks.*/ |
||
1048 | /*@{*/ |
||
1049 | |||
1050 | /**Test to see if this is an Opus stream. |
||
1051 | For good results, you will need at least 57 bytes (for a pure Opus-only |
||
1052 | stream). |
||
1053 | Something like 512 bytes will give more reliable results for multiplexed |
||
1054 | streams. |
||
1055 | This function is meant to be a quick-rejection filter. |
||
1056 | Its purpose is not to guarantee that a stream is a valid Opus stream, but to |
||
1057 | ensure that it looks enough like Opus that it isn't going to be recognized |
||
1058 | as some other format (except possibly an Opus stream that is also |
||
1059 | multiplexed with other codecs, such as video). |
||
1060 | \param[out] _head The parsed ID header contents. |
||
1061 | You may pass <code>NULL</code> if you do not need |
||
1062 | this information. |
||
1063 | If the function fails, the contents of this structure |
||
1064 | remain untouched. |
||
1065 | \param _initial_data An initial buffer of data from the start of the |
||
1066 | stream. |
||
1067 | \param _initial_bytes The number of bytes in \a _initial_data. |
||
1068 | \return 0 if the data appears to be Opus, or a negative value on error. |
||
1069 | \retval #OP_FALSE There was not enough data to tell if this was an Opus |
||
1070 | stream or not. |
||
1071 | \retval #OP_EFAULT An internal memory allocation failed. |
||
1072 | \retval #OP_EIMPL The stream used a feature that is not implemented, |
||
1073 | such as an unsupported channel family. |
||
1074 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT If the data did not contain a recognizable ID |
||
1075 | header for an Opus stream. |
||
1076 | \retval #OP_EVERSION If the version field signaled a version this library |
||
1077 | does not know how to parse. |
||
1078 | \retval #OP_EBADHEADER The ID header was not properly formatted or contained |
||
1079 | illegal values.*/ |
||
1080 | int op_test(OpusHead *_head, |
||
1081 | const unsigned char *_initial_data,size_t _initial_bytes); |
||
1082 | |||
1083 | /**Open a stream from the given file path. |
||
1084 | \param _path The path to the file to open. |
||
1085 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1086 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want the |
||
1087 | failure code. |
||
1088 | The failure code will be #OP_EFAULT if the file could not |
||
1089 | be opened, or one of the other failure codes from |
||
1090 | op_open_callbacks() otherwise. |
||
1091 | \return A freshly opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error.*/ |
||
1092 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_open_file(const char *_path,int *_error) |
||
1093 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1094 | |||
1095 | /**Open a stream from a memory buffer. |
||
1096 | \param _data The memory buffer to open. |
||
1097 | \param _size The number of bytes in the buffer. |
||
1098 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1099 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want the |
||
1100 | failure code. |
||
1101 | See op_open_callbacks() for a full list of failure codes. |
||
1102 | \return A freshly opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error.*/ |
||
1103 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_open_memory(const unsigned char *_data, |
||
1104 | size_t _size,int *_error); |
||
1105 | |||
1106 | /**Open a stream from a URL. |
||
1107 | This function behaves identically to op_open_url(), except that it |
||
1108 | takes a va_list instead of a variable number of arguments. |
||
1109 | It does not call the <code>va_end</code> macro, and because it invokes the |
||
1110 | <code>va_arg</code> macro, the value of \a _ap is undefined after the call. |
||
1111 | \note If you use this function, you must link against <tt>libopusurl</tt>. |
||
1112 | \param _url The URL to open. |
||
1113 | Currently only the <file:>, <http:>, and <https:> |
||
1114 | schemes are supported. |
||
1115 | Both <http:> and <https:> may be disabled at compile |
||
1116 | time, in which case opening such URLs will always |
||
1117 | fail. |
||
1118 | Currently this only supports URIs. |
||
1119 | IRIs should be converted to UTF-8 and URL-escaped, |
||
1120 | with internationalized domain names encoded in |
||
1121 | punycode, before passing them to this function. |
||
1122 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1123 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want |
||
1124 | the failure code. |
||
1125 | See op_open_callbacks() for a full list of failure |
||
1126 | codes. |
||
1127 | \param[in,out] _ap A list of the \ref url_options "optional flags" to |
||
1128 | use. |
||
1129 | This is a variable-length list of options terminated |
||
1130 | with <code>NULL</code>. |
||
1131 | \return A freshly opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error.*/ |
||
1132 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_vopen_url(const char *_url, |
||
1133 | int *_error,va_list _ap) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1134 | |||
1135 | /**Open a stream from a URL. |
||
1136 | \note If you use this function, you must link against <tt>libopusurl</tt>. |
||
1137 | \param _url The URL to open. |
||
1138 | Currently only the <file:>, <http:>, and <https:> schemes |
||
1139 | are supported. |
||
1140 | Both <http:> and <https:> may be disabled at compile |
||
1141 | time, in which case opening such URLs will always fail. |
||
1142 | Currently this only supports URIs. |
||
1143 | IRIs should be converted to UTF-8 and URL-escaped, with |
||
1144 | internationalized domain names encoded in punycode, |
||
1145 | before passing them to this function. |
||
1146 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1147 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want the |
||
1148 | failure code. |
||
1149 | See op_open_callbacks() for a full list of failure codes. |
||
1150 | \param ... The \ref url_options "optional flags" to use. |
||
1151 | This is a variable-length list of options terminated with |
||
1152 | <code>NULL</code>. |
||
1153 | \return A freshly opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error.*/ |
||
1154 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_open_url(const char *_url, |
||
1155 | int *_error,...) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1156 | |||
1157 | /**Open a stream using the given set of callbacks to access it. |
||
1158 | \param _stream The stream to read from (e.g., a <code>FILE *</code>). |
||
1159 | This value will be passed verbatim as the first |
||
1160 | argument to all of the callbacks. |
||
1161 | \param _cb The callbacks with which to access the stream. |
||
1162 | <code><a href="#op_read_func">read()</a></code> must |
||
1163 | be implemented. |
||
1164 | <code><a href="#op_seek_func">seek()</a></code> and |
||
1165 | <code><a href="#op_tell_func">tell()</a></code> may |
||
1166 | be <code>NULL</code>, or may always return -1 to |
||
1167 | indicate a stream is unseekable, but if |
||
1168 | <code><a href="#op_seek_func">seek()</a></code> is |
||
1169 | implemented and succeeds on a particular stream, then |
||
1170 | <code><a href="#op_tell_func">tell()</a></code> must |
||
1171 | also. |
||
1172 | <code><a href="#op_close_func">close()</a></code> may |
||
1173 | be <code>NULL</code>, but if it is not, it will be |
||
1174 | called when the \c OggOpusFile is destroyed by |
||
1175 | op_free(). |
||
1176 | It will not be called if op_open_callbacks() fails |
||
1177 | with an error. |
||
1178 | \param _initial_data An initial buffer of data from the start of the |
||
1179 | stream. |
||
1180 | Applications can read some number of bytes from the |
||
1181 | start of the stream to help identify this as an Opus |
||
1182 | stream, and then provide them here to allow the |
||
1183 | stream to be opened, even if it is unseekable. |
||
1184 | \param _initial_bytes The number of bytes in \a _initial_data. |
||
1185 | If the stream is seekable, its current position (as |
||
1186 | reported by |
||
1187 | <code><a href="#opus_tell_func">tell()</a></code> |
||
1188 | at the start of this function) must be equal to |
||
1189 | \a _initial_bytes. |
||
1190 | Otherwise, seeking to absolute positions will |
||
1191 | generate inconsistent results. |
||
1192 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1193 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want |
||
1194 | the failure code. |
||
1195 | The failure code will be one of |
||
1196 | <dl> |
||
1197 | <dt>#OP_EREAD</dt> |
||
1198 | <dd>An underlying read, seek, or tell operation |
||
1199 | failed when it should have succeeded, or we failed |
||
1200 | to find data in the stream we had seen before.</dd> |
||
1201 | <dt>#OP_EFAULT</dt> |
||
1202 | <dd>There was a memory allocation failure, or an |
||
1203 | internal library error.</dd> |
||
1204 | <dt>#OP_EIMPL</dt> |
||
1205 | <dd>The stream used a feature that is not |
||
1206 | implemented, such as an unsupported channel |
||
1207 | family.</dd> |
||
1208 | <dt>#OP_EINVAL</dt> |
||
1209 | <dd><code><a href="#op_seek_func">seek()</a></code> |
||
1210 | was implemented and succeeded on this source, but |
||
1211 | <code><a href="#op_tell_func">tell()</a></code> |
||
1212 | did not, or the starting position indicator was |
||
1213 | not equal to \a _initial_bytes.</dd> |
||
1214 | <dt>#OP_ENOTFORMAT</dt> |
||
1215 | <dd>The stream contained a link that did not have |
||
1216 | any logical Opus streams in it.</dd> |
||
1217 | <dt>#OP_EBADHEADER</dt> |
||
1218 | <dd>A required header packet was not properly |
||
1219 | formatted, contained illegal values, or was missing |
||
1220 | altogether.</dd> |
||
1221 | <dt>#OP_EVERSION</dt> |
||
1222 | <dd>An ID header contained an unrecognized version |
||
1223 | number.</dd> |
||
1224 | <dt>#OP_EBADLINK</dt> |
||
1225 | <dd>We failed to find data we had seen before after |
||
1226 | seeking.</dd> |
||
1227 | <dt>#OP_EBADTIMESTAMP</dt> |
||
1228 | <dd>The first or last timestamp in a link failed |
||
1229 | basic validity checks.</dd> |
||
1230 | </dl> |
||
1231 | \return A freshly opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error. |
||
1232 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> does <em>not</em> take ownership of the stream |
||
1233 | if the call fails. |
||
1234 | The calling application is responsible for closing the stream if |
||
1235 | this call returns an error.*/ |
||
1236 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_open_callbacks(void *_stream, |
||
1237 | const OpusFileCallbacks *_cb,const unsigned char *_initial_data, |
||
1238 | size_t _initial_bytes,int *_error) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
1239 | |||
1240 | /**Partially open a stream from the given file path. |
||
1241 | \see op_test_callbacks |
||
1242 | \param _path The path to the file to open. |
||
1243 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1244 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want the |
||
1245 | failure code. |
||
1246 | The failure code will be #OP_EFAULT if the file could not |
||
1247 | be opened, or one of the other failure codes from |
||
1248 | op_open_callbacks() otherwise. |
||
1249 | \return A partially opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error.*/ |
||
1250 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_test_file(const char *_path,int *_error) |
||
1251 | OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1252 | |||
1253 | /**Partially open a stream from a memory buffer. |
||
1254 | \see op_test_callbacks |
||
1255 | \param _data The memory buffer to open. |
||
1256 | \param _size The number of bytes in the buffer. |
||
1257 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1258 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want the |
||
1259 | failure code. |
||
1260 | See op_open_callbacks() for a full list of failure codes. |
||
1261 | \return A partially opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error.*/ |
||
1262 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_test_memory(const unsigned char *_data, |
||
1263 | size_t _size,int *_error); |
||
1264 | |||
1265 | /**Partially open a stream from a URL. |
||
1266 | This function behaves identically to op_test_url(), except that it |
||
1267 | takes a va_list instead of a variable number of arguments. |
||
1268 | It does not call the <code>va_end</code> macro, and because it invokes the |
||
1269 | <code>va_arg</code> macro, the value of \a _ap is undefined after the call. |
||
1270 | \note If you use this function, you must link against <tt>libopusurl</tt>. |
||
1271 | \see op_test_url |
||
1272 | \see op_test_callbacks |
||
1273 | \param _url The URL to open. |
||
1274 | Currently only the <file:>, <http:>, and <https:> |
||
1275 | schemes are supported. |
||
1276 | Both <http:> and <https:> may be disabled at compile |
||
1277 | time, in which case opening such URLs will always |
||
1278 | fail. |
||
1279 | Currently this only supports URIs. |
||
1280 | IRIs should be converted to UTF-8 and URL-escaped, |
||
1281 | with internationalized domain names encoded in |
||
1282 | punycode, before passing them to this function. |
||
1283 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1284 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want |
||
1285 | the failure code. |
||
1286 | See op_open_callbacks() for a full list of failure |
||
1287 | codes. |
||
1288 | \param[in,out] _ap A list of the \ref url_options "optional flags" to |
||
1289 | use. |
||
1290 | This is a variable-length list of options terminated |
||
1291 | with <code>NULL</code>. |
||
1292 | \return A partially opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error.*/ |
||
1293 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_vtest_url(const char *_url, |
||
1294 | int *_error,va_list _ap) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1295 | |||
1296 | /**Partially open a stream from a URL. |
||
1297 | \note If you use this function, you must link against <tt>libopusurl</tt>. |
||
1298 | \see op_test_callbacks |
||
1299 | \param _url The URL to open. |
||
1300 | Currently only the <file:>, <http:>, and <https:> |
||
1301 | schemes are supported. |
||
1302 | Both <http:> and <https:> may be disabled at compile |
||
1303 | time, in which case opening such URLs will always fail. |
||
1304 | Currently this only supports URIs. |
||
1305 | IRIs should be converted to UTF-8 and URL-escaped, with |
||
1306 | internationalized domain names encoded in punycode, |
||
1307 | before passing them to this function. |
||
1308 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1309 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want the |
||
1310 | failure code. |
||
1311 | See op_open_callbacks() for a full list of failure |
||
1312 | codes. |
||
1313 | \param ... The \ref url_options "optional flags" to use. |
||
1314 | This is a variable-length list of options terminated |
||
1315 | with <code>NULL</code>. |
||
1316 | \return A partially opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error.*/ |
||
1317 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_test_url(const char *_url, |
||
1318 | int *_error,...) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1319 | |||
1320 | /**Partially open a stream using the given set of callbacks to access it. |
||
1321 | This tests for Opusness and loads the headers for the first link. |
||
1322 | It does not seek (although it tests for seekability). |
||
1323 | You can query a partially open stream for the few pieces of basic |
||
1324 | information returned by op_serialno(), op_channel_count(), op_head(), and |
||
1325 | op_tags() (but only for the first link). |
||
1326 | You may also determine if it is seekable via a call to op_seekable(). |
||
1327 | You cannot read audio from the stream, seek, get the size or duration, |
||
1328 | get information from links other than the first one, or even get the total |
||
1329 | number of links until you finish opening the stream with op_test_open(). |
||
1330 | If you do not need to do any of these things, you can dispose of it with |
||
1331 | op_free() instead. |
||
1332 | |||
1333 | This function is provided mostly to simplify porting existing code that used |
||
1334 | <tt>libvorbisfile</tt>. |
||
1335 | For new code, you are likely better off using op_test() instead, which |
||
1336 | is less resource-intensive, requires less data to succeed, and imposes a |
||
1337 | hard limit on the amount of data it examines (important for unseekable |
||
1338 | streams, where all such data must be buffered until you are sure of the |
||
1339 | stream type). |
||
1340 | \param _stream The stream to read from (e.g., a <code>FILE *</code>). |
||
1341 | This value will be passed verbatim as the first |
||
1342 | argument to all of the callbacks. |
||
1343 | \param _cb The callbacks with which to access the stream. |
||
1344 | <code><a href="#op_read_func">read()</a></code> must |
||
1345 | be implemented. |
||
1346 | <code><a href="#op_seek_func">seek()</a></code> and |
||
1347 | <code><a href="#op_tell_func">tell()</a></code> may |
||
1348 | be <code>NULL</code>, or may always return -1 to |
||
1349 | indicate a stream is unseekable, but if |
||
1350 | <code><a href="#op_seek_func">seek()</a></code> is |
||
1351 | implemented and succeeds on a particular stream, then |
||
1352 | <code><a href="#op_tell_func">tell()</a></code> must |
||
1353 | also. |
||
1354 | <code><a href="#op_close_func">close()</a></code> may |
||
1355 | be <code>NULL</code>, but if it is not, it will be |
||
1356 | called when the \c OggOpusFile is destroyed by |
||
1357 | op_free(). |
||
1358 | It will not be called if op_open_callbacks() fails |
||
1359 | with an error. |
||
1360 | \param _initial_data An initial buffer of data from the start of the |
||
1361 | stream. |
||
1362 | Applications can read some number of bytes from the |
||
1363 | start of the stream to help identify this as an Opus |
||
1364 | stream, and then provide them here to allow the |
||
1365 | stream to be tested more thoroughly, even if it is |
||
1366 | unseekable. |
||
1367 | \param _initial_bytes The number of bytes in \a _initial_data. |
||
1368 | If the stream is seekable, its current position (as |
||
1369 | reported by |
||
1370 | <code><a href="#opus_tell_func">tell()</a></code> |
||
1371 | at the start of this function) must be equal to |
||
1372 | \a _initial_bytes. |
||
1373 | Otherwise, seeking to absolute positions will |
||
1374 | generate inconsistent results. |
||
1375 | \param[out] _error Returns 0 on success, or a failure code on error. |
||
1376 | You may pass in <code>NULL</code> if you don't want |
||
1377 | the failure code. |
||
1378 | See op_open_callbacks() for a full list of failure |
||
1379 | codes. |
||
1380 | \return A partially opened \c OggOpusFile, or <code>NULL</code> on error. |
||
1381 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> does <em>not</em> take ownership of the stream |
||
1382 | if the call fails. |
||
1383 | The calling application is responsible for closing the stream if |
||
1384 | this call returns an error.*/ |
||
1385 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT OggOpusFile *op_test_callbacks(void *_stream, |
||
1386 | const OpusFileCallbacks *_cb,const unsigned char *_initial_data, |
||
1387 | size_t _initial_bytes,int *_error) OP_ARG_NONNULL(2); |
||
1388 | |||
1389 | /**Finish opening a stream partially opened with op_test_callbacks() or one of |
||
1390 | the associated convenience functions. |
||
1391 | If this function fails, you are still responsible for freeing the |
||
1392 | \c OggOpusFile with op_free(). |
||
1393 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile to finish opening. |
||
1394 | \return 0 on success, or a negative value on error. |
||
1395 | \retval #OP_EREAD An underlying read, seek, or tell operation failed |
||
1396 | when it should have succeeded. |
||
1397 | \retval #OP_EFAULT There was a memory allocation failure, or an |
||
1398 | internal library error. |
||
1399 | \retval #OP_EIMPL The stream used a feature that is not implemented, |
||
1400 | such as an unsupported channel family. |
||
1401 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was not partially opened with |
||
1402 | op_test_callbacks() or one of the associated |
||
1403 | convenience functions. |
||
1404 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT The stream contained a link that did not have any |
||
1405 | logical Opus streams in it. |
||
1406 | \retval #OP_EBADHEADER A required header packet was not properly |
||
1407 | formatted, contained illegal values, or was |
||
1408 | missing altogether. |
||
1409 | \retval #OP_EVERSION An ID header contained an unrecognized version |
||
1410 | number. |
||
1411 | \retval #OP_EBADLINK We failed to find data we had seen before after |
||
1412 | seeking. |
||
1413 | \retval #OP_EBADTIMESTAMP The first or last timestamp in a link failed basic |
||
1414 | validity checks.*/ |
||
1415 | int op_test_open(OggOpusFile *_of) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1416 | |||
1417 | /**Release all memory used by an \c OggOpusFile. |
||
1418 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile to free.*/ |
||
1419 | void op_free(OggOpusFile *_of); |
||
1420 | |||
1421 | /*@}*/ |
||
1422 | /*@}*/ |
||
1423 | |||
1424 | /**\defgroup stream_info Stream Information*/ |
||
1425 | /*@{*/ |
||
1426 | /**\name Functions for obtaining information about streams |
||
1427 | |||
1428 | These functions allow you to get basic information about a stream, including |
||
1429 | seekability, the number of links (for chained streams), plus the size, |
||
1430 | duration, bitrate, header parameters, and meta information for each link |
||
1431 | (or, where available, the stream as a whole). |
||
1432 | Some of these (size, duration) are only available for seekable streams. |
||
1433 | You can also query the current stream position, link, and playback time, |
||
1434 | and instantaneous bitrate during playback. |
||
1435 | |||
1436 | Some of these functions may be used successfully on the partially open |
||
1437 | streams returned by op_test_callbacks() or one of the associated |
||
1438 | convenience functions. |
||
1439 | Their documention will indicate so explicitly.*/ |
||
1440 | /*@{*/ |
||
1441 | |||
1442 | /**Returns whether or not the stream being read is seekable. |
||
1443 | This is true if |
||
1444 | <ol> |
||
1445 | <li>The <code><a href="#op_seek_func">seek()</a></code> and |
||
1446 | <code><a href="#op_tell_func">tell()</a></code> callbacks are both |
||
1447 | non-<code>NULL</code>,</li> |
||
1448 | <li>The <code><a href="#op_seek_func">seek()</a></code> callback was |
||
1449 | successfully executed at least once, and</li> |
||
1450 | <li>The <code><a href="#op_tell_func">tell()</a></code> callback was |
||
1451 | successfully able to report the position indicator afterwards.</li> |
||
1452 | </ol> |
||
1453 | This function may be called on partially-opened streams. |
||
1454 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile whose seekable status is to be returned. |
||
1455 | \return A non-zero value if seekable, and 0 if unseekable.*/ |
||
1456 | int op_seekable(const OggOpusFile *_of) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1457 | |||
1458 | /**Returns the number of links in this chained stream. |
||
1459 | This function may be called on partially-opened streams, but it will always |
||
1460 | return 1. |
||
1461 | The actual number of links is not known until the stream is fully opened. |
||
1462 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the link count. |
||
1463 | \return For fully-open seekable streams, this returns the total number of |
||
1464 | links in the whole stream, which will be at least 1. |
||
1465 | For partially-open or unseekable streams, this always returns 1.*/ |
||
1466 | int op_link_count(const OggOpusFile *_of) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1467 | |||
1468 | /**Get the serial number of the given link in a (possibly-chained) Ogg Opus |
||
1469 | stream. |
||
1470 | This function may be called on partially-opened streams, but it will always |
||
1471 | return the serial number of the Opus stream in the first link. |
||
1472 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the serial number. |
||
1473 | \param _li The index of the link whose serial number should be retrieved. |
||
1474 | Use a negative number to get the serial number of the current |
||
1475 | link. |
||
1476 | \return The serial number of the given link. |
||
1477 | If \a _li is greater than the total number of links, this returns |
||
1478 | the serial number of the last link. |
||
1479 | If the stream is not seekable, this always returns the serial number |
||
1480 | of the current link.*/ |
||
1481 | opus_uint32 op_serialno(const OggOpusFile *_of,int _li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1482 | |||
1483 | /**Get the channel count of the given link in a (possibly-chained) Ogg Opus |
||
1484 | stream. |
||
1485 | This is equivalent to <code>op_head(_of,_li)->channel_count</code>, but |
||
1486 | is provided for convenience. |
||
1487 | This function may be called on partially-opened streams, but it will always |
||
1488 | return the channel count of the Opus stream in the first link. |
||
1489 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the channel count. |
||
1490 | \param _li The index of the link whose channel count should be retrieved. |
||
1491 | Use a negative number to get the channel count of the current |
||
1492 | link. |
||
1493 | \return The channel count of the given link. |
||
1494 | If \a _li is greater than the total number of links, this returns |
||
1495 | the channel count of the last link. |
||
1496 | If the stream is not seekable, this always returns the channel count |
||
1497 | of the current link.*/ |
||
1498 | int op_channel_count(const OggOpusFile *_of,int _li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1499 | |||
1500 | /**Get the total (compressed) size of the stream, or of an individual link in |
||
1501 | a (possibly-chained) Ogg Opus stream, including all headers and Ogg muxing |
||
1502 | overhead. |
||
1503 | \warning If the Opus stream (or link) is concurrently multiplexed with other |
||
1504 | logical streams (e.g., video), this returns the size of the entire stream |
||
1505 | (or link), not just the number of bytes in the first logical Opus stream. |
||
1506 | Returning the latter would require scanning the entire file. |
||
1507 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the compressed size. |
||
1508 | \param _li The index of the link whose compressed size should be computed. |
||
1509 | Use a negative number to get the compressed size of the entire |
||
1510 | stream. |
||
1511 | \return The compressed size of the entire stream if \a _li is negative, the |
||
1512 | compressed size of link \a _li if it is non-negative, or a negative |
||
1513 | value on error. |
||
1514 | The compressed size of the entire stream may be smaller than that |
||
1515 | of the underlying stream if trailing garbage was detected in the |
||
1516 | file. |
||
1517 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream is not seekable (so we can't know the length), |
||
1518 | \a _li wasn't less than the total number of links in |
||
1519 | the stream, or the stream was only partially open.*/ |
||
1520 | opus_int64 op_raw_total(const OggOpusFile *_of,int _li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1521 | |||
1522 | /**Get the total PCM length (number of samples at 48 kHz) of the stream, or of |
||
1523 | an individual link in a (possibly-chained) Ogg Opus stream. |
||
1524 | Users looking for <code>op_time_total()</code> should use op_pcm_total() |
||
1525 | instead. |
||
1526 | Because timestamps in Opus are fixed at 48 kHz, there is no need for a |
||
1527 | separate function to convert this to seconds (and leaving it out avoids |
||
1528 | introducing floating point to the API, for those that wish to avoid it). |
||
1529 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the PCM offset. |
||
1530 | \param _li The index of the link whose PCM length should be computed. |
||
1531 | Use a negative number to get the PCM length of the entire stream. |
||
1532 | \return The PCM length of the entire stream if \a _li is negative, the PCM |
||
1533 | length of link \a _li if it is non-negative, or a negative value on |
||
1534 | error. |
||
1535 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream is not seekable (so we can't know the length), |
||
1536 | \a _li wasn't less than the total number of links in |
||
1537 | the stream, or the stream was only partially open.*/ |
||
1538 | ogg_int64_t op_pcm_total(const OggOpusFile *_of,int _li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1539 | |||
1540 | /**Get the ID header information for the given link in a (possibly chained) Ogg |
||
1541 | Opus stream. |
||
1542 | This function may be called on partially-opened streams, but it will always |
||
1543 | return the ID header information of the Opus stream in the first link. |
||
1544 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the ID header |
||
1545 | information. |
||
1546 | \param _li The index of the link whose ID header information should be |
||
1547 | retrieved. |
||
1548 | Use a negative number to get the ID header information of the |
||
1549 | current link. |
||
1550 | For an unseekable stream, \a _li is ignored, and the ID header |
||
1551 | information for the current link is always returned, if |
||
1552 | available. |
||
1553 | \return The contents of the ID header for the given link.*/ |
||
1554 | const OpusHead *op_head(const OggOpusFile *_of,int _li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1555 | |||
1556 | /**Get the comment header information for the given link in a (possibly |
||
1557 | chained) Ogg Opus stream. |
||
1558 | This function may be called on partially-opened streams, but it will always |
||
1559 | return the tags from the Opus stream in the first link. |
||
1560 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the comment header |
||
1561 | information. |
||
1562 | \param _li The index of the link whose comment header information should be |
||
1563 | retrieved. |
||
1564 | Use a negative number to get the comment header information of |
||
1565 | the current link. |
||
1566 | For an unseekable stream, \a _li is ignored, and the comment |
||
1567 | header information for the current link is always returned, if |
||
1568 | available. |
||
1569 | \return The contents of the comment header for the given link, or |
||
1570 | <code>NULL</code> if this is an unseekable stream that encountered |
||
1571 | an invalid link.*/ |
||
1572 | const OpusTags *op_tags(const OggOpusFile *_of,int _li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1573 | |||
1574 | /**Retrieve the index of the current link. |
||
1575 | This is the link that produced the data most recently read by |
||
1576 | op_read_float() or its associated functions, or, after a seek, the link |
||
1577 | that the seek target landed in. |
||
1578 | Reading more data may advance the link index (even on the first read after a |
||
1579 | seek). |
||
1580 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the current link index. |
||
1581 | \return The index of the current link on success, or a negative value on |
||
1582 | failure. |
||
1583 | For seekable streams, this is a number between 0 (inclusive) and the |
||
1584 | value returned by op_link_count() (exclusive). |
||
1585 | For unseekable streams, this value starts at 0 and increments by one |
||
1586 | each time a new link is encountered (even though op_link_count() |
||
1587 | always returns 1). |
||
1588 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open.*/ |
||
1589 | int op_current_link(const OggOpusFile *_of) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1590 | |||
1591 | /**Computes the bitrate of the stream, or of an individual link in a |
||
1592 | (possibly-chained) Ogg Opus stream. |
||
1593 | The stream must be seekable to compute the bitrate. |
||
1594 | For unseekable streams, use op_bitrate_instant() to get periodic estimates. |
||
1595 | \warning If the Opus stream (or link) is concurrently multiplexed with other |
||
1596 | logical streams (e.g., video), this uses the size of the entire stream (or |
||
1597 | link) to compute the bitrate, not just the number of bytes in the first |
||
1598 | logical Opus stream. |
||
1599 | Returning the latter requires scanning the entire file, but this may be done |
||
1600 | by decoding the whole file and calling op_bitrate_instant() once at the |
||
1601 | end. |
||
1602 | Install a trivial decoding callback with op_set_decode_callback() if you |
||
1603 | wish to skip actual decoding during this process. |
||
1604 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the bitrate. |
||
1605 | \param _li The index of the link whose bitrate should be computed. |
||
1606 | Use a negative number to get the bitrate of the whole stream. |
||
1607 | \return The bitrate on success, or a negative value on error. |
||
1608 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open, the stream was not |
||
1609 | seekable, or \a _li was larger than the number of |
||
1610 | links.*/ |
||
1611 | opus_int32 op_bitrate(const OggOpusFile *_of,int _li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1612 | |||
1613 | /**Compute the instantaneous bitrate, measured as the ratio of bits to playable |
||
1614 | samples decoded since a) the last call to op_bitrate_instant(), b) the last |
||
1615 | seek, or c) the start of playback, whichever was most recent. |
||
1616 | This will spike somewhat after a seek or at the start/end of a chain |
||
1617 | boundary, as pre-skip, pre-roll, and end-trimming causes samples to be |
||
1618 | decoded but not played. |
||
1619 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the bitrate. |
||
1620 | \return The bitrate, in bits per second, or a negative value on error. |
||
1621 | \retval #OP_FALSE No data has been decoded since any of the events |
||
1622 | described above. |
||
1623 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open.*/ |
||
1624 | opus_int32 op_bitrate_instant(OggOpusFile *_of) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1625 | |||
1626 | /**Obtain the current value of the position indicator for \a _of. |
||
1627 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the position indicator. |
||
1628 | \return The byte position that is currently being read from. |
||
1629 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open.*/ |
||
1630 | opus_int64 op_raw_tell(const OggOpusFile *_of) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1631 | |||
1632 | /**Obtain the PCM offset of the next sample to be read. |
||
1633 | If the stream is not properly timestamped, this might not increment by the |
||
1634 | proper amount between reads, or even return monotonically increasing |
||
1635 | values. |
||
1636 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to retrieve the PCM offset. |
||
1637 | \return The PCM offset of the next sample to be read. |
||
1638 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open.*/ |
||
1639 | ogg_int64_t op_pcm_tell(const OggOpusFile *_of) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1640 | |||
1641 | /*@}*/ |
||
1642 | /*@}*/ |
||
1643 | |||
1644 | /**\defgroup stream_seeking Seeking*/ |
||
1645 | /*@{*/ |
||
1646 | /**\name Functions for seeking in Opus streams |
||
1647 | |||
1648 | These functions let you seek in Opus streams, if the underlying stream |
||
1649 | support it. |
||
1650 | Seeking is implemented for all built-in stream I/O routines, though some |
||
1651 | individual streams may not be seekable (pipes, live HTTP streams, or HTTP |
||
1652 | streams from a server that does not support <code>Range</code> requests). |
||
1653 | |||
1654 | op_raw_seek() is the fastest: it is guaranteed to perform at most one |
||
1655 | physical seek, but, since the target is a byte position, makes no guarantee |
||
1656 | how close to a given time it will come. |
||
1657 | op_pcm_seek() provides sample-accurate seeking. |
||
1658 | The number of physical seeks it requires is still quite small (often 1 or |
||
1659 | 2, even in highly variable bitrate streams). |
||
1660 | |||
1661 | Seeking in Opus requires decoding some pre-roll amount before playback to |
||
1662 | allow the internal state to converge (as if recovering from packet loss). |
||
1663 | This is handled internally by <tt>libopusfile</tt>, but means there is |
||
1664 | little extra overhead for decoding up to the exact position requested |
||
1665 | (since it must decode some amount of audio anyway). |
||
1666 | It also means that decoding after seeking may not return exactly the same |
||
1667 | values as would be obtained by decoding the stream straight through. |
||
1668 | However, such differences are expected to be smaller than the loss |
||
1669 | introduced by Opus's lossy compression.*/ |
||
1670 | /*@{*/ |
||
1671 | |||
1672 | /**Seek to a byte offset relative to the <b>compressed</b> data. |
||
1673 | This also scans packets to update the PCM cursor. |
||
1674 | It will cross a logical bitstream boundary, but only if it can't get any |
||
1675 | packets out of the tail of the link to which it seeks. |
||
1676 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile in which to seek. |
||
1677 | \param _byte_offset The byte position to seek to. |
||
1678 | This must be between 0 and #op_raw_total(\a _of,\c -1) |
||
1679 | (inclusive). |
||
1680 | \return 0 on success, or a negative error code on failure. |
||
1681 | \retval #OP_EREAD The underlying seek operation failed. |
||
1682 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open, or the target was |
||
1683 | outside the valid range for the stream. |
||
1684 | \retval #OP_ENOSEEK This stream is not seekable. |
||
1685 | \retval #OP_EBADLINK Failed to initialize a decoder for a stream for an |
||
1686 | unknown reason.*/ |
||
1687 | int op_raw_seek(OggOpusFile *_of,opus_int64 _byte_offset) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1688 | |||
1689 | /**Seek to the specified PCM offset, such that decoding will begin at exactly |
||
1690 | the requested position. |
||
1691 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile in which to seek. |
||
1692 | \param _pcm_offset The PCM offset to seek to. |
||
1693 | This is in samples at 48 kHz relative to the start of the |
||
1694 | stream. |
||
1695 | \return 0 on success, or a negative value on error. |
||
1696 | \retval #OP_EREAD An underlying read or seek operation failed. |
||
1697 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open, or the target was |
||
1698 | outside the valid range for the stream. |
||
1699 | \retval #OP_ENOSEEK This stream is not seekable. |
||
1700 | \retval #OP_EBADLINK We failed to find data we had seen before, or the |
||
1701 | bitstream structure was sufficiently malformed that |
||
1702 | seeking to the target destination was impossible.*/ |
||
1703 | int op_pcm_seek(OggOpusFile *_of,ogg_int64_t _pcm_offset) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1704 | |||
1705 | /*@}*/ |
||
1706 | /*@}*/ |
||
1707 | |||
1708 | /**\defgroup stream_decoding Decoding*/ |
||
1709 | /*@{*/ |
||
1710 | /**\name Functions for decoding audio data |
||
1711 | |||
1712 | These functions retrieve actual decoded audio data from the stream. |
||
1713 | The general functions, op_read() and op_read_float() return 16-bit or |
||
1714 | floating-point output, both using native endian ordering. |
||
1715 | The number of channels returned can change from link to link in a chained |
||
1716 | stream. |
||
1717 | There are special functions, op_read_stereo() and op_read_float_stereo(), |
||
1718 | which always output two channels, to simplify applications which do not |
||
1719 | wish to handle multichannel audio. |
||
1720 | These downmix multichannel files to two channels, so they can always return |
||
1721 | samples in the same format for every link in a chained file. |
||
1722 | |||
1723 | If the rest of your audio processing chain can handle floating point, the |
||
1724 | floating-point routines should be preferred, as they prevent clipping and |
||
1725 | other issues which might be avoided entirely if, e.g., you scale down the |
||
1726 | volume at some other stage. |
||
1727 | However, if you intend to consume 16-bit samples directly, the conversion in |
||
1728 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> provides noise-shaping dithering and, if compiled |
||
1729 | against <tt>libopus</tt> 1.1 or later, soft-clipping prevention. |
||
1730 | |||
1731 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> can also be configured at compile time to use the |
||
1732 | fixed-point <tt>libopus</tt> API. |
||
1733 | If so, <tt>libopusfile</tt>'s floating-point API may also be disabled. |
||
1734 | In that configuration, nothing in <tt>libopusfile</tt> will use any |
||
1735 | floating-point operations, to simplify support on devices without an |
||
1736 | adequate FPU. |
||
1737 | |||
1738 | \warning HTTPS streams may be be vulnerable to truncation attacks if you do |
||
1739 | not check the error return code from op_read_float() or its associated |
||
1740 | functions. |
||
1741 | If the remote peer does not close the connection gracefully (with a TLS |
||
1742 | "close notify" message), these functions will return #OP_EREAD instead of 0 |
||
1743 | when they reach the end of the file. |
||
1744 | If you are reading from an <https:> URL (particularly if seeking is not |
||
1745 | supported), you should make sure to check for this error and warn the user |
||
1746 | appropriately.*/ |
||
1747 | /*@{*/ |
||
1748 | |||
1749 | /**Indicates that the decoding callback should produce signed 16-bit |
||
1750 | native-endian output samples.*/ |
||
1751 | #define OP_DEC_FORMAT_SHORT (7008) |
||
1752 | /**Indicates that the decoding callback should produce 32-bit native-endian |
||
1753 | float samples.*/ |
||
1754 | #define OP_DEC_FORMAT_FLOAT (7040) |
||
1755 | |||
1756 | /**Indicates that the decoding callback did not decode anything, and that |
||
1757 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> should decode normally instead.*/ |
||
1758 | #define OP_DEC_USE_DEFAULT (6720) |
||
1759 | |||
1760 | /**Called to decode an Opus packet. |
||
1761 | This should invoke the functional equivalent of opus_multistream_decode() or |
||
1762 | opus_multistream_decode_float(), except that it returns 0 on success |
||
1763 | instead of the number of decoded samples (which is known a priori). |
||
1764 | \param _ctx The application-provided callback context. |
||
1765 | \param _decoder The decoder to use to decode the packet. |
||
1766 | \param[out] _pcm The buffer to decode into. |
||
1767 | This will always have enough room for \a _nchannels of |
||
1768 | \a _nsamples samples, which should be placed into this |
||
1769 | buffer interleaved. |
||
1770 | \param _op The packet to decode. |
||
1771 | This will always have its granule position set to a valid |
||
1772 | value. |
||
1773 | \param _nsamples The number of samples expected from the packet. |
||
1774 | \param _nchannels The number of channels expected from the packet. |
||
1775 | \param _format The desired sample output format. |
||
1776 | This is either #OP_DEC_FORMAT_SHORT or |
||
1777 | #OP_DEC_FORMAT_FLOAT. |
||
1778 | \param _li The index of the link from which this packet was decoded. |
||
1779 | \return A non-negative value on success, or a negative value on error. |
||
1780 | Any error codes should be the same as those returned by |
||
1781 | opus_multistream_decode() or opus_multistream_decode_float(). |
||
1782 | Success codes are as follows: |
||
1783 | \retval 0 Decoding was successful. |
||
1784 | The application has filled the buffer with |
||
1785 | exactly <code>\a _nsamples*\a |
||
1786 | _nchannels</code> samples in the requested |
||
1787 | format. |
||
1788 | \retval #OP_DEC_USE_DEFAULT No decoding was done. |
||
1789 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> should do the decoding |
||
1790 | by itself instead.*/ |
||
1791 | typedef int (*op_decode_cb_func)(void *_ctx,OpusMSDecoder *_decoder,void *_pcm, |
||
1792 | const ogg_packet *_op,int _nsamples,int _nchannels,int _format,int _li); |
||
1793 | |||
1794 | /**Sets the packet decode callback function. |
||
1795 | If set, this is called once for each packet that needs to be decoded. |
||
1796 | This can be used by advanced applications to do additional processing on the |
||
1797 | compressed or uncompressed data. |
||
1798 | For example, an application might save the final entropy coder state for |
||
1799 | debugging and testing purposes, or it might apply additional filters |
||
1800 | before the downmixing, dithering, or soft-clipping performed by |
||
1801 | <tt>libopusfile</tt>, so long as these filters do not introduce any |
||
1802 | latency. |
||
1803 | |||
1804 | A call to this function is no guarantee that the audio will eventually be |
||
1805 | delivered to the application. |
||
1806 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> may discard some or all of the decoded audio data |
||
1807 | (i.e., at the beginning or end of a link, or after a seek), however the |
||
1808 | callback is still required to provide all of it. |
||
1809 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile on which to set the decode callback. |
||
1810 | \param _decode_cb The callback function to call. |
||
1811 | This may be <code>NULL</code> to disable calling the |
||
1812 | callback. |
||
1813 | \param _ctx The application-provided context pointer to pass to the |
||
1814 | callback on each call.*/ |
||
1815 | void op_set_decode_callback(OggOpusFile *_of, |
||
1816 | op_decode_cb_func _decode_cb,void *_ctx) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1817 | |||
1818 | /**Gain offset type that indicates that the provided offset is relative to the |
||
1819 | header gain. |
||
1820 | This is the default.*/ |
||
1821 | #define OP_HEADER_GAIN (0) |
||
1822 | |||
1823 | /**Gain offset type that indicates that the provided offset is relative to the |
||
1824 | R128_ALBUM_GAIN value (if any), in addition to the header gain.*/ |
||
1825 | #define OP_ALBUM_GAIN (3007) |
||
1826 | |||
1827 | /**Gain offset type that indicates that the provided offset is relative to the |
||
1828 | R128_TRACK_GAIN value (if any), in addition to the header gain.*/ |
||
1829 | #define OP_TRACK_GAIN (3008) |
||
1830 | |||
1831 | /**Gain offset type that indicates that the provided offset should be used as |
||
1832 | the gain directly, without applying any the header or track gains.*/ |
||
1833 | #define OP_ABSOLUTE_GAIN (3009) |
||
1834 | |||
1835 | /**Sets the gain to be used for decoded output. |
||
1836 | By default, the gain in the header is applied with no additional offset. |
||
1837 | The total gain (including header gain and/or track gain, if applicable, and |
||
1838 | this offset), will be clamped to [-32768,32767]/256 dB. |
||
1839 | This is more than enough to saturate or underflow 16-bit PCM. |
||
1840 | \note The new gain will not be applied to any already buffered, decoded |
||
1841 | output. |
||
1842 | This means you cannot change it sample-by-sample, as at best it will be |
||
1843 | updated packet-by-packet. |
||
1844 | It is meant for setting a target volume level, rather than applying smooth |
||
1845 | fades, etc. |
||
1846 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile on which to set the gain offset. |
||
1847 | \param _gain_type One of #OP_HEADER_GAIN, #OP_ALBUM_GAIN, |
||
1848 | #OP_TRACK_GAIN, or #OP_ABSOLUTE_GAIN. |
||
1849 | \param _gain_offset_q8 The gain offset to apply, in 1/256ths of a dB. |
||
1850 | \return 0 on success or a negative value on error. |
||
1851 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The \a _gain_type was unrecognized.*/ |
||
1852 | int op_set_gain_offset(OggOpusFile *_of, |
||
1853 | int _gain_type,opus_int32 _gain_offset_q8) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1854 | |||
1855 | /**Sets whether or not dithering is enabled for 16-bit decoding. |
||
1856 | By default, when <tt>libopusfile</tt> is compiled to use floating-point |
||
1857 | internally, calling op_read() or op_read_stereo() will first decode to |
||
1858 | float, and then convert to fixed-point using noise-shaping dithering. |
||
1859 | This flag can be used to disable that dithering. |
||
1860 | When the application uses op_read_float() or op_read_float_stereo(), or when |
||
1861 | the library has been compiled to decode directly to fixed point, this flag |
||
1862 | has no effect. |
||
1863 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile on which to enable or disable dithering. |
||
1864 | \param _enabled A non-zero value to enable dithering, or 0 to disable it.*/ |
||
1865 | void op_set_dither_enabled(OggOpusFile *_of,int _enabled) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1866 | |||
1867 | /**Reads more samples from the stream. |
||
1868 | \note Although \a _buf_size must indicate the total number of values that |
||
1869 | can be stored in \a _pcm, the return value is the number of samples |
||
1870 | <em>per channel</em>. |
||
1871 | This is done because |
||
1872 | <ol> |
||
1873 | <li>The channel count cannot be known a priori (reading more samples might |
||
1874 | advance us into the next link, with a different channel count), so |
||
1875 | \a _buf_size cannot also be in units of samples per channel,</li> |
||
1876 | <li>Returning the samples per channel matches the <code>libopus</code> API |
||
1877 | as closely as we're able,</li> |
||
1878 | <li>Returning the total number of values instead of samples per channel |
||
1879 | would mean the caller would need a division to compute the samples per |
||
1880 | channel, and might worry about the possibility of getting back samples |
||
1881 | for some channels and not others, and</li> |
||
1882 | <li>This approach is relatively fool-proof: if an application passes too |
||
1883 | small a value to \a _buf_size, they will simply get fewer samples back, |
||
1884 | and if they assume the return value is the total number of values, then |
||
1885 | they will simply read too few (rather than reading too many and going |
||
1886 | off the end of the buffer).</li> |
||
1887 | </ol> |
||
1888 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to read. |
||
1889 | \param[out] _pcm A buffer in which to store the output PCM samples, as |
||
1890 | signed native-endian 16-bit values at 48 kHz |
||
1891 | with a nominal range of <code>[-32768,32767)</code>. |
||
1892 | Multiple channels are interleaved using the |
||
1893 | <a href="http://www.xiph.org/vorbis/doc/Vorbis_I_spec.html#x1-800004.3.9">Vorbis |
||
1894 | channel ordering</a>. |
||
1895 | This must have room for at least \a _buf_size values. |
||
1896 | \param _buf_size The number of values that can be stored in \a _pcm. |
||
1897 | It is recommended that this be large enough for at |
||
1898 | least 120 ms of data at 48 kHz per channel (5760 |
||
1899 | values per channel). |
||
1900 | Smaller buffers will simply return less data, possibly |
||
1901 | consuming more memory to buffer the data internally. |
||
1902 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> may return less data than |
||
1903 | requested. |
||
1904 | If so, there is no guarantee that the remaining data |
||
1905 | in \a _pcm will be unmodified. |
||
1906 | \param[out] _li The index of the link this data was decoded from. |
||
1907 | You may pass <code>NULL</code> if you do not need this |
||
1908 | information. |
||
1909 | If this function fails (returning a negative value), |
||
1910 | this parameter is left unset. |
||
1911 | \return The number of samples read per channel on success, or a negative |
||
1912 | value on failure. |
||
1913 | The channel count can be retrieved on success by calling |
||
1914 | <code>op_head(_of,*_li)</code>. |
||
1915 | The number of samples returned may be 0 if the buffer was too small |
||
1916 | to store even a single sample for all channels, or if end-of-file |
||
1917 | was reached. |
||
1918 | The list of possible failure codes follows. |
||
1919 | Most of them can only be returned by unseekable, chained streams |
||
1920 | that encounter a new link. |
||
1921 | \retval #OP_HOLE There was a hole in the data, and some samples |
||
1922 | may have been skipped. |
||
1923 | Call this function again to continue decoding |
||
1924 | past the hole. |
||
1925 | \retval #OP_EREAD An underlying read operation failed. |
||
1926 | This may signal a truncation attack from an |
||
1927 | <https:> source. |
||
1928 | \retval #OP_EFAULT An internal memory allocation failed. |
||
1929 | \retval #OP_EIMPL An unseekable stream encountered a new link that |
||
1930 | used a feature that is not implemented, such as |
||
1931 | an unsupported channel family. |
||
1932 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open. |
||
1933 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT An unseekable stream encountered a new link that |
||
1934 | did not have any logical Opus streams in it. |
||
1935 | \retval #OP_EBADHEADER An unseekable stream encountered a new link with a |
||
1936 | required header packet that was not properly |
||
1937 | formatted, contained illegal values, or was |
||
1938 | missing altogether. |
||
1939 | \retval #OP_EVERSION An unseekable stream encountered a new link with |
||
1940 | an ID header that contained an unrecognized |
||
1941 | version number. |
||
1942 | \retval #OP_EBADPACKET Failed to properly decode the next packet. |
||
1943 | \retval #OP_EBADLINK We failed to find data we had seen before. |
||
1944 | \retval #OP_EBADTIMESTAMP An unseekable stream encountered a new link with |
||
1945 | a starting timestamp that failed basic validity |
||
1946 | checks.*/ |
||
1947 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT int op_read(OggOpusFile *_of, |
||
1948 | opus_int16 *_pcm,int _buf_size,int *_li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
1949 | |||
1950 | /**Reads more samples from the stream. |
||
1951 | \note Although \a _buf_size must indicate the total number of values that |
||
1952 | can be stored in \a _pcm, the return value is the number of samples |
||
1953 | <em>per channel</em>. |
||
1954 | <ol> |
||
1955 | <li>The channel count cannot be known a priori (reading more samples might |
||
1956 | advance us into the next link, with a different channel count), so |
||
1957 | \a _buf_size cannot also be in units of samples per channel,</li> |
||
1958 | <li>Returning the samples per channel matches the <code>libopus</code> API |
||
1959 | as closely as we're able,</li> |
||
1960 | <li>Returning the total number of values instead of samples per channel |
||
1961 | would mean the caller would need a division to compute the samples per |
||
1962 | channel, and might worry about the possibility of getting back samples |
||
1963 | for some channels and not others, and</li> |
||
1964 | <li>This approach is relatively fool-proof: if an application passes too |
||
1965 | small a value to \a _buf_size, they will simply get fewer samples back, |
||
1966 | and if they assume the return value is the total number of values, then |
||
1967 | they will simply read too few (rather than reading too many and going |
||
1968 | off the end of the buffer).</li> |
||
1969 | </ol> |
||
1970 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to read. |
||
1971 | \param[out] _pcm A buffer in which to store the output PCM samples as |
||
1972 | signed floats at 48 kHz with a nominal range of |
||
1973 | <code>[-1.0,1.0]</code>. |
||
1974 | Multiple channels are interleaved using the |
||
1975 | <a href="http://www.xiph.org/vorbis/doc/Vorbis_I_spec.html#x1-800004.3.9">Vorbis |
||
1976 | channel ordering</a>. |
||
1977 | This must have room for at least \a _buf_size floats. |
||
1978 | \param _buf_size The number of floats that can be stored in \a _pcm. |
||
1979 | It is recommended that this be large enough for at |
||
1980 | least 120 ms of data at 48 kHz per channel (5760 |
||
1981 | samples per channel). |
||
1982 | Smaller buffers will simply return less data, possibly |
||
1983 | consuming more memory to buffer the data internally. |
||
1984 | If less than \a _buf_size values are returned, |
||
1985 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> makes no guarantee that the |
||
1986 | remaining data in \a _pcm will be unmodified. |
||
1987 | \param[out] _li The index of the link this data was decoded from. |
||
1988 | You may pass <code>NULL</code> if you do not need this |
||
1989 | information. |
||
1990 | If this function fails (returning a negative value), |
||
1991 | this parameter is left unset. |
||
1992 | \return The number of samples read per channel on success, or a negative |
||
1993 | value on failure. |
||
1994 | The channel count can be retrieved on success by calling |
||
1995 | <code>op_head(_of,*_li)</code>. |
||
1996 | The number of samples returned may be 0 if the buffer was too small |
||
1997 | to store even a single sample for all channels, or if end-of-file |
||
1998 | was reached. |
||
1999 | The list of possible failure codes follows. |
||
2000 | Most of them can only be returned by unseekable, chained streams |
||
2001 | that encounter a new link. |
||
2002 | \retval #OP_HOLE There was a hole in the data, and some samples |
||
2003 | may have been skipped. |
||
2004 | Call this function again to continue decoding |
||
2005 | past the hole. |
||
2006 | \retval #OP_EREAD An underlying read operation failed. |
||
2007 | This may signal a truncation attack from an |
||
2008 | <https:> source. |
||
2009 | \retval #OP_EFAULT An internal memory allocation failed. |
||
2010 | \retval #OP_EIMPL An unseekable stream encountered a new link that |
||
2011 | used a feature that is not implemented, such as |
||
2012 | an unsupported channel family. |
||
2013 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open. |
||
2014 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT An unseekable stream encountered a new link that |
||
2015 | did not have any logical Opus streams in it. |
||
2016 | \retval #OP_EBADHEADER An unseekable stream encountered a new link with a |
||
2017 | required header packet that was not properly |
||
2018 | formatted, contained illegal values, or was |
||
2019 | missing altogether. |
||
2020 | \retval #OP_EVERSION An unseekable stream encountered a new link with |
||
2021 | an ID header that contained an unrecognized |
||
2022 | version number. |
||
2023 | \retval #OP_EBADPACKET Failed to properly decode the next packet. |
||
2024 | \retval #OP_EBADLINK We failed to find data we had seen before. |
||
2025 | \retval #OP_EBADTIMESTAMP An unseekable stream encountered a new link with |
||
2026 | a starting timestamp that failed basic validity |
||
2027 | checks.*/ |
||
2028 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT int op_read_float(OggOpusFile *_of, |
||
2029 | float *_pcm,int _buf_size,int *_li) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
2030 | |||
2031 | /**Reads more samples from the stream and downmixes to stereo, if necessary. |
||
2032 | This function is intended for simple players that want a uniform output |
||
2033 | format, even if the channel count changes between links in a chained |
||
2034 | stream. |
||
2035 | \note \a _buf_size indicates the total number of values that can be stored |
||
2036 | in \a _pcm, while the return value is the number of samples <em>per |
||
2037 | channel</em>, even though the channel count is known, for consistency with |
||
2038 | op_read(). |
||
2039 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to read. |
||
2040 | \param[out] _pcm A buffer in which to store the output PCM samples, as |
||
2041 | signed native-endian 16-bit values at 48 kHz |
||
2042 | with a nominal range of <code>[-32768,32767)</code>. |
||
2043 | The left and right channels are interleaved in the |
||
2044 | buffer. |
||
2045 | This must have room for at least \a _buf_size values. |
||
2046 | \param _buf_size The number of values that can be stored in \a _pcm. |
||
2047 | It is recommended that this be large enough for at |
||
2048 | least 120 ms of data at 48 kHz per channel (11520 |
||
2049 | values total). |
||
2050 | Smaller buffers will simply return less data, possibly |
||
2051 | consuming more memory to buffer the data internally. |
||
2052 | If less than \a _buf_size values are returned, |
||
2053 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> makes no guarantee that the |
||
2054 | remaining data in \a _pcm will be unmodified. |
||
2055 | \return The number of samples read per channel on success, or a negative |
||
2056 | value on failure. |
||
2057 | The number of samples returned may be 0 if the buffer was too small |
||
2058 | to store even a single sample for both channels, or if end-of-file |
||
2059 | was reached. |
||
2060 | The list of possible failure codes follows. |
||
2061 | Most of them can only be returned by unseekable, chained streams |
||
2062 | that encounter a new link. |
||
2063 | \retval #OP_HOLE There was a hole in the data, and some samples |
||
2064 | may have been skipped. |
||
2065 | Call this function again to continue decoding |
||
2066 | past the hole. |
||
2067 | \retval #OP_EREAD An underlying read operation failed. |
||
2068 | This may signal a truncation attack from an |
||
2069 | <https:> source. |
||
2070 | \retval #OP_EFAULT An internal memory allocation failed. |
||
2071 | \retval #OP_EIMPL An unseekable stream encountered a new link that |
||
2072 | used a feature that is not implemented, such as |
||
2073 | an unsupported channel family. |
||
2074 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open. |
||
2075 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT An unseekable stream encountered a new link that |
||
2076 | did not have any logical Opus streams in it. |
||
2077 | \retval #OP_EBADHEADER An unseekable stream encountered a new link with a |
||
2078 | required header packet that was not properly |
||
2079 | formatted, contained illegal values, or was |
||
2080 | missing altogether. |
||
2081 | \retval #OP_EVERSION An unseekable stream encountered a new link with |
||
2082 | an ID header that contained an unrecognized |
||
2083 | version number. |
||
2084 | \retval #OP_EBADPACKET Failed to properly decode the next packet. |
||
2085 | \retval #OP_EBADLINK We failed to find data we had seen before. |
||
2086 | \retval #OP_EBADTIMESTAMP An unseekable stream encountered a new link with |
||
2087 | a starting timestamp that failed basic validity |
||
2088 | checks.*/ |
||
2089 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT int op_read_stereo(OggOpusFile *_of, |
||
2090 | opus_int16 *_pcm,int _buf_size) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
2091 | |||
2092 | /**Reads more samples from the stream and downmixes to stereo, if necessary. |
||
2093 | This function is intended for simple players that want a uniform output |
||
2094 | format, even if the channel count changes between links in a chained |
||
2095 | stream. |
||
2096 | \note \a _buf_size indicates the total number of values that can be stored |
||
2097 | in \a _pcm, while the return value is the number of samples <em>per |
||
2098 | channel</em>, even though the channel count is known, for consistency with |
||
2099 | op_read_float(). |
||
2100 | \param _of The \c OggOpusFile from which to read. |
||
2101 | \param[out] _pcm A buffer in which to store the output PCM samples, as |
||
2102 | signed floats at 48 kHz with a nominal range of |
||
2103 | <code>[-1.0,1.0]</code>. |
||
2104 | The left and right channels are interleaved in the |
||
2105 | buffer. |
||
2106 | This must have room for at least \a _buf_size values. |
||
2107 | \param _buf_size The number of values that can be stored in \a _pcm. |
||
2108 | It is recommended that this be large enough for at |
||
2109 | least 120 ms of data at 48 kHz per channel (11520 |
||
2110 | values total). |
||
2111 | Smaller buffers will simply return less data, possibly |
||
2112 | consuming more memory to buffer the data internally. |
||
2113 | If less than \a _buf_size values are returned, |
||
2114 | <tt>libopusfile</tt> makes no guarantee that the |
||
2115 | remaining data in \a _pcm will be unmodified. |
||
2116 | \return The number of samples read per channel on success, or a negative |
||
2117 | value on failure. |
||
2118 | The number of samples returned may be 0 if the buffer was too small |
||
2119 | to store even a single sample for both channels, or if end-of-file |
||
2120 | was reached. |
||
2121 | The list of possible failure codes follows. |
||
2122 | Most of them can only be returned by unseekable, chained streams |
||
2123 | that encounter a new link. |
||
2124 | \retval #OP_HOLE There was a hole in the data, and some samples |
||
2125 | may have been skipped. |
||
2126 | Call this function again to continue decoding |
||
2127 | past the hole. |
||
2128 | \retval #OP_EREAD An underlying read operation failed. |
||
2129 | This may signal a truncation attack from an |
||
2130 | <https:> source. |
||
2131 | \retval #OP_EFAULT An internal memory allocation failed. |
||
2132 | \retval #OP_EIMPL An unseekable stream encountered a new link that |
||
2133 | used a feature that is not implemented, such as |
||
2134 | an unsupported channel family. |
||
2135 | \retval #OP_EINVAL The stream was only partially open. |
||
2136 | \retval #OP_ENOTFORMAT An unseekable stream encountered a new link that |
||
2137 | that did not have any logical Opus streams in it. |
||
2138 | \retval #OP_EBADHEADER An unseekable stream encountered a new link with a |
||
2139 | required header packet that was not properly |
||
2140 | formatted, contained illegal values, or was |
||
2141 | missing altogether. |
||
2142 | \retval #OP_EVERSION An unseekable stream encountered a new link with |
||
2143 | an ID header that contained an unrecognized |
||
2144 | version number. |
||
2145 | \retval #OP_EBADPACKET Failed to properly decode the next packet. |
||
2146 | \retval #OP_EBADLINK We failed to find data we had seen before. |
||
2147 | \retval #OP_EBADTIMESTAMP An unseekable stream encountered a new link with |
||
2148 | a starting timestamp that failed basic validity |
||
2149 | checks.*/ |
||
2150 | OP_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT int op_read_float_stereo(OggOpusFile *_of, |
||
2151 | float *_pcm,int _buf_size) OP_ARG_NONNULL(1); |
||
2152 | |||
2153 | /*@}*/ |
||
2154 | /*@}*/ |
||
2155 | |||
2156 | # if OP_GNUC_PREREQ(4,0) |
||
2157 | # pragma GCC visibility pop |
||
2158 | # endif |
||
2159 | |||
2160 | # if defined(__cplusplus) |
||
2161 | } |
||
2162 | # endif |
||
2163 | |||
2164 | #endif |