Reputation: 1380
disclaimer: newbie to nodeJS and audio parsing
I'm trying to proxy a digital radio stream through an expressJS app with the help of node-icecast which works great. I am getting the radio's mp3 stream, and via node-lame decoding the mp3 to PCM and then sending it to the speakers. All of this just works straight from the github project's readme example:
var lame = require('lame');
var icecast = require('icecast');
var Speaker = require('speaker');
// URL to a known Icecast stream
var url = 'http://firewall.pulsradio.com';
// connect to the remote stream
icecast.get(url, function (res) {
// log the HTTP response headers
console.error(res.headers);
// log any "metadata" events that happen
res.on('metadata', function (metadata) {
var parsed = icecast.parse(metadata);
console.error(parsed);
});
// Let's play the music (assuming MP3 data).
// lame decodes and Speaker sends to speakers!
res.pipe(new lame.Decoder())
.pipe(new Speaker());
});
I'm now trying to setup a service to identify the music using the Doreso API. Problem is I'm working with a stream and don't have the file (and I don't know enough yet about readable and writable streams, and slow learning). I have been looking around for a while at trying to write the stream (ideally to memory) until I had about 10 seconds worth. Then I would pass that portion of audio to my API, however I don't know if that's possible or know where to start with slicing 10 seconds of a stream. I thought possibly trying passing the stream to ffmpeg as it has a -t option for duration, and perhaps that could limit it, however I haven't got that to work yet.
Any suggestions to cut a stream down to 10 seconds would be awesome. Thanks!
Updated: Changed my question as I originally thought I was getting PCM and converting to mp3 ;-) I had it backwards. Now I just want to slice off part of the stream while the stream still feeds the speaker.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 2922
Reputation: 1751
Can I suggest using removeListener after 10 seconds? That will prevent future events from being sent through the listener.
var request = require('request'),
fs = require('fs'),
masterStream = request('-- mp3 stream --')
var writeStream = fs.createWriteStream('recording.mp3'),
handler = function(bit){
writeStream.write(bit);
}
masterStream.on('data', handler);
setTimeout(function(){
masterStream.removeListener('data', handler);
writeStream.end();
}, 1000 * 10);
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 535
It's not that easy.. but I've managed it this weekend. I would be happy if you guys could point out how to even improve this code. I don't really like the approach of simulating the "end" of a stream. Is there something like "detaching" or "rewiring" parts of a pipe-wiring of streams in node?
First, you should create your very own Writable Stream class which itself creates a lame encoding instance. This writable stream will receive the decoded PCM data.
It works like this:
var stream = require('stream');
var util = require('util');
var fs = require('fs');
var lame = require('lame');
var streamifier = require('streamifier');
var WritableStreamBuffer = require("stream-buffers").WritableStreamBuffer;
var SliceStream = function(lameConfig) {
stream.Writable.call(this);
this.encoder = new lame.Encoder(lameConfig);
// we need a stream buffer to buffer the PCM data
this.buffer = new WritableStreamBuffer({
initialSize: (1000 * 1024), // start as 1 MiB.
incrementAmount: (150 * 1024) // grow by 150 KiB each time buffer overflows.
});
};
util.inherits(SliceStream, stream.Writable);
// some attributes, initialization
SliceStream.prototype.writable = true;
SliceStream.prototype.encoder = null;
SliceStream.prototype.buffer = null;
// will be called each time the decoded steam emits "data"
// together with a bunch of binary data as Buffer
SliceStream.prototype.write = function(buf) {
//console.log('bytes recv: ', buf.length);
this.buffer.write(buf);
//console.log('buffer size: ', this.buffer.size());
};
// this method will invoke when the setTimeout function
// emits the simulated "end" event. Lets encode to MP3 again...
SliceStream.prototype.end = function(buf) {
if (arguments.length) {
this.buffer.write(buf);
}
this.writable = false;
//console.log('buffer size: ' + this.buffer.size());
// fetch binary data from buffer
var PCMBuffer = this.buffer.getContents();
// create a stream out of the binary buffer data
streamifier.createReadStream(PCMBuffer).pipe(
// and pipe it right into the MP3 encoder...
this.encoder
);
// but dont forget to pipe the encoders output
// into a writable file stream
this.encoder.pipe(
fs.createWriteStream('./fooBar.mp3')
);
};
Now you can pipe the decoded stream into an instance of your SliceStream class, like this (additional to the other pipes):
icecast.get(streamUrl, function(res) {
var lameEncoderConfig = {
// input
channels: 2, // 2 channels (left and right)
bitDepth: 16, // 16-bit samples
sampleRate: 44100, // 44,100 Hz sample rate
// output
bitRate: 320,
outSampleRate: 44100,
mode: lame.STEREO // STEREO (default), JOINTSTEREO, DUALCHANNEL or MONO
};
var decodedStream = res.pipe(new lame.Decoder());
// pipe decoded PCM stream into a SliceStream instance
decodedStream.pipe(new SliceStream(lameEncoderConfig));
// now play it...
decodedStream.pipe(new Speaker());
setTimeout(function() {
// after 10 seconds, emulate an end of the stream.
res.emit('end');
}, 10 * 1000 /*milliseconds*/)
});
Upvotes: 2