| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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If the requested number of mono and stereo sources exceeds 256, the source
limit will be expanded. Any config file setting overrides this. If the device
is reset to have fewer sources than are currently allocated, excess sources
will remain and be usable as normal, but no more can be generated until enough
are delated to go back below the limit.
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This is intended to do conversions for interleaved samples, and supports
changing from one DevFmtType to another as well as resampling. It does not
handle remixing channels.
The mixer is more optimized to use the resampling functions directly. However,
this should prove useful for recording with certain backends that won't do the
conversion themselves.
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Currently only applies to external files, rather than embedded datasets. Also,
HRTFs aren't unloaded after being loaded, until library shutdown.
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They're not accessible since the removal of the buffer_samples extension, and
were kind of clunky to work with as 24-bit packed values.
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This should cut down on unnecessary quantization noise (however minor) for 8-
and 16-bit samples. Unfortunately a power-of-2 multiple can't be used as easily
for converting float samples to integer, due to integer types having a non-
power-of-2 maximum amplitude (it'd require more per-sample clamping).
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This improves fading between HRIRs as sources pan around. In particular, it
improves the issue with individual coefficients having various rounding errors
in the stepping values, as well as issues with interpolating delay values.
It does this by doing two mixing passes for each source. First using the last
coefficients that fade to silence, and then again using the new coefficients
that fade from silence. When added together, it creates a linear fade from one
to the other. Additionally, the gain is applied separately so the individual
coefficients don't step with rounding errors. Although this does increase CPU
cost since it's doing two mixes per source, each mix is a bit cheaper now since
the stepping is simplified to a single gain value, and the overall quality is
improved.
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NFC filters currently only work when rendering to ambisonic buffers, which
includes HQ rendering and ambisonic output. There are two new config options:
'decoder/nfc' (default on) enables or disables use of NFC filters globally, and
'decoder/nfc-ref-delay' (default 0) specifies the reference delay parameter for
NFC-HOA rendering with ambisonic output (a value of 0 disables NFC).
Currently, NFC filters rely on having an appropriate value set for
AL_METERS_PER_UNIT to get the correct scaling. HQ rendering uses the averaged
speaker distances as a control/reference, and currently doesn't correct for
individual speaker distances (if the speakers are all equidistant, this is
fine, otherwise per-speaker correction should be done as well).
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Also slightly refactor setting playing state when the device is disconnected or
there's no buffers to play.
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This extends the base ALC_SOFT_loopback extension with support for B-Format.
When ALC_FORMAT_CHANNELS_SOFT is set to ALC_BFORMAT3D_SOFT, then additional
attributes must be specified. ALC_AMBISONIC_LAYOUT_SOFT must be set to
ALC_ACN_SOFT or ALC_FUMA_SOFT for the desired channel layout,
ALC_AMBISONIC_SCALING_SOFT must be set to ALC_N3D_SOFT, ALC_SN3D_SOFT, or
ALC_FUMA_SOFT for the desired channel scaling/normalization scheme, and
ALC_AMBISONIC_ORDER_SOFT must be set to an integer value greater than 0 for the
ambisonic order (maximum allowed is implementation-dependent).
Note that the number of channels required for ALC_BFORMAT3D_SOFT is dependent
on the ambisonic order. The number of channels can be calculated by:
num_channels = (order+1) * (order+1); /* or pow(order+1, 2); */
In addition, a new alcIsAmbisonicFormatSupportedSOFT function allows apps to
determine which layout/scaling/order combinations are supported by the loopback
device. For example,
alcIsAmbisonicFormatSupported(device, ALC_ACN_SOFT, ALC_SN3D_SOFT, 2) will
check if 2nd order AmbiX (ACN layout and SN3D scaling) rendering is supported
for ALC_BFORMAT3D_SOFT output.
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This has a couple behavioral changes. First and biggest is that querying
AL_BUFFERS_PROCESSED from a source will always return all buffers processed
when in an AL_STOPPED state. Previously all buffers would be set as processed
when first becoming stopped, but newly queued buffers would *not* be indicated
as processed. That old behavior was not compliant with the spec, which
unequivocally states "On a source in the AL_STOPPED state, all buffers are
processed."
Secondly, querying AL_BUFFER on an AL_STREAMING source will now always return
0. Previously it would return the current "active" buffer in the queue, but
there's no basis for that in the spec.
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This avoids using seq_cst for loading the source state when either inside the
mixer, or otherwise protected from inconsistencies with async updates. It also
fixes potential race conditions with getting the source offset just as a source
stops.
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