MoonWorks/src/Audio/AudioDataQoa.cs

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Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
namespace MoonWorks.Audio
{
/// <summary>
/// Streamable audio in QOA format.
/// </summary>
public class AudioDataQoa : AudioDataStreamable
{
private IntPtr QoaHandle = IntPtr.Zero;
private IntPtr FileDataPtr = IntPtr.Zero;
private string FilePath;
private const uint QOA_MAGIC = 0x716f6166; /* 'qoaf' */
public override bool Loaded => QoaHandle != IntPtr.Zero;
private uint decodeBufferSize;
public override uint DecodeBufferSize => decodeBufferSize;
public AudioDataQoa(AudioDevice device, string filePath) : base(device)
{
FilePath = filePath;
using var stream = new FileStream(FilePath, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read);
using var reader = new BinaryReader(stream);
UInt64 fileHeader = ReverseEndianness(reader.ReadUInt64());
if ((fileHeader >> 32) != QOA_MAGIC)
{
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throw new InvalidOperationException("Specified file is not a QOA file.");
Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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}
uint totalSamplesPerChannel = (uint) (fileHeader & (0xFFFFFFFF));
if (totalSamplesPerChannel == 0)
{
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throw new InvalidOperationException("Specified file is not a valid QOA file.");
Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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}
UInt64 frameHeader = ReverseEndianness(reader.ReadUInt64());
uint channels = (uint) ((frameHeader >> 56) & 0x0000FF);
uint samplerate = (uint) ((frameHeader >> 32) & 0xFFFFFF);
uint samplesPerChannelPerFrame = (uint) ((frameHeader >> 16) & 0x00FFFF);
Format = new Format
{
Tag = FormatTag.PCM,
BitsPerSample = 16,
Channels = (ushort) channels,
SampleRate = samplerate
};
decodeBufferSize = channels * samplesPerChannelPerFrame * sizeof(short);
}
public override unsafe void Decode(void* buffer, int bufferLengthInBytes, out int filledLengthInBytes, out bool reachedEnd)
{
var lengthInShorts = bufferLengthInBytes / sizeof(short);
// NOTE: this function returns samples per channel!
var samples = FAudio.qoa_decode_next_frame(QoaHandle, (short*) buffer);
var sampleCount = samples * Format.Channels;
reachedEnd = sampleCount < lengthInShorts;
filledLengthInBytes = (int) (sampleCount * sizeof(short));
}
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/// <summary>
/// Prepares qoa data for streaming.
/// </summary>
Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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public override unsafe void Load()
{
if (!Loaded)
{
var fileStream = new FileStream(FilePath, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read);
FileDataPtr = (nint) NativeMemory.Alloc((nuint) fileStream.Length);
var fileDataSpan = new Span<byte>((void*) FileDataPtr, (int) fileStream.Length);
fileStream.ReadExactly(fileDataSpan);
fileStream.Close();
QoaHandle = FAudio.qoa_open_from_memory((char*) FileDataPtr, (uint) fileDataSpan.Length, 0);
if (QoaHandle == IntPtr.Zero)
{
NativeMemory.Free((void*) FileDataPtr);
Logger.LogError("Error opening QOA file!");
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throw new InvalidOperationException("Error opening QOA file!");
Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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}
}
}
public override void Seek(uint sampleFrame)
{
FAudio.qoa_seek_frame(QoaHandle, (int) sampleFrame);
}
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/// <summary>
/// Unloads the qoa data, freeing resources.
/// </summary>
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public override unsafe void Unload()
Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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{
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if (Loaded)
{
FAudio.qoa_close(QoaHandle);
NativeMemory.Free((void*) FileDataPtr);
QoaHandle = IntPtr.Zero;
FileDataPtr = IntPtr.Zero;
}
Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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}
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/// <summary>
/// Loads the entire qoa file into an AudioBuffer. Useful for static audio.
/// </summary>
Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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public unsafe static AudioBuffer CreateBuffer(AudioDevice device, string filePath)
{
using var fileStream = new FileStream(filePath, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read);
var fileDataPtr = NativeMemory.Alloc((nuint) fileStream.Length);
var fileDataSpan = new Span<byte>(fileDataPtr, (int) fileStream.Length);
fileStream.ReadExactly(fileDataSpan);
fileStream.Close();
var qoaHandle = FAudio.qoa_open_from_memory((char*) fileDataPtr, (uint) fileDataSpan.Length, 0);
if (qoaHandle == 0)
{
NativeMemory.Free(fileDataPtr);
Logger.LogError("Error opening QOA file!");
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throw new InvalidOperationException("Error opening QOA file!");
Audio Restructuring (#50) This is a complete redesign of the MoonWorks Audio API. Voices are the new major concept. All Voices can be configured with volume, pitch, filters, panning and reverb. SourceVoices take in AudioBuffers and use them to play sound. They contain their own playback state. There are multiple kinds of SourceVoices: TransientVoice: Used for short sound effects where the client will not be keeping track of a reference over multiple frames. PersistentVoice: Used when the client needs to hold on to a Voice reference long-term. StreamingVoice: Used for playing back AudioDataStreamable objects. SoundSequence: Used to play back a series of AudioBuffers in sequence. They have a callback so that AudioBuffers can be added dynamically by the client. SourceVoices are intended to be pooled. You can obtain one from the AudioDevice pool by calling AudioDevice.Obtain<T> where T is the type of SourceVoice you wish to obtain. When you call Return on the voice it will be returned to the pool. TransientVoices are automatically returned to the pool when they have finished playing back their AudioBuffer. SourceVoices can send audio to SubmixVoices. This is a convenient way to manage categories of audio. For example the client could have a MusicSubmix that all music-related voices send to. Then the volume of all music can be changed at once without the client having to manage all the individual music voices. By default all voices send audio to AudioDevice.MasteringVoice. This is also a SubmixVoice that can be controlled like any other voice. AudioDataStreamable is used in conjunction with a StreamingVoice to play back streaming audio from an ogg or qoa file. AudioDataWav, AudioDataOgg, and AudioDataQoa all have a static CreateBuffer method that can be used to create an AudioBuffer from an audio file. Reviewed-on: https://gitea.moonside.games/MoonsideGames/MoonWorks/pulls/50
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}
FAudio.qoa_attributes(qoaHandle, out var channels, out var samplerate, out var samples_per_channel_per_frame, out var total_samples_per_channel);
var bufferLengthInBytes = total_samples_per_channel * channels * sizeof(short);
var buffer = NativeMemory.Alloc(bufferLengthInBytes);
FAudio.qoa_decode_entire(qoaHandle, (short*) buffer);
FAudio.qoa_close(qoaHandle);
NativeMemory.Free(fileDataPtr);
var format = new Format
{
Tag = FormatTag.PCM,
BitsPerSample = 16,
Channels = (ushort) channels,
SampleRate = samplerate
};
return new AudioBuffer(device, format, (nint) buffer, bufferLengthInBytes, true);
}
private static unsafe UInt64 ReverseEndianness(UInt64 value)
{
byte* bytes = (byte*) &value;
return
((UInt64)(bytes[0]) << 56) | ((UInt64)(bytes[1]) << 48) |
((UInt64)(bytes[2]) << 40) | ((UInt64)(bytes[3]) << 32) |
((UInt64)(bytes[4]) << 24) | ((UInt64)(bytes[5]) << 16) |
((UInt64)(bytes[6]) << 8) | ((UInt64)(bytes[7]) << 0);
}
}
}