jackyalcine
jackyalcine

Reputation: 468

How do you play or record audio (to .WAV) on Linux in C++?

Hello, I've been looking for a way to play and record audio on a Linux (preferably Ubuntu) system. I'm currently working on a front-end to a voice recognition toolkit that'll automate a few steps required to adapt a voice model for PocketSphinx and Julius.

Suggestions of alternative means of audio input/output are welcome, as well as a fix to the bug shown below.

Here is the current code I've used so far to play a .WAV file:

void Engine::sayText ( const string OutputText ) {
    string audioUri = "temp.wav";
    string requestUri = this->getRequestUri( OPENMARY_PROCESS , OutputText.c_str( ) );
    int error , audioStream;
    pa_simple *pulseConnection;
    pa_sample_spec simpleSpecs;
    simpleSpecs.format = PA_SAMPLE_S16LE;
    simpleSpecs.rate = 44100;
    simpleSpecs.channels = 2;

    eprintf( E_MESSAGE , "Generating audio for '%s' from '%s'..." , OutputText.c_str( ) , requestUri.c_str( ) );
    FILE* audio = this->getHttpFile( requestUri , audioUri );
    fclose(audio);
    eprintf( E_MESSAGE , "Generated audio.");

    if ( ( audioStream = open( audioUri.c_str( ) , O_RDONLY ) ) < 0 ) {
        fprintf( stderr , __FILE__": open() failed: %s\n" , strerror( errno ) );
        goto finish;
    }

    if ( dup2( audioStream , STDIN_FILENO ) < 0 ) {
        fprintf( stderr , __FILE__": dup2() failed: %s\n" , strerror( errno ) );
        goto finish;
    }

    close( audioStream );

    pulseConnection = pa_simple_new( NULL , "AudioPush" , PA_STREAM_PLAYBACK , NULL , "openMary C++" , &simpleSpecs , NULL , NULL , &error );

    for (int i = 0;;i++ ) {
        const int bufferSize = 1024;
        uint8_t audioBuffer[bufferSize];
        ssize_t r;
        eprintf( E_MESSAGE , "Buffering %d..",i);
        /* Read some data ... */
        if ( ( r = read( STDIN_FILENO , audioBuffer , sizeof (audioBuffer ) ) ) <= 0 ) {
            if ( r == 0 ) /* EOF */
                break;

            eprintf( E_ERROR , __FILE__": read() failed: %s\n" , strerror( errno ) );
    if ( pulseConnection )
        pa_simple_free( pulseConnection );

        }

        /* ... and play it */
        if ( pa_simple_write( pulseConnection , audioBuffer , ( size_t ) r , &error ) < 0 ) {
            fprintf( stderr , __FILE__": pa_simple_write() failed: %s\n" , pa_strerror( error ) );
    if ( pulseConnection )
        pa_simple_free( pulseConnection );

        }

        usleep(2);

    }
    /* Make sure that every single sample was played */
    if ( pa_simple_drain( pulseConnection , &error ) < 0 ) {
        fprintf( stderr , __FILE__": pa_simple_drain() failed: %s\n" , pa_strerror( error ) );
    if ( pulseConnection )
        pa_simple_free( pulseConnection );
    }    
}

NOTE: If you want the rest of the code to this file, you can download it here directly from Launchpad.

Update: I tried using GStreamermm, and this won't work:

    Glib::RefPtr<Pipeline> pipeline;
    Glib::RefPtr<Element> sink, filter, source;
    Glib::RefPtr<Gio::File> audioSrc = Gio::File::create_for_path(uri);

    pipeline = Pipeline::create("audio-playback");
    source = ElementFactory::create_element("alsasrc","source");
    filter = ElementFactory::create_element("identity","filter");
    sink = ElementFactory::create_element("alsasink","sink");
    //sink->get_property("file",audioSrc);
    if (!source || !filter || !sink){
        showErrorDialog("Houston!","We got a problem.");
        return;
    }
    pipeline->add(source)->add(filter)->add(sink);
    source->link(sink);

    pipeline->set_state(Gst::STATE_PLAYING);
    showInformation("Close this to stop recording");
    pipeline->set_state(Gst::STATE_PAUSED);

Upvotes: 7

Views: 7881

Answers (2)

Daniel Voina
Daniel Voina

Reputation: 3215

GStreamer/Pulse/JACK are great. For simple and fast things you might use SoX http://sox.sourceforge.net/

Upvotes: 1

Brent Bradburn
Brent Bradburn

Reputation: 54859

The "Hello World" application in the GStreamer documentation shows how to play an Ogg/Vorbis file. To make this work with WAV files, you can simply replace "oggdemux" with "wavparse" and replace "vorbisdec" with "identity" (the identity plugin does nothing -- it's just a placeholder).

To install development support for GStreamer (on Ubuntu)...

sudo apt-get install libgstreamer0.10-dev

You need the following on the gcc command-line to enable the use of GStreamer libraries...

$(pkg-config --cflags --libs gstreamer-0.10)

By the way, you may find it useful to use "gst-launch" for prototyping GStreamer pipelines before writing the code.

## recording
gst-launch-0.10 autoaudiosrc ! wavenc ! filesink location=temp.wav

## playback
gst-launch-0.10 filesrc location=temp.wav ! wavparse ! autoaudiosink

A feature of GStreamer that may be useful for voice recognition is that it is easy to insert audio quality filters into a pipeline -- so you could, for example, reduce noise that might otherwise be in the recording. A pointer to a list of the GStreamer "good" plugins is here.

Also of interest, "PocketSphinx" (which seems to be related to your project) already has some GStreamer integration. See Using PocketSphinx with GStreamer and Python

Upvotes: 4

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