////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // // HEADER BEGINS HERE // #ifndef STB_VORBIS_INCLUDE_STB_VORBIS_H #define STB_VORBIS_INCLUDE_STB_VORBIS_H #if defined(STB_VORBIS_NO_CRT) && !defined(STB_VORBIS_NO_STDIO) #define STB_VORBIS_NO_STDIO 1 #endif #ifndef STB_VORBIS_NO_STDIO #include #endif #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif /////////// THREAD SAFETY // Individual stb_vorbis* handles are not thread-safe; you cannot decode from // them from multiple threads at the same time. However, you can have multiple // stb_vorbis* handles and decode from them independently in multiple thrads. /////////// MEMORY ALLOCATION // normally stb_vorbis uses malloc() to allocate memory at startup, // and alloca() to allocate temporary memory during a frame on the // stack. (Memory consumption will depend on the amount of setup // data in the file and how you set the compile flags for speed // vs. size. In my test files the maximal-size usage is ~150KB.) // // You can modify the wrapper functions in the source (setup_malloc, // setup_temp_malloc, temp_malloc) to change this behavior, or you // can use a simpler allocation model: you pass in a buffer from // which stb_vorbis will allocate _all_ its memory (including the // temp memory). "open" may fail with a VORBIS_outofmem if you // do not pass in enough data; there is no way to determine how // much you do need except to succeed (at which point you can // query get_info to find the exact amount required. yes I know // this is lame). // // If you pass in a non-NULL buffer of the type below, allocation // will occur from it as described above. Otherwise just pass NULL // to use malloc()/alloca() typedef struct { char *alloc_buffer; int alloc_buffer_length_in_bytes; } stb_vorbis_alloc; /////////// FUNCTIONS USEABLE WITH ALL INPUT MODES typedef struct stb_vorbis stb_vorbis; typedef struct { unsigned int sample_rate; int channels; unsigned int setup_memory_required; unsigned int setup_temp_memory_required; unsigned int temp_memory_required; int max_frame_size; } stb_vorbis_info; typedef struct { char *vendor; int comment_list_length; char **comment_list; } stb_vorbis_comment; // get general information about the file extern stb_vorbis_info stb_vorbis_get_info(stb_vorbis *f); // get ogg comments extern stb_vorbis_comment stb_vorbis_get_comment(stb_vorbis *f); // get the last error detected (clears it, too) extern int stb_vorbis_get_error(stb_vorbis *f); // close an ogg vorbis file and free all memory in use extern void stb_vorbis_close(stb_vorbis *f); // this function returns the offset (in samples) from the beginning of the // file that will be returned by the next decode, if it is known, or -1 // otherwise. after a flush_pushdata() call, this may take a while before // it becomes valid again. // NOT WORKING YET after a seek with PULLDATA API extern int stb_vorbis_get_sample_offset(stb_vorbis *f); // returns the current seek point within the file, or offset from the beginning // of the memory buffer. In pushdata mode it returns 0. extern unsigned int stb_vorbis_get_file_offset(stb_vorbis *f); /////////// PUSHDATA API #ifndef STB_VORBIS_NO_PUSHDATA_API // this API allows you to get blocks of data from any source and hand // them to stb_vorbis. you have to buffer them; stb_vorbis will tell // you how much it used, and you have to give it the rest next time; // and stb_vorbis may not have enough data to work with and you will // need to give it the same data again PLUS more. Note that the Vorbis // specification does not bound the size of an individual frame. extern stb_vorbis *stb_vorbis_open_pushdata( const unsigned char * datablock, int datablock_length_in_bytes, int *datablock_memory_consumed_in_bytes, int *error, const stb_vorbis_alloc *alloc_buffer); // create a vorbis decoder by passing in the initial data block containing // the ogg&vorbis headers (you don't need to do parse them, just provide // the first N bytes of the file--you're told if it's not enough, see below) // on success, returns an stb_vorbis *, does not set error, returns the amount of // data parsed/consumed on this call in *datablock_memory_consumed_in_bytes; // on failure, returns NULL on error and sets *error, does not change *datablock_memory_consumed // if returns NULL and *error is VORBIS_need_more_data, then the input block was // incomplete and you need to pass in a larger block from the start of the file extern int stb_vorbis_decode_frame_pushdata( stb_vorbis *f, const unsigned char *datablock, int datablock_length_in_bytes, int *channels, // place to write number of float * buffers float ***output, // place to write float ** array of float * buffers int *samples // place to write number of output samples ); // decode a frame of audio sample data if possible from the passed-in data block // // return value: number of bytes we used from datablock // // possible cases: // 0 bytes used, 0 samples output (need more data) // N bytes used, 0 samples output (resynching the stream, keep going) // N bytes used, M samples output (one frame of data) // note that after opening a file, you will ALWAYS get one N-bytes,0-sample // frame, because Vorbis always "discards" the first frame. // // Note that on resynch, stb_vorbis will rarely consume all of the buffer, // instead only datablock_length_in_bytes-3 or less. This is because it wants // to avoid missing parts of a page header if they cross a datablock boundary, // without writing state-machiney code to record a partial detection. // // The number of channels returned are stored in *channels (which can be // NULL--it is always the same as the number of channels reported by // get_info). *output will contain an array of float* buffers, one per // channel. In other words, (*output)[0][0] contains the first sample from // the first channel, and (*output)[1][0] contains the first sample from // the second channel. // // *output points into stb_vorbis's internal output buffer storage; these // buffers are owned by stb_vorbis and application code should not free // them or modify their contents. They are transient and will be overwritten // once you ask for more data to get decoded, so be sure to grab any data // you need before then. extern void stb_vorbis_flush_pushdata(stb_vorbis *f); // inform stb_vorbis that your next datablock will not be contiguous with // previous ones (e.g. you've seeked in the data); future attempts to decode // frames will cause stb_vorbis to resynchronize (as noted above), and // once it sees a valid Ogg page (typically 4-8KB, as large as 64KB), it // will begin decoding the _next_ frame. // // if you want to seek using pushdata, you need to seek in your file, then // call stb_vorbis_flush_pushdata(), then start calling decoding, then once // decoding is returning you data, call stb_vorbis_get_sample_offset, and // if you don't like the result, seek your file again and repeat. #endif ////////// PULLING INPUT API #ifndef STB_VORBIS_NO_PULLDATA_API // This API assumes stb_vorbis is allowed to pull data from a source-- // either a block of memory containing the _entire_ vorbis stream, or a // FILE * that you or it create, or possibly some other reading mechanism // if you go modify the source to replace the FILE * case with some kind // of callback to your code. (But if you don't support seeking, you may // just want to go ahead and use pushdata.) #if !defined(STB_VORBIS_NO_STDIO) && !defined(STB_VORBIS_NO_INTEGER_CONVERSION) extern int stb_vorbis_decode_filename(const char *filename, int *channels, int *sample_rate, short **output); #endif #if !defined(STB_VORBIS_NO_INTEGER_CONVERSION) extern int stb_vorbis_decode_memory(const unsigned char *mem, int len, int *channels, int *sample_rate, short **output); #endif // decode an entire file and output the data interleaved into a malloc()ed // buffer stored in *output. The return value is the number of samples // decoded, or -1 if the file could not be opened or was not an ogg vorbis file. // When you're done with it, just free() the pointer returned in *output. extern stb_vorbis * stb_vorbis_open_memory(const unsigned char *data, int len, int *error, const stb_vorbis_alloc *alloc_buffer); // create an ogg vorbis decoder from an ogg vorbis stream in memory (note // this must be the entire stream!). on failure, returns NULL and sets *error #ifndef STB_VORBIS_NO_STDIO extern stb_vorbis * stb_vorbis_open_filename(const char *filename, int *error, const stb_vorbis_alloc *alloc_buffer); // create an ogg vorbis decoder from a filename via fopen(). on failure, // returns NULL and sets *error (possibly to VORBIS_file_open_failure). extern stb_vorbis * stb_vorbis_open_file(FILE *f, int close_handle_on_close, int *error, const stb_vorbis_alloc *alloc_buffer); // create an ogg vorbis decoder from an open FILE *, looking for a stream at // the _current_ seek point (ftell). on failure, returns NULL and sets *error. // note that stb_vorbis must "own" this stream; if you seek it in between // calls to stb_vorbis, it will become confused. Moreover, if you attempt to // perform stb_vorbis_seek_*() operations on this file, it will assume it // owns the _entire_ rest of the file after the start point. Use the next // function, stb_vorbis_open_file_section(), to limit it. extern stb_vorbis * stb_vorbis_open_file_section(FILE *f, int close_handle_on_close, int *error, const stb_vorbis_alloc *alloc_buffer, unsigned int len); // create an ogg vorbis decoder from an open FILE *, looking for a stream at // the _current_ seek point (ftell); the stream will be of length 'len' bytes. // on failure, returns NULL and sets *error. note that stb_vorbis must "own" // this stream; if you seek it in between calls to stb_vorbis, it will become // confused. #endif extern int stb_vorbis_seek_frame(stb_vorbis *f, unsigned int sample_number); extern int stb_vorbis_seek(stb_vorbis *f, unsigned int sample_number); // these functions seek in the Vorbis file to (approximately) 'sample_number'. // after calling seek_frame(), the next call to get_frame_*() will include // the specified sample. after calling stb_vorbis_seek(), the next call to // stb_vorbis_get_samples_* will start with the specified sample. If you // do not need to seek to EXACTLY the target sample when using get_samples_*, // you can also use seek_frame(). extern int stb_vorbis_seek_start(stb_vorbis *f); // this function is equivalent to stb_vorbis_seek(f,0) extern unsigned int stb_vorbis_stream_length_in_samples(stb_vorbis *f); extern float stb_vorbis_stream_length_in_seconds(stb_vorbis *f); // these functions return the total length of the vorbis stream extern int stb_vorbis_get_frame_float(stb_vorbis *f, int *channels, float ***output); // decode the next frame and return the number of samples. the number of // channels returned are stored in *channels (which can be NULL--it is always // the same as the number of channels reported by get_info). *output will // contain an array of float* buffers, one per channel. These outputs will // be overwritten on the next call to stb_vorbis_get_frame_*. // // You generally should not intermix calls to stb_vorbis_get_frame_*() // and stb_vorbis_get_samples_*(), since the latter calls the former. #ifndef STB_VORBIS_NO_INTEGER_CONVERSION extern int stb_vorbis_get_frame_short_interleaved(stb_vorbis *f, int num_c, short *buffer, int num_shorts); extern int stb_vorbis_get_frame_short (stb_vorbis *f, int num_c, short **buffer, int num_samples); #endif // decode the next frame and return the number of *samples* per channel. // Note that for interleaved data, you pass in the number of shorts (the // size of your array), but the return value is the number of samples per // channel, not the total number of samples. // // The data is coerced to the number of channels you request according to the // channel coercion rules (see below). You must pass in the size of your // buffer(s) so that stb_vorbis will not overwrite the end of the buffer. // The maximum buffer size needed can be gotten from get_info(); however, // the Vorbis I specification implies an absolute maximum of 4096 samples // per channel. // Channel coercion rules: // Let M be the number of channels requested, and N the number of channels present, // and Cn be the nth channel; let stereo L be the sum of all L and center channels, // and stereo R be the sum of all R and center channels (channel assignment from the // vorbis spec). // M N output // 1 k sum(Ck) for all k // 2 * stereo L, stereo R // k l k > l, the first l channels, then 0s // k l k <= l, the first k channels // Note that this is not _good_ surround etc. mixing at all! It's just so // you get something useful. extern int stb_vorbis_get_samples_float_interleaved(stb_vorbis *f, int channels, float *buffer, int num_floats); extern int stb_vorbis_get_samples_float(stb_vorbis *f, int channels, float **buffer, int num_samples); // gets num_samples samples, not necessarily on a frame boundary--this requires // buffering so you have to supply the buffers. DOES NOT APPLY THE COERCION RULES. // Returns the number of samples stored per channel; it may be less than requested // at the end of the file. If there are no more samples in the file, returns 0. #ifndef STB_VORBIS_NO_INTEGER_CONVERSION extern int stb_vorbis_get_samples_short_interleaved(stb_vorbis *f, int channels, short *buffer, int num_shorts); extern int stb_vorbis_get_samples_short(stb_vorbis *f, int channels, short **buffer, int num_samples); #endif // gets num_samples samples, not necessarily on a frame boundary--this requires // buffering so you have to supply the buffers. Applies the coercion rules above // to produce 'channels' channels. Returns the number of samples stored per channel; // it may be less than requested at the end of the file. If there are no more // samples in the file, returns 0. #endif //////// ERROR CODES enum STBVorbisError { VORBIS__no_error, VORBIS_need_more_data=1, // not a real error VORBIS_invalid_api_mixing, // can't mix API modes VORBIS_outofmem, // not enough memory VORBIS_feature_not_supported, // uses floor 0 VORBIS_too_many_channels, // STB_VORBIS_MAX_CHANNELS is too small VORBIS_file_open_failure, // fopen() failed VORBIS_seek_without_length, // can't seek in unknown-length file VORBIS_unexpected_eof=10, // file is truncated? VORBIS_seek_invalid, // seek past EOF // decoding errors (corrupt/invalid stream) -- you probably // don't care about the exact details of these // vorbis errors: VORBIS_invalid_setup=20, VORBIS_invalid_stream, // ogg errors: VORBIS_missing_capture_pattern=30, VORBIS_invalid_stream_structure_version, VORBIS_continued_packet_flag_invalid, VORBIS_incorrect_stream_serial_number, VORBIS_invalid_first_page, VORBIS_bad_packet_type, VORBIS_cant_find_last_page, VORBIS_seek_failed, VORBIS_ogg_skeleton_not_supported }; #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif // STB_VORBIS_INCLUDE_STB_VORBIS_H // // HEADER ENDS HERE // //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////