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Repeatedly playing contents of QByteArray through QAudioOutput

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  • nulluseN nulluse

    As that file would only have 1 sine wave, I do not expect that anything could possibly play it, short of me writing a program for that.

    At least the 8 bit file using char sample directly inserted into the buffer

            char sample = (char)(qSin(qDegreesToRadians(ii)) * 128);
            buf->append(sample);
    

    looks fine:

    0000000000: 00 12 23 35 45 53 60 6B │ 74 7A 7E 7F 7E 7A 74 6C   ↕#5ES`ktz~⌂~ztl
    0000000010: 61 54 45 35 24 13 00 EF │ DD CC BC AE A1 95 8D 86  aTE5$‼ ïÝ̼®¡•†
    0000000020: 82 81 82 85 8B 94 9F AB │ BA CA DB ED FF           ‚‚…‹”Ÿ«ºÊÛíÿ
    

    That is the one that emits a weak 'burp' when it starts.
    The 16 bit samples populated via stream look all right to me too, but wit this one I cannot hear anything at all:

    0000000000: 00 00 00 00 00 00 12 2C │ 00 00 23 FB 00 00 35 0F        ↕,  #û  5☼
    0000000010: 00 00 45 0F 00 00 53 AA │ 00 00 60 92 00 00 6B 85    E☼  Sª  `’  k…
    0000000020: 00 00 74 4B 00 00 7A B5 │ 00 00 7E A3 00 00 7F FF    tK  zµ  ~£  ⌂ÿ
    0000000030: 00 00 7E C4 00 00 7A F7 │ 00 00 74 AC 00 00 6C 03    ~Ä  z÷  t¬  l♥
    0000000040: 00 00 61 2B 00 00 54 5A │ 00 00 45 D4 00 00 35 E3    a+  TZ  EÔ  5ã
    0000000050: 00 00 24 DB 00 00 13 13 │ 00 00 00 E9 FF FF EE BB    $Û  ‼‼   éÿÿî»
    0000000060: FF FF DC E5 FF FF CB C6 │ FF FF BB B5 FF FF AD 07  ÿÿÜåÿÿËÆÿÿ»µÿÿ­•
    0000000070: FF FF A0 08 FF FF 94 FA │ FF FF 8C 17 FF FF 85 8E  ÿÿ ◘ÿÿ”úÿÿŒ↨ÿÿ…Ž
    0000000080: FF FF 81 80 FF FF 80 02 │ FF FF 81 1D FF FF 84 C9  ÿÿ€ÿÿ€☻ÿÿ↔ÿÿ„É
    0000000090: FF FF 8A F5 FF FF 93 80 │ FF FF 9E 3E FF FF AA F7  ÿÿŠõÿÿ“€ÿÿž>ÿÿª÷
    00000000A0: FF FF B9 69 FF FF C9 4A │ FF FF DA 46 FF FF EC 06  ÿÿ¹iÿÿÉJÿÿÚFÿÿì♠
    00000000B0: FF FF FE 2E             │                          ÿÿþ.
    
    mrjjM Offline
    mrjjM Offline
    mrjj
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    Hi
    Well im not sure if it will work but
    http://manual.audacityteam.org/man/importing_audio.html
    can import raw.

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    0
    • nulluseN Offline
      nulluseN Offline
      nulluse
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      Emits a beep in Audacity as one would expect (if pasted 1000 times).

      mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • nulluseN nulluse

        Emits a beep in Audacity as one would expect (if pasted 1000 times).

        mrjjM Offline
        mrjjM Offline
        mrjj
        Lifetime Qt Champion
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        Ok so the beep would be somewhat like the burb you get with Qt?

        Im wondering about
        QAudioFormat format;
        and
        new QAudioOutput(format, this);
        If it will copy it. ( I assume yes) (+ wav file works)
        so dont matter it goes out of scope.

        also
        else{ // restart from scratch
        QDataStream s(buf, QIODevice::ReadWrite);
        audio->start(s.device());
        }
        That seems to be a new / another QDataStream and not the one you made a class member?

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        0
        • nulluseN Offline
          nulluseN Offline
          nulluse
          wrote on last edited by nulluse
          #11

          Since then I've changed the code to use the member stream:

                  else{ // restart from scratch
                      audio->start(s->device()); // s is a class member here
                  }
          

          No, the 'burp' is a short burst, a short abrupt chirp, nothing like a proper sine wave.
          The audio output clearly thinks it is playing audio, as there are no events until I hit the Stop button and then it prints

          Stopped audio IdleState
          

          into the debug output. It's just that there is no sound coming from the speakers. The program also appears in the Windows mixer once the audio output starts.

          mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • nulluseN nulluse

            Since then I've changed the code to use the member stream:

                    else{ // restart from scratch
                        audio->start(s->device()); // s is a class member here
                    }
            

            No, the 'burp' is a short burst, a short abrupt chirp, nothing like a proper sine wave.
            The audio output clearly thinks it is playing audio, as there are no events until I hit the Stop button and then it prints

            Stopped audio IdleState
            

            into the debug output. It's just that there is no sound coming from the speakers. The program also appears in the Windows mixer once the audio output starts.

            mrjjM Offline
            mrjjM Offline
            mrjj
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            My best guess is that it dont like the format but
            I cannot see why not.
            Also
            http://stackoverflow.com/questions/32049950/realtime-streaming-with-qaudiooutput-qt
            which seems same code, it seems it plays for him.
            And you seem to check errors etc so Im out of suggestions for now :(

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            0
            • nulluseN Offline
              nulluseN Offline
              nulluse
              wrote on last edited by nulluse
              #13

              I am somewhat suspicious of the repeated starting of the output from the same stream.
              Should there be something to re-wind the stream to the beginning? Like this:

                      else{ // restart from scratch
                          s->resetStatus();
                          audio->start(s->device());
                      }
              

              which does not actually help, I am just posting this as a question.
              That was one of the reasons I wanted to create a local variable for the stream in both places: for initial start and re-start.

              Or perhaps do I need to create a completely separate stream for reading from the buffer? I am getting impression that the stream is either at the end after writing data into the buffer, or when I want to re-start.

              mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • nulluseN nulluse

                I am somewhat suspicious of the repeated starting of the output from the same stream.
                Should there be something to re-wind the stream to the beginning? Like this:

                        else{ // restart from scratch
                            s->resetStatus();
                            audio->start(s->device());
                        }
                

                which does not actually help, I am just posting this as a question.
                That was one of the reasons I wanted to create a local variable for the stream in both places: for initial start and re-start.

                Or perhaps do I need to create a completely separate stream for reading from the buffer? I am getting impression that the stream is either at the end after writing data into the buffer, or when I want to re-start.

                mrjjM Offline
                mrjjM Offline
                mrjj
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #14

                Hi
                I wondered the same.
                Like it plays once and then are at the end.
                You could maybe put sample generation in a function and create a new sample
                at restart. mostly for test.

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                0
                • nulluseN Offline
                  nulluseN Offline
                  nulluse
                  wrote on last edited by nulluse
                  #15

                  No luck! I tried to add this to the state handler:

                          else{ // restart from scratch
                              delete buf;
                              delete s;
                  
                              buf = new QByteArray();
                              s = new QDataStream(buf, QIODevice::ReadWrite);
                  
                              for(float ii=0.0f; ii<360.0f; ii+=(360.0f*1000.0f/af.sampleRate())){
                                  int sample = ((int)(qSin(qDegreesToRadians(ii)) * 32768));
                                  (*s) << sample;
                          //        char sample = (char)(qSin(qDegreesToRadians(ii)) * 128);
                          //        buf->append(sample);
                          //        qDebug() << (int)sample;
                              }
                  
                              audio->start(s->device());
                          }
                          break;
                  

                  Still no sound.
                  Also tried completely removing re-start and simply repeating the wave 1000 times to get 1 second of sound, but to no avail:

                  for(int i=0; i<1000; i++){
                      for(float ii=0.0f; ii<360.0f; ii+=(360.0f*1000.0f/af.sampleRate())){
                          int sample = ((int)(qSin(qDegreesToRadians(ii)) * 32768));
                          (*s) << sample;
                  //        char sample = (char)(qSin(qDegreesToRadians(ii)) * 128);
                  //        buf->append(sample);
                          qDebug() << (int)sample;
                      }
                  }
                  

                  It saved a 180,000 byte file which plays a nearly perfect tone when imported into Audacity (as far as I can tell with the cheap speakers).

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                  • mrjjM Offline
                    mrjjM Offline
                    mrjj
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    Ok so data is good
                    but it seems it dont like. I wonder if some of the format settings
                    is wrong but I really cant spot it.

                    Is it possible for me to have the project to play with ?

                    nulluseN 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • mrjjM mrjj

                      Ok so data is good
                      but it seems it dont like. I wonder if some of the format settings
                      is wrong but I really cant spot it.

                      Is it possible for me to have the project to play with ?

                      nulluseN Offline
                      nulluseN Offline
                      nulluse
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      @mrjj
                      You can grab it from here: qtcreator project
                      Thank you for your time!

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • SGaistS Offline
                        SGaistS Offline
                        SGaist
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        Hi,

                        I'd recommend taking a look at the spectrum example in the example of the QtMultimedia module. There's a small tone generator that should get you started.

                        Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                        Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

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                        2
                        • nulluseN Offline
                          nulluseN Offline
                          nulluse
                          wrote on last edited by nulluse
                          #19

                          This is it, that project set me onto the right track:

                          s->device()->close();
                          s->device()->open(QIODevice::ReadOnly);
                          

                          before starting playback fixed the issue! So that really was the stream at the end.
                          Super, thanks a lot!

                          Development is not over, as I suspect that closing and re-opening the device is time consuming and would cause jerky sound, but at least it is clear now why it was not working.

                          For now when I try to play the buffer with 1 sine wave repeatedly, using s->device()->seek(0); before restarting audio, the speakers are just clicking fast instead of playing a sine wave. This approach may be entirely unsustainable due to overhead involved in restarting both IO device and Audio output.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          1
                          • mrjjM Offline
                            mrjjM Offline
                            mrjj
                            Lifetime Qt Champion
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            Super
                            I tried with
                            http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qbuffer.html#details
                            but had no luck.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • nulluseN Offline
                              nulluseN Offline
                              nulluse
                              wrote on last edited by nulluse
                              #21

                              Overhead of seeking to 0 and re-starting audio must be huge!
                              When I am playing 1 second of 1000 waves and re-starting, there is about 1/10 second delay between the blocks.
                              This is on i7-2600 3.4 GHz machine. I will need to change the approach completely, but at least you two got me onto the right track - appreciate your help!

                              mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • nulluseN nulluse

                                Overhead of seeking to 0 and re-starting audio must be huge!
                                When I am playing 1 second of 1000 waves and re-starting, there is about 1/10 second delay between the blocks.
                                This is on i7-2600 3.4 GHz machine. I will need to change the approach completely, but at least you two got me onto the right track - appreciate your help!

                                mrjjM Offline
                                mrjjM Offline
                                mrjj
                                Lifetime Qt Champion
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                @nulluse
                                You are most welcome :)
                                Its pretty huge delay.
                                Im surprised seek is that expensive.

                                funny, i have i7-2600 also. Old now but still a fine CPU

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                                0
                                • mrjjM Offline
                                  mrjjM Offline
                                  mrjj
                                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #23

                                  Note
                                  Adding just
                                  s->device()->seek(0);
                                  made it play for me.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • mrjjM Offline
                                    mrjjM Offline
                                    mrjj
                                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    I was wondering if we subclass
                                    QIODevice and implement
                                    qint64 QIODevice::readData(char * data, qint64 maxSize)
                                    If we then would endless supply data and avoid the
                                    delay as we never restart then.
                                    I have never subclassed QIODevice so not sure what minimum
                                    override is.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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